7 PESSOAS QUE FICARAM RICAS DE MANEIRA BIZARRA! [+10] - Summary

Summary

The summary is:

The speaker is Felipe Neto, a Brazilian YouTuber, who talks about seven people who became rich in strange or unexpected ways. He mentions examples such as a man who sold a domain name for millions of dollars, a woman who won the lottery four times, and a couple who found gold coins in their backyard. He makes jokes and comments throughout the video and invites the viewers to subscribe to his channel and watch more of his videos.

Facts

1. The speaker is discussing how to become a millionaire and provides examples of people who have become rich in unusual ways. [Source: Document 1]
2. One of the examples given is a person named 'ex uncle' who created a website called the 'thousand dollar website' to make money for college. [Source: Document 1]
3. The website was a billboard with a million pixels, and 'ex uncle' sold each pixel for a dollar. [Source: Document 1]
4. The website went viral, and 'ex uncle' sold all of his advertising space. [Source: Document 1]
5. The website was eventually sold on eBay for 38.8 thousand dollars. [Source: Document 1]
6. Another example is a woman who won the lottery four times in total, earning millions of dollars each time. [Source: Document 2]
7. The seventh example is a Portuguese man who decided to leave 70 random people from the phone book as his heirs. Upon his death, these people inherited a 12-story building in Lisbon, a house in Guimarães, and over 120 thousand reais. [Source: Document 2]
8. The eighth example is a Chinese woman who started a company that collected used cardboard and recycled it into new cardboard, which she sold for a higher price. Today, her assets are valued at almost 2 billion dollars. [Source: Document 3]
9. The ninth example is the story of Chris Clark, an American who bought the domain name 'pizza.com' for 20 dollars in 2000. In 2008, he sold it for 2.6 million dollars. [Source: Document 3]
10. The tenth and final example is a couple in California who found 1427 gold coins from the 19th century in their backyard. The coins were dated between 1840 and 1890. [Source: Document 4]