Just watched this and it hit different. Jon Stul walks into Shark Tank with probably one of the heaviest legacies in Australian business—his father is Manny Stul, the guy behind Moose Toys who literally changed the toy industry. Ernst & Young World Entrepreneur of the Year. Billionaire status. The kind of legacy that could crush most people.



But here's what got me: Jon wasn't there to coast on his dad's name. He came with his own product, his own vision, his own fire. And that's the real move, right? Because there's this thing people don't understand about legacy—it can be a door opener, sure. Manny Stul built an empire and that means doors open easier for the next generation. But walking through that door and actually building something? That's entirely different.

The pressure in that tank wasn't just from the investors grilling him. It was about proving he could stand on his own. That's the thing about coming from a family like that—you can't just inherit success. You inherit expectations, sure, but the actual work? That's all you.

Manny Stul created something legendary, but Jon's not trying to be Manny Stul 2.0. He's trying to be Jon. And honestly, that's the energy the market respects. Whether it's startups or crypto, people can smell when someone's actually building versus just coasting.

This is why I keep saying legacy is just leverage—what you do with it determines everything. $BTC
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