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We believe in using technology to improve lives and cater to diverse beauty needs. Introducing L'Oreal Paris beauty genius, our virtual personal beauty advisor. It offers advice and assistance wherever and whenever you need it. We also have a hair coloring product that mixes itself, making it easy to apply. Watch as I demonstrate how clean and simple it is.

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Speaker 0: Thank you for calling Pastor John's. We have a large one topping pizza for 7.99. No, this is Domino's Houston. Our price is 6.99. Are you kidding me? You called us? Wait, this is Tommy John's? Your pizza tastes like Papa's. You couldn't make it. You're a smart carpenter salesman.

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Elon is a techno enthusiast. Optimus can talk and even does sign language. Hey, Optimus! How's it going? Enjoying the party? What do you think of the new Cybercap? The Cybercap looks amazing! I'm trying to get a ride. Me too!

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I'm at an outside meeting and need you to deliver evidence to someone. Do you have a card? Yes, I do. Just give it to him. We want confirmation that he received it. Thank you. You're welcome. Have a great day. Thank you, you too.

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Hello, how can I help you today? Feel free to ask any questions or discuss any specific topics you'd like to know more about.

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Let's shave John's 366-day beard. The family watches as John gets a clean shave after winning a court case. John is grateful for his free face.

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I'm Cooper, a White House intern. I start with coffee, book nail appointments, and handle calls. The West Wing is prestigious. We've vaccinated 160 million Americans. I'm off to get a haircut. Let me know if you want more of these videos.

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My name is Michael Bennett. If you want your ballot mailed to your house, you can fill it out at the top. You can also pick it up on Thursday. I’m happy to help with that. Just let me know if you need assistance. If you want to hand in your ballot, I can take care of that for you. Would there be a line for this?

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During the tour, your picture will be taken and can be viewed and bought later at the gift shop. Remember to smile for the cameras! Use promo code "That's Sureshcin" for a 10% discount on your entire purchase.

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I'm John Gray from the FBI. Is Miss Anderson available? No, she's not. I wanted to discuss the Baton Rouge case with her. Can I schedule a meeting to come back and talk to her?

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Hello, it's nice to see you again. I'm happy to do that. Let's get started.

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Hello. Hey, guys. How are you? See you. How are you doing? Good. Let's go.

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Perfection takes time, effort, and hard work. But what if there was an easier way? Imagine an AI handling all your business calls, eliminating four-hour hold times, offshore call centers with poor attitudes, and endless phone menus. Your customers deserve better. Let's make your calls perfect. Call us at (415) 480-0000 and let's discuss how we can help. Visit bland.com.

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Mario: Let's start with Venezuela. Do you think this is a strategy by Trump? Larry: I saw something similar back in 1988. The CIA was involved with trying to provoke Manuel Noriega into taking some action, so we could say we had to respond to set the stage for a military invasion, which I believe that in 2018, Donald Trump signed a finding authorizing a covert CIA action to get rid of Maduro. That attempt failed. And now the objective is to get control of the oil. That's the number one priority, with an eye toward the risk of a renewed Iran conflict and the prospect of shutdown of the Persian Gulf, and the need to have an alternative supplier. Ukraine defeating Russia was the plan, and Russia’s military is now around 1,500,000. Mario: What’s your initial reaction to Venezuela? I talked to John Kuriaki who said to read naval movements to gauge what the military plans. The buildup on the coast of Venezuela is significant. They’ve got 14, 12 warships, including the Gerald Ford. Do you think they are bluffing or this is a Trump strategy? Larry: It could be a bluff. I saw something similar in 1988. I was in the Central America branch, and the CIA’s analytical thrust was to provoke Noriega into taking action to justify a response and invasion. That happened in 1988. But that time there were US bases in Panama; Quarry Heights was full. Southern Command was there. Now Southern Command has moved to Miami, just near Southcom. Another issue: within the military, the concept of supported and supporting commands means the special operations command (SOCOM) would normally be the supporting commander, but here Southern Command would be subordinate to SOCOM, which is problematic because SOCOM cannot fight a conventional war. Delta Force, SEAL Team Six, and others are light infantry for raids, not mass warfare. So launching shells or sending ground forces won’t solve Venezuela; terrain is rugged and favors ambushes. If US troops ashore, body bags would likely exceed those from Iraq and Afghanistan. Venezuelans will fight, and insurgents from Brazil and Colombia could join. Decapitation strikes against Maduro could provoke an insurgency that the US would struggle to pacify. Mario: Could we see a decapitation strike like Israel against Hezbollah and Iran? Larry: Decapitating Maduro would still leave loyalists and other actors with weapons; an insurgency could erupt, and the US would be unable to pacify it. The real objective here is unclear. The State Department’s INL/INSCR programs have long documented Venezuela as a transit point for drugs; Trump claimed fentanyl is the issue, but most cocaine also goes to Europe. The 2018 Trump era mentioned the Trendy Aragua as a pretext to justify covert actions; I believe Trump signed a finding authorizing a CIA operation to remove Maduro, leading to Guaidó, but that failed. The broader agenda appears to be regaining oil influence and countering Russia, China, and Iran’s influence in Venezuela. Mario: Elaborate the agenda and strategy behind these strikes on boats out of Venezuela and Trump’s public acknowledgement of a CIA covert operation. What’s the strategy and intention? Larry: The objective is to restore oil control in Venezuela and reduce adversary influence. Maduro once aligned with the CIA, and Chavez/Maduro have maintained cordial relations with Moscow and Beijing. The US aims to curtail BRICS and reduce Venezuelan ties to Russia, China, and Iran, potentially moving Venezuela away from the dollar-based system. The theory that this is a message to Putin circulates, but if that were the aim, it’s a poor strategy given the broader geopolitical dynamics in Syria, Iran, and the Palestinian-Israeli arena. The US previously overpromised in the Red Sea and failed to secure freedom of navigation, signaling limited military capacity for large-scale campaigns. The objective of any Venezuela action must be concrete, otherwise it risks entanglement in an insurgency. Mario: Turning to general foreign policy under Trump. What about the national security strategy? Europe’s criticisms, and Trump’s approach to Ukraine—Witkoff and Kushner meeting Putin? Larry: The 2025 national security strategy signals change, but these documents are not blueprints; they’re guidelines. Europe is being asked to step up, while the US distances itself, arguing Europe’s resources and industrial capacity have diminished while Russia and China shift. Europe’s censorship and defense spending are under scrutiny. The US–UK intelligence relationship still lingers, but overall the West’s ability to project force is questioned. Russia and China’s relationship is deep and mutually reinforcing; the Rand Corporation’s earlier ideas that Ukraine would defeat Russia to force Moscow to join the West have not materialized. Ukraine’s fight has forced Russia to mobilize and shift front lines; casualty counts are contested, but Russia’s front has expanded with a larger force and higher attrition. Mario: What about Ukraine negotiations and Putin’s terms? Larry: Putin’s terms (as stated on 06/14/2024) are: Crimea, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, Donetsk, and Luhansk permanently part of Russia; Ukraine must withdraw forces from those territories before negotiations begin. An election must be held in Ukraine with a legitimately elected president, potentially replacing Zelenskyy, and Russia would then talk to Ukraine. Russia’s stance treats these territories as non-negotiable; freezing lines is not acceptable to Russia. If negotiations fail, Russia is likely to maintain control over large parts of Donbas and southern Ukraine, potentially extending into Kharkiv and Odessa. Western military support is insufficient in scale to match Russia’s production; Russia’s oil revenue remains a significant portion of GDP, and the global south is pivoting toward BRICS, with Modi’s meeting signaling stronger ties with Russia and China. The strategic trend is a shift away from Western dominance toward a multipolar order. Mario: Larry, appreciate your time. Larry: Pleasure as always, Mario.

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Introducing Anita, your virtual team of AI assistants for small businesses. Anita offers a marketing assistant that drives customer growth through AI-powered advertising on Facebook, Instagram, and Google. It also provides services like creating stunning business websites and engaging social media content. The client service assistant enhances customer service with a booking system, online payments, and customer review management. And with the business assistant, powered by cutting-edge chat GPT, you can gain valuable insights and get answers to your business questions. No need for a rocket science degree – try it for free and supercharge your business with AI.

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From 10 am to 4 pm, anyone who needs their first or second vaccine dose can come here. Let's get vaccinated! Look at the excitement and emotion. Oh my God. Oh.

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This is Morgan Sherwin and Sam Sururi, our team members who assist with service and sales.

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We will review the new client slide deck this afternoon. Brian, did you get a haircut during work hours? Yes, I did. My hair grows during work hours, so I don't see the issue. Are you guys joking? No.

The Koerner Office

How to Build a Chat GPT Wrapper (Real Success Story)
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The episode features a candid interview with the creator of Hey Rosie, a voice-based AI receptionist wrapper built on top of existing AI technology. The guest explains that Rosie answers and triages business phone calls for small and local service companies, offering a cheaper, more capable alternative to voicemail and traditional answering services. The core appeal is high contact conversion, better memory, and a scalable, self-serve model that sidesteps heavy enterprise sales. The conversation delves into why the founder pursued a wrapper business at the app layer rather than selling to developers or pursuing enterprise deals. The host emphasizes the market potential, the pain of missed calls for small operators, and the shift from “answering service” to an AI receptionist. The guest notes Rosie’s ability to learn, route, transfer, and even offer text-message handoffs, all with fast latency improvements. Pricing, unit economics, and product strategy are thoroughly explored. Rosie currently charges by plan levels with minutes-based pricing as a transitional binding, then moves toward feature-based differentiation such as appointment setting, live transfers, spam detection, and custom training. The guest explains that per-minute pricing is economically challenging to sustain and highlights the goal of moving away from minutes to value-driven packages for different customer sizes. There’s also discussion about market fit and customer acquisition. Rosie’s early traction comes from broad, non-niche outreach via social ads, with a focus on home services and other local small businesses where phone contact remains pivotal. The host and guest debate broad versus niche targeting in AI wrappers, and they share actionable ideas for aspiring wrappers, such as leveraging existing infrastructure, embedding real-time demos, and emphasizing problem-first selling rather than tech fascination. The episode closes with live product exploration and a demonstration of Rosie on a Pest Busters example, illustrating how the agent is configured from a Google Business Profile and a company website in minutes. The conversation wraps with practical advice, a discount code for listeners, and a reminder that the wrapper strategy can unlock large markets when the user experience feels simple, reliable, and genuinely solves a painful problem.

The Koerner Office

How To Get Paid $2,500 + Monthly Checks for "Drag & Drop" AI Employees
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In this episode, the host introduces Danny, a hands-on entrepreneur who built a business around AI-powered voice agents for local services. The concept is simple and scalable: replace missed calls and tedious phone Q&As with an AI agent that answers questions, collects information, and presents a booking link without slowing the business owner. Danny shows how a practical tool can generate recurring revenue, with upfront fees of $2,500 to $5,000 and ongoing maintenance in the hundreds each month. The audience learns how a busy barber can benefit from a virtual receptionist that handles scheduling, FAQs, and lead capture while the stylist stays focused on the craft. The conversation stresses that value lies not only in technology, but in the sales strategy, client selection, and the ability to show a finished product to prospects. The episode touches on market windows for new tech, drawing a parallel to past “Yelp moments” and noting opportunities endure longer when you prove tangible results. Danny explains testing ideas with real clients, often offering free services to prove impact and generate referrals, then moving toward scalable pricing as the client base grows. The host emphasizes a practical mindset for AI entrepreneurship: start fast, solve current problems, and let proof-of-work persuade future customers while delivering measurable improvements for small businesses. The dialogue covers deployment mechanics, including how GoHighLevel integrates with voice agents, how transcripts guide conversations, and how automation can trigger bookings or follow-ups. They discuss routing calls, missed calls, and the difference between casual conversations and professional onboarding. They stress showing rather than telling—live demos, personalized mockups, and KPI dashboards that reveal impact. The exchange also addresses client education, pricing strategy, and balancing high-ticket upfront work with ongoing support to build long-term relationships. Finally, the episode reflects on scaling through a lean, problem-centered approach. Danny urges starting with existing networks, offering free initial work to demonstrate value, and using referrals to grow the roster. The discussion looks ahead to expanding from barbers to other small-service businesses and creating dashboards that translate metrics into decisions. The takeaway is a practical, speed-focused blueprint: identify a real pain point, build a proof of concept, and let customer outcomes drive pricing, packaging, and growth.

Coldfusion

Google Duplex A.I. - How Does it Work?
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Google Duplex is an extension of Google Assistant that can make phone calls to schedule appointments. It utilizes a deep neural network built on WaveNet technology, allowing it to engage in realistic conversations. Duplex has been trained specifically for booking and inquiries, not general conversation. The public reaction has been mixed, with concerns about transparency. Duplex uses recurrent neural networks to understand context and handle interruptions. While it has passed a narrow version of the Turing test, its future applications remain uncertain. Overall, Duplex represents a significant advancement in AI technology.

The Koerner Office

Stop Guessing. Here’s How to Build What People Will Actually Pay For
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Most people start a business with an 'if I build it, they will come' mindset, which rarely works. The host shows how to decide what to build by polling a target audience and then building it live with AI guidance, even without coding. Using Pikfu, he surveys business owners to learn which website features they would pay for, highlighting appointment booking as the top priority and revealing data-driven priorities for rapid development. He experiments with a vibe- coding tool to generate a booking widget for dog groomers, then refines prompts with ChatGPT to sharpen the product spec. The lesson: move fast from poll to prototype to sale, sometimes within hours. Bundling core features rather than selling standalones matters, and perception of complexity can drive willingness to pay. The takeaway is clear: ask, build, test, and launch with AI assistance to bring real ideas to market quickly.

The Koerner Office

I Built an AI Agent in 5 Minutes (And Sold It Live)
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A creator demonstrates how to rapidly build and deploy an AI voice agent for small businesses, focusing on ringless voicemail drops as a sales channel and using drag‑and‑drop tools to minimize setup time. The host walks through selecting industries, scraping local leads, and validating phone numbers, while highlighting practical constraints like call throughput, lead quality, and the importance of multi‑touch outreach for marketing campaigns. The live workflow emphasizes quickly turning scraped data into actionable campaigns, choosing a target niche such as pool services or tree trimming, and testing a voicemail message crafted to engage business owners who may be receptive to AI automation. Throughout, the emphasis remains on feasibility, cost, and real‑world results over hype. The episode then shifts to building the actual AI voice agent, detailing a step‑by‑step setup in a high‑level platform, including creating a knowledge base from a business website and configuring voice responses, scheduling, and human handoffs. The presenter demonstrates how to train the agent with a simple prompt, connect a real business URL for knowledge extraction, and test live calls, noting tradeoffs between voice naturalness, speed, and reliability. The narrative reinforces that the technology is accessible, affordable, and capable of producing tangible warm leads, while acknowledging variability in sales outcomes and the learning curve for deploying such agents in different service niches. In closing, the host points viewers toward a trial path and a marketplace option to extend the approach to other businesses, underscoring that the core insight is turning programmable AI into a scalable, value‑adding service for local contractors.

This Past Weekend

Jeff Wittek | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #354
Guests: Jeff Wittek
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Jeff Wittek, a barber turned entrepreneur and YouTube personality, joins Theo Von for a sprawling chat about his hard‑luck path, sobriety, and the grind of building a public life. He grew up around New Jersey and New York, cutting hair in barber shops before chasing entertainment and business ventures across the country. He left for Miami Beach at eighteen, and his early years were marked by heavy drinking; he says he is sober now and that he keeps showing up for recovery work. He describes his process candidly, saying, "right now I'm on my fourth step," recounting a relapse, and explaining that he has tried ketamine therapy while continuing to attend meetings and work with sponsors. The talk then explores the arc of his career: from the barber shop to a multi‑platform presence, two shows, and a growing brand. He emphasizes how vulnerability has become part of his value, noting that a producer had already seen him cry on a documentary and that the audience looks for more than laughs. They discuss the day‑to‑day of creating content, the thrill of collaboration, and the tension of keeping up with audiences as projects multiply. Humor and branding intersect in Jeff’s use of persona, including his famous mullet and a wild haircut he designed to fuel a skydiving goal. He explains that he cut his hair that way specifically to jump out of a plane, and that the look helps him inhabit a larger entertainer mindset—even when the week is rough. The mullet becomes a recognizable symbol as he describes early life in New Jersey, wrestling culture, and the kinds of legends you meet in barber shops. The conversation also threads through family, sobriety, and personal life. Jeff opens up about the dog life—his 15‑year‑old French bulldog who is effectively off the books—and about conversations with his parents. They joke about the realities of aging, health, and the kinds of routines that keep him grounded, including attempts to balance caffeine, sugar, and recovery. A long discussion about success follows, with a listener question about what counts as being successful. They reference John Wooden’s idea that success is peace of mind that comes from knowing you made the effort to become the best you were capable of becoming, and they wrestle with the notion that money or fame may not deliver lasting happiness. The pair also riff about addiction, sobriety, and the ongoing challenge of resetting after difficult days, including a trip into the boxing/MMA world, dream matchups, and the crossover between content creation and sport. Near the end, Jeff hints at future projects: a mobile barber van, hair products, and collaborations with other creators. The interview weaves in the realities of performing live, the obligations of a team of twenty‑somethings he works with, and the constant aim of keeping things fresh while staying true to who he is. It ends with mutual appreciation, plans to cut each other’s hair, and a sense that this conversation was a snapshot of a life spent chasing variety, learning to reset, and staying connected to the audience that follows every step.

The Koerner Office

How to Start a $10k/Month Sleep Consulting Business with $0
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Jane Havens recounts building a sleep consulting business from a home-based start, turning a personal skill into a lucrative career that now earns her 8,000 to 12,000 per month while working with families virtually. Her journey began as a stay-at-home mom who solved her child’s sleep issues, then certified to formalize the skill. The story emphasizes transformation, family life, and the appeal of helping others while keeping work flexible. She details certification considerations, costs, and duration, noting there is no governing body for sleep consulting but that formal training improves coaching, plans, and communication. She paid roughly $2,200 to $2,400 and finished in four to five weeks, participating in a community rather than a rigid cohort. This section also covers how experience grows confidence, sets boundaries with friends, and ethically converts informal help into paid services. Jane outlines her two main offerings: a virtual two-week sleep consultation at $750 and a $145 30-minute “Ask Me Anything” session. She highlights low overhead, time-based work, and highly repeatable processes, with a typical engagement requiring about an hour and a half of direct work and flexible text support. Referrals from satisfied clients drive most business, reinforced by a goal of training others to become sleep consultants. She discusses margins, scale, and the potential for a franchise-like model, stressing that personal branding and trusted relationships fuel growth more than any brand name. The episode closes with reflections on success benchmarks, the importance of client commitment, and the evolving landscape of sleep coaching as a scalable, heart-centered service. Havens reinforces that while some earn substantial monthly incomes, meaningful impact on families’ lives remains the core driver, and she envisions future expansion through training programs and broader reach while maintaining a personal, high-quality service.
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