Search:

Bay Dreams Co-founder Mitch Lowe - Controversy, Fisher In NZ & MILLIONS LOST!

May 21, 202501:55:40
00:00:06
Mitch Low, welcome to my podcast. Oh,
00:00:08
mate, thanks for having me. It's great
00:00:10
to have you here. It's on a Sunday
00:00:11
morning as well, so um you're a concert
00:00:14
promoter, so I'm guessing Saturday
00:00:16
night, this is what I imagine Saturday
00:00:17
night looked for you. Some some
00:00:18
ketamine, some MD, maybe two hours
00:00:21
sleep, and then you're here. Spot on. 10
00:00:23
years ago. 10. Yeah. Um, unfortunat last
00:00:27
night for me was uh was was even harder
00:00:29
than that. It was uh I I had my 9month
00:00:32
old baby waking up a few times
00:00:33
throughout the night, but um I'm in the
00:00:34
middle of 75 hard, so I'm not doing
00:00:36
anything unusual partywise at the
00:00:38
moment. So, all right. You did 75 Hard
00:00:40
last year as well. Yeah. Why are you
00:00:41
doing it again? I decided once a year is
00:00:43
is what I will be doing from now on. Um,
00:00:46
I'm all or nothing sort of guy. So,
00:00:48
it's, you know, summer was wild and I
00:00:52
just looked forward to getting back to
00:00:54
Yeah. Bit of health and fitness. So,
00:00:56
every year. Are you pissing all the
00:00:58
time? Yeah.
00:01:01
That's funny. That's I always tell
00:01:02
people that's the hardest part is trying
00:01:03
to drink three and a half lers of water
00:01:04
every day. It's so much water. Yes. So,
00:01:07
75 hard 75day challenge. Um, you drink
00:01:10
heaps of water, read 10 pages of some
00:01:13
sort of self-help book, two workouts a
00:01:15
day. One of them has to be outside.
00:01:16
Yeah. Um what else is there? Have you
00:01:19
done it? No. Okay. You know a lot about
00:01:20
it. Yeah. It's um that's it. I swapped
00:01:22
the reading for learning Turkish cuz my
00:01:24
wife's Turkish and I want my baby to to
00:01:26
be bilingual. So um so I'm learning
00:01:28
Turkish every day. And yeah, it's
00:01:31
basically the water, the workout,
00:01:32
learning something. Um there's phase
00:01:34
two, which I should be doing, is it's
00:01:36
like cold shower, manifestation, all
00:01:38
visualization, all that. But I'm sort of
00:01:40
I'm just repeating phase one every year.
00:01:42
I think that's enough. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
00:01:44
I know it's a lot. And um if if you And
00:01:47
you need some sort of diet as well. And
00:01:49
also no alcohol or anything. Yeah.
00:01:50
Sorry. Alcohol. And if you if you if you
00:01:53
slip up at any stage, you're supposed to
00:01:55
reset and go back to day zero. Exactly.
00:01:57
Exactly. Exactly. So I'm And I'm want to
00:02:01
make sure that I that I nail it. So I'm
00:02:03
Yeah, I'm I'm I'm all in, but I've only
00:02:05
got 18 days left. Oh, you're crushing
00:02:08
it. Who's Who's counting? Yeah. Yeah.
00:02:09
Wow. Um Okay. So, who is Mitch Low and
00:02:12
what is your company Aiology?
00:02:14
Uh I am primarily yeah m in the music
00:02:18
promotions game. So I'd um call myself a
00:02:20
promoter but trying to be many other
00:02:22
things I guess these days. Uh over the
00:02:24
last 15 years it's sort of progressed
00:02:25
into lots of companies and offshoots of
00:02:27
of music. Um and more recently a
00:02:31
restaurant and um done a tech company
00:02:34
and I've done uh yeah just it's mate I'm
00:02:38
just I'm I'm all over the show. So, I
00:02:40
guess I'm just an entrepreneur that's um
00:02:41
trying to make the most out of life at
00:02:44
at this stage and um yeah, recently
00:02:46
become a family man, had a baby and just
00:02:49
enjoying the the new challenges, you
00:02:51
know, that we go through every day.
00:02:52
Yeah, you fit a lot in E. You get a lot
00:02:54
done. Like, if I asked you to like run
00:02:56
through the 30 companies you've got,
00:02:58
would you be able to name them? No, no.
00:03:01
Oh, no. No, not
00:03:04
like it's so many. I'm not I'm not that
00:03:05
good. But no, it's um yeah, I do I do
00:03:08
fit a lot in. Um I still trying to
00:03:12
figure out figure out how, but it's just
00:03:13
it's just all go all go every day. And
00:03:16
um I I try to do things I enjoy, you
00:03:18
know? So it's not um yeah, every day
00:03:22
fitting a lot in but but loving what I
00:03:23
do. So if you're passionate about it,
00:03:25
it's um yeah, I know it's cliche, but it
00:03:27
it doesn't really feel like work. I'm
00:03:28
just always on. Yeah. Well, yeah.
00:03:31
There's that saying, if you if you enjoy
00:03:32
what you do, you never work a day in
00:03:34
your life. Exactly. Um, yeah, I'm
00:03:36
excited to like unpack the the Mitchell
00:03:38
story and sort of deconstruct your
00:03:39
success and try and get a peek inside
00:03:41
that brain. Um, but I think it's worth
00:03:44
mentioning you're um in a group of
00:03:46
people that have like messaged me about
00:03:48
coming on the podcast. Um, which I find
00:03:50
super inspiring. When I when I first
00:03:52
started the podcast and that happened um
00:03:54
I found it really weird. I thought, oh,
00:03:56
you know, that's uh, you know, it was
00:03:58
quite confrontational. The more I think
00:04:00
about it, I realize it's that's a me
00:04:01
problem and that's a tall poppy thing.
00:04:03
Yeah. So now when someone messages me
00:04:05
like you did about coming on, I um I
00:04:07
find it super inspiring. I appreciate
00:04:09
that. Yeah. Why did you aren't you busy
00:04:11
enough? Yeah. No. No. It's interesting
00:04:12
that that you say that because the the
00:04:14
flip side of that is is someone like
00:04:16
myself feeling like, am I worthy of
00:04:18
being on a podcast? You know, so you've
00:04:20
always got this imposter syndrome where
00:04:21
like, have I achieved enough to have a
00:04:23
conversation with someone like you
00:04:24
that's done so much? So, it's sort of
00:04:26
it's it's ironic that people sit with
00:04:28
these feelings, but the reality is like
00:04:30
we all want to connect, you know, and
00:04:32
we've all got something valuable to say.
00:04:33
So, I guess I got I only got to a point
00:04:35
in the last year and you can see if you
00:04:37
go back on my socials, I was I was never
00:04:39
faced a camera. Like people knew
00:04:40
aiology. People didn't know that I owned
00:04:42
it. Um and I just made this decision
00:04:44
that I I'm comfortable enough or
00:04:47
confident enough now to be a brand to be
00:04:49
a part of my brand. Um, and you know
00:04:52
that comes with its its pros and cons as
00:04:54
as you would know being, you know, a
00:04:56
person that is sort of more face to
00:04:57
camera. But it's I just made the
00:04:59
decision that I want to link with good
00:05:01
people when the worst case scenario, you
00:05:03
know, worst case scenario is I just look
00:05:04
like an idiot on on a podcast. But best
00:05:06
case scenario is I inspire some other
00:05:09
people to take the chances that I took,
00:05:11
you know, dropping out of school and and
00:05:13
starting companies and saying yes to too
00:05:15
many things and just give another side
00:05:18
of it, you know, like and and just show
00:05:20
that if you fail enough times, you can
00:05:21
succeed. So hopefully um that's the
00:05:25
direction it takes. Well, full full
00:05:26
respect. Full respect. And another thing
00:05:28
that's worth mentioning um you've done
00:05:29
this uh Michaela Blight uh double gold
00:05:32
medalist, you know, New Zealand rugby
00:05:34
sevens legend. She did this as well. you
00:05:36
you sent me like a detailed list of like
00:05:37
bullet points about potential things
00:05:40
that we could we could cover. Um which
00:05:42
is awesome as well. It's great. Um I you
00:05:46
we've got a mutual friend uh Mitch
00:05:48
James. Um I I messaged him yesterday to
00:05:50
say you were coming on the podcast and
00:05:52
he sent me back like a two-minute long
00:05:53
voice note. Um he he he calls you goat
00:05:56
low. He does. Yeah. The greatest of all
00:05:58
time. Um I won't play you the whole
00:06:00
voice note, but the um I'll paraphrase
00:06:02
it. Uh he doesn't see limitations or
00:06:04
boundaries and he loves to do the
00:06:06
impossible. Oh, that's a lot nicer than
00:06:08
I was expecting. No, no, he did he did
00:06:11
say something about you guys um you
00:06:13
running a muck in Sydney and taking
00:06:14
doors off a hotel room or something.
00:06:16
Look, look, there's there's there's a
00:06:18
few stories there. Uh but no, look, he's
00:06:21
what he's one of my best mates. We've
00:06:22
got a his last ever show coming up.
00:06:24
There's a lot there's a long history
00:06:25
there which is which is incredible
00:06:27
because um cuz we partnered up and you
00:06:29
know built his career together and we
00:06:31
just became absolute best mates
00:06:33
inseparable and he went off on another
00:06:34
journey and um and now we've come back
00:06:37
together eight years later to do his
00:06:39
last ever show and see him off in the
00:06:41
music game. So, it's it's actually like
00:06:43
super emotional ending. Um, and but he's
00:06:46
just still throughout all of the drama
00:06:49
and everything we've been through, he's
00:06:50
still just my best mate. And so, he's um
00:06:53
I call him Goat James. And that's yeah,
00:06:55
goat logo goat James. And we just we
00:06:57
just took on the world. We were just
00:06:58
young out of control, you know,
00:07:02
20-year-old, well, mid20. Well, he's
00:07:03
younger than me, but you know, we were
00:07:05
just um we were just out there trying to
00:07:06
achieve the impossible. And he he always
00:07:09
had the same vision that I did.
00:07:11
And was it was it you that linked him up
00:07:13
with Ed Sheeran to be the opening act
00:07:15
for Ed Sheeran on his New Zealand shows?
00:07:17
Yeah, it was like it was a series of
00:07:19
events, but um but effectively we we
00:07:22
partnered with someone in Australia that
00:07:24
then did the Ed Sheeran shows and that
00:07:25
that sort of got him that that
00:07:27
supporting slot. um mind-blowing meeting
00:07:29
Ed Sheeran and going on that tour that
00:07:31
you know that for me was like a really
00:07:33
pivotal like wow like what we're doing
00:07:36
is actually you know it's before that
00:07:38
you know doing doing lots of club shows
00:07:39
and bringing international artists but
00:07:41
being in the presence of Ed who's
00:07:43
borderline number one in the world for
00:07:45
for so long that was um that was a huge
00:07:48
achievement for us. Yeah. Was it just
00:07:50
one of those moments where you realize
00:07:51
okay there's levels to the game and
00:07:52
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And and that doesn't
00:07:54
mean that, you know, I'm not at that
00:07:55
level. I'm not touring those acts that
00:07:58
are selling out three stadiums, but um
00:08:00
just to even be a part of it was is more
00:08:03
than enough for me. And you know, that's
00:08:05
a memory that I I could retire on that
00:08:07
memory. Well, you you I mean, you've
00:08:09
you're no slouch yourself. Like you've
00:08:10
brought some impressive people to New
00:08:12
Zealand. And we we'll get into that
00:08:13
later. But um first of all, it's a real
00:08:15
simple question and a yes or no answer.
00:08:17
Did you smoke weed with Snoop? No, sadly
00:08:20
not. That was the goal cuz I reckon even
00:08:24
if you're if you're a non-smoker, you
00:08:26
you wouldn't pass up that opportunity.
00:08:27
It's iconic. No, no, it was honestly it
00:08:30
was just tough to get any time with
00:08:32
Snoop. Like we we just met him. He said
00:08:34
thanks and um but trust me that was that
00:08:37
was on the bucket list.
00:08:39
Um so I live just around the corner from
00:08:41
the the studio we're in at the moment.
00:08:42
I've I've got an apartment that
00:08:43
overlooks Victoria Park. There was a big
00:08:46
concert that you put on there at the
00:08:47
beginning of um 2025, a guy called
00:08:49
Fischer, and I'm showing my age here. I
00:08:51
I I had no idea. I had no idea who he
00:08:53
was. Um but I could see the week leading
00:08:56
up to the concert um the the temporary
00:08:58
effect fences because it's not a
00:08:59
traditional concert venue. The temporary
00:09:00
fences being erected around the outside
00:09:02
like a over a kilometer worth of fences
00:09:04
and then portaloos coming in, temporary
00:09:06
bars, marquees, everything. Then the
00:09:09
show was on and then 3 hours later it
00:09:11
was all it was all done. And it looked
00:09:12
like a tremendous amount of work for a
00:09:14
like a very very short quick fix event.
00:09:17
Yeah. Um so yeah, what are the inner
00:09:20
workings of of a show like that? So you
00:09:21
start with the artist. Start with the
00:09:23
artist and you know taking Fisher as an
00:09:26
example. We were on his team's case
00:09:28
since 2018. So that's almost you know
00:09:31
six plus years of until we actually
00:09:33
delivered it. So, uh, yeah, start with
00:09:36
the artist, eventually get the deal
00:09:37
done, get the terms right, and then, uh,
00:09:39
for us it was about taking an artist
00:09:41
that he had been here, but never since
00:09:43
he had blown up. So, it was taking this
00:09:45
iconic artist and putting him into like
00:09:46
an iconic venue. Uh, and we were the
00:09:48
first to ever get Victoria Park and get
00:09:51
the consent to do a a actual festival
00:09:53
there, which was the first one was
00:09:54
called Plane Sailing, but basically
00:09:56
we've got the consent to do it one show
00:09:58
there a year. And um so I think when you
00:10:01
marry things up like when you take an
00:10:02
act like Fischer and you put them into a
00:10:04
venue that's that iconic in in the sense
00:10:08
that it's like the Central Park of
00:10:09
Oakland and nothing much happens there
00:10:12
music-wise. Um it just was a perfect
00:10:15
recipe. The right dates, beautiful
00:10:16
weather, like everything just Yeah, that
00:10:18
was a that was a magic show that one.
00:10:20
Oh, it was incredible. Um I watched it
00:10:22
from my my balcony and I could see
00:10:24
people coming and then leaving and it
00:10:25
was all very orderly. Um, and it was
00:10:27
wonderful, but it just seemed like such
00:10:29
a insane amount of work for an event
00:10:31
that only went for a few hours. So, so
00:10:33
you lock in Fisher, so he he gets a flat
00:10:35
fee regardless of how many tickets get
00:10:37
sold. How does that work? No, a lot of
00:10:39
um Yeah. So, not many people understand
00:10:41
how this works. But on on a smaller
00:10:42
scale artist, you've got just what's
00:10:43
called a guarantee. So, it's just a flat
00:10:45
fee. Whatever happens happens. Uh, when
00:10:46
you get to the bigger artist, there's
00:10:48
either a bonus structure or it's called
00:10:50
a versus deal, which could be 80 20 80
00:10:52
20 80% to the artist, 20% to promoter.
00:10:55
Um, as the artist gets progressively
00:10:57
bigger, they can start demanding things
00:10:58
like 9010s and when you get to Edge
00:11:00
Sharon's level, I'm sure you could do
00:11:02
982s if you wanted to. So, because it's
00:11:04
guaranteed sellout. So, um, the
00:11:06
structures are they're forever changing.
00:11:08
Um, but effectively, yeah, for that one,
00:11:10
it was it was structured based on the
00:11:12
sales and our goal was to do 20,000
00:11:15
tickets and and we smashed that. So, um,
00:11:18
yeah, very like just just a win a win
00:11:20
for everyone involved, you know, which
00:11:22
is not always the case when it comes to
00:11:24
to promoting. How do you know if you're
00:11:26
going to make make money on it? Like, do
00:11:27
do you is is it like sort of gut and
00:11:30
just like cross your fingers and hope?
00:11:32
Like, is it afterwards that you tally
00:11:33
all the invoices and stuff and you work
00:11:35
out if you've made a profit or a loss or
00:11:37
Yeah, I mean, very detailed forecasting
00:11:39
and 15 years of doing it, you get a
00:11:40
little a little better, I guess. But um
00:11:42
I've always I've always said it's
00:11:44
calculated gambling and and anyone that
00:11:46
says it's not. Any promoter that thinks
00:11:48
they've got a bulletproof solution would
00:11:50
be lying because it's um you can look at
00:11:52
the data all you want. So we take the
00:11:54
stats, you know, we know how many
00:11:55
listeners the artist has in a city. We
00:11:57
know how many Tik Tok fans or followers
00:11:58
or Instagram follow. We know all the
00:12:00
stats, but sometimes you get artists
00:12:02
that have all the stats that flop. You
00:12:03
know, no one no one wants to see them
00:12:05
live. I've seen that happen tons of
00:12:07
times. And um so there is a level of
00:12:09
this gut feeling where we just knew that
00:12:12
Fisher hasn't been here in that long.
00:12:14
We're going to put him in that venue on
00:12:15
that day and this is going to work. Like
00:12:16
it's it's and we were just all in. Um
00:12:19
and a show like that is even even for a
00:12:21
large company, a show like that can be
00:12:23
make or break. So, there is there's
00:12:25
still an element of gambling there, you
00:12:26
know, because it's uh we're just I mean,
00:12:29
you do the math on, you know, of if
00:12:31
you're 3,000 tickets short at 200 bucks
00:12:33
a ticket versus 5,000 tickets over, like
00:12:36
the variables are just crazy. Um, but
00:12:39
honestly, with Fisher, we were just all
00:12:41
in. Um, we we just had a really good
00:12:43
feeling about it. The we knew the break
00:12:45
even that the only thing you know from
00:12:47
the start is we need 18,000 tickets,
00:12:49
let's try get 23 or we need 10, let's
00:12:52
try get 15. That's what you know.
00:12:54
God, it's not for the faint, eh? No. No.
00:12:57
But but are you at a point now where um
00:12:58
your company aiology is like so big that
00:13:01
you you know one one failed show is not
00:13:03
going to you know bankrupt you or
00:13:04
[ __ ] the company? Yeah. Yeah. I mean
00:13:06
to to a certain degree it because it has
00:13:08
before. I've lost everything five or six
00:13:10
times. So it's not um but no we're at a
00:13:14
point now where we wouldn't take a risk
00:13:16
of a scale that would completely
00:13:18
liquidate the business, you know, which
00:13:19
you've seen with some festivals. So,
00:13:20
we're always um and I don't operate the
00:13:24
same way I used to because I've got a
00:13:26
family now and you know, so I'm a little
00:13:28
I'm still crazy. Um I'm risk prone, but
00:13:32
at the same time, I've just got to be a
00:13:33
little smarter now. So, we Yeah, we make
00:13:36
we make smarter decisions, I guess.
00:13:38
Yeah. Let's talk about that for a
00:13:39
second. Yeah. So, you're you're a dad
00:13:40
now. You got a daughter called Ka who's
00:13:43
eight months, nine months. Nine months.
00:13:45
Yeah. What was um what was that birth
00:13:46
experience like? What was that? Was it
00:13:48
Were you there? Was it a profound? Oh, I
00:13:50
was I was I was in there. Yeah, it was
00:13:52
um it was everything. I mean, not it was
00:13:56
completely different to the movies,
00:13:58
right? So, I'm glad we did like we we
00:13:59
did antiatal and we like it's not like,
00:14:02
"Oh, your water's broken." And you rush
00:14:03
out there, but um it was more like, you
00:14:06
know, as I was making dinner, water
00:14:08
breaks, call the midwife. Oh, okay. We
00:14:10
should probably get you in in the next
00:14:11
24 hours. Oh, just casual as you know,
00:14:13
like because they've done it so many
00:14:14
times. Um but you know that yeah our our
00:14:18
journey was was relatively standard in
00:14:20
the sense that we um you know water
00:14:22
broke went to the hospital and then it
00:14:24
was 14 hours I think of of labor which
00:14:27
is you know long but not I've heard I've
00:14:31
heard of much uh wilder stories and yeah
00:14:34
and then eventually you go through just
00:14:37
the most intense the most intense 14
00:14:38
hours of my life. Um, and then this man,
00:14:42
this baby comes out and it's just the
00:14:44
most crazy feel. That's just the one
00:14:47
thing I miss. Like if anyone's when I
00:14:49
hear of like my friends having kids and
00:14:51
stuff like it's almost you forget all
00:14:54
the wild chaos around it and it's just
00:14:57
that that feeling of when your child is
00:14:59
born is like yeah it was it was
00:15:02
mind-blowing. Um, which I think's the
00:15:05
only reason why we'd Yeah, we're already
00:15:07
talking about having another one, which
00:15:08
is like it's kind of I I don't know how
00:15:11
that h it's like you're wired to forget
00:15:12
what we you know, you forget what you
00:15:14
went through. The trauma. The trauma.
00:15:16
It's It's incredible that you can forget
00:15:18
that, but has it has it changed you in
00:15:20
any way? Definitely. Definitely. Yeah.
00:15:23
Yeah. It's um I mean obviously it's
00:15:26
changed the day-to-day life you know and
00:15:28
in the sense of um how you know my
00:15:31
movements and um and and trying to be
00:15:33
there for my daughter and I want to be a
00:15:35
really present dad you know which when
00:15:36
you're running companies and you're
00:15:38
trying to stay fit and you're trying to
00:15:39
fit all these things in your day but
00:15:41
also be present um that's that's an
00:15:43
ongoing challenge and something that I
00:15:45
enjoy the challenge of it um but also
00:15:47
it's changed it's it's just another
00:15:49
reason to live you sort of forget you
00:15:51
forget what you know I can't remember
00:15:54
what I was doing before. It's going like
00:15:56
where where did this time come from? And
00:15:57
and now when I'm building things and if
00:16:00
I if I'm developing a property or I'm
00:16:02
getting us like a you know trying to get
00:16:03
us a holiday home or something, it's all
00:16:06
with Kaire in mind. It's it's crazy
00:16:08
because she's going to get all the
00:16:09
benefits of everything that we're
00:16:10
setting up. It's just another re it's
00:16:12
just motivated me to do um to do more
00:16:15
which on one hand I thought we were
00:16:18
going to have this baby and I was going
00:16:19
to pull back on everything. I actually I
00:16:22
actually intended on selling out of as
00:16:24
much stuff as I could and just keeping
00:16:25
sort of like a few things on the side
00:16:27
and it was man had this baby and I was
00:16:30
like I got like a a new wind you know I
00:16:32
felt like a fresh entrepreneur again
00:16:34
like ready to take on take on more so
00:16:37
yeah I mean life changing is 100%. I
00:16:40
mean, what about you? And you you're
00:16:41
married, eh? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
00:16:43
What's the um what's the meat kit? How
00:16:44
long have you guys been together? We got
00:16:47
married December 202. So, yeah, two and
00:16:50
a half years of marriage. Been together
00:16:53
for closer to six. Uh so, still yeah,
00:16:57
still relatively fresh. How did you
00:16:58
meet?
00:17:02
Um we originally met because Ael had a
00:17:07
ticketing business. Um, and that would
00:17:08
have been, you know, 10 years ago, we
00:17:10
just ran into each other as like she was
00:17:11
pitching for my ticketing. Um, and then
00:17:14
never saw each other again. Um, and both
00:17:16
of us had, you know, both of us were in
00:17:19
sort of long-term relationships. She was
00:17:20
in America. I was, uh, I'd been living
00:17:24
in Sydney, but I was back in NZ at this
00:17:26
point. And I just decided, yeah, we I
00:17:31
just decided to reach out one day. She
00:17:32
had won, you know, she was winning all
00:17:34
these awards, and I was like, who is
00:17:35
this? I I because we followed each
00:17:37
other's journey, right? Because it's
00:17:38
crazy. You meet once and then you're
00:17:39
linked on Instagram for life. LinkedIn.
00:17:41
Um LinkedIn. Yeah. Yeah. Um and I just
00:17:44
remember watching Aelle just so you know
00:17:46
just those god, oh man, New Zealander of
00:17:49
the year, this this and this and like um
00:17:52
I was just so impressed by her. I mean
00:17:54
obviously she's insanely beautiful, but
00:17:56
it was I was so impressed with like what
00:17:58
she was achieving and and uh I don't
00:18:00
know. One day I just I was like, "Mom,
00:18:02
do you think this is someone?" I
00:18:03
remember pulling her up on Instagram and
00:18:05
saying to my mom, "Do you think this is
00:18:06
someone I should talk to?" And and she's
00:18:08
like, "You know, absolutely." And then I
00:18:10
set up a fake business meeting. Um, so
00:18:13
because that's why I started this tech
00:18:14
company. So I I I reached out to Ael
00:18:17
knowing that she had done ticketing. I
00:18:18
said, "Hey, can I can we have a coffee
00:18:19
when you're next in New Zealand?" And um
00:18:22
and chat about what it's like to start a
00:18:24
tech company. You know, the craziest
00:18:26
part about that meeting is, um, she
00:18:28
laughs about this all the time, is like
00:18:30
I I got the vibe that she knew that it
00:18:34
was a bit of like, oh, they was
00:18:35
flirting, you know, but she turned up
00:18:36
and I ordered a glass of red wine and
00:18:38
she and I don't even drink wine and she
00:18:40
ordered a coffee and then it was just a
00:18:43
semi-awward me sitting there with this
00:18:45
red wine trying to turn it into a date.
00:18:47
Um, not a Yeah. Not a vibe at all. But
00:18:51
some somehow I managed to pull it back.
00:18:53
Yeah. Well, that's interesting. Yeah.
00:18:54
Cuz I wondered how the dynamic of that
00:18:56
relationship worked like cuz you're a
00:18:57
you know an all gas no breaks sort of
00:19:00
guy but it sounds like she's sort of cut
00:19:02
from the same cloth as well. Yeah. Yeah.
00:19:04
And honestly that was the part of that
00:19:06
conversation with mom was man we both
00:19:08
live such busy lives. Do you reckon this
00:19:09
could ever could ever work? And it was
00:19:11
more a case of just give it a chance,
00:19:12
you know, and and obviously I didn't
00:19:15
know much about Aelle outside of her
00:19:18
success in her businesses and whatnot,
00:19:20
but um from the moment we linked, you
00:19:22
know, she's just such a warm, kind
00:19:25
person, you know? So, it was straight
00:19:27
away, I mean, what more could you want?
00:19:29
I was like, this is this is going to
00:19:30
work regardless of how busy each other
00:19:32
are. And um and it did. it it was that
00:19:36
was never still now we've both got our
00:19:40
individual projects but also we've got a
00:19:42
lot that we work on together there's so
00:19:44
much overlap um and there's so much
00:19:46
throughout our day where we're doing
00:19:48
things together you know as opposed to
00:19:50
separately um so I think that's I don't
00:19:52
know if that's part of the solution but
00:19:53
it's we're very I'm helping her with her
00:19:56
companies she's always giving me advice
00:19:58
on mine that's that's that's how a
00:20:00
partnership you know should be how how
00:20:02
long was it before you laughed about the
00:20:03
red wine incident
00:20:05
Oh,
00:20:06
it's so embarrassing. Yeah. Yeah, it
00:20:08
was. Um Oh, within within the second or
00:20:11
third date because we we hit it on the
00:20:15
So, that happened and how's this for
00:20:17
backing it up with an even worse
00:20:18
situation. Well, could could have been
00:20:20
catastrophic, but it worked out on the
00:20:23
So, then we linked up again like a fake
00:20:24
second business meeting where we're sort
00:20:26
of, you know, bit more bit more uh
00:20:28
flirting going on. Um, but the third the
00:20:30
third time we linked up, I said, "Hey,
00:20:32
I'm going to take you to a bushf, which
00:20:33
is this party that I ran out in 24-hour
00:20:36
parties out in the bush. You get you get
00:20:37
texts on the day, the location, and you
00:20:39
just and so as comes from this corporate
00:20:42
background, and 3 days later, I've got
00:20:45
her in like fishnet stockings out in
00:20:46
this out in the middle of the W cut
00:20:49
like, and I just I just knew it was make
00:20:51
or break. Either she's going to
00:20:52
absolutely love this. It's going to be
00:20:54
the best experience of her life because
00:20:55
she's never done this. she's never
00:20:57
partied. She's never been out with a
00:20:58
promoter, you know, or um or she's going
00:21:02
to absolutely hate it and just think
00:21:03
that my friends are nuts because you're
00:21:05
all just dressed up partying for 24
00:21:06
hours. Um and yeah, just man, thank God
00:21:09
that it was it was the uh the first
00:21:11
option there. So, she just ended up
00:21:12
having the best night of her life and
00:21:14
from that point, literally inseparable.
00:21:17
I introduced her as my wife that night
00:21:19
and then um I think a week later was
00:21:22
lockdown. She came down to Toadonger and
00:21:24
was stuck. Wow. You think that wasn't
00:21:27
tactical but it was it stuck with me.
00:21:30
Yeah. It's funny. Lockdown a lot of
00:21:31
people seem to have that experience
00:21:32
where and it's like it's going to make
00:21:34
or break the relationship. Yeah. Yeah.
00:21:36
Um yeah, you mentioned your mom before
00:21:37
too. That sounds like a nice
00:21:39
relationship with your with your mom
00:21:40
like her being your your wing woman.
00:21:42
Yeah. In a way. Yeah. So let's go let's
00:21:45
go back and talk about your upbringing.
00:21:46
So yeah. Are you from Toadonga? No, no,
00:21:49
no. I'm actually South African. So um
00:21:51
moved from my parents, you know, the
00:21:54
classic, they just wanted a better life
00:21:55
for us. They saw what was happening in
00:21:56
South Africa at the time. Um so I was 9
00:21:58
years old. Moved to Oakland. Um yeah,
00:22:02
I'd say my upbringing would, you know,
00:22:04
very much Howick East Oakland
00:22:06
upbringing, you know. Um and yeah, from
00:22:10
from there went over the ditch and lived
00:22:13
in Sydney for five years. And um cut a
00:22:16
long story short, eventually um ended up
00:22:18
back in in the mount when I when I left
00:22:20
Sydney cuz Bayreams ended up taking off
00:22:22
in New Zealand and I had to move back.
00:22:24
So um yeah, I'm I'm a South African Kiwi
00:22:28
Australian, right? And um must have been
00:22:31
good values in your household because
00:22:32
I've heard you say like your your
00:22:34
favorite word so like your north star is
00:22:36
integrity.
00:22:38
Yeah. Is that is that from your
00:22:39
upbringing?
00:22:41
Yeah. Yeah. 100%. I mean, I'm always um
00:22:44
you know, super proud of my family and
00:22:46
and super proud of, you know, where I'm
00:22:48
from and uh yeah, I mean, mom's always
00:22:51
instilled that in us, you know, but uh
00:22:53
yeah, I I don't know. I don't know why
00:22:55
that was such a big thing for me. Like,
00:22:57
I just I just remember get getting into
00:22:59
the music industry and there was, you
00:23:01
know, a few wild things that happened at
00:23:03
the start in terms of just realizing how
00:23:06
people operate in this game. you know,
00:23:08
it's very it's very, you know, cutthroat
00:23:11
and it's very like walk on top of
00:23:13
others, you know, or push them down to I
00:23:15
don't know. I I just remember going, if
00:23:17
I'm going to do this and I'm going to
00:23:18
get into the music game, I I I want to
00:23:21
operate with integrity and um and see
00:23:24
see if I can do it another way, you
00:23:26
know, and sort of just bring something
00:23:27
different to the to the keeping in mind
00:23:30
that was like the underground like night
00:23:32
clubbing scene that I was in back then.
00:23:33
It wasn't these sort of like the big pop
00:23:35
concerts, but um yeah, it was just I
00:23:39
just remember that being a huge thing
00:23:40
for me, you know, I guess. Yeah, all
00:23:43
family influence, friends influence.
00:23:45
Like I guess I was surrounded by good
00:23:46
people and um yeah, still still got the
00:23:49
same, you know, very proudly I still
00:23:51
have the same friend group from when I
00:23:52
was 12 now. So, it's kind of like it's
00:23:54
just such a good such a good group of us
00:23:56
and yeah, it speaks volumes and um
00:23:58
integrity is a great word, but you know,
00:24:00
when the stakes get higher and you know,
00:24:02
money becomes involved like I'd imagine
00:24:04
it's hard to stick to that sometimes.
00:24:06
Oh, yeah. 100%. But that's especially
00:24:08
when everyone when not everyone around
00:24:10
you, but other people around you aren't
00:24:11
playing, you know, the same playbook.
00:24:12
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And that's why I think
00:24:14
it's um that's why I think integrity is
00:24:16
such an incredible term or word or or
00:24:18
goal because it's it's extremely hard to
00:24:21
always to always operate with 100%
00:24:23
integrity, right? We're all going to
00:24:25
made tons of mistakes. But I think just
00:24:27
having it like you said is that north
00:24:29
star. Like what a cool what a cool goal,
00:24:31
you know, like what's it's like a word
00:24:33
that for me just encompasses everything
00:24:35
that that as humans we we should strive
00:24:38
to be. It's it doesn't mean, you know, I
00:24:40
wouldn't say that I've got 100%
00:24:41
integrity. I say that I try I try my
00:24:43
best, but the fact that it, you know, it
00:24:46
just reminds me to work with honesty and
00:24:48
and often in this game, you're faced
00:24:50
you're faced with a a choice a lot of
00:24:52
the time. And sometimes there's an easy
00:24:53
path and I can make the money and I can,
00:24:55
you know, and sometimes there's a harder
00:24:57
path and my go-to always now will be the
00:25:00
harder path. Um, you know, even it's a
00:25:04
longer road, but you know, the reward's
00:25:06
greater at the end. Yeah. And you can
00:25:07
sleep better at night. Yeah. Yeah. Um,
00:25:09
so you told your parents when you were
00:25:11
14 that you wanted to work for yourself.
00:25:12
What did you think that was going to be?
00:25:14
Did you have an idea? No, I didn't have
00:25:17
an idea of what it would be. I mean, I
00:25:18
was, you know, buying $2 BB guns and
00:25:22
selling them for $7 on TradeMe, and I
00:25:24
was just, you know, little I get that a
00:25:26
little bit from my from my dad. Um, and
00:25:28
so always sort of just hustling. Um, so
00:25:31
I didn't know I didn't know what it
00:25:33
would be. I just knew that I would
00:25:34
somehow find a business. And the funny
00:25:37
thing is it was it was never about
00:25:41
anything. I guess there's an element of
00:25:43
like always wanting to prove people
00:25:44
wrong and I was always the naughty kid
00:25:45
in school and you know there's you want
00:25:47
to even you even want to prove your
00:25:48
family wrong you know because I come
00:25:50
from quite a um you know I take a lot of
00:25:53
risk. Well my mom's a from banking like
00:25:56
she's she's the opposite of that. So
00:25:57
like it's all I'm going to take these
00:25:59
risks and I'm going to prove everyone
00:26:00
wrong. Um but yeah, I guess um for me it
00:26:04
wasn't about what I did. It was I just
00:26:07
remember looking at people that had
00:26:09
their own businesses that had the
00:26:11
freedom to travel and all I ever wanted
00:26:13
was to travel. Like we from a family of
00:26:16
four boys and we didn't we didn't get to
00:26:18
go on overseas holidays and stuff when
00:26:20
we were younger and um not not hard done
00:26:22
by but like I just remember looking at
00:26:24
travel as the that was like the goal. if
00:26:28
I could travel, if I could just I don't
00:26:30
didn't want to have $100 million. I just
00:26:32
wanted enough money where I could travel
00:26:34
freely and all I did thankfully found
00:26:38
promoting because all I did for 10 years
00:26:39
was literally just I was on planes on $7
00:26:43
standby flights because I was on my you
00:26:44
know I couldn't afford travel but I
00:26:46
found ways where I was I was going to
00:26:49
festivals overseas and I you know my my
00:26:51
friend who worked for the airline was
00:26:52
giving me these standby travel flights.
00:26:55
you'd sit there and wait, see if you're
00:26:56
going to get on the flight. Um, and that
00:26:58
was my life for 10 years. I got to see
00:27:00
the world. I got to experience other
00:27:01
festivals and I got to bring some of
00:27:03
those ideas back to NZ. And I've heard
00:27:06
you say in other podcasts that you've um
00:27:07
you've got ADHD or ADHD traits. Have
00:27:10
Have you been diagnosed or? Uh, no. We
00:27:12
um we did some pre-marriage counseling.
00:27:15
Um, and yeah, this it's funny because
00:27:18
this was only this only four maybe four
00:27:20
years ago. Um, and we did this like
00:27:23
intensive three-day, you know, we just
00:27:25
we we just wanted to do this course and
00:27:27
just be um the best, you know, husband
00:27:30
and wife that we could be. So, it was a
00:27:32
very intensive, you know, 8 hours a day
00:27:34
for 3 days vibe. And um I was just I was
00:27:37
just rambling on about something and
00:27:38
this, you know, and the um she's a fully
00:27:42
registered trained, you know,
00:27:44
psychologist or counselor or whatever it
00:27:46
was, but she um yeah, she's like, "Can I
00:27:48
she's like, "Can I stop you there?" you
00:27:49
know, and and because I was trying to
00:27:50
work out why my brain's just so all over
00:27:53
the place and why there's so many tabs
00:27:55
open all the time and and she was a my
00:27:58
parents thought I had ADHD when I was a
00:27:59
kid, etc., etc. She was the first person
00:28:02
that said, "Hey, like I just want you to
00:28:03
know like you've got ADHD and these are
00:28:06
these are the traits and um and I went
00:28:08
from there to that was the first thing
00:28:11
that happened." And then around that
00:28:12
same time, I was in this uh group chat
00:28:14
with the people that I work with. Um so
00:28:17
aiology runs 150 shows a year and
00:28:20
there's five of us that work on it.
00:28:22
Okay. And um they somehow the topic
00:28:26
popped up and and I was like, man, how
00:28:29
are we like, you know, well done, guys.
00:28:31
How are we achieving all this stuff? And
00:28:32
they're like, oh, you know, that we've
00:28:33
all got ADHD, right? So, so four of
00:28:35
them, four of them out of the five, me
00:28:37
being the fifth. Um they're like, yeah,
00:28:40
and I mean 100% like you should take
00:28:41
this test. And I ended up just I I
00:28:42
remember just spent I spent one night
00:28:44
just doing all these tests and scoring
00:28:46
like 19 out of 21, you know, on and just
00:28:48
being like, whoa. So if I the word had
00:28:51
been thrown around, but I'd never
00:28:53
genuinely cared enough to actually look
00:28:56
at it and and then when I yes did all
00:28:59
those tests, accepted that it was a
00:29:01
possibility, you know. Um I did actually
00:29:04
sign up for the it takes like a year
00:29:07
plus to get diagnosed in New Zealand and
00:29:08
I you know I sort of put my name on the
00:29:10
list and everything but um yeah I sort
00:29:13
of that that was the moment where I was
00:29:15
like okay well now what if I look at
00:29:16
some of the ways to to manage this and I
00:29:19
started like implementing some of these
00:29:21
you know strategies to like manage my
00:29:23
life and it's been 10 times better ever
00:29:26
since. No, no medication or anything,
00:29:27
but just but just, you know, small
00:29:30
structural ways of like um when you've
00:29:33
got a lot on, just being able to, you
00:29:36
know, just sort of understand it all a
00:29:38
little bit better and slow down. Yeah, I
00:29:41
think there's um I mean, the the
00:29:42
testing's never been better. So, there's
00:29:44
a better understanding about it, but um
00:29:45
this is how it was when I was at school
00:29:47
and probably the same for you. Like, it
00:29:48
was generally like just disruptive kids
00:29:50
in class, usually boys. That's they were
00:29:53
the ADHD kids, the random kids. Um but
00:29:55
yeah there's never been a greater
00:29:57
understanding but you um yeah you were
00:29:59
no good at school e like there was one
00:30:01
term that you like wagged at 80 classes.
00:30:04
Yeah. Were you just what did did it just
00:30:06
that sort of style of learning just not
00:30:08
gel with you or Yeah. Yeah. It it was I
00:30:11
mean I'm still not huge on the schooling
00:30:14
system. Right. So um is it not set up
00:30:16
for people like you? No. No. Well, it's
00:30:18
it's I mean it's factually not because
00:30:20
you you see the results of um a lot of I
00:30:24
mean if you just take my friend circle
00:30:26
for example, most of the ones that are
00:30:27
running really successful businesses and
00:30:30
you know that are super entrepreneurial
00:30:31
and super more sort of um
00:30:35
extroverted um not that that plays a
00:30:38
part but like they yeah those are all
00:30:41
those are all my mates that dropped out
00:30:42
when they were 15 you know from school
00:30:44
or the ones that were always in trouble
00:30:45
always um yeah who who just didn't fit
00:30:48
into the system. And I guess I was just
00:30:50
one of those that was every every school
00:30:52
report is, you know, Mitch has so much
00:30:55
potential, but if he just, you know,
00:30:58
he's so distracted or he's like um Yeah.
00:31:01
And I like I was relatively naughty, but
00:31:04
not not intentionally, you know. It was
00:31:07
kind of like I don't even know. I just
00:31:10
What's sort of naughty? I was like, no,
00:31:12
exact No, exactly that. like instead of
00:31:14
going to like a science class, I'm out
00:31:16
drifting my car during during lunchtime.
00:31:19
Like it's just that's just who we were.
00:31:21
That that's that's just Yeah. It's um
00:31:23
Yeah. You want to do what's going to
00:31:24
spin your wheels. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No
00:31:26
pun
00:31:28
intended. So Yeah. And and look, I still
00:31:30
it was one of those weird ones where I
00:31:32
still had like awesome relationships
00:31:33
with the teachers and um you know, I'm
00:31:35
I'm almost certain they knew that I was
00:31:37
signing my my parents signatures every
00:31:39
time. And um uh you know it was yeah it
00:31:42
was funny when my mom found about you
00:31:44
knowund and something letters that I'd
00:31:46
forged. Um but um no it was yeah look I
00:31:50
was just loud and distracted but I I
00:31:51
knew I think I knew what I wanted and
00:31:53
that that's the part that really got me
00:31:55
at school. It's like I I knew I don't
00:31:57
need to be learning this to achieve what
00:31:59
I want to achieve, you know, and I think
00:32:02
there's still elements of truth to that
00:32:04
now. Yeah. I I don't know if the New
00:32:06
Zealand I mean I'm sure there there are
00:32:07
some really super inspiring teachers out
00:32:09
there that that are doing a great job,
00:32:10
but I think for the most part the New
00:32:12
Zealand school system is not set up for
00:32:13
dreamers and big thinkers. I had sir do
00:32:16
you know Sir Peter Beck, you know,
00:32:17
Rocket Lab? Yeah. Yeah. I had him on the
00:32:19
podcast earlier this year and he he told
00:32:21
me about a parent teacher interview when
00:32:22
he was like 14 or 15 and um the the
00:32:25
teacher said to his parents, "Oh, Peter
00:32:27
thinks he's going to send rockets into
00:32:28
space. He's very smart, but we need to
00:32:29
manage his expectations. Maybe maybe he
00:32:32
could get a job at the aluminium
00:32:33
smelter." Um and he and he said his his
00:32:35
parents they were just silent on the way
00:32:37
home and then his dad was like well [ __ ]
00:32:38
them. Oh which is really cool. I get
00:32:40
goosebumps just telling the story. I
00:32:42
love it. I love it. Billionaire like
00:32:44
he's um yeah we've got this amazing the
00:32:46
space company. It's incredible. Oh it is
00:32:48
amazing. And there's so many stories
00:32:50
like that and that's that's why I guess
00:32:51
it's um yeah that's why I truly still
00:32:55
believe that that there's an issue in
00:32:57
today's society with with the whole
00:32:59
schooling system as well. You know it's
00:33:00
not just when I was at school but I mean
00:33:01
I think it's been there forever.
00:33:03
So you had a couple of jobs. You worked
00:33:05
in um the butchery at Wworth and Amazon
00:33:08
Surf and Skate. Yeah. Skate and then um
00:33:11
then a design course at Polytech which
00:33:13
you loved. Yes. Yeah. Yes. I mean that
00:33:16
the example of um I guess which backs up
00:33:19
what I'm saying is you know struggled at
00:33:21
school wagging every you know wagging
00:33:23
periods trying to get out of there. Um
00:33:25
and then uh I I mean I I got just enough
00:33:28
qualification to get early acceptance
00:33:30
into this design school. So instead of
00:33:32
doing seventh form, I was straight into
00:33:34
um um nold design college. And so from
00:33:38
going from being that kid, you know,
00:33:39
this naughty distracted kid that wags
00:33:41
every period to then I got 100%
00:33:43
attendance at um my design school the
00:33:45
entire year, never missed a day. In
00:33:47
fact, I turned up two hours early every
00:33:48
day. Um mainly because I needed to get a
00:33:50
ride with my mom into town. But um but
00:33:53
it was just the stark contrast of you
00:33:56
take me out of that setting and put me
00:33:57
somewhere where I just wanted to be a
00:33:59
designer, you know? I just I was just
00:34:01
obsessed with graphic design is a
00:34:03
creative outlet, you know. So, it was um
00:34:06
I guess it was it was almost in a way
00:34:08
proving to myself that I could be what I
00:34:11
was telling this, you know, sort of
00:34:14
saying that I that I could do this and
00:34:16
and went off and did it. So, half the
00:34:18
time I'm probably just trying to prove
00:34:19
to myself that I can do things. But I
00:34:21
think that's an ADHD thing as well,
00:34:23
isn't it? You can hyperfixate on
00:34:24
something that you're really into. Yeah.
00:34:26
Yeah. Yeah. And and then you um so
00:34:28
you're 18 and you launched a clothing
00:34:30
line called how do you say it? How do
00:34:31
you ASAP? ASAP. A ye sap. ASAP. Um and
00:34:35
is this sort of the beginning of Mitch
00:34:37
the promoter? Yeah. Yeah, it is. It is.
00:34:39
So um yeah, so the you know the butchery
00:34:42
job was just in school when I was 15 to,
00:34:44
you know, earn 30 bucks a week and put
00:34:46
gas in my car. And then um and then that
00:34:49
second job at Amazon was sort of you
00:34:52
know straight after studying design
00:34:54
going into Amazon and um and then
00:34:58
creating I mean getting obsessed with
00:35:01
clothes whilst I'm there creating a
00:35:03
clothing label um which is ASAP and uh
00:35:07
realizing that it actually takes money
00:35:09
to run a business and just sort of
00:35:11
struggling like just the the real real
00:35:13
hustle of having no money but trying to
00:35:17
um run a you know print some shirts and
00:35:21
then try facilitate getting them into
00:35:23
like I was friends with the guys at
00:35:24
Bordertown and they sort of at least I
00:35:26
had a bit of an outlet there trying to
00:35:27
sell online trying to do it all myself
00:35:30
um and effectively realizing that it's
00:35:32
very hard to do business that was my
00:35:34
like shock entrance into the business
00:35:36
world um and but the one amazing thing
00:35:40
that came from that like many people who
00:35:42
accidentally fall into business or
00:35:44
certain companies um was that I threw a
00:35:47
launch party for the brand because
00:35:50
that's all I could think of that doesn't
00:35:52
cost me money. I just got my friends to
00:35:54
sell $10 tickets to their mates. So, um
00:35:57
so I knew the one thing I did have was a
00:35:59
network of good friends. And so, you
00:36:02
know, if I ask you to sell I just said
00:36:03
if you sell 10 tickets to your mate at
00:36:05
10 bucks each, you get a free ticket.
00:36:07
And um you know that's if if I had 20
00:36:11
mates doing that you know and sort of
00:36:13
create this little snowball effect and
00:36:15
you know and when you're young it's
00:36:16
quite easy to get people to a party that
00:36:18
becomes very hard later on but uh so
00:36:22
yeah cut a long story short this launch
00:36:23
party man imagine me as a kid that's
00:36:26
just had no money losing money you know
00:36:28
18 losing money on clothing and I throw
00:36:31
this launch party and there's 600 people
00:36:32
there on K Road and I and it was just
00:36:36
just a bender really. Like I just, you
00:36:39
know, 5:00 a.m. just stumbling out of
00:36:40
there and um maybe the party must have
00:36:44
cost me two grand cuz I ended up with
00:36:45
like four grand profit and I was like
00:36:48
this is the dream. Like I just had the
00:36:50
best night of my life and I woke up with
00:36:51
four grand. I don't even think I'd ever
00:36:53
had four grand before. Um I had a $600
00:36:55
car. So um that was that was the
00:36:58
beginning of being a promoter. Was that
00:37:00
like a like an aha moment? 100%. 100%.
00:37:04
That was I mean it was again it's
00:37:07
probably far-fetched to think that you
00:37:09
can make money on this party you know in
00:37:11
my head what if I can do that next
00:37:13
weekend if I can do that the weekend
00:37:14
after. So yeah but I knew that it was
00:37:17
what I wanted to do. Um if you think
00:37:19
about what I do and you know the way
00:37:22
that my brain works it's you I I need to
00:37:26
run a business where it's consistently
00:37:27
like project based and just leading on
00:37:29
to the next thing. So, you know, we
00:37:31
talked about Fisher. It's it's it's book
00:37:34
the act, put all this work into it,
00:37:36
deliver it, and then it's done. It's
00:37:38
gone. You never like then all it's just
00:37:39
a memory. It's just it's just, you know,
00:37:40
but then you're on to the next thing.
00:37:42
And so, you're constantly chasing the
00:37:43
dragon. You're chasing this high of like
00:37:44
what's the next thing? And and it works
00:37:47
perfectly for me. Like, it's just I
00:37:49
think I was just designed to be a music
00:37:52
promoter because it's just I love the
00:37:54
chase. Yeah. Because there's no there's
00:37:56
no blueprint for that. E there's no
00:37:58
course, you know. There's
00:38:00
no I mean I suppose you could get a job
00:38:02
at Live Nation or like Frontier Touring
00:38:05
or something and learn the ropes, but
00:38:07
it's not something that anyone sort of
00:38:08
thinks to do as a career path, I guess.
00:38:11
Yeah. Yeah. Which is interesting because
00:38:12
that's um one of the most common
00:38:15
messages I get and I and I I try to
00:38:18
reply to any, you know, any young person
00:38:21
at school that's going to go get out
00:38:22
there and they're like, "What's the
00:38:23
process? What what what should I do?
00:38:26
Should I go to uni?" And you know, it's
00:38:28
like the last thing I say is go study
00:38:30
event management at UD. You know, right
00:38:32
now, get together a group of friends and
00:38:35
throw a party at some pub down the road
00:38:38
the same way that I did and get your
00:38:39
mates to sell $10 tickets and sell it
00:38:41
out and continue to try to do that. And
00:38:45
you will learn along the way what works
00:38:47
and what didn't. You know, like that I
00:38:49
had a hundred shows that didn't work.
00:38:51
Um, but eventually you click on to what
00:38:53
does. Yeah. You're getting new reps in,
00:38:55
aren't you? Yeah. Yeah. Um, so was this
00:38:57
the birth of aiology?
00:38:59
It was. It was, but not in the not in
00:39:02
the sense that you know it now, but it
00:39:03
was u it was the birth of an under 18
00:39:06
sort of event business. So I was doing
00:39:07
um Splurge music festival and uh and
00:39:10
that's because it it operated on the
00:39:12
system of getting reps to sell tickets.
00:39:14
Um so so I I realized there was a real
00:39:17
opportunity there which is getting
00:39:18
school kids to sell tickets to school
00:39:20
kids and eventually you know it's 15 16
00:39:22
17 year olds. um very intense intense
00:39:27
way to get into it because you require a
00:39:29
lot of event management and and security
00:39:31
and and in terms of when you're looking
00:39:33
at patrons that are under 18, you know,
00:39:35
but but it was yeah, so yeah, single
00:39:39
swim really and um and and just built
00:39:41
built that up until it was operating
00:39:43
around New Zealand in a few spots, you
00:39:45
know. So there was at one point there
00:39:46
was Splurge Levven, which is where
00:39:48
you're from, isn't it? Yeah, I was born
00:39:50
in there. There we go. Really? I I once
00:39:52
that's how that's how wide I was trying
00:39:53
to So, there was Yeah. Toonga, Oakland,
00:39:55
Wellington, Christ Church. We sort of
00:39:57
got around. Um, but that was a great way
00:39:59
for me to it was a great entry into the
00:40:02
scene because if you can break that
00:40:03
market and then eventually, you know,
00:40:05
I'm I'm 18, 19, 20. I wanted to start
00:40:07
doing proper club nights. That was the
00:40:09
birth of aiology then when we started
00:40:10
doing those club nights. You've been
00:40:13
doing this a long time now, eh? It's
00:40:14
like half your life you've been doing
00:40:15
this. Yeah. Yeah. Which is crazy. Um,
00:40:17
and your biggest success story, I'd say,
00:40:19
is probably Bay Dreams. That's what
00:40:20
you're best known for. Would you say?
00:40:23
Would you say? Would that be fair to
00:40:24
say? I think it ted on me. Uh, look,
00:40:28
it's it it was I would say it's the
00:40:30
biggest success story in terms of the
00:40:31
way that it unfolded. It's not um, you
00:40:35
know, it's I don't know. It's a it's an
00:40:37
interesting relationship I have with
00:40:38
Bayreams now because of just everything
00:40:40
that unfolded and the you know, the this
00:40:43
the breakup and everything that happened
00:40:44
with it. But the it is something I'll
00:40:47
always look back on. And the reason I'll
00:40:49
never remove this tattoo is because it
00:40:51
it was a pivotal moment where I stepped
00:40:53
up from just doing like some smaller
00:40:55
headline shows to like hey let's have a
00:40:57
crack at a full festival. So I yeah
00:41:00
absolutely adore like just the I mean
00:41:03
for a brand in two years to become the
00:41:05
biggest festival in New Zealand was was
00:41:07
unheard of. I think it still holds the
00:41:09
still holds the record for the
00:41:10
trajectory and and stuff that in the way
00:41:12
that it happened. Um because it's it's
00:41:14
iconic like the reputation it's you know
00:41:15
it's up there with like rhythm and vines
00:41:17
or the big day outs or you know insert
00:41:19
name here like it's it's one of those
00:41:21
sort of things but you you weren't there
00:41:22
for the first one were you in India?
00:41:24
Yeah. So you put you're putting on a
00:41:26
festival and you're not even there. How
00:41:27
does that work? Oh look that cuz that
00:41:29
was a that man that that happened so
00:41:32
fast. So that was in I think it was like
00:41:35
August or September that we decided
00:41:37
we're going to give Bayreams a crack. By
00:41:41
October it was launched. It only had two
00:41:43
months until the 2nd of January when it
00:41:45
was, you know, we only had two months to
00:41:46
promote it or just over and I had
00:41:48
already locked in my cousin's wedding in
00:41:50
India at that point. So part of the
00:41:52
condition was like keen as to do this.
00:41:55
I'll give it my all. It was to city
00:41:57
council and stuff wanting us to put
00:41:59
Bayreams together because of remember
00:42:01
the chaos that it used to be near on the
00:42:03
street and the beach and so anyway, so I
00:42:05
was like I'll I'll give this my all.
00:42:07
I'll market you know the [ __ ] out of it.
00:42:08
But um unfortunately I'm going to be in
00:42:11
India. So, uh, so yeah, it was the
00:42:14
crazy, man. Such a fond memory is like
00:42:17
I'm riding a camel trying to get 3G
00:42:19
service holding my phone up because the
00:42:22
gates had opened and all I wanted was
00:42:24
for my event manager to just say like
00:42:26
it's all good cuz you just anxiety,
00:42:29
you're not there, right? So, you don't
00:42:30
know what's happening. It's pouring down
00:42:32
with rain. Um, and I remember just
00:42:34
calling just please tell me it's please
00:42:36
tell me it's all good. Yeah. So, I was I
00:42:38
was Camelback. So where are things at
00:42:41
with Bay Dreams now? Is it still your
00:42:43
baby? Yeah. Yeah. So what were you
00:42:45
talking about before the split and
00:42:47
stuff? Uh so yeah, we'll see how deep we
00:42:51
can get into this but um but yeah,
00:42:52
effectively four years ago um I split
00:42:55
with my partner that I started it with.
00:42:57
Um so there was some you know heavy
00:42:58
allegations and and basically we just I
00:43:02
just went the complete opposite
00:43:03
direction and that ended up being this a
00:43:06
monster monster fallout. took, you know,
00:43:07
a year of a year of accountants and
00:43:10
lawyers and just absolute just not
00:43:13
something I would ever want anyone to go
00:43:14
through. Um, but uh, yeah, it's we we
00:43:18
ended Was it was it just a case of, you
00:43:20
know, you think you know someone and
00:43:22
then, you know, you're on this integrity
00:43:24
path and they're potentially not? Yeah.
00:43:27
Yeah, it was. It was. Um and it's yeah
00:43:30
you sort of question everything after
00:43:32
that but it was it we were we were
00:43:35
definitely on different paths two
00:43:36
different people um and there were
00:43:38
elements that actually that's what
00:43:40
created you know success in some ways.
00:43:43
Um but it but it was definitely a case
00:43:45
of
00:43:46
of thinking yeah or or being manipulated
00:43:49
or or
00:43:51
or yeah it's really hard to it's hard to
00:43:55
know exactly um what happened but I
00:43:57
reflect on that a lot but it's um but
00:43:59
we're definitely two completely
00:44:00
different people. Um and then I started
00:44:02
you know people start to question you
00:44:04
when you're attached to someone like
00:44:05
that. So the the the fallout the fallout
00:44:08
was um was pretty big but we yeah I
00:44:13
basically just put did everything I
00:44:15
could to work through it in the best way
00:44:17
that I could you know so um we got out
00:44:20
the other end of that and that's why
00:44:22
it's this weird you know we ended up
00:44:24
with the brand um and I got a new
00:44:26
partner and you know so things were
00:44:28
positive in that regard but also it's
00:44:30
always it's always sort of tainted now.
00:44:32
Yeah tainted is the right word. tainted
00:44:35
um but also
00:44:37
uh you know it also left us quite
00:44:39
motivated to bring it back um and it's I
00:44:42
mean it's just had a year off so that's
00:44:43
why it's sort of strange timing because
00:44:45
we did Fisher replaced Bay Dreams the
00:44:47
year just gone so um we're yeah we're
00:44:50
looking at it for this upcoming summer
00:44:52
but there's another massive act that's
00:44:54
going to replace the sort of Fisher
00:44:57
model and I guess I guess we're in a
00:44:58
position now where we're almost
00:45:00
wondering have we just found a new model
00:45:02
because that was our most successful ful
00:45:03
summer we've ever had. And uh I don't
00:45:06
want to I don't want to get so attached
00:45:07
to brands that it actually ends up you
00:45:09
can sort of again like I was saying when
00:45:12
chase a dragon it's like especially with
00:45:14
me getting fixated on something you can
00:45:16
you can end up in dangerous territory
00:45:18
unless you are willing to be a bit
00:45:21
flexible you know find ways.
00:45:24
Um, so some something like that, like a
00:45:26
a split in a business partnership, which
00:45:28
by all account sounds like it was pretty
00:45:30
sort of nasty, like Yeah. How long does
00:45:33
it take to get over that? Do you ever
00:45:34
get over it? Have you got trust issues
00:45:37
now to a degree?
00:45:39
Yeah. Yeah, I mean, you you develop a
00:45:41
pretty you develop a pretty thick skin.
00:45:43
I think the I think there's an emotional
00:45:46
part of it that you'll never you'll
00:45:48
never get over, right? It was being
00:45:51
being dragged into it and then starting
00:45:53
to question yourself, you know, man like
00:45:55
like genuinely believing like I'm in
00:45:57
this to do the right thing and now now
00:45:59
look at me. I'm having to pitch in front
00:46:01
of a boardroom and explain to people
00:46:02
that I'm not him, you know, and and and
00:46:05
that's a really hard place for someone
00:46:08
like me that likes to pretend like I
00:46:10
don't care what people think but heavily
00:46:12
care what you know like it's everyone
00:46:13
does. Yeah. You know, everyone likes to
00:46:14
say that. Um and and so I was like, man,
00:46:18
just just that that reputational damage.
00:46:21
Um but I Yeah, it's it's like to give
00:46:25
you an example. I mean,
00:46:26
we're 3 and 1/2 years into this and, you
00:46:30
know, he's sent an email out from an
00:46:32
anonymous email of photos of me saying
00:46:36
things in group chats or like photos of,
00:46:39
you know, Mitch is doing drugs and and
00:46:41
like and sent it out to every council
00:46:43
and police member in New Zealand, you
00:46:45
know, and and this is only like 3 months
00:46:48
ago. So, you're still dealing you're
00:46:51
sort of like over one part, but there's
00:46:53
still this this hangover. there's still
00:46:54
this hangover there and and there's
00:46:56
there's some there's something new all
00:46:58
the time. Um but then I've always been
00:47:00
such a firm believer that karma takes
00:47:02
care of itself, you know. So I've it's
00:47:04
kind of I don't know action over action
00:47:05
over words. I mean, you know, obviously
00:47:07
I sent an email out saying this is this
00:47:10
is this is my ex- business partner and
00:47:12
and it's defamatory and whatnot, but but
00:47:14
also how nice is it to just wait and
00:47:17
then you just look at the collapse of
00:47:19
JuicyFest now and all and it's I just
00:47:21
knew that it would take care of itself
00:47:23
and um yeah, it's uh yeah, it's it's
00:47:28
been an interesting journey. Yeah, the
00:47:30
um the guy we're talking about, there
00:47:31
was a photo on Instagram a couple of
00:47:32
weeks ago of him um I think in Dubai or
00:47:35
somewhere with the tape brothers. You
00:47:37
see what I'm like the story literally
00:47:39
writes itself. I I there's nothing I
00:47:41
could do to make that situation any
00:47:43
worse. It's already But it seems like
00:47:45
you're two completely like polar
00:47:48
opposites in terms of on terms of people
00:47:50
and I suppose that's what you're saying
00:47:51
before like that can work from a
00:47:53
creative friction sort of perspective. M
00:47:56
um but yeah, did you not see that side
00:47:59
of him?
00:48:01
Uh so master master manipulator I I
00:48:06
would say and I'm not I I don't mean
00:48:07
that from a perspective of like an an
00:48:09
excuse, but it's when you deal with
00:48:12
someone that's uh say say there there's
00:48:17
definitely a side of them and there's
00:48:18
that there is that bad side and then
00:48:20
you've like with anyone, right? They're
00:48:22
always going to show you they're going
00:48:23
to put their best foot forward,
00:48:24
especially when you're getting into a
00:48:25
partnership. And that whole process was
00:48:27
him calling me up going, "I've changed.
00:48:30
I want to be a better man. I'm a family
00:48:32
man now. Let's like, you know, he
00:48:34
already had the bit of a reputation
00:48:36
before that." Um, and I am a sucker for
00:48:39
people that want to that want to be
00:48:40
better and want to do good, you know?
00:48:42
Like I I'm I just I see the good in
00:48:45
people. And it's that's how we got into
00:48:48
business. I man if you want to if you
00:48:49
want to change and you want to do this
00:48:51
let's do this you know like let's
00:48:52
everyone deserves a second chance sort
00:48:54
of vibe um and and I guess that's for a
00:48:58
few years there was a huge element of
00:48:59
that it would it would um often almost
00:49:02
confiding in me to you know it's almost
00:49:07
it was it almost felt like I was doing a
00:49:09
good service in terms of um you know in
00:49:12
terms of sitting down with someone and
00:49:14
and them asking my advice and what would
00:49:16
you do and Um, so there was, it's not
00:49:19
that I didn't understand there was a
00:49:20
side of him, but completely blindsided
00:49:24
by the depth of it and the and sort of
00:49:27
what unfolded, you know, like just m
00:49:31
Yeah. mind-blowing because 99% of that
00:49:35
stuff is I mean it's it's in private,
00:49:37
right? Like you don't know the
00:49:38
allegations and stuff that that that
00:49:40
came out were um were were Yeah.
00:49:46
And and it was and it was also at the
00:49:47
same time really hard to get out of a
00:49:50
business relationship because in in NZ
00:49:52
that the just the law around it is is
00:49:54
quite intense, you know, and and we had
00:49:56
to take a you can't just tell someone,
00:49:58
hey, I don't want to be in business with
00:49:59
you anymore and walk out. You got you
00:50:01
have 15 companies that have to be
00:50:02
legally separated, which means
00:50:04
effectively we had to we had to buy him
00:50:06
out. So imagine the process of buying
00:50:08
someone out at a multiple that they're
00:50:10
deciding.
00:50:11
It's a lot of untangling. It it was it
00:50:13
was a year of untangling. Um but still
00:50:17
the best thing I ever did and um and and
00:50:19
our businesses have, you know, since
00:50:21
since then have it's been a journey.
00:50:24
Yeah. Well, there's the you know, you
00:50:25
talked about karma before and like the
00:50:28
the truth and things generally always
00:50:30
comes out, doesn't it? Or cream rises to
00:50:32
the top. Yeah. Yeah. Whatever saying you
00:50:34
want to use. Yeah. Um Yeah. But the the
00:50:37
the emotional toll that that must have
00:50:39
taken on you personally though must have
00:50:40
been massive. It is. It is it is
00:50:43
massive. For sure. For sure. Um and
00:50:47
it's it's uh it doesn't just affect you
00:50:51
as well, right? it affects it's to see
00:50:54
the sort of flow on effect of it is you
00:50:57
know like my wife having to support me
00:50:59
through that or um the it's just it's
00:51:04
hard for anyone to deal with despite the
00:51:06
fact that I was you know obviously
00:51:07
trying to press on and like run these
00:51:09
companies and actually try from a
00:51:11
business perspective but it's yeah I
00:51:13
just think the emotional toll and the
00:51:15
way that it makes you act around people
00:51:17
and the way that it changes you as a
00:51:18
person is um yeah I'd say That's the
00:51:22
hardest part. Is that the biggest
00:51:23
adversity you've been through?
00:51:26
Yeah. H Well, there's
00:51:29
It's in the top 10. Oh, no. No. It's No,
00:51:32
it is it is it is the biggest It's the
00:51:33
biggest emotionally. I mean, I'm sure
00:51:35
I'm sure you know the story of um of
00:51:37
almost dying in Bali and and that's like
00:51:40
there's different types of adversity and
00:51:41
um I love how I'm a UFC nut and um
00:51:45
Alexander Vulcanowski said the other day
00:51:46
that adversity is a privilege and and
00:51:48
that stuck with me because it's if I
00:51:50
look at all of these situations, they're
00:51:52
they're all really different, but
00:51:53
they've all unfolded really well for me
00:51:57
in the end. But that's because you have
00:51:58
to treat adversity as as an opportunity
00:52:01
to genuinely get better. I didn't, you
00:52:04
know, when that whole thing unfolded,
00:52:06
didn't didn't go fake it and tick some
00:52:09
boxes. Like genuinely had to just go do
00:52:11
some work and figure out for myself, you
00:52:13
know, like you got to look inward in it.
00:52:16
Um, and that was the hardest part
00:52:17
because you start questioning yourself
00:52:18
and um but yeah, it's there's been a lot
00:52:22
of adversity in in in different ways and
00:52:24
um
00:52:25
yeah. Yeah, there's there's there's been
00:52:27
a few times that I've been in the media
00:52:28
for the wrong reasons and and a few
00:52:31
times that I've been in it for the
00:52:32
right, but it's I don't know. You you
00:52:34
get a pretty um thick skin on one hand
00:52:37
as well to Yeah. One of those one of
00:52:39
those media things. Um I I wasn't aware
00:52:41
of this until I um started googling you
00:52:44
uh in preparation for this podcast, but
00:52:46
the blackface thing um I I felt a bit
00:52:48
sorry for you with this. So you were
00:52:50
like 18 years old maybe. Yeah. And um
00:52:53
you and four other mates um are dressed
00:52:55
up as the Jackson 5. Yeah. Um and and
00:52:59
this came out
00:53:01
maybe 5 years ago. Yeah. So you're 18 at
00:53:04
the time when it happened, 30 when it
00:53:05
came out. Um now we all know now that
00:53:08
Blackface is is bad and and it's um it's
00:53:11
racist and we shouldn't do it. Um but at
00:53:14
at the time when you did it, I don't
00:53:15
think there was that sort of like
00:53:17
awareness and I don't believe there was
00:53:18
any malicious intent. Um, I I've even
00:53:20
done it myself once. Like I when I was
00:53:22
at at the Edge, we were doing a a p uh
00:53:25
like a party for I think it was bar 101
00:53:27
or something in Hamilton and it was like
00:53:29
a like a pop star party and I I dressed
00:53:31
up as Willam um for this like for this
00:53:35
sanctioned event. Um and I'm saying that
00:53:37
because that was peak black eyed peas
00:53:39
but at the time like no one flagged it.
00:53:41
No one from uh media works promotions
00:53:44
department, no one from this bar, uh no
00:53:46
one at the party. Um, so obviously now
00:53:50
like I'd be mortified if there was a
00:53:51
photo of it that surfaced because um, it
00:53:53
would really bite me in the ass in a bad
00:53:55
way. Um, but this would have been about
00:53:56
the same time you were doing the the
00:53:57
Jackson 5 thing. Yeah. And it seems it
00:54:00
it seems kind of unfair.
00:54:02
I don't know like to to to rake someone
00:54:05
over the coals for something when they
00:54:06
were completely naive and I suppose
00:54:09
ignorant to it at the time. Yeah. Yeah.
00:54:11
I I was that was probably the
00:54:13
first ma that was the first major bit of
00:54:16
adversity that I'd ever dealt with in
00:54:18
terms of the media and I was heartbroken
00:54:20
because before that I was like oh the
00:54:22
guy that did Bay dreams and and all of a
00:54:23
sudden you're just the blackface guy you
00:54:25
know and um and it it was dark because
00:54:28
again like you start questioning
00:54:30
yourself cuz I'm looking back at it and
00:54:32
it was it was my profile cover photo for
00:54:35
you know two years or whatever and and
00:54:36
that's hundreds of people thought it was
00:54:39
great and and um and then And I'm going
00:54:41
on the flip side like I I cuz I I didn't
00:54:44
understand it. But again, like go away,
00:54:46
do the work. Like 99% of people that
00:54:48
have an issue with it don't actually
00:54:49
know why. But I I I wanted to actually
00:54:52
go away and and heavily research and
00:54:55
understand why why I did was wrong
00:54:58
because it was literally I was so taken
00:55:00
back and the way that that unfolded was
00:55:03
two promoters that had an issue with me
00:55:05
surfaced it to to have a go. Right. So,
00:55:08
so I'm sitting there just trying to be
00:55:09
so defensive as I naturally am. Um, and
00:55:13
and yeah, again, like credit to to my
00:55:17
wife and just helping me through that
00:55:18
and and helping me see that I was at the
00:55:22
end of the day, I was completely in the
00:55:23
wrong regardless of regardless of the
00:55:26
timing or understanding it. It's just um
00:55:29
so look, I just issued an apology and um
00:55:32
that taught me a lot as well. That
00:55:34
taught me a lot to just take
00:55:35
accountability and just, you know, some
00:55:37
sometimes all you want to do is get your
00:55:38
guard up and go, well, you don't know
00:55:39
that it was a dress up com like like you
00:55:42
don't know that. Yeah. Try and add
00:55:44
context. Yeah. But there was um Yeah.
00:55:46
The the old uh USA President Ronald
00:55:48
Reagan, he um had a saying like
00:55:49
explaining is losing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
00:55:52
You're honestly and and and it has paid
00:55:54
off for me big time and I'm not good at
00:55:56
it and I'm getting better. But sometimes
00:55:58
take accountability and just apologize,
00:56:01
learn, and move on. And and you again
00:56:05
incredible part of that is you actually
00:56:09
I actually ended up building stronger
00:56:10
relation. So the the the people's
00:56:12
objective was to take me down. The
00:56:15
outcome of it was that I built stronger
00:56:17
relationships with people in media that
00:56:19
I've personally apologized to and um and
00:56:22
public publicly apologized and people go
00:56:25
you're just human you know and and so
00:56:27
the outcome with the fallout with my
00:56:29
business partner the blackface the
00:56:31
situation in Bali all these situations
00:56:34
that if if you treat it as a as a as an
00:56:36
opportunity to get better and um it's
00:56:39
it's always always worked out. So I'm
00:56:42
I'm a glass half full sort of guy when
00:56:43
it comes to that now. At the time I was
00:56:46
burying my head in a pillow just you
00:56:48
know crying. So it's um Yeah. Yeah. I
00:56:51
bet. I bet. I I um I can't imagine the
00:56:54
toll it that it took on your mental
00:56:56
health at the time. Yeah. Yeah. It was
00:57:00
It was pretty heavy. It was It was
00:57:02
definitely pretty heavy.
00:57:04
The the the barley thing you you you've
00:57:07
um alluded to a couple of times. I've
00:57:08
heard this on a couple of podcasts. So
00:57:09
you what what was it in a in a nutshell?
00:57:12
Basically, you um you had to leave Bali
00:57:15
in disguise like you could have been
00:57:16
thrown in a Balanese jail or or beaten
00:57:19
up or Yeah, that was a just a crazy
00:57:24
series of events which is um and I we'd
00:57:28
be here for two hours if I tell this
00:57:29
properly, but and everyone knows the
00:57:31
story now, but it but effectively yeah,
00:57:33
just corruption try to run a festival
00:57:35
and the corruption just it it took me to
00:57:37
the point where I was basically hiding
00:57:39
on an island and and escaped on a on a
00:57:41
jetboat and I I paid off the wrong
00:57:43
people and um and I was I was in the
00:57:45
news and um for nothing other than just
00:57:48
wanting to put on a party for people and
00:57:50
and people had flown in from around the
00:57:52
world and I just felt this immense
00:57:54
pressure to make it happen and I ended
00:57:56
up paying people to paid paid the
00:57:59
military to defend against the police.
00:58:01
Eventually the Navy came and arrested
00:58:03
the guy I was working with. I I escaped
00:58:05
on a jetboat and uh and got caught and
00:58:07
detained and eventually deported. Um,
00:58:11
so, wow. Are you allowed back in Bali?
00:58:13
No, I know. Funny funny funny story
00:58:16
there is, um, I I thought that I'd So,
00:58:20
they basically said you're blacklisted
00:58:22
for life, but then when I Googled it,
00:58:23
it's it was a normally it's a 5year
00:58:25
blacklist. So, 5 years later, I tried to
00:58:27
go back. Trust me, why would you tried
00:58:29
to go back for my friend's wedding and
00:58:31
um, I got off the plane and she swiped
00:58:32
my passport and her face went white. You
00:58:35
know, this is 5 and a half years later
00:58:37
or something. And then they just
00:58:39
detained me in a room instantly. And I
00:58:40
just went this I just this is it. Like
00:58:42
they've been waiting for me to come back
00:58:44
here and now they're going to put me in
00:58:45
prison because because they didn't they
00:58:48
wanted to get me in prison the first
00:58:49
time. Um and they just put me Yeah. I
00:58:53
had two choices. It was prison or it was
00:58:54
get back on the same literally back onto
00:58:56
the plane in the same seat that I was
00:58:57
in. Flew back to New Zealand. Um, and it
00:59:00
turns out that I was blacklisted with
00:59:02
like rapists and murderers and it's the
00:59:05
highest level of that's why she was like
00:59:07
she went ghosted and probably thought
00:59:09
that I was killed somebody or something.
00:59:10
So, um, yeah. And then the other day my
00:59:14
business partner who's over there, he he
00:59:16
go he goes, "Hey, I've met someone that
00:59:18
I think can wipe your blacklist." You
00:59:19
know, so he goes, "It's going to cost
00:59:22
four grand us." I went, "That's ironic.
00:59:24
It's the same amount of money I paid the
00:59:25
last person." You know, it's just this I
00:59:28
can't even explain the level of
00:59:29
corruption there. But so, but was it all
00:59:32
a misunderstanding or did you didn't do
00:59:34
anything wrong? No, no, we did. Oh, man.
00:59:37
It's like got the visas, we had the
00:59:39
right venue. They just they invented a
00:59:41
they invented this permit to start
00:59:42
getting money out of us. And what
00:59:44
started as five grand, 10 grand,
00:59:46
eventually we' paid, you know, thou tens
00:59:49
of thousands of US dollars to people,
00:59:52
including high level cops, including the
00:59:54
main person that was supposed to say
00:59:55
yes. Get around the boardroom table,
00:59:58
paid him the money, sign the form, and
00:59:59
he just goes, "I don't know what you're
01:00:00
talking about." And just the process
01:00:02
starts again. You got to pay them more
01:00:03
money. Wow. Just a corrupt system. Yeah.
01:00:07
Um there's there's a book I really like
01:00:08
called Extreme Ownership and uh it's by
01:00:10
this um guy Jo Willink and it's
01:00:12
basically in any situation you figure
01:00:14
out like what you did wrong or what part
01:00:16
of the blame you can take in it with
01:00:18
something like the barley thing like
01:00:20
what like what can you take from that
01:00:22
personally and do better with Yeah. And
01:00:25
we were just talking, you know, I was
01:00:27
saying that my what I again with that
01:00:30
Northstar being um integrity, it's like,
01:00:32
well, I should just be trying to take
01:00:34
accountability, right? And trying to
01:00:36
trying to figure out what part I played
01:00:37
in that, but it's I guess it goes back
01:00:40
to that I I probably never should have
01:00:43
jumped at that opportunity that someone
01:00:45
presented me. It was it was another
01:00:46
promoter that presented me with that
01:00:47
opportunity to go to Bali and run a
01:00:49
show, but I did no due diligence. I did
01:00:52
absolutely zero. I just said yes and
01:00:54
flew on the plane, you know, and so so I
01:00:58
need to learn something around the
01:00:59
decisions that I'm making and how, you
01:01:01
know, and actually putting a little bit
01:01:03
more thought into them. So, um, so, but
01:01:06
outside of that, I felt like we ticked
01:01:07
all the boxes. I felt like we were just
01:01:10
trying to do the right thing and throw
01:01:11
this party and then just got absolutely
01:01:13
swindled. Wow.
01:01:16
Costly lesson.
01:01:19
A lesson. A lesson nonetheless. I came
01:01:21
back with N. That was one of the times
01:01:22
that I came. You're talking about shows
01:01:24
that can completely completely end your
01:01:26
business. That was I came back with zero
01:01:28
dollars and had to restart aiology after
01:01:30
that. Wow. Yeah. Six occasions where
01:01:33
you've lost everything, right? Um what's
01:01:35
the most money you've lost on an event
01:01:36
and the most money you've made on an
01:01:38
event?
01:01:39
Uh, most money I've lost
01:01:43
on one show would
01:01:45
be close
01:01:48
to if if you're including like a brand
01:01:51
that was like a couple shows, you know,
01:01:52
probably 1.4 million, one and a half
01:01:55
million maybe. Um, definitely 7 800
01:01:58
grand on like one headline show a few
01:02:00
times. Um, you know, in the last sort of
01:02:02
10 years. Um, I won't say which acts
01:02:05
because then it makes them look bad, but
01:02:06
but there's been situations. This is
01:02:08
this is again my problem with jumping
01:02:10
into things too early. But I've booked
01:02:12
acts that I think are huge that because
01:02:14
I grew up on them and I've brought them
01:02:15
to New Zealand and lost 700 grand, you
01:02:18
know, and you're just sitting there
01:02:19
going that was an expensive party and an
01:02:21
expensive lesson for my friend. So are
01:02:23
you aware that that you've lost before
01:02:25
the event goes ahead? Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
01:02:27
Yeah. That's the craziest thing. You
01:02:28
still got to Yeah. still put a smile on
01:02:30
your face and make sure that it's still
01:02:32
and you still got to make sure say
01:02:33
you've reduced the venue like you know
01:02:36
that example I was giving before brought
01:02:38
an act planned on doing 15,000 people
01:02:40
outdoors ended up doing 6,000 people
01:02:42
indoors everyone else had an amazing
01:02:44
time you had an intimate experience with
01:02:46
an with this band or and you know you
01:02:48
got to sit there you know the days
01:02:51
leading in that you're either losing
01:02:52
half a million or a full million and
01:02:53
then you just go wondering which end of
01:02:55
the spectrum it is um and And to be
01:02:59
clear, at that we didn't have that money
01:03:03
to lose. You know, we're talking about
01:03:04
being a business. Um that that was one
01:03:06
of those bad decisions where like it
01:03:08
remortgage the house, which I've also
01:03:10
done a few times. Is is this just the
01:03:13
the cycle of the the nature of the
01:03:15
beast, the cycle of this sort of
01:03:16
business that you know you're going to
01:03:18
win two and then lose one? Yeah. Yeah.
01:03:21
Yeah. Again, it's that um if you compare
01:03:24
it to poker, you know, you're never
01:03:25
going to win a 100% of the time, but you
01:03:27
get better. you get better at this
01:03:28
calculated gambling situation and um you
01:03:32
know we're we're at a point where some
01:03:33
of our brands like Audiology. Um, so
01:03:36
Audiology does use it's more
01:03:39
specifically electronic music, but we've
01:03:40
got that niche and we sell out 95% of
01:03:43
the shows and it's just it's this
01:03:44
awesome little beast. And then trademark
01:03:46
mother the business does more the the
01:03:48
larger festivals. And so there I guess
01:03:51
we're lucky to be at a point now where
01:03:53
we're winning more than we're losing.
01:03:55
But it's yeah, you you will never ever
01:03:57
get them all and neither does Live
01:03:59
Nation and how many times do they bring
01:04:01
artists over that flop or cancel the
01:04:03
second Spark Arena show?
01:04:04
It's all good. It's just that's just how
01:04:06
it is. Like even the pros can't can't
01:04:08
get this right. And when everything goes
01:04:10
really well, like how much can you make
01:04:11
on an event? Like say the Fisher gig
01:04:13
that we've talked about. Um Yeah. Like
01:04:15
how much would the company make on that?
01:04:17
Um well there Yeah, there was two shows.
01:04:20
Um you can I mean not not that gig
01:04:23
specifically, but you can make a million
01:04:26
you can lose a million dollars on a show
01:04:27
that size or make a million dollars on a
01:04:29
show. And that's that's the variance.
01:04:31
Yeah. So when you're talking 30,000
01:04:33
people like Bayreams, um we've we've had
01:04:36
a Bayreams that's lost a million dollars
01:04:37
and we've had a Bay Dreams that's made a
01:04:39
million dollars. So um I would say
01:04:41
that's the spectrum when you get to 30
01:04:43
20 to 30,000 people. Amazing. Yeah. Oh,
01:04:46
let's um talk about some of the artists
01:04:48
that you've um brought to New Zealand
01:04:50
and um if there's a story to go along
01:04:51
with them, maybe you can share it.
01:04:54
Um some some of these um I've listened
01:04:57
to so many podcasts that you've been on,
01:04:58
so um that's amazing. I think I've
01:05:01
listened to every podcast you've done,
01:05:02
so I know there's a story for some of
01:05:03
them. We'll start with Omi. Do you
01:05:06
remember Omi?
01:05:07
The I'd say he's a one hit wonder. Maybe
01:05:10
1.5. He had a a song called Cheerleader
01:05:12
and another one called Hula Hoop. I
01:05:14
don't even know the other one. So that
01:05:15
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Good. Good on him. Um
01:05:18
that was Yeah. Yeah. So that's that was
01:05:21
prior to us having um So So now there's
01:05:25
software, right, that can really break
01:05:26
down the stats. So, I could I can tell
01:05:28
you how many, like I was saying,
01:05:29
listeners. Um, I can tell you the
01:05:31
engagement level that you have. So, if
01:05:33
you're if you're bringing over an artist
01:05:34
that doesn't have huge streams, but
01:05:36
they're huge on Tik Tok, you can look at
01:05:37
what's their engagement in Tik Tok in
01:05:39
Oakuckland during this period. So that
01:05:41
so it's a little bit we're we're just so
01:05:43
data driven now as a nation you know it
01:05:46
was you know worldwide but it's back
01:05:49
then you would a song would OMI had a
01:05:52
number one song on the radio and so we
01:05:54
just went book him now like book him
01:05:56
before this like before it's impossible
01:05:58
to book him and um yeah I oh man I just
01:06:03
talking about this one openly like I
01:06:04
genuinely think we announced it and sold
01:06:06
seven tickets
01:06:08
and can you imagine us just like I
01:06:11
thought we were home run sellout, you
01:06:14
know. I was like I was like I'm like yes
01:06:17
this is um yeah just full confidence gut
01:06:20
feeling that is gut feeling doesn't
01:06:22
always pay completely wrong. Oh poor
01:06:24
Omie. Um what about tea pain? T I've got
01:06:28
a funny history with Tain because um I
01:06:31
sort of yeah in not in the very very
01:06:34
early days but in you know early I don't
01:06:37
know maybe 2014 or something. So brought
01:06:40
brought him out here um and we had some
01:06:43
we were doing a lot of sort of old
01:06:44
school R&B and hip-hop at the time a
01:06:46
brand I've got called talk later and
01:06:48
yeah brought him out here and had a
01:06:51
really successful like couple of shows
01:06:53
and he blew everyone's mind and he
01:06:56
because it was one of the first times
01:06:58
that people realize he's not just
01:06:59
autotune like he he actually can sing he
01:07:01
actually can dance he's a weapon
01:07:03
performer um super successful run
01:07:06
couldn't couldn't wait to get him back
01:07:07
next time we bring him back.
01:07:10
He He basically decides he wants to be a
01:07:13
DJ and he wouldn't perform live, but our
01:07:16
contract had him for live. And he it was
01:07:20
it was wild because he he basically
01:07:22
turns up and he goes, "I'm just going to
01:07:23
DJ." We said, "If you do that, like
01:07:25
which he did." He says, "No, I'm going
01:07:27
to DJ. I'm not going to sing live." And
01:07:29
people in Christ Church people were
01:07:30
throwing [ __ ] on stage and like um and
01:07:33
you know again as a promoter like that
01:07:37
that's like worst case scenario because
01:07:38
people are like people aren't enjoying
01:07:40
the show. It's not about the money at
01:07:42
that point. the reputation and you know
01:07:43
and then and and they're complaining and
01:07:46
he ended up putting up videos saying
01:07:48
like who are these promoters like where
01:07:50
you know I'm he's like I I'm DJing and
01:07:53
like basically just calling us out when
01:07:56
you know but the promoter is always
01:07:59
wrong in that sense because the artist
01:08:00
is always the artist is almost like the
01:08:02
customer is always right you know
01:08:04
because they've got a louder voice and
01:08:06
what am I going to do post a Instagram
01:08:07
shot of the contract like probably could
01:08:10
but so anyway we
01:08:12
I think I think like that show was so
01:08:14
bad that the next day he agreed to do
01:08:15
half DJ half live at the next and so
01:08:18
sort of like DJing but like a bit of
01:08:20
singing. He sort of just got through I
01:08:22
don't know sort of why did he not want
01:08:24
to do a show? No, he's just artist just
01:08:26
changed like the he he he just felt like
01:08:30
he hadn't been it was called a DJ live
01:08:32
set but it was literally just DJ without
01:08:35
the live. I mean, he was there
01:08:36
physically, but um but anyway um ended
01:08:41
up um taking him in Christ Church to the
01:08:44
strip club afterwards. And I just
01:08:46
thought this is one of those like, oh
01:08:48
yeah, aha moments, you know, where I'm
01:08:50
like, okay, I've got tea paint in a
01:08:51
strip club right now. It's 3:00 in the
01:08:54
morning. Um and we walked in and I
01:08:56
swear, no word of a lie, I'm in love
01:08:58
with the strippers playing as we as we
01:09:01
roll in. Like couldn't have been any and
01:09:02
this was not planned. And so so like
01:09:05
these girls are dancing and he rips out
01:09:08
his phone and he's just filming and you
01:09:11
know I'm in love with the stripper and
01:09:13
uh and this big bouncer comes over and
01:09:15
he goes put your phone away man you know
01:09:17
and Tain's like you know eventually I
01:09:21
was like yeah just just you put it away
01:09:22
puts his phone away and he pulls it out
01:09:24
again he starts filming and this
01:09:25
bouncer's just like told you to put that
01:09:27
phone away man and um and he just goes
01:09:30
he goes you're allowed to play my
01:09:32
content and I'm not allowed to get your
01:09:34
accountant and start it and starts
01:09:37
arguing with this bouncer to the bouncer
01:09:39
just starts walking us out cuz it starts
01:09:41
to get quite heated. Tang goes outside,
01:09:43
kicks this car and it and you know with
01:09:46
everyone starting to like but yeah it
01:09:48
was I was just sitting there
01:09:50
going you know it's like what is life e
01:09:53
cuz you know I grew up listening to this
01:09:55
guy and now I'm like with him kicking
01:09:56
cars and it just it was just there's
01:09:58
been plenty of moments like that but
01:10:00
that one's classic. Oh that's such a
01:10:01
cool story. Do you Yeah. Do you
01:10:03
typically have much to do to do with the
01:10:05
artist or is it just a case by case?
01:10:07
Yeah, I I I mean I try I try my best
01:10:09
because I think my objective is to make
01:10:11
sure that they like love New Zealand.
01:10:12
I'll probably go a little bit extra in
01:10:14
terms of the hosting and these days it's
01:10:16
taking them to play golf, but it's it's
01:10:18
always been whatever you want, you know,
01:10:20
take you to show you around, you know,
01:10:22
let's just go a hickey. Let's let's
01:10:24
there's always extra activities outside
01:10:26
of the show days. Um, what I can say
01:10:29
though is it's not very prominent in
01:10:32
terms of um, hip-hop. It's, you know,
01:10:35
sort of a lot of the electronic DJs,
01:10:37
they love it, you know, and really good
01:10:39
relationships like friends that would
01:10:40
come to my house and and uh, and just do
01:10:42
cool cool [ __ ] but and yeah, it's it's
01:10:46
a lot harder with the the big American
01:10:48
guys, I'd say, as much as you try. Yeah.
01:10:50
What about Brian Adams? You brought
01:10:52
Brian Adams to New Zealand. Yeah. Yeah.
01:10:54
Amazing. Yeah. That was an incredible
01:10:57
one because that um growing up in in
01:11:00
South Africa, I'm sure I'm sure it's the
01:11:01
same in New Zealand, but he was an icon,
01:11:04
you know, like we grew up listening to
01:11:06
every album, you know, dad was playing
01:11:07
it all the time. dad was singing it all
01:11:09
the time singing, you know, Brian Adams
01:11:11
and and so that was one of those um
01:11:14
still to this day top three, you know,
01:11:16
acts that I've ever brought over because
01:11:18
it just hit an entirely different, you
01:11:21
know, just an an emotional, you know,
01:11:23
pulled an emotional string where it's
01:11:25
introducing my parents to Brian Adams
01:11:27
like Oh, no way. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That
01:11:29
was all and that's all I thought about
01:11:30
when I when I toured him. We did massive
01:11:32
like massive crazy plays at vineyards
01:11:34
and we sold lots of tickets but nothing
01:11:37
beats that feeling of like so it's
01:11:39
putting on something that my family
01:11:41
actually you know wanted to come to and
01:11:43
and you know they came to Snoop Dog and
01:11:45
stuff but it's Brian Adams is is Brian
01:11:48
Adams you
01:11:49
know that was uh yeah that was
01:11:51
beautiful. Um Cardi B do you have
01:11:54
anything to do with her? Yeah. Yeah.
01:11:56
Yeah. Uh crazy. Taking her to Nelson was
01:12:00
was mind-blowing because you know an act
01:12:02
that that was the year that she blew up.
01:12:04
Um taking her to Nelson and just it was
01:12:08
just again sometimes you just you step
01:12:11
back and you it's almost like laughable,
01:12:13
you know, some of the things that we
01:12:14
were doing because yeah um huge American
01:12:18
artist. She's actually super shy and
01:12:21
super quiet in real life. I remember
01:12:23
being really like taken back, you know,
01:12:25
meeting her and asking her to sign some
01:12:27
shoes and just when she's just
01:12:30
outlandish personality on social media.
01:12:32
A lot of them are like that, by the way.
01:12:34
But, um, I'm sure you've you've met
01:12:36
you've met tons, but I just remember
01:12:37
going, "This is a stark contrast to who
01:12:39
I thought you were going to be." Well,
01:12:40
everyone's just human, eh, and there's,
01:12:42
I suppose, a persona. Yeah. Yeah. What
01:12:44
did you get your shoes signed for? Do
01:12:45
you Are you a memorabilia guy? Uh, I am.
01:12:47
I am. I'm not. I'm pretty bad with
01:12:50
remembering it all. So, normally it's
01:12:51
Yeah. whatever posters we can find. But
01:12:53
uh yeah, we just had this thing going
01:12:54
where we would get custom printed
01:12:56
Converse shoes. So, you know, had like a
01:12:58
full like mural on the side of her and
01:13:00
then she signed one side and it's in my
01:13:03
studio. Oh, how good. Yeah. You got a
01:13:05
studio at home, eh? Yeah. Yeah. Awesome.
01:13:07
What do you do in the studio? Not what I
01:13:10
should be doing. It's um uh when I again
01:13:13
offshoot of a company but ended up
01:13:15
starting like more of a management
01:13:16
agency company for for artists because I
01:13:19
just felt inspired to like help Kiwi
01:13:21
artists. I felt like a bit of my duty
01:13:23
really, you know, running all the
01:13:24
festivals but then it's now we need to
01:13:26
give them a platform and so um so signed
01:13:28
a bunch of artists and said here's a
01:13:30
studio you know use it whenever you need
01:13:32
record and and we did do some recording
01:13:34
but it honestly this that studio's only
01:13:37
turned into my office. It's my
01:13:39
dayto-day. Yeah. It's turned into an
01:13:41
office. Set up to be a studio, but not
01:13:43
much music goes down in it. Oh, good.
01:13:46
Um, it' be a great place to put your
01:13:47
daughter when she starts teething. Just
01:13:50
put her in the soundproof booth and just
01:13:52
leave her there. That's right. Now, um,
01:13:54
what about Oh, wiggles. You bought the
01:13:56
Wiggles uh to NZ. Yeah. Another another
01:14:00
one of those emotional decisions. Um, I
01:14:02
say how so that was before your daughter
01:14:04
was born, eh? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it was
01:14:06
Ker events. I set up the business for
01:14:07
her. I knew I'd hand it to her at some
01:14:09
point. Um, so yeah. So, brought the
01:14:11
Wiggles here, turned it, you know, the
01:14:14
cool part about that was turning it into
01:14:16
like a a rave or just giving it like a
01:14:18
twist of what I do. You know, it wasn't
01:14:20
a traditional Wiggles show. It was
01:14:22
crazy. The parents enjoyed it as much as
01:14:24
the kids, I think. Um, but yeah, again,
01:14:27
that's like Brian Adams for me. It was I
01:14:29
get all my family into one room, my
01:14:31
nieces and nephews. They just lined up
01:14:33
there and I bring the Wiggles in. I
01:14:35
mean, it's like I don't even care how
01:14:37
much money I lost on that show. Oh,
01:14:40
yeah. That was Oh, no. Yeah. Well,
01:14:41
because we went over on the production.
01:14:43
We went over on everything and but I
01:14:44
didn't it just wasn't about that for me.
01:14:46
It was again that's that's why I call
01:14:47
that one an emotional decision. And um
01:14:50
it was it was awesome. Would not change
01:14:52
a thing. How how can you how can you
01:14:54
enjoy a show when you know you've lost
01:14:55
money on it? Like aren't aren't you
01:14:56
standing there with a sour taste in your
01:14:58
mouth? No, I think it I think you sadly
01:15:01
um Hey, mate. I think you sort of get I
01:15:04
don't know if you I don't want to say
01:15:06
you get used to it but um you just know
01:15:08
the es and flows of the business. Yeah.
01:15:09
Exactly. Exactly. And you know that
01:15:11
there'll be some losses. You know
01:15:12
there'll be some wins. Uh but I think
01:15:15
again if if it lost money but I mean to
01:15:19
have that experience with my family it
01:15:21
it just it sort of just gets to a point
01:15:23
where it's a little irrelevant you know
01:15:24
like you know 10 years ago would have
01:15:26
cared because I wouldn't have been able
01:15:27
to go to you know run a show the week
01:15:29
after. But yeah, that one was I can't
01:15:33
explain the the look on my nieces and
01:15:35
nephew's faces when the Wiggles walked
01:15:36
into a room. People might say, "Oh,
01:15:39
that's priceless." But actually, it's
01:15:40
not. It's a couple hundred thousand.
01:15:41
Yeah, I can tell you exactly how much
01:15:42
that cost. What I can tell you is you're
01:15:45
better off buying the meet and greet
01:15:46
package instead of trying to run your
01:15:48
own show. Um, have you always had like a
01:15:51
real healthy relationship with failure?
01:15:54
Failure. Failure gets a really
01:15:57
um there's so much negative connotations
01:15:59
with it. Yeah. Yeah. And a lot of people
01:16:01
are fear fearful of it. E I know I have
01:16:03
been through my life. Yeah. I'm trying
01:16:05
to re, you know, sort of re redefine
01:16:07
what failure means because it's a
01:16:08
stepping stone to success. There we go.
01:16:10
There we go. Yeah. And it's and anyone
01:16:13
that's successful talks about failure a
01:16:15
lot. You know, it's the irony. It's just
01:16:16
that the differences we push through or
01:16:18
the differences I perseverance always
01:16:20
beats failure. So it's it I developed a
01:16:24
yeah I'd say I had a good relationship
01:16:26
with it in the sense that um failure on
01:16:30
one hand failure wasn't an option on the
01:16:32
other hand it was through failure that I
01:16:34
knew I would find success. So I just
01:16:36
always it was okay that certain brands
01:16:38
didn't work. I didn't care that. Um,
01:16:40
don't get me wrong, when the the
01:16:42
clothing line and stuff, I was just
01:16:43
gutted like in in the early days, but as
01:16:46
you start to as you start to grow and
01:16:48
start to find success, you actually care
01:16:51
less about the things that don't work.
01:16:53
Um, even even right now, failure almost
01:16:56
excites me now because it's, you know,
01:16:58
15 years of of running things. It's it's
01:17:01
what can I learn from it? The reason I'm
01:17:03
taking on a restaurant right now is
01:17:05
because I've got a huge chance of
01:17:07
failure. like it's it's it's not even an
01:17:08
industry that I'm in. It's a very
01:17:10
difficult industry to be in. Every
01:17:12
single person I spoke to told me not to
01:17:13
do it. Excites me even more, you know?
01:17:16
It's um what's the worst case? I have a
01:17:18
restaurant that doesn't work. It's
01:17:21
Yeah. I think people just need to get
01:17:24
over that fear of failure. It'll be it
01:17:26
it'll help them tfold to just take
01:17:28
chances. Well, it can be crippling,
01:17:30
can't it? 100%. Yeah. Um Oh, what about
01:17:33
CO? How was CO for you? Fantastic. No,
01:17:37
that was it was crazy thing. So co this
01:17:40
is why I started branching out my
01:17:41
companies because when co hit so
01:17:44
everything I had built to that point so
01:17:46
so built up the music events festivals
01:17:48
and shows then started buying the
01:17:50
fencing the portaloos the sound system
01:17:53
started buying things connected to music
01:17:55
okay co hit every single thing didn't
01:17:58
exist and so um so
01:18:01
I it was and the crazy thing is my wife
01:18:04
owned a ticketing business so the two of
01:18:07
us are sitting there locked down
01:18:08
together with no companies. This is
01:18:11
going this is going to be a this is
01:18:13
going to be make or break. Um and and
01:18:16
look it the strange thing with co is it
01:18:18
did end up being okay for us because I
01:18:22
don't know if you remember that red
01:18:23
light orange light system but there was
01:18:25
there were moments in there where when
01:18:26
it went orange we could run outdoor
01:18:28
events and we were just smashing these
01:18:31
outdoor events in these gaps. um much to
01:18:34
the despise of of a lot of the older
01:18:37
population because they were calling
01:18:39
them super spreaders.
01:18:40
Andre that's a phrase I haven't heard in
01:18:42
years. Remember the super spreaders
01:18:44
events? Oh, it was cuz our DJs were the
01:18:46
ones coming over doing two weeks
01:18:48
quarantine and then playing shows.
01:18:51
Have you ever considered um you quitting
01:18:54
or pivoting? Like if things ever got
01:18:56
really tough that you've actually
01:18:57
contemplated it?
01:19:00
Never never quitting. I've definitely
01:19:03
considered selling or trying to do other
01:19:06
things, which I do every, you know,
01:19:08
every week regardless. So, um, yeah, I I
01:19:12
used to say no. Now I'm more open to I
01:19:16
sort of just like to take every day as
01:19:18
it comes because the
01:19:19
opportunities I don't know what's around
01:19:22
the corner. if you know if if there's a
01:19:24
huge partnership, if there's the
01:19:25
opportunity to go overseas or or I just
01:19:27
like to stay I like to sort of keep the
01:19:30
options open and be a bit spontaneous
01:19:32
with that. But no, I've never I would I
01:19:34
would never I would never quit. Have you
01:19:37
always been a resilient guy or do you
01:19:39
think it's been sort of like a muscle
01:19:40
that's been built over the years?
01:19:43
Uh yeah, I yeah, resilience is a 100%
01:19:46
that's just a trait that's been there.
01:19:48
Yeah. M I don't even know where I get
01:19:50
that from to be honest. But it was it
01:19:51
was just again it was just there was no
01:19:54
option apart from making this work. And
01:19:56
if you and if you're that heavily
01:19:59
invested, it will always work. I've
01:20:01
never seen a scenario where it where it
01:20:03
doesn't. It's just how many times are
01:20:04
you going to fail before before you
01:20:07
eventually get there? Yeah. Um yeah. Are
01:20:10
you much of a goal set? Like do you have
01:20:11
like five year goals, 10 year goals or
01:20:13
do you just sort of like take
01:20:14
opportunities as they come and Yeah,
01:20:17
take opportunities. um as they come. I I
01:20:20
I've moved away from uh my email
01:20:23
signature used to actually just be
01:20:25
opportunist and um and then I realized
01:20:28
there's sort of some negative
01:20:29
connotation to that. But I I I try set
01:20:34
I'll try to set goals sort of two or
01:20:35
three years um and try and not go too
01:20:39
much further than that from a business
01:20:41
perspective. I think it's amazing like
01:20:44
now for me the goals I would set are
01:20:47
more lifestyle driven. They're not
01:20:49
business driven if you know what I mean.
01:20:51
Like just I've only just got into health
01:20:53
and um I know you you know got big into
01:20:55
running. It's I was extremely unhealthy
01:20:58
because all I did was work up until 18
01:20:59
months ago and then now I prioritize my
01:21:02
health, my family and then business. So
01:21:03
it's so now I'm it's those are the
01:21:06
goals. So when I you know where do I
01:21:08
want to be in five years? Well, I want
01:21:10
to be an extremely active, healthy dad,
01:21:12
you know, and then sort of like and I
01:21:14
want to be traveling and I well then
01:21:16
cool. How do how does my what reverse
01:21:18
engineer that? How is my business going
01:21:20
to fit into that? And if I have to sell
01:21:21
some companies, then I'll do it. If I
01:21:23
have to those are the things that we
01:21:24
sort of discuss as you know with I
01:21:26
discuss with my wife. Yeah. You one one
01:21:29
big thing I've got from doing this
01:21:30
podcast for three years now is um you
01:21:32
just you can't take your good health for
01:21:33
granted. Eh, absolutely not. You've got
01:21:36
to like pro protect that with everything
01:21:38
you've got. Have you seen the the Avichi
01:21:39
Doco? I haven't yet, mate. Yeah, he was
01:21:42
exactly the same. Like just hyperfixate
01:21:44
on work and his people would come and
01:21:46
give him food and he he just wouldn't
01:21:47
eat it because it'd just be like zoned
01:21:49
in on what he was doing. He ended up
01:21:50
being incredibly unhealthy. Really?
01:21:52
Okay. Well, that I'm definitely going to
01:21:53
watch that. But it's that reminds me a
01:21:55
lot of honestly I would work so
01:21:59
consistently. I don't like the term work
01:22:01
hard, but I was just working so
01:22:03
consistently and non-stop that I could
01:22:05
easily forget to eat. Like that was
01:22:06
there'd be days where all I'd have is a
01:22:08
coffee and it'd be 3:00 p.m. and I go,
01:22:10
"Oh [ __ ] like I should probably eat
01:22:12
something, you know." But um those are
01:22:14
the those are the big changes that have
01:22:16
happened for me in the last honestly
01:22:17
only in the last 18 months. Um it's
01:22:21
yeah, you start you start to learn that
01:22:23
it's just so much more important. But
01:22:25
also it makes you the irony is when you
01:22:28
take time to so to to work out or drink
01:22:32
water or eat well you actually are more
01:22:35
productive and you have more of an
01:22:36
output. So that that interests me
01:22:38
because it's how do you fit more in your
01:22:40
day. Well the irony is that you want to
01:22:43
actually when you're working you want to
01:22:44
be in a deep work state you know and if
01:22:45
you can that's how I sort of break down
01:22:48
my day. I'm focusing on a lot of things,
01:22:49
but I can I've worked out how to really
01:22:52
hone in on something for an hour. Pull
01:22:55
out and go into the next thing and break
01:22:57
it up. Do you have like a strict morning
01:22:59
routine or anything? No, I'm not one of
01:23:01
those like a herman. Oh, I'm sort of I'm
01:23:04
almost jealous of some of those things
01:23:05
that I, you know, I I I just if you want
01:23:08
to be a successful entrepreneur, you got
01:23:10
to wake up at 4:00 a.m., ice bath at
01:23:12
4:15, and win the morning, win the day.
01:23:14
And it's like, and I always I'm go [ __ ]
01:23:17
I'm the opposite. And I actually feel
01:23:18
quite guilty at times cuz I'm I I only
01:23:21
wake up early now because of Ka. Prior
01:23:23
to that, I would work late at night and
01:23:26
then and wake up late. Um so look, it's
01:23:29
slowly changing, but I I don't think
01:23:30
I'll ever be one of those 4:00 a.m. 5
01:23:33
a.m. people. I don't know. I don't know.
01:23:35
Maybe. Never say never. Never say never.
01:23:37
Um are you doing some work with Israel
01:23:39
Adisa? Yeah. What's going on there? Is
01:23:42
this top secret or can you No, no, I can
01:23:44
fully talk about it. I mean, apart from
01:23:46
the the lineup, that's a never- ending
01:23:48
never- ending debacle, but um so we uh
01:23:51
yeah, being South African and um and
01:23:53
also being a massive UFC fan. Uh yeah, I
01:23:57
sort of just had the opportunity to to
01:23:59
pitch to um to David and Izzy, the
01:24:02
brothers, and uh they got their family
01:24:04
involved and they liked what they heard,
01:24:06
which is basically I was like New
01:24:09
Zealand needs a cultural festival that
01:24:11
celebrates, you know, African music and
01:24:13
and if you look at the growth of um of
01:24:15
Afrobeat music, monstrous, right? Like
01:24:18
my FM 30% of their playlist now is
01:24:20
Afrobee. And I could see the trend and
01:24:23
and I said, "Well, if I'm going to do
01:24:24
this, I'm going to partner with the
01:24:25
right person." and Izzy's big into music
01:24:27
and dance. So, we ended up forming this
01:24:29
partnership which is um which has been
01:24:31
awesome and we sort of just we've teased
01:24:33
the project and then when we got deep
01:24:35
into booking the lineup, we realized how
01:24:37
extremely uh difficult it is to get some
01:24:39
of these artists and we're just in the
01:24:40
final stages now. Um so, yeah, the we've
01:24:45
told people it's launching in October.
01:24:47
At the moment, it's still it's still all
01:24:48
go like it should be. We should be
01:24:50
announcing it in four weeks.
01:24:53
There's a lot of balls in the air, eh? A
01:24:55
lot of balls. Lot of balls. Is it So
01:24:57
you're you're you're planning you're
01:24:59
you're talking and doing deals now for
01:25:00
shows that will come to New Zealand. How
01:25:03
far in the future? Uh we are five years
01:25:05
in the future, four years in the future.
01:25:07
No, no, it's always it's always about a
01:25:09
year. Um so so right now we're heavily
01:25:12
booked up till April next year. So like
01:25:15
Aiologyy's almost got shows every
01:25:17
weekend until April next year. The
01:25:20
biggest stuff is normally a year in
01:25:22
advance. to say if we book Snoop or
01:25:24
someone like that now, it'll be for this
01:25:26
time next year or late or quarter 4 next
01:25:29
year. Um, so it's not it's never three
01:25:32
or four or five years because of the way
01:25:34
that music works.
01:25:35
It's like they're normally touring
01:25:38
around something an anniversary of an
01:25:40
album or a new release or you know so
01:25:43
you can't four years from now they can't
01:25:45
tell me how the value of fisher right
01:25:47
now they can tell me you know so it's
01:25:50
yeah it's never that far in advance but
01:25:52
wow we try on did you buy 36 acres of
01:25:56
land like around Oakland somewhere did I
01:25:58
I think I heard this on a podcast did
01:25:59
you amazing what's amazing I don't I
01:26:02
just don't even remember saying that I
01:26:04
feel like you know you know, you know
01:26:05
some things. I I go go pretty deep with
01:26:07
the research. Yeah. 36 acres of land.
01:26:09
Whereabouts? It's like in rural Oakland
01:26:10
somewhere. Yeah. It's in in a place
01:26:12
called Aka um which is by 10 minutes
01:26:14
from Pukakoi. Um that story's Yeah,
01:26:18
that's quite funny. It was it was an
01:26:21
opportunity to buy some land that we
01:26:23
wanted to develop for events because,
01:26:26
you know, we were talking about how
01:26:27
events you spend all this time, you roll
01:26:28
in for one day and you pack out. I
01:26:30
wanted some land that we could slowly
01:26:33
chip away at and 20 years from now it'll
01:26:35
be an amazing festival site. You know,
01:26:37
the the way that the reason Tomorrowland
01:26:39
and stuff is so impressive is they own
01:26:41
the land and they're consistently adding
01:26:43
to it and building and changing and um
01:26:45
and also I became quite obsessed with
01:26:47
just development of land and property
01:26:49
and um so yeah, so we we own the land.
01:26:52
Um we to be honest up until this point
01:26:56
we've so we've started the consent for
01:26:58
events but mainly focused on there was
01:27:00
two old like uh hoarder homes on it that
01:27:04
we basically bowled down and rebuilt. Um
01:27:07
so it's been a it's been a slow process
01:27:08
but the idea there is that we eventually
01:27:10
have a venue a large scale festival
01:27:12
venue.
01:27:14
Amazing. So it'll it'll be like what
01:27:18
what are you thinking? Is it sort of up
01:27:19
in the air like or are you thinking like
01:27:20
your own sort of coachella or
01:27:21
tomorrowland or will you like rent it
01:27:24
out to other promoters or Yeah, I think
01:27:26
it'll be that perfect balance of um just
01:27:28
so when you get consents they normally
01:27:30
uh for a certain it's for a certain
01:27:32
capacity over a certain amount of time.
01:27:34
So quite common for that would be five
01:27:35
large scale events o annually and
01:27:38
there's a whole process of getting all
01:27:39
that signed off and one lady's got
01:27:41
horses next door and she can say no and
01:27:43
but anyway eventually you get there and
01:27:45
and of those five I might use two of
01:27:47
them and then the other three we could
01:27:49
you know anyone it's about having it's
01:27:52
an option for like the likes of lab or
01:27:54
660 or it's like large acts can play
01:27:57
there which is quite rare because at the
01:27:59
moment we've got western springs or a
01:28:01
stadium um so I we just sort of saw an
01:28:04
opportunity there to have something
01:28:05
that's not too far from the city, but
01:28:07
also it's stunning. It's like on the,
01:28:10
you know, the Wat River runs past it and
01:28:12
it's flat and it's surrounded by trees
01:28:13
and um yeah, I I really do hope it turns
01:28:17
into something. It hasn't been a huge
01:28:18
priority for me lately, but um like
01:28:22
that's the beauty of land. It's for me
01:28:24
that's probably a 20-year project. Wow,
01:28:26
that seems like a significant
01:28:28
investment. How much is 36 acres? Not in
01:28:30
terms of price, but in terms of like
01:28:32
what can you compare it to? Is it like
01:28:34
Western Springs or Eden Park? Um what is
01:28:36
it? How much is 36? Yeah, I won't get
01:28:40
the exact calculation but it's um but
01:28:41
for example the the it's sort of broken
01:28:44
down into site that we thought could be
01:28:45
used for parking, camping and then the
01:28:47
actual event site itself and the the
01:28:49
actual sort of event site. So to fit
01:28:52
20,000 people on you effectively would
01:28:54
like two rugby fields. Um so that's
01:28:56
that's about three rugby fields that we
01:28:58
have on in that area there. Wow. Um, and
01:29:01
then there's a lot of earthworks and
01:29:02
stuff that needs to happen to get the
01:29:04
parking, but it's um, yeah, I would say
01:29:06
it it's probably horrendously incorrect,
01:29:09
but I would say it looks looks like
01:29:10
about seven rugby fields, I guess. Wow.
01:29:14
Jeez, that's exciting. Yeah. Yeah. New
01:29:17
Zealand needs big thinkers like that
01:29:19
like you people that are going to get
01:29:21
[ __ ] done. Do you How do you What's your
01:29:23
relationship like with tall puppy
01:29:24
syndrome? What are your thoughts on
01:29:25
that? Um, I have you encountered a fair
01:29:28
bit of that. Oh, hugely, hugely. You
01:29:31
know, that's when we talk about
01:29:32
adversity. I mean, that's most of those
01:29:34
scenarios that I've that I've ended up
01:29:35
in have been from competitors or people
01:29:39
that that want to push you down
01:29:40
regardless of what you do. And and I
01:29:42
don't know, it's just it's rooted in
01:29:43
jealousy. Always. Yeah. Yeah, it is. And
01:29:45
I don't people say it's I don't know how
01:29:47
it's they say it's a New Zealand thing
01:29:49
and I'm not sure because I don't know
01:29:51
all the other cultures. I mean, I
01:29:52
obviously I didn't I didn't feel it in
01:29:55
Australia, but I but I wasn't I was
01:29:57
still living in the New Zealand scene.
01:29:59
Um, so look, I know I know it's heavily
01:30:02
talked about in NZ and I've definitely
01:30:04
experienced it in New Zealand and I just
01:30:05
assumed it was a worldwide thing, you
01:30:07
know, because it's naturally people just
01:30:10
want to pull you down thinking that
01:30:13
that's their way to the top and it's so
01:30:16
I've just had crazy situations where
01:30:18
people have emailed out things about me
01:30:21
or like just general just lies or I
01:30:24
don't know. It's look, it's just not for
01:30:26
me. Um, I've got I work with amazing
01:30:30
people that I guess you start to keep
01:30:32
your circle a little bit smaller and and
01:30:35
deal with people that actually want to
01:30:37
see you succeed. And my objective is
01:30:39
just support
01:30:40
everyone because it makes sense like
01:30:43
when you support people and they support
01:30:44
you back. I mean it's just it's it's to
01:30:46
me it's so simple. I don't understand.
01:30:48
Yeah. Um, one one thing I can tell you
01:30:50
for free winners never indulge in tall
01:30:54
puppy syndrome. Like you're never going
01:30:55
to see someone like a Dan Carter or a
01:30:56
Richie Mccor going online slagging
01:30:58
someone else off. Like they're not
01:31:00
because they're busy doing doing their
01:31:01
own thing and celebrating other people
01:31:03
as well. Yeah. It's um it's a losers
01:31:05
mentality. Yeah. And it's so icky and
01:31:07
it's so gross. Yeah. Yeah. It's a
01:31:09
scarcity mindset thing. E cuz it's like,
01:31:11
oh, if Mitch is doing this, it means I
01:31:13
can't do it. But it's like there's
01:31:14
plenty of room at the table. Exactly.
01:31:16
Exactly. No, you've hit the nail on the
01:31:17
head. I mean, winners focus on winning,
01:31:18
but it's um I've never Yeah. I've never
01:31:21
encountered a situation ever in in my
01:31:24
journey where someone doing the same
01:31:26
thing as us or at the same level has,
01:31:29
you know, has said a negative thing or
01:31:32
done well, sorry, they say negative
01:31:34
things, but I've never seen someone take
01:31:36
action in a tall poppy way if they're if
01:31:38
they're operating at a high level, which
01:31:39
is effectively what you said. Um, what's
01:31:42
one piece of advice you'd give someone
01:31:43
wanting to start their own thing, not
01:31:46
necessarily in promotion, but just like
01:31:47
an entrepreneurialship journey? the
01:31:50
journey. I I
01:31:52
just I would
01:31:54
say initially just that at at the start
01:31:58
it's
01:31:59
about obviously taking that that risk
01:32:02
and having again going back to what we
01:32:04
said about failure. But if if you're
01:32:07
prepared to fail as a worst case and you
01:32:10
know that worst worst worst case you
01:32:12
know you're back at square one and you
01:32:14
got to start again. And if you can just
01:32:15
wrap your head around, if you can get in
01:32:17
in the mind frame of understanding that
01:32:20
that's all it is, that's all it is. It
01:32:21
doesn't matter. People will say what
01:32:23
they like and they can think what they
01:32:24
like, but all you're doing is learning
01:32:27
and and creating another opportunity for
01:32:29
yourself to have another crack. Then I
01:32:32
believe we would see so many more
01:32:34
entrepreneurs. we'd see so many more
01:32:36
people doing what they genuinely want to
01:32:39
do, you know, as opposed to just being
01:32:41
pushed into being pushed into the sort
01:32:43
of, you know, whether it's university or
01:32:45
or in whatever. I mean, yeah, I I just
01:32:49
want to see people do what they're what
01:32:52
they're truly um passionate about. But
01:32:53
that but that starts with being brave
01:32:56
and bold enough to take that that first
01:32:58
step. Yeah. Yeah. And if you if you're
01:33:00
going to entertain the worst case
01:33:02
scenario, you're also obliged to
01:33:04
entertain the best case scenario. Like
01:33:05
what if it all goes right? Yeah. You
01:33:07
know, what if it what if it, you know,
01:33:08
exceeds my expectations? Exactly.
01:33:10
Because they're both equal
01:33:11
possibilities, right? Yeah. Yeah. I was
01:33:13
hoping people focus on the only the
01:33:15
negative. Yeah. Um, what does success
01:33:17
look like to you today? And has it
01:33:19
changed over time? Oh, it has changed
01:33:22
drastically. I mean, success for me at
01:33:24
the start was the ability to travel,
01:33:26
right? So it was I'm I'm stoked that it
01:33:30
was never primarily money. I I mean I do
01:33:33
I do remember having a figure in mind as
01:33:35
you know as a as a teenager the dream of
01:33:37
being a millionaire. Um but it was never
01:33:40
primarily that my I wanted the ability
01:33:43
to have or the flexibility to be able to
01:33:46
travel right and see the world right. So
01:33:47
so once that sort of started to happen
01:33:50
um you know you start to look at things
01:33:52
like family and um success for me now is
01:33:58
the freedom not to travel as such but
01:34:01
the freedom to do to still be able to do
01:34:04
what I want to do when I want to do it.
01:34:07
Um but but with balance in mind and and
01:34:11
prioritizing the things that are
01:34:12
important which though I think those
01:34:14
take you a little while to learn. um
01:34:18
like you know a teenager that just wants
01:34:21
to travel the world and get drunk and
01:34:22
see everything you know versus versus
01:34:25
now it's like
01:34:27
okay are the things that I'm doing do
01:34:29
they have a positive impact mainly on
01:34:31
like the close people around me first
01:34:33
and foremost you know which that that's
01:34:35
a challenge every day you know am I am I
01:34:38
taking on things that I'm proud of that
01:34:39
will allow me to spend more time with my
01:34:41
family and enjoy life or or am I just
01:34:43
doing things for the sake of trying to
01:34:45
be you know cool or trying to be the guy
01:34:47
and trying to it's um and and that's
01:34:50
that's always a battle. But that yeah,
01:34:52
success for me now is finding is working
01:34:54
every day to find that that balance.
01:34:57
Yeah. Less less um less ego driven maybe
01:34:59
than what it was uh in your 20s. Yeah.
01:35:01
Um do you think about legacy at all? Is
01:35:04
that something you think about like
01:35:05
Yeah. What what sort of legacy would you
01:35:07
like to leave behind?
01:35:09
Um, legacy is I think the concept I I
01:35:13
mean I love the idea of legacy more than
01:35:16
I you know more than any anything else
01:35:19
in the sense that um what I want to
01:35:22
achieve I I want to have like a lasting
01:35:24
impression and I hope that it inspires
01:35:26
other people to do the same. Um, but
01:35:28
then on the flip side of that, legacy to
01:35:30
me is it's such an interesting concept
01:35:32
because people aren't going to remember
01:35:34
me regardless in three generations, you
01:35:36
know, like it's kind of almost it's
01:35:37
almost ego driven to assume that I can
01:35:40
leave a legacy that's going to have this
01:35:42
massive lasting I mean most people don't
01:35:45
know their great-grandparents name and
01:35:47
that's how quickly you can lose sight of
01:35:50
you know takes a few generations and and
01:35:52
so I guess I'm more of a now I'm more of
01:35:55
a now person. I mean that I I'm
01:35:58
obviously everything's for Ka and my
01:36:00
future kids and the way that I'm setting
01:36:01
them up. I'm going to give them all the
01:36:02
things that I never had. That is
01:36:04
beautiful to me. I've already I feel
01:36:06
like I've already achieved that. Um, but
01:36:10
yeah, it's it's I'm not I'm not going to
01:36:11
ever I just don't want to do things ego
01:36:13
driven where it's, oh, my name's going
01:36:14
to be I'm the promoter that they're
01:36:16
going to remember forever. Because
01:36:18
honestly, like the coolest thing about
01:36:20
doing what I do is realizing that people
01:36:23
only really give a [ __ ] for a very short
01:36:25
period of time and then they forget.
01:36:26
They care when they're stuck outside and
01:36:28
they're trying to get into my show. Then
01:36:29
I've heaps of friends, you know, then
01:36:31
it's like then you're the absolute man
01:36:33
for 4 hours. But outside of that, my
01:36:36
real friends don't give a [ __ ] They
01:36:37
don't like they don't we just laugh
01:36:39
about it. They I still they still mock
01:36:40
me and we you know we just act like
01:36:42
we're schoolmates. You need that. That's
01:36:44
a healthy relationship. Yeah. Does your
01:36:46
um Yeah. What does your phone look like
01:36:48
on the like the day of a concert or the
01:36:50
week of a concert? Is it amazing who
01:36:52
comes out of the woodwork? It is crazy.
01:36:55
There's it's it's an unwritten um it's
01:36:58
it's been a joke for so long that you
01:36:59
know like uh even my wife you know who
01:37:03
sees what I do every day like it's I
01:37:06
show her like hey have a look at this
01:37:07
you know there'll be like 150 me 150
01:37:09
messages but my favorite one there's
01:37:12
always this opening line that again it's
01:37:15
become this joke where it'll be like hey
01:37:17
man and cuz you know you can only see
01:37:19
the first line hey man know we haven't
01:37:22
spoken in a while or like hey long No,
01:37:24
long time no see. And oh, these are and
01:37:28
I I don't know if it maybe it's that
01:37:29
ADHD thing, but I have to open every
01:37:31
message and respond because if there's a
01:37:33
if cuz that's what I do every day,
01:37:35
right? I I probably average 200 emails
01:37:37
and 50 phone calls like it's but I but I
01:37:41
love like ticking those things off is
01:37:43
what keep that's what gives keeps me
01:37:45
calm. It's the like if they build up
01:37:48
then I'm just going to be stressing,
01:37:49
right? So, it's kind of like the worst
01:37:52
part is I'll get these messages and then
01:37:54
I actually I actually action them all,
01:37:56
you know, like if it's sort of like I
01:37:58
sometimes I'll say, "Hey, like I'm busy,
01:38:00
like I can't help." But 90% of the time
01:38:02
I'll actually help almost everyone. And
01:38:05
my wife gives me so much [ __ ] for it cuz
01:38:07
it's like, "Hey man, long time no see."
01:38:11
Like, "What do you what do you mean? You
01:38:12
had Oh, hey, I noticed it's sold out
01:38:14
online. Like, is there any way I'm happy
01:38:16
to pay, but is there a way that you can
01:38:18
That's my technique." Yeah, I'm happy to
01:38:20
pay. It's like, no, if you were happy to
01:38:21
pay, you would have paid. It's It's so
01:38:23
good.
01:38:25
Oh god. Oh well. Um, now that we've
01:38:28
connected, I uh you can add me to that
01:38:29
list. I'll be that guy. No, actually I
01:38:31
hardly ever leave the house. I um the
01:38:33
last couple of weekends I've been
01:38:34
watching um Stage Coach and Coachella on
01:38:37
YouTube. Why Why would they do that? Why
01:38:39
would they have that on YouTube? Why
01:38:41
they live stream it? Yeah. Why? Why? Uh
01:38:44
yeah, there's no payw wall or anything.
01:38:46
I just wonder what the what the business
01:38:47
thinking behind that would be. Yeah.
01:38:49
Yeah. We I mean we've live streamed a
01:38:51
few things and we we find it difficult
01:38:52
because artists often is there's a lot
01:38:54
of roadblocks but um with something like
01:38:57
Coachella I mean the reach is just
01:38:59
astronomic right. So I guess their
01:39:01
thought process outside of the
01:39:02
sponsorship direct cash that they're
01:39:04
getting um yeah their thought process I
01:39:06
imagine would be that if this is
01:39:08
broadcast to the world it's almost like
01:39:10
free marketing and then the next year
01:39:11
sells out instantly again. It makes it
01:39:13
cool to be there. M um we've broadcast
01:39:16
some things in the past like I said um
01:39:18
it's never a monetary thing. It's always
01:39:21
with the objective to reach the wider
01:39:23
audience. Um yeah and I think it does it
01:39:26
it builds that FOMO because now you know
01:39:28
the tickets early tickets go on sale
01:39:30
straight after that live stream and
01:39:31
everyone's in there because they don't
01:39:32
want to miss it. And um I don't know
01:39:35
watching it at home on my Samsung Frame
01:39:37
TV with beers that didn't cost me $11
01:39:40
US. It's pretty good. Yeah. Yeah. And I
01:39:43
can imagine that's millions of dollars
01:39:45
to make that stream work because it's
01:39:46
very it's a high-end so good highend
01:39:49
stream. Um, what are your biggest fears?
01:39:55
Um, outside of heights,
01:39:59
um, now I'm t I'm tackling that one. But
01:40:02
uh um my biggest fear I would say is
01:40:08
not achieving sort of or or not living
01:40:12
up to my potential um would be would
01:40:17
probably be the main thing you know and
01:40:18
and it's probably why I take on um a lot
01:40:23
of things and you know I wish I could
01:40:26
I'll step it down a notch at some point
01:40:28
but um but no I don't know I think I've
01:40:29
just got this the fear is is that I just
01:40:33
feel like we can do so much on this
01:40:36
earth and I feel like I want to give so
01:40:38
much and I just don't want to be I don't
01:40:41
want to be 70 or 80 years old and just
01:40:43
go man I should have done that and
01:40:45
that's that that fear of not wanting to
01:40:48
look back and say I should have done
01:40:50
that. That's probably why I'm trying to
01:40:51
do everything. Yeah. Oh, I think that
01:40:53
would be one of the worst things e like
01:40:55
um yeah dying with regrets. Yeah. And it
01:40:58
is be terrible. And that is I mean I I'm
01:41:01
big I'm it doesn't take you long to
01:41:04
they've done a lot of research on that.
01:41:05
They've asked people on their deathbed
01:41:06
like what you know and and it's always
01:41:08
the same thing. It's always I should
01:41:10
have done this I should have done that
01:41:11
and it's and it's not necessarily
01:41:13
business. That's the beautiful thing
01:41:14
like 90% of the time it's like I wish I
01:41:16
spent more time with this person or you
01:41:18
know and it's those are the thing I'm
01:41:20
constantly
01:41:21
man you you I want to look back and just
01:41:24
actually know that I was a present dad.
01:41:25
That's like one of the hardest one of
01:41:27
the hardest battles. It's easier to
01:41:29
start a company.
01:41:32
What's your inner voice like?
01:41:35
Are you you quite quite kind to yourself
01:41:37
or I mean you're very very
01:41:39
driven. Like do you fogg yourself or you
01:41:41
quite kind to yourself?
01:41:44
Uh I think I think I'm somewhere in the
01:41:46
middle. I think I'm somewhere in the
01:41:47
middle. I'll um it's a constant it's a
01:41:51
constant battle. Um in terms
01:41:53
of you know again like some of the
01:41:55
things we we spoke about and that I've
01:41:57
been through. It's that it you start to
01:42:00
I think everyone's got doubt, right? To
01:42:02
some degree, even the most confident of
01:42:04
people. And even though I've been doing
01:42:05
this long, I've still got those same
01:42:07
doubts just in in different areas, you
01:42:09
know? So, you're constantly questioning,
01:42:11
you know, am I good enough? Am I good
01:42:14
enough to speak like this on this
01:42:16
podcast? You know, am I am I am I truly
01:42:20
am I are my actions representing what I
01:42:23
say? Like, am I actually a good person?
01:42:25
Am I actually doing good things? So, I'm
01:42:27
I guess I'm consistently always
01:42:28
questioning myself and but I don't have
01:42:30
an issue with that because it just keeps
01:42:31
me, you know, it keeps it's always at
01:42:33
the forefront of my mind of just wanting
01:42:37
reverting back to that just like I just
01:42:40
want to be having a positive impact.
01:42:44
Um but yeah, my brain's just doesn't
01:42:48
stop. So, I guess Do you sleep all
01:42:49
right? I actually do sleep all right,
01:42:51
which is strange, right? cuz um yeah, I
01:42:54
I I fall asleep fine. Um I can operate
01:42:58
on not much sleep as well. You know, I
01:43:00
had 5 hours last night and I feel all
01:43:02
right. Um so, but yeah, I've had no
01:43:05
issue, you know, even if my my brain
01:43:09
races up until a point where I've like
01:43:11
ticked off what I need to and then I can
01:43:13
and then I can relax. So often I'm doing
01:43:15
the last thing I do before bed, which
01:43:17
most people would hate, is just make
01:43:19
sure that everything's ticked off, do my
01:43:21
Turkish, make sure that crypto hasn't
01:43:23
lost heaps of money, and then, you know,
01:43:24
just No, just control the controllables.
01:43:27
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um, no, just make sure
01:43:29
my emails are ticked off and that I have
01:43:30
a little bit of an understanding of the
01:43:32
next day. Just look at my calendar. Just
01:43:34
feel
01:43:35
It's just ironic that I have to do work
01:43:37
in order to actually relax or get the
01:43:39
work done to have a sense of peace.
01:43:41
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. When was the last time
01:43:43
you cried?
01:43:45
Uh, I cry a little bit to be honest. Um,
01:43:48
do you What do you What do you cry
01:43:49
about? Like gratitude tears or
01:43:54
um No, no. I mean,
01:43:57
I'm Oh, man.
01:44:00
the tears are always um I don't know
01:44:02
even even if it's something in a
01:44:04
relationship you know or like trying to
01:44:06
you know if it's if I'm apologizing or
01:44:10
um I tear up quite easily actually which
01:44:12
it's quite um yeah but I mean in terms
01:44:15
of like
01:44:16
full-blown breakdown you know like just
01:44:19
when I've had people close to me pass
01:44:21
away which is which has sadly been you
01:44:24
know for someone of my age it's been a
01:44:26
has been a fair few um luckily Yeah, not
01:44:30
not any um close family members, but
01:44:32
yeah, I've had just just really close
01:44:35
friends and stuff that have had really
01:44:36
unfortunate situations and
01:44:39
um yeah, it just Yeah, you've been
01:44:41
impacted uh by suicide, haven't you?
01:44:44
Yeah. Yeah, massively. Massively. So
01:44:46
yeah, my um 2019 my best mate who was
01:44:52
living with me at the time um who I was
01:44:54
I was sort of trying to help through his
01:44:55
struggles. He he had um BPD which is I
01:44:58
don't know if you know borderline
01:44:59
borderline personality disorder. Yeah.
01:45:01
And um uh yeah, I was just trying to be
01:45:05
there for him. And again, massive
01:45:07
massive learning curve when you're just
01:45:09
trying to be there for someone that
01:45:12
you're trying to help them see the world
01:45:13
in a different light. And um and yeah, I
01:45:16
mean the the the short version of that
01:45:18
eventually he just lost his battle after
01:45:20
about a year and a half that he was
01:45:21
living with me. And um yeah, just I'd
01:45:26
never experienced like death in that way
01:45:29
before. I'd never had someone that close
01:45:31
to me pass away. Um he was living with
01:45:34
you at the time. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So he
01:45:37
was in Oakuckland prior, but I said,
01:45:38
"Hey, come down to Toadonger and like
01:45:40
Yeah. basically let's just um tackle
01:45:43
tackle one day at a time, you know, and
01:45:45
um and so the the cool thing um his name
01:45:49
is Cullen. We called him Tastain. But
01:45:51
the the great thing with him was he
01:45:54
loved music and the event. So it was it
01:45:57
was always
01:45:59
uh it was always looking forward to the
01:46:01
next you know the next thing. Um and and
01:46:04
those were normally it could be a bush
01:46:06
or it could be you know certain show
01:46:08
that we were doing. Um, and that sort of
01:46:10
kept him, yeah, it was one of the few
01:46:12
things that just kept him positive about
01:46:13
life, you know, was always talking about
01:46:15
the it gave me like a real sense of,
01:46:18
wow, what I'm doing does have a positive
01:46:20
impact because it's um you can see it.
01:46:24
Yeah. You see it in people like him
01:46:26
where where like being at an event is
01:46:28
just the time where they're truly happy.
01:46:30
You know, even if it's only for four or
01:46:32
five hours, there's the anticipation
01:46:33
leading up to it, leading up to a
01:46:35
concert. the same way it leads up to
01:46:37
someone's going on holiday like that
01:46:38
feeling and then you have the moment and
01:46:41
then that moment's hopefully enough to
01:46:43
you know we launch something soon after
01:46:45
that.
01:46:46
So yeah that was uh
01:46:49
uh yeah that was one of the times that I
01:46:52
that I cried for a long long time.
01:46:55
Yeah the the same year 2019 I I lost um
01:46:58
a good friend as well. He he had
01:47:00
bipolar, but no, nobody knew like he
01:47:02
kept it hidden from everyone. And then
01:47:03
he um it happened real suddenly like and
01:47:05
he took his life in a real violent
01:47:08
emphatic way. Like there was there was
01:47:10
going to be no other outcome other than
01:47:13
um taking his own life. And um that sent
01:47:15
me on a bit of a journey, you know, like
01:47:16
looking into my own mental health cuz I
01:47:18
thought if [ __ ] this guy was the life of
01:47:20
the party, if it could happen to him,
01:47:21
then you know, it could happen to me as
01:47:24
well. And that's got me thinking about
01:47:26
my own mental health. Incredible. Yeah.
01:47:28
that this the story is the same because
01:47:30
before that I almost had that mentality
01:47:33
of like of it was that toughen up
01:47:35
classic New Zealand mentality, you know,
01:47:37
where like friends would tell me, you
01:47:38
know, if you're depressed, it's like,
01:47:40
well, just do cool [ __ ] Like go go go
01:47:42
be happy. Like it's crazy. And I and I
01:47:44
never understood depression. And so my
01:47:46
my journey or my understanding of that
01:47:49
is is truly like I've flipped 180. I
01:47:52
flipped 180 after the the journey with
01:47:55
tasting with with Tastain and seeing
01:47:58
seeing him be extremely happy one day
01:48:01
and waking up just wanting to kill
01:48:03
himself the next day. Like just watch
01:48:05
watching that roller coaster and
01:48:06
actually understanding that people can
01:48:07
be wired differently and it's not like
01:48:09
that's not a hey man go cheer up
01:48:12
scenario. This was like it was it was
01:48:14
dark at times. Um and so yeah that the
01:48:20
again every it was a very very dark
01:48:23
period but the what came out of that was
01:48:26
me having a deeper appreciation and
01:48:28
understanding for people going through
01:48:30
mental health and uh which which led to
01:48:31
us in his honor creating um bring people
01:48:34
dancing that's why it's BPD is the
01:48:36
acronym for borderline pipola borderline
01:48:39
personality disorder um so yeah that
01:48:42
that set me off on this other journey
01:48:44
with events which has been Yeah. Are you
01:48:48
Are you at peace that you did everything
01:48:49
you could for your mate? Yeah. Yeah, I
01:48:53
am. I questioned that for a while
01:48:54
whether I whether I was like it was
01:48:56
almost and I don't know what it was like
01:48:58
for your mate, but Oh, sorry. You know,
01:49:00
your yours came as a massive surprise
01:49:02
whereas this scenario was him telling
01:49:04
us, I'm going to take my life. I'm never
01:49:06
going to see my 30th birthday. Like it's
01:49:08
almost in some ways you're like I mean
01:49:12
how do you sit there and listen to one
01:49:14
of your best mates tell you that like
01:49:16
I'm going to do this? And there were
01:49:19
number of times where he'd tried it and
01:49:21
and um I had to get him out of a car
01:49:24
like where he tried to gas himself and
01:49:26
you know drive up to a just crazy crazy
01:49:29
[ __ ] But it's um yeah it's almost
01:49:31
harder
01:49:33
um in some ways that he was so open. I
01:49:36
was I was so actively trying to to help
01:49:39
him and he's so openly saying that this
01:49:41
is what I want and it was the o he felt
01:49:44
like it was the only way that he could
01:49:46
be at peace and there is this small part
01:49:48
of you and a lot of people don't want to
01:49:50
admit it but there's there's still this
01:49:52
part of you where like you almost start
01:49:54
to believe them in the end you're like I
01:49:55
just can't see you go through any more
01:49:57
pain dude this is like so when it when
01:49:58
it eventually happened you it was like a
01:50:01
level of there's just relief relief yeah
01:50:08
It's rough. Yeah, I suppose there's
01:50:10
there's um there's there's probably more
01:50:12
than two types, but yeah, there's your
01:50:13
your mate who um was yeah, making it
01:50:16
very clear clear about how he was
01:50:18
feeling. And then there's my mate who
01:50:19
was very very secretive about it and
01:50:21
nobody knew. But I think both of them
01:50:22
come with like a a degree of like sort
01:50:24
of guilt to the people left behind. Like
01:50:27
you do you do question you what you
01:50:29
could have done differently for a
01:50:30
different outcome. Definitely. It's
01:50:31
tough though. Eough.
01:50:34
Um, say it's your
01:50:37
funeral. Um, you're an old man, you die.
01:50:41
Um, your your family and friends are
01:50:42
there. What three words would you like
01:50:44
them to use to describe you? Integrity.
01:50:48
Yeah, that would be that that that would
01:50:51
be the dream, I think.
01:50:54
Um yeah, I think I I want to be
01:50:58
remembered as
01:51:00
um fun's the right word, but
01:51:04
I you know
01:51:07
I Yeah, I guess if they I mean integrity
01:51:10
covers a lot of things as we discussed,
01:51:11
but even if they just said that I was
01:51:13
just an honest man um that was family
01:51:17
first that um was fun to be around uh
01:51:21
like that that would be far more than
01:51:23
enough. Um, you know, and and I it's
01:51:27
yeah, sort of just weird because I
01:51:28
couldn't I just don't imagine a scenario
01:51:30
where they're talking I don't care about
01:51:32
the things that I've achieved, you know,
01:51:33
it's sort of like it's not even attached
01:51:34
to music, but if they say that I you
01:51:37
know, if they say that I operated with
01:51:39
honesty and stuff, then that would be
01:51:40
huge. It's how you make people feel.
01:51:43
Hey. Um, yeah, you used the phrase
01:51:45
reverse engineer before and that's what
01:51:47
I like about that question because I
01:51:48
think if if it's something that you can
01:51:49
think about, like three words that
01:51:51
people would you'd like people to
01:51:52
describe you once you're gone, then you
01:51:54
can start acting that way. Yeah. Yeah.
01:51:57
Yeah. So true. Yeah. And are you proud
01:51:59
of yourself? I am. I am. I am. I think
01:52:03
there's
01:52:05
um I think it's healthy to be proud of
01:52:09
what you've achieved. I don't I don't
01:52:10
look back on what we've done enough. um
01:52:13
uh growth mindset, eh? Yeah. Yeah. Very
01:52:16
very much 1% of where I need to be all
01:52:18
the time, you know, and which keeps you
01:52:20
humble and it's, you know, on one hand
01:52:23
people, oh amazing, you've achieved all
01:52:24
this. What's it like to stand there?
01:52:25
It's like, oh, it's just nothing
01:52:27
compared to what I would love to be able
01:52:29
to do, you know? So, it's um Yeah. I Are
01:52:33
you good at celebrating the wins along
01:52:35
the way?
01:52:37
Is it a work on? I think it's I think
01:52:39
it's a I think it's a work on. Um, no. I
01:52:42
think look,
01:52:44
we I don't think I don't do enough
01:52:46
reflection. I think celebrating the wins
01:52:49
is like being at the event is there's no
01:52:51
greater way. You're if you're at Fisher,
01:52:53
you're standing on stage, you're looking
01:52:54
at everyone and and it's and you've
01:52:56
pulled off the event. There is no I
01:52:58
can't even imagine a better way to
01:53:00
celebrate it than the success of the
01:53:01
event itself. That that's the unique
01:53:03
thing about events is they are they are
01:53:05
a celebration when you're there. Um but
01:53:08
it's yeah it's funny how just naturally
01:53:10
you're just always always looking ahead
01:53:12
and I and I wish um yeah I wish I did do
01:53:16
more more reflection but um yeah I'm
01:53:19
super proud of what we've achieved and
01:53:21
I'm yeah um very but I'm always more
01:53:25
excited for the things we haven't
01:53:26
achieved.
01:53:28
That's it's good though if you got
01:53:30
something to like look forward to that
01:53:32
that you know that reason to get out of
01:53:33
bed in the morning. Yeah. Yeah.
01:53:35
Otherwise, what you just I don't know. I
01:53:37
would just Maybe that's another fear. I
01:53:39
would hate to feel like I've achieved
01:53:41
it. I would hate to feel like I've
01:53:42
achieved it all. That's Well, I've had
01:53:44
um Anna Moberry on the podcast. You
01:53:46
know, she's one of the Zuru founders
01:53:47
now. She set up a new company called
01:53:48
Zeal. And I I said to her, like, so
01:53:50
she's a billionaire, sold out of Zuru,
01:53:52
got a billion dollars. I'm like, why why
01:53:54
did you set up another company? like why
01:53:55
don't you just go on a couple of boards
01:53:56
or go on the board of trustees for your
01:53:58
kids school and she she described um I
01:54:01
wonder if you agree with this like she
01:54:02
said um uh like Zuru was a mountain that
01:54:06
she climbed and there's many more
01:54:07
mountains that she wants to climb. Yes,
01:54:09
100%. 100%. And that's what we goes back
01:54:13
to that flexibility I want to keep is I
01:54:16
don't want to get fixated on yes I've
01:54:18
been heavily involved in music and a
01:54:20
promoter is what I would have to
01:54:22
identify as primarily but I don't want
01:54:24
that to be what defines me and and if if
01:54:27
you look back from you know I I want to
01:54:29
achieve things in other areas and but I
01:54:32
don't mind for me it's not about the the
01:54:35
category or the industry it's it's about
01:54:38
the objective you know and if the
01:54:40
objective is impacting people
01:54:41
positively, then it doesn't have to be
01:54:43
music. I don't I might just get
01:54:45
absolutely fixated on sport or it might
01:54:48
be golf. Like at this stage, it's
01:54:49
probably going to be golf. If I start
01:54:52
running golf events, I'd be stoked, you
01:54:53
know, but um yeah, I just think in life
01:54:57
we got to stay open.
01:55:00
Hey, well Mitch Low, this has been
01:55:01
great. Um yeah, it's been like a couple
01:55:04
of hours. Um and the impression I've got
01:55:06
is that um yeah, you're a man of
01:55:07
integrity. Oh, yeah. Thank you. I
01:55:10
appreciate that. Oh, no. I really
01:55:12
appreciate you coming on the podcast and
01:55:13
I'm really excited to see what the uh
01:55:14
what the future brings and what you do.
01:55:17
So, I think the country needs big
01:55:18
thinkers like you. Oh, I appreciate
01:55:20
that. Thanks so much for having me, man.
01:55:21
This is awesome. Appreciate it, bro. I
01:55:22
appreciate it. Cheers.

Podspun Insights

In this episode, Mitch Low, a dynamic concert promoter and entrepreneur, shares his journey through the exhilarating yet unpredictable world of music promotion. He dives into his experiences with the intense 75 Hard challenge, balancing fatherhood, and the chaotic nature of his career. Mitch reflects on the emotional rollercoaster of running events, from the thrill of sold-out shows to the gut-wrenching losses that come with the territory. He discusses his relationship with integrity, the impact of mental health struggles on himself and those around him, and the lessons learned from both success and failure. With a candidness that is both refreshing and relatable, Mitch reveals how he navigates the challenges of being a father, a business owner, and a friend, all while striving to leave a positive legacy. The conversation is filled with laughter, insights, and a genuine passion for life, making it a must-listen for anyone interested in the music industry or the entrepreneurial spirit.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 92
    Most heartbreaking
  • 91
    Best overall
  • 90
    Most emotional
  • 89
    Most quotable

Episode Highlights

  • Mitch Low's Journey
    Mitch shares his evolution from a concert promoter to an entrepreneur and family man.
    “I'm just an entrepreneur trying to make the most out of life.”
    @ 02m 41s
    May 21, 2025
  • The Birth Experience
    Mitch recounts the profound experience of his daughter's birth.
    “It was the most intense 14 hours of my life.”
    @ 14m 38s
    May 21, 2025
  • Integrity as a North Star
    He emphasizes the importance of integrity in a cutthroat industry.
    “Integrity is such an incredible term or word or goal.”
    @ 24m 14s
    May 21, 2025
  • The Launch Party
    An 18-year-old throws a launch party for his clothing brand, drawing 600 people and making a profit.
    “I just had the best night of my life and I woke up with four grand.”
    @ 36m 50s
    May 21, 2025
  • Karma and Business Fallout
    Navigating the emotional toll of a messy business split, but believing in karma.
    “Karma takes care of itself, you know.”
    @ 47m 02s
    May 21, 2025
  • Adversity as Opportunity
    Adversity can be seen as a chance to grow and improve oneself. 'Adversity is a privilege.'
    “Adversity is a privilege.”
    @ 51m 46s
    May 21, 2025
  • Financial Lessons from Events
    The ups and downs of event promotion can lead to significant financial losses and lessons.
    “I came back with zero dollars and had to restart.”
    @ 01h 01m 22s
    May 21, 2025
  • Emotional Moments with Artists
    Bringing Brian Adams to New Zealand was an emotional experience, connecting family and music.
    “It just pulled an emotional string.”
    @ 01h 11m 23s
    May 21, 2025
  • Building a Festival Site
    The vision for a large-scale festival venue is a 20-year project, focusing on gradual development.
    “I wanted some land that we could slowly chip away at.”
    @ 01h 26m 30s
    May 21, 2025
  • Overcoming Tall Poppy Syndrome
    Discussing the challenges of tall poppy syndrome and the importance of supporting each other.
    “Winners focus on winning, but it's a losers mentality.”
    @ 01h 31m 16s
    May 21, 2025
  • Loss and Impact
    Reflecting on the loss of close friends and the impact of mental health struggles.
    “It just kept him positive about life.”
    @ 01h 46m 13s
    May 21, 2025
  • Legacy and Integrity
    Discussing how he wants to be remembered after his passing.
    “Integrity. Yeah, that would be the dream, I think.”
    @ 01h 50m 48s
    May 21, 2025

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • 75 Hard Challenge00:34
  • Becoming a Dad13:40
  • Integrity Discussion24:14
  • School Struggles31:59
  • Karma and Fallout47:02
  • Financial Setbacks1:01:22
  • Land Development1:26:30
  • Success Redefined1:34:54

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

Related Episodes

Podcast thumbnail
From Shortland Street to Bankruptcy: Karl Burnett on ADHD, Mental Health & Life After Fame
Podcast thumbnail
Lydia Ko & Israel Adesanya’s Mental Coach GRILLS ME on Negative Self-Talk, Self-Sabotage & More!
Podcast thumbnail
Base Jumper & Author, Sequoia Schmidt - How Losing Father & Brother in Avalanche Inspired Her