American tech bros is fighting. Lellowish!

Venture capitalist Andrew son (right) gave a punch to a crypto entrepreneur, a crypto entrepreneur, a crypto entrepreneur in Denver in February.

While walking in the crowded hotel conference room, Andrew son looked like any other technical man, who attended Ethanvar at an annual Cryptocurrency Conference. A venture capital investment in Florida, son, however, was not a network in the conference but to fight one of them – live on YouTube.At the hotel, a small drive from the Conference Convention Center, under the attentive eye of a representative of the Colorado Combi Sports Commission, 40 -year -old, son snatched his boxers.He weighed under just 195 pounds on the target for fighting. The bare-rated enterprise capitalist picked up his biceps and flexed for cameras.America’s technical aristocratic class, Washington, is not satisfied with immense wealth and increasing political influence, has recently developed a new passion – fight. In the United States, men like daughter are learning to hammer a opponent on the head with their fist, kick, knee, elbow and, in some cases. The movement figures are Meta billionaire CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who is one of the apps, from the Skinny Computer NERD to the Martial Arts Fighter on Instagram,, one of the apps.Devotion to the tech industry’s martial arts is an aspect of a broader cultural change that has increased American politics. Many of these are chasing a testosterone-thunder ideal of masculinity-made masculinity, which have climbed on social media and have been embraced by President Donald Trump. Jujitsu of 40 -year -old Brazil, an enthusiastic businessman from Zuckerberg said this year that the corporate culture was getting “neutrized” and devoid of “masculine energy”. In 2023, Zuckerberg’s fellow billionaire Elon Musk, a long -time corporate rival, challenged him for a television cage match. But that fight never happened.Most of the aspiring fighters in the Tech world have an important thing: before they started chasing their extraordinary new hobbies, they earned a lot of money. In 2018, Batey established Betdapp, a company that develops software to eliminate fraud in music streaming. He also runs a venture capital firm, side door ventures, which invests in a crypto startup.Two years ago, the son’s venture fund invested $ 500,000 in the Karate Combat, a competitor for the final fighting championship. The league operates as a hybrid between an athletic competition and a technical startup. Instead of offering traditional shares, Karate Combat gave daughter’s firm Karate Toks – a cryptocurrency, which can bet on fan Karate Combat Fights, which streams on TV channels such as ESPN deports along with YouTube. Karate Combat’s primary business is a professional battle – mixed martial arts competitions that feature experienced athletes, some of which fight in the UFC.(For karate combat, a representative refused to explain how much money the league produces.)Last year, the company formed a new competition for amateurs and began to introduce it as an undercard in pro events, which are sometimes held in crypto conferences. The competition was called the Influencer Fight Club, and its base was simple: put some technical people in the ring and see what happens.In the last 18 months, the competition includes some big names in the Crypto world, including Nick Carter, an enterprise investor, known for his combative post on the social site X. At a Crypto conference in Nashville, Tennessee, in the last summer, Carter knocked an impressive body, a Tatud Crypto Marketer in a goal. On social media, he was honored as “kitley” and adopted the nickname “Tungsten Daddy”.,

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