All Episodes

July 3, 2025 55 mins

Remember that mustache guy who made you spit out your coffee laughing about beef jerky and HOA disputes? Scotty K returns to the podcast where it all began, bringing us along for the wild ride his life has become since our last conversation.

From quitting his firefighter job to reaching nearly 4 million TikTok followers in just over a year, Scotty's transformation has been nothing short of extraordinary. But what stands out isn't the follower count—it's what he's done with it. Through marathon livestreams and ruck marches, he's raised over $143,000 for the American Heart Association. His fitness company now employs 25 full-time coaches (including actual doctors) and helps clients like Eric, who at 800 pounds is working toward standing up for the first time in four years.

The conversation takes us through Scotty's adventures across America, from being recognized everywhere he goes to jumping out of planes with Army paratroopers. We get the inside scoop on his upcoming apparel brand, Fault Line Apparel, designed to combat toxic masculinity with a "brutalist survivalist" aesthetic. There's also his unexpected partnership with Bethesda, where he'll be cosplaying as an NCR Ranger from Fallout at gaming conventions.

What makes this episode special is the genuine reflection on what it means to suddenly have influence. As Scotty puts it, "I didn't anticipate the impact some of my videos would have on people." Whether he's making viewers laugh with outlandish food reviews or moving them to tears with vulnerable moments, his authenticity shines through. Because as he learned in therapy: "I don't deserve it, but I belong here."

Ready to laugh, be inspired, and maybe shed a tear? Press play and discover what happens when a mustached fitness guy decides to weaponize his audience—not for personal gain, but for making the world better, one video at a time.

Support the show

You can find us on social media here:
Rob Tiktok
Rob Instagram
Liam Tiktok
Liam Instagram

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey everybody, welcome to the podcast things
and stuff, all that good stuff.
We're here with Scotty, who washere, I think, a year ago I
don't remember, who knows,doesn't matter.
Good, it's fine.
We were talking about all thestuff Scotty got and he was
telling me about how much heabsolutely hates beef jerky and
anyone who likes beef jerky, hedoesn't like them.
So you can take it from there.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
Scotty, that's a bit hyperbolic, A bit of a stretch.
No, somebody keeps sending mebeef jerky on like a weekly
basis, as if I have asubscription to beef jerky now
On a weekly basis, you've got aNetflix for jerky Not on purpose
.
I don't like beef jerky, millie, go inside baby, go inside baby

(00:40):
, but no, yeah.
So I have so much beef jerkyfor no good reason.
But no, people send me a lot ofcrazy things.
I get a lot of.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
I was going to ask you.
I want to know, like, what arethe weird things that you get in
the mail?
Like I'm just curious.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
I get a lot of people send me food products which I
very rarely, and I'm talkinglike unpackaged home goods.
Yeah, I see you opening breadonce in a while.
Sourdough bread is a big one.
I get pretty often.
Uh, somebody sent me uh honeyjam which I would try, but I
can't fucking open this.
And then I get a lot of weddinginvites and, like high school

(01:20):
graduation invites.
How weird would it be if Ishowed up to one of those.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Uh, I mean I think you would make their year if you
did it, but like that's, I'msure that's.
None of them are going to bethat close to where you live
yeah, probably not.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
Uh, speaking about where I live, god, I hate this
place.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
I can't wait to move uh, I was trying to open the
door for you to complain aboutwhere you live.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
Yeah, no, liam, and I have talked about it almost at
nauseam at this rate, about howmuch we want to move to new
england.
Yeah, you went up thererecently as well.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
Yeah, so I went up to new england, boston.
I did not expect boston to belike new york city or as much as
new york's like new york cityas it is, it's just a lot bigger
skyscrapers.
I don't know what I wasn'texpecting.
Like fucking benjamin franklinthere with, like you know, with
his stands, with scrolls, withscrolls, and it's what's his

(02:10):
kite in the key?
I don't remember history youknow.
But like I wasn't expecting tobe new york like new york city
and it really was I was likethis is a little extreme for me.
I'd tell it's a little so Icould see I.
We loved salem.
It was full of people dressingup like witches and shit.
That was super cool, like was itreally yeah, like a ton of

(02:31):
people were dressed up as, likeyou know, wiccan witches stuff.
There was like they wereselling all that stuff it I had.
We had a lot of fun.
The restaurants there were likesurprisingly good.
We and we were and what's the?
You know, the funny thing islike you get people that dressed
up like in suits all the time.
A lot of them are just dickslike I'm just gonna not all of
them, but like a lot of them buteverybody dressed, every person
dressed, as a witch is like thenicest person ever yeah,

(02:53):
they're like super cool and talkto you like if they're dressed
like that

Speaker 3 (02:57):
yeah, we spent two days in salem, uh, on our honey
not our honeymoon, but our, ourtrip out there for our
anniversary and we, we loved it.
I mean it was gorgeous, everypart of it, like it was so
pretty.
When you woke up in the morningtoo, like, and the weather was
nice and the people were nice,and that was the thing we went
to walk across the street to gointo this coffee shop and this

(03:20):
box truck I think it was like aU-Haul truck or something like a
Renne Center truck is activelydriving down the road and slams
on their brakes, and it's likethe two guys in the truck were
like Scotty, you know, it's likeyou guys are driving right now.
What are you doing?
And there was like four carsbehind them and they just sat
there and nobody honked.
They were just like oh, theymust know each other, let's just

(03:41):
give them a minute.
It was so, it was cool.
They were just like oh, theymust know each other.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
Let's just give them a minute.
It was so, it was cool, I love.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
Canadian.
There's yeah, I think thefarther north you go, the nicer
people get.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
Somebody was on one of those little trolleys.
They're like you're the guyfrom TikTok and I was like, okay
, bye, as he's like driving,like driving away.
That's going to be nice thatyou're bye, but there was like a
really cool, like a place wherethey sold like these, uh,

(04:10):
chocolate drinks like coffee,but it was made of chocolate.
It was like what you know, likepeople like mayans or whatever
would drink, so they would makeit mocha.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
You nerd.
I don't know what it's called.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
I called, but it was it was like super, like dark
chocolate it was.
It was really interesting.
There was like so many coolplaces we like it's just it's
just really expensive to livethere.
The houses are I was like damnlike it's like three times the
price of our house easily, andwe get made not even as much as
this.
So we're we're not so sure.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
Maybe yeah.

Speaker 1 (04:45):
You'll.
We're not so sure.
Maybe yeah you'll.
You still need a basement foryour blender.

Speaker 3 (04:47):
Well, oakley will get older and not fear the blender
and not nap as much maybe,hopefully, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
So people have been tagging me a bunch in this video
of like this company sells thisthing that goes over the ninja
creamy to cancel out the sound.
It's really you gotta get this,you gotta this like that's a
that's.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
There's a market for it.
Rob, the last time I saw youwas in San Diego for TwitchCon.
Yes, it was when you gotoverwhelmed by the amount of
cereal in the cereal aisle andthe amount of beverages in the
beverage aisle too.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
Don't get that.
Yeah, that was insane.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
How many things did you take home with you?
It had to have been how manythings did you take home with
you?
It had to have been how manythings you have to declare at
customs.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
So yeah, I've got.
I've got my little carry-onthing that I had my laptop in
and I just filled this sucker upwith as much as I could.

Speaker 3 (05:35):
That was great, man.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Your shoulders are looking bigger, yeah I'm
carrying all the diet sodaacross the border yeah, man,
it's been great.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
Um, I appreciate you guys having me back on.
This was the first podcast Iwas ever on oh was it well I
mean because you were.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
I like I saw, like because when you got the like
long story short, I got taggedin a bunch of your videos.
People probably heard the story, everything like that, and then
I was like, okay, so it's, thiscontent's gonna blow up and
it's gonna go there.
So I guess we kind of got youlike right before things really
started to take off, right yeah,yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
Uh, you were the first podcast I went on and then
, like I think, the followingweek, I went down to Houston uh
to hang out with the Echo Visionathletes, uh, before I joined
Rise, and I met michael smoke orhigher up wellness, and I was
on his podcast that weekend andso it just it just kind of
spiraled out of control afterthat.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
So as with everything else as well, or just that,
because it seemed likeeverything kind of just went
crazy after that everything wentcrazy.

Speaker 3 (06:39):
God, I'm so tired of traveling.
Liam, I'm over it.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
I just got back.
What's the worst place that youcan talk shit about and you
don't like?
Oh?

Speaker 3 (06:49):
man shit, or is that just where you live?

Speaker 1 (06:51):
right now.
That's where, yeah, currentlycurrently where you are.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
Um, man, I think of all places that I've traveled
that I really just haven't liked.
Uh, mainly like dallas, becauseit's hot as fuck, um, and I
don't like the heat, but alsolike LA is just, it's LA, it's
busy.
You know what I mean.
New York is cool, but it'sdirty and everything smells like
urine.

(07:15):
Um, but I think my one of myfavorite places I visited
outside of new England cause Ifell in love with that place,
going back for the bachelorparty soon, that's going to be
cool.
Um, yeah, but other than thathas been washington,
washington's fantastic love.
That dc no, washington dc is acesspool of a bunch of ants

(07:37):
crawling over each other,snagging each other's butts.
I fucking can't.
Uh, that sucked we.
I was there for a good cause,but I I hated it.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
I remember you going there, so I was like, is that
what you're talking about?

Speaker 3 (07:47):
No, Washington State, washington State, the PNW is
gorgeous, but no, I just gotback two days ago, I think, from
Kentucky.
You want to talk about afucking flyover state.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
All the Kentucky people right now are like, yeah,
OK.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
Yeah, no, I get it.
No, I went out to Kentucky, thearmy's uh professional
parachuting team, the armyknights uh, invited me out to
jump out of an airplane andparachute with them and I was
like sure, let's do that.
Um, and it was fun, it was cool, um, and they wanted it to be
like a recruiting thing for,like for the army.

(08:25):
And I was in the army and I Itell people actively all the
time not to join the armybecause it sucks.
Yeah, it's a little ironic, yeah, yeah, yeah and so I went out
there and they're like yeah, ifyou just want to shout out like
the recruiting.
And I was like how about?
How about I do, how about Ishout out?

Speaker 1 (08:39):
the timing especially is like a little rough.

Speaker 3 (08:43):
I feel like Well, there's a nationwide recruiting
shortage in the military,especially in the army, and so I
was like, how about I shout outa charity that I work with?
And they couldn't say, no, youknow, because then they'd have
to be like no no to charity.
So I just ended up shouting outa charity before I jumped out
of the plane.
It was cool.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
Did you listen to Tom Haney's Free?

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Falling as you went down.
That was the song that was inmy heart.
Yeah, but no, it was a goodtime.
The flights home were horrible,horrible.
Woke up early to get to theairport and then my flights got
delayed like five times.
I was supposed to get home atlike 11 am.
Got home at 6 pm.
It was horrible.
Hor got home at 6 pm.

(09:27):
It was horrible, horrible.
Yeah, so all in all, I'm homefor another week and I go to la
for a dungeons and dragons thing.
Oh, that's super sick is it justlike a one-shot?
campaign thing that somebody itis or it's like so, uh,
derrington press is like asister company of critical role
and they, they own dagger heart,which a good friend of mine,
elise, created.
They sold out and they'retrying to get more pr on it.

(09:48):
So myself and tank tolman andif he, uh, uh, and a couple
other creators are going to dicetimes studio in la to film, um,
it's not gonna to be livestreamed, so it's going to be on
their YouTube on Darringtonpress and it's.
I made a character for ityesterday during our zero or

(10:10):
session zero, and it was funnybecause there's specific like
damage.
How you take damage is likeunder your armor class of like
three or four and then anythinghigher than that you get into
like severe damage or majordamage and things like that, and
it's like one damage, twodamage or three damage and
they're like, yeah, it should belike a two or a four.
And I was like, uh, mine's afucking 13 and a 26, did I?

(10:33):
They were like, how the fuckdid you build that?
And I told them I made a, uh, ajuggernaut human brawler.
And they were like, oh, yeah,so you're literally just a
fucking tank.
And I was like, yeah, that'sthe idea.
So my character's name is uhwell, don't get me lying to you.
I built it um buckshaw, okay,because?

(10:55):
it's a western campaign, so thename is buckshaw I guess I have
to talk a lot.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
My favorite character to play is the one with eight
intelligence, all the strength,and I name them Oof or Oog or
something like that.
Those are my favoritecharacters to play and Oof
always talks about Oof in thethird person, like, of course.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
And those are the best ones.
And you took a big old bite outof a cabbage and you spit it on
a plate and presented it topeople.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
I don't even remember what I did, but I'm sure I did
it was amazing Oof hungry.

Speaker 3 (11:25):
Yeah, that's good.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
That's great, fresca, fresca.
I actually have tea.
I actually don't have a dietsoda.
It's weird.

Speaker 3 (11:35):
That's so weird.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
It's so weird, but I just, I don't know I finished
something I don't even remember.
I don't remember anythingthat's going on, but anyway.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
I kind of wanted to talk to you.
Sorry.
Last time that I was on thispodcast you were gainfully
employed.
You are fucking unemployed now.
You quit your job.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
Being unemployed has been the best decision I've ever
made.
Man, it's nice, huh.
It's just.
I don't have Working overnightjust sucked so many asses that I
just it's the best getting outof that.
Yeah, oakley, sleep still sucks, so I still wake up early and
whatever, but at least I canmake it all work, whereas when I
was overnight that's.

(12:15):
Please, don't do that.
It just destroys you Anybodyworking overnights.
I feel for you because it'sabsolutely rough.
But, yeah, quitting has beenjust the best thing it's great,
no but go on you were gonna askme a question.
I just want to see like yeah,because you're trans, because I
mean like you had a lot of youknow like success since the last
time we met you, I kind of wantto just kind of get your take

(12:37):
on just like on, on on, like thegrowth that you've had in some
of the like you know what's the,you know some parts about it,
some parts that are like youdidn't realize.
Maybe is there anything thatyou're like wow, I didn't
actually like.
You know, I didn't see thiscoming.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
I running the risk of sounding like a conceited
dickhead here we, as a channelon Tik TOK.
I went from, like I say webecause it's, you know, me and

(13:13):
my fiance that handle everythingwe went from 750 followers to a
million and 38 days and so it'sjust, and from there it's it's
rarely slowed down.
Um, we're almost and I sayalmost by, like, I think, 300
followers.
Uh, on Tik TOK, we're away from300 followers, away from 3.9
million, just hit 1.4 million oninstagram, which I did not
anticipate that happening at all.
Uh, in the videos that didreally well, there were pissing
off my hoa and my shaving videosthose two ones.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
Those ones did well.
Interesting, I kind of expectedmore of your like fitness ones,
I guess to do well on instagrambecause it seems like that's
what does.
Well, really, that'sinteresting yeah, yeah and uh.

Speaker 3 (13:45):
So like the success overall is it's.
It still floors me.
You know, I wake up and I'mlike nobody deserves this kind
of life.
You know, like I've, I'vetraveled way more than I ever
thought I would.
I've met so many amazing peopleand heard so many amazing
stories, going to the Arnoldwhere you and I finally hung out
Um, I met 2,500 people at ameet and greet, uh, over a

(14:09):
couple of days, and I ran out ofGerm-X and I got sick.
But it was incredible becauseyou know of the, the connections
that you make and the uh, Ididn't realize.
I think that I belong whereI've been placed and I think
that I don't deserve it, but Ibelong there.
And it's a weird duality that Ifind myself in, because the LA

(14:31):
fit expo was the first time Iwas ever on a panel and I'm
sitting up there with lean beefpatty and the trend twins and
professional week guy and I'mlike the fuck am I doing up here
?
I'm a 30 year old mustachefitness.
This is weird.
And, um, I realized, like I,I'm not the one who decided that
I needed to be on this stage,right, uh, so I can't take it

(14:52):
away from myself.
So, um, I and that comes fromtherapy, I've been working on
that Um.
And then, like, I met some of my, my favorite creators that I
followed for years and, um,they're incredible people.
There's some that I met thataren't incredible people.
Uh, you know, uh, you meetpeople who you're like, how have

(15:13):
you not been discovered yet asas just a giant shit bag?
Um, but for the majority of thepeople that I've met in the
space, they're just fuckingawesome people right?
Lean B Fatty's a sweetheart.
Professional Weak Guy's asweetheart.
I was texting Sam Sulik thisweek which is a weird sentence
to say out loud and he's justthe simplest, nicest guy he

(15:35):
texted me.

Speaker 1 (15:35):
That's what I expected from him, though, like
every video I see from him.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
that's exactly what I expected To just marry just
like down to earth, like, yeah,all right, cool yeah, he texted
me, was like I just crushedchest and I was like nice.
Then he sent me a picture of afish and I was like hell, yeah,
sam, that's, that's sam, trulyfor you.
Um, you know, meeting willtennyson or chris bumstead or
these guys that I've followedfor absolute years.
It's incredible, man.

(15:59):
I'm happy to call some of thesepeople, uh, my friends, you
know.
And something that I didn'tanticipate was how recognizable
or how well branded I am withthe mustache, with the hat, with
the converse Okay, yeah.
And so like walking through atarget in the middle of nowhere,
illinois, and uh, I was upthere for my, my weights back

(16:20):
here being painted.
He's up there with like fivedays, middle of a blizzard and
my videographer, josh, and I goto a target to get groceries for
this Airbnb and there's thiskid walking through holding
these frozen pizzas and he seesme and he drops them and he
starts shaking and I was likewhat's going on, man?
And so like in the middle ofnowhere or in the middle of a

(16:42):
subway in New York city, or, uh,going through a drive-through
for my kiddo.
I went to Walmart this morningwhen I woke up to meal prep and
nine people stopped me.
One of the cashiers, super nicegirl cried and hugged me and
like or I'm going through a, a,a, the Las Vegas air pardon me
airport, and a woman taps me onmy shoulder while I'm filling up
a Diet Pepsi at a Burger Kingand just tears.

(17:08):
And that I didn't anticipate.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
Well, I don't want to brag.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
I'll go to a dinner with my fiance or my friends
while we're traveling and I'llleave that restaurant and a day
later I'll get three messagesthat are like hey, you came to
the restaurant I worked at, or Iwas sitting across from you and
I didn't want to bug you andI'm like bro, say hi.

Speaker 1 (17:27):
I've actually gotten that a few times.
I've had people say like Ididn't want to say anything or
do it.
Or if people did, say hi,they'll message me like I didn't
want to.
I'm sorry for saying hi.
I'm so sorry.
I'm like aren't you the guythat like eats food online
sometimes?
And I was like, yeah, I am.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
So you might have people that cry, but like, come
on, that's pretty good no,that's, that's the thing is I,
uh I didn't anticipate overallthe impact that some of the
videos that I have made wouldhave on people.
Yeah and uh, you get that a lot, you know.
I think that's why you're.

Speaker 1 (18:03):
So you fit well into like a panel or something,
because I don't think the trendtwins are making too many videos
that are like hitting people intheir soul, talking about you
know real life shit.

Speaker 3 (18:13):
You know like they're , they are what they are and I'm
not trying to hate on any ofthose well, you know, what's
funny about that is that mypersonal experience with the
trend twins was very minimalbefore we got on stage.
And then on stage, of coursethey're the trend twins, they're
the whole time.
Um, and hilariously, a womanfrom the audience finally got
the microphone she was the lastone to receive the microphone

(18:35):
for this panel and she was likeI made a rap for you guys and if
and if you guys like it, I wantto be in your, I want to put
you in my music video.
And then she just like no musicor nothing, she just started
like freestyling and it was ass.
It was so bad.
My videographer went fromfilming, you know, uh, wide to

(18:56):
for the YouTube to verticalright on this.
It was so bad, um, but we gotoffstage and they were just like
normal dudes, reallyinteresting.
They weren't bravado.
They were like oh, it's reallynice to meet you, sir, and like
they were super nice and theywere chill and so very much

(19:17):
characters, right, and I didn'tanticipate that either.
I was like, oh, these guys haveto be like bros all the time,
right, yeah, it's just not thecase.
Yeah, I think, I think they, uh, they found their niche and
what sells what they need tosell.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
I gotta say like that character though has got to be
kind of fun to play eventuallyafter years, I'm sure you're
like all right, I gotta befucking done with bro a and bro
b, but like you know, like it'sfor the time being like I can
see it being being fun sure,yeah, well sure, you're the
person that plays oof.
I like the characters are fun.
Man, I'd love to play like acrunk, like playing a crunk from

(19:50):
like Embers of Earth is likeamazing, it's poison for.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Cusco like it's so great that's fun, man.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
Eventually I'm sure it gets tiring.
But is there any like?
I'm wondering like is there anylike parts of this whole thing
that you're like you don't enjoyso much?
Is there any like aspects to it?

Speaker 3 (20:10):
they're like I could go without this brand deals, so
like a lot of the like.
For the viewers watching whomay not know, part of signing on
to a company, they're givingyou a salary.
Most of the time, with thatsalary comes expectations of
posting on a schedule, and Ihate that.
I hate being under the gun tocreate content, and so I've told

(20:31):
a lot of these companies tosuck a fart.
I'll make a video when it makessense for my brand.
And I didn't say it in thoseterms, right, it's very
professionally.
I put it in the chat.

Speaker 1 (20:47):
It was in all caps, so make me sound smarter.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
But the idea is that, like I don't want to be one of
those guys that makes contentthat like you watch and you're
like, oh man, I wonder how muchyou got paid for that.
You know, I've done.
I've done one one off video eventhough that's what you're
getting already right, you getthat all the time, and that's
the thing is something that I'velearned from a lot of like
watching creators.

(21:10):
I want to create content, likeI'm a consumer of that content.
Yeah, right, and that's how Ithink about.
That's what I think about whenI'm editing as well.
Like am I bored?
And and that's super easy is toget bored while watching
content, especially contentthat's like over a minute to two
minutes long, and I'm no longerin the creator fund either, and

(21:32):
so I'm just making content thatI want to make, and so it's fun
for me.

Speaker 2 (21:39):
Don't worry, when we hire you on as spokesperson for
Oops All Chemicals pre-workout,you will have full creative
control.
We hire you on as spokespersonfor oops all chemicals
pre-workout.
We're working on creativecontrols yes, I love yes locally
.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
You can go, you can take it any direction you want
to they're fucking all of them,all of the.
You're like, listen with allthe followers that you have
followers I have, don't youthink, oops, all chemicals would
do fucking numbers?
That's really numbers yeahthat's really as long as it
tasted decent and had a bunch ofchemicals in it.
It doesn't matter put caffeinein there it doesn't matter, you

(22:11):
throw ashwagandha in there whogives a shit, doesn't?

Speaker 3 (22:13):
yeah, I mean.
Another thing that I didn'tlike foresee is, uh, working
with some of the companies thatI have been able to work with
right.
So, like gymshark Now, rightnow we are negotiating our third
contract.
So if I leave Gymshark, I won'tgo to another clothing company

(22:33):
because I want to build aflagship with companies, not
seem like I'm jumping ship toship whoever pays me more.
I will not go to Young LAbecause they don't have plus
size clothing and they have apretty spotted history when it
comes to how they treat peopleof specific lifestyles.
I'll put it at that, and so ifI leave, I'm not going anywhere

(22:54):
else.
But I I got signed on withGymshark cause I broke into
their New York event, like that.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Physically like your chain that you had to break, or
like wait no, there wasn't athey they ran out of tickets.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
They were.
They were sold out and so Isnuck in and just pretended like
I was supposed to be there andI got recognized by one of the
talent managers, who's a veryclose friend of mine.
Now he's coming to the wedding,um, and he signed me and he's.
He's incredible and I I'vedeveloped a really good working
relationship with Jim shark andthen same with rise.
Rise supplements was the firstcompany that I signed on to.

(23:28):
Rise Supplements was the firstcompany that I signed on to and
I love those guys.
They're incredible.
Nick Stella is the CEO and NoelDizel Love that guy to death.
And we've been working on myprotein and that's the thing is
like I didn't anticipate havingsignature products.
You know what I mean.
Like that's something that justdoesn't come to mind when

(23:48):
you're first starting makingcontent or you finally get a
video that pops off is like, oh,I'm going to get my own protein
or pre-workout or whatever.
And so, like my protein wassupposed to come out last week
but, in very Scotty K fashion,the manufacturers forgot the
fucking sweetener, so they hadwait, wait, wait wait, they made
.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
so how many did they make before they like?

Speaker 3 (24:10):
fucking a whole run of them 500.
Oh, my god, yeah, they had tomake, they had to run a whole
new product line and so, um, andthen the helimix bottle.
That was insane.
Like I didn't, you know, I goton the phone with helimix and
they were like, yeah, we can getyou an athlete code and
affiliate.
I don't want one.
I don't want to do that.
I've got enough of the code.
Scotty, you know, sniff this,scratch that for 10% off.

(24:34):
I fucking don't like that.
And um, he was like what do you?
want.
And I don't know what came overme.
He's like what do you want?
I was like I want a signaturebottle.
He said we've only done thatfor two people, uh, max Taylor
and David Ziegler.
I was like I know I'm going tobe the third and he was like you
know what?
Fuck it, let's do it.

(24:54):
And then we just started and itwas awesome.
Uh, and then he was like God,like two or three weeks later
he's like hey, I need yoursignature man.
And I was driving back fromDallas and I stopped into a
target and I walked in and Iasked him.
I walked in and as I was walkingin, I came across somebody and
I was like hey, can I have yourreceipt please?

(25:16):
Do you need it?
And she was like no, and I waslike thanks.
And I went back to my truck andI wrote I wrote my signature on
the back of a fucking targetreceipt from somebody else's
purchase.
Um, it was fantastic and that'swhat I sent into them.
Um, but, yeah, and we've had,we've had a lot of success with
that stuff and, more importantly, we've had success with charity
.
You know we've done so muchcharity work, um, and it's been

(25:41):
the forefront of a lot of thingswe've done.
So, like selling this hat.
You know this hat was createdby dad brand apparel and, uh,
it's really funny because thewashing instructions on the
inside of the hat says Ask yourMom.
That's objectively hilarious.
But it took me five months tobreak the door down for them.
I was like, hey, I want to workwith you guys.
Eventually they're like, yeah,how can we do that?

(26:03):
Now, this hat initially saidMILF, right here, I had to seam,
rip it out of my hat toactually wear it.
And they wanted to put that backon there.
They were like, yeah, we havethe blanks, we just won't stitch
MILF into it.
We can sell it as a Scotty Ksignature hat.
They were like do you want$4.50 from every purchase or do

(26:23):
you want 20%?
I was like I did the math and20% was $5.
I was like let's just go with20%.
And whenever they agreed tothat, I was like, great, Now all
of that's going to go to thischarity.
And so we raised over 15 grandselling these hats.
It was awesome.
And then I get to see this hatwhen I go to conventions.
It's really cool, yeah.

(26:44):
And then we did the AmericanHeart Association stream, where
we streamed for five daysstraight I was sleeping on
stream, you know, and all kindsof stuff which was inside an
average of like 2000 peoplewatching me sleep.
You guys are weird.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
This guy's going to wake up any moment.
Hold on, no, no, no, no, no.
Don't leave yet, don't leaveyet.

Speaker 3 (27:01):
Yeah, but it was.
We raised $143,000 in five daysand we're we're already ramping
up, uh, the next event andwe're getting so many people
involved.
Um, that I'm super excitedabout.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
We've got god, we're working with toyota, we're
working with walmart and I meanall kinds of people intel nice
well, yeah, with the americanart association I'm sure you can
get you know a few or a bigcompanies you know on board with
that.

Speaker 3 (27:29):
Well, I'm also super creepy.
So when I want to work with acompany, I just look up their PR
rep and I find them like theiraddress, their phone number,
like pictures of their kids, andthen I call them.
There's a bounty hunter kickingin.
That's the bounty hunter thing.
Yeah, and it works, man,because I don't call them like
breathing heavy.
I start off the call with likehey, sorry to cold call you, I'm

(27:52):
scotty from the, you knowcalling on behalf of the
american heart association, andthen people's ears perk up.
But it's been super beneficial.
And I also joined a veterangaming community called regiment
gaming.
Um, now, they had a history ofbeing a for-profit veteran
gaming company, which landedthem in some pretty hot water.
So I joined that company assoon as they went nonprofit, and

(28:18):
so myself and a few otherstreamers are now the face of
the company, and so we're doinga ton of activations and
building PCs for veterans anddoing all kinds of fun stuff.
So there's that.
And now I'm working withBethesda on a bunch of things
too.
They're sending me out to GCX,which is a gaming conference in
Orlando, where I'm going to becosplaying and judging cosplay

(28:42):
competitions and interviewingpeople on the main stage, do you
?

Speaker 1 (28:45):
have your costume set up, or are you still waiting to
figure out what you're doing?

Speaker 3 (28:48):
I have a professional , uh, a professional cosplay
like costume designer, makingtwo different ones, so I'll be
an ncr, yeah.
So here's why I'll be an ncrranger for gcx, right, and uh,
I'll have like the rifle and thewhole thing, um, and then I'll
move on.
Like, while I'm there, I'mgoing to be doing a bunch of

(29:10):
stuff on the main stage.
It's going to be really coolInterviewing the main makeup
effects artists for the TV show,the fallout TV show, and it's
very fallout adjacent.
All I have to do is stream forlike four hours whatever video
game I want for St Jude's andthen we're going out there.
It's going to be really neat.
Um, my good friend, batty, orKyle Batty, streams.

(29:38):
He's on the board and Batty isone of the other gentlemen who
is the face of regiment gaming,so we're very close, um, and so
doing that.
And then, three days after mywedding, we're in the Mojave
desert for wasteland weekend isthe 15th anniversary of it, uh,
and it's like it's like Mad Maxand fallout had a bastard baby,

(29:59):
um, and it's going to be reallycool.
So I'm going out there not onlyas an NCR ranger on day one,
but on day two I'm going to be aRaider.
So in the fall universe Now I'mgoing on a prep for my wedding.
That's why I meal prep todayand I'm going to be absolutely
just dick skin shredded.
It's going to be really cool.
And so the Raider cosplay isvery bare bones.

(30:20):
I'm shirtless, covered in blood, right.
I look like a murderous rampant, but with the juxtaposition of
a reporter in the field vibe.
So I'm going to have like anewsboy cap on and a microphone
and it's going to be recordedwhere I'm like all right, jim
we're here with, and then it'sgoing to be a bunch of that.
That's all recorded for FalloutDay, which happens in October.

(30:41):
I'll be helping put that on,which is also a prerecorded
stream for charity.
So it's going to be reallyfreaking cool all the things
that we're layering in forbethesda.
Um, and I just streamed acouple of days ago before I

(31:01):
fucking jumped out of anairplane with uh west johnson,
the voice actor for skyrim,oblivion, uh morrowinds, fallout
, new vegas 476.
He's been involved in so manyFallout projects or Bethesda
projects.
Overall he's incredible.
So we got to stream with him.
I didn't know I was streamingwith him until 3 days prior and
then he did a bunch of likecameo type videos where he was

(31:22):
in character and then sent themto me and so I had to make a
video kind of bolstering this.

Speaker 1 (31:28):
and that's when I realized, when he sent those
videos, uh, the day after Ifound out we were doing this,
that's when I found out that itwas for alzheimer's uh, charity,
and I was like fuck, all rightso you have like a charity bingo
card or something that you haveto get all of them in a row, or
it's just like you try and getoff as many as you can with that
little, that little stopper,with the little glue stick thing

(31:49):
.

Speaker 3 (31:49):
No, man, I just I think that, like when you have
an audience and like a community, a lot of people like weaponize
that community or that audiencefor their own personal gain,
yeah, and to line their pockets.
Think like cooking for gains.
That guy is a bitch.
But if you can weaponize thataudience or utilize that
audience for charity, let mefucking why not?

(32:11):
Right, as long as your billsare paid go for it.
So we do a ton of charity work,man.
Honestly it makes me happy.
I, the last day of the AmericanHeart Association charity event
was a ruck march and I steppedoff on that ruck march with the
idea like, hey, every twohundred and fifty dollars we're
going another mile Right.
And then eventually it turnedinto I'm not stopping until we

(32:34):
hit 100 grand.

Speaker 1 (32:35):
I remember that, I remember watching that we were
just like walking 1,800 miles orwhatever it was.

Speaker 3 (32:40):
It was horrible.
At like mile 18, there was thisold man named Robert who had
like like high centered hisfucking truck on a rock outside
of a schlotzky's which is asandwich shop.
And we walk up and he's likeI've been here for three hours,
I can't get off the rock.
And so we deadlifted this guy'sfucking truck off of this rock

(33:03):
and god, that hurt my back, uh,because military.
And then we just kept ruckingand, uh, we just kept going for
miles and people would get onthe live, like where are you
going?
I'm like fucking west, I don'tknow, uh, um, and but it was
really cool to see that we had alot of, uh, people in the
community that were watching thelive stream.
They would come by and theywould honk, or some people even

(33:25):
go slightly ahead of us by likea quarter mile and brought us
like oranges and bananas andwater and Gatorades and stuff.
And it was really neat, man, um, and having that community
aspect come together.
And so for this next event,we're pushing it to potentially
eight to 10 days.
We're going to do an in-personevent for the ruck March where
people can join in, uh, for afee, obviously, for charity, um,

(33:46):
and then we're doing a virtualruck march because a lot of
people on that live stream werelike, oh, I want to join in, but
I'm like in Nebraska and I'mlike, oh, fucking sorry.
And then people even days afterwe're making videos that were
like I was motivated to do thisbecause of that live stream and
so we're going to do that.
We're almost like a virtualfive K, all kinds of stuff.

(34:12):
We're getting john cenainvolved.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
I've gotten a little obsessed with the american ninja
warrior thing I watched, can Ijust say, like a ninja warrior,
back when it was sasuke whichwas like the original japanese,
you know, ninja warrior and thenamerica I remember was it g,
was it g4 tv or whatever they.
They sent people over to competein Sasuke.
I watched that and then I gotto see it.
When it came to America andthey're like American Ninja

(34:35):
Warrior, I was like I got.
So there's a Ninja Warrior gymlike 20 minutes from my house
that I like going to.
They have like the salmonladder and all that stuff, those
, are really cool.

Speaker 3 (34:45):
I got to hang out with Flip Rodriguez oh shit, no
kidding.
Yeah, I got to hang out withFlip Rodriguez oh shit, no
kidding.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So he's actually apparentlycousins to a very close friend
of mine, and so we ended upmeeting in Dallas for DreamCon
DreamHack one of the fuckingconventions and so he's a really
cool guy.
We're working on getting thoseguys out for this event.

(35:07):
It's going to be really cool.
We're trying to do a lot ofthings.
I want like an avengers levelthreat when it comes to, uh,
this charity this year.
So it's gonna be really neat.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
Yeah, that's awesome man, so you got a couple things
going on.
Is what you're saying, justlike just?
A few, just a few, I'm verytired I don't know.
I mean, I know you don't reallykeep track of all of it.
You have people that kind ofkeep track of your.
You know like you knoweverybody else, but yeah, still,
I don't know how you get to all.

Speaker 3 (35:34):
I do have an assistant.
You know I have a full timeassistant and she's great.
I mean all of this, not tomention that I started a fitness
company to absolutely bankruptV Shred Right, because, fuck
that guy.
So I started my fitness companyin November and, uh, we have

(35:55):
done very well and uh happy tosay that I now employ over 25
full time coaches and uh, two ofwhich are fucking doctors.
I have doctors on staff.
It's fucking crazy and, um,it's great.
Man, I love it.
We actually make a difference.
Doctors, uh, physicaltherapists, yeah, so, uh, yeah,

(36:19):
not, not, not just to see yeah,yeah, align your fucking chakras
, dude, um.
But no, we we have a lot of,really.
We, we make a difference.
You know what I mean?
I just signed on about a monthago.
This guy, eric and Eric um, hasbeen bedridden for four years.
He was 1200 fucking pounds.

(36:39):
Um, he has congestive heartfailure and left side edema and
he's been pissing in a pan forfour years his words.
He's been pissing in a pan forfour years, his words.
And so now his only goal andconceptualize this, if you can
is to fucking stand up.
Are you kidding me?
Like how, how privileged are weto just get the fuck up in

(37:00):
comparison?
So this guy, I was very wary onsigning them and taking them on
as a personal client of mine.
Um, cause I take VIP clients.
I don't charge any extra, I'mnot capital one, I don't care
what's in your wallet, I justwant to work with specific
people.
And so this guy was like I'mgoing to do it with or without
you and I'm like that was thefucking answer, right.
And so um he's.

(37:21):
He got down to 800 pounds, buthis doctors won't even look at
him for weight loss surgeryuntil he hits 600 pounds.

Speaker 1 (37:27):
And then like five or six pounds that they'll start.

Speaker 3 (37:30):
And then he still got work to do there.
So his next goal is standingand that shit gives me chills,
dude.
And so I called his local firedepartment, got on the line with
his captain, uh, on that shift,and they agreed to go out and
put up a series of pulleysystems above his bed so he can
do exercise, and had a very longand in-depth conversation about

(37:51):
nutrition with him and hisfiance and how to properly, you
know, structure his mealsthroughout the day, and we had
an all hands on deck with allthe specialists that work for my
company to build him a protocolthat he can manage while he's
still in bed, and it was.
It was very like, very detailed.
Like can you scoot to the edgeof your bed?
How long does it take you toget to your edge of bed Right?

(38:13):
Can you lift your left leg?
How high can you lift?
And so, in comparison, it wassuch a good call and we built
something for this guy that'sactually working, and I had his
check-in that I did today andalmost every time we talk he can
recognize the differences inhimself and that is so powerful.
So I love it, man, the theamount of changes that we've

(38:35):
been able to affect, not onlyfor charity but for people on a
personal scale and the impactthat you have just making a
video putting a cup of coffeedown and asking people how they
are.
Saw that like it's incredibleand I get to, I get to do this,
I get to do this.
You know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (38:51):
It's crazy oh I, every day I tell my wife I'm
like this is my job, like thisis just wild, it's I'm going to
work honey six steps into that.
You know, dirty like uh, messedup, uh computer room we have
over there and that's my job.

Speaker 3 (39:07):
And then I get to take oakley out and we go to
like the museum and shit I waswatching one of your videos
right before we hopped on and itwas the uh god, you said
something.
It was had the quest pizza init, um, and you said something
about how like this tastes, likethis fucked of this, but that I
had a lot of comments aboutthat, but I don't even remember

(39:28):
what it is, because I say likethat's just kind of my thing.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
It's like I'll just say this, fuck this.
And like this came out andpeople are like that's wild I'm
like, I'm, I don't like, I justsay shit like the other day I
said I would rather uh haveintimate relations with a pencil
sharpener than listen to thisguy talk and people are like
that's.
I'm like you haven't heard thisguy talk.
It's really annoying.
At least a pencil sharpener Ican get over quick.
I can get intimacy done fastwhen I need to.

(39:52):
This guy's videos is 10 minuteslong.
I don't want to listen to.
I'm not going to listen to thatfor 10 minutes.

Speaker 3 (39:58):
Yeah, yeah, no, your videos crack me up.
I was funny.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
The konjac noodles.
They was like rubber bandsshoelaces yeah, that's what
those fucking things man,they're not they don't taste
like real food.
And people say like you have tomake them like the, like
japanese make them.
And I'm like well, I only knowamerican way and it's fucking
awful fucking, so apparently youneed to get the japanese to
make no, being in a couple ofyour videos was really fun too.

Speaker 3 (40:27):
Didn't like the popcorn video and the muffin
video.

Speaker 1 (40:29):
It's just doing stupid shit, like you know,
that's, I think, like for a lotof people.
You know, they've got work,they've got school, they got
their kids, they got all thesethings going on, and it's just
like there's a lot of peoplegiving good information, right
like there's a lot of peoplegiving really good information.
But like being able to make itjust like light-hearted and give
people just like a quick laughand just like you'll be like

(40:51):
okay, you know, just you know,wind down from the day and also
here's some decent informationthat hopefully you can use.
That that's what I I do my bestto get get across, you know
yeah, so yeah, no, it works tooyeah I think you know you really
allow, like your videos,especially kind of like allow
people to really just like kindof
open up about shit that's goingon in their life.

(41:13):
You know, I think it's the youdo a great job of that, of
allowing people to kind of likework through some of the
emotions that they have andthey're dealing with, like
especially that coffee.
When you talk about it, likeyou just sit a coffee down,
you're like how you doing,because I think we all kind of
have this shit built up,especially like if you live in
the states and all the thingsare going on, you're just like
fuck, what is?
Yeah, I just have, I want toyell or whatever it is, you know

(41:36):
.
So it kind of gives you just anavenue for that yeah, no, I'm
uh.

Speaker 3 (41:41):
It's really funny.
One of my close friends isworking with a relocation
company that works with socialmedia influencers.
Like he's moving to spain.
All he has to do is make likefive videos about it.
I think he said like theprocess of which moving, packing
, and then like acclimating, andthen what his favorite things
are about spain.
Once he gets there, then I'mlike I can't tan, so probably

(42:01):
not spain, but like run thatbitch back for scotland and I
got you.

Speaker 2 (42:05):
Yeah, dude, I'm good, I'm good let me see.

Speaker 1 (42:06):
good, I don't want to go down.
Let me see.

Speaker 3 (42:10):
Leaving.

Speaker 2 (42:10):
Can't get far enough away from that Mike guy.

Speaker 3 (42:14):
Yeah, dude, I can't man.
I just don't do well with theheat, honestly.
But no, it's been really,really incredible.
And then, like, leaving thefire department was such an
unsettling moment for me andit's been a year now.
You know I should make afollow-up video about that, but

(42:39):
it's been a year and there'sbeen such a tone shift around
the local fire department andthe firemen that I still know on
the job.
Um, like my fiance's father, mysoon to be father-in-law he's a
captain in the fire departmentand so people always ask him in
a very shitty manner like how'sfather?
My soon to be father-in-law,he's a captain in the fire
department and so people alwaysask him in a very shitty manner
like how's your boy doing?
And he was a little embarrassedbecause I quit the fire
department to be a fuckinginfluencer and so he'd be like,

(43:01):
oh, you know, he's all right.
I don't really know about noneof that, and that was the
conversation.
But there was such a shift forhim when he realized that it was
working and that so far it'sbeen successful.
And he people ask him now andhe's like he's doing really good
.
He's doing, you know, and I'vehad a, I've had like three or

(43:22):
four firemen reach out and askfor coaching and, uh, one of
them is a VIP client of mine, isalso now become a very close
friend, um, and he's built likea grizzly bear fucked a fridge.
That guy is huge.
Uh, he is massive.
He's like six foot three, 400pounds.
He's a big dude.
Um, and you just, uh, I don'tknow man it's been.

(43:46):
It's been really cool to decidewho I wanted to be and then not
back down off of it.
I like that.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
My dad was just telling me a story.
He's watching one of my videosat work and someone asked him
like hey, I watched that guy andhe's like that's my son.
And they're like wait what?
Like yeah, it's just reallycool to kind of have those
moments.
You know, yeah, just one day ata time.

Speaker 3 (44:11):
It.
You know like, just you know,just one day at a time.
It gives you a uniqueopportunity to be petty as well.
So I, uh, it does.
It does like you have thosethat's really the most important
part, that's the most importantno like charity, you know
whatever no, we have a.
The reason why I got out of themilitary on my first contract
with this was this guy named, uh, michael matthew mumford.
Right, I called him eminem andeminem um, and he sucked he like

(44:34):
pencil, whipped his pt tests,uh to get uh promoted, and he
was just a general shitbag, andI hated that guy.
Now I was also a shitbag.
We just didn't like each other.
He made my life a living hell,and I got out because of him and
I told him.
As such, I was like you're thereason why I'm leaving.
I hate you.
And then I would run into himin the wild like a Costco and

(44:55):
he'd try to shake my hand.
I'm like fuck you.
And it was really fun, but Nowthat I have this company that I
get to manage and run as a CEO,I found out that his ex-wife
really needed a job, and youknow albeit far be it from me to
deny somebody who's sohardworking a position with my

(45:15):
company.
She is incredible, though, andso she was like while she was in
her interview process, theywere talking and she was like
yeah, I might go work for thisfitness influencer.
He's like oh who?
And she was like yes, might gowork for this, uh, fitness
influencer.
He's like oh who.
And she was like, yes, uh,scotty k fitness.
And he was like, well, I reallyhoped that he's, yeah, I really
hoped that he's like a betterperson now and she's like that
guy sucks, uh, but no, there'sso much lore as well.

(45:36):
Yeah, it's such a good time, um, but no, man, I am happy, I'm,
I'm just busy, you know, justbusy I, you know, just busy.

Speaker 1 (45:45):
I would say it's going to calm down for you, but
it's not so like I don't know.
Just kind of keep riding thewave, I don't know yeah.

Speaker 3 (45:51):
Well, that's another thing is like we have more
things that are happening behindthe scenes.
I'm launching I just openedanother LLC launching casino why
not?
I'm launching my own merchcompany.

Speaker 1 (46:11):
I saw you were responding to comments and stuff
.
You were telling people thatyou were gonna like do a merch
thing.
So august 2nd I'm hardlaunching my uh company at the
anaheim fit expo okay, are wegetting some mustaches in the
bowl?

Speaker 3 (46:17):
it's gonna be.
It's less personally branded.
There's gonna be like somethings here and there that are
like definitely like stupidmustache stuff.
Um, but it's uh, I wanted to golike somewhat brutalist,
survivalist vibe, like, okay, Idove like fallout, but I dove

(46:37):
into the psychology behindbranding and like colorways and
the duality of personality whenit comes to branding, right, so
you need like, uh, a logo and anamesake and, like you need to
know where you fall on aspectrum in, uh, what you don't

(46:58):
want your company to represent,when you do want it to represent
, like, is it raw, is it refined, is it serious, is it silly?
You know where do you fall onthat?
Um, and find your, find yourspot on there.
Then go from there.
What do you want it torepresent?
How do you want it to comeacross?
And so, with the duality stuff,there's so many different

(47:19):
archetypes you can go with, andwhat I went with was like the
shaman, who provides wisdom anduh, you know things like that to
the his people, but also thejester.

Speaker 1 (47:31):
So think like rafiki from the line I was just gonna
say rafiki from like that's ahundred percent.

Speaker 3 (47:36):
That's the vibe, but that's not like the artistic
vibe.
The artistic vibe, that's theart.
The art vibe is brutalist,survivalist, wasteland, um, and
so I came up with the name ofthis and, uh, it is fault line
apparel.
The idea is that the main likeantagonist of the brand is toxic

(48:00):
masculinity.
So trying to break that down inthe way of like this isn't ego
lifting, it is emotionalresistance training, right, real
warriors and real, uh, strongpeople build back from being
broken, right, uh, and thingslike this.
So that's the whole vibe isfuck the toxic masculinity and

(48:22):
the toxic like bro culture, likerah, rah, rah, I'm tough, and
how much do you bench?
And rah rah, it doesn't fuckingmatter.
Like shut up, it's not thatserious.
Um, and so there's gonna be likedifferent factions as well, and
so doing different productlaunches around the factions.
So, um, tankless, like our tanktops and like stringers are

(48:42):
going to be called, uh,unarmored, and then, like
hoodies and joggers, are thearmored series and you have
heavyweight stuff, the uparmored series and things like
that.
That's just some of the stuffthat we've done behind the
scenes.
I'm super excited about all ofit.
Um, and so we're also sellingthe hat in different colorways
and for the different factions.
We're gonna have like dog tagsand patches and stuff and so

(49:04):
many different things.
Also jorts I'm doing jorts, uh,because you gotta do jorts on
on leg day when you're hittingquads.
You gotta, you gotta rock thejorts, and so got crocs as well
are we getting some crocs?
and then you could have no crocs, you have a bunch of different
little mustaches and like I'mjust saying, not a crocs guy.
Man never have been to make myfeet sweat.

Speaker 1 (49:24):
I've never worn a pair of crocs, but like they
seem popular and I think peoplewould buy them.
That's what I'm just saying foryour audience especially.

Speaker 2 (49:30):
You can dress them up like mr potato head there you
go.

Speaker 3 (49:33):
Yeah, yeah, but no, uh, it's exciting, man.
There's a lot of, a lot ofthings that that are happening
behind the scenes, uh, that I'mnot at liberty to discuss yet,
but a lot, of, a lot of funstuff.
So that's, that's like probably60 of the plates that I'm
currently spinning, and, uh, agood friend of mine recently
told me that there's no suchthing as extraordinary people.

(49:56):
It's just people who show up,uh, an extra amount of time and
do ordinary shit, you know.

Speaker 1 (50:01):
So that's it, just doing the ordinary shit extra it
seems like you got a lot goingon and I I wish you luck with
all of that.
I I don't have a tenth of thatand I've already felt like I
have too much so uh, my sleepquality is not great um
apparently you're sleeping allwhile people, while you're being
recorded and shit like that.

Speaker 3 (50:20):
I mean damn for the live streams.
Yeah, yeah, people are strange.

Speaker 1 (50:25):
People are strange.
There's so much content youhave to make.
You need to do it whilesleeping.

Speaker 3 (50:29):
Yeah, honestly, that's good for the charity
event though, because we got theTikTok live stream got up to
six and a half million likes.
That was crazy.
That's really good, and so welearned a lot from that.
This next event probably willnot be at my house, thank God.
That was a lot, but no, alsodoing stuff with the new car,

(50:56):
that's fun.
Got my dream car and I startedmodifying it.

Speaker 1 (51:01):
Are you still fucking around with the HOA, still
pissing them off?

Speaker 3 (51:05):
I hope so.
Yeah, I'm working on something,something.
I'm gonna film a video before Igo to la.
They fucking charged me againfor my trash can, so I'm gonna
bedazzle them this time and putgoogly eyes on them, just in
case they miss them.
You know, I want them to beable to see them, for sure fuck,
yeah.

Speaker 1 (51:21):
Well, do you have anything else that you want to
talk about and you're lookingforward to in the future?
Are you kind of gone overeverything?
What do you anything else?

Speaker 3 (51:27):
man, I'm looking forward to hanging out with you
guys again.
I'm looking forward to hangingout with Oakley Rob.
I hope I get to see you back inSan Diego for the Twitch con.
Hope your dad's doing well.
Twitchcon.
Hope your dad's doing well.
That's good.
I'm glad to hear man.

(51:48):
I'm looking forward to tomorrow.
That's it.
That's the best I got Justtomorrow.

Speaker 1 (51:54):
Well, before you go, I want you to tell people where
to find you, but in your RFKvoice, I just got it all.

Speaker 3 (52:02):
I fucking can't dude.

Speaker 1 (52:07):
God, that's so bad.
No it that was good.

Speaker 3 (52:08):
I like, quite frankly , uh, you sound really gross.
Um, no, yeah, I, if you guysfeel so inclined, to follow me.
I'm scotty k fitness on allplatforms.
Um, there's a lot of fakeaccounts out there.
Tiktok won't verify me.
I've tried 17 fucking times, 17times.
No shit, it's ridiculous.
I gave up.
I fucking don't care anymore.

Speaker 1 (52:28):
I haven't tried once, because if you can't do it 17
times, there ain't a fuckingdick's chance in hell that I'm
doing it.

Speaker 3 (52:35):
I wasted so much time on that stuff.
I've been to TikTokheadquarters three fucking times
.
They still won't verify me.
It's so annoying.
But no, thank you guys.
I've been looking forward tohopping back on this podcast.

Speaker 1 (52:56):
The first podcast I've ever been on and get to
reprise my role as the dumbmustache guy.

Speaker 3 (52:59):
Considering the way things are going in America,
maybe the last podcast you'llever go on Could be.
Could be I'm making a video onhow to get your special stats
for the wasteland, like in reallife, just to, just to get
people prepped for the fuckingapocalypse.
Um, just in case, just in caseI may or may not have bought
brand new handheld ham radiosfor me and kylie.
So good fucking times.
I also got night vision.

Speaker 1 (53:19):
Go check out kylie's I saw that video, the night
vision for you page like.

Speaker 3 (53:24):
It's not, it's not binoculars, it's I mean, to her
credit, they are binocular nightvision, so yeah, but those are
definitely uh, yeah, those goodtimes, good stuff, but no, I
really appreciate you guys manand always, always.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
We'll have you on again another sometime amount of
time when you're free we gottaget you t-shirts that don't make
you look like you're 12.
Uh, those this one, so I funnystory.
You should say that I boughtthis when I was about 12.
I'm not lying.
I bought this when I was, I'mgonna say, 16 or 17 years, I
don't know when I was very youngand it's still a comfy shirt

(54:03):
and honestly, I'm just like.
At nighttime, I'm like fuck it.
I throw on whatever I'mcomfortable with and I play some
games and I finally have likean hour or two to myself, which
is just a beautiful it wasalready six foot three by the
time he was eight.
I what's that like I was thetallest person in my middle
school, including the teacherslike jesus christ, yeah, I got,

(54:24):
I got tall pretty fast thewidest.

Speaker 3 (54:27):
I was the widest, so that's fair.
But all right, I appreciate youguys.
I'm gonna go use the littleboys room and then I'm gonna
play some video games.
So I like it.
I like it, rob, it's alwaysgood to see you, brother liam,
all the people here.
I'll see you guys later.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.