The LFG Show

Tariffs At 200 MPH 🏁 Mario Berta "The Fast And The Solarious"

David Stodolak

⚡️ENERGY INDEPENDENCE ISN’T A FUTURE CONCEPT — IT’S HAPPENING RIGHT NOW
And it’s changing the game 🔥

In this high-voltage episode of The LFG Show, we go LIVE from SolarCon with global entrepreneur and Turbo Energy Director Mario Berta — and he drops some serious 🔋SOLAR BARS🔋

🎯 What we cover:
🚀 Turbo’s AI-powered energy storage system, The Sunbox – installs in just 45 minutes
📉 Cuts energy bills by up to 41%
🤖 Learns your usage every 5 minutes — and auto-adjusts
🔌 Backup power during grid failures & climate blackouts
💥 And why only 4% of Americans have tapped into this massive opportunity

🌎 Mario’s done business in 73 countries.
He’s raced cars professionally.
Been on Shark Tank Philippines and The Apprentice Spain.
And his motto?
👉 “The guy that doesn’t show up closes sh\*t.”

We also break down:
⚖️ Tariffs, regulation, and why the U.S. solar market is ready to explode
🏠 The power to go completely off-grid — “build your house in the middle of nowhere” vibes
📈 The business model of freedom – own your energy, own your life

---Big shoutout to the team at Turbo Energy www.turbo-e.com for leading the charge toward smart energy freedom.
And MAJOR love to Connection Holdings — big things coming soon 👀💼

💣 And of course — none of this happens without our sponsors:
🔗 Ringba https://www.ringba.com — the #1 call tracking platform
🏠 Roofs In A Box www.roofsinabox.com — scale your roofing biz with 70% less overhead

---🎧 *SUBSCRIBE to The LFG Show* right now for more 🔥 interviews from the frontlines of solar, lead gen, and digital domination.
👉 Tap the bell. Drop a comment. And LET’S F\*CKING GO.

#TheLFGShow #TurboEnergy #SolarCon #EnergyIndependence #BatteryStorage #AI #Entrepreneurship #HomePower #LeadGen #Ringba #RoofsInABox #NoMoneyNoHoney

Timestamps:
0:05
Meeting Mario Berta of Turbo Energy
3:27
The US Solar Market Opportunity
8:10
Sunbox: The AI-Powered Storage Solution
11:08
Tariffs and Climate Change Challenges
14:12
European vs American Solar Culture
18:16
From Shark Tank to Global Business
21:20
Racing Cars and Business Success
26:09
Closing Thoughts and Future Plans

Speaker 2:

Guys, we got a special guest today. We're going to flip the script a little bit. We're going to talk about energy storage, racing cars being on the apprentice, talking with President Donald Trump. We got Mario Berta. He's the Director of Global Operations for Turbo Energy, publicly traded in the NASDAQ. Mario, it's a pleasure to have you on the show. Thank you for having me. How do you like?

Speaker 3:

SolarCon. How's this show been for you? Listen, it's my first time to Solar Conference ever. I'm coming from a totally different background. I think you guys are making solar great again. Thank you.

Speaker 2:

That means a lot to me. We're trying Listen solar. They call it the solar coaster, right, it's a lot of ups, it's a lot of downs, right, but I feel like we're at a point where it's consolidating right now. And the one thing I took away we saw Abigail speak. She's a big live. She's the head of the director of SIA, which is a solar energy industrial association. They do a lot of good stuff for solar. She was saying that solar energy has doubled year over year, and that's good, because that's what's going on with turbo energy, right. So that's one bright spot that solar energy is going to continue to grow. How do you feel about that?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so not only Abigail, also the guy of Freedom Solar. The market is only 4% penetrated In a market of 300 million people. That sounds to me like a tremendous opportunity. And the fact that technology is getting better, prices are going down of the actual equipment but electricity cost is going up. So now the delta is becoming wider and wider, which will ultimately reflect, will result into an additional interest from the consumer.

Speaker 2:

Yes, so obviously Turbo Energy started. It's a European-based company right Valencia, spain. This is an operation in Chile and Europe, coming to America and where else in Africa, in Congo, we did South.

Speaker 3:

Africa. We have a strong presence in Chile because of our matter company is actually a much bigger organization that produce solar farms across the planet and in Spain the matter company built the biggest solar farm to date in Europe.

Speaker 2:

So everyone understands Turbo Energy is not a startup. Turbo Energy has been around for a while.

Speaker 3:

We're a startup within a much larger organization. We don't run it as a startup, it's a structured organization. Already we operate in an environment which is extremely regulated, even within Europe. Italy has its own regulations, spain has its own regulations, so we've got to be extremely structured in the way we enter. Each market Got it, so why the decision to be extremely structured in the way we enter?

Speaker 2:

each market Got it, so why the decision to enter the United States market? What was the thought process behind that?

Speaker 3:

I mean, I think any company in the planet needs to be present in the United States once you reach a certain size if it wants to really hit the home run, and big. The good news is now America. It's a very big market and an extreme the American consumism and dynamism. It's an amazing opportunity. The downside is, you know, is that people here and I know there's a tremendous difference between you know a Europe solar conference and an American solar conference. Here people are very aggressive and they're down to make it happen and so on, which is good, but also makes it way more competitive.

Speaker 2:

Turbo energy, united States. Right, there's a lot of competition. Obviously there's the Teslas, the Enphases, the Franklins, right? What's the differentiating factor?

Speaker 3:

Yeah. So we for sure not try to compete on price. I think you never compete on price when you start to sell technology. Now, the batteries that we all know is a battery for us is a commodity just like for anybody else.

Speaker 3:

Our real innovative product is what we call the sandbox. So, in simple terms, it's a cabin, and the cabin will have all you need for your storage solution. It will contain the batteries, it will contain all the components and it's actually a nicely designed item which is in your. Ultimately it's going to be in your house, right? So you don't want scattered accessories that look ugly and can be touched by the kids or beaten by the dog, you know. So the cabin will contain everything. It's a simple, elegant, unique piece. You plug it in and you're you know you're up and running with a storage solution, our unique value proposition for the consumer. Aside the design, it's our artificial intelligence which is actually learning every five minutes. The sandbox is shooting information to our servers and learning from the consumption pattern of the final consumer and adapting the switching on and off of the battery and buy from the grid with a sole purpose to actually save on the electricity bill, and what kind of savings do you think the consumer is going to expect?

Speaker 3:

I mean, we have estimates that you know with batteries you will save 20% on electricity bill. With batteries and artificial intelligence that 20% can go up to 41%.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it seems to me, based on my understanding, that the key differentiating factor is the ai. Yeah, there's two things is the ease of installation right 45 minutes to install versus hours. The the sleekness is portable you move from one home to another, you can bring with you easily. And also the ai component correct, that's correct. Yeah, and in the ai component, are you not seeing that in the competition at all?

Speaker 3:

like you would think there'd be some sort of Anybody that you know, any player that allows you to download an app. It adds AI. You know, like any company now is talking about AI because they allow the stock to go up, they put AI in their investor update. Our thing is real, like our servers are churning in and out information every five minutes. And if you have a kid let's say you have a kid your consumption pattern in the house changed dramatically from one day right, somebody's going to stay in the house way more because the kid is in the house, so the consumption pattern will change. Our system is able to detect this kind of consumption pattern in a week.

Speaker 2:

There is a new endeavor called Roofs in the Box. It's just man from day one, it's taken off.

Speaker 4:

When I first started getting in the roofing industry, what was happening was my fixed costs were always there, and so for me I was looking at how can we, kind of one, save on these costs? And then, two, how do I not lay people off during down times, but also maybe even the ability to pocket more money during the slow season or even the peak season. Since we've done this before, like with our lead gen companies where we have virtual staffing and from Argentina or Columbia, I'm like why don't we do the same thing in the construction business? Now, once we figured it out, we reduced their fixed costs by 70%, and so now, during the downtime, they have real seasoned veteran type of players, but during the uptime, the pocket of 70% of their operational costs are now going back in their pocket. And then, when it's time to scale, you have the back end prepared, already ready to go to help them. Like lift off, depending on what state you're in, you're averaging at about 12.5% on what you pay out on taxes, insurance, like all the different insurances that you have to pay out, right? So, yeah, you don't have to pay out unemployment, you don't have to pay out unemployment. They pay out bike insurance, medicare, social Security the things that business owners have to eat.

Speaker 4:

Roofs-to-box is not just limited to roofing or home improvement companies. You can use it for any services, right? You can use it for IT. We use them internally for data cells, for hygiene, for analytics. It doesn't even matter what the vertical is Like. Business-to-box at the end of the day, pretty much yeah.

Speaker 2:

So it does it for you, right? The user doesn't have to, the homeowner doesn't have to do anything. It monitors, almost like the you know that whoop, one of those things. It monitors that and it gives it and it does it automatically for you. That's correct. That's amazing. So what do you think are especially now listen tariffs? Right, that's a big elephant in the room. Everyone, everyone here is talking about it. How is that going to affect the whole solar energy market? Obviously it's affecting it.

Speaker 3:

I mean it will affect everyone and will affect everyone in the same level. So it's unfair for the industry. But nobody will really have a competitive advantage unless we'll be capable to produce battery in the US, which, if even we start today to build a factory, it will be live in four years. So I don't think it's a problem of today, because everybody will have the same problem. It will squeeze everybody out. It will squeeze margin out. Ultimately, the consumer will be impacted by it because if we want to acquire a solar system, we'll have higher capex, so investment. So honestly, I don't know how this is going to play out. We'll do our best to contain cost and not to pass it on to the consumer. Based on what I saw, here.

Speaker 2:

Solar's having a lot of challenges right now overall, but the energy mark and the energy storage part component that's the bright spot right now and that made me feel positive coming out of here, because I've been at this show I've been in solar since 2016 and it was a rocket ship up to about 2022, early 2023 and a lot of things have changed. But the one thing that's going up right now, where the money's flowing, is definitely energy source.

Speaker 3:

So I feel that's a bright spot and you guys are entering at a good time, I agree, and I think today, with the shark tank guys, I ask a very, a very interesting question how do you feel about a business which can be killed or boosted by government movements? Right? So in Italy that will happen. We had the call 110% bonus and everybody was building solar panel and upgrading it and they created a gigantic bubble. People start stockpiling solar panel and batteries and so on and then the government changes, they kill the bonus and people start going bankrupt. So I think, mostly as a solar stakeholder, as an economist, I would say the market has to figure it out that anything can happen. Anybody can be in the White House or in European Union. The market has to be fluid and figure it out with or without government, government subsidies, because you never know what's going to happen next, correct?

Speaker 2:

and also another big thing is climate change. Right, all these disasters texas, florida, all these parts in america people are without power for days. Right, it's terrible. So that's the other component of it. It's not only just saving money on your electric bill, or the ai component. It's also about having that backup, which is what you should have, and then even true user cases.

Speaker 3:

We provided a bigger version of the sandbox for commercial industries or military. They were building camps in the Middle East and you know they only have solar power right or gasoline right. So we provided batteries. They installed solar panel on the ground. The solar panel will be producing energy throughout the day, and gigantic battery of the size of 20 feet container where we're getting charged throughout the day and then now they will be able to light up camps based on that technology. And another case we have Chile has exactly the same problem as California. Chile has tremendous shortage and outage of electricity and a earthquake hit Santiago a month ago. I mean, it happens all the time. It was really bad and the whole city was off life for a couple of days and suddenly we start to have a spike on orders for our commercial industry division in Chile because of that reason.

Speaker 2:

Wow. So that's a real case use scenario that you could apply to anywhere in America that has these issues for Florida, texas, whatever. I'm from New Jersey, right, and New Jersey used to always be isolated from these issues. You hear about hurricanes in Florida. You know the Carolinas, but recently Jersey and New York have been getting hit with hurricanes as well Power out for several days. So it's not just because of what's going on in the world with climate change. It's not everything. The world has been flipped, but the one thing that's certain that people need energy. You can't. You need electricity, right, you need to cook your food and everything. So that's the one thing that I love about the product and that's why I think this is only going to continue to grow. And at the end of the day listen, these tariffs are taught. It's been all talk, so who knows? People say 145%. Now it might be 5%, it might be 10%, who the hell knows? Right, but at the end of the day, people need electricity and they can't live without it.

Speaker 3:

I think what is cool about it in a very, very long run, it's being autonomous from the grid. Yes, right, you can build your house in the middle of nowhere in Kansas City or in the desert in Fuerteventura in Spain, and you don't need anything, right, you have electricity. You don't even need the internet because you can get Starlink as long as it has electricity. So, I think, in the long run, be completely autonomous from the grid. I think it's fascinating to me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, absolutely so. Let's talk about the show here. Right, you said this is your first solar show. We're going to be going to one in September called RE+. That's way bigger than that. That had 40,000 people. I think it's in Vegas or Anaheim, but anyway, you really want to bankrupt me. Huh, what's that? It's going to be fun, though, but what I was going to say to you is that what did you learn coming here? And obviously I know the European market is way different than the American market, but what was like your big takeaway?

Speaker 3:

I mean, I, I. I think the biggest takeaway is that you know, for for us in europe, solar it's a boring business. It's a profitable business, but there is no royalty or novelty in being a an installer, uh, being a billion dollar company, uh, selling solar panel there's no novelty. People are not really proud. Listen, it's a business. There is demand, so we supply the demand. There is no coolness about it. Here people are excited Like the guy of Forever Freedom. It looks like he's building a cult on solar installations. So you embrace this business. It is cool and it's funny and it's profitable and all of this stuff. So I find this very fascinating.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, it's kind of like trendy. Yeah, they make it trendy, they make it trendy. Yeah, that's the right word. And you mentioned also the social media. Right that you don't see it's not as buzzy on social media in Europe as it is here.

Speaker 3:

You see people walking around and doing content right, it looks like we're more on a fashion show than a solar conference right, yeah, with the Shark Tank, the guys from Shark Tank, damon John, who is it? Kevin David and the guy that I did.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was interesting. A robbery, don't forget Yo robbery. Share our post. Bam baby LFG show blowing up. How do you like these guns, man? I need a vet man because these puppies are sick. Very good man again. So, speaking of shark tank, you were on shark tank, yui, this guy was on shark tank in the philippines and you talked with bob president trump before he was president, for an hour. Let's, let's talk about those experiences.

Speaker 3:

So I, I, you know, in my life, I, I joined two reality shows. Uh, one when I was very young, the apprentice in spain called el aprendiz, and uh, uh, it was a franchise. So, uh, it's the same format, I mean things you guys know. And uh, at the we, when we were getting brief, all the selected candidates, we got the chance to spend like I don't remember how much, it was, I I think 30, 40 minutes with Trump, yeah, which, of course, back then nobody in the living room thought it would become president. So what year was this? Wow, I was 21. So it was 19 years ago. Oh, wow, so right. Wow, I was the only foreigners in the apprentice, spain. I managed to arrive halfway through it, so I got fired in the middle. Yeah, I'm halfway through it.

Speaker 3:

So I got fired in the middle, yeah, and then a few years later, throughout my life, I landed in the Philippines for business and then, with my own very business, I went as a participant in Shark Tank Philippines, called the Final Peach, run by a gentleman called John Aguilar, and, and I won it yeah so you won, I won it. Wow, we raised $300,000. You got $1,000?, $300,000. Oh, $300,000?.

Speaker 2:

We'll not get out of that Fucking guy. Man Drinks on you today. Man, I was buying drinks last night. I spent them all already.

Speaker 3:

It was years ago.

Speaker 2:

That's all good, that's great man, but so you, I let's talk about that.

Speaker 3:

So I I landed in the philippines because of my consulting jobs. So I I did my mba, uh left for consulting. Consulting landed me in various countries, among them philipp, philippines. Then I worked for a German group called Rocket Internet, which in the US you guys don't know, but in Europe it's a very, very popular group on the tech scene. And then I built my own business, which was like an Airbnb for office space which I sold a few years ago. And then I specialized myself in kind of like being a consultant in commercial restructuring of businesses. Right, and that's kind of what I'm working on with with turbo. Not a turbo needs a restructuring, but my job in this case is to turbo charge business.

Speaker 2:

So I'm in charge of internationalization of the product it's a perfect role for you, especially going into a new market, right? You've had experience doing that. How? How has I guess I answer my own question but how has that experience shaped you? I mean, I can imagine, just I was. I never lived in asia. I've been to asia, I've been to singapore, I've been to thailand, but you actually lived there, man. And how? How do you think that impacted your career? I mean your business acumen, obviously?

Speaker 3:

tremendous. So the number one thing and I want to sound obvious here but when? When you are? I mean I'm Italian and for 20 years I haven't worked in Europe a single day in my life. I graduated in. My first country as a businessman in consulting was Papua New Guinea. It's the other side of the world. So since day one of my career I've been outside of my comfort zone. Since day one of my career it was in a different language, that was in Italian. Since day one of my career, I have to interface myself and sometimes confront myself with culture which are way different than mine, because one thing is being in Italian and dealing with Spanish or American we're kind of Western but the other thing is dealing with Singaporean and Indonesian and Thai and Filipinos and so on so.

Speaker 3:

I have to be extremely adaptable and completely out of my comfort zone from day one.

Speaker 5:

When I first heard of Roofs in a Box, I thought no way could everything be combined in one platform, from your CRM to AI, even virtual assistant helping manage all these things together. It has completely changed my business and I couldn't be where I'm at without it. So over the last eight months or so, I've saved at least a million dollars on what it would cost, salary-wise, to hire the engineer. I wouldn't have been able to do what I've done without Roof's in a Box or be able to do what I am currently doing without Roof's in a Box. If you are looking to scale, get your business organized or get it ready to sell, definitely want to give Roof's in a Box a call. They'll get everything tightened up, get you set up to do whatever you need to do for a fraction of the cost. Not everybody's got a million dollars just laying around. Hire operations managers to have their own call center. So give Ruth's Unbox a call. They'll get it taken care of.

Speaker 2:

Got it. So do you think that's one? I don't know if this is why a lot of businesses fail or at business, people don't make it. Do you think because they don't step out of the comfort zone? Or maybe they don't know how to adjust it's?

Speaker 3:

various. It's various things. I I don't think people that are not constantly out of the comfort zone, that will not be succeeding. But if you constantly out of your comfort zone, you're ready. You're ready for impact on pretty much that happens to you in life, right? So if any problems you thrown at me, I'm gonna turn it around and fix it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, I'll tell you one thing that I gained a lot of appreciation for you or I don't know what the word is, I guess respect. I gained a lot of respect because we just told you about this show, not even a week ago, I don't think it was like six days ago. Where were you in Italy?

Speaker 1:

or Spain. I was in Spain.

Speaker 2:

Listen, you should come to Vegas. I think it'd be worth you coming here. And you came, man, you know it took you 20 hours to get here. You came, yeah, economy, you didn't sleep much. You had some bad coffee, you know. So you had to drink some Dunkin' Donuts. I know that's not what you used to drink in Spain or Italy, so you stepped out of your comfort zone man.

Speaker 3:

So I really appreciate that. It's my, we appreciate you guys as a partner and it's mostly that you know. Something I learned is that you got to show up. Yeah, I mean, the people don't show up these guys, they will never win. Exactly Okay, you got to show up. Right, I'm a guy that will. I fly 150 days a year. I, you know, I've been in 70 plus countries. I get invited to Tajikistan, I go, no questions about it. If they invite me to Paris and the same day they invite me to Kazakhstan, I prefer to go to Kazakhstan because I've never been, but now I've been to Kazakhstan. But what I mean is that you've got to show up in anything you do. The guy that doesn't show up close shit.

Speaker 2:

I love that. I read somewhere someone said 99% of success is showing up. You got to be there. I'm the same way. Every year I do over a hundred flights. I go places and I always get at least one thing where no one else gets anything. I find one thing or one connection right, so I think that's amazing. Another thing about stepping outside your comfort zone is you're a race car driver too, right.

Speaker 3:

I really have not to tell you my stuff. You, you turn out my dirty laundry. Yeah, listen, I gotta go up here. It's a semi-professional thing I do, I, I embrace it. Few years ago, uh, I, I think it's unbelievable the the level of things you can do once you're in a in a car racing mood. Uh, I get no chance by by now to be anywhere a champion of any formula, any NASCAR, any Le Mans, any 24 Hours, any Mille Miglia. But you know, it's cool, I like it, I enjoy doing it, it's adrenalineic, I love it. What got you into that? It started in the Philippines with the Radical Cars Championship.

Speaker 2:

Okay, Okay, and this is something. How long have you been doing it for? Seven years, seven years so. But we you were on the yesterday Sunvina, one of the big sponsors of the show they have like a the simulator, some $30,000 simulator man. I lost money man, I bet on you. I was like I was telling people that you had no experience. Meanwhile you did lost man. I think you were in with those other guys, the guy was in the simulator.

Speaker 3:

Every simulator works really differently, like when you are really in a, in a, in a racetrack. You're kind of like in heaven, right you. You live in your own world, you know you're, you're wired with the car, you become one with the car.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was gonna ask you that. I mean, I, I, it's funny. I was at a show, uh, I was in colorado a year and a half ago and and they did a race car thing and man, I was nervous man, these cars are so powerful, it's almost like a beast right and they had someone in my ear turn, turn, turn, and like I was scared, man, I could see how you could lose control really easily. I stepped out of my comfort zone and I only did that once and it's tight, like you get in there and like you have to squeeze in there. So you need to start with karting with karting.

Speaker 3:

Uh, okay, that's how everybody starts, got it. And the the physical demand of karting. It's unbelievable because you have a very high, very high ratio. Horsepower per kilos, right. So karts maybe they weight 80 kilos, but certain cars they have up to 30 or 40 horsepower, so so that's a ratio of two. Right, the porsche gt3 has 400, 400, 550 horsepower, but it weighed the tons and a half, yeah, right. So the physical demand when you're steering on a porsche gt3 is much lower than karting it's just, yeah, that is fascinating.

Speaker 2:

But ask you because I think, do you think? And the answer is probably yes, but how has race car driving and doing something that's so adrenaline-packed and you have to have control too how has that impacted you as a business person? Do you think it gives you an edge?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean, I think any sports that you do athletic or semi-athletic brings you discipline, brings you do athletic or semi-athletic brings you discipline, brings you confidence, it brings you some sort of you know, of course, the health aspect of it. Right? Who said? I remember it is like there is a guy, very famous guy in America. He says I don't hire fat people. He doesn't hire fat people. Oh, andy Elliott probably.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the guy, if you're fat, you're insulting yourself so you can't be good at anything, right? So I mean I wouldn't take it to that extreme, obviously. Uh, I, I think that you know, I mean you know me already. We've been together for two days. Like I woke up in the morning for espresso and the gym. There is nothing in my life before, right after I finish the gym, then I can start, you know, I can start being my, I can be the nuclear power plant and I am right. But it's you gotta be consistent, right? So that that's what kind of helps you, that's what kind of host I love that so you've traveled.

Speaker 2:

You've been all over the world. What's your favorite place in the world? Spain. Spain, like in madrid, or madrid, that's why I live there and why exactly?

Speaker 3:

It's a combination of objective and subjective thing. You know, the vibrancy of Madrid, it's something I haven't seen anywhere else in the planet, right, and I've been in, you know, like I said, 73 countries, hundreds plus cities. I was a month, a month and a half ago, in Rio and it was something similar, right, the vibrancy of Rio it's a city integrated with the beach. Everybody's very laid back and people start drinking caipirinha at 4 pm. So the kind of vibrancy is the closest I've been. But it's a metropolitan city. It's very safe, it's super clean, it has business school, it has businesses, top restaurants, it's still reasonably affordable, right. So all these combinations, I think, made it Madrid the best city in the world.

Speaker 2:

That's amazing. I would have expected you to say another city, but I've been to Madrid a few times. I like it a lot, but you live there, I mean you know it way more than I do.

Speaker 3:

I live there.

Speaker 2:

My friends are there, I help my house and also got it. Man, listen, I'm glad you got to. We got to do this. I, I can't wait for the future. You're coming, you're gonna be spending more time, obviously, in america and I think that the future is bright. You know, you're gonna give me a green card too, or we'll see. Maybe it might be tougher now with the administration, but okay, listen, we'll figure out that. Five million dollars at the time, it's fine, I can handle it. Maybe we could do the $5 million gold visa. That's what we could do. That might be. We got to sell a couple of sandbox for that. Yeah, sandbox. Yeah, we'll do a super duty one for the White House. Make it happen. How can people get in touch to find out more about you, mario?

Speaker 3:

Well, I mean LinkedIn. We're going to post this on LinkedIn my peak performance classes, my driving stuff, my business stuff.

Speaker 2:

Everything is there. I love it. All right guys, you heard it. Mario, I interviewed someone from Italy one time. He said let's fucking go in Italian. I forgot how he said it. How do you say it? Let's fucking go in Italian. How do you do it? Let's fucking go in.

Speaker 3:

Italian. I'm Yamavanti, something like this of those Yama want. It's all that matters.

Speaker 1:

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