00:06
Did you watch the Tinder Swither?
00:09
No. But I saw your picture with it. So what's the what's the, like, the the Okay. So you guys don't? Okay. So here's here's what happened. It's it's kind of an amazing thing.
00:18
There's a guy. So the document it's a documentary
00:21
about this guy who goes on Tinder and his Tinder profile looks like you know, he's kinda like a normal ish looking guy, but he's, like, clearly living a cool lifestyle, like lots of travel
00:32
in different climates.
00:33
Kind of it wearing very nice clothes. That's his profile. Alright. So girls swipe right on him, and then start chatting with him. And he he basically what he ended up doing was he ended up conning
00:43
women out of money. And it was like a ponzi scheme. So what he would do is he would meet a woman on Tinder, take her out on a date, kind of wine and diner make it look like he's this baller of a guy.
00:54
And he, you know, it's just like
00:57
like a prince out of a fairy tale. He just loves her, the average looking girl, whose average job, just from my average city. And then all of a sudden, he's like, come on my private jet and come do this with me and they go together. And there, she's like, oh my god. It's all happy. Thing. I am that princess that he picked that he cares for. And so he he starts talking to him and his backstory is that he
01:18
his dad owns a diamond company, and he's the son of a billionaire. And if you Google, you see that this guy's the son of a billionaire. So he kind of like had created this profile around that. And,
01:29
and then, you know, sure enough, a month in,
01:32
he's like,
01:34
hey, you know, like, he he's he's oh, you know, he sends a picture of his body. He's always with a bodyguard. He's like, my bodyguard got attacked.
01:40
Oh my god. And then she's like, oh my god. Is he okay? He's like, yeah. But, you know, they're telling me, I can't use my credit cards anymore because they're tracking my location.
01:47
You know, like, these are our enemies for our company. The Diamond Business is a ruthless business.
01:51
And he's like, can I borrow your credit card for the time being while I,
01:56
you know, because I can't use mine yet? And she's like, oh, okay. And he's like, cool. Just make sure you get your limits raised because, like, I have business meetings and all this stuff. So these women end up going, like, a hundred fifty, two hundred thousand dollars in debt. As he racks up credit card debt, then he's like, hey, go get a quick loan and send me the money. I need it because, you know, my enemies are after me. And he's like, my enemies are after me. And so you the documentaries of the first half of the documentaries is women talking about how they fell in love, and the second half is, like, the how they got conned, basically. And he's like a ponzi scheme. So he's well, he'd fall in love with one woman. Alright. He'd get them to fall in love with him, get them to start giving him money and credit cards. He'd be using that to wine and dine the next woman. And then he would be doing this with multiple women at once, telling them all the same things, and then he was living this, like, extravagant lifestyle on all these women's dime. And,
02:47
and then, you know, so that's that, okay, that's the core of the movie. Quick reaction to that, then I'm gonna tell you some other stuff. Well, what happened to him? So how does this end? It ends with he gets exposed. So the women are like, oh my god. You know, they they go to the credit card company. They're like, look, I have to be honest. Like,
03:02
my kind of boyfriend, you know, or I don't know what's going on. This is the guy he's tricking me and, like, they he's there. Can we see a picture of the guy? And he she shows a picture on her phone and the the two, like, agents from, like, Amex or whatever, just look at each other, like, it's him. And then the she's like, what? It's like, we've been after this guy for years. He does this with tons of women. They're like, there's other women he's doing this too. And so it's like they feel cheated on plus conned. And,
03:26
And so he but technically, what happens is is he breaking the law? He's not breaking the law. They are giving him money they're sending him money willingly, and they are,
03:36
you know, they're giving him their credit card, and they're calling the credit card company and saying, no, no, it's me. Can you please raise my I'm traveling. I'm in I'm in the I'm in a visa right now. And so they're like, you know, you're in a kind of a sticky spot. You can't really say he stole it. You clearly gave it to him. In fact, you kinda committed fraud, but, like, well, whatever, we'll leave that aside. But, like, yeah, you do owe this money. Like, this is not
03:58
This is not, you know, a stolen credit card. And so,
04:02
anyways, he ends up getting a fifteen month sentence for not even for this. It's for like something else that he did, like, associated with this.
04:11
He serves five months, gets off free. He's out there living. He's got a new model girlfriend. He lives somewhere else.
04:17
The girls kind of like exposed him in the press because they were like, okay. Look. Law enforcement's not doing anything or it's gonna take too long. He's gonna keep doing this in the meantime. They go to the Norwegian press where they're from, and they they they kind of, like, expose it. The Netflix turns it into a documentary.
04:31
And, and so the guy's still out there
04:34
One of the things in the movie is he goes to a plastic surgeon and he's like, I want my eyes, cheekbones, chin, mouth, all restructured. The and this guy's like, I'm not gonna do this. Only a criminal would want this surgery.
04:45
And so he's like trying to change his face so he could keep it going, but he can't change his face. And now he's like, you know, kinda like public enemy number one. But a lot of people who watch this are like, dude, these girls are stupid. You yeah. You were just with him for the money, and then he called you for the money. You got what you deserved. So the the girls are getting a ton of flack for it. That's
05:02
that's
05:03
that's dumb.
05:05
But I'm just thinking what waste of talent by this guy?
05:08
Yeah. That's pretty amazing. It's like energy. It's like a it's like a, you know, what's funny is, like, Leonardo
05:14
played the same character and catch me if if you can, and it was awesome. He's became like a hero. But when I see this guy, I wanna punch him in the face. Yeah. Exactly. He that was the problem. It was a documentary and stuff and movie about the con itself where you sort of fall in love with this smooth guy. Yeah. If if a different if if if, like, a lovable if, like, if, like, Matt Damon played him, I would be all about it.
05:36
But, you gotta watch the thing. It's super punchable face this guy.
05:41
Yeah. And the memes are just amazing.
05:44
Around. Well, I saw the meme with you, with your face on it. Yeah. Yeah. Yes. I had somebody I was like, hey, photoshopped my head onto, onto this photo where it looks like I'm with the guy. And I just tweeted out, like, oh, I'm with my sister's new boyfriend. Like
05:57
Is that American?
05:58
No. This guy is is Israeli.
06:01
Dude, screwed this guy, man. I I, I'm happy they made a documentary about him. How did he get all the,
06:06
so he's in a private jet in a bunch of these pictures? How did he get that?
06:10
Because he's using the previous woman's money to fund his his lifestyle. So he would fly private. Yeah. Yeah. So he's actually flying private. I don't know if all the time, but at least some of the time. And, it was just really wild. In fact, a lot of the numbers don't make sense. Like, he must have been running this on, like, tons of women at once to fund this lifestyle because these, like, the Jets and the stuff that he was doing, like, okay. He would call this woman out of eighty grand, but eighty grand, it funds, like, one month of this lifestyle. You know, like, that's not very long. So he must have had a lot of people at the same time or the doc documentary's a little inaccurate. I don't know. But How much money did he get?
06:43
They said that he had conned women out of millions of dollars, over over time.
06:47
They didn't say exactly how much. They don't know, you know, how much of it was there. But but I I just feel like you did this all wrong. Like, if you're gonna do all this effort,
06:56
You gotta be more intelligent. Right? Like, okay. What could he have done?
07:01
Could've just married Rich could have just seemed rich, married rich, divorced, took half. Right? Like, that that would have worked.
07:08
Wait. Wait. You know, put more wood behind fewer arrows here. And he could have just gone one very wealthy person. If he really wanted to do this, that's my first critique of of him.
07:16
My second critique of him is
07:20
bro, all this money
07:21
to just party, partying's exhausting. Like, about he just wanted to fly private and go to these clubs and do table service. Like,
07:28
you know,
07:29
you couldn't pay me to do that. I don't I don't even want travel. You gotta diversify your assets, dog. Yeah. It should've it should've. Own own some Like, buy something, buy buy a home. Do do you see something with this money? You you just blew all the money on overpriced, you know, like, bottle service at the club? Like, wow. Alright. Ask critique number too.
07:48
Number three.
07:51
Go b to b, bro. Corporate
07:53
Swindling. Would it works way better. So, you know, he could have been, like, you you heard about the guy who just started sending invoices to Microsoft and Apple and stuff. It just got paid, like, millions of dollars. Just send focus. It he was just sending an invoice to accounts payable or whatever.
08:07
And, and then they would just pay some of the invoices.
08:10
Yeah. But he just did, like, like, a p at Microsoft dot Yeah. And he was like, he's like, hey, you know, this is for the, blah, blah, blah. And, like, and then they went back and they're like, what the hell is this? Who is this vendor that we've paid one point one million dollars to this year? Like, nobody knows who this is. I don't think that's illegal either.
08:25
I think it is because he was, like, you know, well, whatever. They were going back after him these companies a lot of money. So that's the downside of going b to b. I feel like there could have been a b to b way of doing this.
08:35
Should have actually just started a diamond company. Could've made a lot more money. If you're this good at getting women's emotions tied up in your your lifestyle,
08:43
just actually sell the diamonds.
08:45
It would have worked.
08:48
Use their money to fund a diamond company that actually could have worked. This guy needs to be needs to be in the Facebook ad manager tender. Yeah. That's my and that's my critique of this guy. I'm looking at him now. The all those these women who he scammed, it like, a lot of them look like models, Like, he was killing it. Also, like, you forgot the other option, which is, like, just marry one of these ladies. If they're rich enough to, like, if they're these beautiful women who can wire them two hundred k, like, I don't know, man, bro. Maybe gotta keep her. Well, the in this case, he's like, he was telling him, like, go take, like, a kind of like a collateralized loan or a payday loan and, like, super high. Just don't worry. He's like, I'm gonna wire your money back in four days. And then he would, like, not wire them back, and then they'd be like, hey. Did you wire the money? He's like, oh, sorry. They are like, the bank was closed. Okay. And then he would, like, show them a statement. He'd be like, oh, I sent it. Should arrive in a couple days.
09:33
She's like, hey. It hasn't arrived yet. What's going on? Like, their interest is building up on this, like, flash loan you had me take. He's like, oh my god. Let me call the bank. Another two days ago by, he's like, called the bank. They said this thing got frozen. I gotta I gotta deal with this. I'm so sorry here.
09:46
Know, I'm gonna send you one of my watches. In the meantime, you could just sell it. This watch is worth a hundred thousand dollars. Sent up a fake watch. And you would just buy time doing that. It's like, these women didn't have the money, but, like, I think he could he could have totally
09:57
gone for a richer woman
09:59
and then been like, you know what, baby, like, I love you. I'm not gonna make you sign a prenup. You know me. I'm a billionaire. I come from this lineage, but I'm not my dad says sign a prenup. I'm not gonna do it. And then she would feel a little bit of pressure and be like, Okay. I guess I can't really ask him for a peanut. Anyways, this guy's richer than me. Alright. I guess I also won't. That would have been a a more effective con. If this guy were in jail, do you think he'd be popular or hated?
10:24
I think popular, sadly. You think popular? I think I think popular. I could see going either way, man. I could see his I could see his going either way. I think, like Did he swindler in prison? Would he, like alright. So Bernie Madoff, I heard in prison was like a god. Which I get. I get that. You know, like, he could teach people how to, like, corner, like, the chocolate or the chocolate, hot chocolate market, like, in prison. Like, he could, like, you know, or he could, like, you know, dominate the commentary and then get, like, teach you about markets. I get that. And also there were it wasn't a violent crime, so no children or women would hurt. Like this guy, is he I would see this guy being unpopular.
10:59
I don't know. That's a good He's got kind of like a douche bag or a to him. So that's the problem. That's that's where he's gonna get in trouble. But,
11:06
Both the Swindler, the Swindler would do well in in prison. This is a good place to be. I guess I'll watch it. How many episodes was it? He's not in prison. He's out and about. He's he's living a nice life right now. Screw this guy, man. Any salt a couple million dollars?
11:18
Yeah. I think I think about I think this documentary is good Oh, that's fair. I'm okay. You're not serving time, and you have this documentation. Well, aren't you? Our buddy, Jack, butcher pointed something out. That was like, oh, wait a minute. That's true. He's Netflix is gonna make a lot of money off this documentary. Pay off these women's debts. They have like a go fund me going. It's like, yo, Netflix, you need to pay off this woman's two hundred thousand dollar debt. That's true. You you did well on this documentary. So that's the, that's the real call out here. Netflix
11:42
cancel Netflix if they don't pay off these women's debts.
11:46
That's the no brainer. You don't think they're going to? The well, nobody said anything. These women are doing interviews everywhere. There's a go fund me out there. I feel like I feel like they could have said or they're just, you know, swindling people. One good thing that, you know, we didn't make a lot of money off this, but Netflix actually generously did agree to pay off the debt. You know,
12:02
blah, blah, blah. That I feel like that story should have come out if they did it. If they didn't, then fire your either fire your PR person Netflix
12:09
or
12:10
Pay off this pay these debts.
00:00 12:25