I mean in recent years, I think you've only got to sell thirty or forty thousand to get a #1.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Becoming number one is easier than remaining number one.
Relative to all the start-ups out there, getting a valuation of $1 billion is rarely accomplished.
Still, most people don't have much money. So finding ways to come out a couple of thousand dollars ahead every year still matters.
I would love to sell millions of records, but that's never gonna be the case.
Nobody's going to sell 10 million records by not working hard.
Wanted has gone into second, third and fourth printings of the individual issues and the north American printings of Wanted #1 are now close to 100,000.
I'm not chasing money, so I'm not looking at just trying to stretch out a deal artificially just to have a certain number.
I don't particularly care how many records we sell any more because we've kind of bought all the equipment we want to buy.
I don't really know anything about sales figures, to be honest with you.
If I could sell 500 million records every time, it would be great. But I've also had the luxury experience of having it when I was a teenager, in a very kind of model version of it.
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