Jason Spurlock keeps launching MLM schemes that collapse. Morning Ignition is his latest.

The Morning Ignition website tells you almost nothing about who runs the company. Right now it's just a sign-up form masquerading as a business. There's no launch date. No ownership information. Nothing that suggests this is an actual operating company rather than a prelaunch cash grab.

The domain morningignition.com was registered January 27, 2013, under Spurlock's name at a Kentucky address. That history matters because Spurlock has been here before—twice.

His first venture, Network Marketing VT, charged affiliates $98 monthly. That money went directly to whoever recruited them. When complaints about unpaid commissions piled up, the whole thing collapsed within a year. Spurlock didn't wait long. He launched MMB60 with the exact same structure: $98 monthly payments funneled to recruiters. That scheme also died. Today the MMB60 website redirects to Morning Ignition, suggesting his second venture lasted no longer than his first.

Now he's running the same playbook again.

Morning Ignition describes itself as offering "1-hour morning rituals that unleash your fullest potential" through "Performance Coaching Wake Up Calls." MMB60 affiliates got access to the same service bundled with their $98 monthly fee. The product hasn't changed. The pitch hasn't changed. Only the name has.

The company's terms acknowledge that some purchases "may come from 3rd party vendors" but provide no details on what these products actually are or whether they have any real market value outside the MLM structure.

Spurlock's compensation plan reveals the real business model. New recruits pay a one-time $97 joining fee that goes entirely to whoever brought them in. That's pure recruitment income with no product involved.

The company uses a "3-up" structure for ongoing commissions. Affiliates keep their first recruitment commission, then pass their 2nd, 4th, and 6th commissions up the chain to their recruiter. This forces endless recruitment just to break even, and guarantees that the vast majority of participants lose money.

Here's what's most telling: Morning Ignition accepts affiliate signups while its compensation plan remains hidden. Spurlock posted an unlisted video on his YouTube channel explaining the payout structure, but it's not on the company website. Potential recruits can't see how they'll actually make money without digging through YouTube. That's deliberate obfuscation.

Three ventures. Three identical structures. Two confirmed collapses. The pattern is clear: Spurlock builds a recruitment scheme, collects fees from people chasing income, watches it implode when new recruit supplies dry up, then rebrands and starts over.

Morning Ignition isn't a rebooted business. It's a recycled one.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Morning Ignition and who operates it?
Morning Ignition is a business venture registered under Jason Spurlock's name in Kentucky in January 2013. The official website functions primarily as a signup form with minimal operational details, no launch date disclosed, and limited ownership transparency, presenting characteristics typical of prelaunch promotional initiatives.

What is Jason Spurlock's business history?
Spurlock previously founded Network Marketing VT, which charged affiliates $98 monthly with direct compensation flowing to recruiters. The scheme collapsed within one year following accumulating complaints regarding unpaid commissions, establishing a pattern of failed multilevel marketing ventures.

What regulatory concerns surround Morning Ignition?
The venture exhibits structural elements common to pyramid schemes: emphasis on recruitment over product sales, absence of transparent operational framework, lack of documented business legitimacy, and operator's documented history of collapsed MLM enterprises resulting in financial losses for participants.


🔗 Related Articles

- 6 more piracy streambox sellers arrested in the UK
- Maxizone Touch MLM scam arrests in India
- PGI Global reboots Ponzi, Helen L Graham promoted to CEO
- Alex Morton’s Jeunesse – where is the retail?
- OneCoin struggling to keep websites behind reverse-proxy