If you don't know Togi, here's a little background...
The guy owns 3 Lamborghinis, a Ferrari, 2 Audis, and a Rolls-Royce.
He's also worth like negative $10M.
(Dude makes bank, but loses money like it's going out of style. #gambling...)
Anyoway, that's Togi.
23-year-old influencer and gambling content creator who just sat down for a financial audit and casually admitted he coin-flipped his $2 million Miami house to SteveWillDoIt.
And lost.
You can watch the whole episode HERE.
The whole thing started as a YouTube challenge: make $100k in one week through gambling.
He won $25k at blackjack. Doubled it. Then the bets got "more aggressive" because he owed $900k to production for an elaborate YouTube game show he'd already committed to.
By the end? $2.3 million gone. Including the house.
His explanation: "The gambling has given me the most wonderful experiences."
Now, I'm not here to dunk on Togi.
He got on camera and told the truth, which is more than most people do.
And honestly, he's a super nice guy.
(Maybe too nice.)
But there are 3 money lessons buried in his story that apply to you, even if you've never once considered coin-flipping a house.
Lesson 1: "I can always make more" is the most expensive belief in personal finance.
Togi's been a millionaire 3 times.
He's also been broke 3 times. That pattern isn't bad luck, it's a mindset.
When you believe money is infinitely replaceable, you never protect it.
You don't need to gamble your house to fall for this one.
It shows up every time you blow a bonus before saving it, or charge a vacation on credit because "I'll pay it off next month."
The belief that future-you will fix it is why present-you is still in debt.
Lesson 2: Assets aren't the same as wealth.
Six cars. Zero cash.
That's not wealth — that's a garage full of debt and depreciation wearing a costume.
The number that matters isn't what you own. It's what you'd have left if everything went sideways tomorrow.
His actual net worth?
About $391k in assets with roughly $100k in debt.
For someone pulling in $1.9M per quarter, that's a disaster.
Why?
Because income without a system is just money passing through.
Lesson 3: "Vibes-based" financial decisions will wreck you.
When asked why he spends $250k a month on his team, Togi said: "If the vibes seem right, go for it."
I want you to sit with that.
Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
Per month.
On vibes!
Most people aren't dropping $250k, but they are making vibe-based decisions.
Signing up for subscriptions because it felt like a good idea. Buying a car they can't afford because it felt like time.
Skipping investing because the market "feels weird right now."
Feelings aren't a budget.
They're a liability.
The frustrating part about Togi is that the raw ingredients are actually there.
The income, the audience, the hustle. What's missing is a system.
That's exactly what Master Your Money is built for.
People who need a real framework for where every dollar goes, how to actually build wealth, and how to stop letting feelings run their finances.
If Togi's story hit a little close to home...
The impulse spending, the income that disappears, the "I'll figure it out later" energy: START HERE.
Taquitos,
Caleb "Apparently I Gamble Now" Hammer
P.S. Togi still thinks the gambling was worth it for the memories.
So we did a little coinflip with $10K on the line.
Check it out here to see if I agree.
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