Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 649: Chris "Drama" Pfaff
Episode Date: November 27, 2017In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Chris "Drama" Pfaff. Chris got his start with the reality TV show "Rob & Big" and then "Rob Dyrdek's Fantasy Factory."At age 22, with no background in bu...siness or fashion, he launched a t-shirt and streetwear line, Young & Reckless, which has grown into a nationwide brand, with distribution in more than 3,000 Macy’s, Dillard’s and PacSun stores, celebrity endorsements from Puff Daddy and Justin Bieber, 43 employees, and $31 million in revenue in 2015 (Forbes Article here). This episode digs into Chris' story and is a fascinating listen. What was it like becoming a reality star? (2:29) Everyone’s favorite little homie Breaking out of that stereotype (5:57) Wanting to be involved Was Rob supportive of his clothing line? (10:20) Realist reality show (12:10) When did the pop culture burst happen? (16:38) The hustle life (19:00) Small town beginnings (22:31) Drawn to the hustle, not the job The highs and lows of starting a clothing line (26:30) Working in seasons in fashion, you are losing Streetwear vibe with no pride Branding is everything What does he consider streetwear today? (33:28) What strategies is he implementing? (34:50) What does he think of juggernauts like Amazon/Apple?? (36:14) What motivated him to start his podcast? (38:29) Searching for his purpose Millennials, entrepreneurs of our future (42:25) Motivation follows action Entrepreneurs he models after? (47:48) Favorite guests? (49:37) Fashion/Fitness comparisons (51:26) Foundation to kick start other things, his podcast (53:24) Has he always been this self-aware? (54:43) What does he do to unplug? (59:00) Amount of content needed (1:03:27) Will YouTube stars take over Hollywood? (1:09:00) Related Links/Products Mentioned: How A Millennial With No Business Experience Or College Education Created Streetwear For The Masses Rob & Big Rob Dyrdek's Fantasy Factory Quiksilver Files for Bankruptcy | RIDE Channel Bobby Light (Rob & Big) - Dirty Girl – (YouTube) 5 Truths the Fast Fashion Industry Doesn't Want You to Know Entrepreneurship and Millennials Are Thriving in Emerging Markets Rich Piana punched/fight LA Expo 2017 – YouTube The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google - Scott Galloway (book) Self-Awareness and Feeling Transparent: Failing to Suppress One's Self Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked - Adam Alter (book) Calm: Meditation to Relax, Sleep, Relieve Anxiety and Lower Stress Moment – Automatically track your and your family's daily iPhone and iPad use 8 YouTube Stars Who Are Taking Over the World – Vogue Featured Guest/People Mentioned: Chris "Drama" Pfaff (@drama) Instagram Short Story Long Young And Reckless Rob Dyrdek (@robdyrdek) Instagram Christopher Boykin Lil Wayne WEEZY F (@LilTunechi) Twitter Miguel (@Miguel) Twitter Kendrick Lamar (@kendricklamar) Instagram Diddy (@diddy) Twitter Gary Vaynerchuk (@garyvee) Twitter Elon Musk (@elonmusk) Twitter Steve Jobs Jeff Bezos (@JeffBezos) Twitter Tom Bilyeu (@TomBilyeu) Twitter Tim Ferriss (@tferriss) Twitter Logan Paul (@LoganPaul) Twitter/Instagram Jake Paul (@jakepaul) Twitter/Instagram Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS Prime Pro, which shows you how to self assess and correct muscle recruitment patterns that cause pain and impede performance and gains. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? 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Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
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Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Oh, I'm excited.
I'll tell you what.
I'm excited.
Chris Fath, otherwise known as drama, was very different, because I didn't know much about
him, like you did.
Like, I know you've been following them for a while.
This is why I get a little geek.
This one was cool, man, for me.
This was a big, you know, we talk about milestones
in our business and things that, you know,
and I'm not, I definitely, definitely not the guy
who gets starstruck or weird or nervous around people
that like, maybe I watched or that were famous.
Like so none of that.
But there's definitely this respect level.
And there's also this, wow, this is really cool that we're here.
Because I spent many years watching him on Robin Bigg and fantasy factory.
And you know, Rob Deirdrick and him are both two guys that I'm super impressed with what they've done.
Not just from the reality show because that doesn't impress me. and him are both two guys that I'm super impressed with what they've done.
Not just from the reality show because that doesn't impress me,
it would impress me when somebody takes that from a reality show.
They pivot and they actually...
And turn it into a business.
And they build an empire.
You know, and Rob has done that and you see Chris right now building his
and man, what a cool story.
Yeah, I was, cause I didn't know much about him.
I knew him from Robin Bigg as drama.
And when we met, I was very pleasantly surprised
the guys, super intelligent dude, very self-aware.
We have a great conversations in this podcast.
You gotta see where it turns.
I'm really curious as a listener,
as you're listening through this pay attention
and tell me where you think it turns
because when we set this up,
Brianna was telling me, Chris was really hard to book
because he was very hard to book because
he was very uncertain to do the podcast with you guys.
A bunch of fitness meet-head guys, he's not a big fitness guy, he didn't want to talk
about working out and fucking nutrition the entire time.
You could tell that when we first sat down to start this interview that there's this
little bit of not excited, I don't know where this is going to go, and then there's
definitely a turning point in the episode where you can just tell
We're just having a great conversation with a couple guys. So you're gonna hear us talking to Chris Faff again his podcast this short story long
He's at drama on Instagram and Facebook and his clothing line is young and reckless
Dotcom so without any further ado here's Chris
fast dude uh super excited to uh sit down and talk to you so I um a I was a
huge robbing big fan as a kid thank you and yeah and that was the first time
I and I have a bulldogs and everything so it was that big a big of a fan you and
all in and I remember I remember you I don't want to bother many horror yeah I
remember you being on the show and then I remember watching fantasy factory and then I remember
Watching you like starch your business kind of come along man
Yeah, I kind of want to start us there. So kind of for those fans that may not know you yeah
What was that like at that age being on a reality show becoming kind of a reality star and then
Breaking off.
Yeah, so at that age, it was absolutely insane.
I mean, I came from Akrono Haya, which is very small town, very slow, very, you know what I mean?
It's not a lot going on.
Definitely not anything like filming a crazy MTV show.
So I came here at 18 right on the edge of 19, and that stuff happened pretty quick.
Like right when I got here,
they were working on the pilot for what would become
Robin Bigg, and that whole process took close to a year
from filming the pilot to actually airing on TV.
But it was pretty quick that there was like MTV people
in the house, in the living room,
and there's cameras everywhere,
and it just got real weird, real quick.
You know, and it's like, man, LA is weird. And it's still as weird. It still
is. But now it's like, I got like the shock treatment. You know what I mean? I got like,
welcome here you are and weird MTV shows. So yeah. Yeah. So, um, and then obviously that kind of
went off. It became this massive hit, you know, which was another super crazy feeling because I
remember one of the executive producers coming to us who did jackass and he said
You know in a couple months you guys when you're walking down the street people are gonna recognize you and this is gonna change
You know forever and and I remember us thinking that was so
Not possible like it was just like no man like come on like I'm a regular guy
Yeah, like it's just like we had no goals of being famous or being like reality started
You know, it's just like I don't know bro. famous or being like reality started. You know, it was just like, I don't know bro,
thanks for the heads up and I don't think so.
Anyway, so the show obviously became this massive hit
and you get these weird, you get such a crazy reaction
from people because they feel like they really know you.
You know, like it's different than,
like for instance, Tom Cruise is way more famous
than we ever were, but if you see him walking through a mall,
you're not gonna run up on him and say like,
Yo man, I love that one. You know what I mean?
Because you don't know him. You know the character. Right. With us, they feel like they are
in your house. They know your dogs. They know you're, you know what I mean? They know
everything. What a great point. That is a big difference between reality, star versus
somebody who's doing like an acting. I didn't even think of it. Well, how different
is you probably get more people trying to butt into your shit. It really, really hard to
like. Oh my god. And I didn't, you know, like, I don't care because I always took it very lightly
but like I didn't one thing I didn't think about is with my role being like the little homie
getting picked on on every right I'm everyone's favorite little homie I was now I'm everyone's
little homie every time I'm walking through the mall right so I'm like drama get out of here man
what the hell are you doing oh shit did you never fuck with you at that age like nothing crazy
like nobody ever like,
try to give me a way to your,
yeah, give you a swirly,
but like it was just the attitude of like,
oh, drama, what are you doing here, man?
And you're like, well, who are you?
Like, you know, people are talking to you,
like they really know you.
All the sensors in your brain go off of like,
oh, who is this person?
But they don't.
So that's kind of like,
everyone treats you with the same dynamic
that you're treated on the show.
So it was a real weird, crazy thing, crazy time as a whole.
Do you talk about how hard that must be
to try and break from that?
It was hard, and I'm gonna be honest.
It, not that it was some big horrible thing,
like oh my God, I was the little homie in it,
ruined my life.
But there was this element of like, okay,
this was really fun.
I was able to make some money and launch this company,
but it is important to me too.
I don't need to be taken too seriously,
but I do want people to see me as a business owner.
And I wanted to listen to my podcast
and think that maybe I'm having decently
intelligent conversations and there's some value.
You know, you wanna break out of that
and have people kind of think of you that way.
If they're always just thinking of you
as the butt of the joke,
obviously you can never scale that into anything.
So it was a process.
And there were definitely times
when I, you know, felt a little like beat up by it.
You know, like I felt like, man,
I just, I positioned myself one way to millions of people
and that's really hard to conquer.
But I do feel like finally,
it's probably a couple of years ago that it really shifted,
and that I think people now more think of me
for running young and reckless,
and for the whole history of everything we've done,
as opposed to that.
So you still get it a little bit, which now it's more fun,
but yeah, it was a process.
But did you have intentions the whole time like getting on the show of like, you know, marketing this this closing link in your head?
Or that just like happen is so here's what it was in my head
It was like we moved here and I remember there was a moment when Rob
So I wasn't really supposed to have anything to do with the show originally I was just around because
I was I had just moved here and my goal was
to get a job at a skate shop and get a hopefully a studio apartment. That was my life dream,
right? So then the show kind of started happening. There was a moment when Rob had a guy scheduled
to be his assistant and he quit. He called and said he couldn't do it. And Rob said,
do you want to be my assistant? And I mean, I don't even know what a personal assistant is
or does. I don't know my way around the city. Like, I have no idea what that means.
And all of our friends came to me and said,
man, don't do it.
Because he's really, when he's working, he's really serious.
And they're like, it's gonna ruin your relationship
with him, like, you don't wanna mix that.
Like, just don't do it.
And I remember him saying, like, look man,
if you wanna be involved in any of this shit
that we're doing, you know, this show
and all this stuff that we're doing, this is how you do that.
You know, there's no that if you're working at a skate shop, yeah, we can be friends,
but like you're not going to be involved in this fun stuff that we're doing.
And so I just knew like I wanted to be involved.
Like I wanted to be around the action.
Are you already into fashion and pop culture at this time?
Yeah, like into, yes, but not, I mean, I would be lying
if I said my real passion was to start a business
and to be an entrepreneur, not to change the fashion game.
Even then.
Yeah, even then, even then.
I always wanted to be, I always saw myself
as like this entrepreneurial person
and that's what I always wanted to do.
Not, it was never that.
My early dreams were to be a professional skateboarder
but it was never like a fashion thing.
I cared, I liked it, I cared how I dressed,
I was a skater, and all my jeans had to be perfect,
and I would stretch my shirts out
so they were the right length, and yeah, all that stuff,
but nothing crazy.
So what happened was, I'm sorry, I'm rambling a little bit,
but I knew I wanted it on the action.
So I got, I started working for Rob,
did whatever I could to fit into the dynamic
that was Rob and Big. The first thing I started doing was making, did whatever I could to fit into the dynamic that was Rob and Big.
The first thing I started doing was making beats,
making music.
And so I put a lot of the music on the background
of Rob and Big.
A lot of the background weird little cheek goals
were in mind.
Oh, whatever.
Yeah, and so that was my thing.
It was like, I would just give that to the executive producers
and be like, here, please, please, please, please.
And they did me favors because those original ones were
terrible. If you'll hear, if you ever listened to a Robin Big, like, uh, uh, uh,
uh, uh, rerun and you just hear some terrible ringtone in the back, that's drama.
But, um, and then you know, we did Bobby Light, the Bobby Light song.
Yes.
Cause I was in that.
You did.
Oh, that's awesome.
Yeah.
So, okay.
I'm so happy. You should.
So, that was my first thing.
Anyway, getting to the point when fantasy factory started, I was like, okay, this is my
opportunity to really launch something, um, because it was just me and Rob at that point.
And I just saw how clothing was like the perfect thing.
There was a chain of retailers that were all the kids shopped who watched the show being
Paxon, Zoomey's, Tilly's, right?
It was dead on you, ship straight to them before you come, obviously.
And I could wear it on the show, I could market it.
It just fit perfectly, that product fit perfectly
with that marketing platform.
And so that's when I came up with the name and the concept
and figured it out.
And Rob was real supportive of you doing that
as far as like branding yourself and doing all that.
Yeah, and I always tell this story,
and I hope that it always comes off right,
because what happened when Big Black launched his
clothing line on robin big
Rob helped him out a lot he introduced him to a guy at DC who helped him with distribution and all that stuff so naturally when when I had the idea to do a clothing line
I went to him and I said hey man here's my idea like
where do I catch the check and uh and he was he essentially, look man if you want to do it, go do it.
Like you're a smart guy, you can figure it out.
I don't have the time to do it.
Like I just, I can't help you.
And I remember at the time being like, did you risk into him a little bit?
He hate me.
Like I was just like, why would you not, you know, and I didn't want to push back.
I was never that type of guy.
But I was just like, shit man, like I've seen you help, big black and I've seen you help,
these other people, but I didn't hold any real resentment,
but it forced me to go figure it out
and to go meet my business partner,
so I'm with now, and to really learn it and figure it out.
And to be honest, if he would have said,
hey DC, do this line for drama,
it would have been gone right now.
I mean DC's went bankrupt not too long ago, but also it just would have died. There would have been no, it It would have been gone right now. I mean, DC's went bankrupt not too long ago,
but also it just would have died.
There would have been no, it wouldn't have been
an actual business.
I wouldn't have been invested in it.
I wouldn't have known how to run it.
And so I'm really, really thankful for that.
And then like a year ago, he came to me
because now we're a lot closer.
He came to me and said,
I'm gonna be honest, I just thought it was whack.
He's like, I just, he's like,
I just do what I do.
He's like, I just thought the name like, I just thought the name was, I just thought it was kind of like.
Now it's like, he's like, he was kind of talking about wanting to invest.
That's the true form.
It's the really successful business that came from the show.
Now I wish I blew it.
That's great.
He's like, at the time, I just thought it's...
You can't invest now, motherfucker.
Yeah, now there's no place for you. Yeah. So as a fan of the time, I just thought it's... You can't invest now, motherfucker. Yeah, now there's no place for you.
So as a fan of the show, I remember watching it.
One of the things that I was drawn to was,
as far as reality shows, I felt it was the most real.
Yeah.
Was it really that real?
I felt like you guys, even when you guys
bickered a little bit or you were frustrated with them,
I felt like it felt real.
100%.
So I'll tell you how it went down.
Number one, all of the
Crew that always worked on the show always said this is the realest reality
Just someone who's a fan and I felt that you could just tell yeah, and so the way it went down is this We would there'd be some crazy idea that either came from something that was really happening something rob saw online
Something big black was doing like you know something would come up
And they'd be like man, that's an episode like that could be an episode something Rob saw online, something big black was doing, something would come up and they
be like, man, that's an episode, that could be an episode.
So what we're going to do is we're going to, obviously we'll show you getting into it
or discovering it, we'll go meet with this person, I think that'd probably be a good
gem.
And then the ending is us doing a party to celebrate the launch of it.
So they would structure it in TV form. But every right. But every moment was just whatever happens happened.
Who's the creative genius behind that?
Rob, it is.
One million percent, Rob.
He is a genius man.
Man, so that.
I mean, he conceptualized, 98% of every single episode.
There was a really good team of executive producers
and stuff to kind of help him clean it,
or to say like, well, we don't really know how to
put a butt on this scene, or transition it, or something like that. Yeah, and they were also really good at like you know
There was one time the famous episode where we got attacked by sharks
Well, he really let one bite him. I just screamed but
We that came from driving in the car just him and I driving a car shooting an episode and there's the cameras in the car
But we weren't we're just talking shit and
We were just driving by the ocean and he said, how much would it take for you to get
attacked by a shark?
And I'm like, no price.
It's not a half a nut of number for that.
But wouldn't it be cool?
What if you knew it wouldn't really mess you up, but just like a scar or something?
Like 10 grand, 15 grand.
I'm like, zero chance, no, no dollar amount, not taking the risk.
So anyway, by the time we, he's like, man, I think it would be cool.
I think I would do it.
Yeah.
By the time we got out of the car 10 minutes later,
the producers ran up to us and said,
hey, we have a place in the Bahamas.
We can do a whole episode about this if you want.
And we're like, okay, let's do it.
So that's how like an episode would go.
Dude, I think every 17 year old to probably,
almost 30 year old at that time thought,
this is probably what I thought, which was,
if I had all the money in the world,
this is how I would spend it.
Did you, especially fancy factory,
that was one of those things,
I was loving how, you know,
like everything it was like,
all this fun shit going on,
but everybody's working,
and that was a crazy dynamic.
It was cool, I mean, I'm gonna be honest,
like there was a part,
this might make me sound a little stupid,
but like there was a part of me that didn't realize
how much fun we were having until we stopped.
You know what I mean?
And in the sense of, we didn't like the actual process
of filming, of having to go every day for the whole day,
you can't really have your phones on you,
because you have a mic.
It's a little bit tedious some days.
And obviously we didn't care at all about like the fame
or the any of that stuff, right?
So there were days when we were like,
ah, this is just, you know,
we just don't feel like doing it today.
The point is, it wasn't until it was over
where I'm like, man, we really like that.
It was like we had like a blank check.
And like, just, and, because you have this budget,
you have an MTV budget.
And you have a team of producers and creatives
to help you figure out how to actually do it.
So any idea, they'll figure out in 10 minutes where you can go do it and what the different
options are.
What was your favorite one?
Oh man.
Uh, remember the lotto, I remember that was hilarious.
Uh, how do you guys have done so many great, great fucking ideas.
Yeah, cause there's so many different, um, there's different man.
Like when we did some of the original episodes with big black and and his bam bam and his friends and Uncle Jerry
Came out from Alabama. I don't know if you remember that or not
That was during the Bobby light dirty girl episode those were so fun just because it was like it was just homies hanging out
Yeah, it was just so so so real
But I would also say like you know, I got there was an episode where I got shot out of a cannon
That was like one of the scariest things in my life.
But like, being able to have the opportunity to do that,
right now is like, insane.
Also, scuba diving with sharks.
Like, we didn't have, we didn't have any sort of lessons
or anything.
They took us in a above ground pool for 30 minutes,
said, here's how you take your regulator out.
Here's how you put it back in.
All right, here we go.
Good luck, and like, you're 60 feet down on our shipwreck.
Yeah, no problem.
So I don't know, man, there were just so many,
I could name a million, there were so many good experiences.
Yeah, when did the urge for the pop culture
and the fashion thing happen?
I mean, you're definitely into it now.
Did that start to really evolve in fantasy factory?
Or what?
Yeah, so I would say that like,
so on Robin Bigger started doing the music stuff
and obviously that kind of gets you into
pop culture world a little bit,
but fantasy factory is just where I,
I think that I was probably 22 or maybe 23 when that started.
And so naturally that's just when I started to like,
19 to 22, I say that I was just figuring out
what LA even was, you know what I was just figuring out what LA even was.
And what it was even not living in Ohio was like.
So at that age is when I really started kind of growing up
and getting into whatever I was into.
And I just kind of went in that direction.
Like I was always in the like rap and rappers
and that stuff growing up.
And this was just was my like adult version of it.
And I put the studio in the fantasy factory and also like what happened was
you know every so the way it happens in this weird world of LA is when you have a show
and obviously you have a place as cool as the fantasy factory every celebrity would reach out to come see it.
Just to hang out.
Just to hang out and you would get these weird calls you know that people just wanted to come see it.
Like I remember one day my friend of a friend of a friend called
and said, hey, little Wayne wants to come skate,
the fancy factory.
And this is when little Wayne was the biggest celebrity
in the world.
And you're in the rap.
And I'm in the rap.
And I'm in the skating.
And this guy is like an alien, you know?
And so I'm like, oh man, okay.
And so I go down, I end up going down by myself.
And I go down and his tour bus pulls up.
And I'm like holy shit.
We're just smoking.
Maybe I like a few F.O. hands and whatever.
And then he hops out with a skateboard
and he's like, what's up drama?
And I'm like, what the hell?
Like the English knows who I am.
I'm like, I'm not.
And then he just went and skated for three hours.
And that had been crazy. Because little weight at that time too was just
Mass yeah, so I guess what I'm getting at is I'm super rambly today. I apologize
That's how we roll man
So I'm getting at is like it just became this intersection of like I'm making music
I have a clothing line that I'm trying to market and get on celebrities anyway
Celebrities want to come to the fantasy factory. I have a studio there.
I mean, at the time in the studio, I was work, before they were, they were nobody's.
I was working with Miguel Kendrick Lamar, YG.
Those are just the people that were in there as these new up and coming artists.
So it was just this really cool energy and that's where all of those things kind of intersect.
And it's such formidable years.
I mean, those are years of growth for everybody.
Yeah. How did they influence your growth as a person?
I just think they taught me like the, they taught me the hunger and the reality of like
this entrepreneur life and like the hustle. You know, and it's like you got to reach out
to the next person and ask for the favor and do the favor and connect with that person.
Does it happen? Yes.
In 100% and it never stops and it's still, there's still days on my podcast
where I'll reach out to people.
I texted Puffy the other day to see if you would do
the podcast.
It's the most uncomfortable out of pocket.
You don't need to, it's ridiculous.
But you have to just ask the crazy favors.
And constantly, and I think that it taught me in that phase,
what it really takes to grind it out
and build something in this weird world of entertainment.
Yeah, it's all the relationships.
It's not what you know, it's always been
when you're not here.
You're true net worth is your net circle, man.
Yeah, it's so true, man.
And it just never stops.
I think that when I was younger, I had this fantasy
of hitting this made it point
where everyone just comes to you
and you can just do anything.
You know what I mean? Like, let me just get so and so on the phone
I will exit you
It's like and it just never happens, you know
and
That's where I really learned to a talk about that actually because I bet a lot of people think I'm sure you have got
They had this before who think oh well he was on the show and he's got Rob and of course he's successful
I mean, I'm sure like he they probably think it's easy to talk about the grind and the hustle
for someone like, yeah, and that's another thing that used to, I think, bother me when
I was younger, but it's like, I think now is the story plate.
Like if young and reckless were to crash and burn a few years ago, I probably would
have had to live with that for a long time.
That would have been tough.
You know, that would have been like, so he was only Robin or so.
So it was like, it was your ride.
It was.
No.
But I think that now, that it's kind of evolved past that.
It's been like when you look at the whole picture.
And for me, the biggest scariest part that I try to tell
young people is, was when I left Ohio.
It was saving up the money and then filming little league football games
and selling DVDs to parents to try to get $2,000.
Oh, you were hustling like that, don't you?
Yeah, and I was making skate videos of my friends
and selling them to the local skate shops
and saying, look what the kids in Akron are doing by this video.
So I scrounged together close to five grand
from these weird little odd jobs.
And you're only like 18 right now, how old are you right now?
16, you know, 16.
Oh shit, well, oh shit.
And then when I was 18,
I had a really bad head injury, right?
I was, my plan was to graduate high school
a month later, move to LA.
So a week after graduating,
we went to this big skate park opening.
I fell, hit my head, skating,
fractured my skull,
was in a coma for four days,
braiding, yeah, polish, Polish flot in my brain.
So I, and I woke up and I was devastated
because number one, I didn't know how to read
or food had no taste.
And it was this weird thing, right?
And they were like, how you have a blood clot
in your brain from the fracture and you can't leave.
You can't go to L.A. you can't leave.
And it messed me up.
Like it just gave me a lot of, you know,
it just really bummed me out, gave me a lot of, you know, it just really bummed me out,
gave me a lot of anxiety.
They always said, you know, at any point you could have seizures,
you could, you know, at least you could have these sort
of after effects.
So the point was, scrounged all that together,
moved to LA, and I remember the first week of being here,
not to sound like a baby, but called my mom every night,
like I don't think I can do this.
Like this is just too crazy.
It's too out of my element.
Well dude, it's so extreme.
Like talk about that, like how different were you guys grew up?
Cuz you grew up kind of like I did like total farm town out in the middle of nowhere kind of small
Probably everybody drive down one street probably know everybody in the neighborhood type of deal hundred percent
It's so different even still now when I go to New York like I can only last in New York like three days
Cuz it's still too much like yeah, like I've adjusted to LA, but New York is like expert level and I just
Expert level I can't get there, man.
Two stimulating.
They move fast.
It is.
You feel like you just can't get a moment of like quiet.
You know, you're always, there's people on top of you.
So anyway, for me it was about,
it was the whole process of getting out of my comfort zone
and coming to LA and trying to figure it out.
And when I moved here, Rob was a pro skateboarder.
You know, he wasn't a rich celebrity. I mean, he was doing well, but we kind of went on this whole journey
together and we built these things together. And that's why I think that my goal now is
to really tell people what I learned and how I did what I did and share as much information
as possible, because it's not, it doesn't help me in any way to like try to be too
Cool for school and think that I'm some right now hot
What drove you to do all that because I mean looking back
It takes some balls take some balls to make that that big leap from where you were to come out to LA and not know anything
Just Tim for just a childhood. I mean how were you like financially as a kid like yeah, so financially as a kid
I mean we might I I mean, how were you like, financially as a kid? Yeah, so financially as a kid, I mean,
I had the parents that were,
we didn't have a lot of money, but they,
we never knew that.
Like we never knew that money was even a thing.
You know, like we would take the yearly trip
to Myrtle Beach, pack up the minivan,
and we drive on down, you know what I mean?
And, and we had, you know, a bike when we needed a bike,
you know, but they just did a good job at not like,
it wasn't like we were worried about where our next meal
was gonna come from,
but they just did a really good job
of not us not worrying about it.
But I knew that for anything outside of that,
I had to hustle and I was always drawn to the hustle,
not the job.
I never had a real job.
Like I said, I would go, I learned how to film
because I was filming my friend's skateboard.
So, and then I bought a Mac
because I was editing skateboard videos.
So then I realized that there's not really money there
in Akron, Ohio.
But what I could do is I could go to,
it started with my little cousin's
Little League football game,
and I would go and I would sit there for the whole game
and film the game.
And then I would come back next week with DVDs
of the game for the parents and say, hey, 20 bucks, you know, you can buy your watcher kid
whatever run around the field and run into each other and
and
Little stuff like that is what I was always trying to do so I
Realized that 30 years old now I
Just love
The progress like I love the journey process something starting something. Yeah, it's not it's not as
tied to money as I thought it was. It's not traveling for me. That's not a thing. Yeah, maybe it will be one day.
It's like trying to start businesses or trying to start things and trying to put them out to the world and see how people react.
Even the podcast, I make zero dollars off the podcast and I have no plan to.
But it's so cool to sit with these guests,
try to figure out the best format.
How can I really, you know, blow up?
What's the cover art look like?
What's my little set look like?
And then put it out and I'm just sitting there
hitting refresh, refresh, refresh, and seeing what the views are.
You know, I just like that.
And when I'm not doing that, that's when I start to go nuts.
Do you hate boredom?
Yeah, I do.
I do, I'm okay.
The reason why I'm hesitating is because I'm not one
of those guys that always has to be around a lot of people
or like always has to be doing something.
I can be at home, but I have to be, you know,
reading a new book or working on a new release plan
for some, you know, like I have to be doing something
with a purpose.
I'm really bad at like just chilling for the sake of chilling, you know, it's always been
a...
Which feeds, which feeds well into a clothing line because talk about how hard that is.
I mean, every week now trend is changing, like how do you keep up with it?
I failed like five times already.
Oh yeah, I failed.
And I think when we tried to do other lines with other people times already. Oh, you made it. I failed. I failed.
And I think when we went and tried to do other lines with other people that were similar
to what Young and Reckless was and failed.
You have to talk about that.
Tell me how hard that is.
Yeah, so it's how.
It's insanely hard, especially now, because like you guys said, it changes so quick.
And it used to be like, you would design your collection a year early, you would prebook
it, so you knew what people were going to buy. You would design in seasons four your collection a year early, you would pre-book it, so you knew what people were gonna buy,
you would design in seasons four of them a year,
you would shoot your campaign,
let's say you wanna go get like a celebrity
or a brand ambassador, you shoot your campaign
and that's your spring campaign and you are done.
And I'm not to say it's not a lot of work,
but it's a lot easier to schedule
and to put into those springs.
So, I'm more mule.
Yeah, and now that is completely dead.
And if you are in any way working in seasons
as far as I'm concerned in fashion, you're losing.
Splendid.
Splendid.
Splendid seasons now.
Yeah, they're just, it's just like,
people wear long sleeves in the winter.
That's a good point.
Explain what you mean by that.
So what I mean is, like I said,
that's the only way of doing it.
The new way is all that you know for a fact is
people buy more long sleeve things in the winter and short sleeve things in the summer, right?
There's your seasons.
But what you do is you you know, you say here is a run of okay
Jeans are doing well for us. We tested with two different styles really low quantities, but they performed really well
So now we're gonna go design
really low quantities, but they performed really well. So now we're gonna go design 15 different styles of denim,
and we're gonna order 20,000 units and bring those in ASAP.
Now on the flip side,
these button up shirts that we did
aren't performing very well.
So we're gonna bail on those, try to get rid of them,
either do like a flash sale or send it
to an off price place or something like that,
and make room for something new.
Okay, looks like we just launched Hoodies two weeks ago
and they're crushing it.
We need five more styles of that type of hoodie.
Looks like blah, blah, blah, blah.
It looks like it's constantly that every single day.
Now do you keep, do you get on that?
Do you enjoy that?
Yeah, I like it.
I like it.
It's one of those love hates.
Do you like that Taylor?
When did you start Younger McLears?
What year was it?
It was 2009.
2009.
Yeah, so that's when Street Wear was popped.
Yeah, so let me tell you this too,
like my model when I started Young and Reckless was this.
I wanted to, I saw how cool Street Wear was.
It was killing it at that time.
What brands were influencing you at that time?
Diamond, the hundreds, obviously supreme,
Crooks and Castles, and all the Fairfax guys.
I liked it, man, and I used to go get close from them
when we were filming Rob and Big.
Like I was wearing a lot of diamond,
and Rob started Rogue status,
which turned into DTA, the show with all the guns on it.
So here's what happened.
I realized like where I grew up in Ohio,
you don't have access to anything cool,
and definitely not cool brands like that and out here in L.A.
In New York people are waiting in line overnight to buy a $50 gild and t-shirt, right? Like what the hell is going on?
So my thought was okay, what if I made a brand that had a strong message and felt connected to the customer
But didn't have that pride issue. I sold in
malls, I was at Tilly's, I was everywhere, right? Because at the time it was at the tail
end of like the action sports thing being really big. The best selling shirt was like a Fox
racing t-shirt at Paxon. And so I said, what if I give that kind of streetwear vibe, but
to the malls, but that was like, that was looked at as like, dude, you're just grazing over
some brilliance, right now.. You're gonna stop me then.
You're grazing over brilliance right now
because the fact that you pay attention to that shit,
so many people think they're just gonna start up
a t-shirt brand.
It's just thinking,
oh yeah, I think it's so much of,
you just wanna be cool, right?
Yes.
You can probably speak to that.
With the street wear guys.
Yeah, very much so.
Yeah, that's where a lot of them got screwed.
And I like those guys, and this is no diss to them,
but where a lot of them got screwed is,
they really started this thing as like,
the homies started making some t-shirts,
and it became a thing,
and then they start, then you start to become cool
around all the other homies,
and then you get your store on Fairfax,
and now you have like, purpose.
Like your whole life is about just like,
yeah, I'm the dude from the thing.
Like, yeah, yeah.
And all of a sudden, you're going to trade shows
and like, you're all wearing the same shit
and you're being real tough.
And like, we're ready to fight someone over our T-shirts.
And what the problem is like,
T-shirt wars.
Yeah, T-shirt wars.
Meet me on Fairfax.
But when it started to blow up
and the actual category of streetwear became really popular,
they weren't prepared.
They were bad operators.
They weren't prepared to blow up a business.
And so a lot of them, a few of them tried, a few of them did really well and made a lot of money,
but nobody's really still killing it from that sort of phase. It kind of blew up.
A lot of them made a lot of money, and now you don't really hear about a lot of them anymore.
And like I said, I love those guys to death, and they were a lot of my inspiration for starting
young and reckless, but they weren't ready for to operate a business
on that level and sell to those type of stores and deal with returns and all the shit that
happened. So purely operational mistakes, like a business mistakes. Yeah, and it just
proves to you like brand is so important and brand is like it's everything man, but if
you can't back it up with a plan and and a distribution plan, and an operational, you're not running a sound business,
you're gonna hit a wall.
But I think that's why a lot of,
there's always kind of the big handoff, right?
A lot of companies start and explode,
and then they usually sell or take on money.
And at that point, when that happens,
that's when you're getting the operations, right?
That's when those people are coming in and saying,
okay, here's how we actually scale this business.
It's really rare that any business has blown up to its full potential with the original
founders, you know, but I think in streetwares, it's just a little easier to spot because
the founders look like skater kids, you know what I mean?
Like you can spot them.
You're not welcome on Fairfax with a suit and a Goldman Sachs briefcase, you know what
I mean?
So what I was getting at is, that was the goal.
I said, man, I can do this.
Like, I can make a street wear brand.
I always used to joke street wear with no pride, right?
Street wear, but I'll sell it anywhere.
I'll sell the fuck.
I'm curious to how do I care.
We're all young and reckless, right?
And so, that's what we did.
And we went to pop.
You're mom's young, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I always used to tell that story too.
My mom called me when they was like,
Chris DeFerricks wanted to let you know,
I'm gonna be reckless today.
Yeah, I'm gonna be reckless.
And I was like, why mom, what happened?
She's like, well, my recipe for cookie said to put
one teaspoon in, but I put three.
And I'm like, mom, you killed it.
Like, you're living the brand.
I'm doing it.
I'm doing it, I'm doing it.
So anyway, so we did that.
We got a lot of backlash for that.
A lot of people,
especially the Fairfax guys hated us for that.
You know, it was just like you were just whacked.
Like you're selling out, right?
Yep, and sure enough, a lot of them sold to the malls
right after we did.
Just saying, they are making some money over there.
So that happened.
I guess what I'm getting at is, shit, I'm rambling.
What I'm getting at is that business model is now gone because
of ecom so you can order supreme anywhere in the world it doesn't matter where you live
it doesn't matter if you're an acronym Ohio it doesn't matter who you are totally changed
the game yeah used to be this elite thing you could they wouldn't even it wasn't even a
good vibe when you went in their stores they didn't want you in there they only wanted
the cool guys in there you know what I mean mean? Who was the first to pivot? You know, once I changed.
Well, pivot how to e-commerce. Yeah. The first, I don't know who was the first.
Well, what do you think about the way that it's evolved and like what you would consider
streetwear today? Yeah, because I guess so so so what I'm the point to that I'm trying
to make is like so now that's gone right so me being a streetwear brand
Selling to the malls is not even that doesn't even sound cool any that doesn't sound interesting because it's not a thing
Because first of all all malls are closing and second of all you can get streetwear at malls now
So the new thing is
Also in that time h&m top shop unit glow all those places came here and expanded since young and reckless has started
They weren't really here when young and reckless started
So now you can get a full outfit
that looks just like your favorite rapper,
athlete, celebrity, for 30 bucks,
you can get the whole thing.
I can't compete with that.
I don't have, there's nothing I can do with those prices.
So my goal now is, how do I, our main focus is Ecom,
how do you sell a full collection
as affordable as humanly possible,
but attach a strong brand?
And I'm going to ask you the kid to pay 15% more to buy young and reckless jeans than
H&M jeans, but you have the young and reckless tag and you have the brand.
And we're also going to curate music and artists and we're going to give you this lifestyle.
I think that's something I can accomplish.
What are the strategies that you're putting in place to do that?
It's really, number one, the hardest part is just sourcing the product.
Like we're making, we're doing jeans two for 70 bucks and we're doing two for 30 printed
teas and packs of three t-shirts for 20 bucks.
We're doing really, really well on prices, but that's a mission to try to figure that
out and to keep your quality right.
Right. So what you do is we're trying to nail that as much as we can, and then we're really trying to kind of
also elevate the marketing and make it look even more
expensive and make sure that we work even more with people that we really believe in and make sure that the
quantity of content is there because now you put it out today and it's completely, they forget about it tomorrow, right?
Like we could have Barack Obama
wearing a young and reckless t-shirt today,
and by Monday, it would never happen.
You know what I'm saying?
It used to be like 50 cent war echo on TRL,
and the brand blows up, you know?
But those days are just gone.
So it's quantity.
It's like, what's our brand message, what's our values,
pump that out as much as we can,
make it feel elevated and then sell the clothing
for an affordable price.
I think if you do all that, you create a world
that's like, oh, this is something of value.
To those great trip down memory lane right there.
TRL.
So yeah, it's a fraud.
Yes, I'm telling you.
It used to be, like, if you hear those stories,
it's like, yeah, the moment he wore it on blah blah blah blah.
I was just exploded you know but now like nobody cares.
How do you feel about you know the days of Amazon now that that being the big juggernaut?
It's like half of me thinks it's so amazing and so cool and I love everything they're
doing and half of half of me is scared for my life because you know it's I am in a business
that that they could just
steamroll to a degree.
You know what I mean?
I think they're doing everything so well.
They do such a good job on everything they do.
I'm curious to see how branded apparel fits in
to what they're doing.
It's gonna be very interesting.
It's because it seems like brands,
for a lot of things don't matter anymore
because now you wanna to look and see
Oh, this has got five star rating. This has got five star rating. That's all I care about but close a little bit different
Right close have style and fashion. Yep, so they seem to be a little bit protected from that
But also here's one of my theories is I believe that okay, so let's put ourselves in a make believe
high school and
When we were all in high school, you would walk down the hallway
and you would see the kids, the hot topic kids,
and the Fubu kids, and that, right?
And that is how you said who you were,
and what type of person you were,
and that's why you would pay $40, $30
for a screen-printed t-shirt, right?
The value is not there, it's the brand, right?
Now when you walk through a school,
what says who you are is what's on your Snapchat.
And what do you have the iPhone X?
The iPhone X is a thousand dollars.
It's an accessory.
Really nice outfit.
It's a very high school.
Well, taking the Apple's a luxury brand,
that's what they say.
100% and what's your do you have the Apple watch?
What's your phone case?
What's on your Snapchat?
What are your soundcloud playlists?
That is what says who you are.
So if you have now, then you go stack it
with some
H&M genes or some affordable stuff because it doesn't even really matter as much anymore.
That's how you kind of put together your life now and express yourself. So just brands don't
mean as much in a parallel either unless you're actually providing real value. And I think that value
is not only through the clothing and the quality and the price,
but also what are you giving that kid?
Are you telling them what music to listen to?
Are you telling them what podcasts are cool?
Are you actually, you know, those subscribe to you.
The whole brand.
Yeah, those tap into you.
If you're actually giving them something of value, you know,
but if you just say like, we're the coolest
because we're just looking at the set.
And was that part of your motivation to do the podcast?
100%.
So two big motivations, because we covered them both.
One was that was how can I offer something?
And the thing that I'm so passionate about
is I moved to LA, I got out of my comfort zone,
and I was exposed to what's possible.
That's it.
Like I saw, I watched an MTV show be created.
I watched people become superstars.
I watched brands be created.
I watched DC Shoes go from $1 million in revenue
to $500 million after the Robin Big Explosion.
I watched it.
That was the greatest gift.
So what I try to do is let other people see it.
Just interview people, humanize them, say,
this is how they did it.
It's not that big of a deal.
They've had their hard times too.
They've had their good times. This is their idea came to them in the shower.
This one came when they were hiking.
Here's the reality.
You can do that too.
So it was that mixed with wanting to continue to tell who I am.
And get at, you know, just tell my story.
Why do you, once again, why do you follow me on Instagram?
If it's just because I have cool pictures
and because I'm the guy from the clothing thing,
it's not gonna work.
I'm not gonna build an audience that way.
If you follow me because I'm a young entrepreneur
that is around other young entrepreneurs
and I expose you to cool ideas and cool strategies
that I'm trying and books that I'm reading
and by the way, here's our new collection
and here's how we made it.
That's some value.
And you wouldn't know this unless you listen to you,
like I'm listening to you right now, talking. You know, I mean. that's the thing and also you know like once again the gift in the curse is
most people that do know who I am that don't like subscribe to what I'm doing now think the opposite.
Like they just think the guy I don't know he's the fucking guy from the thing like he was on the show
and then he had like a clothing thing or the young and restless like the soap opera. I don't know.
You know but like in the rest of the day dude please don't be mad. I don't know, you know, but like
Dude, please
Oh my god, now if I had it one day we were filming on the set of the bold and the beautiful because it was Rob's mom's favorite thing They asked me to take my hat off because the young and restless set was next door
Like can you please take that off? I'm like it's not the same. They're like please you're gonna start a war
Oh, that's hilarious. No. Can you please take that off? And I'm like, it's not the same. They're like, please, you're gonna start a war. Oh, that's hilarious.
There's no Y&R in the building.
Oh, yeah.
Fuck you, it was gonna come out.
Hey, motherfucker.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I just noticed that like I love doing the TV stuff
and having fun and getting shot out at cannons
and attacked by bulls, I really do.
But there's a different type of sort of fulfillment
that I get when I'm sitting talking to young entrepreneurs.
So I'm talking about mindset habits. So I'm talking about mindset habits or I'm talking about daily routine like just stuff that I really
Like and apply every day. So I want to pursue that as much as I can and share that information
And you know the same thing that everyone wants
I want a kid to come up to me one day and say like I truly
Live the life that I didn't think I'd be able to because of you, because you exposed me to that. Because that's what happened to me.
Does it feel like a bigger purpose than everything?
On other words, do you feel like this is just a bigger purpose than?
Yeah, I think that it is a purpose.
I don't think the other stuff was a purpose.
That was part of the problem, right?
And I hope that doesn't get taken the wrong way,
but it's fun filming a show and I made okay money.
And even launching the brand was cool, but
That's not a that's I didn't have a talent. I wasn't famous for a talent I wasn't famous because people like my music. I wasn't even that funny
I fit into the dynamic well. That's what I was good at if I had a gift on fantasy factory Robin big
It was knowing where the hole was for me and filling it right?
But so people aren't coming up to you saying, man, that song helped me through a tough
time.
You know, I get like, my dude, you shouldn't have pulled, you shouldn't have pulled, you
shouldn't have pulled.
So yeah, I think I was kind of searching for a little bit of that purpose.
And I think that it then led me to starting young and reckless and then led me to realize that I loved entrepreneurship
and I loved that.
And so now talking to other entrepreneurs,
trying to teach people how to achieve,
trying to teach people that they can get out
of their comfort zones and they can do some stuff
that they really don't think that they can do,
that is my purpose.
You know, we hear a lot about your generation
and the younger generation, the millennials, if you will.
There's a lot of shit to talk about.
But I see like this huge explosion of like entrepreneurship.
Yeah, crazy.
Is that just that?
Am I just, am I crazier?
Is that legit?
Cause I see a lot of kids, you know,
when they're mid 20s and early 30s and they want to.
To the hustle of it.
Yeah, it's different than when I was a kid,
it wasn't the same.
It's definitely a debate to be had.
I don't know yet.
I think that I'm on the tail end, right?
Like I'm like a millennial cusp, millennial adjacent,
because I didn't grow up pointing a phone at my face
and telling people what I'm doing still feels really stupid.
Oh good, we're all the same thing.
Thank God, it feels like.
I can do this.
I was going to do this all day long right here or standing in front of tons of people but
to talk to the phone still is too weird.
So I, yeah, so I don't, I didn't get that.
I'm forcing myself anytime I'm doing stuff like that.
But I did come with a little bit of that, I think, you know, the fact that you even can,
like we always joke about, if you dropped out of college 10 years ago and said I'm gonna go start a business. They'd be like well. We'll see you on skid row
You know what I mean, but now if you do it they'd be like hell yeah, you are. Yes, gonna be awesome
You're gonna be just like Gary V
You know
It's accepted now now. I think that the bad thing that comes from that is everybody thinks they can do it everyone thinks
They don't realize a hard much hard work is involved now and it more about like, do you look like you're doing it better than you're actually doing it?
Oh, what a good point.
Right, like people get really good at looking like
they're getting really good.
And I think that that is a problem.
That's becoming a skill.
Thank you, Instagram.
Yeah, thank you, man, for screwing up our youth.
But no, I think that that's really dangerous.
So if I could make my stance in the debate,
I would say, I think there will be more entrepreneurs
and self-made people because of it,
because just of simply more people trying.
Like if you had any more people to do it almost.
Yeah, you're gonna have more.
If you, let's just say you had a thousand people
try before, if you have 10,000 try more,
try this year, you're gonna have double the success rate.
But I think you're gonna have a lot of people really confused and really lost.
Why isn't working?
Yeah, like what?
I'm doing everything right.
My post got a thousand like.
Yeah.
Like what was taking so long?
So yeah, I think that it's, you know, I think it's dangerous.
But I want it, my goal is to try to find a way to like,
and I haven't been doing a very good job of it yet, but to try to give like
Realness not all the fluff, you know, and the like, I don't know. There's a lot of just fluff entrepreneur talk out there. Yeah
There is of course and to try to really say like this is how you do it. I'm doing a campaign with 21 Savage and here's what I'm doing
Why I'm doing it why I'm hoping that it will work. It's cool, like I'm trying to do more of that without coming off too harsh, because sometimes
I listen to myself and I'm like, you sound like a drill instructor, like, you know what
I mean, like, get out there and you've got to find how many units and like, let me care
some about that.
So finding that sweet spot, I think.
Yeah, but that was the brilliance that I was talking about.
I mean, you do your homework.
It's not like you just thought of a cool, I think most kids think, build a cool page,
make myself look cool, get a good camera,
they're thinking of all those.
The brand is just the logo.
Right, that's what stops.
I think they don't like the process.
Right, going back to what you mentioned.
Oh yeah, no, yeah.
But they don't even know that they like it
or don't like it because they've never even tried it.
Like, it's like, I always, I use this comparison
for everything, but it's the same thing
as going to the gym and being in shape, right?
It's like, nobody likes it. Nobody actually is like, yes, 10 more.
I can't wait. What?
It doesn't happen, but you don't realize how nice it is and how it's an added benefit
to your existence when you learn to enjoy that suffer.
I'm saying, and I think that's the same as how I look at running a business.
I know there's a lot of days where I'm like, and I think that that's the same as how I look at running a business.
I know there's a lot of days where I'm like, holy, are you kidding me?
This is what I have to do.
It's terrible.
But when you go home at night on those days, you feel extra good.
So accomplished.
It's the day when I come in here, when everything's just on autopilot, and I'm just kind of walking
around making sure everyone's good, I go home and want to punch myself in the face.
Those are the bad days. And I just think a lot of young people, a lot of people.
I don't think it's even, I think this is a thing that has repeated itself for a very
long time.
I think people have not given an honest try to know whether it's for you.
I think one of the biggest lies is that, you know, you need to be motivated.
Like I need to be motivated, pumped up to do things.
And what people realize is that motivation,
like any emotion is an emotion.
You get it, and it goes away,
and then what?
It's the one you're not motivated
that you can become successful.
And one thing I'm real big onto
is motivation follows action.
Action doesn't follow motivation, right?
So like what I've learned is,
I don't sit and wait.
It's like, well, not feeling it, do you know what?
I'm not feeling it today either.
Well, we tell you to inspire.
Like, you go, go do something.
Go start, you know, come to the office,
work on something and you'll find the thing.
Is that create motion?
Well, create motion, is that what it goes for?
Yeah, motion creates motion, motion creates motion.
Yeah, and I think that there's a motion.
Oh, no, there's a motion in the ocean.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's what I know.
I know that one too. So yeah, I just think there's a lot of people that are kind of spending their whole life sitting waiting for that strike of motivation to hit them.
And you just don't realize that it comes from like messing up and feeling stupid and feeling awkward and losing and you know.
Now outside of you obviously you're the field you work in and you're podcasting.
Is there anything else that sparks your interest or things that you're into?
Little stuff. I like photography still. It's lingering from my days of filming and taking photos as a skater.
I like it, but I just don't. I'm not out walking to the park taking photos of trees.
I just can't. I don't know where. Maybe if I go on good vacations one day.
walk into the park taking photos of trees. Like I just can't, I don't know where.
Maybe if I go on good vacations one day.
No, man, I hate to sound so...
You're passionate about what you do.
Yeah, there's nothing wrong with that.
It's very, very consuming when you're into what you do, man.
Yeah, no, I just, yeah.
I like reading books and stuff,
but all the books I'm reading are like entrepreneurial.
So I gotta get out of that.
I gotta read some more like history stuff
or something else, interesting.
But yeah, I'm pretty I'm pretty focused on on what I do and another than that. I who are your favorite entrepreneurs?
Oh man, that's a tough one. I would say you know
The list that's coming to mind is the obvious. It's the Elon Musk the you know
Steve Jobs
He was an asshole, but what, he was an asshole,
but what he created was, I don't like his personality,
but what he created was brilliant.
Jeff Bezos, all the go-to, I don't have some.
Have you read the four yet?
The four.
No.
Well, the four is about the big four companies.
Is it those guys?
Yeah.
It's a book. Yeah, it's their about the big four companies. Is it those guys? Yeah. It's a book.
Yeah, it's their game plan.
I'm gonna write it.
It's like the four horseman, dude.
It's my favorite book I've read all year.
I'm writing it down.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm trying to think if I have any like really cool niche
one that you're gonna be in there.
Well, Rob's got to be in there.
Well, of course he is.
But I, he's like my brother.
You know, like I'm a fan of him as a whole.
Like I don't even think of him as like,
I'd put on a drink or he's like, yeah, he's,
it's my brother.
That's awesome.
Any favorite guests you've had on your show so far?
Our mutual friend Tom, Tom Billio, is amazing.
I interviewed Tim Ferris who's on this coming week's episode.
He was great.
He was like, so is it different than you would expect it or was he exactly?
He was different.
You want to know what?
I, once again, just being honest, sometimes on his podcast, I feel like he comes off a
little arrogant.
And I just think it's his, I just now that I've met him, I think it's just how his personality
sort of comes up.
He was the nicest guy.
And he came here by himself and it was at 8 30 in the morning on a Sunday because that's he could squeeze it in before he left town and he just came with two
Big duffle bags and he had been out of town for like the last five weeks
But everything he needed was in these two duffle bags including his whole podcast recording setup like he just lives
He is Tim Ferris like there's not a piece of him that is not who he says he is.
But it just, I think the big thing to me was he was so, so nice
and so willing to just sit for hours and talk about anything.
I feel like we're surprised more than we actually are right on.
Most times when we have a guest, we think they're gonna be,
he might be boring and like, so true.
Don't you feel like that? I feel like you, that's what I love about this.
Well, the thing about podcasting that we've noticed and realized is that podcasters
it's like this it still is and I'm sure it's going to change because
everybody's getting into podcasting now but
it seems like this this great community like everybody kind of wants to help each
other grow and do well. When we first started we were nobodies and we would
meet these big podcasters and they were totally helpful like they'd want us to succeed and come on my show and I'll be on your show.
And it was like, oh, this is a house. You know, I kind of like no shit.
Like seriously, it was it's pretty awesome.
It's so cool. And I will say that that was one thing that I hated about, um, about the
streetwear. I was just saying apparel's like the opposite.
Apparel's like fitness for us. Oh, just a lot of territorial. Oh, yeah,
a lot of insecure camps. You're in that. Camps, you're in that camp.
Oh, you're that.
Okay, that's what you wear.
That's how fitness is just like that.
It is so stupid.
That's kind of what inspired MindPomp was to break that mold.
So the three of us have taught, we've been in 15, 20 years, but we all have different
backgrounds.
And we share the positive things about all the different modalities of training.
But within our community, it's not like that. It's like my my way's better than your way, and it's like, who's dropping
studies to prove that? Well, the way what we're doing is better than what they're doing
over there. And it's like, no, there's something to do.
It's insecurities. A lot of insecurities, a lot of big egos and fragile egos. But in podcasting,
we haven't seen that. Really haven't. Everybody's been super fucking cool. And smart. It's
so pretty smart. That's the cool thing.
Not too many like complete idiots.
No.
I, and if so, they're really funny.
Yeah, there's something.
Yeah, that goes for it.
But it's just weird how an entire industry can, like,
the culture can be insecure.
You know, like, it's, like, because that's how clothing is,
like, they will fight.
People will fight each other over, like, clothing shit.
Like, it's so, That's exactly how it finishes.
Like the last big fitness convention down here in LA,
there was the-
It was a fist fight, wasn't it?
Yes, it was a what's his face who just died, right?
Oh, oh, oh, oh, Rich Riffiana.
Yeah, it was the big, I don't know if you know who that is,
but he big tattooed, dude, he just died recently,
but just the last big LA convention
of his, they got into a big old brawl
and it's like these camps, you know,
and they sell their clothes and
their supplements. I think it's an image. Any type of industry that's super based on image
and how you look. A lot of that's driven by insecurity, fitness. I was the skinny kids,
I want to build a small muscle. I was really fat. I need to look at particular. These big
egos, fragile egos. In podcasting, it's really just,
it's about your content.
It's about your value.
Most of the listens are growth-minded people, right?
It's your keeper.
Most people that turned on a podcast,
you turned on the first time to probably listen
and learn something, right?
Were you a big podcast listener before you started?
You know, not like crazy.
Like I was, but like Joe Rogan,
the occasional Tim Ferriss,
kind of the obvious go-to's.
I more just loved the platform.
Like I just thought it was so cool.
I believe that I gravitate a little bit more
to talking than to like on camera stuff,
if I could have it my way, right?
And just the fact that you could do whatever you want,
I could launch it tomorrow, you know, it just was.
Super free. Yeah, I really like that. I could do it tomorrow. You know, it just was. Super free.
Yeah, I really like that.
I could do it in the office.
And the way I always looked at it,
and still look at it, is like,
I think that it's the foundation,
or it's the thing that will start to kick start
all of my new things.
It's not the thing.
Like I don't look at like,
I'm gonna have the world's biggest podcast.
I just, it's part of it.
Part of it.
It's just, that's starting. I can't believe the conversations that
I've had and you know like I wouldn't be talking to you guys if I didn't start a podcast
right because it went through Tom to then to wherever. So imagine talking to Tom. Now
I'll call Tom with like weird brain questions right because he's just like brain genius.
And I have 10 to 15 people that I now talk to on the regular,
because of sitting down and having these conversations
with them, it's just taking me in this whole
kind of different direction that I didn't expect,
which is really cool.
And I think that'll be the start of kind of
where my life goes.
Have you always been this self-aware growth minded?
Because you're very, I know you mostly from the show,
from Robin Bigg and hearing you talk and whatever you're very, I know you mostly from the show from you know Robin big and
Hearing you talk and whatever you're extremely intelligent very self-aware and very growth-minded
Have you always been that way or is this something that you started to develop?
Do you have a pivotal moment in your life? No, first of all, thank you because it was a insanely nice compliment
I think that if I could really I think I was younger it came off
More as like anxiety and like worry.
And you know what I mean?
I think that was like the young.
Same here.
Yeah.
And I still something.
I know what I mean, yeah.
It's still my biggest.
If I could say like what's your biggest flaw, it's that.
Like it's just anxiety and sort of social.
Like that's why the podcast has been great for me too,
because it forces me to sit down
and talk to someone for at least
There's been days when I especially in the beginning when I would come in and be like oh, man
I don't know what to talk about. I don't know the story really well
Like where are we gonna go and then I will leave and be like yes, yes
Like it's really is like putting yourself through like this thing, but um no, I think that
Yeah, I think that I was an overthinker and still am, but I think that, um, yeah, there
was no big turning point or anything like that.
I've always been pretty like analytical and just really tried to look at everything as
thorough as possible.
And like I said, it's not always.
Studies, studies show like what you're saying is actually, the studies will show that anxiety and those types of things
are definitely closely connected to growth-minded individuals.
It's almost like it forces people to try to grow,
you know, change and whatever,
because you're in this uncomfortable state, you know,
most of the time.
Yeah, and I think like the good thing is,
you're really self-aware.
Like being self-aware is really good
when you're doing a podcast,
but when you're in an uncomfortable situation, it's really bad. Because you're like, I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I'm over there. I what do you think angles. Yeah, so it's canals when I'm in usually crowded situations.
I'm used to it on real tight.
I think that in the last like two years I have been on kind of this mission to like, you
know, just be a little bit better, more well-rounded person, figure out where my issues are, my
flaws are, and just really work on them.
You know, even if it's socially,
even if it's not spending enough time with my friends,
or like I added it on my notes every single day
to call or text my mom.
And I just notice now it's a habit,
and every morning I say,
hey, mom, love you, hope you have a great day.
And there would be like two week times
when I didn't talk to my mom at all,
not for any reason, not because we have an issue
because I don't love her.
I just wouldn't think about it.
And she wouldn't say anything. So it's little stuff like that
that I'm really trying to slowly get better. I think that when it comes to the anxiety and stuff,
the main thing, like meditation has really helped a lot. How often do you do it?
Every day, I'm doing it right. Do you use any like tools for it or just sit on your own quiet?
I use a calm on the app calm. Yeah, so it's for 10 minutes
So I do that I even recently started doing affirmations and goals
Because one of the guys I had on my podcast who became a really good friend is really big on that
So I was like fuck it. I'll try it. So I
Recorded it on my of me saying it on my mics into put it on my iPhone
So every morning I sit for 10 minutes and I do meditation
and then I listen to my little affirmations
and I listen to my goals for the end of 2018,
where I'll be December 2018.
And it's amazing how some of those little things
really just snowball into making yourself,
you just feel a little bit more in control and grounded
and there are times when I'll be in situations and start to get a little bit more in control and grounded. And there are times when I'll be in situations
and start to get a little jammed up,
and I'll focus on my breathing or stuff like that.
But I haven't found a cure all.
I think that it's like,
as you get better, everything gets better.
And that'll forever be a challenge to try to figure it out.
How do you deal?
I just another good book for you.
Irresistible talks about the addiction to phones and social media.
And this is a big part of all of our lives in world now
and for sure a tool for us to be successful,
but it also can consume you.
Do you notice that yourself?
And are there, do you do anything to make sure
you have a day off or you get away from that?
What's that like for you?
Yeah, 100% I think it's terrible.
And what I did for a long time,
and I think I'm gonna go back to it,
is I had two phones, and one phone was only phone in text,
and the other one was everything else.
So YouTube, Instagram, Snapchat, email,
everything was on another phone.
So you are very, very aware.
Like right now it would be in my bag,
and I would have a moment where I, like we were done, and I have a break I have nothing I get to check my stuff right but
then you put it back and you're just very aware of when you're messing around
and wasting time and when you're not it's so easy to check a real email that's
that means something and then go over to Instagram for a second and you go
blah blah and before you know it it was 20 minutes and you checked an email. You know, and I think that it's,
I think it's really bad.
And I think it's a problem that I have 100%.
I need to check it, like I need to whatever.
I have an app on my phone called Moment,
which you set like a goal of,
like I try to stay under four hours or something,
saying on my phone every day and it alerts you
when your book talks about that app.
That it?
Yeah, okay, so I got that from, I think a podcast book talks about that app. Does it? Yeah. Okay.
So I got that from, I think a podcast or a book or something.
So it's great.
It will send you a little alert, hey, you're a loser when you go for four hours.
Hey, junkie.
Yeah.
Stop.
Hey, crack it.
How's Instagram?
And then, and it tells you what apps you spend time on, which is mind blowing.
If you even go, I didn't know this for a long time.
If you go to your, I believe settings go go to battery and then go to click usage,
it'll show you what percentage of your battery
was spent on what apps.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yes, so it'll stay like 75% Instagram for a day.
Oh shit.
Shit.
I'm a loser.
I did not know that.
That's a little hack right there.
I had no idea.
Yeah, yeah.
So, it tells you that and whatever,
but yeah, it's another thing that you just have to try.
It's just like anything, man.
I'm learning that it may sound like, yeah, no shit, but all of these things, you know what
the issue is, you know how to do it better.
You know how to eat better.
You know how to exercise a little bit more.
You know how to stay off your phone a little bit more.
You know how to, it's just doing it.
I'm doing it little by little and trying to set up systems to track if you did it or not really helps.
You know?
I have, this thing that I do, which is a combination of like
from Jerry Seinfeld and a friend of mine
and blah, blah, blah, all this different stuff,
where every day, that's what I was talking about with my mom,
every day I have like eight things.
So I have my notes every day that are printed out with what I have to do that day. At the top of that every day is all of the
things that I should do for like a basic successful day, meaning drink two liters of water,
color text my mom stretch, meditate like the basics. And I cross them off as I go throughout my day.
And then if I get them, if I cross them all, I have a calendar at home on my wall that I put a giant red X on with a Sharpie for that day. Because what happens
is, if you get three Xs, and number one, you're tracking it. So you know what you're doing,
you know, if you're doing good or bad. That alone makes a huge difference. Then saying,
I don't, I feel like you're wearing a figure this week, you know, you're forced to be
aware. Yes. And then what happens is, you might have a long day, you might have not done
very well, but you get home and you see three X's in the last three days on
those on that calendar and you know that today you're not going to get one. You'll do the
extra stuff. Like you'll be like, ah, whatever, I'm just going to chug the water and call
my mind. I'll take this street going. Yeah, you keep the street going and you notice
too, like, you know, you have a big night of drinking or you have some whatever thing and
you have like four blank days and then you kind of get it back together and you get a chain going and then something happens
and you start to learn what gets you off and what keeps you on and what you know and just being able to track that on the most basic form with a sharpie and some paper
Really really helps. Yeah, which one of those basics is the most challenging for you to get consistently?
It
It's for some reason I'm for some reason it's the water drinking two liters of water.
I don't know why.
I just every like literally every day it's almost it's almost always the thing on there because
it's I think maybe because it's throughout the whole day like you you'll get home and
be like I have to drink a liter and a half a water and I really don't feel like you know
like you have to because the other ones like read and water, and I really don't feel like, you know, like you have to, because the other one's like, read,
and it's kind of these things that you can do.
At least you're knocking out
the real important ones I feel like.
Yeah, but still, that's such a stupid thing to not be doing.
You know what I mean?
I find myself now, like the last week,
I've been like, okay, drink the water,
drink like you're in the uber, drink the water,
and like, you know what I mean?
And just, it's stupid, but.
Other than that, what are your biggest challenges
with business right now?
Biggest challenges, I think is just a mount of content needed.
Oh, God, it's a truth.
You know, as a whole, and a content war right now, I feel like.
Yeah, is that why you started the vlog?
Yeah, and I'm doing a terrible job at it.
You know, like I should be, I should be,
there's no reason why I am not posting a vlog every day
and a podcast and a blah blah. I mean, there's just no reason. It's what you should be doing, but it's so
hard and once again walking around pointing a camera at your face all day is so stupid and
when you're trying to just, I don't know, I just the way my brain works
It just feels so show offy to me.
Yeah, so vain.
I feel you.
And it's just like, oh, I can't do this.
It was so hard to get on Instagram.
It was so, this guy was like hammering on me,
get on Instagram and I'm looking through and I'm like,
let's go grandpa, I'm gonna tell her
where the building's in business.
I'm like, this is narcissism.
Now the kids are gonna listen to it.
Just don't make me Instagram.
I mean, fitness on Instagram is just a pile of shit.
It's fucking narcissism, how it was so difficult to get on,
but it's a tool, it's a business tool,
you gotta use it and get over that, you know?
Even these guys would be like,
you have to post more photos of yourself.
Stop posting, like, doing a podcast today.
You know, like, God, don't look at me.
And I'm like, it's so stupid.
Like, what's my, then you have to worry about your caption.
What's your caption?
Yeah, get up there.
Kill it today.
Just kill it.
Look at me in this chair with the headset on.
Like, you can do it too.
So I don't know, I just naturally shy away from it.
But yes, it's just across the board.
Like, you have to be communicating every day
of with something of good quality
and something of good value.
And it's like, how the hell?
So I got to do that from my thing.
Young and reckless has to be doing that.
And it's hard.
That's definitely the biggest challenge.
Yeah, more than ever, the brand means the person behind it, more than ever.
It wasn't like that before.
It was not.
But now it's all you.
It's like, if you're, if they know you and they like you, your brand will do well.
It's so true.
And I always said it like,
when I first started Young and Reckless,
me being on a reality show,
I thought was a detriment.
It was not good because these brands at the time
were like, they were mysterious
and they had this cool factor and it was like,
oh, I think this guy owns it.
And I heard he has seven Ferrari.
You know what I'm saying?
This guy over here.
What's good?
So are you mysterious?
Yes, you are.
So I have to tell you the story.
So Taylor, the only reason I'm the most
he is sitting in on this podcast, there it's so.
Truth be told.
So Taylor doesn't even podcast with us.
He's actually runs our whole social media side.
Nice.
But I said, did you got to be on this podcast with Chris?
Because I know that this guy, how we met,
he was only
23 years old. So this is fucking 10 years ago. And we're playing basketball together. I'm
so fascinated by this kid that he has the ability to come in the gym at 11 and three. And
I'm like, what the fuck is this kid doing? Nice shoes on dress nice dress. And what are you
doing? So you don't have a Facebook business. And this time, this is 10 years ago. It was
Twitter. It was Twitter.
Oh, it was Twitter.
Okay, so he's got a social media business.
And at this time, I've heard of people that have made money that way,
but I never met anybody yet.
And here's this 20-something-year-old kid,
and I'm super fascinated by him.
Like, dude, we gotta have lunch.
Like, you've created like a six-figure business off of a fucking Twitter?
Yeah, yeah.
Come on, I gotta have lunch. I'm still fast.
Yeah, right?
So we have lunch and we talk all about it.
And he basically kind of shows me the ropes.
And that's actually when I turn my Instagram on.
But he created an apparel company.
And I'm teasing him because he doesn't,
he has no images of him all the time.
He's Mr. Undercover.
So you see?
Do people think you're like really cool?
I don't do it anymore.
I've not read it.
Not real bad.
I'm sure you're thinking that.
I don't know, but you build up this image and in streetwares, particularly, it's all about
how cool do you look or how cool do you appear to be.
And it's all about perception.
Perception is everything.
And when I started meeting more and more people in the street wear world
When I started hanging on fair facts more and going to the Nike air mag events and you start meeting on these people
You're like oh, this is all fake. Yeah, like they're they're they're running these cars
They're living with their parents. I'm over here like I have my own spot
And I'm like I'm like really trying to do it. Yeah, I'm really trying to live it
And and then you you get you get exposed to it and you're like,
everything you thought it was supposed to be,
is not.
It was 100%.
And I just think like, I guess what I was getting at
is I thought, so it was kind of in the day
where those were the guys that were killing it, right?
Were the mysterious, sometimes fake life, just baller.
And so me being like, hey, it's me drama
from Nancy Mankery.
Like, it wasn't good.
So I tried as much as I could to actually sort of
be in the background.
I mean, obviously people are gonna know I own it.
I have to post about it and stuff
because I have all these followers.
But like, I did marketing campaigns with Meek Mill
and Machine Gun Kelly in the early days
and all my stuff was like,
how can I do stuff with other people?
Because it can't be like my thing.
The point is now eight years later,
it has to be my thing.
I have to be out front showing you how I run the business.
It's like just the opposite.
And so I was like, all right, well shit, here we go.
You know, like, let's get it and try to do this right
But it just has changed. I just think street wear still people like mystery and they like the you know
It's like rappers, but um, but
A lot of the people that are winning are just out front and the fans feel connected to them. I mean real is low in pole
It's like selling 30 million dollars a year in
merch. Like, dude, that's a huge clothing line. Those kids got watched both those two, man, they're
unbelievable what they're doing. I was just telling these guys how we're we are part of this
changing and it's funny. We're here in LA and Hollywood and stuff and I'm like, dude,
I, I, I, is Hollywood gonna die in the next 10 years, bro, is Netflix gonna take over movies and
famous people are gonna be
YouTubers and shit like that. It is all you got to do is look at little kids I have two kids and they don't know shit about who's on TV or movies
Yeah, but they know who their favorite YouTube stars are. Yeah, we go to the store
We buy stuff based on what the YouTube stars say if that's the future man so crazy. It's so true
But it's not crazy like like you saw Brad Pitt walking down the street and then like some unknown YouTube like
Okay, Paul walk you and like kids would be like
Like to the youtuber and Brad would just do his thing. They do events. These youtubers do events my kids wanted me to go to one
I'm like, who is this guy? I don't know. I'm gonna like always my favorite youtuber
They open presents and play with toys or some bullshit. I don't know. Yeah, it's crazy
I'm trying so hard not to sound like old and like that stupid, you know, but like,
get off my lawn.
If that's what it is, that's what it is.
It's going that way.
I mean, when you look at Netflix and stuff, I mean, you're seeing these guys,
I just saw, like, just the other day, I saw the first trailer for like a real movie, man.
Netflix made.
Yeah, and then the next thing, and you thing you see when you talk about Logan Paul those guys
They're in movies now. Yeah, yeah, you see them in movies. I mean it's it's good
Well think about it if you're if you're a movie studio or yours production studio you want to make a movie
You got this kid over here with you know 20 million subscribers to the YouTube channel
You only got to pay him a half a million dollars to be in your show movie and you know you're gonna have a guaranteed audience
You're gonna pay $50 million to Tom Cruise.
Cross the earth though, are we gonna lose good shit?
I don't know.
That's the big clip.
That's where I think we sound old.
Cause I think they sound old.
I think there are parents when,
or let's say our grandparents, right,
when like TV first started,
they were probably like, you kids,
like you don't know what we,
you know what I'm saying?
I think it was probably the same, or like when rap music, imagine M&M, like it was like,
you guys do not know music. You're telling me all music is going to be this garbage,
this talentless hack, you know what I mean? Now he's like the legend. I just, I don't know. I think
it's, I think it's just how things like evolve and where it goes. I think it's our perspective, but it's scary.
I can't see the difference.
It looks like garbage.
Damn it.
Like to me, I watch it and I'm like, what the world's over?
I give up everyone's in the house making vlogs and those are our celebrities now.
Excellent.
Well, thanks for letting us talk to you, man.
That was great, man.
We could do this for hours.
Oh, absolutely. Broke you would have brought a blunt, we would have you man. Yeah, we could do this for hours. Oh, obviously.
Broke you would have brought a blunt.
We would have, man.
Yeah, don't.
If you would have brought a blunt, we would have just got,
we would have went two hours plus easily next time.
Next time.
You got to, you got to come visit us up in the area.
San Jose, we have a whole studio and everything.
We could do all kinds of media.
We got video equipment, green screen.
We have a whole recording.
That's awesome, man.
I would love to.
And anytime.
It's like the fantasy factory podcast.
Yeah, it's like, it's the one. It's the one. It's the one. It would love to. And anytime. It's like the fantasy factory podcast. Yeah. It's a little wild.
Yeah. Yeah.
We're the cool.
It's really awesome. Yeah.
We're the cool snirts. No, that's cool, man. I love it.
Anything I can do ever for you guys or if you'll have me back on or whatever.
Oh, for sure. Yeah. For sure, brother. It's great.
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