The political commentator taking on Gatorade
“Is it in you?” asks Michael Jordan in a nostalgic new Gatorade spot, neon-colored sweat beading on his face.
Anyone who's ever scrutinized the label on a bottle of Midnight Ice or Citrus Cooler might have a follow-up question: What is "it," exactly — and does it really need to include something called maltodextrin?
'The real conservative response is: We’re going to make something artisanal. We’re going to make something real.'
For Josh Lekach, one of the current wave of entrepreneurs questioning conventional, corporate-controlled wisdom about health and nutrition, the answer is no.
Keeping it clean
Lekach’s Sport Drink — a clean electrolyte drink powder alternative to Gatorade and other thirst-quenching chemical confections — hit the market August 1, nearly a year after the product’s conception by Josh Lekach, Josh Kaye (Healthy Home Josh), and a third owner in the company who chose to remain anonymous.
The drink mix for athletes is currently available in two varieties: the original no-flavor blend, appropriately called No Flavor with Sugar, and a sparkling, citrus-flavored option titled No Yellow 5 Lemon Lime. Both blends contain the same mix of electrolytes, which includes Dead Sea salt, potassium chloride, sodium bicarbonate, and magnesium sulfate. Organic cane sugar is used for carbohydrate replenishment.
Lekach, a 37-year-old co-owner of the emerging brand, sat down for a virtual interview to discuss the real-ingredient, real-hydration company. He settled into the discussion from a sunny balcony in Costa Rica with a bottle of water premixed with the No Yellow 5 Lemon Lime Sport Drink in hand. His current jar is almost depleted, and he mentions that his wife is upset about running out so soon.
Lekach points out that his brutally honest family members have found the drink enjoyable, and a cursory glance online shows the lemon-lime mix as sold out.
Not bad for a business started on a whim.
Doing it right
The way Lekach tells it, roughly a year ago he made an Instagram post about how it has never been easier to start a brand: Just take a product you like, figure out how it's made, and then make it healthy and artisanal.
While he only meant to use Gatorade as an example, Kaye messaged him and suggested that they run with the idea. Lekach was convinced, and Sport Drink was born.
Despite a seemingly quick turnaround from concept to market, making Sport Drink without the common additives added six months to the production process and at least a few thousand to the costs. As of this interview, Lekach is still taking red-eye flights to Los Angeles to hand-fill jars of Sport Drink when they need to be restocked. The company is searching for a manufacturer that can package the product as formulated.
“If we started the wrong way, and we lied, I wouldn’t feel good about that, and I wouldn’t drink it myself,” said Lekach when asked about the business sacrifices associated with creating a cleaner product.
A particular challenge in manufacturing was avoiding the use of maltodextrin, a common additive in beverages used to prolong shelf life, said Lekach. The ingredient is known to create blood sugar spikes greater than those reported from real sugar. According to Lekach, the Sport Drink owners chose to spend more time perfecting the formula instead of using the chemical as a shortcut.
A 'Sad' tale
Sport Drink isn’t Lekach’s first foray into the beverage industry. He more or less memed his brand Sad Water into existence; before long Coca-Cola was expressing interest. However, Lekach's increasingly outspoken political commentary eventually scared the conglomerate off. Lekach pivoted into podcasting.
Both Vimeo and Patreon ended up banning Lekach's show — the aptly named "Wrong Opinion" — before it found its current home on Censored.TV.
While he is happy to continue his show, Lekach says he wants more for his family. Creating a product like Sport Drink is part of that goal.
Forgoing market research, Lekach says that a lot of people talk themselves out of pursuing an idea, but “I’m just going with my gut.”
He said he has taken notice of other niche brands popping up in the right-wing sphere such as wellness influencer Sol Brah and Hestia Cigarettes.
As with those brands, politics permeate Sport Drink's marketing. Sport Drink’s website alludes to both biblical history and U.S.-funded terrorist groups in its description of the Dead Sea salt it contains. For Lekach this isn't some external gimmick; the conservatism is built in.
“The real conservative response is: We’re going to make something artisanal. We’re going to make something real," said Lekach. "A product like ours is conservative because it goes back to how we used to do things when people just wanted to put out a good product."
Lekach added that his humbling experience maneuvering the crash of 2008 in the fragrance industry — as well as a stint raising about half a million dollars for a tech startup — taught him valuable lessons about figuring things out on his own and navigating bureaucracy.
While Lekach acknowledges the dominance of electrolyte products containing artificial sweeteners, colors, and chemical additives, he's convinced that it only takes a small percentage of consumers to drive change in the market. He citied the wide availability of kosher products as one example.
“The bigger brands are taking notice,” said Lekach, noting that online discussions about the hazards of seed oils have led to food producers offering healthier choices.
Sugar's not the enemy
To win over consumers, Lekach has to rehabilitate an often-maligned sweetener: “It’s not the sugar that’s killing you,” he says.
“The main hurdle will be to teach the consumer that sugar is not bad for you. We’ve been tricked into believing that the unnatural alternative to anything is healthier, but all of the alternatives that they have sold us, those are the unhealthy things,” said Lekach.
He referenced anecdotes of native populations using the popular plant-derived sweetener stevia as a contraceptive and noted that for people living a healthy lifestyle, real sugar is going to give their bodies the energy they need.
For the consumers who want to start shopping for cleaner brands, Lekach says the key is to focus on products with fewer and more familiar ingredients.
Lekach's next priority is to streamline the production process without sacrificing quality. He also intends to offer more flavors in the next few months. From there? Lekach's answer echoes the inspirational messaging of his competitor: "The sky’s the limit.”
Sport Drink is available for purchase online.
Hollywood had to learn that faith comes first in ‘Duck Dynasty’
“Duck Dynasty” star Willie Robertson had humble beginnings, but the wild success of his family’s reality show would have any spectator guessing otherwise.
“A lot of Christians told us like ‘Oh you can’t do this, you’re going to destroy your family.’ But I was like ‘if not us, then who?’” Robertson tells Glenn Beck, recalling the beginning of his family’s rise to fame.
“I felt firm in our faith and who we were,” he continues, adding, “You get a chance, and I felt like maybe God led us to this and said, ‘Hey, here’s your opportunity.’”
When Willie pitched the idea to his father, Phil Robertson, about starting a reality TV show, he wasn’t interested until Willie told him it could help get the gospel to more people.
“That was what attracted me,” Glenn says. “I heard people talk about you guys. They said, ‘There's this show, and they pray at the end.’”
While prayer and faith were a large part of their show, the Hollywood producers that worked on it at first weren’t pleased.
Willie concedes that the production company used to edit out “in Jesus’ name,” which they have since stopped doing. “I think they always struggled with what made it work,” he continues. “They would put shows behind it that were, you know, I wouldn’t say anti-faith but definitely you know, super worldly.”
When the viewers would be confronted with the show that followed, they’d switch the channel.
“They struggle with knowing, I think, especially, I think the faith part and the prayer part, how much that played into it,” Willie says.
“If you could boil it down in one sentence, what was the secret of the show? Why did it work?” Glenn asks.
“I think it was a combination of authenticity, faith, and funny,” Willie says.
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Ethereum's founder is worried about its future, says he wants blockchain to serve as a 'counterweight to authoritarian governments'
Vitalik Buterin, the founder of the Ethereum Network, which houses the world’s second most popular cryptocurrency, Ethereum, is unfathomably wealthy and successful.
Despite his unprecedented success, the 28-year-old financial tech guru is not exactly optimistic about the future of cryptocurrency.
He told Time Magazine that “Crypto itself has a lot of dystopian potential if implemented wrong.”
Time reported that the Buterin’s creation, the Ethereum Network, is a trillion-dollar financial “ecosystem that rivals Visa in terms of the money it moves” and that “Ethereum has brought thousands of unbanked people around the world into financial systems, allowed capital to flow unencumbered across borders, and provided the infrastructure for entrepreneurs to build all sorts of new products.”
Buterin is worried that people who are overeager to invest their money in cryptocurrency underestimate the risks associated with doing so and expressed a general distaste for people who treat cryptocurrency as a sort of get-rich-quick scheme.
Referencing the infamous line of Bored Ape NFTs he said, “The peril is you have these $3 million monkeys and it becomes a different kind of gambling.”
Buterin also dislikes the glitz and glamor that often accompanies the newfound wealth by people who invest in cryptocurrency; he said, “There definitely are lots of people that are just buying yachts and Lambos.”
The encrypted blockchain technology that Ethereum runs on, like Bitcoin, gives Buterin hope that his creation will eventually become more than a financial asset.
Reportedly, Buterin hopes that “Ethereum will become the launchpad for all sorts of sociopolitical experimentation: fairer voting systems, urban planning, universal basic income, public-works projects” and more.
Most important to him however is a desire for Ethereum to serve as a “counterweight to authoritarian governments and to upend Silicon Valley’s stranglehold over our digital lives.”
Put simply, Buterin hopes to see his creation be used for more than financial investing.
He said, “If we don’t exercise our voice, the only things that get built are the things that are immediately profitable and those are often far from what’s actually the best for the world.”
Buterin’s vision, however, may not come to pass as he is far from the formal leader of the Ethereum Network.
In fact, the network was created so that there could be no central figure that directs its trajectory. It is a decentralized platform that is responsive to the whims of whoever is using it the most effectively.
This decentralization leaves Buterin trying to guide Ethereum’s legion of devotees by writing blog posts, giving interviews and speaking at conventions, and conducting independent research on blockchain technology.
'We ain't rich; I'm rich': Shaq offers sobering message to his kids if they're hoping for financial handouts from their multimillionaire father
Not that most folks would know firsthand, but it seems quite likely that at least a few children of super-wealthy parents may not believe they'll need to lift a finger come adulthood with so much available cash hanging around.
Well, count Hall of Fame basketball icon Shaquille O'Neal's children out of that number.
What did he say?
Because O'Neal indicated during a taping of the "Earn Your Leisure" podcast that his progeny aren't about to get any handouts from Dad.
"My kids are older now, and they're kinda upset with me," Shaq offered. "They're not really upset, but they don't understand. 'Cause I tell them all the time: We ain't rich. I'm rich."
Indeed, O'Neal never backed down under the basket — and he's no softie with his six children, who are between the ages of 15 and 25, MarketWatch reported, when it comes to requiring them to make their own way in the world.
"No," he continued, as if he was speaking to his kids, insisting they need to land a bachelor's or master's degree— "and then, if you want me to invest in one of your companies, you're going to have to present it — boom, boom, boom. Bring it to me; I'll let you know. I'm not giving you nothing."
Shaq to his kids: “We ain’t rich, I’m rich.”Teaching them work ethic. 💪 https://t.co/RbCNgkL5BV
— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) 1635353713.0
So how much money does Shaq have, anyway?
O'Neal, 49, made $286 million during his NBA career, the outlet added, noting that the former center and current TNT commentator has made a pretty good living since then through endorsement and equity deals with Icy Hot, Gold Bond, Buick, The General, Pepsi, and Reebok.
What's more, ClutchPoints estimates that Shaq's 2021 worth is about $400 million.
More from MarketWatch:
O'Neal is the latest wealthy celebrity to voice a stance against gifting their children money.
When referencing leaving large sums of money to their children when he dies, actor Daniel Craig said recently, "My philosophy is to get rid of it or give it away before you go," adding that it would be "distasteful" to leave millions to your heirs.
Business billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Gates have expressed similar views over the years, as have CNN anchor Anderson Cooper and musical artist Sting.
How are folks reacting?
Some observers gave Shaq high praise for his no-nonsense approach to handing out cash to his children — but a number of others criticized him on Twitter:
- "I will never understand this mentality. I made it for my children. I don't want them to be slacking in their efforts, but I will not put a burden on them to struggle in life," one commenter said. "Build business and let them be in charge to maintain them and grow. Remember! U will be old AF soon."
- "This is why white people will always be ahead," another commenter declared.
- "You are correct," another user said, answering the previous commenter. "Whites believe in passing along OLD MONEY to keep their kids and grandkids in the same life style...I plan to do the same ...Unfortunately, SOME affluent blacks believe in 'I got mine, now you go get your own.'"
- "That's the problem with black families," another user added. "This is also a percentage of the reason why the generation wealth gap is as large as it is between white and black. Stereotypically, when black parents and grandparents toil through all the hardships and unfairness that they had to go through, they typically feel that their children have to jump through the same or similar hurdles and hoops for the kids to be worthy of any wealth whatsoever. Versus their white counterparts who have parents who literally hand their kids their share of the family's capital..."
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