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There was one day I was at home, sitting in my room, and I was like, oh, okay, I'm going to get this rope.
I'm going to go into the garage, and I'm just going to end it in the garage.
It's Tommy from Tommy Auto.
I am just a regular guy that likes cars. People are like, oh, Tommy's bought this or Tommy's bought that.
I bet Camille's a gold digger. First of all, my wife is a multi-millionaire.
I wanted to be a video game designer. The only reason I was really doing music was to buy cars.
Wow. I used to write about cars just in my free time.
My wife, she said to me one day, you love cars, just do car content.
So here's a quick cold start. Here's a cold start. So I'm getting a new car.
My sister, she saved my life.
I was having this awful thought train, and she called me, do you want to come meet me for lunch?
I went to meet her. I broke down.
At this point, I was broke, like flat broke.
I found out near the end of my music story that my manager had been stealing money from me.
I went back into music. I started producing for other people. I found a new manager.
It was going great. And then...
Speaking about that, Tommy, though, when I started following you, I would refer to you as Tommy Music,
but obviously as the years have gone on, which is still the name of your account on Instagram,
but as the years have gone on, I now refer to you when talking about you to my friends or followers as Tommy Auto.
So clearly all the content that you've done around cars over the years is now profoundly part of my vision
of who you are and what encompasses you. But today, we're going to talk about your story,
how you've amassed these cars, how you've got to where you are today.
But I think the first question that I need to ask is, in your own words, who are you and what do you do?
I am just a regular guy that likes cars. So that's how I like to view myself.
I've always grown up with a passion for cars.
I wasn't born in the UK. I was born in Nigeria, moved over here at a very young age.
And I guess as all first-generation immigrants do, we had to work our way up as a family.
My dad was really into computers, so I got into computers. I wanted to be a video games designer.
I went to university. My stories were really...
That's why you know me as Tommy Music, because I went to university.
I got into music. I became a DJ. Then I became a producer and I found success in that.
The only reason I was really doing music was to buy cars.
Because cars, to me, is an innate part of my personality.
I can't imagine myself without cars, but all in all, I'm just a guy that likes to talk about cars.
And I think, oh, I hope that comes across in what I do. I just love talking about cars.
So what age did you move from Nigeria to here?
I was about four or five years old.
I remember it very clearly because I got lost in the airport on the way to this country.
My mom came first. She was studying at Oxford.
Then my dad brought us over a few years later.
I remember being at the airport and I was looking at a Boeing 747 with the Lufthansa livery on it.
I just looked at it a bit too long. My dad walked off with my sister and I was just lost in the airport in Nigeria.
I was about four or five and it was a massive culture shock.
It's seeing snow for the first time, bad weather, like seriously bad weather or on and off weather.
But one thing that stayed with me is the cars that I saw when I came here.
Such a variety of cars.
My dad's first car in the UK was a Lada.
I'm not sure if many people know what a Lada is.
There's not actually many here.
There isn't because they're all broke down.
It's a Russian car brand.
My dad had a Lada but my dad had always been into cars.
Then he eventually worked himself up to Peugeot.
Then from there a BMW 7 series.
The question was when did I come over here?
Four or five.
I remember it very clearly, disturbingly clearly.
I only know what a Lada is because a part of my earliest years that formed everything I love about cars was watching Top Gear.
I remember they did something silly with Top Gear with the Lada.
When you were coming over and you got here at that early age, did you discover Top Gear once you were here?
Or was that already a big thing back home?
Yeah, I discovered Top Gear once I was here.
When I was in Nigeria, my only experience of cars was my dad.
My dad is an engineer, you would say.
He used to just get random scrap cars and then fix them up.
Cars that were due to be condemned or destroyed, he would ask the people, can I have the shell?
Then he'll slowly put the car together.
He did that with a 911 in Nigeria.
Then he did it with a 911, like a rally edition with the rally lights on as well.
A picture in full safari.
He did it with those as well.
One of them he actually put a Volkswagen Beetle engine in because he couldn't get a 911 engine in there.
It ran, everything was as it should be apart from a Volkswagen Beetle engine.
From a young age it was my dad who was my only access to cars and car knowledge.
I just remember it's such a vivid picture in Nigeria in our living room.
A picture of a Lamborghini Countache on the wall.
It had a red frame and it was a very 80 style picture, almost airbrushed.
I remember just looking at it for hours and hours and just being like, wow.
Then when we moved to England, I remember my first time seeing a Lamborghini Diablo and being like, what the hell is that?
So from a young age I've just always, always loved cars.
But the only car content we had back then would have either been magazines or long form in terms of TV.
Short form didn't exist, what you're doing now.
But if short form did exist from the age of maybe 12 backwards to when you first came here,
and you followed Tommy Auto and Tommy Music's account where you are now,
what would your question or comment be on those posts to that guy?
That's a really interesting question.
That's a really interesting question.
Because if you understood that that guy was in the same position as you were then
and he'd gone through and he now has all these amazing cars and this amazing family
and this amazing life that people see, what would you have commented and asked?
Wow, what would I have commented and asked?
That's a very profound question because I've been through a lot since then.
I don't think I would have necessarily asked something.
If I was going back to talk to myself.
Yeah, if you were still the person you were when you were say 12 commenting on that video.
I'll just say no matter what happens, no matter what happens, it'll work out.
That's all I'll say to myself.
I think that that is probably what I would say to myself.
If you were a kid, not Tommy, but you were following Tommy at that age,
what would you be thinking about that?
You'd be thinking like how the hell has he got all this stuff right?
I get the question.
I'll probably be like, how have you done it?
How has that happened? How did it work?
It's not normal.
And that transpires in what people search for online
because when I put together my episodes, I type every single guest's name into Google.
And let me guess, the first thing is...
What do you think your first thing is on Google?
What does Tommy Auto do?
Assuming something along those lines?
Yeah, I thought so.
So do you want to, in the simplest way possible, just summarise that for the now, the present tense?
For the present tense right now, I would say I am a car collector.
I'm a car enthusiast.
I'm also an investor and I'm also a content creator, I would say.
And I still dabble with music production and writing, I would say.
Which is a very free place to be.
I think when people, which is why people end up Googling things like that,
it's because everything that we're taught is that you do a thing.
That you do a thing and that thing is almost like a piece of string
and it's like a career ladder or a curb that you climb that piece of string.
I look at your journey from everything I've seen so far
and what you're going to explain, almost as blocks.
Yeah, yeah, literally.
And literally it's own housing block almost of each different story.
And I think nobody, when they're in their years of development
and figuring out what they're going to do with their life,
thinks that the option of kind of doing this for a bit and that for a bit
and doing life in blocks is kind of an option that works or is available.
But did you think that when that became a thing or were you on that?
I'm going to choose this and this is where I'm going to go.
So I can understand how to the outside viewer, it would appear as blocks.
But to me, I see things as a string, as you say.
But the only thing is my string didn't just go up, it's gone down
and to the left and to the right and it's done all these things.
Like a bird's nest.
Literally.
I guess the underlying things I've always, I've always loved cars.
So I always knew I wanted to do something with cars.
Whereas I've tried starting a car company in terms of like modifying
and improving cars that didn't work out.
I used to write about cars just in my free time, like write my own reviews.
I used to record YouTube videos before I was Tommy Auto.
But I just wouldn't, I like, I wouldn't post them.
Like I'll record and edit them.
So I guess the underlying thing is cars.
But the reason that everything is so, I guess blocky to everyone else
is that I've never been afraid to just be like, I don't want to do this anymore
and just switch to something else.
So to the outside person, it might be like, oh, he did music.
Now he's doing cars or he used to have a video games website
and now he's doing music or he used to want to be a film director.
This is probably what my parents liked.
This guy just wants to do everything.
But I've never limited myself.
I've always chased what I want to do in the time.
You talk about that decision.
So I don't want to do this anymore.
Yeah.
It's an instant, very direct, very cut off kind of comment
where there's a lot of people that go through life
and to think about ending the thing that they're doing
could take years to come to that conclusion or decision.
Is the thing that enables you to be able to make a decision like that,
essentially making some money from the thing that you did?
Money secondary for me.
For me, for example, the switch from music to cars,
it was either I end music or I end my life.
Just one of the two.
And I was just like to end music
because it was having such a negative toll on me and my psyche.
So that wasn't about cars.
That was about, okay, I need to start thinking about my health,
my mental health, my physical health
and I need to do something that's actually going to make me happy.
That's why I just dropped like,
I made a lot of money from music
and I lost a lot of money music.
Then I started making money again
and things kind of just all unravelled
in terms of how the industry operated for me.
And I got to such a depressed state
that there was one day I was at home
and it's such a vivid memory for me.
I was sitting in my room and I was alone in the house
and I was like, oh, okay, I'm going to get this rope.
I'm going to go into the garage
and I'm just going to end it in the garage.
And it was such a straightforward thought process for me.
It wasn't like, oh, no, I'm going to do this big thing.
I was like, oh, I'm just going to do this today.
And then right before I went to do that,
my sister called me and she was like,
do you want to go get lunch?
And I went to get lunch with her and I just broke down
and I told her everything and she broke down.
She was like, we have to try and figure out what's going on.
That's such obviously horrific and vivid memory.
And I also think what is kind of eye-opening
and ashamed about it is because to the layman,
we picture music as happiness.
Like if we think of music back in your home country,
we think of lots of colors, yellows and greens
and people dancing and you come here and you picture music
and there's all kinds of new styles of music
forming in those parts of life.
And we think of music and happiness as a thing together
because music typically is speaking about a story
or something positive, but in your case,
obviously that journey didn't end in that way.
How did it start though?
I mean the context of what ended up happening
in your early part there.
Tell us about the start of that journey
because it obviously wasn't bad at the start.
Yeah, it wasn't bad at the start.
So I was in university.
I went to my first nightclub because I was a very much
the kind of kid that preferred to stay indoors.
I used to work for my dad in his computer shop.
I used to make websites.
I had a website that was quite successful
called Slice Gaming.
It was like a gaming news website similar to IGN and stuff.
And I started with my friend Finn
and it just became super successful
and I was getting invited to like game shows
and I remember getting invited to Preview Test Drive
Unlimited by Atari when that came out.
So I was always locked away at home doing stuff
through Six Forms, through GCSEs.
And then when I went to university,
I went to my first club night and I walked in
and I just remember hearing house music
in a club for the first time being like,
Oh my God.
This is not.
It just like took over me
and it was like making,
even today when I talk about it,
it makes the hairs on me stand up.
It was just such a magical experience
to listen to the music on a proper sound system
and to have people all enjoying it with you
and it just be really positive energy.
And I remember leaving that club
and being like, I want to be a DJ.
Out of the blue, just saying it like that.
And I'd always loved music, right?
My parents loved music and I'd always
made CDs when I was at home, compilations.
But I was like, I'm just going to learn how to DJ.
I just bought some decks and taught myself how to DJ.
To the detriment of my university grades, I must say.
And then I just became good at it
and I became known as one of the uni DJs
and I started DJing at other unis as well.
And then I left university
and someone was like,
Oh, Tommy, you're always playing other people's music.
How about you make your own?
They said it like as a flipping joke.
Oh, you should make your own music.
And it was like, to me, I was like, is that like a challenge?
So I just made a song and the first song I made,
I remember sending it to a DJ called DJ Pioneer
and it got played on radio the next week.
And I was like, maybe I'm good at this.
The world is telling me like, do this, do this.
But to me, to me as a massive Formula One fan,
there's a really crazy like comparison I'm going to make.
If we think about being that age,
but suddenly realising you're really fast in a car,
you'll realise that it's too late
because you never started when you were four.
The doors closed, you've got to accept it
because you just don't see the option of like
getting anywhere when they're going.
But it's amazing how many different things there are
that you can still discover even when you think
you're going in on your path.
Exactly.
That you can actually get up to speed with
and find if it's within you as a passion quite quickly.
And that sounds like what happened there.
Yeah, it was, again, I'd always love music
and it's just like, I've never really been the kind of person
to be like, oh, I can't do that.
I probably won't be able to do that, do you know what I mean?
Like I make a joke for my wife all the time,
like if I want to go into politics,
if I say one day to myself, I want to be Prime Minister,
I would do whatever it takes to make it happen.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I've just always had that kind of personality
where I'll just, whatever it takes to get to my end goal
or to achieve something or sometimes just to prove
someone wrong, like the guy that made the joke
about making music, just wanted to prove someone wrong,
then it's like, I'll just do whatever it takes.
And it's the same with cars now.
Whereas when I started, people will be like,
I'll get like 100 views on something
or on YouTube in 2015, I'll get like 100 views.
And people will be like, oh, do you really want to,
like, oh, you shouldn't really bother or like,
oh, there's no point.
And then I'll be like, okay, watch
and I'll just do whatever it takes.
What gives you the belief that you can do it?
It's like when you started doing those sets
and getting good at it, what gave you the belief
that like, oh, I have never done this before,
I'm going to be good at this and I'm going to do it.
Like where does that come from?
Is that from both your parents?
It's definitely, do you know what it is?
It's, it's, if I can see another human being
can achieve that thing.
If there's no physical limitation to something
or there's no limitation in the,
in the realm of like science,
like flying or something, like I'll be like,
I can do it.
If someone else can DJ
and if someone else can make music,
why shouldn't I be able to?
Obviously there's things like drawing where,
you can teach yourself to draw,
but then there's a difference between a great illustrator
and an artist.
Do you know what I mean?
Whereas music, I always thought, oh, well,
I like music, so it should be pretty straightforward.
But my parents have kind of just always been like that.
They just support me through anything.
Same with my sisters.
Like if my sister wants to be a radio presenter,
which she tried in university and my parents
supported and she was good at it.
And it's just that if someone else can do it,
I can do it.
That's how I just see things.
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And what was doing it then?
When you then were making those next big moves
and it really opened up.
What did that look like?
Like visualizer?
Oh, well, I mean, when I tell the story,
it sounds super straightforward.
Like I just woke up and made music in it.
I left university and I started working
in a phone shop selling phones,
a place called O2.
I was making music.
So I'd work in the day and then produce music
until about one o'clock in the morning
in my bedroom at home.
And I just kept producing, kept producing, kept producing.
I would send the songs to my friends.
Then one day I was like,
why am I sending it to my friends
when I could put it on SoundCloud?
Just start putting it on SoundCloud.
Then people started listening.
People started downloading it.
I was like, wait a second.
This seems to be happening.
And I had a song that I made
and it got played on radio or whatever.
So I was a bit, I guess,
I was a bit like thrown in at the deep end
where I felt like the pressure of
I need to keep making to a certain standard
and keep improving.
So I just kept grinding it out,
kept grinding it out.
And I used to make songs on my laptop
with iPod headphones.
That was just how I used to do it.
When was your first moment on that journey?
When you were like,
oh, I actually understand how this makes money, Matt, now.
Like, I could actually earn quite a bit from this.
The first moment,
I was driving home from my work
and then I heard a song that I made
being played on radio.
This was a completely different song
and I don't even know how the DJ got it.
I heard it being played on radio.
It was being played by Mr. Chairman.
He gave it the craziest talk up.
He was like, oh, this song is from
this new artist called Taser,
which was my name.
I'm so embarrassed.
It was my name at the time.
And it was crazy.
I remember getting home and thinking,
this is surreal.
Then I went to work the next day
and I got a call from someone saying,
oh, I'm so and so and I work at Universal
and I thought, okay, I'm being pranked.
And then I got a call from someone saying,
oh, I'm so and so and I work at Warner Brothers.
Oh, I'm so and so and I work at Sony.
And I was like, okay.
They're like, we want to sign your song.
And I was like, this could be a thing.
Like it's not just something I do.
I don't just DJ on the side.
This could be a thing where I make money from it.
So I started going to the meetings
and I was getting offered insane amounts of money
to like just obviously sign my song to them.
And then that's when I was like, ah,
I guess I'm a DJ and artists now.
Like I'm just going to be that now.
And I quit my job, signed my song and I was DJing.
And then there was a time that I was making like,
there's DJs that make more, but at this time
it was more a lot to me.
I was making like a thousand pounds an hour to do a DJ set.
And this was coming off the back of making,
I don't know, eight pounds an hour or two.
It just happened so fast.
And again, that's probably why even at that early stage
a lot of people probably thought, oh, it's blocks.
Like Tommy was in uni, he was working at O2
and now he's this international DJ doing like,
how did this happen?
Like, it's just, I don't know.
You don't even know how suddenly that happened.
I get a lot of imposter syndrome
even when I think about it now
because the song that really made me popular
is Ten Year Anniversary was this year.
I didn't celebrate it for obvious reasons.
I just like, I look at it and I'm like,
how did this actually happen?
Like how did I get to this point?
And I guess it's just not limiting
what I thought I was capable of
and never being like, oh, I don't think,
like some of my friends would make music
and be like, oh, I don't think I'm going to put it out there.
I don't know what people are going to say
or I'm not going to email this person.
You just do it.
I just did it.
I just, it's not like I didn't care what anyone thought.
I just didn't see a limitation to what I could achieve.
Well, not seeing a limitation to what you can achieve
opens the door to do more and more and more.
So what age were you when you signed that first song?
Just to apply context.
I was 24 when I signed that song.
So the mindset you must have been in is,
oh my God, like if this is what I'm doing now,
like what could I be doing in four or five years
like once I've compounded?
Suddenly going from not a lot to earning money,
was it kind of like what happens to footballers?
Like off the rails a little bit.
It was disorientating.
It was seriously disorientating.
I remember just sitting there and looking at my bank account
and being like, oh my God, I'm rich.
I came from being a university student
to work in O2, to work in your paycheck to paycheck basically
to sitting at home, looking at my bank account
and seeing numbers that I had never seen before.
And I was just like, what the hell has happened?
I think one thing that kind of grounded me,
I don't drink, I don't smoke.
I don't really party.
So that kept me on like a very sensible part
whereas some people they'll get money
and then they'll just be like,
okay, I'm just going to buy drugs.
But you car-y.
Yeah.
But my issue was cars.
So I remember I got the paycheck
and I was just like, cool.
I said to her, I said to her, I was like,
can you take me somewhere tomorrow?
I'm just going to like have a stop-gap for a second
because when you then get to
and we're going to go along the rest of this line
but such a horrific way that that obviously ended for you.
I'm so sorry that that was the case.
But we typically look at
when something ends badly in our life,
it's so easy to put a negative brush over the whole thing.
Oh, absolutely.
There are so many moments of euphoria
and stories that sometimes don't turn out
the way you want them in there.
Yeah, exactly.
So there's moments where I'm like,
wow, that was amazing, man.
I had a really good time.
Oh, this was great.
But then when I get to the end of that,
the final chapters of my music career,
it becomes super dark for me.
Like super dark.
And was that because of musical money?
It was because of the music industry
which then caused the issues with money.
And I'll explain that.
I guess I explain that when I get to that point in the story.
But the industry is just built up of a lot of...
So get it twisted.
There's great people in the music industry.
And for example, my wife, Camille,
her team are stupendous.
And that is the team that I wish I had.
But the team I had at the time
were just kind of taking advantage of me.
I found out like near the end of my story,
that my manager had been stealing money from me.
And that changed to another manager.
And that manager did some things that I thought...
I thought the management company was going to be on my side
because of what happened.
It was very inappropriate and very advantageous.
But then when I realized they were just out to protect themselves
and it wasn't about,
oh, we need to get rid of this employer.
We need to know how to make things better for you.
It was more like, oh, we want to protect the brand.
When it got to that point,
I just remember thinking this industry is just not...
It's not a nice industry.
Everyone's just taking advantage of everyone.
And I'm the creator.
And I'm the creator, yeah.
And I'm the one that's sitting in front of the laptop
going to the studio doing the sessions.
Everyone's benefiting it, but I'm not benefiting.
I'm just slowly getting worse and worse.
So it's like you almost had that moment of euphoria.
And then drop.
Yeah, literally.
And it wasn't even a subtle drop.
It was just like a fine drop.
Christ, dude, you're literally like...
Yeah, it was like...
But I guess that's the story of my life.
I have these massive highs and these massive lows.
And a lot of my personality,
my wife always says that I'm very like...
I'm always kind of...
She hardly sees me get super excited
or super bad at sad about things.
I think I've taught myself to just not react to things.
Obviously, I'm my detriment.
Because I don't appreciate some things.
And then other things, I don't process them well.
Many of you might not know this,
but away from the recordings that I do in my van studios,
I've actually got a digital marketing agency.
Now, we specialize in a lot of automotive clients,
but we cover everything, really.
Our team is made up of PPC specialists,
SEO specialists,
and the most talented designers I've ever seen,
which have done work like the Starnagloss website,
the TWR website, and many more.
We've actually just built icon box for the Auto Alex crew as well,
meaning that people that watch their channel
can buy their favorite merch seamlessly and in style.
So if you're interested in starting a project
and you'd love to speak to us,
just tap the link below and let's hop on a call.
Do you think that kind of mindset
and the way that she describes you is actually contentment?
Because you've been through so many of those things now.
So like when you become content,
you kind of become quite calm.
You can't become calm and actionous everything you do.
I wish it was that.
It is more just me protecting myself.
And I don't let myself get happy about stuff
because I've had people throw deals at me like,
oh, Tommy, we'll give you 100K for this random one thing.
Then I'll sign the deal and then they're like,
ah, actually, nah, we've changed our minds.
So I've learned to process that
until something's complete,
I just don't let myself get super excited about something.
Even buying cars to this day,
I'll sign something to get the car
and I'll be on my way to pick it up and I'll be very like,
and then until the car is at my house,
I will not be happy.
Like I'll just be very like, oh, yeah, nah, yeah, oh,
this is great.
Oh, yeah, yeah, thank you.
And then when it gets into my house,
it's always in my garage and I look at it,
I'm like, holy shit.
I'm getting really excited about it.
It's a 980!
Yeah, it's a 980!
Literally that's exactly how I am with things.
But then that's typically the first real
that you upload when that car comes
and that typically shows that person,
which is then why people perceive this incredible life.
And this is why I love to get into those struggles
behind the curtain, essentially,
because it's not as easy as it looks.
It's not as easy as everyone makes it out to look.
You've obviously got that, I'm exactly the same,
disease with buying cars.
It is a disease, isn't it?
What was the first one that kicked it off
during that journey in music?
The first one that kicked it off,
I bought, I signed a deal.
And that's what I was saying, I signed my deal
and I said to my mum,
Mum, tomorrow...
The last person you should tell!
I was like, tomorrow I need you to take me somewhere.
She was like, don't worry.
She took me to this place, car dealership.
It was a Mercedes E-Class, E250 cabriolet,
gun metal grave, a red roof, red interior,
AMG line.
Looking back, it was just a very normal car, I guess.
But to me, because I had an Lexus I-250,
so I just went and I was like, mum, take me to this place.
She took me there.
And I remember the salesman being like,
how do you want to pay for it?
And I looked at my way, bank cash.
And then I just put my car in the machine,
and I never realised this,
but if you want to buy something of such
significant value, the bank's like, hold on.
So I put my...
He said, oh, it's been, it's been declined.
And I was like, declined.
He was like, yeah, oh, normally if someone has to pay
for something of such significant value,
they'll do this and say, call the bank,
get an authorization on the code.
So I remember my bank calling me.
They were like, oh, this transaction of,
I can't remember how much it was.
It was like 30 grand or something.
I just tried to go through, is it you?
And I was like, yeah, yeah, it's me.
And they're like, okay, no worries.
We'll put that through.
I remember just doing it, getting the receipt.
I even took a picture of the receipt.
I drove home and my Mercedes E-Class feeling like, yeah.
And as soon as I got home, I was like, I felt nice.
I want another car.
Like, and it just, I had that Mercedes for like four months.
Then I bought a Porsche Panamera.
Same thing again.
I took this time.
It was my dad and my dad took me to Wales to pick up.
I remember going there.
How'd you want to pay for it?
I drove to my set straight afterwards.
And it was just like, again, I've always loved cars.
And I just realized like, I actually have the free will to
and the money to just buy like.
Dangerous.
Dangerous cars.
The cars that people would be like, oh, this is a serious
financial decision.
Are you sure you want to do this?
I was just like, yeah, like, I'm sure.
Show me the money.
Exactly.
So I was buying cars.
And like I say, like, I was only doing music because it got
to a point I just love cars and I was only doing music
because I just wanted to buy nice cars.
Do you think that if I bring it back to the person
that would have had an account, if you were that person
looking and following Tommy, do you think you'd have
maybe commented, this guy has an infinite money glitch
at that point?
I would have, I see it from where I came from and like,
I was raised in Oxford, right?
And I wasn't from like, I wasn't from like a wealthy area,
like in Oxford, but my family worked hard.
My mom, my dad, then we moved up.
But we were never like, I would say we're very much
like on the lower end of middle class.
That's how it was at the time.
And I would probably be like, because my neighbors
were probably like, why is a random Porsche showed up
on the street?
So from the outside in, especially like my friends
or like my school friends, they must have been like,
what the hell?
How did this happen?
Because it was literally overnight,
but it just feels like the story of my life
because I don't limit myself in what I can do.
I tend to just jump to something and then people
don't even have time to process that I start doing it
and I'll start to see success in it because I'm very,
I just don't doubt myself in that kind of thing
when I switch to something.
Because again, it's that if another human being
can do this, why can't I do this?
I've never limited myself.
So looking at myself as an outside,
I would have been like, how the hell did he do that?
Do you think that's the most valuable trait
to being successful?
Yeah.
I think for me anyway, just don't limit yourself.
And it's so funny.
I keep seeing people being like, oh, yeah,
realizing you have free wills become like
a trending thing to say.
And I've just always been like, I actually
have free will and I can just do whatever I want.
I remember the Prime Minister conversation with my wife
like, if I wanted to become Prime Minister,
I remember saying to her like, what would really
actually stop me from doing that?
Trying to do that at least.
I can imagine myself getting somewhere.
It sounds so stupid, but I can imagine
myself achieving something towards doing that.
I'm not saying I would be Prime Minister,
but I wouldn't limit myself if that's
what I actually wanted to do.
Yeah.
How long was that music career?
From 2014 to 2014.
24.
24 hours.
24 in 2014.
I'm revealing my age now.
And then I stopped in COVID.
I stopped in COVID.
Wow.
COVID was like the great level of so many things.
It was such an unfortunate time for so many people.
But for me.
You discovered crypto.
Yes.
For me.
So I just dampened a very emotional moment then?
Literally.
For me it was like, okay, I'm just going to stop doing music.
And I just stopped.
And it worked.
It worked because I could focus on other stuff
and kind of just be at home and be like a bum
and not be pressured and not have the pressure
of deadlines or people wanting this or wanting that.
And then I had motivation because I had my family.
I had met, she was my girlfriend at the time, my wife.
And I was just like, you know what?
I'm just going to try and figure out what I want to do.
And I don't care how long it takes.
And then she said to me one day, you love cars.
Just do car content.
She said it's so blasé.
I was like, what do you mean?
She was like, you're always talking about cars.
Just do car content.
And I was like, yeah.
I could do car content.
I just started doing car content.
And that's off the back though of also quite a bit.
Again, this up-down thing of your story,
because it sounds like your sister was a hugely profound person
in your life who without maybe you wouldn't be here today.
Yeah, absolutely. I would say that.
And that was during COVID or just before.
That was just before COVID.
So that was about 2017, 18.
My sister, she saved my life.
I always say it to her.
I sent it to her the wedding day the other day.
I gave her speech and I was like, yeah.
I saw those pictures.
Beautiful.
Thank you.
Well, I say thank you as her wedding.
Thanks.
Thanks on her behalf.
Yeah.
My sister saved my life.
She's my older sister.
So she's always been there from when I was young.
Best friend.
We used to dress the same.
People used to think we were twins.
We were quite close in age.
So she's, I think, 18 months ahead of me.
But yeah, it was almost like she had the psychic ability
to know something was wrong.
Because she would never be like, do you want to come meet me for lunch?
That's what I was going to get to.
Yeah.
So I was having this awful moment, this awful thought train.
And she called me, do you want to come meet me for lunch?
I went to meet her.
I broke down and then she bought me something called a happiness diary.
And she said, instead of focusing on negative,
write all the happy things that you come across.
Write those down.
And then she was checking in with me.
And at this point, I was, the brows broke.
Like flat broke.
And my sister was like, don't worry.
I'll help you get back on your feet.
So she was helping me with money situations.
I remember I lent my, I had a Mercedes Benz S-Class that I lent my friend.
And he racked up, I think, 10 grand worth of parking tickets.
And this all came to me at the same moment when I found out my manager was
stealing money from me.
So I stopped doing music.
I was in a court case.
I had left my management, obviously.
I had stopped talking with my label.
And then to get those 10,000 pounds of parking tickets,
literally every day, a new parking ticket would come through.
A new one, a new one, a new one.
And then because I was so depressed, I would leave some and then it would
go up more and more and more.
So I didn't have any money.
My sister was like, don't worry.
I'll help you out.
She was paying off the parking tickets for me.
I think all together my sister, oldest,
has probably spent about 40 grand on me just to make sure that I could be
in a position where I could, I could live and I could function.
And because she did that, I was able to start going back into,
I had realized I don't want to do music, right?
But I had also realized this is the only thing I can do right now
that it's going to be able to make money.
Outside of just getting a regular job.
So I went back into music.
I started producing for other people.
I found a new manager.
It was going great.
And then I found out, I'm not sure,
I'm not sure if this is going to be in the podcast
because I've never spoken about this before, ever.
I found out that manager had been,
I found out that manager had a crush on me
and had been inviting me to stay at his house
and had put a camera in his bathroom
and had pretended to be girls online
to try and get me to send pictures.
Essentially, I found out that manager
who was working for the manager coming out of that
was just, I guess, sexually abused, you would say.
That's what it was.
It was, yeah.
And that's like after everything you've just described.
After everything I've been through.
Because even court, that one word,
we gloss it over in a sentence.
It was like the court.
Court is one of the most stressful situations
you can ever come to in your life.
And then when you compound something regular,
like parking tickets on there.
Parking tickets, yep.
Then that's not even what you've just discussed,
then isn't just like another parking ticket added to the pile.
That's just like the baseball bat swinging through
and just being like, oh, my mind's broke.
And I would ask that, do you talk about
your love for music ending before that second producer?
Yeah.
And I thought that was where all the music did end,
but do you think that first part just before
that was the point that you talk about it as the end
even though it wasn't quite the end
because you did start doing it a bit more?
Because was that where you fell out of love with it?
That's where I fell out of love,
but like a relationship is when you fall out of love,
you kind of just like coast along
because it still works.
And for like the benefit of the kids
or my lifestyle or whatever, I was like,
I'm good at it, so let me just keep going.
And then when that happened,
it was then like finding out,
okay, I fallen out of love,
I'm coasting along this relationship,
and now I've found out my partner's cheated on me,
for example, so you just,
at that point I was like, I'm done.
It was for me
the personification of every single thing
that was wrong with the music industry
because there was no support for me
when I had found out and I approached it.
I remember going to the management company
which are a big management company
to have a meeting like a crisis meeting
and I thought the meeting was to support me,
but when I got to the meeting,
they had brought in a lawyer
and they had brought in someone
for brand image,
and they were trying to get me to sign something
and I was just like, you know what,
I am done.
I was like, I'm just done with this industry.
I'm done with the people. I'm done with the drama.
I'm done with the issues.
I'm done with the lies.
They finished me and that was right before COVID.
And then COVID happened
and I just remember being like,
I don't want to do music.
And my wife who was a very successful songwriter,
producer, artist,
during COVID, she was still encouraging me
to produce music because I was producing music.
We were writing music together
and then like I said one day I just said,
I do not want to do this anymore
because even listening to music on a radio
was painful for me because it just brought back
my memories because I would hear songs
and be like, God,
this is a really good song. I can make songs like this.
But then all this has happened
and all this will probably happen.
I just don't want to do it.
Even to this day, and my wife will tell you,
I just don't listen to the popular radio stations.
I'll listen to Radio 4
or I'll listen to Smooth Chill.
Things that aren't anything to do with
the music industry in a sense,
more like older stuff just because
I just get serious.
Like if...
It sounds so stupid but my wife
needed a song mixed down and mastered yesterday
so I said, I'll do the mix down for you
so you can send it for master.
I get anxiety as soon as
I start doing it because it just brings back
so many bad memories for me.
So yeah, I just...
I was like, I can't do it anymore.
I just can't do that to myself anymore.
And this was after that I've had such a bad experience
that I've wanted to commit suicide
and then I had another bad experience.
I was like, yeah, you know what?
I was like, I was like, fuck this.
I'm not doing it anymore.
Can I... I want to ask you a second
about the person
you were in a specific way
just before that happened.
Yeah. Or in like a couple of years prior to that happening.
Maybe like in the peak in the enjoyment moments
that we spoke about versus now.
Because the Tommy that I followed
and know now
always as a big beaming grin
is extremely approachable.
Like you just have an aura of like
if you're at a car show or online
like talk to me.
I'm here. I'm not going to bite.
Like you have this just lovely aura
about you as a human.
Was that the same two years
prior when you were like in the peak
going into those dealerships buying the car?
So have you always been that guy as my point?
Or did you ever become a person
that you'd look back on now and think
cool, that guy was a bit like
you what, bro?
Have you ever been that guy?
I've always been the same.
Always completely been the same.
I would talk to it. If anyone
wants to talk to me because of what I do
I always have time for them because I'm always like
this person can consume my content
or this person can listen to my music
or this person listens to my DJ sets
they want to talk to me.
The least I can do is give them 10 minutes of my time
and just sit down and talk to them
and get to know them as a person because
I wouldn't be doing what I'm doing
but aside from that I've just
in school I was just friends with everyone
I wasn't like
in my mind obviously
I feel like I was friends with everyone
but there was no one that I wouldn't speak to
I've always just been the kind of person
that I'm just open to talk to anyone
I don't really see people as like
I wouldn't talk to that person
or this person doesn't play basketball
or they're not into cars
I'll just talk to anyone and I'll talk to anyone about anything
Was that the same virtually as well
because you mentioned like you were involved
in a gaming company
so I can imagine you as a bit of a gamer
talking to people over the internet
and I kind of see that playing out
because I see you responding to every comment
I see you responding
making a video about a comment
you're so involved in the community aspect
of what you've created and knowing
who your guys are
you've always been the guy that will talk to everybody
and that's probably why that's now come through in Tommy Orton
I've always been like that
when I was doing my gaming website
I had a forum on this
I was probably like 12 when I first started my gaming
I was like 13, 14
talking to like adults
about games and writing reviews about games
as a 14 year old
and people just didn't know that
so I'm very confident to speak to people
if it comes to like
giving a speech or standing on stage
or talking to a thousand people does not bother me
at all I'll probably get more nervous
talking to someone one on one
and I would like a thousand people at a time
it's just the way my brain is set up
I do not know why
and I guess it's probably helped because I used to DJ
and I'll do sets of like 4,000 people in the crowd
and I'll stand there and I just really became
motivated
I like a challenge and I love being under pressure
so
I perform better in those scenarios
but again I'll talk to anyone
and I'll talk to anyone about anything
because I always find interesting what people do
it's just
that I'm just intrigued
to learn things especially if someone
talks to me about something new
the other day I was at a film set and I was asking people about cameras
and I learned so much about cameras and I was like wow
it's like that's an art form
in itself and like we have the
automotive industry and then I guess I'm
Tommy Auto in the automotive industry
but there's like a Tommy camera in the camera industry
and there's a Tommy Bakery
in the bakery industry and there's a Tommy
like there is
like it's almost like you know Stranger Things
upside down and then you have the normal
world and then everything's normal and then you have the upside down
which is everything's the same but slightly different
so I like to just talk and learn
about things I know I'm going off tension but it's just
that's a part of my character that I'm really like
I'm really proud of because
it's allowed me to like amass a lot of
knowledge on random things
and my wife sometimes calls me a know-it-all but I just love it
like I just retain it like I love
learning new things but that's helped me
to be willing to talk to people
so to have such tough moments
like that I watched your video you did
with Yanny who we'll talk about
met Yanny and got involved with him but of course
I watched that video so so much information
and anyone's wondering the one I'll put it
on screen just here now
but in that video you mentioned
crypto and you had this
moment of crypto was that one of these
moments that you talk about
from like going from low to suddenly having
a bit of a win that might have helped you as well
to an extent
yeah I think
I like
I had started making money
you know what I don't know why I'm saying yes
yeah it was
I'm sitting there trying to think
oh really because you become
desensitized from things right and
I think I've
become desensitized from like the lifestyle
that I have where I see it as
to me obviously it's just an everyday normal
stuff right and to other people it must be like
oh my god like this guy has an
SUJ oh my god this guy has a
812 he has this he has that he has this
um yeah that was one of those moments
the short answer is yeah one of those moments
that was like
holy holy holy crap like
did you basically put everything in that you'd managed
to amass back up so yeah so I
managed to make money I didn't put everything in I put in
what would be a relatively small amount
based off of what my friend recommended
and it just
it popped off and I just
I thought was fake at first
but apparently he's not
sharing in you yeah so no but this was like
awful off this because you know
when you just use like digital money like
I don't know about I didn't know about crypto
even to this day I'm still I get a lot of my
information from my like car club like my guys and
then I get
and I was just like oh
okay
time to go buy a car
it was that kind
of level in the end
yeah yeah yeah it was like oh time to
time to go buy a car
I've been very lucky in terms of
I
would say that
maths and numbers and I found
this out in a later age
and I never realized I was dyslexic
and I never realized I had
and people use it as a buzzword
I never realized I had like ADHD
and autism I never realized that growing
up until like around
COVID time I started to like learn more about
myself so when it comes to numbers
and I try to explain this to Yanny
in the Yanny video but I don't think
I explained it well but
I can see a hundred grand
cash or a hundred grand the figure
and I can see a hundred
and fifty grand and my brain sees them as the same amount
of money it's such a weird
thing I can see two hundred grand in my brain sees
the same amount of money I can't
really I can process it
to an extent but not to the extent
that a lot of people can like
looks on like yourself where you can sell multiple businesses
and you can do this and you could do that I would
struggle on the financial side
because I'd just be like
why can't I just spend a hundred
K on this business and someone would be like because you only have a hundred K
like it doesn't
work for me but I think what blessed me
is having meeting
my wife Camille
because when it comes to finances and everything
she knows that I can't
be the one to run and control everything
because I would have a baghati
sharon and
yes go and nothing else
you're just like in bed an auto
trailer
over and goes
because
I can't and it is
my weakness I cannot
when it comes to finances I don't
see money as a finite thing
is the way my brain is
if I have a million pounds
and I I'll be like okay
I'm you spend five hundred K on a car
have five hundred K I'll buy this and I'll buy this
and I'll still think I have a million pounds in my head
but I don't I spend everything
and that's what
tricked me up when I was doing music
and it's tricked me up several times in my life
but luckily I have a wife
that is the exact opposite when it comes
to finances so
everything came to a head at like the
perfect time where it's like
you've come into success you've come
into money you've come into like you're doing your
social media you're
working with friends on business ideas and stuff
and you've met someone that has stopped you
from being an idiot
so oh that sounds nice what is that
what is that
do you
am I allowed to say E type
like I thought it was an old
it sounded like an old car
but no one ever drives up my street like that
if you need to know we have had to open the side door
it is very hot
sorry I thought it was in Nigeria
it is
I was sweating
I just drove past it I think that
I can't even remember what I was saying that sounded sick
it was like a smooth sound
wanna be in Hunters
but yeah like I was saying everything came to a head
at a perfect time
my wife has seen success she's great with money
so she's been able to
mould me in a way where
I don't make stupid decisions
and I don't do stupid things
because best believe I would do stupid things
I reckon the most common
word you've used in this podcast
so far is my wife
her phrase that you've used
and she clearly from everything that you do
you so clearly show how much she means
but how did you meet
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I got a plaque
I got a plaque for selling
when you sell a certain amount of records you get plaque so I got a plaque
and I was like oh sick took a picture of the plaque
then she jumped in my DMs and she went
congratulations
well done I loved
this song
we just started speaking and
there hasn't been a day since that we haven't spoken
it's just from like she
DM me we started speaking I took her on a date
and I think
since I took her on a date I've probably seen her
every single day
apart from like when she's gone
to a work thing or
but yeah that's how we met
she slid in the DMs
and were you inspired by her as well because inspiration
makes inspiration
was she already on like part of her
anime with what she's done?
I remember hearing in the anime
she's done some mad things
when I met my wife she was already
so
she was already hyper successful
she was super successful
one of the
if not the most
profound
or prolific songwriter in the UK
at the time
but my world and her world
were so separate
I had heard her name before but I didn't really know who she was
and then
we started talking and I was like wow this is she's a really nice person
I was talking to like a friend
because I thought oh she's DM me to say congratulations
I don't want to overstep any boundaries so I was talking to
a friend that she was like are you not going to ask for my number
and I was like oh like
oh it's party time
but yeah she
has had such an impact on my life
seeing what she did
especially during lockdown seeing her still
working and stuff it made me think okay I need to
I need to pull my pants up
and I need to show her
that I'm worth something do you know what I mean
like she never put that pressure on me
but I was like I need to do
I need to do something to make her proud and that's when I started doing like
I wonder if this will work I wonder if that will work
and then ultimately she was the one that told me to do car stuff
and then
I started doing car
things and I remember
when it comes to telling stories I get so passionate that I just jump around
just the way my brain works
I remember getting into cars
and then we flipped a car
and made so much money from it
I was like oh I can do this as well
what's the car?
Hurricane Perfomante I bought it for
160 grand and I sold it
financed it for 160 grand
and I sold it for 240 grand
peak lockdown
I think I put like
what color was it?
okay I sold an orange hurricane perfomante
when I'd like lost everything
down for 160k
it could have been
I was thinking have we just discovered something
that would have been insane
Sam you bastard
I flipped the hurricane
but I wouldn't have been able to flip the hurricane if she didn't encourage me to do those kind of things
and then
again because she's
good of money I've never felt
I run everything by
people are like oh Tommy's bought this or Tommy's bought that
and sometimes people are like I bet Camille's a gold digger
first of all my wife is a multi-millionaire
so she's never been
my wife is a gold digger it's been me trying to catch up
so anytime I'm like oh yeah
I've bought this car I've done this
I've done that best believe that would not have happened
if I didn't say to my wife what do you think about this
do you think it's a good decision we'll sit down
we'll talk about something we'll go over it we'll analyze it we'll look at the numbers
then she would be like
yeah I think you should do it
if it was down to me I may have a share on
but that's about it
I wouldn't have anything and no fuel
wouldn't be able to drive it
no service history
the reason I always bring her up is because
she has
she had such a huge impact on
my trajectory and changing that
trajectory and encouraging me
and giving me
the space
and the encouragement to chase
what I love
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when did you start to realize
that that was also a reality
that what you loved and wanted to do
was actually something that was going to work
not just from the car flip
because I
want to kind of almost in a way separate that from social
but then it's quite interesting that that's the bit behind
the TikTok accounts that people don't
necessarily think that
he could just be doing like a few deals here and there
people don't materialize as a thing
but it is a thing
and that all comes from following and base
when did that all start to build
I guess I realized it
I realized it when
I remember predicting the markets
would go crazy on cars
and I was talking to my wife about it and I was like
this is these cars
are going up because I am just
I'm sure you're the same thing
everyday auto trader
looking at cars I have no business looking at
and I'll just look every day and I'll be like hold on
like this is
this is kind of crazy and I remember saying to her
there's this like obviously this pandemic
started and you can't
I know that you can even say that on podcasts
I was like this global
is happening but people
are looking for places to put their money and I remember
being like to her
cars are going to go up in value
watches are going to go up in value and I was getting things right
and I was like you know what instead of just being like
I'm going to put money in
I'm going to go for it
and I thought the worst comes to worst have a hurricane
perfomante
if it turns out bad I'll just sell it
hopefully it's longer
and then I thought well if the world ends
it doesn't really matter anyway
it kind of makes sense so I did it
and it just worked out and then
it worked out again because I bought a Vented or S
and the same thing happened again where I ended up making like
50 grand I was like okay
like this is working then
my wife
she had bought
a Bentley Continental W12
Super Sport the old generation
and I remember saying to her return that
because that is not the one you want to buy
and we got the new one instead
but again we got it
at a right time
and then we sold it for more and I was like
no one has ever made money on a Bentley
I failed
I drove it down to south end
with my friend Finn and we sold it for more
than we purchased it for
and it just bought it brand new
but again it was at a time where
you must have twisted someone's arm
the world was in a very weird
place at that time
and I was lucky that
I had the capital
and I had someone who believed in me enough
to start doing these mad things
and then it just kept working and working
so with so much
depth
so much personal success
and so many times that you've gone from zero
to zero throughout that story
does it pain you when you see comments
like Camille has bought all of his cars
not really
it doesn't
it doesn't stress me out because
without Camille
I wouldn't have the cars
so I'm like
people are always like oh Tommy's got this
Tommy's got that and she deserves her flowers as well
because
without her wouldn't be possible
and then also a lot of the cars
some of the cars out on the drive now
she's bought the G-Wagon
she's bought that car there
or she's bought this or she's bought that
it's a joint effort between both of us
it doesn't bother me
doing something you both love together
but I think one thing that does bother me is that
I didn't
sing her praises sooner in my content
that it could get to a point where people would be like
oh she's a gold digger
that's something that I'm like
I should have been singing her praises
and I should have been bringing her to the forefront sooner
because for her to achieve
everything she's achieved to be called
a gold digger by some random people on the internet
it's kind of a bit of a piss take
so I wish that
I would have involved her sooner
but I do so now
and I do make it very clear that she buys her own
cars and then she
like for example the 918
I wouldn't have bought that car by myself
we bought that together because
very expensive
it's very expensive and also that is a
family decision
I thought you were about to say a family car
that's a family car
that's a family decision
I plan to not be on earth and that 918
my son's garage or his son's garage
and that's something that
at the end of the day if my son wants to sell it
he can sell it but that is for them
so that's a family decision
same as buying a house
so I would not have done that without her
do you know what I mean
but it's that kind of two people coming together
and sharing a passion
I have money, Camille has money
but the reason I get people looking at me
and think oh Tommy has loads of money
it's because my wife is very rich as well
so it's not the situation where
power couple
I hate using that term
but essentially it is because
it's not a situation where
one of us is super rich and one of us
hasn't got anything going for them
it's like two people that
have done well and are making money
and they can kind of
the world's the oyster kind of
well I don't have a share on yet
when you said I should have sung
a praises sooner
do you have a question now that allows you to do
just that
if she was sat out with her friends
going for a drink in town and she's talking about
oh Tommy's video band it got this many views
like he flipped this car
I was like how the hell did he manage to do that
and if you're sat here with me
what's something that has blown your mind
she's accomplished over the past couple of years
you're just like dude I cannot believe this
what has blown my mind
two Grammys
she's got two Grammys
and Grammys is something that you just get
she's got two Grammys
and people may not know this
but an Ivan Avello award
which is a very prestigious music award
like it's so prestigious that
people don't know about it because it's a very like
the music industry goes to a party
and the party they'll be like Jamira choir performing
or like they'll be someone
like I don't know like
YouTube performing or something but
it's not broadcast on TV no one knows about it
she has that for best songwriter
two Grammys for her songwriting
and she doesn't talk about it
she doesn't talk about it
and not only that
she will wake up one day and be like oh I want a G-Wagon
she won't buy a G-Wagon
oh you know what Tommy I really
this happened
she was like I really want a supercar
I don't know what supercar I want
I want something usable just bought Hurricane Storato
like that is how
like that is how
impressive she is
like she is just
what she's achieved
especially as a black woman in the UK
or in the world
more people should know about it
like people think oh she writes
she wrote songs for Little Mix but
she's done some crazy things
when you say more people should know about it
you're talking about the future tense as well though
because it's something that can happen
100% 100%
more people can be educated
she's appearing in more of your content
that leads me to the question of
where does this go
I'm not sure if I'm allowed to say where it's going
next but
I guess
more of us being seen
more people seeing us
around the world
not on a social media platform
not necessarily on a social media platform
but I guess that's where
it's going
or it's started to go to
does that make you super excited
once again it's the embryo
it's the start of the new thing
and the last part of that chapter didn't end on a bad note
yeah yeah so it's like
okay we're doing this together and we're starting a new
it's not easy obviously
it's like we're starting these
massive like some of the things that
we have planned and we've got in the works already
it's just incredible
and it's like to do it with someone that you love
and someone that
is such a good person
that makes it ten times better
the reason I asked you
who Tommy was maybe when he was like 18, 19
and if he was this guy that maybe was a little bit more
chipped up etc
was because you've been such an avocat
of like speaking out of like I was feeling really bad
I needed some help
I went and got some help
because if you were that person
so many of those people wouldn't do it
because they just think they're too hard
or they're too successful
but like what is your chance to talk
to those guys that would comment on your videos
and be like Tommy this doesn't seem real
that might be going through that horrendous stuff
God
what would I say? Do you think you just got to open the door?
I have to that's why I just talk about it
so openly like a lot of people are like
oh yeah no I've been depressed but I'll just
I'll give people the graphic details
I'll just tell people how it was
what I was going through
I think I will just keep telling them
my story so people can
hopefully see a bit of themselves
I remember a few months ago I put up something on my Instagram
I have these moments where I'll just be like
you know what I just want to talk about something
I just wrote like five paragraphs
on my Instagram story about
my depression
and how I got depressed
and how I got out of depression
so many people were like I needed to read this right now
I'm going through the same thing
so I wouldn't necessarily be like
to a certain group of people this this or this
I'll just keep saying my
my truth
just keep advising people look like get help
and when I say get help I don't
it doesn't have to be professional if you're afraid to do that
speak to someone anyone
speak to me just message me
I might I'll do my best to respond
because I get a lot of messages but just speak to anyone
because it is so difficult
especially in this day and age where
we feel like we need to achieve so much
we need to do so much
we need to have a name for ourselves
so many people are getting caught up in that
in that like um mentality
it's putting that as such
a negative space so yeah
because it applies pressure so much pressure
when you talk about not being too
bothered by the comments you're actually
very like mentally resilient to the comments
do you think that comes from the notebook that you spoke about
uh I think part of it
part of is that part of is that and also
I grew up in a house
with two sisters that are very intelligent
and
I
can give it as good as you like
if you're willing to give it to you I'll give it back to you
so to me like when people start to try I'm like
okay cool
I'll just give it back to them so because it or sometimes
I won't respond but I'll respond in my head and I'll be like oh yeah I feel better
when you started blowing up
on those platforms and on Tiktok
you then were introduced
to people like Yanny and Matt Watson
you spoke about like
loving the cars but were you watching
their content before you even got into it
yeah I used to watch Yanny's content
way back when it was just um
2014-2013
when he was doing uh just the
rapping stuff Matt Watson when he was on
what was that platform that he was on before
car well I can't remember
the name he was on another platform and I used to watch him then
I remember having a conversation with my serif friend Finn
again saying wow this
he's probably the best motor and journalist out there
and we I remember us having this discussion
and a greenery trying to be like he's just
out of this world and I remember thinking oh I wish I could do that
I wish I could just test cars and talk
about them on video so to finally
meet them and get to know them it's just
it sometimes I'm so
blasé about it but then I sometimes I see it but I think
it's so mad like I used to
watch this person I used to be such a big fan of this person
and now like I can just pick up my phone
and just message them do you get those realisation moments though
like maybe you're on like the runway
about to do a drag race
and isn't it crazy that there is a world
in which this is the bit that I want to take back
right to the start to the Tommy if
social media was around and he had a phone
and was commenting on Tommy that was real
but
that kind of makes sense
and it's weird that you could be sat on a runway
in your own supercar about to do a video
and there's a way in this day and age
now of kind of justifying that as like
well I'm doing this to build a community
the passion which leads to this and this and this
and it's also great at the same time
like we'd have never known that growing
up would we and like many people now probably don't
think that like the stuff that they see is actually
fun that people do and it can lead to a thing
that is going to become their thing
exactly like
I guess sometimes some
I remember one time I was sitting on the runway and I was like
don't mess this up
I was like just don't mess this up
and it was for numerous reasons it was the first car
video I did was Mario Vuelto
don't mess this up because Lamborghini to me has always been
the brand or like always was
the brand and I was like
you mess this up I'm going to fall out of Lamborghini
like that's how much
pressure I felt when I did that race
and then I also thought okay don't mess this up
because you're meeting Matt Watson
so on who you looked up to
and you're doing
something that you've always watched
it was fun though
it was so fun and then I think
I occasionally get those moments
like when Yanny came here
and we were doing the video I was like oh you know what
so crazy like I used to watch you and I was like
I'm such a big fan and blah blah blah blah
and it's just appreciate
taking a second to appreciate those things
but often it does take me like a week
normally before it kicks in
and I'm like oh yeah that is actually quite mad that I did that
but yeah it's um
it's my I don't even know
what to say like if I just
couldn't I just didn't I didn't think
it would happen I guess
what do you think it has been
is like a big thing that runs
through the veins of all the content that you've
done that has differentiated
it and allowed you to grow in your
space because the car world very much
allows people to grow as long as
they're in their own space and like
there's only so many now car rebuilders
before the next ones can push through
and Yanny grew in the world of film
and raps and Matt Watson grew in the
world of proper motel and journalism
around cars but making it funny
and then it seems to me that Tommy has grown
is taking so much information and lifestyle
and putting it into a very live
very real very
like personable clip
and like would you say that that's kind of your
your style is just being like talking to the
camera talking to your audience like I know
every single one of them yes
I mean
not everyone likes my personality
not everyone likes my content and
I'm like okay with that but
it sometimes hurts a bit more because
my content is just my personality
what do your parents think
about you putting the prices of
cars so blasé
on thumbnails
and titles
they've never mentioned it
I hate doing it though
I do not like doing it the only reason I do it
is because youtube algorithm
for some reason
only seems to work for me
if I put testing
the bigger the number so for example
I use a website called
thumbnail test you can test titles you can test
thumbnails I'll put like 20 in
the ones that get
an outstanding amount of clicks
taking my 1.25 million
pound hypercar to Monaco
over
I drove a thousand miles to Europe
or through Europe in my
918 it seems to be like
I hate doing it and it's so funny because
on my tiktok I won't do it because
tiktok doesn't care about that
but on youtube people will only
click on your thing if you give them
a reason to either love it or hate it
by the thumbnail if you only pick
one platform to keep what would you
that is a mad question to ask
that is a mad question to ask
you have to sit here now and delete
one of those platforms
what would I delete
oh my god
oh my god it would
it would have to be youtube
it would have to be youtube because youtube
I don't even know if people realise this
I make no money from youtube it cost
me more to make one video than I make
from two or three videos like
I spend money on my youtube videos
I spend money on my editor Joe
guy Nathan I want the videos to be high quality
and I do it because I flip in love talking
about cars but I do not
make any money from youtube
whereas tiktok I actually make money from
tiktok and it takes me like
a minute to make a video
and my videos are like I was saying
my personality I guys
I don't I never say hi guys I don't know
I just said that I'd be like so today
I'm with my Porsche GT3 RS
and I've got my GT3 touring outside and I just want to see
a quick comparison of the two I just talk people through it
and again I can just be myself
and just talk and just my personality's out
there and it's so it's easier
I mean I love youtube because I love long form
I study media production in university
I love creating it but
if I put my thinking hat on it would have
to be I would just focus on tiktok
well I once said this
podcast to stand the test of time
in being something that covered the real
story behind you because in a
minute clip that gets uploaded to tiktok
or even a 15 minute video so focused
about cars it's so hard
to find a moment to understand the real
you to get under your skin to really see
everything that's been along that journey
and I hope that this stands for
everybody that's listened there's not
only educational and can take lessons for
it but also a path to you
a path to understanding every time
that reel pops up everything
behind that guys eyes and what he's been through
and I just wanted to say thank you from everybody listening
and myself for how you kind of opened
up to then and spoke about everything
because I think there is so much
value in that these days to
an audience that is
listed with YouTube titles and thumbnails
and feels the pressure to get somewhere
that the guys they're watching
many of them have actually had some of the toughest moments
you could ever get through as a human
and I just wanted to say thank you for coming on road to success
Oh there's no problem with that I loved it
I thoroughly enjoyed our conversation
I enjoyed it too it was so funny because I was like oh I'm just going to talk about
cars for like an hour in a bit and we've
literally not talked about cars at all
because I've shared some stuff that
you give me a space to share some stuff that I've never shared
and never spoken about outside
of court or
my house and
it's been therapeutic so
hopefully I haven't bored everyone and
maybe we can do another one where we actually talk about cars
if that's what you were looking for
thank you man
no worries thank you very much
About this episode
Tomi from Tommy Auto shares his inspiring journey from a struggling musician to a successful car enthusiast and content creator. He opens up about his mental health struggles, the pivotal role his sister played in saving his life, and how his wife, a successful songwriter, has influenced his career. Tomi discusses his passion for cars, the ups and downs of the music industry, and how he transitioned into car content creation during the pandemic. This candid conversation highlights the importance of following one's passion and the support of loved ones in overcoming life's challenges.
Check out Tweak: https://www.tweakuk.com/From nearly ending it all in his garage, to finding salvation through cars, Tomi’s journey is raw, emotional, and inspiring. From Nigeria to the UK, through the highs of international DJ success and the lows of depression, betrayal, and financial collapse — this is the untold story behind the cars, the content, and the man himself.Don’t forget to subscribe to our channel for more exciting content about your favourite shows and celebrities. Hit the bell icon to stay updated on all our latest episodes👍 Like, Comment, and Share this episode. Join our discussion in the comments sectionCheck out Tweak: https://www.tweakuk.com/🔗 Follow Us:Instagram: @Roadtosuccessofficialpodcast@benedictfowler