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January 29, 2020 30 mins

This week on Legit Check, Yeezy Bust sits down with Severino Alverez to talk about his career as a baseball player to transition into the fashion and sneaker space.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
What's going on? Guys? This is easy bus to and
welcome to another episode of Legit Chick. Here I'm with
my good friend Sevrino Alvarez a k A Severino truly.
Now today we're gonna be talking about some very interesting topics,
kind of like diving into Sevrino's life. Um, as you
guys know, I have a lot of cool people on
the show that not necessarily are in front of the

(00:20):
camera or in front of the scenes at all time. So, uh, Severno,
go ahead and introduce yourself and tell us a little
bit about yourself. Hey, everyone, Severino Alvarez here a k
A Sevy or Severino truly. These guys end up calling
me a lot of different names, So whatever one sticks,
it just depends on what day of the week it is. Yeah, exactly. Yeah,

(00:41):
well today we're gonna stick to uh Sevy just to
make things a little bit easier. Okay, cool, I'm I'm
with that. So. Um, I met Sevrino through a good
friend of mine, uh Drek Croatian style. I've had him
on the show before, and uh we've been good friends
ever since we met. Had our ups and downs, but
it has a few times that's really normal one. Okay,

(01:03):
So Sevy, tell us a little bit about what you do.
How maybe you got acquainted with Dray. What's your part
of the fashion sneaker world. Yeah, so Dre and I
met at Basel in Miami through uh a big sneaker
critic and sneaker collector and sneaker connoisseur a k A.

(01:27):
Trinidad James t J as we know him. Um, he
introduced us back and I believe it was um maybe
and yeah, he introduced me to Dre. Um. We had

(01:48):
a very unique introduction and became friends in the next year.
I would say after that. UM, anyways, time me Dre,
what I do typically depends on who's asking, or again
I like to say, like it depends on what day
of the week. It is a lot of entrepreneurial stuff

(02:13):
that is involved, um with basically conceptual ideas that involve
brand development. UM. I do a lot of consulting. Uh.
There's a kid that is seventeen years old that I
live coach right now. That's kind of what I have
seen at what best benefit him and his creative ventures. UM.

(02:38):
I wouldn't say there's a ton of brands that I
work with there's a few brands that I work with.
There has been brands in the past that I don't
work with anymore clothing wise and fashion that I don't
work with any more that I did. But consulting advisement,
brand development, it's a it's kind of a very intriguing

(02:58):
and unique industry that we work in. You know, sometimes
you work on like a specific project for one brand
for a month and then you're done, And other times
you are working with a brand for several years and
it becomes kind of like a home to you. Uh yeah,
So give give us an example of, you know, one

(03:21):
of the cooler brands that you've worked with them maybe
you know, I know some of them are some of
them are a top secret. So it's okay. Yeah, there's
a few that probably I wouldn't be able to speak
about and keep my reputation. Ah, but we're not out
here to get you. You're not out here to get me.
That happens a lot on the on these on these podcasts.

(03:41):
Sometimes not here though, Yeah, I would say right now there,
I mean, shoot, I'll sell you a really great brand.
I work with Project Blitz. Project Blitz never heard of it,
You've never heard of it. You know, if if you've
had dre On here, then you know what Project Bliz
is and what Project blitz es. He was the second episode. Okay, cool,
so well then we don't even need to delve down

(04:02):
that hole. Uh. In the last a few months and
my first project was during our bassl Is Horritos. You
just did a cool little post about Horritos. But some
Mexican Sota brand. You would say, what the heck Doceta
and culture and sneakers have to do together? Well, yeah,
we made it happen. Yeah we did. I don't really

(04:23):
like to like generally work with any specific brand, any
specific industry. I kind of just like to keep the
door open and just see kind of what flows my way.
I mean, we're here in Hawaii right now as we
record this, making some big moves and making some big moves,
you know, like we were just here for the Louis
Vatton dinner. So it's difficult to say that I work

(04:43):
for or with Louis Batton. They have offered me a
position a couple of times, but the specific way that
I'm with them right now just makes more sense for
me my career path. Yeah, but we're still here. You know,
we we got invited to come out here and enjoy dinner.
They opened up their new store here in Waikiki, So

(05:06):
it was a blessing and I feel very fortunate to
come out here and celebrate with them. But that was
the new store, the one we went to. Yeah, it
was a brand of store, so it was a historic
basically building and foundation. Um. The inside of that store
for the last several months, i mean maybe six to
eight months, has been gutted and totally turned in because

(05:26):
it had two stories before, but just a lot more condensed,
not as much space throughout the whole store. They fit
a lot more product in the store, which I'm I'm
assuming is their goal as any brand. It's like, why
do we have all the space and we can't fit
our product and now they can so, but it was
it was a lout vatan before too. They just yet
so they just redid it. Yeah, they just basically redid
the store. So that's what the whole two day period

(05:49):
was about. You know, obviously for me and for us,
it was a lot more than that. Relationships and being
present with you know, the people that you were work
with is really important. So absolutely absolutely we had a
blast what's the beach today? You know, business and pleasure
doesn't don't always make today was one of the few exceptions,
and and and it is. It is one of the

(06:11):
few places that you can actually mix business and pleasure
and get with it Hawaii. So yeah, I kind of
went on a tangent with what I do. But yeah,
it just kind of depends where I need to fit
and how I can best kind of bring the most
value to the team. I love teamwork, I love hard work,
and um, I love entrepreneurship. So anything kind of within

(06:32):
that fashion art creative realm is something that I'm usually
interested in totally. I think that, especially these days, the
term entrepreneur is not what it used to be twenty
years ago. And it's kind of hard to just pinpoint
one thing that because I have a really hard time
answering the question what do you do? I really do
And it seems like you in a way don't have

(06:55):
an exact answer. And that's okay, because I feel like
that's kind of how things are, know, And it's like
you're saying with like a creative direction and you know,
helping brands out, like I know, I know you're involvement
with blitz obviously and know what you did with Ritos,
which is awesome, Like even me, Like, people are like, oh,
what do you do? And I don't want to say
influencer because I hate that word. Um, I don't want
to say YouTuber or rather say entrepreneur because there's a

(07:17):
lot of things I do behind the scenes that you know,
I don't put in front of a camera. But yeah,
I totally understood. So what do you what are your
thoughts on that? Like what do you think, like why
do you think that is these days? You think it's
because of the Internet. Do you think it's because of
the opportunity that the internet brings or do you think
it has nothing to do with the internet. There's just
a new way of culture, new way of life. Because

(07:38):
I don't know, did you probably when you were in
college you weren't like, Okay, I'm definitely gonna do all
of these things, you know what I mean? Because at
all because most people when they're in college, so like, yeah,
I want to be a doctor, a lawyer, a business
or a teacher or whatever. You know, So what what
what do you think is that paradigm shift that probably
occurred within the last decade or so yeah, So, I

(08:01):
mean I grew up wanting to be a major league
baseball player. My dad played major league baseball, I played
college baseball. I wanted to play major league baseball, you
know a little bit of pro ball, and it just
I I got burned out. But I think that the
competitiveness of that was something that always it was a

(08:21):
part of me. It didn't need need to be baseball
for me to be competitive. I think that the shift
happened probably when I was twenty three, um, which was
ten years ago now, so that would have been two
thousand and nine when I met when I met my wife.
But it wasn't like I just kind of like came
into fashion, you know, like I wasn't wearing Louis Baton

(08:42):
and and visam around and stuff like nowadays. But I
was still with it, you know, like I knew what
was going on. You know, my mom grew up sewing,
so like again, it wasn't like I was some outstanding
outspoken fashion critic or des miner or whatever you may
have it. But at a younger age, I was more

(09:04):
aware of what went in to design, pattern making, sewing, styling,
you know, kind of have a foundation in the creative
realm of fashion, art, et cetera. Because I mean they
all blend together. They always have. Nowadays with technology, it
just seems so much more streamlined together. The paradigm shift

(09:27):
probably happened in oh nine as far as when like
I'm playing baseball too, Oh wow, I'm gonna really start styling.
People that made it further in baseball or other athletes
are some artists from the Southeast, you know, because my
dad played for the Braves in Atlanta, grew up with
a lot of hip hop artists, which is a story
in and of itself. But uh, yeah, I just started

(09:49):
using the other talents that I had outside of baseball,
like my networking and you know, my style. I always
came to and left the park with something for shan.
So when I stopped playing baseball, it didn't. It never
stop where people are always asking me like, Yo, where'd
you get that seavy? Or Yo, where'd you get those shoes?

(10:09):
Or how did you get that so? Um yeah, So
would you say, um, maybe your want for something that's
like exclusive came from almost the competitiveness from baseball or
do you think it's always something just you've you've been into.
I think exclusivity was something that I always enjoyed because

(10:30):
my dad played pro ball. It wasn't something that I
like gloated in. It started a long time ago, man
like beanie babies, baseball cards. I mean, I remember literally
selling my baseball car collection. And it's not like I
sold like, oh yeah, here's just a normal collection. It
was like I had the baseball back cards and the
jersey cards and the autograph cars and like the rookie cards,

(10:53):
and it just became like having the collection was always
something that was important to me. Uh. It's cycled through
so many different things, but something that actually always remained
constant was the wardrobe. Like and when I say remained constant,
I had cool shoes the whole time. But one year

(11:14):
I love paintball, so I had all the coolest paintball
guns and all the gear and the new mask and
the new goggles, and you know, I might not have
had the newest game system, but I still have the
coolest shoes and the coolest fits to me. And then
the next year I'd probably be all into cars, so
i'd you know, like whatever with the car, and I

(11:36):
wouldn't have paintball gear anymore, but I'd still have the
shoes and the fits that I needed, you know, for school.
So I guess once I kind of became a little
bit more successful and had a little bit more opportunity,
the wardrobe is continue to grow. And that's what I
remained kind of consistent with, was like, I'm going to
continue to grow my image. So where do you think

(11:57):
you got an inspiration for like wanting to you know,
collect sneakers and have like a cool or did you
ever have like an inspiration to collect sneakers or that
something more recent? Do you think back then it was
just more so like oh, these shoes looked dope with
this outfit, rather than like, oh, I'm wearing Jordan's or whatever.
I think my mom always dressed me nice and it

(12:19):
made me passion and about making my keeping myself clean,
you know, like but wasn't But do you think it
was more like when you say clean, was that more
like just like white teas and like polos with skinny
jeans or just something that it wasn't necessarily any look,
it was just basically when I say clean, it was like,
I feel like my image has always been important. It

(12:40):
wasn't like I'm trying to create a facade of who
I'm not. It's trying to represent myself in the best way,
which is like totally different. You can look at it
totally different ways, but it's all the same thing. It's
like when somebody gets all dressed up and all done
up and clean and smells get a nice like somebody like, oh,
they're just making a facade, and then other people like, no,
they're just like making the best representation of themselves. Like

(13:03):
I look at it is. We're all out here, we're
all imperfect people. But the best image you can present
yourself with is always what I thought to be one
of the most important things. You know. Basically what you're
saying is like you're always into certain things and you'd
always kind of like need the best of the best
and be able to kind of like what you're saying about,

(13:23):
like the paintball stuff and like the car stuff in
the cards. Where did that? But you said you always
looked fresh, um, no matter what you did, So what
do you um? Where do you think? Like the whole
sneaker collecting side kind of came in obviously, you know
it's an easy bust to podcast, so you know, we
gotta talk a little bit about sneaker. Yeah, for sure,
we got to what do you think was your first

(13:44):
kind of like shoe? You're like, damn, like this is it?
You know, I love the sneaker and I have to
get every color or every model or whatever. Like what
what do you think that that was your first one?
I mean because I know, like just to give you
guys context, um, so you know, like whatever I see him,
he's either wearing some crazy off whites or some exclusive
Air Forces or Supprise or whatever it might be, or

(14:08):
literally just a black fair Vans. So fat, what do
you think? What do you think was facts on the vans?
Is what I mean? Yeah, And what do you think
was kind of like what made you get into everything?
Was Vans always your thing and then you kind of
branched out in the sneakers or I mean, I think
it's a lot of things, you know, like one thing
that I don't get here get brought up and maybe
it's just me and I'll just call myself out, like

(14:31):
it's fun having things other people don't have. Sometimes it's
a talking point. It's it's it's not being a jerk,
but it's it's it's being like, you know what, man, like, Yo,
did you hear about these? Yeah, I heard about him.
I couldn't get him, you know, I got a cool pair,
like come check him out, Like, nothing wrong being It's
being the guy that has the piece that your friends
want to see, you know. Um, nothing wrong with I mean,

(14:51):
but style is obviously the epicenter of why I was
doing it. Air Force ones, air Max ones, Jordan's wants
to A to three. I've grown on me, but air
Air Jordan fours when I was younger, we're like that
la criminal lacrim. Now when I look at myself, I
just looked so boxy on me and I and I

(15:13):
and I don't dismiss that I love that shoe. But yeah,
like air Force ones, air Max ones, there's some shoes
from back in the day. I mean when I say
my first shoe, uh well, for one of the questions
that you asked, I would probably like, I mean, one
of the first ones that possed into my mind is
literally air Force one white, air Force one white low,
air Force one white, which is like, wow, that's pretty basic,

(15:36):
but hey, there it is. I'm not gonna I'm not
even on the front, Like that was my two of
my go toos somewhat accessible to get to still clean.
It mattered, it was relevant with like multiple audiences were
like you passed with the like Crokey. I mean, I
grew up in the Southeast. I grew up in South Carolina,

(15:57):
So it's like passed with the guys in the in
the sorority girls to an extent, but you still passed
with like the streets a little bit like where you
could be relevant on not both there's like a line
draw on the sand, but like on every side, there's
multiple sides. I would say, like a heater that I
had back in the day was like I mean there

(16:18):
was an air Max one that was pink and gray
that Clock came out with way back. I mean this
was a long time ago and early two thousand's I
was one of my big heaters back in the day.
There's probably a Jordans four back in the day, like
a couple of jordan fours that I had that were fire.
I never had like the eminem or anything we can

(16:39):
I'm like, I can't. I can't stand out and say
that I had like the four like car Heart or
Encore or anything crazy like that. But there was a
couple of drones that I had maybe the lightning cool gray,
the original cool gray. You know, I'm an old man
now though now though, so it's kind of like when
I look back, it's like the things that stick to me,

(17:00):
or like just your typical air Force ones and your
standard air Max ones too, man as we're just two
silhouettes that I always vibed with really well totally. I
think air Force ones, like ever since they came out,
have been a staple and like sneakers, and you know

(17:20):
a lot of people are are saying that they came back.
I just, you know, a few minutes ago, actually did
say they came back. They never really left in a way.
But now I feel like it's becoming more and more
of like a normal thing, you know. But it's funny
because I used to watch, you know, celebrities talk about
their sneakers and they were always like, yeah, I have
I have air Force ones. I wear them one time

(17:40):
and I throw them away, which is the funniest thing ever.
And it's like the biggest like lex ever because the yeah,
we're in a hundred dollar shoe once and tossed away
and I have another hundred pairs, but yeah, and they
never really left. And it's such a timeless shoe. And
I'm willingly to put my money on the on the
on this next statement, Like hear me out, guys, their
forces are gonna be the next big thing next year,

(18:03):
as bees or the thing this year, and like they're
gonna kind of slowly start dying out probably with the
next year. They're never gonna die out. Like the expensive
ones are still gonna be expensive, but um and really
hard to get. But I have a feeling that air
forces are just gonna skyrocket next year. Everyone's gonna be
going crazy for force. Yeah, I agree. Well, so it's
just you know, it's just a shoe that's it's like

(18:25):
it's back like it never left, you know what I mean.
But um, in a way, it's really gonna explode next year.
In my opinion, at least, I could be wrong. I've
I've actually been saying that to some mutual friends of ours.
I feel like Jordans ones been going crazy. I don't
think they'll ever die off necessarily, but I feel like
one the first, second, and third place shoe silhouette contenders

(18:47):
always switched up every now and then, and you know
you've got the Jordan once and now you got the
s B craze going for a little bit, for sure.
The Air Force one's gonna kick in. I'm curious to
see what what silhouette it goes US two after that.
But I would agree with you. I would think that
Air Forces is something that is going to come very
very hard culturally as far as cultural significance in the

(19:11):
next year. Yeah. No, absolutely, I think if we if
we really broke it down, though, I think from two
thousand fifteen two seventeen, it was all Easy. Everything was
Easy Easy three. I mean there was some sneakers in there.
There was some sneakers in there, but like, but you
didn't hear about any of the sneakers. You didn't hear

(19:33):
about really anything anything Nike much. I mean Easy controlled
the media like and and I And I'm not saying
that like literal, I'm just saying it, like you didn't
really hear much outside of the Easy releases, and you
didn't hear because they're outside of the market, being totally

(19:54):
just crazy uneasies, That's what I'm saying. I think two
and seventeen was really just like Kanye, that's it. Like
I I the only thing I wore was Adidas during
those three years. I never had worn Adidas previous I
honestly don't think I've ever owned a pair of Adidas
sneakers previous to that. I was always a die hard
Kanye fan, and you know, still I am, by the way,

(20:17):
but now it's like all Travis Scott and you know,
Jordan's like that's pretty much it. You know, like now
people are seeing easy releases every now and then, they're
just so kind of selling out, but they're not as
crazy as they used to be. I think two dozen
fIF two thousand seven teens with for sure yeasies, maybe
it went from three fifty v ones to seven fifties

(20:37):
to uh, seven hundreds and then I would say no,
I wouldn't even say seven hundred. I'd say V twos.
We're kind of like to take over. But now I
feel like people are kind of getting over him. So
what do you think was like two thousand eighteen and
two nineteen, like what was the shoe of the year
this year? A lot of people were saying, gosh, I
mean the reinsurgence that that Jordan's Nike Brain came. I

(20:58):
mean there were so many ones that came out the Union,
Jordan's I mean the off whites. We can't forget those.
You know, there's a lot of opinions about it, but
a lot of people were saying the last year, the
sneaker of the year was the Union Jordan one. Everyone
was rooting for that guy. And I mean, honestly, for me,
I would say it's one of the best Jordan's. I mean,

(21:20):
I personally wear the blue red white combo to fum blue. Yes,
you would, You would know the official name better than
I do, but I know that it's a fly looking
Jordan one. Um. Obviously the red the red toe are
the black toe with the red top and the in
the gray swede on. It is something else that's just remarkable.

(21:43):
But it's it's they're they're they're both probably top two
Jordan's of the year for sure, But I don't know
if it's it's just tough to say what's the best
shoe of the year, you know, Yeah, it's what was
your favorite of this year or last year? Two thousand nineteen.
Oh man, you know, there's still a few shoes that

(22:06):
are about to come out in twenty nineteen contend with
the dunks. I don't know if they're really contenders. To
be quite honest, like and remind me of what's all
you know? Okay, So, so the skis Pschis came out
this year, the waff Runners and the Blazers. Blazers and
waff Runners super cool shout out of the Sky and
Nike awesome collaboration. I'm a bigger fan of the waff Runners.

(22:31):
I think it's a great shoe. Probably not the best
one of the year. Travis Scott's Jordan One. I would
say that Jordan one Low might be a contender. I
know that's a very unpopular opinion. It is. I like
the Low more than the High and I almost got
crucified on my story. But and that's so, and that's okay.
I think, you know, having an opinion that just differs

(22:53):
is like what dialogue is all about. It's great. As
much as everyone loves the Jordan One, I I'm not
the really the biggest fan of it. Wow, that's like,
I know, dunt, dunt. Yeah, I mean I'm not like
what I wear it? Yeah, I do, I like it? Yes?

(23:13):
Is it with my favorite? No? It really is not.
I'd rather wear the Jordan one though. Um well, that's
the thing. Like Jordan one, I never was a fan,
and at a lot of people were in from the
high piece. But I think what Travis did with the
Jordan one Low was very good because I feel like
beautiful every not not even like the like the color,

(23:34):
and like his like backwards spurge. Like the actual shape
of the shoe is entirely different than like a shattered
backboard blow or like a bread Low or like a
Royal Low, because it was just sleeker, you know, it
didn't have that crazy looking heel in the back. It
was made to be a shoe that you wear on
the street, not a shoe you play basketball, which I

(23:55):
really liked, and that's why I really loved the Eric
costen um as b Jordan one lows, like the unc
color way, and then I like the new ones that
he's actually releasing, which are really really dope. Like that
shape is sick. Like if all Jordan one lows came
in that shape, I'd be We're enjoying one lows all day.
But like the rest of them with that if they

(24:15):
just have a really large heel and like you know,
it's for like ankle support or like support, which makes
sense because it's for basketball. But like I just think
that Travis was really like, you know what, I want
to give this kind of an s B vibe, and
I kind of I wanted to be like a skate
slash streetwear sneaker, Like you know what I mean, I
can I can see that, Yeah for sure. So that's
why I started liking him or not, because I mean genuinely,

(24:36):
like I thought Eric Costin's Jordan One Low was that
for I will say, shout out, shout out to Eric
because that that's that's a fire shoe. It is. There's
a lot of other shoes. In fact, while we're on
the subject, I'm not gonna like probably name all of them,
but we can't forget like the fragment clot air Force
one that came out. I'm an air Force one guy.
Like we've talked about fire. What's another? Oh yeah, this

(25:01):
plant flea market. They came out with some air Force
ones Fire. I like it. So that that's cool. She's
killing it. The Blazers that she came out out with
that are like mixed match. Those are pretty cool in
my opinion about a lot of people might not say
that's the top tier running shoe for the year, but
I think it's a great idea and it was really

(25:21):
cool to me. Um, you know, we're probably missing like
ten shoes, but it was funny. That's that's that's that's
the way. There wasn't like one that you were like damn,
like either you got it and you immediately put on
your foot or like you weren't able to get and
you're like, ship, I really need this. Mm hmm. You
know that that because last year, if there's usually a

(25:42):
shoe I want, I'm gonna try it, I'm gonna get it.
Well yeah, but I don't want to say like I
get every shoe I want. I'm not that guy. But
no matter what, like I'll pay resil, I don't care. Um.
Last year, for me, that shoe was the Hollow's Eve Blazer.
That was my favorite true of last year. Um, I
would say it's either at the top three best shoes

(26:04):
of last year. I paid Resail for it. I didn't care.
I like the black one better. I have the Hollows
Eve too, but the black blazer to me is like,
that's the that's a fire shoe. I wore that a lot.
I don't know. I was a bigger fan of the
Hollows Eve Like that was the first shoe I paid
resoil for last year, overnight d to my house and
wore them the next day. That's how much I love
those shoes. The Blacks Split Swoosh air Force one CDG

(26:28):
that was from last year, I believe, right, I think so, Yeah,
I'm pretty sure. Yeah, I got I got two or
three pairs of those just to make sure that I
had them. So like another amazing slept on. I feel
like those are gonna be something that goes up next year.
But you're gonna hear me go back to the silhouettes
of the air Max one, the air Force one, the
air Drawer and one. I I really think that it's

(26:49):
gonna be hard to kind of pick a shoe for
this year. But you know, um that that'll be a
discussion for probably a different podcast with the May maybe
I'll have, Yeah, I think it to be. I think
I'll have some some guests on that will have a
pretty heated debate, so it would be interesting. I mean,
I feel like I can give a heated debate, but
you know, I probably need a little bit more prep.

(27:10):
I'm gonna have to go back home and look through
my closet of stuff that I'm just like sitting on
and be like, oh wow, I remember this guy. We
live in a busy world. You know, shoes are definitely
something that I'm passionate about, but there's so much else
going on in my life right now that actually I
would be lying if I said that shoes they've taken
a back burner. That's scary to say they'll never be

(27:32):
irrelevant to me. But like again, there's just a lot
of other things that are more important right now. So
I'm always gonna have a fresh paretics. But uh, me
being the best critic of every single shoe that's coming
out on a current basis, it's just probably probably not.
I was just I'm just curious to pick your brain
on that one. But yeah, anyway, guys, um, we're a

(27:54):
little bit sure for time. Um, I'm I apologize if
the podcast sounds a little bit different. Um, you know,
I'm not back in the studio in l A. And
I'm in Hawaii trying to enjoy my time out here
with Severino truly and a couple other friends that we
have out here. So, um, Severino, this is uh your
time right now. Go ahead, like leave us with something,

(28:16):
you know, tell us where we can follow you and
see more of a Saverino truly, yeah, kind of you know,
tell tell us something like a little a word of wisdom,
so you know, man, man, I'll try. Um okay, So well,
first off, I appreciate you, Thank you for coming off. Guys. Yeah,
you know, I think that we all have a lot

(28:39):
of talents and and and ambitions in life, and I've
chosen to chase several different ones of mine and I've
kind of landed where I'm at right now with this
kind of creative realm that I've kind of revolve inside
of the reason I'm saying that is because I've always
been really ambitious about doing what my my heart felt.

(29:00):
So if I had to leave you with any words
of wisdom, it would just be to really be ambitious
and and disciplined about how to get where you want
to get. Um. For me, it was just being determined
and making sure I was accountable to the plan that
I created for myself. Other than that, man, if there's

(29:22):
anything to check out, it's just we have a big
schedule coming up for you know, there's a lot of travel.
Fashion Week, Harris Milan, I'm going to Tokyo. I'll be
in Hong Kong. There's a lot going on art fashion stuff.
But yeah, I would say just just if if you
want to follow some crazy stuff out side of this

(29:42):
guy and everybody else he has on you can check
me out. My name is, like, like he said, Severino
Alvarez or Severin No Truly. You'll be able to probably
find me on is it at Severino Truly? On Instagram? Yeah?
Who wants to go check out some Yeah? Some fit picks? Yeah,
fit picks. I'm not gonna lie though. If if there's

(30:03):
an old man putting out fit picks on another level,
it's it's your voice, Severino No, but hey, for real.
I appreciate you guys my Heart Radio. Thanks guys for
having me on. Look forward to uh hearing more great
things about the podcast. Man, Well, appreciate you for coming on. Man,
thanks for having me in Hawaii, and I'm gonna get
you guys next time. Peace
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