Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William Burroughs went to Columbia together (not sure if Burroughs did but he hung out there.)

Ginsberg got into publishing and helped Kerouac get “On the Road” published which became the bible for 22 year old kids everywhere.

When Burroughs was sick from drugs in Morocco and Ginsberg was visiting him he found random scraps of writing all over the floor of Burroughs place. He pieced them together (barely), edited them (barely), and got it published as the now-classic (ugh, I hate it) “Naked Lunch.”

Together, the three of them consistently helped their friends get books published, art sold, poetry read, and on and on.

And even though their styles were totally different they created one movement that every writer at the time wanted to be a part of, The Beat Movement.

Around the same time, the painter Jasper Johns lived with the artist Robert Rauschenberg and they hung out with the dancer Merce Cunningham and the composer John Cage.

Eventually they all met Leo Castelli who sold their works for millions. When they all first met, all of them were complete unknowns.

In Silicon Valley: Facebook, Palantir, Youtube, Tesla, LinkedIn, Yelp, Yammer, and more were all either largely funded or started by ex-employees of PayPal (believe it or not, more of Peter Thiel’s net worth comes from his investment in Palantir, the software the NSA uses to spy on people, than from Facebook).

As I pointed out in another post: HBO, Showtime, Viacom, Starz, FX, Universal, and shows like “Mad Men”, “House of Cards,” etc., were all started by a core group of people who worked together at the same time at HBO.

If you watch interviews with comedians like Louis CK, Jerry Seinfeld, Larry David, Chris Rock, they all worked together in no-name clubs for years, each opening for the other over and over again, until they broke out one by one and pulled their talented friends along with them.

Back in 2008-9, I had spent eight years building my “scene” in the financial space and I was realizing that it was just not working for me. I had failed to build a scene. I felt really lonely and scared.

Either none of these people really liked me, or they thought me a failure or I didn’t like them or I don’t know what. It wasn’t working out.

I was getting kicked off boards, losing all of my writing gigs, losing all of my TV gigs, failing at opportunities, and this was eeking into every area of my life: getting divorced, losing a home, going broke.

I kept hearing about people talking behind my back. Whatever. It doesn’t matter. It was the wrong scene for me. Blech.

Instead of making me feel creative and innovative I just kept feeling worse and worse. When people with positive energy are around each other, more energy is created.

More art is created. More innovation with more integrity with more opportunities. You literally can eat less if you are around people who are giving you energy and bringing you to a higher level.

So I started to blog. I figured I had nothing to lose. And nothing really to gain. I didn’t know what scene I was in. I just wanted to return to what I loved twenty years earlier: writing.

I moved seventy miles north of the city just to escape my old “scene,” and now I had nothing and was getting ready to go broke again after starting and selling many businesses and then constantly failing.

And then bit by bit I met amazing people. Other people from around the country or world doing what I was doing.

People would send me a note. Or call me with some ideas. Or promote my work. Or make an introduction. And I would do the same. We’d all like each other’s stuff. We’d all take time out from our own work to help each other.

I’ve now flown all over the country meeting these people, learning from them, really creating new opportunities for myself and for them. Everyone helping everyone where we can, if we can, in the only ways we can.

I felt bad I had no Scene in 2009. But that doesn’t matter. When you do something you love, or even just something your good at (you will learn to love what you are good at) or even something you do with authenticity and integrity (because then you become the trusted source of a scene) then people will gravitate towards you.

How do you monetize a Scene? It will happen. Every single person I’ve met who I consider part of my Scene now has offered me opportunities to make money.

Some I’ve taken, some I haven’t but we worked together in other ways (there are many, many ways people can support and help each other).

Artists and entrepreneurs never work by themselves. There’s always a context. There’s always others from around the world that you can trade ideas with and build ideas on each other.

And if you think you aren’t a creator, then I’m not going to believe you.

We all have our secret passions in the desk drawer. @jaltucher (Click to Tweet!)

We all can find our way to the people who inspire us. The people we admire and want to emulate and want to help.

And then it becomes fun. It’s two kids building a city out of wooden blocks, not caring about what happened before or what will happen later. Let’s just build the coolest stuff with our blocks. Let’s make it bigger and bigger. And more and more colorful. And if all the blocks fall we can laugh and start again.

Today I’m in Seattle and I HATE to travel, meeting with one of the people I consider in my Scene. I’ve known him now for almost four years.

We’ve since hung out in five different cities going to different conferences, meetings, etc. We’ve written books and each supported the other’s books with ideas and inspiration. Plus helped each other in businesses and helped other people in our “Scene.”

A few months ago he had made an introduction, then I had written down some ideas, then we got an invitation, and now we’re both going this morning to… Amazon. To do what?

Who knows? We’re just going. I have no idea why we are here. I just know fun things will happen.

How do you build a scene:

  • Find the people whose work inspires you. Businesses, writings, art, whatever.
  • Come up with ideas for them. How can you help them?
  • Start doing your own work. Share with the people you like. Interact with the people who interact with you sincerely.
  • Try to meet the people who inspire you. Some of them are busy. Some would like to meet.
  • Go to conferences and meet the people who inspire you.
  • Every day work. Every day create. Every day share. The people you share with slowly solidify into your Scene.
  • And then…repeat. Never stop helping.

Never stop building each other up. Never stop making introductions (with permission from each side before you make an intro.)

Never stop delivering value into the Scene. The more powerful the Scene, the more likely it is you will have fun doing what you do, make money at it, succeed at it, live off of it, love it, and make friends.

Ok, meeting my friend downstairs now and then heading off to Amazon.

Start listing who should be in your Scene today.


James Altucher has built and sold several companies, and failed at dozens more. He’s written ten books, and Choose Yourself is the book to RULE THEM ALL. He’s an investor in twenty different companies. He writes every day. He doesn’t have enough friends. Still interested in knowing him? Follow him on Facebook and Twitter.