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🪙 In the 2017 HBO documentary “Becoming Warren Buffett”, the billionaire investor shares his quirky daily breakfast ritual during a drive-through stop at McDonald’s on his way to Berkshire Hathaway’s office.

With exact change prepared in his car’s cup holder—$2.61 for two sausage patties when feeling frugal, $2.95 for a sausage egg and cheese biscuit, or $3.17 for a bacon egg and cheese—Buffett selects his order based on the stock market’s mood that morning, illustrating his lifelong commitment to disciplined, value-driven habits.

This simple routine, maintained for over 60 years, underscores his philosophy of frugality and mental clarity amid immense wealth, as he pairs the meal with a Cherry Coke while reflecting on life’s priorities.
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coingrams
🪙 In the 2017 HBO documentary “Becoming Warren Buffett”, the billionaire investor shares his quirky daily breakfast ritual during a drive-through stop at McDonald’s on his way to Berkshire Hathaway’s office. With exact change prepared in his car’s cup holder—$2.61 for two sausage patties when feeling frugal, $2.95 for a sausage egg and cheese biscuit, or $3.17 for a bacon egg and cheese—Buffett selects his order based on the stock market’s mood that morning, illustrating his lifelong commitment to disciplined, value-driven habits. This simple routine, maintained for over 60 years, underscores his philosophy of frugality and mental clarity amid immense wealth, as he pairs the meal with a Cherry Coke while reflecting on life’s priorities.
In a memorable 2015 episode of “Million Dollar Listing New York”, real estate agent Ryan Serhant pitched a $13.95 million two-bedroom apartment overlooking Central Park South to a client, only for a prospective buyer to submit an offer of 50,000 BTC—equivalent to about $13 million at the time, or roughly $1 million below asking price.

The seller, stunned by the unconventional payment method, dismissed it outright, quipping to Serhant, “You sent us an offer in Bitcoin? I’ll be totally honest with you, Ryan—that’s not even the biggest problem. This offer’s a million dollars below ask!”

While the rejection stemmed from both the lowball fiat value and Bitcoin’s perceived volatility and limited liquidity back then, those 50,000 BTC would now be worth over $4.2 billion, turning the moment into a legendary “what if” tale in crypto lore.
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In a memorable 2015 episode of “Million Dollar Listing New York”, real estate agent Ryan Serhant pitched a $13.95 million two-bedroom apartment overlooking Central Park South to a client, only for a prospective buyer to submit an offer of 50,000 BTC—equivalent to about $13 million at the time, or roughly $1 million below asking price. The seller, stunned by the unconventional payment method, dismissed it outright, quipping to Serhant, “You sent us an offer in Bitcoin? I’ll be totally honest with you, Ryan—that’s not even the biggest problem. This offer’s a million dollars below ask!” While the rejection stemmed from both the lowball fiat value and Bitcoin’s perceived volatility and limited liquidity back then, those 50,000 BTC would now be worth over $4.2 billion, turning the moment into a legendary “what if” tale in crypto lore.
Kevin Durant isn’t just elite on the court — he’s one of the smartest investors in sports.

He started doing venture deals early, long before it became “normal” for athletes.

But here’s what makes KD different:

🔹 He didn’t chase hype.
KD picked businesses with:
	•	sticky consumer behavior
	•	network effects
	•	massive TAM
	•	clear exits

🔹 He stayed patient.
Some of these bets took 5+ years to pay off.

🔹 He didn’t need to be the expert.
He partnered with people who were,
and trusted founders to build.

Today, his portfolio looks like a VC fund:
	•	fintech
	•	media
	•	sports
	•	consumer apps
	•	crypto
	•	logistics

And he’s hit double-digit multipliers in multiple deals.

The wild part?
KD is only 36.

He’ll likely be doing this for another 30 years.

📈 KD’s track record proves a simple point:
You don’t need to be first.
You need to be right.

Smart picks, smart teams, long time horizons.

That’s how real wealth is created.
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Kevin Durant isn’t just elite on the court — he’s one of the smartest investors in sports. He started doing venture deals early, long before it became “normal” for athletes. But here’s what makes KD different: 🔹 He didn’t chase hype. KD picked businesses with: • sticky consumer behavior • network effects • massive TAM • clear exits 🔹 He stayed patient. Some of these bets took 5+ years to pay off. 🔹 He didn’t need to be the expert. He partnered with people who were, and trusted founders to build. Today, his portfolio looks like a VC fund: • fintech • media • sports • consumer apps • crypto • logistics And he’s hit double-digit multipliers in multiple deals. The wild part? KD is only 36. He’ll likely be doing this for another 30 years. 📈 KD’s track record proves a simple point: You don’t need to be first. You need to be right. Smart picks, smart teams, long time horizons. That’s how real wealth is created.
In 2000, Mark Cuban sold Broadcast.com to Yahoo for $5.7 billion at the top of the dot-com bubble. Days later, he bought the Dallas Mavericks for $285 million.

Wall Street and the sports world erupted in laughter.

The Mavs were the NBA’s punchline:
- 10 straight years without playoffs (longest drought in the league)
- cheap owner, terrible facilities, toxic culture
- half-empty arena, zero buzz

Cuban treated the franchise like a broken startup.

He immediately:
- sat courtside in a jersey, becoming the most energetic owner in sports
- spent his own money on charter flights, 5-star hotels, and a locker room with flat-screens, massage chairs, and unlimited training staff
- hired analytics pioneers years before “Moreyball” became a thing
- empowered players and built a culture where stars actually wanted to come

Results came fast:
- 2003–04: 60-win season
- 2006: first NBA Finals appearance
- 2011: upset LeBron’s superteam Heat to win the franchise’s first championship

The $285M “vanity purchase” is now worth ~$6 billion (Forbes 2023 valuation). Cuban sold a majority stake in a deal reflecting that number while keeping control of basketball ops.

Wall Street laughed in 2000. 
Mark Cuban has been laughing for 25 straight years.

When a tech founder applies startup principles — culture, data, player experience — to a laughingstock franchise, the turnaround can be absurdly fast.
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In 2000, Mark Cuban sold Broadcast.com to Yahoo for $5.7 billion at the top of the dot-com bubble. Days later, he bought the Dallas Mavericks for $285 million. Wall Street and the sports world erupted in laughter. The Mavs were the NBA’s punchline: - 10 straight years without playoffs (longest drought in the league) - cheap owner, terrible facilities, toxic culture - half-empty arena, zero buzz Cuban treated the franchise like a broken startup. He immediately: - sat courtside in a jersey, becoming the most energetic owner in sports - spent his own money on charter flights, 5-star hotels, and a locker room with flat-screens, massage chairs, and unlimited training staff - hired analytics pioneers years before “Moreyball” became a thing - empowered players and built a culture where stars actually wanted to come Results came fast: - 2003–04: 60-win season - 2006: first NBA Finals appearance - 2011: upset LeBron’s superteam Heat to win the franchise’s first championship The $285M “vanity purchase” is now worth ~$6 billion (Forbes 2023 valuation). Cuban sold a majority stake in a deal reflecting that number while keeping control of basketball ops. Wall Street laughed in 2000. Mark Cuban has been laughing for 25 straight years. When a tech founder applies startup principles — culture, data, player experience — to a laughingstock franchise, the turnaround can be absurdly fast.
😂😂😂

Vip Telegram link in bio 🚨
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😂😂😂 Vip Telegram link in bio 🚨
New Orleans Pelicans forward Herb Jones remains famously humble despite his NBA success and multi-million-dollar contracts, continuing to drive the same 2018 Dodge Charger he owned during his college days at Alabama.

He frequently arrives at games wearing free team-issued Pelicans gear instead of flashy outfits, prioritizing financial security for his future family.

Jones has explained that saving money this way ensures his kids and grandkids can afford education and a comfortable life, emphasizing long-term planning over material luxuries.
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New Orleans Pelicans forward Herb Jones remains famously humble despite his NBA success and multi-million-dollar contracts, continuing to drive the same 2018 Dodge Charger he owned during his college days at Alabama. He frequently arrives at games wearing free team-issued Pelicans gear instead of flashy outfits, prioritizing financial security for his future family. Jones has explained that saving money this way ensures his kids and grandkids can afford education and a comfortable life, emphasizing long-term planning over material luxuries.
this is what peak CEO performance looks like
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this is what peak CEO performance looks like
In November 2024, the 13-year-old Gen Z Quant Kid launched the Solana memecoin $QUANT on Pump.fun during a livestream. 

Minutes after hyping the token to viewers, he rug-pulled by selling his 51 million tokens for approximately $30,000 in profit.

He taunted the audience while executing the dump, marking a brazen exit from his own project.
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In November 2024, the 13-year-old Gen Z Quant Kid launched the Solana memecoin $QUANT on Pump.fun during a livestream. Minutes after hyping the token to viewers, he rug-pulled by selling his 51 million tokens for approximately $30,000 in profit. He taunted the audience while executing the dump, marking a brazen exit from his own project.
BREAKING: New Black Friday data shows just how stretched the U.S. consumer really is.

95% of all Black Friday sales volume was financed, and nearly 70% of those buyers don’t plan to pay it off within 30 days.

BNPL usage alone topped $1 billion, making this the most debt-fuelled holiday shopping spree on record.

The wild part?
Shoppers are financing discounted items… right as interest rates remain at multi-decade highs.

This isn’t “consumer strength.”
This is the illusion of strength powered by short-term credit.

Households are tapped, savings rates are at historic lows, and spending is being propped up by the most predatory forms of debt in the system.

Everyone cheering record sales is ignoring the real headline:

America is buying everything… with money it doesn’t have.

Brace for what comes after the holidays.
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BREAKING: New Black Friday data shows just how stretched the U.S. consumer really is. 95% of all Black Friday sales volume was financed, and nearly 70% of those buyers don’t plan to pay it off within 30 days. BNPL usage alone topped $1 billion, making this the most debt-fuelled holiday shopping spree on record. The wild part? Shoppers are financing discounted items… right as interest rates remain at multi-decade highs. This isn’t “consumer strength.” This is the illusion of strength powered by short-term credit. Households are tapped, savings rates are at historic lows, and spending is being propped up by the most predatory forms of debt in the system. Everyone cheering record sales is ignoring the real headline: America is buying everything… with money it doesn’t have. Brace for what comes after the holidays.
Congressman Ro Khanna (D-CA) has introduced a bill prohibiting the President, Congress members, and their families from owning, trading, or launching cryptocurrencies to prevent conflicts of interest.

It also bans elected officials from accepting foreign funds tied to crypto ventures, spurred by former President Trump’s pardon of Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao and concerns over undue foreign influence. 

Khanna vows to advance the measure to rebuild public trust, declaring, “It is so illegal, it is right in our faces,” amid debates on crypto’s role in politics.
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Congressman Ro Khanna (D-CA) has introduced a bill prohibiting the President, Congress members, and their families from owning, trading, or launching cryptocurrencies to prevent conflicts of interest. It also bans elected officials from accepting foreign funds tied to crypto ventures, spurred by former President Trump’s pardon of Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao and concerns over undue foreign influence. Khanna vows to advance the measure to rebuild public trust, declaring, “It is so illegal, it is right in our faces,” amid debates on crypto’s role in politics.
Tragic. 😭😂
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Tragic. 😭😂
In 2011 this guy was mining 1 Bitcoin everyday on his $800 PC. Each Bitcoin was worth only $15👀 #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #crypto #viral #cryptonews #mining #trending #btc #explore
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In 2011 this guy was mining 1 Bitcoin everyday on his $800 PC. Each Bitcoin was worth only $15👀 #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #crypto #viral #cryptonews #mining #trending #btc #explore
Jamal Mashburn, the former NBA All-Star, has built an impressive post-retirement empire by owning over 100 businesses as of 2026.

His portfolio is anchored by major franchise holdings—40 Papa John’s pizza locations and 38 Outback Steakhouse restaurants—alongside three Dunkin’ Donuts outlets, multiple car dealerships (such as Toyota and Lexus stores in Kentucky), real estate investments, and stakes in hospitality, printing, advertising, and thoroughbred horse racing through partnerships like Ol Memorial Stable.

This strategic diversification into stable, cash-flow-generating franchises and other sectors has helped him amass significant wealth beyond his NBA earnings, serving as a model for athletes transitioning to entrepreneurship.
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Jamal Mashburn, the former NBA All-Star, has built an impressive post-retirement empire by owning over 100 businesses as of 2026. His portfolio is anchored by major franchise holdings—40 Papa John’s pizza locations and 38 Outback Steakhouse restaurants—alongside three Dunkin’ Donuts outlets, multiple car dealerships (such as Toyota and Lexus stores in Kentucky), real estate investments, and stakes in hospitality, printing, advertising, and thoroughbred horse racing through partnerships like Ol Memorial Stable. This strategic diversification into stable, cash-flow-generating franchises and other sectors has helped him amass significant wealth beyond his NBA earnings, serving as a model for athletes transitioning to entrepreneurship.
Jayson Tatum still has to check in with his mom after making big purchases, but on the flip side, when his NBA career is all said and done… he’ll be sitting on a nice chuck of change in retirement. 🔥
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Jayson Tatum still has to check in with his mom after making big purchases, but on the flip side, when his NBA career is all said and done… he’ll be sitting on a nice chuck of change in retirement. 🔥
Triple-Leveraged QQQ isn’t for the faint of heart. It’s built to amplify the Nasdaq-100’s daily moves, tripling both the gains and the losses. When the world panicked during the COVID crash, most investors fled to cash.

But Charlie Kirk did the opposite. He bought TQQQ: betting that tech giants like Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft would bounce back stronger than ever. It was a bold move rooted in conviction: Temporary crashes don’t destroy great businesses, they just make them cheaper.

While others sold at the bottom, he accumulated. And when the rebound came, his leveraged bet paid off in a way that only courage and deep research can.

Lesson: Market crashes don’t punish patience, they reward it.
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Triple-Leveraged QQQ isn’t for the faint of heart. It’s built to amplify the Nasdaq-100’s daily moves, tripling both the gains and the losses. When the world panicked during the COVID crash, most investors fled to cash. But Charlie Kirk did the opposite. He bought TQQQ: betting that tech giants like Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft would bounce back stronger than ever. It was a bold move rooted in conviction: Temporary crashes don’t destroy great businesses, they just make them cheaper. While others sold at the bottom, he accumulated. And when the rebound came, his leveraged bet paid off in a way that only courage and deep research can. Lesson: Market crashes don’t punish patience, they reward it.
Jordan didn’t build a brand with basketball — he became one after basketball.

Nike changed his life forever.

Despite earning just $94M in NBA salary, Jordan now pulls in over $250M a year from the Jordan Brand alone. His lifetime deal quietly gives him an estimated ~4% cut of all Jordan revenue, a number that’s grown into one of the greatest business deals in sports history.

What’s wild is that the exact terms of his Nike contract have never been publicly revealed—only the results speak for themselves.

The richest athlete ever… and most of it came after retirement. 🏀🔥
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Jordan didn’t build a brand with basketball — he became one after basketball. Nike changed his life forever. Despite earning just $94M in NBA salary, Jordan now pulls in over $250M a year from the Jordan Brand alone. His lifetime deal quietly gives him an estimated ~4% cut of all Jordan revenue, a number that’s grown into one of the greatest business deals in sports history. What’s wild is that the exact terms of his Nike contract have never been publicly revealed—only the results speak for themselves. The richest athlete ever… and most of it came after retirement. 🏀🔥
I mean.. his dad was right.

Follow @coingrams for more crypto gems.

Media: @crypto.kylo
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I mean.. his dad was right. Follow @coingrams for more crypto gems. Media: @crypto.kylo
I only need to double money 12 times and I don’t have to go to work tomorrow
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I only need to double money 12 times and I don’t have to go to work tomorrow
WHAT IN THE WORLD?! 😳🤯
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WHAT IN THE WORLD?! 😳🤯
Carmelo Anthony might be one of the NBA’s most underrated business success stories.

Most fans know Melo for the buckets. Fewer realize how quietly strong his off-court portfolio is.

• Earns ~$6M per year from endorsements alone (Panini, Isotonix, Foot Locker, Powercoco, Haute Time)
• First Jordan Brand athlete in 2003 — before athlete-led brand empires were the norm
• Founder of multiple ventures across tech, fashion, media, and wine
• Early angel investor in Mophie ($500K → Zagg acquisition for $100M+)
• Early investor + board member in Overtime (entered Series B under $100M valuation, now $500M+)

While most athletes peak financially during their playing careers, Melo positioned himself to compound after basketball.

Quiet ownership > loud contracts.

Do you think Melo gets enough credit as a businessman — or is he still underrated off the court too?
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Carmelo Anthony might be one of the NBA’s most underrated business success stories. Most fans know Melo for the buckets. Fewer realize how quietly strong his off-court portfolio is. • Earns ~$6M per year from endorsements alone (Panini, Isotonix, Foot Locker, Powercoco, Haute Time) • First Jordan Brand athlete in 2003 — before athlete-led brand empires were the norm • Founder of multiple ventures across tech, fashion, media, and wine • Early angel investor in Mophie ($500K → Zagg acquisition for $100M+) • Early investor + board member in Overtime (entered Series B under $100M valuation, now $500M+) While most athletes peak financially during their playing careers, Melo positioned himself to compound after basketball. Quiet ownership > loud contracts. Do you think Melo gets enough credit as a businessman — or is he still underrated off the court too?

Coingrams (@coingrams) Instagram Stats & Analytics

Coingrams (@coingrams) has 336K Instagram followers with a 2.11% engagement rate over the past 12 months. Across 1.72K posts, Coingrams received 2.01M total likes and 30.6M impressions, averaging 1.17K likes per post. This page tracks Coingrams's performance metrics, top content, and engagement trends — updated daily.

Coingrams (@coingrams) Instagram Analytics FAQ

How many Instagram followers does Coingrams have?+
Coingrams (@coingrams) has 336K Instagram followers as of March 2026.
What is Coingrams's Instagram engagement rate?+
Coingrams's Instagram engagement rate is 2.11% over the last 12 months, based on 1.72K posts.
How many likes does Coingrams get on Instagram?+
Coingrams received 2.01M total likes across 1.72K posts in the last year, averaging 1.17K likes per post.
How many Instagram impressions does Coingrams get?+
Coingrams's Instagram content generated 30.6M total impressions over the last 12 months.