Sean Perry: 'Welcome to My First Ever F***ing Podcast Guys'
Controversial pro sports bettor Sean Perry has unveiled his first every "f***ing" podcast, and it is pretty slickly produced. Considering the millions and billions of dollars Sean has won over the years, we would expect nothing less. Congrats to him.
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"I am going to have incredible guests on here," Perry promises.
His first guest was John Cerasani. Cerasani is a venture capitalist residing in LA and Chicago. He works with entrepreneurs on achieving success, primarily in the sports and tech sectors, and hosts a podcast titled 2000 Percent Raise.
Cerasani promoted his books, including "200 Percent Raise".
Gambling, Scams, and Hustles: Sean Perry Wins Podcast Ep 1: John Cerasani pic.twitter.com/9f19rKncDZ
— Sean Perry (@seanperrywins) February 24, 2025
"I started calling myself the 'best blackjack player to walk the land'," Cerasani mused. "I'm being funny with it but the reality of it is, Dude, people keep telling me that I'm lying, I'm not showing my losses, I'm full of crap. And it kind of reminds me of when I played football in high school and football in college. I'm a big guy. I played tight end at Notre Dame and people are going 'Dude, he's doing steroids'. Dude, I've never touched steroids in my life. But people are accusing me of doing steroids and it dawned on me that, okay, I actually got something good here.
"So 25 years later, 'he's lying about blackjack, he's being dishonest'," Cerasani said of folks reacting in the same way today as they did back in his high school and college football playing days. "I kind of reminds me of people telling me I'm doing steroids. I literally win every time I play."
His book "200 Percent Raise" is available on Amazon here
"John Cerasani was excited to get a job in the "eal world." After attending two prestigious universities, Northwestern and Notre Dame, he was geared up and ready to enter white collar America. He got a job in business-to-business sales and quickly rose as a top performer, later pivoting to another end of the same industry with another employer. He was doing well and was respected. He had the job title, the assistant, the office with a view, but he also started developing doubt. Major doubt. He was only 27 years old when he realized that Corporate America was filled with smoke and mirrors. There was evidence of brainwashing that suggested employees couldn't achieve this type of success as an entrepreneur, and John discovered that everything was put in place to trick both employees and clients to believe that bigger is better when, in fact, that isn't the case at all. This eventually led to his selling the company he started from his kitchen for tens of millions of dollars. In 2000 Percent Raise, John uses his experiences in leaving Corporate America to compete on his own as a step-by-step guide for the reader, giving them the ammunition to pull the trigger in not only reevaluating the pitfalls of working for someone else, but also how to be successful against much larger employers when working for themselves."
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