26/11/2021 MoonPay has quietly set up a concierge service to help celebrities buy NFTs

Source: Bored Ape Yacht Club

Quick Take

  • Crypto firm MoonPay has helped Jimmy Fallon and Post Malone to purchase NFTs in recent weeks.

  • Its concierge service targets high net worth individuals who want to buy digital collectibles without any hassle.

Crypto payments firm MoonPay has quietly launched a new ‘concierge service’ to help celebrities and the super-rich purchase non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and cryptocurrency.

The company has been working with television host Jimmy Fallon and Post Malone, the rapper, as clients fora beta versionof the service.

Both men have recently touted items they’ve acquired from the Bored Ape Yacht Club collection, which currently cost a minimum of 43.9 ether (or $186,000) a piece.

Fallontweeted a pictureof Bored Ape #599 on November 12 with the caption, “Permission to come a bored?” The day before, Fallon explained that he had used MoonPay’s services to acquire the piece duringan interviewwith digital artist Beeple.

A MoonPay spokesperson told The Block that there is no commercial relationship between the company and Fallon.

But a cursory glance at transaction data relating to Bored Ape #599 shows it was purchased by MoonPay for 46.6 ether (around $196,000) and later transferred to another address (presumably Fallon’s). So what happened?

The transactions stem from the fact that Fallon is an early client of MoonPay concierge service, the firm’s spokesperson clarified.

They described the initiative as a “white glove service for high net worth individuals who want to purchase NFTs in the simplest way without all the hassle of setting up a wallet, buying crypto, using that crypto to purchase an NFT and then taking custody of it.”

MoonPay later invoices its clients for the NFTs and any other services rendered, they added.

Gift-rapped

A closer look at the company’s transaction history on OpenSea would suggest that the rapper Lil Baby is also using the concierge service. Bored Ape #129, which he hasused as a profile pictureon Twitter,was transferred to himby MoonPay last month.

Furthermore, datarecorded on Etherscanshows that MoonPay has sent four payments totalling 325.1 ether ($1.37 million) to a wallet controlled by Post Malone over the past month. MoonPay’s spokesperson confirmed that the rapper has been using the concierge service to acquire crypto as well as NFTs.

Earlier this week, MoonPay confirmed that it hadraised $555 millionin a round led by Tiger Global Management and Coatue, valuing the company at $3.4 billion.

Arts

https://www.theblockcrypto.com/post/125483/moonpay-concierge-celebrities-nft

Interesting NFTs
Magnetic Forces v3
"El imĂĄn humilla al hierro. Es una teorĂ­a sobre el amor. Magnets humiliate iron. It's a theory about love." --Marco Denevi
Cappuccino
Sup playa! I'm Cappuccino. I want to live in a world where people believe the world is flat. I once pawed at a rooster. I don't like to talk about it. We can be friends, but keep the ultra purrsonal stuff to yourself, please.
Pixel Story
This happy-go-lucky tribe made of lovable pixel Kitties have so much to talk about. While their language skills are simplistic, each Kitty still manages to express themselves with a variety of colorful emoticons and poses. From communicating their basic emotions, to discussing the economic implications of rising Ethereum gas prices, Pixel Tribe Kitties will keep each other entertained for hours. As their communications evolve and become more sophisticated, the inhabitants will come to realize that certain combinations of emotes will unlock secrets within their world. Try it out for yourself, if you're lucky enough to adopt a Kitty. Use the coordinate guide at: https://share.getcloudapp.com/7KumW6Lk to position your kitty Layer.
Ushibori in Hitachi Province, from the series Thirty-six Views of Mt. Fuji
Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) Ushibori in Hitachi Province, from the series Thirty-six Views of Mt. Fuji 1832 - Japan
My Other Half | Inspired by Minecraft: The Last Minecart (2011)
Almost every year, we capture ourselves in a way that no photo or video is capable of: with a photoscan. If you dig through our archives, you'll find many of them and can see exactly how we change over time. Sam Gorski, Creator | I wanted to find the oldest scan of myself and put him side-by-side with Sam from the present. While it is hard to look at it and not miss the years past, at the same time, this gives me hope for the future by embracing and cherishing the change in my life. How would I have gotten this far without him? About This Piece | Sam on the left was captured in 2014, while Sam on the right was captured last week (2021). This work represents the personal, creative, and emotional journey in all of us, and the hope that ourselves tomorrow may be better than ourselves today.