On October 16 at 7 PM ET, Go Fund Yourself returns to Cheddar TV with an episode that serves two radically different visions of the future — one plated in the kitchen, the other wired through the mind. This is Episode 11, where food fights, fees, and thought control the screen. And for two bold startups, one primed to defend chefs and the other ready to free human hands, this could be the night their destiny is decided on national television.
The series is powered by a panel of high-caliber Titans — founders, venture veterans, and media personalities — who don’t just hear pitches, they challenge them. Rory Cutaia, David Meltzler, and Jayson Waller are industry disruptors known for turning raw ideas into global brands, and when they lean forward, viewers know something big is coming.
Chop Chop: The Delivery Rebellion Begins
For years, restaurants have danced to the tune of delivery giants, watching commission fees eat their margins bite by bite. Chop Chop arrives with a chef’s knife in hand — ready to cut the cord.
Built as a subscription-based delivery platform, Chop Chop gives restaurants a tool they’ve never truly had: control. No third-party middlemen. No 30% commissions. No silent erosion of profit with every order.
Its promise is simple but radical:
- Lightning-fast ordering
- Predictable monthly costs
- Full ownership of the customer relationship
In an industry where thin margins sink dreams, Chop Chop doesn’t just deliver food — it delivers sovereignty. It speaks for the family-owned bistro, the midnight ramen shop, the neighborhood diner that built a menu on love, not venture capital.
Tonight, they’ll ask the Titans a question millions of restaurateurs wish they could: What if local kitchens took back control of delivery?
Learn more about investment opportunities here.

NAQI: The Mind Unleashed
If Chop Chop lives in the heat of the kitchen, NAQI lives in the space between thought and action. Their groundbreaking neural-earbud platform claims to do what once belonged only in science fiction: convert human intent directly into digital command.
No surgery. No implants. Just… earbuds.
Imagine:
- Sending a text without lifting a finger.
- Navigating devices without a screen.
- Empowering people with disabilities to interact with the world through pure thought.
NAQI isn’t chasing convenience — it’s pursuing liberation. From gaming and productivity to accessibility and neurotech, this platform could fundamentally alter how humans and machines communicate.
But first, they must cross a different threshold: a national audience, a panel of Titans, and a broadcast to millions.
The Go Fund Yourself Edge
Go Fund Yourself isn’t Shark Tank — it’s rawer, riskier, and far more democratic. Founders don’t just pitch for capital; they pitch for community. Television exposure. Fandom. Viral credibility. And most importantly, audience buy-in, the belief of those watching at home.
The Titans — serial entrepreneurs, empire builders, and truth-tellers — will test one question above all:
“Is this a pitch… or is this a movement?”
A Titan summed it up simply: “We don’t just invest in products. We invest in possibilities — the ones that can rewrite an industry.”
Learn more about investment opportunities here.
Two Startups, One Stage
It’s rare that a single episode showcases such contrast. One startup battles commission chaos with operational grit. The other challenges are the very interface of humanity with the digital world. Yet both carry the same fire: to change the rules.
- Chop Chop asks, Who really profits from food delivery?
- NAQI asks, What if thought was enough?
Watch It Unfold. Go Fund Yourself — Episode 11. Tune in on October 16, 7 PM ET, live on Cheddar TV.
Got the next unicorn startup? Apply here today. Miss the show? Check out the replay here.
Spencer Hulse is the Editorial Director at Grit Daily. He is responsible for overseeing other editors and writers, day-to-day operations, and covering breaking news.




