Transcript
jF-Vo1SHpo8 • Building a Business For a New Generation with Drama, Founder of Young & Reckless | Start-up Theory
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Kind: captions Language: en all right we've got a new segment coming up now with my boy drama in the house from young and reckless you guys have ever seen the fantasy factory which literally it was my fantasy I remember when the show first came out I was freaking out that there was this entrepreneur out there that had built something so crazy and this nut so young man was part of the cast of that and is now good what's up well it's good to see you how are you man built his own company from the ground up we are honored to be here dude it's awesome to have you here this is great I've watched all the show so I feel like I'm on like one of my favorite TV shows you know nice yeah that's awesome I literally and I told you this on your podcast I freaked out when they said that you'd ask me to be on your podcast yeah I was like wait a second drama from young and reckless drama yeah that made me so happy yeah so yeah the the cool thing for me so not only did i watch the fantasy factory but back at Quest when we were really getting social and we were doing our because we did quest apparel briefly he's now turned into something much more logical The Hobbit at the time we were doing like like actual apparel apparel mm-hm and we found your contents that this is an example of staying on brand yeah you've always done an amazing job of yeah that means a lot because that's literally like probably the one goal of mine that is like the biggest nightmare in my life why well just because it's so important to me and I would say that if I'm anything I probably lean most towards a marketing or branding person and I see the power of young and reckless and what we could accomplish if we really hammered home and stayed on brand so like it's literally every marketing opportunity every everything that comes across my plate I just try to like I obsess over whether or not it fits and try to make sure that it always does why do you think staying on brand is so important because I literally think that you either do that or you do nothing and the way when it comes to building a brand and the way that I explain it a lot to younger people is like building a brand is almost like building a human being and you want that human being to be trustworthy and reliable and and all those things and so imagine if you met somebody and they showed up and they were really funny and quirky and whatever you like I really like that guy and the next time they showed up they were completely different and the next thing you you don't trust that person you don't want to hang out with that person anymore because they're probably a serial killer right and so not only are you trying to construct this sort of human being type thing but you want it to be you want people to love it and to want to support it and to like it and I just think like I don't know when I name the brand young and reckless I saw the power that it could potentially have but it's a gift and a curse because the word the words mean something so everything you do people are gonna question it automatically whether that is young and reckless or not you know so how do you think about as you've matured how do you think about like staying true to who you actually are or do you do you think that the brand should in some way represent who you really are no to be honest I don't think the brand should really I mean the brand's values come from my basic values right which is that young people I my goal in life is to encourage young people to sort of break out of the mold I know you say break out the matrix which I love break out of the mold and do what they want to do right and I think that the education system is very flawed and I think that the way a lot of people are parented is very flawed and I think that true happiness or success only comes from breaking out of that and doing what you want to do with your own life right so that is how I look at my own life that's where I think that I found a life that I never thought I would be able to have and been able to find true happiness so at the foundation of it it comes from me and Who I am on a surface level I realized that like my wardrobe is not gonna be young and reckless forever I'm not gonna be young forever I'm not gonna know who the hot new rappers are forever who the hot new artists are I'm just not and I think that where a lot of people go wrong is they hold it too close and they try to keep it with them forever and it's like it's not at some point a an 18 year old kid is not gonna want to dress like you know this 35 year old man so there that's where the handoff is for me now as you get into doing content which I I think is really interesting that you're now doing the podcast and obviously you and I have talked off-camera about finding a way into really giving people usable information yeah do you think at all about sort as this entrepreneur movement happens that you're gonna be able to help them the young and reckless crowd reckless to find the way that you just to find it yeah really find their voice and find their ability to succeed in business or in whatever they want to do I do and I'm gonna be honest it wasn't actually like a deep-seated passion of mine to be and I really hesitate like calling myself any sort of teacher or coach I'm Way more a student right but it just kind of so happens that some people know who I am so I have a bit of a built-in following content is obviously bigger than ever and the entrepreneur thing is bigger than ever and so what that means to me is there's way more people listening and there's way more people that have the ability to access what you're saying than ever so it's almost like the way I see it is everything's kind of aligning to like you're stupid if you don't do this right but the way that I look at it is the reason why I do my podcast for instance I'm learning from each of those episodes I'm not teaching so I'm saying here are people that used to be young and reckless and they're the ones that made it now let's listen together to how they made it right and when I do like a video blog or something there's my camera filming right there it's all I'm simply saying is watch come with me as I try to figure it out right I try not to be too preachy or anything like that and then with young and reckless my job is to spotlight the people in the trenches going through it here's a hot new rapper that's really cool that went through hell to get out of Atlanta and he just signed a deal with Interscope and I'm gonna do a spotlight on him so it's like here's the next group here's the people who made it and here's me going along for the ride that's kind of how I look at the whole thing I love that and walk us through then as the learner how did you pull off what you pulled off so you obviously growing up in Ohio where you're at today is not exactly the most obvious no I mean literally in this house is probably the polar opposite of Ohio a Beverly Hills mansion is is the polar opposite of what I do same with Tacoma Washington together that's the beauty of it what was the question so how did you do it how did you pull it off how'd y'all end up you've got this multimillion-dollar brand they built from scratch yeah I think there are misconceptions about how you built it yeah and how seriously you are I was gonna say how seriously you take yourself as an entrepreneur but you're actually a for-real entrepreneur meaning you run a company you're not a figurehead yeah we should run a company yeah so I would say this is if I could explain kind of how I did it I guess I would say because this is what I try to make sure that I keep doing every single day is I just I chased opportunity like viciously chased opportunity then I learned once I got there and then I didn't hesitate to apply it right and I think that I still to this day try to balance those things because if you spend your time learning too much and never acting you're gonna fail right if you spend your time acting acting acting but you're never learning what you're doing you're gonna fail if you spend your time chasing the opportunity and never doing anything you're gonna be at best in some famous person's entourage right I think that's how those people end up there because you see opportunity but you never act my point is really insightful that is how I believe unless you grew up with that person whatever but here's what a funny thing happens and I can tell you firsthand when you're around success the same way you say when you dream too hard you feel it when you're around success you really feel it okay you really feel like you're a cop I mean you're waking up in the morning maybe you're going to some hot Hollywood party you're waking up in an amazing house you're going to an award show why do the work you already have all the rewards and you're so close to it except for one day that person stops or stops being your friend or kicks you out and now you're screwed in your whole life is has no meaning because now it's like wait a minute what happened what did I really do so the point is you people so for people that don't know you how did you end up in in a very successful entourage well so what happened was I born and raised in Akron Ohio the moment I turned 18 I moved to LA simply because I loved skateboarding in LA as the skateboard capital of the world but I knew I wasn't gonna be a professional skateboarder because funny enough I had a really bad traumatic brain injury I know that we're big on brain stuff right now yeah it was in a coma for four days that's brain bleeding and just fractured skull and blood clot in my brain yep the [ __ ] happened I just I was leaving a skate park and I went to hop down a set of stairs and I meant to kick my skateboard away but I landed back on it instead and I just literally like whiplashed onto my thing and woke up four days later yeah I had no idea yeah so so that kind of it wasn't you know there wasn't too much long-term like craziness from that but it definitely like derailed you know like the passion for because you know after multiple of those you're really screwed so anyway point is so I moved to LA kind of blindly just following a love for skateboarding I thought was probably gonna work at a skate shop or something and my cousin who was a pro skateboarder at the time six months after I got here started filming a pilot for a potential MTV show and to us that was like what the hell you know the ones that even mean right MTV was so far beyond any of our like expectations and sure enough I mean the long story short of it is the show ends up getting picked up it's a massive success it's called robbing big I was his real life personal assistant at the time so I get tied into the show as sort of the whipping boy sort of a joke but of all the jokes assistant and but I will say that at the time there was never a piece of my brain that said I want to be famous or I want to be on TV I just knew once again this is opportunity I don't know what it is but I'll take the jokes because there's a better life at the end of this I'm just not sure what it is yet so anyway that happened that went into a show called Fantasy Factory on MTV that was the moment where I said okay this is my time right I've learned now for a few years I have my plan together I know what I want to do and I'm not gonna let this marketing opportunity of being on another TV show pass me by and that's when I really went full steam on my clothing brand and and you know like for instance like I don't have like I loved being a part of the famous entourage but I always looked at it as fuel it was never the end like it it it was cool but it drove me nuts because I didn't want to work at a in a mansion all day and then drive back to my studio apartment I wanted to come over and visit my friend and then go back to my mansion next door and there was never a part of me that was ever tricked that it was mine but what it did do is it showed me that it was possible and I watched it happen and I watched a TV show be made and then become a hit and I watch brands remade and so that's what I owe so much to and that's what I think has turned into a bit of my life goal right is to say here watch me watch this person watch us you can do that too because I saw what that did for me that changed my life I mean I have family members and friends that were in jail or addicted to drugs or you know blah blah blah I truly believe this is a really deep concept but I are a really deep statement but I think a lot of that misery comes from a lack of purpose or belief that you can do it and so you just spiral your brain is really powerful so it's gonna be sitting there thinking all day long if you don't have anything to think about or goals or anything you're gonna start popping some pills or smoking a bunch of weed to just calm it down right and then you know that's where problems come that is amazing how aware you were in the process we're when it was happening are you thinking this stuff like one day this goes away one day the show isn't there anymore oh yeah he kicked out whatever one hundred percent a hundred percent and and I don't not to even sound like I just knew reality TV was not a career right yeah I knew that and I think we all know that and the cool thing was we never liked our show was never about our real lives it was never dramatic about our dating lives or anything like that we knew it was just a fun thing and we used it to market our products and our businesses and that's about it but but yeah I was aware that I needed to hurry up quickly and create a real career because that wasn't one but it was an incredible opportunity to start one right and I also knew yeah that I didn't want to be the entourage I can't say that necessarily my view was as I couldn't probably have said it as clear as I can say it today sure but it just I always felt like it was driving me nuts like I always felt like I don't want to be the third guy I don't want to be the you know the guy that just is the third guy to walk through the door I want this to be my thing what do you say when people are like mom and that's so ego-driven like just be appreciative for what you have drama no I think that that's where the I think that's where ego I think that's where ego can be taken wrong and I think that achieving and creating opportunity and an amazing life for yourself and wanting great things and wanting to give people great things and create great things is not ego I think that had I walked around like I was better than I was at the time that would have been ego I acted like I was third in line like if you watch Robin big there was no ego in me like I was like sure right this is what I'm gonna do this is this is funny this is I'm gonna go through this and one day I'll be able to be in a position where I can be in charge of something I have to say it's a religious watcher of the show I'm not sorry not Robin big I've actually not seen that but man you get a kick Natalie we know each other pretty funny to see me on that make holy cow but watching Fantasy Factory yeah and seeing like your endless good humor about everything yeah and then what I found so interesting is what you did after that and then really building a business and because there was so much parallel it was like you were blowing up young and reckless as I was trying and failing by the way to blow up quest apparel yeah and so seeing that in there like you were really becoming an entrepreneur that was able to execute yeah which is such like there's no evidence of that in anyone until they do it right you can never know that somebody's going to be a successful entrepreneur and to do it so it's pretty incredible that you were able to make so much out of and I'll say this I don't like you know I questioned it you know like they're like this is how it works right when you're sorry - spoiler alert or whatever anyone was a super diehard fan but like there was an episode for my 21st birthday where they shaved the center of my head because they said that I was balding and this is why I was gonna look like when I was old right so they shaved me that guy was a bald old man I wore a suit we got on a party bus we went to Las Vegas and we partied all night for my 21st birthday with me looking like a crazy old man right they came to me first and said hey we have this idea we want to shave your head we want to blah blah blah the problem is you look at it and you're like that's hilarious right you know like that's absolutely we can do that I'm not gonna who am I to say no I take myself too seriously that's too far dude I don't think there was hardly any ideas that I ever said we're too far I realized that was my role on the show and I realized it was hilarious so like Who am I not to do it and then you know you film it and you act like oh my god you're shaving my head this is so crazy I and now I will say I did 100% worried that it would limit me from being able to ever be taken seriously why do you think it hasn't I don't know that it hasn't I still think it might I still think that even though here's the conundrum even though I wouldn't have had the opportunity to start the business had I started the business without that history maybe people would be like oh my gosh he is the greatest 30 year old entrepreneur this guy is a genius we're not like Alice drama I think I don't know but it's all her to me it's just how you it's just how you use it to me it makes people relate to me much more it makes people feel like damn like I watched him go from this little assistant getting picked on to like he's doing well now and I think that that adds a lot more depth to who I am so it was my only way in it was my so I can't question it or I can't even really spend too much time on it I think it was my only way and I think that I played it how I wanted to play it and I think that it's led to an insane story and something for us to be able to talk about on camera you know to me this is one of the most important principles of entrepreneurship is waiting for the perfect opportunity is a death sentence and taking the opportunity that you're presented and then figuring out later how you're gonna make the most of it I think is super smart so there are countless times where at Qwest that impact Theory an opportunity comes up and I'll tell the team look this is not the perfect opportunity but it's an opportunity so we're gonna take it we're gonna get momentum this is where that whole concept we have the shirt called momentum matters yeah and it's like getting people to understand [ __ ] momentum yeah is everything and if you can't build momentum with something with whatever opportunity yeah then you just I agree a trillion percent I would say in my own case like young and reckless as a whole was a bit of a piece of momentum right like I mean I've always been interested in clothing and I always wanted to make my own business and blah blah blah but like did I grow up in in Akron Ohio making sketches of street wares because might know I saw the opportunity I saw that these things were converging and I could use the show to market this product and it was a good product to do and then you could you could send it to Pacific Sun wear and everything lined up for that one keep in mind I also tried music production I tried microwave burritos I've tried a little bit of this microwave burrito called loudmouth burritos and it was like pizza flavored and so I've tried other stuff this one just worked but my point was so I followed the momentum I followed the instincts I created the brand it worked it lined up and then there was a moment when young and reckless became really successful and the show was ending where I started taking it too serious and I started saying no to good opportunities because I wanted to protect the brand so closely and I think that was a big moment for me of learning like whoa whoa whoa don't get too serious here and still don't forget to follow that flow you know cuz it's not always gonna go how you want it's not gonna be perfect you're you just have to protect it within the boundaries of the Opera to protect the brand within the stream of opportunity and keep pushing it would be my opinion all right we have a fan question this one comes from Cage hits question on personal branding the new thing is to be the face of the company and stepping out front much like Tom is doing here at IT however what amps me up is being like Batman in a sense where you take on this huge role but you do it all from the shadows so in business terms it would be like building a huge business like a quest but being able to leading it but being able to lead it like Batman if that makes sense would love both of your opinions my opinion is that sounds really cool and I would love to do that too but I don't believe that it works as well I don't believe there's a plan on how to do it I believe that you're relinquishing a lot of control up to just the universe and I'm just a firm believer sure I'd love to live in some weird mystery hundred million dollar mansion and pull the strings from my macbook but it's not there's no plan of action there there's a plan of action to get out front talk about what the brand is talk about what you care about and I don't know that's why I I like the idea of it but I can't see a way to do it I'd rather attack and be up front yeah so first I'll say that bat Batman's company is called Wayne Enterprises and so let's start with that um and I think that in any other time in history I would have been in the background and any other time in history I think that I wouldn't be able to succeed to the level that I have because my innate personality the things that I love and and by innate I mean that I've spent since the time that I was a kid Fanning these flames of you know focusing on my compassion and team building and all those things which I did get early resonance with and so that's what I love doing and building community being inclusive like those are all things that I like and pre social media could be rewarded for that taking care of the customer never used to be the most empowering marketing vehicle you could possibly ask for it was always good yeah but it was always a long play right it would take 10 years for your reputation to get out there and in a startup world that's that's a huge financial investment to make to hope to reap the rewards in 10 years which is why so few companies did that in the past yeah and why so many companies are doing it now because social media allows you to when you're good to somebody unintentionally they will spread the word or when you're bad to somebody they won't intentionally spread the word so we're living through an era where I think as an entrepreneur if you're not looking at the tools that are available to you and taking advantage of those you just being a fool yeah so if you don't have that skill set then don't do it and if you don't want to build that skill set don't do that but I would say you need somebody in the company that can because this is how people engage with brands and content yeah also forget about Millennials for a second start looking at gen Z Gen Z is going to demand that you tell them who you are you're gonna need a live camera on your face at all essentially right and if for no other reason then they really want to know like are you supporting people are you helpful are you inclusive are you empowering people like it's what they care about so if you understand that that's your consumer that's what they care about and you need to build a company that is going to give them something that they feel is valuable not that you think is valuable they think it's valuable you're gonna have to do that so like you I would have much rather been in the background and for at least two years before I started stepping out front a quest my marketing department was heckling me you know to do it and they're like dude you've got to step out they wanted to do a reality show like we were growing so fast that like this is so impressive nted we could get somebody to cover this I was like absolutely not no way I have no interest in stepping out front and it wasn't until it was just getting so obvious then it was the most powerful marketing vehicle and that things were moving away from the traditional way people thought of social media to now personal branding yeah that I think in a few years it won't even be looked at as a strategy it's a necessity like I don't it's like saying I wish I could have a really really big company but just not have to worry about a silly little customer service department right you know it's like I know that that would be cool but I just don't think and I don't know anyone personally who has chosen the strategy of being mysterious and it's paid off in any way I think that it just appears that way in some companies but it's not yeah that's my opinion all right so we've got a giveaway we're gonna be giving away a young and reckless way and fur as much fun as you guys made of me let's get this bad boy over here nice so is it the bag and everything in it nice so we've got dope hat got some shirts got the backpack nice look at all the way to a hoodie alright and the question here is what episode number of the short story long podcast was Tom on what number of the short story long podcast which is dramas podcast was I on alright drop that in and you can win all this amazing young and reckless swag that's good alright I think we had another question yeah this is fun here we go this is from Tina Kohlberg drama before the accident coma did you always think this way real with yourself perspective about ego it's really funny that's a funny question because that's something that my cousin Rob makes fun of me for a lot is like he's like man you you were kind of dopey before you had that head injury and you just woke up an entrepreneur but it's a joke I don't I think obviously I think about it a lot and I'm really you 18 and I'm reading phantoms in the brain right now the Ramachandran book and I say that right yeah and there's all this stuff about brain injuries and all the effects that it can have I'm just sitting there thinking myself like was I the same did I really think this way the honest answer is yes I think to be honest I personally don't think anything is different nobody that I know has honestly said anything is different the only thing that I did was four years it gave me really bad anxiety because what happened was I had a blood clot in my brain and I couldn't leave so that happened in July I was trying to move to California I had to keep going back and getting cat-scans over and over and over every month to see if the blood clot had went away and finally by November they said look it still hasn't went away but we're not gonna keep you here you can move if you want so I'm like alright I'm out of here but they said like there's a very very very serious chance that you could have seizures that you could have you know repeating issues so I literally when I first moved to LA I was a little anxious anyway but anytime I would feel like even slightly lightheaded I'd be like here I come I'm having a stroke and a seizure all at the same time you know like I'd be like it's over so it gave me this sort of lingering weird anxiety of like something terrible's gonna happen to you at any moment that I I I had to get over but that was it didn't turn me into Superman unfortunately that is a little unfortunate yeah but that's like really scary yeah like that's a for real brain injury something that knocks you out for five minutes is terrifying yeah for days it was bleeding brain back here and then had a concussion in the back and then in the front from it bouncing back forward and then the the blood clot was from the skull fracture it was weird the weirdest thing is you wake up four days later and like your fingernails are longer and your facial hairs and it just feels you know cuz you're like what is going on Wow like these things happen that you don't think of what was that moment like I mean that's like out of the [ __ ] movies I'm gonna be honest as best as I can remember it was sort of this like look you knew something happened it wasn't like where am I get me out of here and it also wasn't like I heard you talking the whole time it was just sort of like you knew that something happened but you didn't know what or or where because I don't remember all I remember is eating breakfast that morning whoa yeah yeah I don't remember so the rest is people telling you about it yes and so I was the filmer for the group right I was the camera guy and so there was I went home there's a couple stories I went home and I looked at my camera and I'm like who filmed all this stuff and they're like you did and I didn't remember and I'm talking and I'm doing all this stuff and I don't remember any of it crazy and then I also when I woke up I couldn't taste food at all I had zero taste I couldn't read and I also remember I went home and all I would do is be on my computer because I was editing videos I just loved my little computer and I went on I remember i clicked on safari on the browser and i didn't know how to work it like i couldn't figure out how to operate how long it was and i was like oh my gosh I'm screwed forever that was well so four days we'll say in a coma maybe two days in the hospital then I got home the next day so a week after whoa but I couldn't lay on my left side I couldn't sleep on my left side cuz I would feel like I was gonna throw up like there was just all these weird little things but they just got all gone I still don't sleep on my left side but I don't know if it's because of that or not really yeah but uh yeah but I can everything else I haven't noticed any longer term side effects you got so lucky like look I'm like holy cow I dodged seven bullets oh my god that brain damage and losing my wife those are my two fears yeah tell me about it crazy yeah alright we've got another question here from Angela Monette Angela Monette Smith how flexible should you be with the direction of your brand or should you define the brand vision and not straight to catch the momentum age-old question and age-old debate I believe that the answer and I'm sorry that this isn't more direct is like you have to know the middle and like I don't know maybe I'm compared to being in a relationship right with your boyfriend and girlfriend and you got to know how far you want to bend to benefit the relationship and for them and you gotta know when it's time for you to say bye and only you know that nobody else knows that I've seen it all happened I've seen people refuse to let go of their brand values to the point where they run it directly into the ground I've seen people be too loose where it never gets off the ground you've seen I mean you got a look at you I've been using this example a lot lately but because it's so massive look at what's happening right now with Nike and Adidas and we're talking about Nike right arguably was the best brand in the world they did a little project with Kanye West he got a little squirrely they let him go they said you know what we don't need you who cares Kanye West goes over to adidas adidas explodes and adidas explodes off of influence or marketing meaning like artists and rappers and all these different people and based around Kanye West and the Jenners and the Kardashians insane right Nike who has had a tradition of never straying from nothing but elite athletes and running never we will never stray that's why they straight from Kanye West their latest campaign is with Travis Scott and Bella Hadid because now they're having to say oh crap we missed something and an adidas is on to stuff and their new collaboration is with Virgil who's a designer and they're you know like they're now Nike is saying oh like we gotta so there is no magic answer on that you have to feel it out for yourself but feel it like do something that feels out of your comfort zone if it felt bad don't do it again do you know hold tight if it feels like you're not growing loosen up like it's a constant it's an everyday thing there's not one thing can write in a mission statement and never stray from it's not that easy yeah it's interesting so when I think about mission to me it comes down to what are you willing to show up and fight for everyday even if you're failing right because the struggle is guaranteed but the success is not so if like building that business is just exciting enough for you that you want to do it no matter what you know hey I got to collect a paycheck and all that I get it but I went through the hardship of chasing the dollar instead of having a mission and steering by that and letting that be the filter by which I made decisions and it was a [ __ ] nightmare so I've learned the lesson on the opposite side of the coin which is you can have all the financial success in the world and still absolutely [ __ ] hate your life because you don't believe in what you're doing so true so for me with impact theory we have a mission and I would say if you have a mission don't ever stray from it you know not for any reason but make sure that your mission is very clear it's the absolute center of who you are so if we were to say young and reckless is actually about being able to help young people develop what they need to go and be successful with that whatever that is right to get out of the box the recklessness is about not letting society put some pressure on you to hold you down it's really defining your own life on your own terms bucking what everybody says is safe yeah okay that's that's a framework even I could get passionate about right like I could totally connect to that and be like okay I'm behind this [ __ ] brand let's do this yeah the path to me is irrelevant so the path right now may be streetwear yep but if you realize that there's something more empowering or just because one thing I want you to understand about this young entrepreneur here is he understands the business dynamics of his industry of his company insanely well I really fell in love with you at that dinner that we did where you just broke down like the clothing industry was like goddamn like from the retail perspective where it's going it was really incredible so he he understands all that he knows how to execute so if you needed to pivot because you saw like where the industry's going this doesn't make any sense to continue to invest in here like that's not my mission my mission isn't about clothes closes the path to my mission of helping them break the box and really do something that matters and you know control their life so when you have a mission that that's like that it's people focused it's broad enough that it doesn't require XYZ business dynamics so then I think you can stay true to the mission and so that's how I think about it here at impact theory is the studio is a path the mission is to pull people out of the matrix so to give them an empowering mindset so if I realize that the way that we're doing it now doesn't make any sense and then I'll switch gears but I think that if you can switch off of your mission too easily then it wasn't real to begin with um so or maybe it was too small like one thing that I would just put out there is like a lot of times people's mission is too small and too close minded of a mission and so it's too easy to deviate off of right and so everything is a threat to it and if that keeps happening maybe it's time to broaden your mission a little bit a quick example we have the time is like when I first came up with the concept for young and reckless the concept for the product was this I'm from Ohio there's no cool clothing options there it's just you take what you get in the mall in LA in New York people line up around the block for cool brands like supreme and all these cool street wear bands I want to create a brand that has that same feeling but is available to the kid in the mall the problem is over the years that model that there's no longer a market for that because most of those brands have started selling to the malls and social media has opened it up and that's just not reality anymore so now my strategy is I want to be able to make more fashion on-trend clothes that are really good really on trend really really cool but affordable because it's always been this mission if I want it to be accessible right it's all whether it's I want to create a cool brand and it's accessible or I want to create a really good valuable product for an accessible price but at the top of all of that the young and reckless brand mission statement has never changed it's always been to get young people to break out of the box in it and be what they want to be so it's like maybe you need to broaden you know the mission if you're keep getting jammed up too quickly I think cuz things will change you know know for sure that makes a lot of sense so where do you see yourself going from here what's the what is that plan to help people redefine themselves I think that like when I look at what I've done like truly what I've accomplished or like people that I have impacted I think that I've just scratched the surface and I think that you know now that I'm getting way more into this content stuff in the podcast stuff and I just think that my the drama universe will be ten times bigger in even a few years than it is or has been this whole time and I think that it's through like I said educating with the podcast and showing my video content and what I'm actually doing and building up the brand the young and reckless brand and I just think like I think that when you when young people think of me now they think like oh yeah I think he was on that TV show and he does that young and reckless thing that's pretty cool but what I would like them to think is like oh that's drama he I just watched his vlog last week and he just had Tom on his podcast and he just you know he just went on a rant about marketing and the blah blah blah and like he really I know him I have a relationship with him and this is what he's doing and there's charity elements and he's helping people start businesses whatever it is I just think that like when you think of me I'll be a lot more meaningful to people and a lot more relatable and a lot it'll be a lot clearer in a few years and I'll just build on that as I go that's my life goal is to do that what role does music play and what you guys are doing so music we work with a lot of music artists with what we do the reason why to be 100% honest with you is because I really personally am drawn to it and I'm really drawn to like the hunger especially in rap music especially with a lot of these young rappers and they just portray the hunger so well and on top of all that it's cool because one thing that I always argue too is at the end of the day I'm not really running a media company yet or I'm running a clothing company and I have to work with people that look cool right so you have to be you know people have to want to dress like the guy in my photos right it can't be a guy sitting at a laptop unfortunately with our new teacher nobody's gonna buy it so it's kind of like how do you wear my real sweet spot is right now is young hungry passionate people that look really cool and music artists are a lot of those people yeah music is something that I I know we had talked about and possibly even doing some sort of collaboration music to me is is a driver of community and so what I mean by that is we're trying to do the same we call impact house which to create the studio the way that we want we really need to involve a lot of creative people that are hungry to do something really amazing that are looking for collaborators that are looking for inspiration that are looking to be a part of something bigger that's really a cultural movement and so the is powerful as the Internet is and as powerful as social media is I think the real juice is when you connect like you and I connecting in real life right so bringing people together here at the house doing sort of creative salons and the vision was always to bring in a musical act someone up-and-coming create a space where they could perform get people attracted to that and then you have like the you know the breakout sessions you've got musicians celebrating the Hunger the whatever and then you've got that break out of and now let's really create something yeah yeah it's just cool it's a cool it's just cool the same way it's cool to have at a party or cool to have at an event it's cool to have in your clothes and it's a cool story to tell and I think that it's a really easy and I just love it like I said I used to want to be a music producer you know and I just you were DJing for a while working so the first thing was I was actually producing music I was making beats and sending him out every day and I was calling myself drama beats and I was and I really thought I was the next Scott Storch right and then I kind of tried DJing a little bit and whatever but they just weren't connecting him there wasn't fun the way it was going I just didn't like it but I just have such a passion for it and for creating a song and what goes into that and just the passion of these young artists and I don't know it's just something I'm really drawn to all right we have another fan question yeah this one is from Carlos Becerra drama you mentioned that you tried several of the businesses in the past did you at that time think of bringing value to the people or what was the purpose so when we were back making burritos yeah what not as much I will say that I do think that as I've gotten older I've understood the concept of of sort of bringing value to people more more than just like a product I used to kind of look at it as like now you create a cool business it's cost-effective you sell it here which still works for a lot of people but now I'm much more driven by that value concept so the answer is what changed in you by the way well I think I've matured you know I just think that like when you're young and you're just kind of looking at what people are doing because I don't think they teach that enough right like I think that if you go to business school I've never been I'm just guessing they teach margins and distribution and maybe the concept of the business and the creative knowledge stuff but they don't know that the concept of really adding value to people and asking them to buy product in exchange is taught yet properly so I just think I got older and I realized that that is what really works and that's what people really resonate with and the reason why we had so much success on our TV shows was because we were creating entertainment value for people and they were inspired by the episodes we were doing in the stuff we were doing an intern they were buying our products and they were subscribing to sort of our lifestyle you know and I just think I understood that more as I as I got older so the answer what is not really like I wanted to be a music producer what's the value you're really creating I wanted people to dance in the club to my stuff I wanted microwave burritos I just saw the opportunity that our demographic are a bunch of like young college kids who are probably going to 7-eleven and grabbing some microwave burritos so I want to create a cool brand that was it was cheeseburger flavored Pizza flavored it was kind of like this Corky burrito thing who taught you to think about demographics and stuff like that where'd you learn that like I didn't learn that stuff till way later I don't know I think it just made sense to me I think it just made sense I think that that's why I am where I am that's the part I don't know that's the part that I think that's in me and that's what sort of carried me to where I am because I started think I was gonna be a professional skateboarder then I thought I was gonna work at a skateboard shop then I thought I had no idea but but there's been this element of me that's just kind of followed instincts learned and then viciously applied how do you go from thinking you're gonna work at a skate shop which is essentially a minimum wage like that to really dreaming big and becoming an entrepreneur this is why I love that that's my whole point my brain couldn't think more than working at a skate shop like I my dream I remember sitting on my friend's roof in Akron Ohio a week before I left to move to LA and I said man six months from now I'm gonna have my studio apartment we're gonna be able to drink all the beer we want I'm gonna have a full-time gig at this skate shop out in the valley and like we can just skateboard on the weekends and sell skateboards during the week and it was a dream come true right and it's just that my mind opened up you know you just see things you see what's possible you see that they're not saying you were seeing was was what was going on with Rob like yeah with Rob I had all these other friends that were you know you just become friends with I had one friend who was making music for a up-and-coming rap group and all the stuff that Rob was doing and just all of our circle there was just so much happening there's so much happening in LA and you just see like well I don't know if this guy can do it and this guy can do it then why can't I do it and is that the big hurdle for you you just never thought that that was something a kid from Akron did yeah you just don't I think that and that I think that that's how a lot a lot a lot of young people are is they dream and they watch a lot of garyvee and they do all this stuff but they they don't actually believe that they can do it and I just wasn't you on the podcast the other day on Joe Rogan's podcast that said you told a kid he could have whatever you want and he said a million dollars yeah it's exactly that it's exactly that and it's sort of like not only saying you can have more but look at these people that are having more look at us we're just two normal guys sitting here having a conversation right some people look at us like oh they have it all figured out they had some gifts or they have whatever and it's just not that's what I'm trying to break down right you know and so yeah I don't know that that's that's why I love that because that was my wildest dream and now the thought of working is obviously you know makes so what's something in becoming an entrepreneur that surprised you that you want anybody out there considering becoming an entrepreneur to know just that you can do it and that like you just gotta pay attention and like I said be humble and learn and apply it but nobody's nobody's that smart like nobody's that you know I mean even me I go in every week to our office and I'm like well I don't know let's try this alright like here's our plan we got a pretty good inkling that it's the right you know we think we know why we're doing this but let's go for it and I've watched people build massive businesses and that stuff and it's just from collecting information and taking your best shot at it and I think that people underestimate like I said their own power and their own ability to to do stuff yeah you know know for sure alright so unfortunately we are running out of time getting the segment come back at like 3 a.m. just give me a call my man I like careful and careful what you offer here we go we need so everybody dramas gonna be back at 3:00 a.m. if you join us dude this was awesome thank you so much for coming on and guys check out what he's doing at young and reckless I'm telling you after being on his podcast after going out with him to dinner after spending time with him here at the house like really getting to know who he is as a person I think what he's doing is incredible not only is he executing well but the changing vision of what the company can be and how it can help people I think is really really cool I think this is a brand to watch an entrepreneur who's now getting out there and letting you learn with him in real time is super super cool I love it a very welcome voice in the podcast world and thank you again for having me Amin was incredible yes and thank you for being here thank you hopefully we'll we'll see you back here 3 a.m. and don't forget guys do we have a winner on the segment yet we do up there it is ok so the winner of the amazing young and reckless swag is Mike Burkhart yay Mike and Mike is an active member of the community so there it is so super excited Mike well played and you know something that I don't I don't even know what number do you know what number of your podcast I was 61 62 62 for the answer that is for the win well well played I'm at it all right well brother thank you so so much you