Bill Murray is the face of one of the most prominent celebrity NFT collections, but like many who aren’t plugged into the Web3 world, he didn’t really grasp the concept at first.
“I thought it was a sort of a sports league,” Murray told Decrypt of the NFT acronym. “I didn't know if it was the National Federation of Tennis or Tumbleweeds, or what. I didn't know what it was exactly. Then when I found out what it was, I was truly confused—even more confused [than] when I thought it was a pro sports league.”
But as his son Jackson described to Decrypt last year, the 72-year-old comedic legend of “Ghostbusters” and “Lost in Translation” fame grew hip to the idea of a tokenized project that was part fanclub and part autobiography, but also an access pass to events where holders can party with the comedy legend himself.
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