Walmart's former secret weapon Marc Lore is trying to change the world

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Full stop, Jet.com founder and former Walmart U.S. e-commerce wizard Marc Lore is trying to shake up the world.

And that's where Yahoo Finance found Lore on a recent Wednesday afternoon, somewhere between executing on big, bold new ideas (food delivery startup Wonder plus city of the future Telosa), mapping out a vision for basketball teams Minnesota Timberwolves and Minnesota Lynx (which he now partly owns with former baseball star Alex Rodriguez) and having a little fun on Twitter (posting a video of watching Olympic bobsled training, a sport then Credit Suisse banker Lore almost played back in the late 1990s after passing a sprinting tryout).

"I'm feeling great. Like you said, I'm living my best life," Lore — who left Walmart as its change-making U.S. e-commerce chief almost one year ago — told Yahoo Finance. "I've been out of Walmart about a year. And you know, I was there for a little over four years and I started thinking about all the things I wanted to do in the future. And when I came out of Walmart, I wound up doing them all in the first 12 months. I was like, check, check, check, check."

Indeed, Lore is checking a whole lot of boxes right now on a list that describes serial entrepreneur.

Lore is the driving force behind food delivery startup Wonder, which is officially out of stealth mode. The basic premise for Wonder is this: Lore wants to democratize good food. He plans to do that by licensing out the menus of popular chefs such as Bobby Flay, making their iconic food inside mobile kitchens and delivering it right to your doorstop.

Lore thinks he could have thousands of these mobile food trucks in operation across the country, but plans to have 1,000 out and about by next year. And he is currently out there raising capital to scale the business (he declines to share how much capital he has raised in our interview).

Marc Lore is living his best life, he tells Yahoo Finance.
Marc Lore is living his best life, he tells Yahoo Finance. · Marc Lore

"We are in fact democratizing, giving people access to great food, food that you couldn't otherwise get," Lore explained.

When Lore isn't thinking about mobile kitchens whipping up spicy Bobby Flay concoctions, he is also building out a 10-year vision for his recent high-profile purchases: basketball teams Minnesota Timberwolves and the Minnesota Lynx.

The first increment of the $1.5 billion sale of the Minnesota Timberwolves to Lore and "A-Rod" as part of their VCP (Vision Capital People) investment firm became official in July. By 2023, the pair will become controlling owners.

Meanwhile, Lore has posted several Twitter videos of himself practicing jump shots in the gymnasium — not surprising to see as business people always try to better understand a business by immersing themselves in it.