By James · Published July 11, 2026

Push Button System Review: Is Jay Brown's Software Real?

A $67 (or $37 with exit-intent) 'software' promising thousands of dollars a day from a single button press, fronted by a Jay Brown persona and, in some versions, fabricated Jimmy Kimmel and Lester Holt endorsements. I walked the checkout and read the earnings disclaimer against the sales page.

A reader forwarded me the ad after they saw what looked like a Jimmy Kimmel segment endorsing the product. The clip was pretty clearly stitched or generated, and it prompted me to walk the full funnel to see where the real revenue flow is - because it's rarely where the front-end fee sits.

★☆☆☆☆

Skip it, and if you saw the celebrity clip, that was fabricated - neither Kimmel nor Holt has any association with this product. The product's own published earnings disclaimer flat-out contradicts the 24-hour income claim on the sales page, and after you pay the $37 to $67 entry fee, the checkout redirects to a broker asking for a further $250 deposit. That broker referral is the real revenue mechanism; the software is scenery.

My working answer is the plain neighborhood-scale route I default to, which is what most of my agency clients quietly run.

The disclaimer contradiction

This is the piece most reviews of this thing miss, and it's sitting on the operator's own website. The sales page says cash flow can begin within 24 hours. The earnings disclaimer, published on the same domain, states in direct terms that there is no guarantee you will earn any money and your outcome could be zero.

Both statements cannot be true. The first exists to sell you. The second exists to give the operator legal cover when the first fails to deliver. Reading a product's earnings disclaimer before you buy is a habit worth building - when it directly contradicts the headline claim, you're looking at a product built to mislead and pre-lawyered accordingly.

The celebrity endorsement issue

Multiple buyer reports on the BBB Scam Tracker describe encountering ads featuring what looked like Jimmy Kimmel and Lester Holt endorsing this product. One documented case describes a buyer losing $380.54 after taking those clips at face value. Neither Kimmel nor Holt has any relationship with this product. The clips are fabricated - either heavily edited out of context or synthesized outright.

This isn't grey-area marketing. Fabricated celebrity endorsements are explicitly prohibited under FTC guidelines and have been the trigger for actual enforcement action against comparable operations. If you saw that ad, that alone is enough to walk.

Where the real revenue actually sits

The $67 (or $37 exit-intent) entry fee is the door. What's behind it isn't a software product - it's a redirect to a broker requesting a $250 trading-account deposit. The operators earn a commission from the broker for every funded account they refer. Your $250 goes into a trading account you can't evaluate, run by a platform you didn't research, recommended by people with a financial incentive to send you and no accountability for what happens next.

This is the pattern I flagged inside the claims-verification model I use for reviews - when the front-end product feels underpriced relative to the promise, look for where the actual revenue is coming from. Nine times out of ten it's a backend the sales page doesn't disclose.

"Jay Brown"

No independent record of a Jay Brown matching the sales-video description exists in the online-marketing space. No LinkedIn, no prior products, no company under that name that predates the launch. The name and backstory function as a trust device. A real founder leaves a trail. This one leaves nothing.

Same pattern I flagged inside 3 Step Payday and Income Team X - a plausible-sounding spokesperson whose entire online existence begins and ends with the sales page.

The name itself

"Push button" income has been a recurring phrase in this category for over a decade. It converts because it maps directly onto what tired people searching for a way out want to hear - minimal action, maximum outcome. But every real model I've ever built or watched work required actual inputs. My own clients pay me monthly because the lead-gen pages I build for them ring their phones. No button. No shortcut. Just a page, a phone number, a real customer, and an invoice on the first of the month.

If you already paid

Bank dispute today, framed as misrepresentation. If you deposited any money with the broker on the other side of the redirect, contact that broker directly and request withdrawal in writing, and simultaneously notify your bank so they see the full sequence. Report to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and file a separate report on the BBB Scam Tracker - the documented complaint pile on this one is already meaningful and yours belongs on it.

The bottom line

Skip it, and if you saw the celebrity clip, that was fabricated - neither Kimmel nor Holt has any association with this product. The product's own published earnings disclaimer flat-out contradicts the 24-hour income claim on the sales page, and after you pay the $37 to $67 entry fee, the checkout redirects to a broker asking for a further $250 deposit. That broker referral is the real revenue mechanism; the software is scenery. If you want the straight answer on what I'd do with the time and money you'd otherwise pour into Push Button System, after years of paid experiments, this is the toolkit i actually keep on my own machine. no hype, no upsell ladder - just what earns its keep every month.

A quick heads-up before we dig in: everything below is what led me to point people at the local digital-asset route I trust instead.

That's the honest wrap-up on Push Button System - the local digital-asset route I trust.