Really? People will buy any old guff… literally!

What I’m about to share with you isn’t a business model for everyone. You’ll understand why as you read on.

It has it’s complications as you’ll soon see and it is more suited for someone who is younger with a larger following… being an attractive young woman also helps.

Stephanie Matto, 31 from Connecticut in the USA, is a reality TV star who appeared on a US show called 90 Day Fiancé.

I believe it’s something to do with US nationals marrying their non-US national fiancés within a 90 day period so that they can get their K-1 visa.

Yes I know, it sounds as dull as dishwater but it proves that people will watch any old guff… not just buy it!

Stephanie has grown an impressive following of 260,000 fans and like so many young women these days, she opened up an OnlyFans account where people paid to see more of her.

I don’t know what kind of content she was posting on her OnlyFans account, but it is what happened next that is interesting… from a business point of view at least.

After receiving requests from fans, Stephanie began farting into Mason Jars and selling them for $500.

“I always thought that was a complete joke,” she said, but she still wanted to see if anyone would buy them and so that’s what she did… she offered her fans the chance to buy her guffs in a jar.

And they did.

A lot of them… demand was high.

They sold out fast.

In one article I read that they were priced at $1,000 per bottle but I saw that she was offering 50% off so I’m not fully sure whether she sold them at $1,000 or just $500 a piece, but what I do know is this:

  • She claims she made over $145K from selling her farts in a jar.
  • In one week alone she made a staggering £38,000.
  • One customer bought two jars (at $500 each) so that he could feel a sense of ‘closeness’ to her! … Seriously?
  • At one point, Stephanie was producing up to 50 jars a week.

She was on a gas-producing high protein diet including a lot of protein shakes and black bean soup.

However…

The wind changed as she tried to squeeze one more guff out.

Stephanie became unwell.

She felt that something was not quite right as pressure in her stomach began to move upwards throughout her body.

It got so bad; Stephanie called friends asking to be taken to hospital believing that she was having a stroke or a heart attack.

“It was quite hard to breathe and every time I tried to breathe in I’d feel a pinching sensation around my heart,” she explained.

Stephanie was diagnosed with severe gas pain. Doctors told her to change her diet and take gas suppressing medication which literally killed off her new business.

“I had to rethink my business model because I knew that selling my farts in this way was not something that was physically sustainable for me.”

I think the saying ‘No shit Sherlock’ springs to mind here… a few per week perhaps… but not in this quantity.

Stephanie has since turned to selling NFTs of art inspired by her farts.

Fart art? Now there’s something I never thought I would say.

A digital artist contacted her and suggested that they made a collection of unique artwork based on her farts… Again… seriously? I have no idea what that means!

NFT stands for Non-Fungible Token and is a unique identifier that can cryptographically assign and prove ownership of digital goods.

In the physical world, a person can own an original painting by a master. Other people can own prints and copies. The original should – for the most part – be easy distinguishable from the copies.

In the digital world where people can download and ‘copy and paste’ digital images, to prove ownership meant having the original ‘source files’ but now, images can have an NFT assigned to them.

Maybe you can call it a kind of crypto-certificate perhaps.

Some people are spending a lot of money buying unique digital art, often generated by AI software.

I don’t know if they are seeing them as investments which they can sell later for a profit.

The ‘newness’ of the art and NFT movement will certainly add to the potential of these investments, but once it becomes more common, will digital art have the same value?

Some people see NFTs as a fad and as the new ‘dot com bubble’. Time will tell, we are in a digital world and it is only going one way… even more digital.

Stephanie is now selling her new ‘fart art’ for 0.05 Ethereum which at the time of writing has a value of £114.

As a bonus to help sales of her new ‘fart art’, some of the NFTs come with redeemable gifts including signed lingerie and now ‘very rare’ real fart jars.

So, if you are struggling to think of anything to sell, take a leaf out of Stephanie’s book, it proves that you really can sell any old guff… quite literally.

As she says herself, “I’m very good at turning shit into gold.

.You need to remember, there are a lot of people out there who will buy some very strange stuff.

There is always a market to sell to and there is always a product you can sell… it just might not smell so sweet.

I don’t know much about cryptographically assigned NFT fart art, but I do know that people are making money from the ‘traditional’ cryptocurrencies.

John Banks is one such person.

His easy approach to cryptocurrency is to allow a bot trade the cryptocurrency markets on autopilot while he goes about his day.

The system doubles his investment for him.

If you would like to know more, go to:

John Bank’s CryptoCash Strategy

Kind Regards.

John Harrison

PS… John shows you exactly how to copy his system which should take no more than half hour to set up. After that, the system is left to run on autopilot growing your investment.

Taking just £200 starting capital and doubling every 6 weeks, you’ll be sitting on a profit of over £50,000 in under a year… and that’s without introducing a single penny more in capital.

Learn more here:

John Bank’s CryptoCash Strategy