ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษด้วยเทคนิค Shadowing จากวิดีโอ: I Asked Tom Cruise How He Made $600 Million

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I'm about to interview one of the greatest movie stars of all time and his name,
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I'm about to interview one of the greatest movie stars of all time and his name,
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it's Tom Cruise.
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What industry did you decide to pursue a career in movies which encompasses almost every industry?
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I'm here with Tom Cruise.
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Oh man, it's nice to see you.
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He's been the face of Hollywood for over 40 years,
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starring in blockbuster films like Pop Gun and Mission Impossible.
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He's made billions at the box office
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while earning hundreds of millions of dollars personally and becoming one of the most iconic actors of all time.
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So today, I'm in my home state of Texas to meet with the legend himself,
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Tom Cruise, to figure out his secrets.
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Ask him how he became one of the greatest actors in history,
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all while building an empire in the process.
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So this video is about to be insane from start to finish,
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so stay tuned until the end.
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With that being said, let's get this video on the way.
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All right, you guys, so we're going to be meeting up with Tom Cruise very shortly,
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but I need you guys to understand something.
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Look, Tom Cruise is one of the richest men in all of Hollywood.
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He's one of the richest actors of all time.
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And I'm going to be interviewing him out in San Antonio.
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But right now, I'm standing in one of the billionaire capitals of the world.
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I'm in Austin, Texas.
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Home to billionaires like Elon Musk, Michael Dell.
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Guys worth billions of dollars.
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And I'm going to be cold approaching some of the richest people in all of Austin right now.
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And one of the billionaire hot spots out here in downtown.
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So we're going to go see who we can find and how they made their,
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well, not millions, but billions out here, you guys.
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Come on.
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Excuse me, sir.
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Sir, how old were you when you became a millionaire?
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About 40 years old.
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How did you get rich?
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Have you ever had one of these?
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Kind bar?
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Yes.
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I found it.
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You created the Kind bar?
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Yeah.
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How much money did you make selling these?
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We sold over a billion dollars a year.
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Are you a billionaire?
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I guess so, but I spent 30 years building my business prior to Kind
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and then only last December I finally sold the company.
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I go all over the world and doing billionaires to help the younger generation.
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Can I get a minute with you for our channel real quick?
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Sure, with pleasure.
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Who am I here with today?
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Daniel Lubetzky.
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How did you come up with the idea for Kind?
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10 years of mistakes in the natural food industry.
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I first started a company called PeaceWorks to bring neighbors in conflict regions together.
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Made so many mistakes, but eventually had an idea for a healthy snack
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that you could travel with and that exploded and did really well.
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Did you have anybody that doubted you when you started this company?
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Everyone doubted me.
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Like even my parents who I love so much.
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What is this crazy Mexican Jewish lawyer doing selling sundry tomato spreads in the streets of Manhattan?
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What was the biggest risk that you took throughout your career?
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I mean, everything in my life was like that,
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but I had a degree from Stanford Law School.
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I could have gone work through a fancy law firm
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and instead I had my little legal suitcase emptied it from the books added all my products
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and I was walking up
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and down the streets of Manhattan at 7 a.m in the morning letting people try my products door by door,
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door by door from 7 a.m to 7 p.m
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and then the following day I would go and deliver the product to stores by myself and repeat and rinse,
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rinse and repeat, rinse and repeat for many, many years.
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You built a billion dollar brand.
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What's your best branding advice for anybody out there? Be consistent.
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Don't try to change things because if you try to please everybody,
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you're going to please nobody always stay consistent with what your logo is marketers always want to change things
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which is cool but there's things
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that shouldn't change your value set a value statement what does my brand stand for
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and very importantly what it is not and be true to
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that always be what you say you are never be what you say you're not
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and be consistent consistent consistent you know even after we were selling billions of dollars
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and worth billions of dollars sometimes people still didn't know
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that the brand was called kind they remember the colors
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but it takes a long time to build an iconic brand You just need to stay consistent.
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Like our logo, we never changed it.
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We were very, very consistent so people develop the mental framework and understand it.
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And what does it mean?
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A brand is a promise.
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A great brand is a promise well kept.
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Your school of hard knocks,
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you know exactly what you're trying to do.
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You know what your consumer,
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what your viewer wants to get out of you.
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And you're very consistent.
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That's why you're succeeding because you know exactly what you need to deliver.
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If one day you're going to go philosophical
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and the other one you're going to go practical
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and the other way you're going to talk to old people and the other one,
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it's going to be much harder for people to know what to look for.
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So you need to be consistent whether you're creating a social media channel
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or product just Consistency is everything now Warren Buffett one of the richest men on planet Earth says
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that Distribution is the key to everything during every store known
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to man What was your secret to getting into distribution getting in every single retail store on the planet hard knocks?
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That's the name of your channel, right?
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It's literally hard knocks like I was on a date with my wife
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and I would ask her before she was my wife Hold on.
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I need to check into this bodega I need to go into this convenience store
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and I would like sell or try to get the product the right shelves one at a time one at a time.
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You build this thing, it took years and years
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and years of knocking down all those doors and slowly but surely you just keep building it.
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What's a lesson about money that is not taught in school
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that you would instill in everybody around the world watching right now?
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My grandfather was a rancher in Mexico.
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He was a cattleman
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and he said a man that's too proud to pick up a penny is not worth a penny
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and I think it's a really important lesson too.
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Don't feel like you're above saving that dollar
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and he used to also say mind the pennies and the dollars will mind themselves.
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Be humble enough to appreciate that one penny.
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I'm walking on the street,
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I will bend over and pick up the penny,
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not just because it's a penny,
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but it's because it says that you're never gonna be above trying to hustle
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and trying to work hard and appreciate and stretch every dollar.
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What is your best branding advice?
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How do you now?
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I'm 56.
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Daniel, if me and you died tomorrow and you had one more guiding principle to lead with the younger generation,
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what would that be?
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Be kind to every human being.
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The reason the company is called kind is I named it after my father.
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He was a Holocaust survivor.
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He was in the Dachau concentration camp.
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American soldiers risked their lives to liberate him.
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And in spite of all of the horrors that he went through,
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he was kind to everybody,
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whether he was the bank teller or the bank president,
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whether he was a flight attendant, everybody.
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He told jokes, he was kind,
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he was loving to every human being.
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He saw his role as bringing smiles to everybody.
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And that's the very small way what I tried to emulate
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to make this a better world than the way we found it.
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That's beautiful right there.
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How important was the entity structuring when you were building Kind Bar?
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Did you start like an LLC or an S Corp?
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Or what did you end up starting?
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It's super important.
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We used to be an LLC and it was just passed through so it's efficient.
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The disadvantage of an LLC is that if you do have profits
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and you're paying them every year and I was actually profitable and I was paying taxes every year.
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When you have a C-Corp structure, there's double taxation.
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But if you're just focusing on growth,
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not on profits every year,
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it's a very good structure because then you're not paying taxes unless you have a distribution or a liquidity event.
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And if you're not planning to do it,
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if you're planning to grow for the future,
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then a C-Corp structure is good and you aim to just keep the money with the company,
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reinvest, reinvest, grow, grow, grow.
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And then you're compounding without having to be paying taxes every year.
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It's super important for you to get the right structure.
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There's a company that we use called Bizi for all of our entity structuring for our businesses.
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They make it super affordable and easy for any entrepreneur.
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Easy?
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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B-I-Z-E-E.
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And the best part is you can do it like in seconds.
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You can turn that idea into a business overnight in seconds.
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So it's like super effective and efficient for all the entrepreneurs out there.
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Very cool.
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I'll recommend it to my team.
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Guys, we're going to be meeting Tom Cruise very soon,
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but we just interviewed a billionaire.
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Did you hear what he just told me?
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He said one of the most important decisions you will ever make is how you structure your company.
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Not marketing, not product, setting up your business entity.
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And he's right, guys.
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Look, if you don't set your business up the right way from day one,
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you risk losing so much money,
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paying way too much in taxes,
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and even putting your personal assets on the line.
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And that's exactly why when I built my multi-million dollar business,
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I went through Busy.
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They handled setting up my LLC,
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and they continue to handle my state compliance filings each year to keep my company in good standing with the state.
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With Busy, not only can you form your LLC or S Corp in minutes,
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You'll also get a free registered agent for a year and lifetime compliance alerts so you never miss a deadline.
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No lawyers, no confusion, just the peace of mind for managing your business in one place.
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So if you're serious about turning your idea or side hustle into a real business,
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guys, do not wait.
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All you have to do is go down
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and click the link in the description of this video to start your business with Busy Today.
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But with that being said,
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let's get back to the video.
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All right, you guys, so I know we're going to be linking up an interview with the legendary Tom Cruise very soon.
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But before we do that,
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I've got a crazy surprise for you guys.
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So check this out.
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Most people spend their entire lives trying to make just $1 million.
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But Thomas Healy, no, no,
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no, no, no. He became one of the youngest billionaires in the world at 28 years old.
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And I'm going to be meeting up with him right now to figure out exactly how he did it.
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Guys, he literally went head to head with Tesla,
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one of the biggest companies in the world.
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And he built an electric trucking company,
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took it public to the NASDAQ,
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and became a billionaire before he turned 30 years old.
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So we're gonna be figuring out exactly how he did that and how you can turn an idea into an empire.
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So let's waste no more time.
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Let's meet Thomas right now and go see what he has to say.
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All right, you guys.
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So we're right now here meeting up with that man Thomas right here.
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The youngest self-made billionaire in the world, you guys.
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Come on.
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What's going on, Thomas?
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How you doing, man?
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It's great to meet you.
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Appreciate you coming out, man.
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We were letting them know, man.
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28 years old, you became the youngest self-made billionaire in the entire world.
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I did.
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Great to meet you and looking forward to sharing a little advice with your audience.
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I got one rule for this interview.
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No holding back.
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I need you to give them a billion dollars worth of game.
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Can we make that happen?
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At just 33 years old,
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I've been through a lot in this short life,
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and so I can't wait to share more.
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Let's make it happen.
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Who am I here with today?
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Have you heard of Kylie Jenner?
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Yes.
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So in 2020, I dethroned her as the youngest self-made billionaire in the world.
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Are you serious?
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So I took my company public.
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We're trading on the New York Stock Exchange,
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and in 2020, we hit a $10 billion valuation.
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So how old were you when you became a billionaire?
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So I was 28.
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So this was all new.
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I became the youngest public company CEO that there was and we were going public on the New York Stock Exchange,
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ringing the bell, opening the markets.
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Now, the average age of a billionaire is what?
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Is it like 70, 80 years old or something?
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Most people get there later in their life.
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I was super fortunate that I started this company.
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I dropped out of college.
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I was in Carnegie Mellon,
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and I had this idea of,
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let's go electrify commercial vehicles.
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Dropped out and started this journey,
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and a few years later,
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we went public and have raised about $750 million to date.
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You had an electric trucking company.
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You were competing with Tesla.
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Were you ever afraid of competition?
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We were.
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Now, this has been a wild journey.
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So we went public, focusing on electric powertrains,
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but then the market's changed.
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Electric vehicles have gotten decimated over the past handful of years.
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And so we actually made the bold move of pivoting out of that industry,
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and we went all in on a technology we acquired out of GE Aerospace,
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where now we're actually making electricity.
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We have what we think is the future of how electricity is going to be made.
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So what's safe to say that you have to master the power of Pivot in order to be a successful entrepreneur?
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We did.
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We saw that all of our competitors were going bankrupt.
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They were running out of cash.
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They weren't able to raise more.
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And we said, well, we still have capital left on our balance sheet.
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Why don't we go into a different market where we see so much growth?
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We saw AI, we saw commercial buildings,
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industrial applications needing more power.
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And we have the solution for that.
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Now people that achieve that billionaire status,
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what do they do differently in your eyes than millionaires?
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One of our early investors,
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he's a billionaire, he said,
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winning is your only option.
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You can't think about what ways could I potentially lose at this,
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how could we fail.
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You got to put all your time
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and effort into figuring out how am I going to win and just work relentlessly at that.
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It has to work or it has to work.
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Yeah, winning is the only option.
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Most people spend their entire lives trying to make a million dollars.
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You became a billionaire before 30.
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What's the best industry somebody can get into right now in today's world?
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AI, right now.
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AI is booming.
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It is unbelievable.
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I think it will totally transform businesses, industries.
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So what we're doing is we're saying,
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well, we got the way to power AI, power data centers.
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So that's the industry I've chosen.
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And I think it's a winner.
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Are you a good negotiator?
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I think I'm decent at it.
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I think it's tough to raise $750 million if you're not good at negotiating.
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So give me a piece of negotiation advice right here that can change somebody's life.
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Never get into a position where you're desperate.
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That's where things usually go wrong.
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You have to have leverage.
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Absolutely.
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Leverages everything in a negotiation and you need to be willing to walk away when it doesn't make sense.
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I had, remember it clear as day like it was yesterday,
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a night where we were supposed to close the deal the following day.
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The investor tried to change the terms on us.
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And so that evening I flew to Florida,
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met with a different investor
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and the following day signed the entire deal with a totally new investor because we had another option.
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So it's safe to say that if somebody else won't, somebody else will.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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And you got to have those people bought in around you
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that are willing to make that leap or jump with you and dive in.
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And you've got to know your worth of business
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because you could have been comfortable with closing on that deal when they tried to change the terms of last minute.
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So you've got to know your worth.
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You've got to know your worth and you've got to always keep a plan B, right?
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Because the path that you're going on could change at any time.
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And whether it's because of something you did or some factor that you have zero control over,
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things change in this world.
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And you've got to have different options lined up to be able to jump on them in a second.
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And your last message to the younger generation.
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Figure out what you want to do in your life and then go all in.
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One of the mottos at Carnegie Mellon was my heart is in the work.
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And I think that's a great thing to live by.
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You got amazing advice, my friend.
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I appreciate it.
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Thank you so much for your time, Andrew.
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Guys, we just interviewed one of the youngest self-made billionaires in the entire world.
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And he just gave a beautiful interview for all the entrepreneurs out there.
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But listen to me very carefully, you guys.
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The time has now come.
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I'm about to go head in and interview the legendary Tom Cruise.
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Guys, he's one of the most renowned actors.
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One of the greatest of all time.
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And I'm going to be getting the secrets on how he became one of the richest
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and most successful men in all of Hollywood.
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So let's go meet up with Tom Cruise and go see what he has to say.
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Come on.
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Listen you guys I've done some crazy interviews before Shaquille O'Neal,
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Mark Cuban, the owner of the Texans,
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the CEO of Nike But I don't think I've ever felt this way before an interview man
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because this is Tom Cruise man This is Top Gun Mavic.
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This is Mission Impossible man.
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You've all seen a Tom Cruise movie before.
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This one's gonna be crazy you guys Come on in.
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Let's go Alright you guys so we are in the hotel in San Antonio,
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Texas right now waiting to do the interview with Tom I
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want to put this in perspective for you guys of how crazy this interview actually is.
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So this is probably going to be one of the last Mission Impossible movies of all time.
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And here's the thing, guys,
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Mission Impossible comes out tomorrow.
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So the fact that we're doing this the day before on his world tour is absolutely crazy.
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In my home state of Texas,
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you guys, no better place to do this, man.
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Shout out to San Antonio.
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Shout out to Texas.
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But yeah, guys, we'll be linking up with Tom soon.
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So get ready for this one.
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James.
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Hey, James.
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How you doing, man?
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It's great to meet you.
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Great to meet you.
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How you doing?
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Great.
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I'm happy to be here.
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Thanks for being here, man.
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Absolutely.
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He was in a helicopter over here directing me doing that.
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So he would be in a helicopter and he'd open the door.
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He would hang out the helicopter in our first day.
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He always had to remind him to put his seatbelt on.
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But thanks for being here.
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James, thought you'd give me a little insight.
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Yeah, I appreciate that.
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It was a lot.
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Thank you.
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No, thank you.
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What industry did you decide to pursue a career in?
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Movies, which encompasses almost every industry.
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I'm here with Tom Cruise.
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Yeah, man.
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It's nice to see you.
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You've been a top actor for decades.
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What's been the biggest driving factor of your success throughout your career?
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I don't know what separates me necessarily.
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I think everyone has their own things that they're interested in, and it's passion.
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And finding something that you're passionate about,
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that it's not what I do,
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it is who I am.
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And so those things that I encourage that in others,
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and I'm always asking people,
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what is your passion and why don't you pursue that?
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And it's my passion to make films,
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my interest in humanity, my interest in life and how it works,
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my interest in knowledge, and knowledge that I can apply to attain the goals
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that I have set for myself and that of my filmmakers together.
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Just very passionate about learning, very passionate about storytelling.
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You've become obsessed with all aspects of film and movies.
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How important was it for you to become obsessed?
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It's not obsessed.
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You know, it's interesting.
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You know, obsession can have a negative connotation.
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It's an interest.
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You know, as I said,
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you look at the amount of industries that it takes and encompasses all of life in terms of working with groups,
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working with individuals, as a producer, as an actor.
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So it is a passion.
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It's something that just interests me.
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So I enjoy learning about it.
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I enjoy watching films in the theater.
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I enjoy the crews that I work with and being directed here,
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you know, with Christopher McQuarrie.
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And so I just, I love what I do.
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And I feel very privileged to be able to do something
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that I love to do and have audiences accept me and want to be entertained by me.
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When you look at a lot of people,
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the number one reason I see that they feel is
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because they don't believe in themselves but when you look at your career,
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you've done every death-defying stunt imaginable.
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What was your perspective on fear and taking risks?
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Do you not fear anything?
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No, it's not a matter.
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I don't mind being afraid.
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I know fear is the unknown,
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and I enjoy feeling that because it also puts me in a position of I want to know.
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And the way that I approach it is just,
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as I said, I look for knowledge that I can apply.
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And when it's applied, you get the correct results.
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So that's what I'm looking for in terms of everything in my life.
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And I'm someone who, if it's not true for me,
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it's not true for me.
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If something isn't real for me,
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no matter what, I have to know and experience it and understand it for myself.
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And when I do that,
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the fear goes away, the adrenaline is still there, the excitement, the adventure.
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I want an adventurous life.
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I want it.
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I like adventure.
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I like exploring things that,
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you know, you look at the aerial stuff that we're talking about here earlier,
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you know, when we're doing stuff like this,
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it's like how to figure out how to do something like this.
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How do we get to this?
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So this is you hanging off a plane right now?
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Oh yeah, it is and the amount of knowledge that we needed to know just to be able to get this shot.
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I'm an aerobatic pilot.
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I fly airplanes.
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I fly this airplane.
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I fly it in all different maneuvers.
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It's what piece of equipment to get this shot.
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So we had to understand the different camera equipment.
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We developed camera equipment and technology just to get this,
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the speed at which this aircraft is traveling.
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And I also have to understand what the pilot knows.
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Because I'm a pilot, I know the dangers and where we're getting this aircraft to a stall.
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So when I'm here, I'm not just acting and moving in between the wings.
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I'm also perceiving what he's going through and the air molecules coming over that wing.
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When you're approaching something like this you don't know until you start really looking at it.
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So what I'll do is I'll set a goal
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and I'll write a list of all the things I think I need to know,
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to learn, to be in order to get a shot like this.
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And I align it with Christopher McQuarrie and our entire film group and so we're also just exploring it.
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You don't just sit in a room and draw this up and think you can get this.
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There is physically how do I train to get here,
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what kind of force, the wardrobe.
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There's so many different elements that an audience doesn't know why or how,
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but the amount of years to be able to get to this,
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to do a shot like this,
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and the collaborative efforts between me and McHugh.
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You know, the dreams that we have,
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and I'm hearing his dreams of what he wants to create,
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and I want to participate with that,
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and then he hears mine.
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It's just this wonderful back and forth with ourselves and with our whole film crew,
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and that's what I love.
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Where did you work at that come from?
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Just my desire to be as competent and able as I can be.
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That interests me excellence interests me and it's something that I know
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that absolutes are unattainable but that I'm going to constantly strive for it.
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It's my desire to entertain people.
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It is my desire to deliver the very best that I've always felt for myself.
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Even when I was a little kid before movies,
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it's when I had any job I always wanted to understand how to do
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that job and then do it at the very highest level that I possibly can.
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I enjoy going for that level of perfection.
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Your last message to the younger generation.
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Yeah, that was it.
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You go.
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Look for knowledge that you can apply to your lives
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because there's so much information out there that doesn't mean that it's accurate.
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I'm someone who says
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when I hear it can't be done I'm like I don't
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know maybe you know how many times do you think the people weren't like oh you could do this
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so it's how to accumulate knowledge that is applicable towards your goals
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and don't be so afraid to be afraid
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or nervous the important thing is to keep pursuing your dreams
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and finding accurate things that are gonna add to your life
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and others you know the way that I look at life I don't live it for myself,
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I really know that to live my life I'm thinking of others and to lead is to serve.
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Not to tell people what to do but to help them to be better.
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So I'd focus on that in terms of yourself personally but also others,
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how you can contribute to your friends,
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to your family, to your workplace in a very positive way.
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Those things are, you know,
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I look to improve every area that I'm in.
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Not just myself, I'm looking at my decisions based on what are the ramifications
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and effects of others so I think we have to think of
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that when we're part of the group
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so that's kind of what I do you got amazing thank
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you very much guys we just interviewed the legendary Tom Cruise I need you guys watching right now to like
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and subscribe for amazing content we got coming every week that's
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because nobody's interviewing Tom Cruise and we just did
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that we're going all over the world to bring you guys the craziest guests the richest most successful people
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and I need you guys to also do yourself a favor go down
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and Click the link in the description of this video to
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become a member of the number one most powerful entrepreneur community and network in the entire world.
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We launched it a year ago and have over 5,000 hungry entrepreneurs
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that get direct access to the millionaires
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and billionaires I interview every week on this channel where they mentor you and answer your questions directly.
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So I can't wait to see you on the inside of the School of Mentors.
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With that being said, I'll see you in the next video.

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ยอดนิยม

เกี่ยวกับบทเรียนนี้

ในบทเรียนนี้ ผู้เรียนจะได้ฝึกการพูดภาษาอังกฤษผ่านการสัมภาษณ์ที่น่าสนใจของทอม ครูซ ซึ่งเป็นนักแสดงที่มีชื่อเสียงในฮอลลีวูด ผู้เรียนจะได้เรียนรู้เกี่ยวกับเส้นทางอาชีพของเขา และสิ่งที่ทำให้เขาประสบความสำเร็จ การฟังและพูดตามเสียงของเขาจะช่วยเสริมทักษะการฟังและการพูดภาษาอังกฤษให้มีประสิทธิภาพยิ่งขึ้น คุณสามารถใช้การฝึก“shadow speak” ซึ่งเป็นเทคนิคที่ได้รับความนิยมในการเรียนภาษาอังกฤษจากยูทูป

คำศัพท์และวลีที่สำคัญ

  • มหาเศรษฐี (billionaire) - ผู้ที่มีทรัพย์สินเกินหนึ่งพันล้าน
  • อัตราผลตอบแทน (box office) - รายได้ที่เกิดจากการขายตั๋วหนัง
  • คำถาม (interview) - การสัมภาษณ์
  • การสร้างธุรกิจ (building a business) - การเริ่มและพัฒนาธุรกิจ
  • ความสำเร็จ (success) - ผลลัพธ์ที่ดีจากความพยายาม
  • คนดัง (iconic actors) - นักแสดงที่มีชื่อเสียงและมีอิทธิพล
  • วัฒนธรรมฮอลลีวูด (Hollywood culture) - วัฒนธรรมที่เกี่ยวข้องกับอุตสาหกรรมภาพยนตร์ในอเมริกา
  • ธุรกิจอาหาร (food business) - ธุรกิจที่เกี่ยวกับการผลิตและจำหน่ายอาหาร

เคล็ดลับการฝึกฝน

ในการฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษจากวิดีโอนี้ ขอแนะนำให้คุณใช้เทคนิค “shadowing” โดยการฟังทอม ครูซ พูดและพยายามเลียนแบบเสียงและจังหวะของเขา คุณอาจเริ่มจากการฟังประโยคสั้น ๆ ก่อน และค่อย ๆ เพิ่มความยาวของประโยคที่คุณพยายามเลียนแบบ ทำให้มั่นใจว่าคุณครองอารมณ์และน้ำเสียงในขณะพูด สิ่งสำคัญคือการใส่ใจกับจังหวะและการเน้นเสียงในคำต่าง ๆ โดยทำการฝึกบน “shadowing site” หรือแพลตฟอร์มฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษที่มีอยู่ คุณจะพบว่าการฝึกแบบนี้จะช่วยเสริมสร้างความมั่นใจในการพูดภาษาอังกฤษของคุณ

เทคนิค Shadowing คืออะไร?

Shadowing เป็นเทคนิคการเรียนรู้ภาษาที่ได้รับการรับรองทางวิทยาศาสตร์ พัฒนาขึ้นสำหรับการฝึกนักแปลมืออาชีพ วิธีการนี้เรียบง่ายแต่ทรงพลัง: คุณฟังเสียงภาษาอังกฤษจากเจ้าของภาษาและพูดตามทันที — เหมือนเงาที่ตามผู้พูดด้วยช่วงเวลาห่าง 1-2 วินาที การวิจัยแสดงว่าเทคนิคนี้ปรับปรุงความแม่นยำในการออกเสียง ทำนองเสียง จังหวะ การเชื่อมเสียง การฟังเข้าใจ และความคล่องแคล่วในการพูดได้อย่างมีนัยสำคัญ

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