Jake Paul Thinks We’ll Live Forever

Jake Paul and Jeff Lowe connect Anti Fund, distribution, streaming boxing, and AI/hardware investing through one operating theme: attention plus execution.

Jake Paul and Jeff Lowe frame Anti Fund as a vehicle built around access, personal capital at risk, and a distribution advantage. Their core claim is that many highly technical companies can pitch investors or engineers, but still struggle to tell a story that normal users understand.

Distribution as an edge

Paul traces that edge back to fifteen years across Vine, YouTube, Snapchat, TikTok, and Reels. His advice to companies is often to simplify the message, make it more relatable, and avoid expensive corporate campaigns that fail to reach the audience. Lowe adds that celebrity distribution is only partial leverage: product, market, and a repeatable audience relationship matter more.

Sports, streaming, and startup operations

The Most Valuable Promotions discussion shows Paul applying startup habits to boxing: faster payments, better communication with fighters, operational detail, and an early focus on women’s boxing. He also sees boxing moving from the TV era and pay-per-view era into a streaming era, with Netflix as the clearest example even after technical strain around the Tyson fight.

Investment thesis

On the fund side, Anti Fund sounds highly AI-oriented but not purely software-oriented. The conversation moves from models and inference providers to semiconductors, fusion, defense tech, robotics, manufacturing, and bio x AI. The interesting zone is where AI connects back to atoms.

Practical read

For founders, the lesson is that distribution can pour gasoline on a fire, but it does not replace product or market selection. For investors, the signal is that future upside may sit not just in AI apps, but in the infrastructure and physical-world layers that make the AI wave real.

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