Hi! My Name is Tynan...

I'm an egomaniac vegan pickup artist who sold everything and is traveling around the world. I generally do whatever I want whenever I want, even when I'm pretty sure it's a bad idea. I like singing gangsta rap, writing, working out, working on my business, traveling, and finding adventure. I always wear a sequinned hat with stars on it.

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Archive: November 2007

Thanks Mom and Dad!

Last year on Thanksgiving I made a big list of everyone I knew and thanked them each for something. I was going to do this again, but almost all of them would be the same as last year.

Instead I’m going to talk about my parents a little bit, since they’ve surely had a bigger influence on me than anyone else.

A lot of the good habits I have today, which essentially define who I am, come directly from my parents. They managed to steer me away from TV, drugs, and alcohol in such a way that I never considered rebelling by indulging in these things.

I remember distinctly wanting to watch TV once as a child. My father told me, “One day you’ll thank us for not letting you watch TV.” At the time that seemed absolutely ridiculous, but here I am today thanking them for not letting me watch TV. This isn’t to say that I don’t watch ANY TV now, but I only have a few shows that I download and usually watch with friends.

When I have kids I’ll ask my parents how they got me to not drink and do drugs. I’ve never once felt tempted to try or do either, despite having an insatiable urge to do everything else under the sun.

They also encouraged me to be independent, which certainly made raising me harder.

When I was in 10th grade I was having a tough time in history class. I didn’t care, so I didn’t pay attention. I was failing. One day, after receiving a grade of perhaps 50 or so on a test, my teacher took me outside to the hallway.

“You went to a Montessori school, didn’t you?”

What a strange question, I thought.

“Yes.”

“I can tell. You Montessori kids are always more independent and don’t study if you don’t want to.”

She said it with a smile on her face, as if to say that it wasn’t necessarily a bad thing.

Not only did my parents enroll me in a Montessori school, which I still remember loving, but they also put me in a private middle school called “The Pike School” in the Boston area, where we lived. It was expensive for them and for my grandparents, but it was such a fantastic school (and the last time I really liked school) that I’ll probably move back there when I have kids so that they can also attend.

When I was at Pike I made friends with a Taiwanese kid named Charlie. He and his family taught me Chinese (I could write a whole entry about how thankful I am to them as well), and my parents allowed me to travel to Taiwan for a month with them when I was only 13! It was the first time I’d even been on a plane, and turned out to be an amazing once-in-a-lifetime experience. I loved it so much that I’m going back there this summer as part of my trip around the world.

I got interested in computers. They bought me one, and my mom bought me tons of books about them. Back then you couldn’t just learn everything on the internet. When I went around to yard sales and bought three more old computers, my father built me a huge desk that spanned an entire wall of my room. He drilled holes in it for the cords and mounted power strips to the underside.

Of course, we had our disagreements as well. I inherited my mother’s stubbornness, which led to many heated arguments, mostly about school. We’d yell at each other, but I was never punished unfairly. I’m glad to be so stubborn, so it’s probably a good thing anyway. Our worst fight was when I dropped out of school to become a professional gambler.

My mother wouldn’t speak to me for a month. She was livid. To this day she’d be thrilled if I decided to go back to school, but a year after I dropped out she let me gamble under her name.

When I decided to buy a house but didn’t have the traditional steady paycheck to get a mortgage, they got a home equity loan on their paid-off house and let me make the payments. I had refused to tell them (or anyone) how much money I was making gambling, but they trusted that I would pay off the loan and not ruin their perfect credit. To this day I’m awed by how generous and trusting they were.

Whenever I had a crazy project at the house, my father would come help me with it. They warned me that tearing a closet out of a bedroom and turning the bedroom into a theater would be bad for resale. But when I decided to do it my father drove with me to Houston to buy the theater seats, and then stayed at my place until midnight building stadium seating and a 10′ diagonal screen that we mounted to the wall. I tried to help, but he did almost all of the real work.

As with any project at my house, I’d be satisfied with our progress and say, “It’s good enough”, but my father would insist on working until it was perfect. I’m trying to adopt his attitude while making Conversion Doubler.

When I decided that I was going to become a pickup artist and move to Los Angeles with three week’s notice, both of my parents fully supported me. My father told me that he admired my independence and would have liked to do the same thing if he was my age. I think my mother was just hoping this would result in me getting married, rather than being totally dateless.

I wasn’t an easy child to raise, either. My favorite hobby as a toddler was pulling all of the books off the bookshelf. I refused to go to sleep in my own bed unless my father heated a pot full of water and sat it on the mattress first to warm the bed. Until I was 13 or so I wouldn’t eat any meat, and only ate 4 different vegetables. My mother tried to encourage me to eat vegetables and organic things, but I told her I didn’t care about things like that. Many years later when I became a vegan I finally appreciated what she had tried to do.

Even to this day I’m probably not the easiest son to have. I routinely do insane things like climb a radio tower, jump on a freight train, or break into the tunnels under UT. Years after the actual event my mother saw a piece on TV about the UT tunnels. Unable to make me out on a small screen she thought “Thank God Tynan isn’t at UT anymore, or that would be him.”

I’m sure that me leaving the country for a year to have adventures isn’t the easiest thing to stomach either. Despite this, my parents support my ideas and whims, and I have an excellent relationship with both of them. There’s really nothing in my past that I hold against them, nor is their anything I wish they’d done differently. At least once a week I’ll find myself thinking about how fortunate I am to have had such a fantastic childhood. The majority of the things I like about myself are directly related to the childhood my parents provided for me. When I’m a father someday, I hope that I can do as good of a job.

I don’t like my birthday or Christmas because people give me presents. The biggest reason behind this is that my parents have given me so much in my life that accepting any further gifts from them makes me feel incredibly guilty. They’ve already given me so much and done so much for me that I’ll never be able to repay them.

Thanks Mom and Dad! I love you both very much!

P.S. I’m also very thankful to have this blog and to have people who care about what I say and spend time reading it and leaving comments. It really means a lot to me and helps motivate me to do interesting things and live a life worth examining.

Saturday Delight

What? Two posts that aren’t over a week apart?! Believe it…

A lot of exciting stuff going on over here.

First - I have seroiusly neglected my friends and my desire to have fun for the past few months because I’ve been working on an awesome project (Sorry guys, I love you and miss hanging out). I haven’t been this excited about working on something until I wrote my book (yeah… the marketing part of the book isn’t so fun).

And the good news is… I’m almost done! I’ve built what I think is THE BEST multivariate testing suite available. Multivariate testing, for those interested, is the process of running tests on your site which show different combinations of variables to each visitor to figure out which combination yields the most sales/e-mail conversions/rss subscriptions/etc.

Examples of variables are things like headlines, colors, graphics, and button sizes.

One visitor might see headline A in a blue color with a picture of a dog and a large button. The next user might see headline B in red with a picture of an airplane and a small graphical button. The software tracks all of your visitors and calculates which combination had the most conversions.

I first came across Multivariate Testing when I worked at Smiley Media. I was charged with researching the different products and picking the best one for us to use. I had meetings and phone calls with all of the major players in the industry. We ended up going with a company that cost over $7000/mo.

It was great software and was useful, but I always got the impression that whoever designed the software had never owned a site that he was trying to optimize. The interface lacked, the test creation process was extremely cumbersome and error prone, the results were difficult to interpret. When you did finally find a winning combination you then had to design it AGAIN manually and upload it to your server.

Still… it was an invaluable tool and was worth the money we paid.

I wanted to optimize my Make Her Chase You site, but couldn’t afford the $7k for the software we used. So what did I do? I started making my own program. My first test let me cut 80% of my advertising costs because my program can easily analyze different traffic sources independently. I then tried a new set of bullet points that my friend suggested and my e-mail conversion rate improved by about 25%.

My program was awesome.

So I spent 8+ hours every day working on it to make it easy for anyone to use. Of course I kept adding new features too.

“Wouldn’t it be cool if it could…” BAM.. three days gone.

I couldn’t possibly be more proud of what I’ve come up with. I can say with 100% confidence that my program is BETTER than any of the established competition. All of their solutions require manually editing your files and adding javascript tags to it that call back to THEIR servers. That’s slow and a pain. One doesn’t require this, but it requires that you rent a server from them and put it in the same rack your site is hosted in.

Mine? Type in the URL of the page you want to edit, highlight the parts you want to change, hit GO and your test is live instantly! The time commitment is literally 30 minutes vs 2 minutes to do the same exact thing! Plus javascript is NOT 100% accurate and pinging another server is SLOW.

When the test is done with theirs you have to manually create the new page and upload it to your server. What a pain! With mine you click ONE button and the new version is live. Best of all, it doesn’t mess with your underlying files. So if you want your old file back, it’s no problem.

Why don’t the other guys do it like this? I don’t really know. That question haunted me while I was building it… “Am I going to hit a wall that makes this method impossible?”

Before this I had never written in PHP, AJAX or MYSQL, the key underlying technologies. I had to learn as I went along from google. As I learned better methods and became a better programmer I rewrote massive sections of code. I learned about MYSQL optimization because I want to make sure that it can handle high loads. Several times I got to brick walls that were seemingly impossible to break through. I’d spent over a week over three lines of code, knowing there must be SOME way to do it. In one case the experts in #php and on forums couldn’t figure it out. I refused to give up and found a solution. I had written WAY too much not to figure it out.

Now I’m writing little bit parts. I’m writing help files, adding little functions like renaming test variables, etc. The functionality is done and has been actively tested on my site for the past month. I even did a fresh install last week to make sure it all works seamlessly from the beginning.

I’m really excited to launch it. I think customers are going to flip out at how awesome my program is. The cheapest serious contender is $1250/mo. I’m going to charge way less than that, but it will still be a lot of income and it will be regular. Best of all, they will make way more per month than I’m charging, so it’s a win-win!

Anyway… moving on

TICKETS ARE PURCHASED FOR LIFE NOMADIC 2008!

I’m out of here on Jan 7 2008. We’ve added a couple stops to the trip. Todd is going for sure and Elisia is going to AT LEAST go to Panama. DJ Doug of Tazeroke fame is going to visit us in all the major stops. Lots of other friends are going to meet up with us at some point.

Here are the FINAL SET IN STONE DATES:

Jan 7 - Panama City, Panama
Mar 2 - Los Angeles, United States
Mar 10 - Tokyo, Japan
May 5 - Taipei, Taiwan
June 23 - Hong Kong
July 4 - Doha, Qatar (ironic that we happen to be in the middle east for July 4)
July 6 - Paris, France

That’s all we have so far… we had to buy the ticket in two parts. I could not be MORE excited about the trip. I still have to sell my car and RV and some other little stuff, but that’s ok. I have a few people interested in the RV. If anyone from the blog is interested, let me know. I’d love to have someone cool continue with it. I still love living in it after 6 months!

I finished learning Japanese!

If you read my forums you know I started it 90 days ago. I didn’t miss a day, doing a tape every day. WOW. Three months ago I knew NO Japanese. Now I can definitely say anything I’d need to say. After two months in Japan I’m pretty sure I’ll be fluent. I know a bunch of people will tell me how hard it is, but I don’t care. I’m ONLY going to speak Japanese there. I’ve already done 45 hours of speaking and have that stuff down. I’ll get it down no problem.

By the end of the year I’ll also have Spanish, Chinese, and French down. Don’t believe me? Wait and see, ladies…

For those curious souls out there, I did the Pimsleur series. They are AWESOME. Todd is doing the Spanish one now and his Spanish is very impressive now. He’s only 2+ months in, too.

I personally challenge everyone reading this to do the full 3 months of a language of their choice without missing a day. I’ll call up anyone who does it and give you pickup advice for free or something and will talk about how awesome you are on the blog. Keep track of your progress on the forums. You can get the CDs for free at your library.

Jay-Z has a new album out. It’s called American Gangsta and is pretty great. I really like the song “Blue Magic”.

I like supporting Jay-Z because I really listen to his albums a TON. In fact, he’s 80-90% of what I listen to. I like classical music and Frank Sinatra too. I think I’m going to just send him a check for $15. I have no use for a CD since I don’t drive my car anymore, and I don’t want some crap 192kHz AAC from itunes. Or maybe I’ll buy a CD and throw it away so that everyone else involved with the CD gets money too. Then again, it’s $15, so it’s not that important.

One more little story.

Back in 2000 I was at UT. I loved rap. I decided I wanted to be able to freestyle. I would download Eminem freestyles and my friends and I would sit around amazed.

One day along with two friends, Cheeze Cracka and Adam Hammonds, I decided to try to learn how to freestyle. We sat in a circle on my bed and took turns.

We couldn’t rhyme two lines. Just couldn’t. None of us, especially me, had ANY natural aptitude for it.

Ever since that day I’ve practiced almost every single day. I’m sure I’ve missed a few days, but I can’t remember the last time a day passed where I didn’t practice.

I’m not excellent by ANY means, but I’m good. I can go pretty much indefinitely, rap about actual content (rather than regurgitating and rephrasing popular rap cliches), and don’t feel embarassed when I freestyle in front of people.

For the first YEAR I couldn’t do more than a couple lines.

Soon I could do a couple rhymes and then weave in a few lines I’d thought of before.

A couple years later I could freestyle for fifteen or twenty seconds.

Then I got to the point where I could go for a while but would constantly repeat the same phrases. I thought I was good, but it was embarassing to listen to recordings because I repeated stuff so much.

After that I reached the level where I could go for a very long time and rarely repeat myself. But my range was limited to things from other rap songs (selling drugs, making money, getting ladies, etc.).

NOW I’m at the point where I can rap about 50% about how great I am (an easy topic) and 50% about situational stuff. Obviously the goal here is to get to 100% situational. I occasionally back myself into a corner where I can’t think of a good rhyme in time so I say something lame or that doesn’t make sense.

Also, my intonation isn’t great now. I’m not very emotionally expressive with my voice. This is getting better, but not quickly. I AM getting better at varying my rhyming pattern by doing segments of quick rhymes, segments with pauses and callbacks, etc.

I’d say my skills are somewhere around 6/10. 5 on a bad day and 7 on a good day.

My recent breakthrough has been getting over my fear of freestyling in front of other people. Half the time I’ll freestyle sometime during tazeroke, which I think will be very beneficial to me.

Anyway… it’s just cool to think about how practicing a skill for just a little while each day can really bring some benefit down the line. What else should I practice? What can you practice?

That’s it for now. If I was a reader of my blog I would be disappointed with it recently. I’m aware of the problem and will fix it, so hang in there!

Hovi’s back!

I’m SO FAMOUS!

Ok, not really. BUT… there’s a big article about me in the Austin newspaper, the Austin American Statesman. I’m on the front of the XLent section, which is the weekend entertainment section. If you’re not in Austin, you can read it here : XLent.

I did the interview last May but it kept getting pushed back. Finally I got a call from the art director from the Statesman asking when I could do a photo shoot. That was a couple weeks ago and today, Thursday, the article comes out.

If you FOUND my site because of the article, here are some of my best posts for you to read :

How I Became a Famous Pickup Artist
Breaking into the Tunnels under UT
Living with Courtney Love
What happens when you put a 3100 Gallon Swimming Pool in your Living Room?
Why I Don’t Drink
Exploring Airman’s Cave
How to Have an Interesting Life
Night Swimming
Quintessential Man
Trying to Pick Up Topanga (and Failed Miserably)
How to ALWAYS Be Happy
Buying and Converting a School Bus
How I Became a Pro Gambler

Enjoy… come see my friends and I at Tazeroke on Tuesdays at Shakespeare’s Pub on 6th.

Also, for my regular readers… I have a big post on how I totally overcame slacking and procrastination coming up soon!

Why I Donated to Ron Paul Today… and Why You MUST Too!

Today I donated money to a politician for the first time in my life. It was only $100, but I expect that I will donate the maximum $2300 soon. Who was the lucky recipient of my somewhat-hard-earned-cash?

Ron Paul, of course.

Ron Paul is amazing. Unlike every other modern politician I’ve ever heard of, he is principled in a way that reminds me of the founding fathers. He has his positions and he sticks to them no matter WHAT. He is probably the ONLY person in Congress who has always voted consistently every time.

When he’s asked questions he answer THE QUESTION ASKED (unlike every other politician who just says whatever will make them look good), and he does so in a smart way, citing historical examples to back up his points.

Of course… this is only good if he has good positions.

And he does.

He believes in freedom an PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY. As you know, I love personal responsibility. His idea is to follow the constitution and allow everyone to make their own decisions and face the consquences. For example, he will abolish the IRS and replace it with… NOTHING. We had no income tax before 1913, and even today with our insane budgets, it’s only responsible for 1/3 of our income.

We can then spend money on what we WANT to spend it on.

He believes in cutting all the stupid government programs. Medicaid, welfare, etc. Let people KEEP the money they earn and spent it how they want.

He wants to get out of this stupid war we’re in and rebuild America’s reputation as an awesome country. Right now everyone hates us. I hate the way the country’s going so much that I’m LEAVING in two months. If Ron Paul wins I might come back.

He wants to get rid of the federal reserve, which is actually a non-governmental institution. It’s privately run, which gives a small group of people tremendous power over our country. Without it we can eliminate inflation.

Anyway… if you want to learn more about him, people have described his positions much better than I ever could. Watch youtube.

Here’s the thing…

… He can actually win.

Vegas odds are incredibly accurate. They’ve never failed to predict a presidential election. Right now Guiliani is at a 33% chance to win. Ron Paul is at 12.5%.

But… a few months ago he was at .5%! Giuliani is just treading water.

People are finally getting sick of the insulting and ridiculous politics that are going on in the country. Everyone who hears about Ron Paul likes him. It’s impossible not to because he’s so refreshingly honest and SMART. You listen to what he says and it’s obvious that he GETS IT.

All he needs now is money to buy media so that people will hear about him. Only 30% of Republicans even know who he is.

Next year you’re going to pay a ton of money in taxes… unless Ron Paul wins. If he wins you’ll be done with taxes, so think of your donation as a hedge against taxes.

Today (November 5th) many people have agreed to donate money. He’s already raised half a million and it’s only 4am. The more he raises TODAY the more free press he will get. No other candidate can get support from the people like this. DO IT.

Click here to donate.

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