3 Signs That Predict If You’ll Become Rich
Published: 2025-11-22
Status:
Available
|
Analyzed
Published: 2025-11-22
Status:
Available
|
Analyzed
Predictions from this Video
Incorrect: 1
Prediction
Topic
Status
Get-rich-quick schemes are generally scams. A balanced approach of patience in understanding the long-term process and impatience in driving daily action is key for financial success.
"So you have to be patient, but also impatient at the same time. patient in the sense that you have to understand that get rich quick is majority of time a big scam. It doesn't work. Um it makes the people selling the get-richqu rich keep you broke. Uh so the first thing you got to understand is that but then second is you want to be impatient where it's going to fuel that drive, fuel that work ethic, fuel that discipline and you have to be willing to keep going."
Correct
A 'rule of five' is proposed for purchasing decisions: if you cannot afford to buy five of an item, you cannot truly afford to buy one.
"The rule that I would always say is follow something like my rule of five. If you can't buy five of them, you can't afford one of them."
Pending
A 75/15/10 financial plan is suggested: 75% maximum spending, 15% minimum investing, and 10% minimum saving for every dollar earned.
"And so one of the easiest things you can create your own is to follow something like a 751510 plan. Which means that for every dollar you earn from now on. 75 is the maximum you can spend. 15 cents is the minimum you're investing and 10 cents is the minimum that you're saving."
Pending
As income increases, the 75/15/10 ratio should be maintained, prioritizing investment and saving before spending, to ensure continued financial growth.
"Then what you do is you take the money, you put it into your investments, and now you just keep investing money. Now, what happens is as you grow your income, you don't change this ratio. So, if you go from $40,000 a year to $400,000 a year, you keep the same ratio and you're still investing first and then you keep saving your money."
Pending
Earned income should be used to invest in assets, which then generate passive income, allowing for a transition away from needing to work daily to get paid.
"You take the earned income. You're working every single day. You take this income and you use as much of that as possible to invest into assets. the assets pay you live off of the assets because now those assets don't need you to go to work every single day to get paid."
Correct
Challenging one's own beliefs leads to increased intelligence, identification of opportunities, and solidification of personal convictions.
"So you have to be willing to challenge your own beliefs. And that's where you know, you will become smarter and you'll find more opportunity and you'll solidify your own beliefs on whatever it is that you"
Correct
Actively seeking out and listening to contradictory viewpoints, even through audiobooks if reading is difficult, is crucial for learning and developing a well-rounded understanding.
"And so, like, you know, if you listen like my I listen to audiobooks. I'm not a very good reader. English is my [clears throat] second language, right? So, I'm not the best reader, but I listen to audiobooks. And uh it's it's funny because I have like books that will completely contradict one another just so I can learn from different points of view."
Unrated
Diligent effort and hard work are more effective than natural talent if that talent is not accompanied by dedication.
"Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard. It that is the truest saying that you can make"
Unrated
The idea that one should only 'work smart' and not 'work hard' is dismissed as a 'bunch of crap'; hard work is presented as essential and a lack of willingness to do it will significantly limit success.
"You have to be willing to put in work you know a lot of people say don't work hard work smart and I think this is a whole bunch of crap you know like you can work as hard as you want but if you're not willing to work hard you're going to very much limit your success"
Correct
To prepare for setbacks and difficulties, one should intentionally seek out uncomfortable experiences and step outside their comfort zone, even if they are not directly related to their goals.
"You have to be willing to get back up. And you know, how do you prepare for that? Maybe go and get punched, go to a boxing class, get uncomfortable, do something that puts you out of your comfort zone, even if it's not directly correlated."
Pending
Resilience and perseverance are critical because challenges and difficulties are inevitable.
"You have to be willing to stick with it when things go wrong and when things get hard because things will go wrong, things will get hard."
Correct
Money acts as a magnifier of one's character; having more money allows a good person to do more good and a bad person to do more bad.
"It's like fire. It's like fuel. It fuels your fire. If you're a good person and you have more money, you have a tool to do more good. If you're a bad person and you have more money, you have a tool to do more bad."
Pending
It is crucial to distinguish between assets that generate income and liabilities that deplete it.
"The third thing would be now to really I mean I know I talk about this a lot but you have to understand the difference between something that makes you money and something that loses you money."
Pending
A purchasing affordability test is proposed: if one cannot afford to buy five of an item, they cannot afford to buy one, serving as a guideline for prudent spending.
"So, you know, you want to buy a a $1,000 phone, you want to buy a $1,000 watch. Okay, fine. Can you buy five of them? And if you don't have the ability to buy five of them, if you can't afford to do that, then you can't afford one."
Pending
Money should be used as a tool to generate more money, and it's essential to differentiate between income-generating assets and money-losing liabilities.
"And so you want to be able to use money in that way. The third thing would be now to really I mean I know I talk about this a lot but you have to understand the difference between something that makes you money and something that loses you money."
Pending
Prioritizing spending on branded goods over savings and investments indicates a misplacement of financial priorities.
"If you got the name brand stuff, but you got no savings, you got no investments, you're doing something wrong. Your priorities in the wrong place."
Correct
Luxury purchases should only be made when one can genuinely afford them, after achieving financial richness, rather than before.
"But it's a matter of when can you actually afford it. You have to know when the right time is for you to have it because you want to first make yourself rich and then hey blow if you can afford it do whatever you want."
Pending
Wealthy individuals invest their money before spending, and ideally, pay taxes after investing, contrasting with the common practice of spending first and investing what remains.
"The way that the finances look for the majority of people, is you make money, you pay taxes, you spend your money, and then you wonder where your money went. Well, wealthy people do, right? wealthy people are you make money and then depending on how you make it either you pay taxes first or after. Ideally after because there are ways to do that legally but you make money and then you want to invest as much as possible and then you spend whatever's left."
Pending
Financial health is crucial for overall well-being, but excessive wealth without other forms of health (physical, mental, spiritual) can lead to increased misery.
"If you're not financially healthy, well, it can make everything else much more miserable because you can't pay your bills. But if you're financially healthy, you're rich, but you have nothing else, more money just makes you more miserable."
Pending
A willingness to learn and a commitment to work are essential components of discipline that enable progress.
"You have to be willing to learn nothing can stop you. So the discipline means that you're willing to put in work"
Pending
Discipline involves a willingness to put in the work; the notion of 'working smart' without 'working hard' is considered invalid and will limit success.
"So the discipline means that you're willing to put in work you know a lot of people say don't work hard work smart and I think this is a whole bunch of crap you know like you can work as hard as you want but if you're not willing to work hard you're going to very much limit your success"
Unrated
Discipline entails persistence through adversity; one must be prepared for things to go wrong and become difficult.
"And then your your discipline then is it's just like anything else. It's being willing to stick with it when things go wrong and when things get hard because things will go wrong, things will get hard."
Correct
Believing in one's own capability, regardless of current circumstances, and committing to doing 'whatever it takes' is the foundational step towards achieving success.
"So you first have to believe that somebody like you can do it from your position and know that hey I will do whatever it takes."
Pending
Mindset is the primary factor for success. Without the belief that success is possible for oneself, resources and drive are insufficient because the mind will create barriers.
"The first thing is mindset. That's why I call, you know, my channel member the minority mindset. You have to believe is possible for you. Uh because if you don't believe it's possible for you, you can have all the resources, you can have all the drive, but you'll never be able to do it because your mind is going to stop you."
Pending
The combination of a strong mindset and the 'whatever it takes' attitude fosters discipline, enabling individuals to believe in their ability to achieve success from their current position.
"And so you first have to believe that somebody like you can do it from your position and know that hey I will do whatever it takes. Now if you have the mindset then you have that I will do whatever it takes that discipline"
Unrated
The 'whatever it takes' attitude, coupled with discipline and a willingness to learn, creates an unstoppable force for achieving goals.
"And then you have that I will do whatever it takes that discipline and then the willing to learn nothing can stop you."
Unrated
Discipline is defined as the willingness to work, and the idea of prioritizing 'working smart' over 'working hard' is considered false, as a lack of hard work significantly limits success and life opportunities.
"So the discipline means that you're willing to put in work you know a lot of people say don't work hard work smart and I think this is a whole bunch of crap you know like you can work as hard as you want but if you're not willing to work hard you're going to very much limit your success uh and limit everything in your life."
Pending
Successful individuals consistently put in significant hard work before learning to manage, delegate, optimize resources, scale, and manage their time effectively.
"I don't know anyone that didn't put in a lot of hard work for a period of time. Yeah. Until they learned how to manage and delegate and optimize with resources and scale and time"
Pending
Initial hard work is a prerequisite for reaching a point where one can scale back and enjoy the rewards; consistent effort is essential.
"But they had to work hard at something in order to get there. Once you get there, now you can scale back and now you can, you know, reap the fruits of your labor. But you have to be willing to put the work. The harder you work."
Pending
Discipline involves perseverance through difficult times and setbacks, as challenges are an inevitable part of the journey.
"And then your your discipline then is it's just like anything else. It's being willing to stick with it when things go wrong and when things get hard because things will go wrong, things will get hard."
Correct
A fundamental requirement for success is the willingness to put in significant hard work.
"Uh, you have to be willing to work hard."
Pending
To gain a comprehensive education, one should actively seek out and study materials with opposing viewpoints, such as reading books by Donald Trump and Barack Obama, or the Communist and Capitalist Manifestos, to understand diverse perspectives and solidify one's own thoughts.
"And so, like, you know, if you listen like my I listen to audiobooks. I'm not a very good reader. English is my [clears throat] second language, right? So, I'm not the best reader, but I listen to audiobooks. And uh it's it's funny because I have like books that will completely contradict one another just so I can learn from different points of view. Like I I read Donald Trump's book and then I read Barack Obama's book. Uh I read the the Communist Manifesto. I read the Capitalist Manifesto. I read you read books that are completely opposite. That way you can explore different points of view and understand and solidify your thoughts and just be more educated because"
Pending
The speaker prefers listening to audiobooks over reading due to English being a second language, highlighting a practical approach to learning.
"And so, like, you know, if you listen like my I listen to audiobooks. I'm not a very good reader. English is my [clears throat] second language, right? So, I'm not the best reader, but I listen to audiobooks."
Pending
True education and intellect are found by listening to and synthesizing ideas that may not agree, residing in the space between opposing viewpoints.
"But you have to be willing to listen to things that don't agree with one another. And that's in the middle is where you find intellect. That's where you find where where your best education comes."
Unrated
Growing up with a single belief system without exposure to alternative perspectives limits one's understanding of life; it is important to be open to and learn from diverse viewpoints, regardless of agreement.
"Because otherwise if we we grow up with just one belief the entire time and we don't see another side of something or another extreme potentially then we're always going to think life is that specific way as opposed to being open to seeing what other people think about whether we agree with it or not. Just learn it."
Pending
Living a holistic life as a human being, not just focusing on finances, is essential for enjoying financial success. The bank account is only one aspect of life.
"And I think that will help you in other places as well. So it's not always you know finance is we talk about this where we live a human life right it's not just my bank account it's I'm a human first a bank account is one aspect of my life and you have to be able to live as a human that way you can actually enjoy your bank account"
Pending
A fundamental requirement for success is the continuous willingness to learn.
"So the willingness to learn. You have to be willing to learn."
Pending
A refusal to learn prevents personal growth, as growth necessitates challenging one's existing beliefs.
"And if if you're not willing to learn, you're not going to be willing to grow because you have to be willing to challenge your beliefs."
Pending
Realizing that previously held beliefs about money, including loans, banks, education, jobs, and investing, were incorrect made it easier to embrace learning and consider contradictory perspectives.
"And I think that became significantly easier for me once I started learning about uh money because I realized everything I was told was wrong about money from, you know, loans to the to banks to schools to your job to investing. When I realized everything that I was told was wrong, that's when I started. I was like, man, I don't think I know anything right. So, I it was very easy for me to start learning and listening to contradictory points of view."
Unrated
The three core components for achieving financial success are the right mindset, the right discipline, and the right work ethic, which includes a willingness to learn.
"So the third thing was the right mindset the right discipline and the right work ethic uh so the willingness to learn."
Correct
Focusing solely on finance is insufficient; living as a complete human being, with the bank account being just one facet, is necessary to truly enjoy financial success.
"And I think that will help you in other places as well. So it's not always you know finance is we talk about this where we live a human life right it's not just my bank account it's I'm a human first a bank account is one aspect of my life and you have to be able to live as a human that way you can actually enjoy your bank account"
Pending
One should focus on living a full human life, with finances being only one part, to genuinely enjoy their financial gains.
"So it's not always you know finance is we talk about this where we live a human life right it's not just my bank account it's I'm a human first a bank account is one aspect of my life and you have to be able to live as a human that way you can actually enjoy your bank account"
Unrated
Continuous effort ('making the flywheel turn') is necessary, and hard work enhances the effectiveness of 'smart work'.
"You have to be willing to put the work. The harder you work. You got to make the flywheel turn. You got to and if it, you know, your hard work makes your smart work even more effective."
Correct
A prerequisite for growth is the willingness to learn and challenge one's own beliefs.
"So the willingness to learn. You have to be willing to learn. And if if you're not willing to learn, you're not going to be willing to grow because you have to be willing to challenge your beliefs."
Unrated
Intellect and superior education are found by engaging with and synthesizing disparate or opposing ideas.
"And that's in the middle is where you find intellect. That's where you find where where your best education comes."
Pending
The speaker listens to audiobooks, including those with contradictory views, to learn from diverse perspectives, noting that English is their second language.
"And so, like, you know, if you listen like my I listen to audiobooks. I'm not a very good reader. English is my [clears throat] second language, right? So, I'm not the best reader, but I listen to audiobooks. And uh it's it's funny because I have like books that will completely contradict one another just so I can learn from different points of view."
Pending
Intellectual growth and superior education stem from actively engaging with and reconciling contrasting ideas.
"But you have to be willing to listen to things that don't agree with one another. And that's in the middle is where you find intellect. That's where you find where where your best education comes."
Correct
When considering a $1,000 purchase, a benchmark is to assess if one could afford to buy five of them.
"So, it's, you know, you want to buy a a $1,000 phone, you want to buy a $1,000 watch. Okay, fine. Can you buy five of them?"
Pending
If one cannot afford to purchase five of an item, they cannot afford to buy even one, acting as a financial prudence test.
"And if you don't have the ability to buy five of them, if you can't afford to do that, then you can't afford one. If you can't buy five, you can't afford one."
Correct
A key financial understanding is differentiating between income-generating assets and money-losing liabilities.
"So the third thing would be now to really I mean I know I talk about this a lot but you have to understand the difference between something that makes you money and something that loses you money."
Pending
The 'Instagram flex culture' and spending on appearances are identified as significant liabilities that are toxic if not managed properly.
"And that's a liability. Yeah. And and what are the main liabilities that people spend on today? [sighs] the way you look, man. We have we have this Instagram flex culture, right? And it it is it is very toxic if you do not know how to use it."
Correct
Spending on luxury items for 'flexing' is only acceptable if one is already investing wisely and has excess funds; otherwise, it's a misallocation of resources.
"And unless you're investing your money wisely and you've got excess money and you're like, 'Okay, I want to buy some stuff to flex, cool.' But if you're not investing your money and you're just spending it on clothes and watches and shoes."
Pending
Having branded possessions without savings or investments indicates misplaced financial priorities and flawed decision-making.
"If you got the name brand stuff, but you got no savings, you got no investments, you're doing something wrong. Your priorities in the wrong place."
Correct
A personal anecdote illustrates spending a significant amount ($1000) on a luxury watch without understanding investment opportunities, such as investing in a watch company for profit sharing.
"When I talked about my watch, I spent a grand on a watch. I had no investments. I don't even know what an investment was at the time. I didn't realize I could have taken that grand and invested it into a watch company and get a share of the profits."
Pending
Wealthy individuals understand the proper timing for spending on luxuries and nice things; there is nothing inherently wrong with these purchases.
"But that's how wealthy people are doing and they understand that. And there's nothing wrong with spending money. There's nothing wrong with having luxuries. There's nothing wrong with having the nice things."
Pending
The key is timing: acquire luxuries only when financially independent, prioritizing becoming rich first before indulging.
"But it's a matter of when can you actually afford it. You have to know when the right time is for you to have it because you want to first make yourself rich and then hey blow if you can afford it do whatever you want."
Pending
Grant Cardone's strategy is to only purchase luxury items (watches, clothes) with passive income generated from investments, not with earned income.
"Grant Cardone is always talking about how he doesn't spend money on the cash he makes uh to buy watches or things. He only spends money on the watches and clothes and things on the passive income."
Pending
By investing earned income into assets, one creates passive income streams that provide financial freedom, ensuring income even if unable to work.
"You take the earned income. You're working every single day. You take this income and you use as much of that as possible to invest into assets. the assets pay you live off of the assets because now those assets don't need you to go to work every single day to get paid. So if you break your leg and you can't get paid, you're not getting that earned income, but that active the the passive income from your assets still coming in. And now if that's the money you're living off of, you are free."
Pending
The strategy is to use earned income to acquire more assets, necessitating the creation of a personal financial system.
"Your earned income is just buying you more assets. And so how do you start that? Right? And and so this is where you have to kind of build some sort of system for yourself."
Unrated
A 'rule of five' suggests that if one cannot afford to buy five of an item, they cannot afford to buy one, serving as a financial prudence guideline.
"And the rule that I would always say is follow something like my rule of five. If you can't buy five of them, you can't afford one of them."
Pending
The 'rule of five' is illustrated: if unable to afford five $1,000 items, one cannot truly afford a single one, promoting financial caution.
"So, it's, you know, you want to buy a a $1,000 phone, you want to buy a $1,000 watch. Okay, fine. Can you buy five of them? And if you don't have the ability to buy five of them, if you can't afford to do that, then you can't afford one."
Unrated
Automating finances through a system ensures that money is consistently put to work, regardless of other circumstances.
"And then you want to create a system like a a system that automates your finances where now you have something going on with your money that is putting your money to work no matter what."
Correct
A 75/15/10 plan is proposed: for every dollar earned, a maximum of 75% can be spent, with a minimum of 15% invested and 10% saved.
"And so one of the easiest things you can create your own is to follow something like a 751510 plan. Which means that for every dollar you earn from now on. 75 is the maximum you can spend. 15 cents is the minimum you're investing and 10 cents is the minimum that you're saving."
Unrated
Savings should range from 3 to 12 months of expenses, with 3 months suitable for those with low liabilities and high risk tolerance, and 12 months for a more conservative approach.
"Now the savings is you want to build somewhere between 3 and 12 months worth of savings if you want to have that protection. Three months if you don't have a lot of liability, a lot of responsibilities, you don't have all that going on and you have a high risk tolerance. 12 months if you want to play it safe,"
Correct
The purpose of savings is for emergency protection, not for wealth accumulation, which is achieved through investments.
"The savings is not there to make you wealthy. It's there just to protect you against an emergency."
Correct
After building savings, all subsequent funds should be directed towards investments.
"Then what you do is you take the money, you put it into your investments, and now you just keep investing money."
Pending
The 75/15/10 investment/saving ratio should remain constant even as income grows significantly, ensuring continued prioritization of investment and saving.
"Now, what happens is as you grow your income, you don't change this ratio. So, if you go from $40,000 a year to $400,000 a year, you keep the same ratio and you're still investing first and then you keep saving your money."
Pending
The typical financial pattern involves earning, paying taxes, spending, and then not knowing where the money went, highlighting a lack of proactive financial management.
"The way that the finances look for the majority of people, is you make money, you pay taxes, you spend your money, and then you wonder where your money went."
Unrated
Wealthy individuals prioritize investing as much as possible after earning income, ideally deferring taxes legally, and then spending what remains.
"Uh but wealthy people are doing is you make money and then depending on how you make it either you pay taxes first or after. Ideally after because there are ways to do that legally but you make money and then you want to invest as much as possible and then you spend whatever's left."
Correct
The fundamental difference in financial strategy is that the wealthy invest first and spend leftovers, while the majority spend first and invest any remainder.
"So wealthy people invest and spend what's left while the majority of people spend and invest whatever's left."
Pending
A key question is how individuals can avoid equating their financial net worth with their personal self-worth.
"How does someone not make their net worth attached to their self-worth?"
Pending
Failure in a task does not define a person as a failure; it is a necessary part of the process towards achieving success, often requiring multiple failures.
"So when you fail at something, you don't become a failure as a person. You failed at a task. And in order to become successful at something, you have to fail at a lot of tasks."
Pending
It's crucial to recognize that failing at a task does not equate to being a personal failure; everyone experiences failures as part of their journey.
"And so the first thing you have to understand that about yourself is that just because something didn't work, just because you failed at something does not mean that you are a failure. Maybe you failed at a task. I failed at a ton of things. I'm sure you have too."
Pending
Net worth is described as a 'worthless' paper number, as it is highly volatile (e.g., a million-dollar net worth in the stock market could drop to $400,000 overnight) and holds little intrinsic value on its own.
"And so now when it comes to net worth, if you want to be completely honest, your net worth is pretty useless. It's a worthless number. It means nothing. It means less than nothing because what is net worth? It's a paper number. If I have a million dollars net worth in the stock market today, tomorrow it could be worth 400,000."
Correct
Living based on net worth or spending according to it is dangerous, as net worth is not actual liquid income and can fluctuate, leading to a lifestyle beyond one's actual financial capacity.
"It doesn't if if you are valuing your life and even worse, if you are spending based off of your net worth, you're living a very dangerous life. And some people do do this because they say, 'Oh, I'm worth a million dollars. So, I'm going to go out and live a million dollar lifestyle. You don't have a million dollars. You're just worth a million dollars. You don't have income coming in, you're just worth this amount of money.'"
Correct
Living a lifestyle based on net worth often involves taking on significant debt, which can lead to financial ruin when markets decline.
"And so, you go and borrow a ton of money and you start living this million-dollar lifestyle. And then things go down and now you're the first one to lose your shirt."
Pending
Key takeaways: Failing at a task does not make you a failure and brings you closer to success; net worth is temporary and should not define you.
"So the thing that I want you to remember, it's first regarding the failure. You're not a failure. Uh just because you failed at a task does not mean you're a failure. It's actually a good thing you failed because that means you're one step closer to finding that success. And then second, regarding the actual net worth number, look, this is just temporary. Everything is temporary."
Pending
Building significant wealth requires the right mindset, learning, time, patience, and a sense of urgency; opportunity exists, especially in developed countries.
"And you have the opportunity to build something a lot bigger. You have to have the right mindset. And if you are here in America, you're in a first world country. You have the opportunity to do that. But you have to be willing to learn and be willing to give it time. So you have to be patient, but also impatient at the same time."
Unrated
Patience is necessary because 'get rich quick' schemes are typically scams that lead to financial loss.
"patient in the sense that you have to understand that get rich quick is majority of time a big scam. It doesn't work. Um it makes the people selling the get-richqu rich keep you broke."
Correct
While avoiding 'get rich quick' scams (requiring patience), one should be impatient in their drive, work ethic, and discipline, pushing forward relentlessly.
"Um it makes the people selling the get-richqu rich keep you broke. Uh so the first thing you got to understand is that but then second is you want to be impatient where it's going to fuel that drive, fuel that work ethic, fuel that discipline and you have to be willing to keep going."
Unrated
The speaker reflects on how predictions made about their future (like interviewing on a show or becoming a CEO) would have seemed impossible due to past familial and societal limitations imposed on them.
"I don't if you would have told me 15 years ago or 10 years ago, hey man, you're going to be interviewing with Lewis on this show. I would never thought that's possible. Like, you know, I grew up being told somebody like me can't do this. Somebody like, you know, I remember talking to my own family members that you can never be a CEO of a company. Somebody like you can't do that. You have no business background. You couldn't even get into business school."
Correct
The speaker now values being a company owner over a CEO, recognizing that owners hold more power, and emphasizes that 'anything is possible.'
"And um it's funny nowadays I'm like well there's a lot more value to being the owner of a company than the CEO of a company because the CEO is working for the owner but anything is possible"
Correct
Regardless of financial aspects, any career aspiration (singer, actor, entrepreneur, CEO) is achievable through belief and hard work.
"and you know even if you just ignore the financial side any you can do anything you want you want to be a singer you want to be an actor you want to be an entrepreneur you want to be a CEO you want to be whatever you want to do it is possible but you have to believe it and you have to be willing to put in that work"
Incorrect
The saying 'Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard' is considered profoundly true.
"Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard. It that is the truest saying that you can make"
Unrated
Examples from the music industry show that highly talented individuals lacking drive and work ethic often see their careers decline, contrasting with those who consistently apply effort.
"because I have so you know I work in I worked in the event planning space. I still know a lot of people in this place space space. I know a lot of people that manage singers big-time singers especially in the the Indian space and some of these people are incredibly talented with no drive, no work ethic and where are they going with their careers? They had this spike in the going down."
Correct
Individuals with average singing talent but consistent effort, quality production, and continuous improvement can achieve widespread success (millions of views).
"I know these other people that are average singers, but they're putting out songs day after day after day. I mean, if you heard them sing, it's like, you know, it's whatever. But you can produce it well, you can make the hooks, you can write cool lyrics, keep improving, and they keep putting out content, and they keep they keep improving every week. And it's like, dang, you got millions and millions and millions of views."
Pending