字幕列表 影片播放 列印所有字幕 列印翻譯字幕 列印英文字幕 - Welcome to Larry King Now, -歡迎來到莱瑞・金專訪 our special guest is Gary Vaynerchuk, 我們今天的特別來賓 是 加里·维纳查克, the self-proclaimed hustler, 自稱奮鬥者的他, is a digital media mogul, author, web show host, 是個數位媒體大師 作家,網路秀主持人, and venture capitalist among many other things. 但最重要的是,他是位有名的創投 As the CEO and co-founder of VaynerMedia, 身為范納媒體的執行長和創辦人 Gary hosts the hugely popular YouTube show, 加里也是主持了一個很有名的YouTube秀 #AskGaryVee. #请教加里·威秀 And has penned three New York Times best selling books. 也寫了3本紐約時報暢銷書 Gary has been named to Fortune Magazine's 40 Under 40 list, 加里也被財富雜誌名為40歲以下40強 of the most influential business leaders, 最具有影響力的商業領導人 and holds the number one ranking 也穩坐了福布斯 on Forbes top 40 social selling market masters. 前40大 社群媒體銷售大師的冠軍 His newest book, #AskGaryVee, is available now. 他的新書, #請教加里威, 也剛上架了 How did this all start, you, wine? 這一切是如何開始的,你是怎麼開始的, 葡萄酒? (laughs) (笑) What, what happened with you? 為什麼, 到底發生了什麼事 ? - What happened with me is, - 事情是這樣子的, I had the great benefit of being an immigrant. 我有個很強大的優勢那就是我是移民到美國的 I was born in Belarus, in the former Soviet Union. 我出生於白俄羅斯,是之前蘇聯的一份子 - [Larry] My mother was from Belarus. - [萊瑞] 我媽媽也來自那 - I didn't know that. - 真的嗎?我之前沒聽說過 - Minsk I think. - 明斯克吧,如果我沒記錯的話 - Yeah, I was born 40 minutes from Minsk. - 嗯, 離我的家鄉應該有40分鐘的車程 And came to the states in '78, 然後我在78年的時候來到了美國 when they let some Jews out of there. 在蘇聯釋出一些猶太人的時候 And, we set up in Queens. 然後,我們定居在王后區 And my parents lived the American dream, 我的父母就開始了他們的美國夢 they worked very hard. 他們很努力的工作 My dad was a stock boy in a liquor store 我爸當時是在克拉克,新澤西州 in Clark, New Jersey. 一家酒庫當搬貨員 And eventually became the manager of that store, 但是在他努力工作下他最終成為了那家店的管理員 and eventually saved up enough money 然後最後存夠了錢 to buy a store in Springfield, New Jersey. 斯普林菲爾德,新澤西州那邊買下了一家酒庫 I was lemonade stands, baseball cards, real hustler kid, 我當時小的時候就懂得賣檸檬汁,棒球卡賺錢了, 我小時候就很拼了 Blow Pops, anything to make a buck. 我連吹彈糖都賣了, 我小時後為了賺錢什麼都賣了 And at 14, I got dragged into the store. 但是在我14歲的時候,我被拖到了我爸的酒庫 You know, oldest son, immigrant family. 你懂得,身為一個移民家庭的長子 I always tell people, Larry, 萊瑞啊,我常告訴人們 that I lived their grandparent's life 我和他們相比 more than theirs, right? 我過的比較像他們爺爺的生活,對吧? I'm couple generations behind most. 我覺得我落後多了 I did it in the 70's, and 80's, and 90's, 我在70年代, 80年代 和 90年代所做的事, when most people did in the 30's, 40's, and 50's. 是多數人在30年代, 40年代和50年代所做的事 - You're a legal immigrant? - 你是合法移民到這的嗎? - I am, thank God. - 感謝上天,我是. - [Larry] Okay. - [萊瑞] 好的 - Otherwise I probably wouldn't do the show-- - 如果我不是的話,我應該不會有那個膽子上今天的節目— - Donald? - 唐納? Okay. (laughs) 好吧 (笑) - And, I fell in love with people collecting wine - 然後,我喜歡上人們竟然在收集紅酒的這個想法 when I was 17, 當我在17歲時, because I was into collecting sports cards. 因為我當時對收集棒球卡擁有很大的熱誠 That was my connection point. 那是我的銜接點 I wanted-- 我想做的是— - Collecting? - Collecting. - 收集? - 收集 I wanted to build 4,000 wine shops. 我想做的是開4000家酒庫. That was, I was gonna build a Toys "R" Us of wine, 我之前的想法是,我想要建立葡萄酒界的Toys "R" Us sell the franchise, buy the New York Jets. 把這個連鎖給賣了, 然後買下紐約噴氣機 這支球隊 That's what the plan was. 那是我原先的計劃 Heard the internet my freshman year of college, 在我大一的時候聽到了網路的聲音 heard that sound, 我聽見了那個聲音 cuh, cuh, chee, cuh. cuh, cuh, chee, cuh. Knew that it was special. 當時我就知道它的特別 And in 1996, I launched one of the first 然後在1996年, 我推出了全美國 e-commerce wine businesses in America. 首幾家的葡萄酒電商 Called WineLibrary.com. 叫做 葡萄酒文庫.com. Took over my dad's business, 從我爸那接手了家庭企業, kind of running it day to day in 1998, 然後1998年每天都專心的經營 alongside with him. 在我老爸的身旁 And from '98 to 2003, helped grow that business 然後從 98年 到 2003年, 我把我們的家族企業的營收 from a three to a $60 million business. 從300萬美元增加到6000萬美元 That became the foundation. 那成為了我一切的基礎 Built that on e-commerce, email marketing, 我是透過電商,電子報行銷 banner advertising, Google AdWords, 橫幅廣告 Google AdWords建立起我的基礎 things that the marketing world didn't believe yet. .這些都是當年行銷員不相信的行銷武器 And then, YouTube came out. 然後 YouTube 出來了 And I started a wine show four months after YouTube started. 然後我在Youtube開始營運之後的4個月開始了我的葡萄酒網路秀 And that-- 然後那是— - You are not a wine expert? - 你不是一位葡萄酒專家嗎? - I grew up a wine expert. - 我從小到大都是一位葡萄酒專家. You know, from 15 to 30, 你知道嗎, 從我 15歲 至 30歲, in those 15 years, my whole life was wine. 在這15年的期間 葡萄酒佔據了我的整個人生 - Were you always successful? - 你一直以來都是這麼成功的嗎? - In everything but school. - 除了學校以外 - Didn't do well in school? - 你在學校的表現不好嗎? - Poor. - 很差 Terrible actually. 爛透了 Punted it. 恨透了 You know, it was funny. 你知道嗎, 這有點好笑 And this is where I give my parents enormous credit, 然後這也是我把我多數成就歸功於我的父母 and I've, you know it's funny, 然後我也,這事情很好笑 it's a business book that says self-awareness. 因為這明明是本商業書,但是它上面寫著自我意識 My parents grew up, and I give them so much credit, 我爸媽成長於,也因為如此我非常敬佩我的父母 in a world where all their contemporaries, 他們當時的環境,他們每一個同僚 as, and you know this, 就, 你懂的, education's the way out for immigrants. 對於移民到外的人來說,教育是他們的出路 - Sure is. - 沒錯 - My mom recognized that I was a merchant, - 可是我媽媽知道我是個商人 an entrepreneur, a promoter. 創業家,推銷員 - So did school fail you, or you failed school? - 所以你覺得是教育制度辜負了你,還是你辜負了教育制度? - School failed me. - 教育制度辜負了我 School's failing entrepreneurs every single day. 教育制度每一天都在辜負著企業家 - Because? - 原因是? - Because it's not built for entrepreneurship. - 因為它們不是為了企業家而造的 It's built for workers. 它們是為了培訓員工而造的 You know, if, you're being taught to play within the lines. 你知道嗎, 如果 你只是被教育著如何跟著規則走的話 And there's nothing being taught that maps 而且現在教育體系教的事情肯本不可能被運用在 to the entrepreneurial market. 企業家的市場裡 As a matter of fact, my biggest cynicism when I sit across 事實是,我近期面對新世代的企業家時, an entrepreneur today, 我對於他們所抱有的懷疑是因為 is if they are too successful at school. 他們在學校過於成功 I probably look at Ivy League grads 我很有可能對那些來畢業於春藤盟校 (美國各8所名校) starting startups right now 想要創業的人們 with more of a negative light, 會帶有一些懷疑的眼光 than I do somebody who wasn't as good. 相對於那些不是從名校出生的人們來看的話 - Because? - 為什麼呢? - Because what I've learned - 因為我在過去5-7年 over the last five to seven years, 所學到的是 and by the way, in the last two, three years, 但是,在最近的2-3年, I've taken a step back on this, 我已經沒有那麼的偏激了 because there's too many entrepreneurial friends 因為我身邊有很多成功的企業家朋友 who've gone to great schools that have been successful, 他們也是從那些名校畢業出來的 so this is not a blanket statement. 所以這並不適用於全部人 But I will tell you that in a world of private schools, 可是我能告訴你的是,在那些人去私立學校的世界裡 in a world of mommy and daddy having a lot of connections, 在一個你老爸老媽有很多人脈的世界裡 that when you go from 12, 15, 18 years of that ecosystem, 當你在這個生態逗留了12,15,18年之後 and you go into a market, and you create an app, 你決定投入市場,開發一個手機應用程式 the market doesn't give a crap who your dad is. 市場才不在乎你老爸是誰 The market responds to your product, 市場只會對你的產品做出反應 and a lot of these kids have not been able 然後對於這一群的小孩呢,多數都是 to take the punch in the mouth 承受不了這個打擊的 that comes along with entrepreneurship. 這個隨著創業而來的打擊 - You're big on self-awareness, right? - 你很注重自我意識, 對吧? - [Gary] Huge. - [Gary] 非常 - How does one get to be self-aware? - 一個人要如何才能擁有自我意識 - I don't know. - 我不知道 - So how do you teach it? - 那你是怎麼傳授它的呢? - I don't know. - 我不知道 But I know it's damn important. 可是我知道他非常重要 And so, I know where I start and where I stop, Larry. 也因為如此, 我知道自己的界線在哪裡, 萊瑞. And I wish, 然後我也希望, honestly I'm curious to see 說實話 我很期待說 over the next 40, 50 years of my career, 在我接下來的40,50年的職業生涯 if I figure it out. 我是否可以找到一個答案 I think that, 我覺得 the things that I've been pushing people to do is, 我近期一直鼓勵人們做的事是 one, create an ecosystem where you make the people 第一,創造一個環節,好讓你身邊最親的 closest to you feel comfortable to tell you the truth. 人們可以感到自在的告訴你真相 So, one of the things I've been asking for people to do 所以 我常要求人們做的其中一件事是 is tell your mom and dad and spouse, 告訴你父母,配偶 best friend, coworker, 摯友和同僚們說, hey, tell me the truth. 嘿,老實告訴我 What am I good at, what am I bad at? 我的長處是什麼? 我的短處是什麼? And spend a month or two to get them comfortable 然後花 1-2個月的時間創造一個 to actually tell you the truth. 他們可以很自在的告訴你事實的一個環境 Cause the people that love you 因為真正愛你的人 sure don't want to tell you. 一定不會想要告訴你 - How did the website thing come about? -那你是怎麼想到要經營網頁的? - Way back when? - 什麼時候的時? - I mean, you, your web show. - 我的意思是,你,你的線上節目 - [Gary] Or the web show now? - [Gary] 是現在的線上節目麼? - What is the biggest thing you do, is your web show? - 你所做過最大的事, 是你的線上節目麼? - The biggest thing I do right now - 我目前所做過最大的事 is I run a 650 person social media digital agency 是我經營著一家擁有650位員工的數位媒體代理商 that works with the brands like Toyota, and Pepsi-- 我們與一些大品牌合作 如Toyota 和 Pepsi-- - [Larry] That's called? - [萊瑞] 那是? - And that's called VaynerMedia. - 我的公司叫 范納媒體 - And what does VaynerMedia do? - 范納媒體做的是? - We're a modern day Mad Man. - 我們是現代廣告界的瘋子 We're a Madison Avenue agency, 我們是一家據點在麥迪遜大道的代理商, the same people that used to sell commercial time 和那些販賣廣告的人一模一樣 on anything you ever did in radio and television, 或者你在電視,收音機所看到或聽到的廣告行為 we now do that on Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram. 我們是在Facebook,Snapchat 和Instagram做一樣的事 And we produce the creative for the brands 然後我們為那些品牌做出內容 to sell stuff, through the phone. 透過手機去售賣產品 Because Larry, and I'd love to get, 因為萊瑞, 我希望可以得到 I'd almost want to, 我甚至想要 I know we're doing a show here, 我知道我們現在正在節目中 but I'd love to get your thoughts, 可是我很想要聽聽你的想法 maybe after, maybe right now, who knows. 或許是待會, 或許是現在 沒關係 I think we're living through a very interesting moment. 我覺得我們處於一個很有趣的時代 I believe that the telephone is becoming the television. 我覺得手機已經開始轉變成為我們生活中的電視 And the television is becoming the radio. 然後我們的電視正在轉變成為我們生活中的收音機 And I've been spending a lot of time studying 然後我花了很多的時間去研究 the transition, in the late 50's, from radio to television. 這個演化, 在50年晚期也是如此,它們從收音機轉到電視上 Because this is the first time 因為這是近50年來 we've had a platform shift in our society 我們社會的第一個 in a half a century. 平台的轉換 And I think it's a very big deal. 然後我覺得這是一件大事 And I've been spending an enormous amount of time, 然後我也在近五年內 the last five years, 花了很多的時間 trying to be the best storyteller for that platform. 讓自己成為該平台的最佳銷售員 - Next, utilizing the digital world - 接下來, 我們會探討如何運用數位世界 for your entrepreneurial benefit. 幫助你的事業 How social media can transform your business. 社群媒體可以如何改變你的生意 Stay with us. 廣告時間,別走開 - We're back with the incredible Gary Vaynerchuk. - 歡迎回來,陪伴著我們的是 傳說級人物 加里·維納查克 Is that a Jewish name? 這是個猶太名字嗎? - You know it's funny, - 你知道嗎這有點好笑 I know it always confuses people. 我知道這常會讓人感到迷惑 People don't think it, but I am. 人們不會這麼覺得 可是我是位猶太人 - [Larry] Okay. - [萊瑞] 好的 (laughter) (笑) The book, #AskGaryVee is out now. 你的新書 #请教加里·威 已經在市面上了 An entrepreneurs take on leadership, 一個創業家對於,領導 social media and self-awareness. 社群媒體,自我意識的看法 Okay, how do we use social media 好吧,那我們要如何運用社群媒體 to help our business? 來幫助我們的企業? - Well I think we first understand - 額,我覺得我們必須先理解 that social media is a slang term 社群媒體只是一個俚語 for the current state of the internet. 去表達互聯網現有的模樣 And when you position social media that way, 可是當你如此定位社群媒體的時候 you take it a lot more seriously. 你會更認真的看待它 So step one Larry, 所以第一步呢萊瑞, for 97% of the people that are watching, 對那些正在觀看這節目的97%的人 is to actually take it serious. 必須要做的就是認真的看待它 That's number one. 那是第一步 And again, we were talking as we were getting ready, 然後呢,就像我們剛才所說的 a lot of radio people didn't take television 很多靠收音機的人在那過度期時 serious when the transition happened. 並沒有重視收音機至電視的轉變 That was their loss. 那是他們吃虧 - Correct. - 沒錯 - [Gary] Right? - [Gary] 對吧? That's what's happening right now, Larry, 萊瑞,這是一樣的事情 this is historics, 這和歷史是一樣的 that history always tells you the future. 歷史會告訴你未來 And so that's what's happening. 所以這是正在發生的事 So first take it serious. 所以第一開始重視他 Two, understand that Facebook, 第二,意識到Facebook and Instagram, and Snapchat, Instagram 和 Snapchat, and YouTube these are different channels. 和 YouTube 他們都是不同的管道 It's the difference between CNN and Fox, 他們的差異,就有如 CNN 和Fox, and ABC and Sports ESPN. 和 ABC 和 Sports ESPN 之間的差異 You've gotta understand the context 你必須要明白你所在的 of the medium that you're on. 媒介的整體環境是什麼樣的 So when you're story telling 所以當你在YouTube上 about your business on YouTube, 描述或推銷你的生意時 you've gotta produce different content 你必須要產出另一種內容 than when you're putting a picture on Facebook. 不是像你在Facebook上傳圖片一樣 So again, sitting in your presence, 所以呢,現在坐在你面前 I almost wanna ask questions more than do this interview. 比起接受採訪,我更想要問你一些問題 I think that people 我覺得人們 underestimate context of the medium. 小看了一個平台的整體環境 I would assume that when you interviewed somebody on radio 我覺得在你透過收音機採訪人 versus when you did it on television, 和你在節目上採訪人的方式 there's slight differences 應該也有不同的地方吧 'cause they're different mediums. 因為他們是不同的平台 - Slight. - 稍微 - Slight and it's slight, but it's real. - 的確是稍微 但它的確不一樣 And in that slightness is all the magic. 然後在那稍微的差異就是一切 Number three, it's understanding 第三, 你必須了解 that you have to provide value. 你必須要提供價值 Too many businesses right now on Facebook 現在有很多企業在Facebook上 and Twitter and Instagram, 推特 和 Instagram, every post they put out is buy my stuff, 他們所發放的每一個貼文是買我的東西 buy my stuff, buy my stuff, 買我的東西,買我的東西 here's where I'm gonna be, check me out, 我們待會會在這邊喔 可以看看我的東西喔 buy my book, check out my experience, 買我的書, 看看我們的體驗, watch me on my show, 收看我的節目 and nobody's providing values. 但是沒有人在提供價值 So the prior book I wrote to this was called, 所以我的上一本書的名字是 Jab, Jab, Jab, Right Hook. 刺拳,刺拳,刺拳,上勾拳. Give, Give, Give, Ask. 給,給,給, 問 And it gave people a formula 這給予人們一個方程式 of how to put out content 去如何發放內容 that actually gave people enough value 同時給予人們足夠的內容 that you then had them in a consideration 這樣你才能讓考慮 to buy your stuff. 購買你的產品 - But the technology changes so much - 可是科技一直在變化 that something could be new tomorrow, 可能明天就會出現一個更新的東西了 that wipes out what was yesterday, right? 然後那個新東西會取代舊的東西, 不是嗎? - Tough crap. Right? - 殘酷吧? The market is the market is the market. 市場就是市場 Everyday people put out shows on radio and television 每一天都會有人在電視台和電台推出新節目 that tried to knock you off your pedestal. 為的就是想把你的節目給幹掉 You had to become number one, 你必須要成為第一 stay number one, 保持第一的頭銜 that's the market. 市場就是如此 I wish that Twitter wasn't losing it's leadership role. 我多麼希望推特可以保持自己龍頭老大的位置 I have 1.2 million followers on Twitter. 我在推特上有120萬個追蹤者耶 I built my brand on Twitter. 我是靠推特打響我個人品牌 I'm dominant on Twitter. 我稱霸了推特 - I have 2.8. - 我有280萬 - Well, 'cause you're a legend. - 那是因為你是個傳奇啊 - Why is Twitter going? - 為什麼推特在下滑? - Because Twitter lost it's way in my opinion, - 我個人覺得這是因為它們失去了以前的方向 'cause they didn't create an algorithm 因為它們沒有去試著寫出一個演算法 and everybody who follows everybody, 然後當每個人都去追蹤很多人時 see's everything and it gets too loud. 整個平台就變得很吵 And so they had, what I call, a fire hose problem. 這就是它們有的,我稱為的水管問題 Too much information meant that people tuned it out. 當市面上有太多訊息時,人們就會不想聽了 So, what Facebook did and what Instagram does, 所以呢,這也是Facebook做了 和Instagram正在做的事 is they don't show you everything. 他們不會把所有資訊都塞給你看 They show you the stuff based on what you've been liking, 它們只給你看它們演算法透過你所讚過的東西 that it thinks that you're gonna like. 而推導出你可能喜歡的事情 - All this is most appealing to the young, right? - 這些是會吸引年輕人的東西,對吧? If you're over 40, are you into this? 如果你年齡超過40的話你會被這所吸引嗎? If you're over 50? 如果你年齡超過50的話? - I think so. - 我覺得會 I think if you look at behavior, 我覺得如果你觀察人們的消費習慣 let me ask you a question. 讓我問你一個問題好了 Have you noticed some of your over 40, 你是否有發現你年過40 over 50 friends start to send emoji's on text? 50歲的朋友們,在他們的信息上也附上了表情圖? - I don't know what that is. - 我不知道那是什麼 - Do you know the little poop pictures - 你知道在信息上會出現的那些糞的貼圖嗎? and the little face and the smiles? 有些小臉,和一些笑臉的貼圖? - I don't text. - 我不傳信息的 - Well listen, let's turn off the cameras, - 那聽好了 我們就暫時關掉攝影機 we got things to do here. 我們需要做一些事 I need Larry to send some poop emoji's immediately. 我必須要教萊瑞如何發一個屎的表情圖 - A poop emoji? - 屎的表情圖? - Yes. - 沒錯 Poop Emoji is the next thing. 屎的表情圖將會是我們的下一個話題 - [Larry] Sounds like a dog in the backyard. - [萊瑞] 聽起來像是待在後院想拉屎的狗一樣 - In the next segment, we're gonna talk poop emoji's. - 在節目的後半段,我們要討論的是屎的表情圖 Look, I think if you look at the data, 聽好了,我覺得如果你去仔細的去細看資料的話 it's stunning what's happened, 35 to 60. 但當你觀察35歲-60歲人們的行為模式時,你會感到驚訝 I'll go a different route with you. 讓我用不同的角度切入這個話題 For anybody who's watching right now, 對於正在觀看的觀眾 if you're lucky enough to know your parent 如果你如此的幸運有那個機會去 at the age that you are now, 在同齡的情況下重新認識你爸媽 if you're of an age where you actually 如果你可以在同齡的情況下 knew your mom and dad at the same age you are now, 去認識你爸媽 you will notice that your behavior is much younger. 你會發現你的行為模式會比他們來得年輕 - Of course. - 當然 - That has a lot to do with technology. - 這有很大部分得歸功給科技 We're living through a youthification of our society. 我們社會正走向年輕化 The fastest growing segment 在Instagram和Snapchat裡 on the Instagrams and the Snapchats in the world, 成長率最高的客戶群們 are the 40 and overs because just like Facebook, 是40歲以上的人們 因為就像Facebook一樣, these things age up. 這些產品也會老化 - Wow. - 哇 - Yeah. - 沒錯 - Now, explain all of this with regard - 那現在你可以告訴我們 to the New York Jets. 你對於 New York Jets的那份執著嗎 (laughter) (笑聲) - I desperately wanna buy them Larry. - 我真的真的很想買下它們 萊瑞. - You do? - 真的嗎? - Yes I do. - 真心 - Can you afford it? - 你買得起嗎? - Not yet. - 我還買不起 But I've never felt more 可是我從來都沒有 in control of that actually happening 像現在覺得說 than I do right now. 這是我能掌控的一件事 - Why this, you're so level headed and on top of things. -為什麽呢,你一直都是一個很理性的人 - [Gary] Yes. - [Gary] 沒錯 - But sports things are a fan thing. - 可是這應該是一個很喜歡體育的人才會有的夢想吧 - [Gary] Yes, they are. - [Gary] 是啊,沒錯 - And that's short for fanatic. - 這也可以簡稱狂粉吧 - Yes it is. - 沒錯 - [Larry] And that's emotional. - [萊瑞] 而且這是有感性成分在的 - Yeah listen, I'm a flawed human. - 對啊,聽好了 我是個有缺陷的人類 I mean we all have our short comings. 我的意思是我們每個人都有屬於我們的弱點 You know look, I'll tell you the truth. 好吧 我就從實招來吧 When I came to America, 當我初到美國時 in Queens and in Dover, 在皇后區和多佛, I couldn't speak English. 我那時不會說英文 Dover, New Jersey. 多佛, 新澤西州 - Spoke Hebrew? - 你那時是說希伯來語嗎? - No, I wasn't speaking Yiddish, - 不是,我那時不是說意第緒語 but I was speaking Russian. 當時我說的是俄羅斯語 There was something when I moved to Edison, New Jersey. 可是當我搬到了新澤西州的愛迪生這個小鎮時有了一個歸屬 Eric Godfrey, Robbie Turnick, Eric Godfrey, Robbie Turnick, they were playing football 那時他們對美式足球非常狂熱 and they made me a Jets fan, 然後他們讓我變成了 Jets的粉絲 and it was my first American thing. 那是我第一個讓我覺得我是美國人的東西 Everybody had a Jets jersey 當時每一個人都有Jets 的球衣 and I wanted one 然後我也想要一件 and we couldn't afford stuff like that. 可是那不是我們負擔得起的 It's not what immigrants do. 這不是剛移民到美國的人會做的事 You don't go out and buy a $30 Jets jersey. 你不會去買一件30美的球衣 So, my mom knitted me one. 所以我媽媽幫我織了一件 And so I have it. 也因為這樣我有了我的球衣 It's my prized possession. 那是我的鎮山之寶 It's literally my prized possession. 那毫無疑問的是我的鎮山之寶 And I've created a fairy tale in my mind, 然後在我小學2,3年級時 somewhere around 2nd or 3rd grade, 我在我腦中有了一個幻想,一個夢想 that I was gonna go from 那就是從 not being able to afford a jersey, 買不起一個球隊的球衣 to owning the whole damned thing. 到買下那一個球隊 The quest to buy the Jets 買下Jets這個球隊的旅程 is my happiness. 是我幸福的來源 Whether I buy them or not, 不管我是否能買下它 so many variables. 因為裡面包含了很多變數 - What if Woody Johnson doesn't sell? - 如果伍迪‧約翰遜不想賣呢? Well, he'll be dead by the time. 額,你能買下這個球隊時他應該就過世了吧 - Well, that's right, I mean, - 是啊,沒錯 我的意思是 there's an advantage of being 25 to 30 years 當你比現在的東主年輕個 younger than the current owner, but you don't know. 25-30歲 某種層面上你的確有一定的優勢, 可是你不能確保說, Anything can happen, right? 因為明天的事誰知道呢? So there's a lot of things 所以在那夢想和幻想中 I can't control in that fairy tale, 有很多我控制不了的因素在 but I can control the ambitious climb to get there. 我能控制的是我想要達到那個夢想的衝勁 - You are so on top of things. - 你一直都很淡定並一直嘗試將事情做得最棒 Does a Jet loss affect you? Jets 輸了比賽會影響你的心情嗎 - Yes. - 會 The Jets are my one Kryptonite. 他們可以說是我的剋星 I'm actually stunningly level headed. 我其實是一個很沈穩的人 I'm basically unemotional when it comes to business. 在商業上我並不會抱有任何的情緒 - I can tell. - 看得出 - You know, it's a win/loss thing, - 你知道的,這只是勝敗的問題 it's a net/net game, I can deal. 是一個有賺有虧的問題 我玩得起 Yes, the Jets bother me 可是 Jets 的話,我不行 because I'm not in control. 因為它不是在我的控制範圍內 - We got quite a few questions on my blog - 在我的部落格上已經有了 regarding tips for jump starting a business. 一些有關創業的問題了 What are the three most important things 在剛創業時必須要銘記在心的 to keep in mind when starting up? 3件事是什麼? - One, that cash is oxygen. - 第一, 現金就是氧氣 I'm blown away by all these people 我很驚訝一些正在 that are starting businesses that don't realize 創業的人竟然不知道說 that money (laughs) is important. 錢(笑) 是重要的 They think about all these things. 他們一直在幻想 They're trying to think about four years from now, 他們在想著4年之後的事 and they haven't made their first check. 但他們卻還沒拿下他們的第一張支票 Just complete lack of practicality 這在創業上是 when thinking about a business. 這是不實際的 Number two, strengths. 第二,你的優勢 Are you a salesman? 你是個銷售員嗎? Are the accountant? 你是個會計師嗎? Do you have financial strength? 你是否對財務有那個明銳感? Do you have sales strength? 你是否對銷售有一套? Are you operationally? 你是否對營運掌有一套? Are you good at HR? 是否在控管人力資源有一套? Whatever you're best at, 不管你的專長在哪 do that, 就去做那件事 surround yourself with the other three or four pillars 再去尋找你創業所需要3-4個支柱 that need to have a business. 圍繞在你的身邊並支持著你 And number three, look for the white space. 然後第三, 去找出人們未探索的地方 Meaning, where are people not marketing 我的意思是, 人們還沒在那邊行銷 and story telling, that you can? 描述產品故事, 可是你能在那邊做到這些的地方 Is Snapchat, is YouTube, 不管是 Snapchat或YouTube, is a blog, or a podcast your way to separate yourself 部落格,播客 你必須要找到你 from everybody else while they're running direct mail, 和競爭者的差異性 趁他們還在砸錢在電子報 or radio, or television, or print advertising? 收音機 電視機 和印刷上時 What's the white space in your sector 你是否可以在你領域 that nobody else is filling? 找到沒人在碰的白色領域? - [Larry] Okay, well, a little game of If You Only Knew. - [萊瑞] 好喔~就是一個早知道的遊戲 I just (mumbles) . 我只是(咕噥) . What's the best piece of advice you ever got? 你得到最好的勸告是? (spits) (吐口水) - That. - 就是這個 When I was fourteen I was full of crap. 當我14歲時,我是個很糟糕的商人 I was a salesman. 我是個純推銷員 I would say anything to you 為了說服你去購買我的棒球卡 to make you buy my baseball cards 或者是一瓶酒 or a bottle of wine. 我什麼都會說 My dad grabbed me by the neck 我爸有一天就抓住我 and he said, "Listen to me, 然後他告訴我說, “你聽好了, "where we come from, “在我們家鄉, "you've got one thing: your word," “只有一個東西是有價值: 你的信用,” and that one moment 然後在那一瞬間 easily, 很簡單的 my mom did most of the work. 但是我媽扮演了很大的角色 My mom did most of the work. 我媽扮演了很大的角色. My dad was at work. 我爸經常都在工作 I never saw my dad until I was 14. 我在我14歲之前都沒見過我爸 She built a self-esteem, 我媽幫我建立了很強大的自尊心 she made me the right kind of guy, kind. 她把我拉到正確的方向,善良 She built the foundation, 她為了我建立了良好的基礎 but that one tweak by my dad 可是我爸的那一句話和導正 changed the outcome of my life 改變了我的人生 from being a good huckster/salesman 我從好的推銷員 who would've made it okay 一個可以過普普的日子 and made a good buck to having real potential. 賺一點錢 到一個擁有無限潛力的人 - Did you get some bad advice too? - 那你是否有聽過一些不好的勸告? - I don't really listen to advice at all, - 我基本上都不聽勸告的 so I'm sure I get bad, 所以我很肯定我也有聽過不好的 Larry, I actually think I get bad advice everyday. 萊瑞, 其實我覺得我每天都在聽不好的勸告 - Is there a company we should be -市場上是否 paying more attention to? 有我們應該更注意的公司? - Music.ly. - Music.ly. It's the emerging thing. 這是剛崛起的東西 Snapchat's the one for most people, 對於多數人的話則是Snapchat but I'm making that assumption 但是我的假設是 that as people continue to watch this, 當人們看下去時 they'll know about that. 他們會更了解Snapchat的事 Music.ly is the emerging social network Music.ly 是一個正崛起同時主要客群為 with junior high kids in America and China. 中國與美國的國高中生社群網路 It has a chance. 它有很大的機會成功 - Your biggest failure and what you learned from it? - 你人生所經歷最大的挫折為?你從中學到了什麼 - I think my biggest failure - 我覺得我最大的挫敗是 was when I transitioned from day to day 是當我想要嘗試每日 in the wine business to starting VaynerMedia, 從我家的酒庫生意和范納媒體切換角色 I wrote a book called Crush It! 我之前寫了一本書 :我的第一桶金 that became a big New York Times list, 它也成功上榜了紐約時報暢銷書之一 I started three other businesses. 我那時同時經營著3個生意 I was like a guy that came out of a long relationship 我就像一個剛脫離一個長久戀愛關係的男孩一樣 and wanted to date everything. 想盡辦法和不同的女生約會 I learned that even though my brain 我從中學到了 即使我的大腦 tells me I can do everything 告訴我說我什麼都辦得到 because I work 15 to 18 hours a day, 因為我每一天都工作個15-18個小時 I can't and you only have so much energy and focus 我就是不能同時經營這麼多事 因為你就是有 一定的能量和專注力 and I need to cut that in. 然後這是我必須考量的 - What industry is on the verge of exploding? - 什麼產業是即將爆發的呢? - Virtual reality. - 虛擬實境 And let me say this Larry 讓我告訴你吧 萊瑞 'cause I think you're gonna get a kick out of this 因為我覺得你會覺得非常驚訝 because if you think emojis is crazy, 如果你覺得表情圖就很狂了 let me tell you what I'm bout to tell you. 讓我告訴你我即將要說的才是真正的狂 12 years from today, 相隔今天的12年 when we're doing this interview 當我們再進行一次採訪時 as we're gonna have a long relationship as you said, 因為就如你所說的,我們會有一個長遠的交情 we're gonna be doing it, 我們進行的方式會是 it's gonna feel like it's happening 會讓你覺得我們正以 just like right now except one thing, 現在的模式進行 唯一的差異是 we're both gonna be sitting at home. 我們倆都在各自的家裡 - (grunts) How about an industry - 那麼你覺得哪個產業 that's slowing down or dying? 正在走下坡或將被淘汰呢? - I think television advertising is in deep crap. - 我覺得電視廣告正面臨一個困境 - Business leader we should be paying more attention to? - 我們更應該關注的商業領袖 - I think Jeff Bezos, who runs Amazon, - 我覺得創辦和正在經營亞馬遜的傑夫 貝索斯 is the single best entrepreneur of this century 是我們這時代最強大的創業家之一 including Steve Jobs. 賈伯斯也是 - And he went into the newspaper business. - 可是他最近才加入了報紙產業 - Because he's smart. - 因為他聰明啊 You know what he did there Larry? 你知道他做了什麼嗎 萊瑞? He went into the brand business. 他走的是品牌策略 He bought that brand, Washington Post, 他以非常便宜的價格買下了那個品牌 for nothing and now he's gonna deploy it 華盛頓郵報 然後呢 他可以利用這個品牌利用在 in a different platform like the Kindle. 不同的平台上 就好像Kindle. - What's the best success story you ever heard? - 你聽過最勵志的成功故事是? - You know what's funny? - 你知道這個問題有趣的地方是什麼嗎? That's a great question. 那是一個很好的問題 I'm very under-educated on the entrepreneurs 我對於這世上的成功人士和創業家的成功故事 and successful people in the world. 是非常陌生的 My favorite success story is my dad. 我最喜歡的成功故事是我爸的 He came here with nothing. 他在什麼都沒有的情況下來到了這裡 Zero. 什麼都沒有 - Good example. - 很好的例子 - I live in a studio apartment a quarter - 我小時候住在只有這個錄影台 533 00:16:51,711 --> 00:16:52,879 四分之一的小套房裡 - 他還在世嗎? of the size of this studio. - He's still living? 是的, 他非常的年輕,才62歲 Yeah, he's young. He's 62. 他只比我年長個22年 He's only 22 years older than me. - [萊瑞] 所以他還在工作嗎? - [Larry] Still working then? - 戰役旺盛呢 - (blows raspberry) On fire. - 這世上的那個國家在商業上 - Part of the world that is exploding 正要崛起? in business and commerce? -非洲是我非常看好的國家 - I'm very intrigued by Africa. 我覺得非洲正在崛起 I think Africa is emerging. 他們現在有手機了 在一定的規模之後 They've got cell phones that at scale, 我覺得那將會是 I think that's gonna be the place 人們在接下來的10年會專注的點 everyone's gonna focus the next decade. - 讓你看好的年輕創業家 - Young entrepreneur who's impressing you? - 我覺得馬克 札克伯格 - I think Mark Zuckerburg 會取代貝索斯 is gonna take that throne from Jeff Bezos 我覺得他真的被低估了 and I think he's grossly, grossly underestimated 然後同時呢 and in parallel, Snapchat的伊萬斯皮格也是讓我吃驚的黑馬 Evan Spiegel of Snapchat has surprised me. 他今年才 25 吧 He's 25 I think. 他在全世界都在注視他的情況下 The way he's navigated that business 很理性的,並很有效的帶領者他的公司 with all the pressure of the whole world looking at him. - 這些小孩子是怎麼冒出來的啊 - Where do these kids get this? 從車庫嗎? In garages? 這個風潮是怎麼崛起的? Where does this come from? 這些天才們 This genius. - 我不覺得他們是因為天才才會如此 - I don't think it's genius. 我覺得他們是幸運的 I think that they're lucky 因為網路崛起了 that the internet came along 然後這允許他們更早的做這些事 and allowed them to do it earlier. 網路的規模是如此龐大 The internet is such scale. - 那,這個網路是在那裡呢? - Well, where is the internet? - 海地,空中 - In the ocean, in the sky. 要說網路就是我們的生活並不誇張 The internet is basically our lives. 我其實覺得網路 I actually think the internet 比我們人生還來的真實 is more our life than this is. 這是人們會花時間的地方 This is where people spend their time. 人們的目光就是資產,然後現在人們的目光都在網路上 Attention is the asset and the internet owns it. - (嘆氣) 10年後的加裡 維納查克 會是怎麼樣的人呢? - (sighs) Gary Vaynerchuk in 10 years? - 仍然在努力奮鬥 - Hustling. - 會是Jets的新東主嗎? - Owning the Jets? - [Gary] 不 - 還不是 - [Gary] No. - Not yet. - 我的行為不會讓我在10年內就能買下Jets - My behavior doesn't map to owning the Jets in 10 years. 我的行為是讓我在30年內就能買下Jets My behavior maps to owning the Jets in 30. - 社群媒體上有很多問題 - Lot of social media questions. Serena Brahney 在 Facebook上問: Serena Brahney on Facebook: “你什麼時候才能知道你已經準備好創業了?” "When do you know you're ready to start a business?" - 如果你心中抱有這個疑問的話 - If you're asking that question, 你可能還沒準備好 you're probably not ready. (笑) (laughing) 萊瑞, 我相信世上擁有純創業家血統的人 Larry, I believe a purebred entrepreneur 他們會窒息所有除了經營自己事業 suffocates in the notion of doing anything 以外的想法 but running their own business. - @chefchipper 在推特上問 : - @chefchipper on Twitter: “你小時候最喜歡的棒球卡是?” "What was you favorite baseball card as a kid?" - 1990 萊富 富蘭克 湯姆斯 的新秀卡 - 1990 Leaf Frank Thomas rookie card. 我和我的朋友布蘭登超愛那張卡的 Me and my friend Brandon adored that card. - 我前幾個禮拜才見到富蘭克 - Just saw Frank a couple weeks ago. - 他是個很棒的球員 - He's a real player. 他曾經是個很棒的球員 He was a real player. - 他現在已經進入名人堂了耶 - Oh, he's in Hall of Fame. Bruce MacLelland在萊瑞 金 現時部落格問說: Bruce MacLelland on the Larry King Now blog: “你會非常積極的參與政治嗎? "Do you get political at all? "你對於那些來自 "What are your thoughts on people 私人部門的政治家的看法是? "from the private sector? "唐納·川普?" "Donald Trump?" - (嘆氣) 其實我不太傾向討論政治 - (Sighs) I don't tend to get political 因為我在這個年紀, mainly because I've voted both party lines already 已經好幾次兩個黨都支持過 at this young of an age multiple times. 對於政治我也是務實的 I'm quite practical about politics. 我會等到他們擁有一個結論時 I wait 'til there's a decision 然後我會做出對於現況 and I make the decision that I think 最好的決策 is best in the current situation. - @BreckLandscape 在推特上問: - @BreckLandscape on Twitter: “什麼更值得投資: "What's more investable: "一個擁有百萬用戶 "a digital company with millions "但是利潤為0的數位公司 "of users and no profit “或是一個有很少用戶 "or one with a few users “但是可以賺個百萬的公司呢?” "and millions in profit?" - 兩個都要 - Both 這是真的 is true, 可是在擁有上百萬用戶但是沒有利潤 but if there's no growth at no profit 並沒有在成長的公司 with millions of users, 在經營者的角度來說的話,是更好的選擇 that's the one that you wanna run 因為它裡頭的優勢太多了 because the upside is so great. - 這也是推特現在擁有的吧? - Now, Twitter had that, right? - 然後聽好了 - Yeah, and look. 我是推特的早期投資者. I was an early investor in Twitter. - 推特應該不差吧? - Twitter isn't bad, is it? - 不,他一點都不差 - No, it's not bad 然後,扯開話題 and by the way, 我因為他賺了很多錢, 萊瑞. I made a crap load of money, Larry. 那些在 推特 公開上市之前 The people who invested in Twitter 就投資它的人 都賺翻了 before it went public made a fortune. 推特 的問題 是 它需要 Twitter's issue is that it needs 想辦法挽留人們的目光 to hold onto the attention of its users. - 露先生在 Facebook問, - Mr. Lou on Facebook asks, “在數位媒體的時代, "In the age of digital media, “對於一個想要在印刷界保持觀眾的人 "how do you suggest someone maintain “你會給他什麼建議呢?” "a solid print audience?" - 你要確保的是, A, - By making sure, A, 他們正在建立的是一個數位觀眾 they are building a digital audience, 然後 B, 找出一些 and by B, trying to find something clever 唯有印刷可以提供 that the print product can deliver 但是數位媒體不能提供的體驗的產品 that the digital product cannot 還有 萊瑞 這個: and also this Larry: 憋氣 holding your breath. 這個產業似乎很快要死了 The user is dying off 然後當我說正走向死亡時 我不是說他會完全不存在 and when I say dying I don't mean literally dying. 我的意思是我們正看著 40, 50, 60, 70, I mean we are watching 40, 50, 60, 70, 80歲的人們 轉向 數位 80-year-olds shift into digital consumption. - 可是如果印刷產業會歸0的話 - But if print is dying, 為什麼 Carlos Slim 會投資在紐約時報呢? why does a Carlos Slim invest in the New York Times? - 因為他想要借用紐約時報 - Because he wants to use 去推動他的理念 that to push his propaganda. - 他現在擁有了一個機器 - He's got a vehicle. - (笑) 沒錯 - (laughs) Yeah. - 和 傑夫 貝索斯是一樣的 - As Jeff Bezos. - 沒錯 - Of course. 萊瑞, 那就是答案 Larry, that's the real answer, 你也懂的 you know it. - 對, @KJM1016 在 推特上問: - Yeah, @KJM1016 on Twitter: “對於一個正在經營社群媒體 "How would you suggest one avoids “你會如何建議他們如何執行 "running their social outlets “才不會讓人們覺得這是垃圾郵件?” "without making it feel like spam?" - 不要製造垃圾郵件 - By not being spam. 萊瑞, 這每次都會讓我生氣 Larry, this pisses me off all the time. 人們都問說, “我要怎麽樣才不會讓人覺得我只是想要推銷?” People are like, "How do I be less sell-y?" 不要只想要賣東西給人啊 Be less sell-y. 給人們真正的價值啊 Provide people actual value. 如果你不想讓你的社群媒體 If you don't want your social media 給別人覺得你一直在轟炸他們 to feel spammy, why don't you talk 那不如你就告訴人們怎麼發放內容 about putting out content 然後與其扮演一個推銷員的角色 and acting like a media company 你不如扮演一個媒體公司的角色呢 instead of acting like a salesperson? - Jon Crabtree在 萊瑞 金現時部落格上問: - Jon Crabtree on the Larry King Now blog: "你是否有觀察到一些正在崛起可是這幾年會 "Do you see any new apps emerging “在這市場帶來巨大影響的應用程式呢?” "as game changers in the next few years?" - 就如我剛才所說, - Like I mentioned, 我非常看好music.ly. I'm very hot on music.ly. 我也覺得Anchor, I also think Anchor, 一個音頻的應用程式也非常有趣 this audio app is quite interesting. - 那是什麼? - What is that? - 你可以把它想像成 語音版的推特, - Think of it as voice Twitter, 與其用打字, so you instead of tweeting, 你是透過聲音去發貼文, you're doing it by voice, 基本上就是你拿起你的手機 so you literally put up the phone to yourself 然後說 “我今天想到的是...,” and say, "Today I'm thinking," 然後很有趣的是 and quite interesting. 現在仍然是非常的早 It's very, very early, 但是我非常的關注它 but I'm keeping a very keen eye on it. - 這些是誰發明? - Who invents these things? - 一些乳臭未乾的孩子. - Youngsters a lot of times who don't know any better. 你知道嗎 我會告訴你的是 這對你來說 You know what I would tell you and I think 也會是有道理的 this will make sense to you. 我覺得這和音樂很像 I look at it very similar to music genres. 我覺得這很像 I think of it as like The Clash Kurt Cobain撞見 Run-DMC的情況一模一樣 and Kurt Cobain, and Run-DMC. 我覺得人們崛起後,然後發現 I think it's people who come up, they don't see what 這市場沒有他們要的東西, 所以他們自己創造他 they want, and they create it. - @SoulmanScofield問說, 你覺得你有沒有可能退休 - @SoulmanScofield, Do you think you'll ever retire 還是你覺得你會太熱愛工作了? or do you enjoy working too much? -我覺得當我和你坐在一起時 - I think when I'm sitting here with you, 然後以我對你的了解, and I know all the context I know about you, 然後對於你在過去50年已經採訪 and the fact that you pretty much have interviewed 了這麼多重要的人物 anybody who's important in the last 50 god damn years, 讓我感到興奮的是 the thing that most excites me, 是當你坐在我面前時 is that you're sitting right here, 然後現在採訪我時 right now and interviewing me. 我就對其他事情沒有任何興趣了 I have no interest in doing anything other. 對我來說在這個錄影室 That to me is the most interesting thing 發生最有趣的 that's happening in this room right now, 是當我接受採訪時 is that while I'm doing this interview, 我腦袋所告訴我的是 the parallel part of my brain is saying, “幹,就是這傢伙. "Damn, this is the guy. “這就是我未來會想做的” "This is exactly what I'm gonna be doing." - 你結婚了嗎? - Are you married? - 我已婚 - I am. - [萊瑞] 有孩子了嗎? - [Larry] You have children? - 有了喔 - I do. - 孩子多大? - How old are the children? - 六歲和三歲 - Six and three. - 一個男生和一個女生? - Boy and a girl? -嗯, 姊姊和弟弟 - Mhmmm, girl, boy. - 好的,那你對於你管理企業 - Alright, how do your thoughts on your ability in business 和管家的想法? to raising a family? 你是否會使用同樣的方式去管理— Do you use the principles at home-- - 我會 - [萊瑞] 真的嗎? - I do. - [Larry] Yeah? -我覺得在所有事情之前,我是一個EQ-人務管理導向的CEO - I think first of all, I'm an EQ-HR-driven CEO. 我覺得我會這麼成功不是因為我的IQ I think I win not on my IQ, 而是在我的情緒管理 but on my emotional intelligence. 我覺得我可以很理解人們的感受 I think that I'm very in tune to people's feelings. 我會試著去反向思考一個人想要的是什麼 I try to reverse engineer what they're about. 舉例來說,我只想要我的孩子 For example, I have no interest in my kids 當他們自己,其他的我都不管 being anything but who they are. 我媽媽給予我最大的禮物就是把重點放在我的優點上 My mom gifted me by parenting me to my strengths. 如果我的孩子是個藝術家 或者是想要管理一個 If my kids are artists or want to be in the non-profit 非營利組織,爬山 我都會全力支持 sector or climb mountains, I'm all-in. 我想要他們當自己 I want them to do them. 我唯一會設的底線是,我不會給你第八名的獎盃 The one line in the sand I have is no eighth place trophies. 這也是我老婆懂的,然後現在我正在看著攝影機 Lizzie knows, and now I'm looking at the camera, 因為我想要她看著我雙眼 'cause I want her to see my eyes again, 不要給予同情的獎盃 no eighth place trophies. 人生要嘛是輸,要嘛是贏,沒有灰色地帶 Life is about winning and losing. It's binary, right? 所以只要我孩子了解這點 So as long as my kids know that, 我不會管她們做什麼 I don't care what they do. 他們不需要很會賺錢 They don't need to make money. 他們不需要當企業家,可是他們想贏的話 They don't need to be entrepreneurs, but to win, 他們需要戰勝市場 there's a real market. 你想要當個藝術家,想要可以幫助人們的話 To be a great artist, to be great at helping other people, 你必須要很強 you have to be great at it. - 你老婆會不會參與妳的生意決策 - Does your wife get involved in your business? - 不,我們都已經分配好了 - No, we have a very strong line in the sand. 我爸媽都有 My parents had that. 她爸媽在多數情況也是 Her parents had that for the most part, 所以我覺得我們也是透過我們 so I think we're just kind of acting 以前所見的行為去辦事而已 on what we saw behaviorally. 聽好了,當你是一家企業的執行長時 Look, when you're the CEO of a company, 當你是個首領時 when you're the top dog, 你只會處理企業負面的事情而已 you're only in the negative issues business. 我是個消防員 I'm a firefighter. 我只會處理讓人頭痛的事情 All I'm dealing with is headaches. 你知道待會會發生什麼事嗎? What's gonna happen right now? 我在踏出這個錄影室之後,我會拿出我的手機 I'm gonna step outta here, and I'm gonna look at my phone, 然後我會有7個我需要立馬處理的事 and there's gonna be seven things I have to deal with 這一點都不好玩. that isn't a fun thing to deal with. .所以我沒有興趣回家後把這個苦帶給我老婆 So to come home and pour that on my wife isn't interesting. 我沒有任何正面的事情可以向她回報 I don't have anything positive to say. 從個體去看的話, 都是負面的事 On a micro level, it's all negative. 當時整體去看的話,這很棒 It's the macro level that's awesome. - 加里,你很棒 - Gary, you're incredible. 很高興可以見到你 - 謝謝你兄弟 Great meeting you. - Thank you, brother, 很高興可以見到你 nice meeting you. - [萊瑞]相信這是未來更多的採訪的第一個 - [Larry] This is the first of many meetings. - 謝謝你朋友 - Thank you, my friend. (upbeat music) (upbeat music)
A2 初級 中文 美國腔 推特 媒體 買下 加里 收音機 社群 成為企業家|Gary Vaynerchuk與Larry King一起2016年 (BEING AN ENTREPRENEUR | Gary Vaynerchuk With Larry King 2016) 271 15 Apu Yang 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字