Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Actually I was supposed to sign a deal with Disney
(00:01):
and I turned it down. I was a little alternative rocker. Yeah,
I get a girl. That's awesome. Yeah, this was after
I got signed. This was so fun. It was like
Hannimontan before I encountered Jesus at six years old, and
it changed my life and I like totally insanely, like
makes absolutely no sense. How got a record deal at
(00:22):
fifteen years old? And it was before the days of
social media. I hated school and I never would say
I was bullied, but there was definitely a few mean
girls who made it where life wasn't really super fun.
I am so confident I can pull together incredible teams,
Like if there's one thing I can do, I can
pull together really good teams. So I do this for
this client. They're super successful, and that's what ends up
(00:43):
kind of opening the door for me to start working
with this company called on Fire Legend, which then worked
with Daily Wire at the time, and I really learned
a lot more about like documentary airspace, and that leads
to Matt wash Fille and when we were talking about
kind of all this other stuff.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I'm just a random dude that like knocks on cold calls,
business doors. Like this is just so to turn and
I think, I don't want to say I'm doubting the
Lord's leading, but like it is like wild to dream
that this could be possible.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Those that are seeking truth, Like, you don't have to
bait people into truth. You don't have to negotiate them
into it. If that search is on the inside of you,
all I have to do is fall back the curtain.
Speaker 2 (01:19):
So, uh, I don't know much about you. This is
my favorite. I love these interviews because it doesn't allow
me to prep which means we just get to have
a real conversation. And so if you wouldn't mind, like
you can start the story wherever you want to. But
if I said, who is Kylie Jean, Like that's a
big soft ball.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Who do you use all an honor? I never get
to be the guests.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
That, Yeah, what do you want my audience to know
about you?
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Get?
Speaker 2 (01:41):
You get to shape it, Like you could say whatever
you want.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
Well, there's like so many different directions I could go
what directions? What's the tone of your podcast?
Speaker 2 (01:49):
Literally?
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Rogan okay? Cool?
Speaker 2 (01:51):
So like be anything whatever you want, Like I want
you to feel the freedom you can let us know
and then we'll go from there whatever you want. Okay,
who are you?
Speaker 1 (01:59):
That's such a odd questions.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
It's a great question. Okay, so you produced a wire stuff.
Speaker 1 (02:04):
Are we officially starting?
Speaker 2 (02:06):
I'll cut wherever I want.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
Let me know when you want me.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
We are recording, okay, perfect, but we'll cut in whenever
we want to cut in later.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
I first of all, you're not been a guest much.
I have, but I'm always a guest with a very
specific purpose.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
This is gonna be fun.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
This is my first like casually unfiltered. So what an honor?
Speaker 2 (02:22):
Thank you great? Yes, like this is my podcast. I
love that we've already started. Okay, perfect, I've been so
if you're not having fun, we should probably just stop
it right now.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
I think it's been really fun. I'm also like running
on adrenaline. Same, It's perfect.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
I was so tired last night I fell asleep with
the lights on, my clothes on.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
Oh. I've definitely had so many of those kind of days.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Yeah, this was a rollout at five am day for me.
And I think my eyes are like burning, but.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
They're like and then you have like the good light,
like yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
In the best way you feel alive.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
Yeah, and it's been warm in here, so I'm kind
of a little sweaty. I feel crunchy. Oh no, I'm
not going to bat for the other team though, So
I'm yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
Kids.
Speaker 2 (03:06):
Yeah, so, like, tell us a little bit about you.
You could say, I mean, do you have a podcast?
Do you have like yeah, my.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Name is Kylie Jean. We can start from the beginning.
I'm a West Coast kid, okay, by birth, so my childhood.
I don't know, how do you tail?
Speaker 2 (03:18):
Let's do it, let's go. I'm in childhood.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
This feels like very like it's like first dates. You know,
first dates can obtus be so weird because they're like
the softball?
Speaker 2 (03:25):
What do we talk about?
Speaker 1 (03:26):
You don't want to talk with them? Yeah, it's like that.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
It's like I can give you way more specific questions
if you want.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
You throw wing, to throw me one specific and I'll
go on a rabbit trail. I'm sure.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
Yeah, Okay, great, let's just start. Let's talk what we
were just talking about. Okay, so you've produced stuff?
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (03:40):
What got you into media?
Speaker 1 (03:41):
Oh? Fun? Okay, so I actually got an entertainment industry
at fifteen years old.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
See we're rolling, let's go, let's get it all right.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
Yeah. So I grew up on the central coast of California,
which is the most beautiful, breastaking incredible childhood. It's branches
and surfers. It's very, very low key. I just went
back there for the first time in years and I
got stopped by like five people while I was out
and about being like, are you a Tannehill? And it's
just fun like that because I think there's something so
(04:10):
beautiful about small town values. And for me, my parents
were pastors and the church there it was very law
familia culture is what we called it. And I encountered
Jesus at six years old and it changed my life.
I had a series of visions that week that were
pillars for me. And I grew up in a household
that like really really valued dreaming bigger than anything that
(04:33):
was bound by natural limitations, and we always were. We
were very coached in being able to develop your vision
with the Holy Spirit and with Jesus. So from a
young age that was so encouraged. So because of that,
I dreamed really really big. Yeah, and I like totally insanely,
like makes absolutely no sense. How got a record deal
(04:55):
at fifteen years old, and it was before the days
of social media, so it was just kind of these
crazy things where I loved my life in California. I
was just a kid. But then my family made a
very quick move to Seattle, which I would be sixth
generation Seattle, and so my mom's side of the family
is like very established there. But Seattle is really different.
(05:15):
I don't know if you've ever been there. Yeah, it's
like very multicultural city, rainy physically like dark during the
winter London totally, it's very similar to that and growing
up with like land and you know, the ocean. I
had my horses growing up.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
I have like a dingy, damp city.
Speaker 1 (05:35):
Oh my gosh, with like a very short notice of
moving in starting junior high like, which is already a
pivotal time in life. It wasn't it just and I'm
the oldest. I'm like a deep, deep feeler. So for me,
especially as a kid, I probably took on responsibility that
was never put on my shoulders. So I just felt
like I had to figure out a way to always
be optimistic. So there's a huge blessing in that. But
(05:56):
then also I think you can usually like shove down things.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
Did you get the red do when you're in California?
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Got in Seattle. So we moved to Seattle. And while
I was there, I my mom used to say, she's
like just came out of the womb singing. I was
always singing growing up on us little like everything turned
into a song. It's like how I process things. I'd
be riding my horse singing like my trainer were like
bring me back, and I just loved like that was
my connection really with the Lord and everything. And I
found so much joy in that and being kind of unhinged.
(06:23):
And at fifteen and like I was, really, I was
struggling with life. I hated in the city I was in.
I hated school. It was like before the days that
people like talked about bullying and I never would say
I was bullied, but there was definitely a few mean
girls who made it where life wasn't My life wasn't
really super fun. I didn't feel like I had deep connections.
(06:45):
I was everybody's friend, and I think everybody would consider
me their friend, but personally I feel so lonely, and
so I remember I couldn't sleep at night. Like being
a creative, you're like up at night exactly. And so
I remember my mom telling me a story about Michael W. Smith,
who is an artist, like.
Speaker 2 (07:03):
Oh, yeah, my wife, yeah Smith.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
Yeah, he's a pillar. And so I remember being really
little and my mom said that the way Michael W.
Smith would write songs as he would go into his
prayer closet for an hour and then come out and write.
And so when I couldn't sleep at night, I just
would be so real and honest with the Lord and
I would like just cry out to him on things
that I didn't feel like I could really verbalize to
(07:27):
my parents or like anybody else. And I remember one
night having this moment where the Lord's like, you, you
have a choice before you, like, you can choose to
He didn't say these words, but now and all these
would be the words to day. It's basically like I
could choose to partner with very real grief and pain
because of the life that I loved so much, like
being taken out of my control. Or I can choose
(07:52):
even though I'm in a lot of unknown to trust him.
And I remember, like so clearly making the decision, like
I feel really hopeless and sad and angry as a teenager,
but I'm going to choose to trust you in this
And like the moment I chose to trust, then I
made a decision like I wasn't going to hold on
to bitterness behind the scenes, and I started writing. So
(08:13):
I started writing like a ton of songs. And I
used to absolutely get frustrated with the Christian music industry
as a little kid, Yeah, because I hated that there
were so many question marks and songs like I couldn't
even listen to, Like my mom would have a Christian
radio playing, and I hated listening to it because I
was like, why is it asking all these questions when
we've been given an entire book of answers, Like nobody's
writing declarative anthems. And so I just started writing declarations,
(08:36):
which I love declarations. They've been a massive part of
my childhood. I think, like a huge thing that even
I travel around and I speak all the time, and
a lot of things they'll talk on is my faith words.
And every single night before we went's bad. I know, I've
told the story a million times, but it's shaped who
I am today. And my parents would always say, what
are your faith words? And so I'd say, I like myself,
(08:57):
I have a great destiny. People listen to me because
valuable and important things to say, and then as I
got older, I always added them on things at the end.
So those declarations have been like transformative for me in
declarations general. So I started taking declarations and writing them
in songs. And this is a really long story, but
(09:17):
one day my dad had like some business guys over
for dinner, I guess, and I was singing on the
other side of the house and one of the guys
like caught wind of it and asked my parents, like,
tell me about your daughter, and like when did she
start singing? Singing? And I'm like, well, she's always been singing.
I think she's really good. But I'm her mom, right,
so I'm advised exactly. And he's like, well what And
(09:39):
he had worked in artist development and some stuff, like
I wasn't too familiar with what he had done, and
he's like, well, you know, it takes it takes a message,
it takes presence, and it takes talent. And I've been
around your daughter enough to know she's got a message.
And I've been around her enough to know that she
has presents. She seems like she might have talent. Could
I like, could I maybe some people and see if
(10:00):
we can get some test vocals. So it was like
this total power and thing.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
I means of God the Lord.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
Yeah, it's not my fa like my family is not
the music industry. And back then, like you have to
go back. I'm thirty three, I was fifteen, so like
the industry was a totally different industry back then than
it is now.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
Were these guys in the CCM music scene these were Yes,
that's even more crazy, it's wild, yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
Very niche. My dad was actually like working on this
huge software development company at the time that started across
into that world. So that's how like those connections started going.
Uh So it was like from software to music, like
couldn't even planned it, especially back then, like that's when
like Facebook's just getting going like that kind of stuff.
So it's pretty crazy. So all I know is that
my parent my dad was like, hey, uh, would you
(10:43):
want to go like check out in Great find Textas
of all places. I was like, would you want to
do some test vocals? I'm like, yes, sign me up.
What I didn't know was behind the scenes, my mom
had been praying for me because my mom said like
Kylie Jean's like there's something in her that is dying
unless you intersect with her. Lord, Like, she needs something
that's beyond school. She needs something that's so.
Speaker 2 (11:03):
She was a creative brains, Like if you don't have
anything to like.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
Know, it does for me at that time, like my
horse for me growing up, I'm so insanely dyslexic, like
horribly dyslexic. Schools like not for me. I never liked school.
I never could fit in the mold. I couldn't figure
things out, I can't sit still. And my horse was
like my biggest best friend growing up. And when we
made that move, like my horse was no longer in
(11:26):
like daily distance of me interacting with them. So the
music then became like a really big part of my
life and my so my mom was like really praying
on my behalf, which I didn't know that. Uh so
it's really cool. So anyways, I ended up like doing
some testmic goals but hadn't even pee put together, did
a showcase. The showcase sold out, like they had to
turn people away, and I wasn't a name. We just
(11:49):
it was like one totally Lord too. We hit a
really good era where that tween demographic hadn't been tapped
into yet. So I'm this young girl and there's even
younger girls in elementary school who are looking for something
that their parents are wanting them to plug into. That's fun,
has a good message, and it just was the perfect
timing of everything. So there was Nashville execs who were
(12:11):
at that showcase, and then that's kind of what launched
my career.
Speaker 2 (12:15):
How does the showcase work? Do you sing live? Or
they just play some songs? They're pre recorded from any Actually,
like we could pull up YouTube archives. I'm sure it's
so fun, It's it's free. I was like this chunky
little I say, do we have the ability to pull
up and react to something live on the TV?
Speaker 1 (12:28):
If not, I will know we did?
Speaker 2 (12:29):
We don't do now, but that would you can?
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (12:32):
Have a link you could send us?
Speaker 1 (12:33):
Yeah, I'm sure I can find it. Yeah, let's see.
There's definitely like a thin vimeo or event. What do
you Yeah, it was a vimeo. Let me see, I
could find some YouTube.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
What's it all?
Speaker 1 (12:43):
I'll search with you.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
See Kylie Jean Tannehill, Right, I didn't use my last name,
Kylie Jean.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
Uh, let's see what I can find. There's some really
cringey low bud see, here you go, here's one. He's welcome, Kylie.
I mean, it doesn't get more fun than little Chunky Cage. Yeah,
(13:15):
so that was my that was my life in high school.
It was great.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
That no way, you don't keep it playing, so sad.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
I was a little alternative rocker. Yeah, get a group.
We had like dance moves. That's awesome. Yeah, this was
after I got signed, but yeah it was fun. Wow,
you have a great boy, Thank you. And it's gotten
even better. It's like an untrained Now I have an
awesome vocal coach.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
Yeah, and she doesn't even know that I wrap Isaiah
where shol do a collapse collaban dude, that we're.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
Gonna do a parlor music label.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
Oh dude, he's a big hip hop fan too.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Wait what let's do it? Actually feel like those genres
making a comp like my Church is made an album.
Let's do it. Yeah, I would love that.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
First of all. That's incredible.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Thank you, that's so fun. It was like handimontana.
Speaker 2 (14:06):
Yeah, this might be offensive.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
Listen, it's because.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
I was getting major Disney Channel vipes.
Speaker 1 (14:12):
Oh. Actually I was supposed to sign a deal with Disney,
and I turned it down. That's a whole story for
your saying I made the very good decision. I think
it was. And I really really love the way my
mom went about that, because my mom was looking me.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
Yea walks through that. So how'd we get to the
Disney level of offer?
Speaker 1 (14:28):
And I somehow got intertwined into something where I had
a meeting with Disney execs that were to be signed
as talent because I had some hits that like played
on Disney radio and stuff. So I was with my
mom and they were doing like show development stuff and
we had this opportunity and I just knew in my
like I just knew with everything inside of me, like
I have this deal. It's the weirdest confident knowing I
(14:52):
knew it. And I go to like open the door
to get in the car, and I just felt internally
so big, like a big no not to it, and
but I didn't feel sad and weill mental. It was
like I know when the Holy Spirit's talking to me.
I was like, I'm not supposed to do this, and
so I don't even get in the car. So my
mom was like, I'm not supposed to take this, and
my mom's like, okay. So my mom looks at me
(15:14):
and she's like, if you say no to this, this
will probably never come back in this way. So I
just want you to like take some time be with
the Lord and just be sure that that's what he's
telling you. And if if it's a note, we're gonna
go grabb lunch and we're going to celebrate. And if
it's yes, we're going to go forward and celebrate in
Ford myth. It I gives you chills thinking about it,
because it really my parents have done such an incredible
(15:36):
job of taking these moments throughout our whole lives to
let us hear directly from the Lord. And then they
always celebrate what the Lord says and they bring in
because the Lord says like out of the mouth of
truth through witnesses, so then we'll back it with like scripture,
and then we'll always pray for a moment that it's confirmed.
Super cool, and then it really was like after that,
my mom had a friend who I think like texted
(15:58):
her or called her out of the blue a couple
later and said, Hey, I was just praying or she
had a dream something I was praying for Kylie Jean,
and I really felt like the Lord said Kingdom Kylie,
and he's like, I just kept hearing this word Kingdom Kylie,
and I kept seeing Disney the Magic Kingdom, and she
didn't know anything I didn't like under indeed, you don't
talk about this. She's like, I kept seeing Kingdom Kylie,
and I kept seeing magic Kingdom and magic is the
(16:20):
compromise for the Kingdom of God supernatural and that she's
been given an authority from heaven to tap into the
supernatural realms of heaven where magic is the compromise on
the other side. And it wasn't like a put down,
was nothing. It was just like whoa like this this thought?
And I was like, she literally just said no to
this that was with Disney, like magic Kingdom, and so
(16:40):
that's really cool. That's like encouraging on fractic, like I
tell her, So Lord will always confirm his word like always,
and it's impossible to miss it, like he cares way
too much. So it's been my life is marked full
of I've lived like forty lives in my short a time.
You are on the earth. It's amazing because.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
How long you pursue the music career.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Then you know I was. I've I wasn't in it long,
and I have so many stories around that too. I
wasn't in it long, but I learned so much and
I was so it was amazing, the best childhood. I
love living outside of the box. I got to connect
with young girls, the whole reason I even got into it.
This is like a whole nother crazy story. But when
(17:20):
I first started writing, particularly for that album, right before
I got signed my I was like, not by my choice,
sent off to a church camp. I hate camp. Why
I hate camp?
Speaker 2 (17:32):
You're talking to a camp counselor right now, so you.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Better there's like divided lines.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
Yeah, I know, I know. It's uh, it's well, I
think it was in the camp. Like I think we
were blessed to have a I've heard horror stories of
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
I just never like I didn't do sleepovers growing up,
Like I didn't like camp, Like it's just my my
best friend. And I just got a huge discussion about
this because I'm I'm hosting like I'm hosting my first
women's retreat that I'm.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
Like all modern about. I'll let you know who's right.
So who what's what's the what's the well.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
I'm like, I'm hosting it, I'm putting it on. I'm
super excited about it. And she's like, we could make
it like camp. I'm like, a heck, no, do it
no wrong, She's right, I do know people can. Okay,
if camp was like what's the movie with the Twins?
Speaker 2 (18:10):
Yeah, the when they they when they switch or whatever?
Speaker 1 (18:12):
Heir cap. Yeah, if camp was truly like that, I've
never experienced camp like that, that'd be cool. My camp
was like forced to church camp. It was terrible. I
hated every moment of it. But I counted the Lord
on the last night of.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
Where that was pretty good.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
So that was good that part, And that was like,
that was interesting because this is before term fifteen, this
when I was fourteen, but it's forced to go to
this camp. And when I went, well, I was like
literally like trying to hold back from tears. So I
did not want to.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
Wow, Yeah, I.
Speaker 1 (18:42):
Didn't want to go because I hate this. I hate
the system of religion and I hate that when the
system feels like it's an organic move of the spirit,
that then has man made system come around. And that's
what like irked me about things that were put together
by that particular church. But you're young, like you don't
really know how to articulated in English. But you're like,
(19:03):
this isn't the Jesus that changed my life. And I
know Jesus and he changed my life, but this is
this is a shallow, man made system.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
We need to have another hour long conversation about this.
This is fascinating hours. Yeah, this is fascinating.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
No, I don't care. I know that it's up to you. Yeah,
we could definitely go there. I mean, if this Joe Rogan,
this is like a three hour show.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
Well, I know, like the last one was an hour
forty five.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
I have to miss the traffic zone, so we got tied.
Speaker 2 (19:25):
We can buy We just might have to get some
Hutchins barbecue. Lator right, Isaiah, are you down tonight?
Speaker 1 (19:31):
Okay? I love me some good barbecue. I used to
be a vegan and I like really went down the
path of healing and now I really only eat meat.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
So walk me through.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
Well we can want You've wadn't your guide? We can
go through anything. Yeah, spirtality, veganism, eat a lot.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
What was the word the vegan thing come from?
Speaker 1 (19:48):
So I was I got really really sick, like back
probably about ten years ago now, and I couldn't figure
it out. I always had weird was your symptoms? Well,
I had. I've always had bad digestion issues since I
was Look, it was setting weird. It's getting really weird.
I have a lot of theories asked to why too.
I was formula fed?
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Insane?
Speaker 1 (20:08):
How down the rabbit hole do you want to go?
Speaker 2 (20:10):
So I threw up fifty times in January February of
this year.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
What I've grew up because of acid reflex.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
And so I had ascid reflects for the past three years.
November of this past year, all kind of started gaging.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Really cool people I can help.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
And we've seen homeopathic doctors. Yeah, we've seen I just
had a cat skin done. I just had ultra sound
done and so we're currently have a schedule with a
gastro inetologist right now. And I've lost thirty pounds this December.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
Do you feel like sick? Like what happens? Okay, just
walk me through this. Okay, this is the most fascinating
rabbit trail. But I'm like really feeling.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
So twenty twenty one, asid reflex started happening, and you know,
then I completely gave up coffee. I completely give a basket.
I went to a doctor. I said, hey, man, this
is and I felt nauseous. My assid reflex wasn't burning.
It felt like I was gonna like my gag reflex
was triggered. That's how my symptom shows itself. So yeah,
and it's not like it was burning everything. It's just
like I felt like I was just gagging. So I
(21:00):
literally just like be at business events and I have
to walk into a room gag and then going back.
Speaker 1 (21:04):
What the heck?
Speaker 2 (21:04):
Yeah, it really it was actually as a reflux and
I and I went to a doctor and he's like,
I can give you medicine. I'm like, doctor, I want like,
how do.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
I fix it? Yeah? You got to get to the
room right and he likes and uh, okay, keep going.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Yeah. So anyway, that was then I I was literally
listening to an Indian dude on teTeX talg the reasons
you know, and I'm like, I've asked the request. Yeah,
we talked about He actually mentioned citrus as being a
really like ending and this is this was of the Lord.
I literally was having a really good day. I was
feeling really good.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:35):
My wife asked if I wanted clementine, and I said sure,
I ate the clementine. Started feeling sick immediately. I'm like,
that's why I have as reflux. So we gave up coffee, pasta, sauce. Yeah,
soda drinks. I drink a lot of Lacroix. And actually
sparkling water can actually be a cause of it too. Yeah,
the carbon carbonation. Yes, So I gave it up and
I started feeling better. Then we found out there was
like lo acid coffee, so I started being able to
(21:56):
drink loacid coffee again. Then I partnered with a roaster,
I Shameless Plug. We have our own low acid coffee
blend called the Broadcast Browt.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Wait, why aren't we drinking it right now?
Speaker 2 (22:03):
I have some of my back book bag.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
Oh my, is it canned coffee?
Speaker 2 (22:07):
No, it's it's no.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
No, hey, you said it's in your backpack.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
I'm so it's it's Uh, it's a bad I'll give
it to you.
Speaker 1 (22:14):
Yeah, i'd love to.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
You can like a huge and it's a roasted coffee cool,
which basically is like it's it's roasted like popcorn. Oh wow,
which means you don't get any burnt beans. So when
it comes to acid and caught, we're going ano rabbit tail,
We're going to come back. Literally, I told you Ruggis show.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
Just keep it like on track because I won't be
able to keep it. Okay, I will keep on. Sorry,
my phone's blowing up. That was rude. No you do
not mean it should be rude.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
Do you want to check it?
Speaker 1 (22:35):
No? No, no, we a pause, you're uh so.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
Anyway, like as there's a lot of things you can
do with coffee to make a little acid, and so
erosted one of those things. Anyway, it's really good coffee.
It's amazing, and so I can drink that now. But
all of a sudden November of last year, we went
to event called Creator Con and uh, I go to
get food afterwards, and I come home and I just
start dry heaving no alcohol, Yeah, just like I'm not
(23:00):
and you know, no literally no, like it's not like
and I'm like, that's super weird.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
Interesting.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
And then a week later I was just randomly there
in the middle day to start dry heaving, and I
was just getting nasty and sorry everyone, and then uh,
and then the week before Amfest, I had like one
hundred and two fever. I was really sick. Then I
got beat literally the Lord like just for amfest yea.
And then the week after a Fest two fever again
really sick. Dry heat, like just dry heaping. I went
throw up, just stry heaving.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
That's terrible.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
And then January just dry heat the whole time, and
then I got really I took we took our kids
to church camp and uh January it's winter camp and
as a tubing hill and it's awesome.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
It's like a game the same camp.
Speaker 2 (23:40):
It'd probably be cool, like so fun. It's called camp
Barrack call. They love it. It's literally the.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
Highlight GPT an alternative word for camp.
Speaker 2 (23:47):
What's that?
Speaker 1 (23:48):
And like alternative word for winter hangout? That sounds great.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
Winter weekend, that would be awesome. We went to a
winter weekend and it was so fun and our kids
loved it. That's awesome anyway, And uh, I got really
sick of camp. I was bedridden for two days and
we couldn't figure it out. And I like so so anyway,
like I literally twenty pounds in your February this year, yeah,
and which really sucks because we had all this like
mot like this we would take some fast and momentum
(24:12):
and then just floored me. Interesting and so since then
it's morphed into so we saw this holistic doctor. Yeah,
and as the reflex gone, Yeah, it's I'm not dry
even anymore, but it's morphed into just pure stomach pain.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
And it's really from like he adjusted your diet heavily.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Yeah, so so yeah, heavily diet changes tons of supplements.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Yeah, did he put you on a heavy metal detox?
That would be I'd be very curious about. I think
that's like what changed my life. Okay massively. Okay, sorry,
keep going. I cut you.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
I'll go talking about it. I have a lot of
done on board now that I'm like I'm talking too much,
I'm like.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
A lot of thought. Have you heard of the book
A More Excellent Way? But it's probably one of the
most instrumental books that every single family should have in
their household. It's called The More Excellent Way to get
on Amazon.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
Talking to Audible.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
It's like Cycledia to any sickness of whatever, and it
reveals to you the spiritual route. And then it's really
cool because then you have all of a sudden mistler.
It's like a white book with gold writing. Yeah, no,
that's not it. Let me see. Just go to like Amazon,
(25:19):
and that was to see. I first heard about it
because there was a guy speaking on healing and he's like,
I found it. Yeah. It's like whenever you see the
results of something, the fruit of something, then that's it
worth having. It's awesome. I have a few copies. But
(25:41):
it's super fascinating because he had high blood pressure and
he's like a super weird of high blood pressure as
an adult. And then the doctor wanted to put him
on blood Bird Michigan, Yeah, whatever, all that stuff, and
he's like, I really don't want to do that, and
I don't know why all of a sudden out of nowhere. Sorry,
I'm just like messing with your mics. I know. He's like, man,
(26:02):
just give me, let me like come back in a week.
Let me like, let me just come back in a week,
and then let's just do another test. And I was like,
there's nothing to change a week. He's like, let's just
do another test in a week. So he goes back
home and he's like really praying about it, takes out
that book and goes to the root of high blood
pressure is self hatred and he's like, I don't have
any self hatred, Like I really don't hate myself. That's crazy.
(26:24):
And then he said, all of a sudden, here's the
Lord say, but what about when you're thirteen? And he
was brought back to a memory. He's like, I never
think about this ever. He's brought back to a memory
of thirteen years old looking at himself in the mirror
with breakouts, feelings, super awkward, his body's changing, and he's like,
I don't feel like I fit in. And he looked
at himself and said I hate myself. He's like, well,
words bring life and death, right, I lie in the
(26:45):
power of the tongue. And so something in his physical
body had to respond to a word curse that he
made over himself, even though he wasn't cognitive that that's
what he was doing in agreement, and so the Lord
revealed that to him. He's like, oh my gosh, I
did do that. So he just repented for cursing himself,
not realizing you're cursed himself, came into agreement with the
(27:05):
truth over who he is and who the Lord of
the Lord has called him into, and released himself into
forgiveness and freedom. A week later, goes back, does a
blood panel, comes back, and the doctor was so floored
he couldn't understand it. He's like, you're completely normal, Like
you don't need to get high blood pressure medication. So
I heard that story and I so believed it because
I really really believe the word, and I started using
(27:28):
that as a frame of reference for things, and it
was really fascinating. So anyways, I don't know. The thing
that was interesting to me about that is because I
do think.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
There's my wife is convinced it's stress related. It could
definitely be stressed.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
I was wondering too. This is so random. I have
a really really good friend, shameless plug, doctor Motley. He
would be a really great guest's I've learned so much
from him. And he was the first person that when
I got diagnosed with celiac and it was way before
gluten was like a trend, and he was the first
person that intersected in my life to really help me
with all of that. And I've learned so much from him,
(28:00):
and it's like he's super fascinating to talk to. But
my my dad had like a whole situation come up
after a surgery with like uncontrollable hiccups. It's just like, really,
it sounds silly, but it was horrible. It was like
gaps in his breathing. Man, you can't sleep. And then
when you've like after you've got surgery of anesthesia brain
and then you're all the steps is like horrible. Is
(28:22):
your dad in a situation like that? Wow? Uh? And
so I was like desperate. I call it Motley and
he's like, you know, it's crazy. He's like if he
doesn't know anything about my dad's history or sort or anything,
but he's like if he was ever in a position
as a kid where he felt responsible or like he
needed to take care of those that were around him,
especially if they were adults, He's like, that suppresses in
the diaphragm, and then it'll find ways to have to
(28:43):
physically manifest itself up. So when you're put under anesthesia,
like your subconscious disconnects, and so anything that might be
like stored in the subconscious then has to have a
physical release in your body. And he's like, that would
be the physical release. So it's like super fascinating, and
that would have been that would have one hundred percent
the dynamics my dad was in is up bringing. So anyways,
it was interesting because you were talking about as reflex
(29:05):
and all that, and stress is a trigger, yes, but
it triggers what has been in the layers of our
system for interesting years.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
So you so you then you believe there's a connection
between like I would.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
Say, curious, what is the connection? Yeah, I can't diagnose you.
Speaker 2 (29:20):
I'm just saying I'm saying the premise while you're saying
like I would, I think where I'm like working through
you know, as you talk like one hundred percent agree,
like the current stress or the current things can have
fit like emotional triggers can have physical triggers totally right,
But then when you're talking about past responses having future
(29:40):
physical triggers, Yeah, that's that's wild.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
Oh and it makes so much sense because if you
think about like our body is a system that has
to respond, and we're made like we're body, soul, and spirit,
and so they're all interconnected. And so the soul the
soul is like the mind will and emotions and so
the mind will in emotion are connected with the physical implications.
The spirit overrides all of that, but those three components
(30:07):
are all very real inner workings. So if you have,
like child.
Speaker 2 (30:11):
What a sect of Christianity you grow like, like did
your Pentecostal? Would you say?
Speaker 1 (30:15):
Like I'd say my dad. My dad said, read the
word the red, pray for the power. So that's the way, Like,
that's the way I grew up. That's why I like,
I've I just literally she's changed everything for me. It's awesome. Yeah.
So yeah, I'm the alogy didn't change me. Yeah, Church
the nomination didn't change me. So I'm like, oh, I
(30:35):
don't really feel like I fit the mold on all. Yeah,
but she's changed everything for me.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
Yeah, that's awesome. Man, No, I love it And that's no,
that's fascinating. I I do think I think it took
me a while to believe my wife because I'm like,
I'm not stressed. Like like one week when I came
to Dallas. I don't know if you even noticed I
say it, Like last time I was at Dallas, I
was so sick and I was a month without getting
like getting sick. In the day before I came to Dallas,
I started getting sick again. And the whole time I
(31:00):
was here, my stomach was just cramping and painful. Like
when I was on Amy Show. I didn't remember what
I said. It was it was in so much pain,
what the heck? And and I was like, you are stressed.
I'm like, no, I'm excited, Like I get a fly
to Dallas and like, I'm not stressed. Probably probably was
a little stressed. And I'm starting to believe because like now,
like if I feel it coming on, if i'm mentally
(31:21):
like if I pray yeah and I breathe, I can
feel it slowly going away.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
That's why I really love learning about frequencies. Like I've
the last I feel like really the last since like January.
My friend group and my family, like we really dove
into frequencies, and I feel like there's a whole dimension
of the Bible that has out of a place of
like fear, been not like actually unpacked and taught about.
(31:49):
So then when you start like diving into this, you're like, oh,
this is really cool because everything literally admits a frequency,
Like if we had a meter that was like reading energy,
every single thing does. So when you start to learn
about the frequencyes that are even attached to feelings, like
releasing the frequency of like love, or releasing the frequency
of stress in case other.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
People might use the word vibes.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
Yeah, they might totally, they totally could I think like
like like.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
If someone says I feel a vibe, like the vibes
are good here, you're saying you're saying that like the
science of frequency.
Speaker 1 (32:18):
Measurable like scientific pattern, they can be picked up.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
Do you think like when people say like like I
had a guess come on and they're like, man, I
felt really comfortable here, do you think where I might say, yeah,
it's just the way I presented myself as this, But
you're saying, like there's an actual scientific frequency that maybe
like portrayed comfortability well in your energy.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
So like your energy emits several types of different frequencies.
And because you are the host of this show, this
is your show, this is your space, you have an
like a literal authority in this space. So the tone
that you set, people are going to be able to
pick up on that and they're going to feed on that.
Or that's why you can have some people who can
come into a room and they might not say a word,
(33:02):
but because the energy that they admit, you're going to
feel that whether it's like they have a bad attitude
and there's like something that's like wrong, You're like, whoa what.
Speaker 2 (33:09):
But you're you're saying it's like a scientific measurable thing.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
It is. Yeah, like all of that actually is that's
like way beyond my comprehension. I've only just like dug
into all of it. I've really learned a lot from
this guy named Justin Abraham. But it's really cool when
you start diving into that stuff and you're like, oh,
that's so true. That's why I like you just vibe
better than certain people. Right, It's because the frequency.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
Are we vibing?
Speaker 1 (33:30):
I feel like we're vibing. Great?
Speaker 2 (33:31):
Okay, great? Isai are you vibing?
Speaker 1 (33:33):
I've appreciated that you guys look tracked with the Rabbit Trails.
Speaker 2 (33:37):
Yeah, I mean I love it like it's a this
is a guest led podcast. That's awesome, where I just
I just try to.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
What made you get into podcasting?
Speaker 2 (33:46):
Oh, that's a great Now I'm not I'm not the guest,
and I don't know.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
It sounds like a fun question.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
Yeah, I know, it is a great question. You're a
great host. Do you have a podcast?
Speaker 1 (33:53):
I do, Okay, it's it was The Kylie Jean Show.
So I think actually on everything. You look up the
Kayli Jean Show, but I'm changing it to just.
Speaker 2 (34:00):
Okay, I want to know about that after I'll answer this.
And then I went, well, just like pay ping pong,
I like, okay. Yeah. So basically when I started insurance,
I met a lot of entrepreneurs that were awesome. And
then I saw online that all the entrepreneurs and their
videos there they're driving Lamborghini's, they're driving, and that's not
real entrepreneurship.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
And I have so many thoughts around that.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
Yeah, so like, but I met like the real entrepreneurs
just grinding him, some of them on their third, fourth,
fifth business. And what really turned the table for me.
Had a buddy that started a landscape company and he
failed the first time, and then two years later he
tried to get in a successful business.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
Yeah. I was like, man, that's entrepreneurship.
Speaker 2 (34:33):
You should go on a podcast. Yeah, and I don't
remember if it was my wife, I don't remember what happened,
but they they were like, you should just do it.
I had made a YouTube channel, a finance YouTube channel.
Don't if you know Graham stephan Is, Yeah, he's like
a finance he's a real estate agent. Mate he's like
four million subscribers.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
Now big, I will say like that that whole world
is like it's so foreign.
Speaker 2 (34:53):
Yeah, he's a finance YouTube channel and I love this
channel and I try to make one and I'm like, wow,
editing's hard coming up with content's heart, Like this is tough.
And so I made three episodes of Quit. Before that,
in COVID, I streamed video games. Oh nice, yeah, twitch yep, yeah,
I was on Twitch and actually a decent following twitch
star No no, no, I mean I had a decent following,
like am I in gamer royalty right now? And during COVID,
(35:15):
like I literally had kids like buy my merch for Christmas.
Speaker 1 (35:18):
That's awesome.
Speaker 2 (35:19):
Like there's this little weird section of my life. When
our interest business shut down. We were and we were
in Whitmer's Michigan, which is like Nazi Germany and yeah,
so it was like we couldn't leave our house or
you need to get shot. Yeah, and uh, I mean
not really but felt like it you got reported on
yeah yeah, but then her, yeah, no, we're gonna stay
on track and uh and my wife's like why do
you just stream? Because she bought me a PS four.
(35:41):
It was like the first for Christmas, and I was like,
I was really good at a game. And then we
got viewers and got monetized and so there's like so
that taught me that I enjoyed being on camera. I
enjoyed the interaction with fans, so to speak, right, and
it was really fun. It was not meant to be
a full time thing. That's not my call. Yeah, but
it did show me that I liked being on camera.
(36:02):
Then I tried again with the YouTube thing didn't work,
and so I already had all the equipment from that thing.
And then I do write music and so and I
traveled on a music team for two years and so
I had did mics and I had whatever. And so
I interviewed this guy with no podcast experience and I
didn't even listen to podcasts, and I'm like, bro, like,
just come on, have a conversation. The only podcast listened
to is Rogan and so we did it. Yeah, and
(36:25):
we did it and it went really well, and I'm like,
I love this. I love that, and I am my
first year, I only released eleven episodes because I did
one a month.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
I was like, that's still really good. Yeah, he did it,
he did it. Start.
Speaker 2 (36:38):
We made it twelve months and made it a year.
Speaker 1 (36:40):
That's a big deal. Think of how many people talk
about something for a long time they never actually take
the step. Oh I know, that's celebrate.
Speaker 2 (36:46):
Yeah. And then the thing that changed it was Babylon Bee.
Speaker 1 (36:50):
Oh yeah, did you do something with them?
Speaker 2 (36:51):
Yeah? So Joel Berry, I'm.
Speaker 1 (36:53):
Like, okay for me that because I did a I
works on a film that.
Speaker 2 (36:56):
Had Yeah, do you know like Jared Lamaster or Dylan?
Speaker 1 (36:59):
Was it Dylan?
Speaker 2 (37:00):
Seth Dylan?
Speaker 1 (37:01):
Yeah, I have just the last name and drilled in
my head, so Seth Dylan. Yeah. So he was a
part of a film that I worked on, and so
I like drove him around and then brought him on
the stuff. Oh cool.
Speaker 2 (37:11):
Yeah, so one of the writers came on my podcast
and then one of the videos went viral okay and
YouTube and that's that's awesome. Then you know Brandon Tatum, Yes,
because of Brandon Tatum came.
Speaker 1 (37:21):
Auser Tatum, yeses the officer Tatum.
Speaker 2 (37:23):
And then he threw the Lord like this is was
literally Kylie, I'm an insurance dude. That's somehow the Lord
has led in this media direction.
Speaker 1 (37:31):
That's awesome. And then brandoin itself.
Speaker 2 (37:34):
Yeah, it's wild. And then uh Trump, there's a turning
point event in Detroit.
Speaker 1 (37:38):
Uh huh.
Speaker 2 (37:39):
I randomly DMed the officer Tatum on the website. His
website just fled a form.
Speaker 1 (37:44):
That's awesome.
Speaker 2 (37:45):
He want me back? Like sure, Bro, I'm down. We
try to do it virtually and we're having audio issues
and this was like, I mean had millions of followers. Yeah,
so I'm like this for me, I'm like, this is
the celebrity guest that like I won't waiting.
Speaker 1 (37:58):
I feel like to you because there was a whole
batch of them that in like that twenty sixteen era,
like all show. They all kind of came up in classes.
Speaker 2 (38:04):
It was him Candice like all them. Yeah, so we
the virtual interview failed and I was like I called
my wife and like it didn't happen. But all the
virtual interviews like, hey, man, where are you at? You know,
Brent Tatum, you know where are you at?
Speaker 1 (38:18):
Bro?
Speaker 2 (38:19):
And I'm like, oh, live at Detroit. It's like, man,
I feel like I'm going to be in Detroit in
like a month, like maybe we can hit up.
Speaker 1 (38:25):
I was like, let's do it. Okay.
Speaker 2 (38:27):
So there's a turning point of it, and uh, he
literally let me pick him up in my car. He
doesn't know me from down till he came. We hung out,
we had dinner, did a podcast. On the podcast he said,
Illness is one of the best podcast I've ever been on.
Speaker 1 (38:39):
That's cool.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
And that was the moment that was like, oh yeah,
and then he invited me to Amfest yeah, and then
now we're here.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
That's amazing.
Speaker 2 (38:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:48):
I think those moments are so incredibly key, the ones
that meet you are like, oh, because you have to
be able to believe in yourself and you have to
realize like h.
Speaker 2 (38:57):
And I really struggle with that.
Speaker 1 (38:58):
It's it's so he I. I just have this recently.
I did a set like a week week and a
half ago, and that made me be like, oh my gosh,
I'm so much better than what I give myself credit
for it, and like not in a prideful way, in
a realization way, because you have to be able to
recognize what you bring to the table in order to
actually even know the value that you carry.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
Because it's funny like in sports growing up, like I
was a really good three point shooter in basketball and
I knew that and I was so I know that,
like I can be confident, but I think this for
me feels such a stretch, Like the percentage of podcasters
that make it is astronomical. And then I'm like, I'm
just a random dude that like knocks on cold calls
business doors, Like this is just such a turn And
(39:40):
I think maybe it's I don't want to say I'm
doubting the Lord's leading, but like it is like wild
to dream that this could be possible. Yeah, And I
think I'm afraid to like open up for that reality.
I think, does that make sense?
Speaker 1 (39:54):
Is knowing your why? Yeah? Like why? Like why why
are you doing this? More?
Speaker 2 (39:58):
People need to have conversations. I want my kids to
have a document of their dad and they can watch
hours and hours of hours of dad and what he
thought about the world for the rest of their life.
I want to prove that you can have conversations with
people that you disagree with and do it amicably. I
want to learn. I don't want to be in an
(40:19):
echo chamber. Yeah, man, I just want to have a
journey where people can come along and just learn, like
this is fun. Yeah, Like I've learned so much about
you already and I'm like, this is great, like so
and it's just also I just love it.
Speaker 1 (40:33):
I love that. So your why is legacy, Yeah, it's value, exchange, curiosity. Yeah,
and I think that's huge. Yeah. Those are whys that
carry roots and wait to it versus like I can
tell you the moment somebody will never make it is
when I obviously my whole career since fifteen and has
been different realms of entertainment industry. Yeah. So the moment
somebody's like I want to be the next so and
(40:53):
so or I'm going to change the world doing this,
It's like, well, your why has no roots to it,
but everything you just laid out, I'm like, that's amazing.
That tells me you are already successful before you're successful
because of your why. So those are the important things.
It doesn't matter what you're doing in life. If you
can identify that, that will carry forward.
Speaker 2 (41:11):
Okay'm getting ncomfortable. Can we talk about you now, like
like I struggle with thank you? That's very sweet. And
but you have a podcast too, I have so.
Speaker 1 (41:21):
Okay, so I have a podcast.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
So music stuff in between podcasts.
Speaker 1 (41:28):
Yeah, so music, and then I did a reality show. Okay,
I should have like literally got I was like in
last place on it and then won the entire thing
and so launched me a little bit. It's called dream
Quest on Amazon Prime. It didn't go very When was
that it was? I was so young, I was like
nineteen years old.
Speaker 2 (41:45):
I did it ques. So we're watching the night as
I haven't even watched what season can?
Speaker 1 (41:51):
I haven't wanted to do it. You guys do it?
How many my family.
Speaker 2 (41:55):
Dream quests?
Speaker 1 (41:56):
But it's not free. You have to pay pay for it.
Speaker 2 (41:58):
I'll pay for it right now.
Speaker 1 (41:59):
It's like I can't. I got to watch it with
my family first. I but yes, so I need to
watch it next time. We can do a full release party.
Speaker 2 (42:08):
We just do like a big like parlor, just avice.
Speaker 1 (42:10):
We should actually I need to like do like the
archives of my life because there's.
Speaker 2 (42:15):
Been so many randos documentary.
Speaker 1 (42:16):
We should it. Let's do it.
Speaker 2 (42:18):
Actually, a friend that wants me to like starts helping
me do documentary documentary.
Speaker 1 (42:22):
That's the space that got me into where I am today. Okay,
I like randomly walked into Okay, because so did that
did that show? That show actually open the door for
me to then do sports media? Okay, so I think
this is one of the things that I value in life,
is just showing up. And I believe that when you
show up, things change and things have to happen. And
so even the sports media thing, like I won this
(42:43):
TV show and somebody had saw in like the editing
House or something like a real of mine. So I
got a phone call from stranger. They said, hey, have
you have I'm so and so with the Arena Football League,
Like have you ever done live TV? Which I haven't,
but I said I can do live TV. And he's like,
can you be in Tampa to Mars said absolutely. I
didn't know a lick about arena football. I knew everything
(43:05):
about football, but arena football totally different. So I just
studied like crazy. I'm a kid, I'm nineteen, and I
show up and it was like total chaos because it
was the team this guy worked for. It wasn't their
home stadium, and his energy was so chaotic and he
was so freaked out. And I had never done this before,
but I was so confident that I remember like just
quieting myself and being like, I need wisdom in this.
(43:25):
And I was this audacious nineteen year old that felt
I was to look them in the ice was on
the trail. I'm like, George, George, I'm going to make
you look like a genius. And he's like what. I
was like, I just need to tell me at my cameras.
I need to tell you my point of focus. And
I'm gonna make you look like a genius. What's my
rules and regulation? And there is not an arena football,
Like I don't even know if reena football still exist.
You can like, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (43:45):
I know the CFL exists.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
He's like, I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker 2 (43:49):
The CFL does.
Speaker 1 (43:50):
The CFL does, that's for sure. Yeah, the XFL, I
don't know. It's not like it was. And this is
so long ago, but like as a reporter.
Speaker 2 (44:02):
I had too many deaths in arena football.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (44:05):
I feel like it was like extra vicious, right.
Speaker 1 (44:07):
So it's a shorter field. There isn't really sidelines, so
there's just like a wall up barrier. Like people died
over those walls and I was in stand I remember,
I don't like why the hecks I wear sandals and
should wear sneakers. I'm like jumping over this wall and
like jumping back over because I.
Speaker 2 (44:18):
Oh, you were like live on field reporter.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (44:21):
Oh, I thought you were like in a studio. No, oh,
you were like.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
There like the action girl.
Speaker 2 (44:26):
Yes, you're like the the Andrews.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
What's your chick?
Speaker 2 (44:30):
And you were literally the Air and Andrews of Steel.
Speaker 1 (44:34):
Yes, that was the Air Yes, yes, And so I
remember being like, because the whole thing on that reality
show I was on was like America's Bell and Dream
Dreams carry America Forts. I'd pitched like Football Experience TV
show because I love action in the football. It's the
whole thing anyway, So the arena football thing was wild.
But that really made me realize, like, because I did
live concerts growing up, I love people interaction. That one
(44:56):
of the things I just is my bread and butter
is taking what could be chaotic situations but bringing an
experience across the camera that people feel like they're a
part of. And I'm definitely like really good at the
high energy experiences. I'm not the girl to do like
the somber, hard hitting interviews like I can do up.
I hate them, and I don't think that that's people
(45:16):
wouldnt want watch that with me. Yeah, much more of
the high energy. So that made me realize, like I
know what I'm good at. I know that I can
thrive on live. I know that I could have a
minimal amount of information and make something absolutely incredible out
of it. And so that really shaped like a lot
of the idea of what I wanted to get into.
I still was like writing music in Nashville and was
trying to figure out, like this TV show, A lot
(45:39):
of things were promised they didn't. There was like networks
sold another network, like a lot all the stuff that
normally happens. So I kind of went through this thing
where I'm like, I don't know what the heck I'm
supposed to do next. And I was gonna go to
La work with Hallmark Channel and stuff, which I was
super excited about. And on the way there, I stopped
to see my grandparents. I'm the oldest of nineteen grandkids.
So fun. I love my family or something, and well,
(46:01):
you know, we're just we are good at being fruitful,
multiplying amen and we're a lot of fun. My family
is so fun. Like I think one of the things
I really value about my family is that we really
really enjoy each other and we don't see eye to
eye on a ton of things, but we really love
being each bosses. It's the best. So it's that my
(46:23):
mom's side. Yeah, okay, So I was going to stop
at my CB as my grandparents and all that end up.
So this is where my story gets weird and complicated.
But LA is where I was going to go to
meet with like Hallmark on some stuff, and then I
was going to go Before I go to LA, I'm
like stopping in Seattle to visit my grandparents all the
fun things. And in between those two trips, I was
(46:45):
going to go to Virginia Beach, Virginia to take my
cousin who was turning thirteen years old, to her first
concert for birthday. So I'm the confore girl. I'm like,
I love this. Yeah, okay. So I'm in Seattle have
this crazy dream and I'm a dreamer, but this dream
scared me. I've never had a d that scared me
in my life. It was so detailed and just the
tone of it, and I woke up and was like,
(47:05):
I wrote down the dream. I drew some elements in
the dream on my journal. I'm like, I don't I
feel like I'm not supposed to go to LA. But
Nashville felt like it was shifting for me. So I
didn't know what that looked like. And I'm like, I
don't know what LA like. I felt like I was
supposed to go there. Get a phone call from my mom.
I learn a little bit on this dream, but not
all the details, and she's like, I don't think you're
supposed to go to LA. I was like, yeah, that's
(47:26):
that's what I'm feeling. And she goes, hey, this might
sound crazy, but like you should really reconsider going to
college because I did a year of traditional college. And
then she's like random classes here and there. I was like,
I hate school, like I'm dyslexic. I hate being in school,
like I've had great jobs, Like no way, I'm a
career girl already. I don't need that. Mom's like, just
think about it, and so whatever my mom says that
(47:47):
out mouths of two or three. I come back to
my grandma's are walking to my grandm's house, and my
Grandma's just like little Norwegian and she grabs me and
she's like, your husband could leave you, your kids can
leave you, but an education will never leave you. And
I was like, I totally hear your heart don't receive that.
I hear your heart, but okay, tell me about this.
She's like, it would just mean a lot to your
grandfather and I if you'd consider finishing your degree. And
(48:11):
so I was like, okay, I hear you. So out
of kind of just wanting to be like check the
box to honor my grandparents, I filled out what I
thought was a This was an August time frame, so
I thought I was applying to a school in Virginia Beach.
Since I knew, okay, I'm going to Virginia Beach to
visit my cousins. My uncle's involved of the school. I'm
gonna ask them to tour me around. Just kind of
checks all the boxes I'll apply for like spring online.
(48:34):
So I do all of that, text my uncle, Hey,
well I'm MVB. Can you please just show me around?
I think gat no problem. So anyways, then long story
short is, my mom calls me back and she's like, hey,
I feel like I'm telling you if you get a
Virginia and you feel like you need to stay, stay
sometimes it takes us. Suddenly, I was like, why would
you say that. She's like, I just I felt it.
(48:54):
I felt like I was to tell you if you
feel like and you stay stay. I was like, no,
the latter part so that sometimes it takes us suddenly.
In my dream, a banner had dropped down that said
sometimes it takes so suddenly. So I drew that out
and I was like, okay, I know the Lord is speaking.
And then my uncle called me and he's like, hey,
as well, you know that if you get here and
you feel like you need to stay here, live with us,
I'll help you finish your degree. And I was like,
(49:15):
did you talk to my mom? He's like no. I
was like, have you talked to Amy, which is like
call my grandma. He's like, I haven't even talked to
your aunt. She doesn't even know I've offered you this.
I was like, oh man, And I knew the Lord
of speaking to me, and I knew everything decide and
me didn't want to do that, like for me to
be put in a classroom again. Yeah, like I don't
think you understand, like my brain flips words, so for
me like to.
Speaker 2 (49:36):
But you're an amazing speaker, so that's really cool.
Speaker 1 (49:37):
That's the thing about like you put me on a
stage with like hundreds of thousands of people, like I
feel I'm like in the zone I was created for.
You put me in a classroom and you asked me
to read something out loud, Like I can't see on
black and white anyway, so I have to like color
code it. And then if like a word has like
the same beginning and last letter, my brain will flip
it out to completely different words. So nothing like it
(49:59):
takes me a long time. It's slow. So that is
like the biggest scariest place because when I was put
in a position of performing and you're like always in
this place to performance, all of a sudden you can't
perform all on something. So they're like, allow, that's an
area the Lord wants to heal in you. So I'm like,
I do not want to be in a classroom whatever. Whatever.
All of a sudden, in the next morning, I get
(50:19):
this call from a Virginia number. They're like, hey, we're
super excited, congratulations student reaching university. What do you want
your major to be? And I'm like wait what They're like, yeah,
like what are you wanting to major in? I was
like no, like I actually applied for you know, the spring,
it's the fall. And they're like, oh no, actually, like
you're accepted, and I'm just like freaked out of my mind.
And I knew anything to get there, So I didn't
(50:41):
even go back to Nashville. I called my mom. My
dad's on a hunting trip. He doesn't even know any
of this is going on. I was like, I feel
like I need to go. I'd be into obedience spin
on gous. She's like, just need to go, just show up,
Just show up. Everything else will be figured out. So
long story short, two years go by, and it was
a gnar really interesting season. I didn't even tell Pep
that I was like doing that. I was just kind
(51:01):
of back and forth. Finished my degree. In the day
that I finished my degree, I get this invitation I
start going to Washington, d C. At that time, Virginia
Beach is it's like only a couple of hours from Washington,
d C. I was a passionate patriot growing up, Like
I have photos off to send them to you. I
have photos of me dress like Betsy Ross and like
first grade in it. I was in it. The little
school that I went to. It taught me how to
(51:22):
love my country and the history of our country, and
it taught me to love the word. And I got
transformed my life. But I loved in America, like I
always have just felt like this huge this this huge
heart for the specific purpose of this nation. Sure weirdly,
since I was young, so I had never been to Washington, DC.
And when I start going to Washington, DC, something like
something became alive that I couldn't even describe because I
(51:43):
was expecting it to be like New York and I
hate New York. Wasn't. So I'm like, wow, there's just
something here. And so I started making those trips. Last
day of school, like I turned in all my stuff,
I'm done, and I get this invitation and I think
that this invitation is going to be a couple hundred
people there, and my mom to me my plus one,
I'm like cool. Turns out I end up being like
we're like two of thirty people at a round table
(52:03):
with Don Junior. And this was like going into Trump's
first ADMIN and so it was like a blown away
I'm like, what am I doing at this table? Yeah?
Like I know the feeling planned this, yes, and it's
like I can't plan this. How did this happen? Ended
up sitting next to my future employer who hired me
to then be an executive with like a news network.
So I was a young executive with this news network
(52:25):
coming out. So this is how like the evolution of
my career and how I get into the documentary space.
But I felt in love. I was like back and
forth to been like Nashville and DC, and I was
so not DC that that's what made me love it.
And I was so naive the same way I went
to the music industry. Naive. I thought that these people
like genuinely cared about their districts. I thought they cared
(52:47):
about our country. Like I thought, like, these are like
wholesome people, and you get behind the curtain, You're like,
there's no reality that's happening here. But because I always lived,
I've lived so tethered to my value system. I can
be fully meet in whatever setting that I'm in, and
because of that, I've had insane favor or conversations or
(53:08):
doors that are opened. And so what I experienced in
entertainment all of a sudden, I was experiencing in DC.
And then you start to learn things, and then you
start to learn the root systems are pretty interconnected and
you can connect the dots. And I have this belief
in me that those who seek truth will find it,
and so in trying to seek the truth on certain things,
and we're approaching this twenty twenty era, I dipped my
toes in the investigative journalism aspect. So then I started
(53:30):
moving that direction with this organization. Long story short, twenty
twenty hits, the plandemic is upon us and everybody gets furloughed.
I shift my focus to things that are happening a
little bit more locally than federally with the government, whatever
all that goes on. I have figure out how to
make money, as we all did so, and I had
like huge convictions on taking like some of the federal
(53:51):
and state funding at the time, which now I'm like,
I don't know why I had. That was the hill
I had to die on. I should just collected the patient.
But I was like, no, Like, I'll figure out a
way to make money. So that's where I started consulting.
And so I started consulting. I was working a little
bit with the company that I met John with, and
so I was figuring all that. I had a client
who was in firearms, and I realized, like an entire
(54:14):
aspect of his business that would absolutely crush. It was
if he had his own cinematic content, and at that time,
like that was like new, Like influencers were kind of
on the horizon in a way that they were were
still like pioneering a lot in the way that social
media was, and the patriotic, traditional valued American businesses were
getting thrown to the side. Nobody's working with them. Twenty
(54:37):
one is a millennial female gun owners were the largest
group of first time handgun owners. Nobody was catering to them.
So it's like naked girls and big burly men. Neither
of that is going to speak to millennial women. So
I'm like, I think you have a really awesome opportunity
to make beautiful stories. So that's how I had no
idea what the heck I was doing, except that I
(54:57):
have a really good natural instinct for storytelling. I know
visually what's gonna be beautiful and come together, and I
am so confident I can pull together incredible teams. Like
if there's one thing I can do, I can pull
together really good teams. So I do this for this client.
They're super successful, and that's what ends up kind of
opening the door for me to start working with this company.
Called Bonfire Legend, which then worked with Daily Wire at
(55:18):
the time, and I really learned a lot more about
like documentary airspace and that leads to Matt wash Fille
and when we were talking about kind of all this
other stuff to then being able to get enough inquiries
to travel and speak full time and launch my old
podcast and doing all of that, and that's where we've
kind of led to today. Yes, so thanks for hanging for
my hybrid version of my life. I loved it.
Speaker 2 (55:40):
So now what do you cover in your podcast?
Speaker 1 (55:42):
It's very much like this but a little different. I
think for me, my why and like my dad asked
me once when I was really young, he said, what's
what's your one big thing? I'm like, what do you mean,
my one big thing? He's like, what's your one big thing? Like,
what's the reason that you're here? I was like, I
was born to encourage other and to open the door
for truth. Like I really believe with everything inside me,
(56:05):
those that are seeking truth, Like, you don't have to
bait people into truth, you don't have to negotiate them
into it. If that search is on the inside of you,
all I have to do is pull back the curtain.
And so I'm like, that's for me, and I want
to see people unlocked in the authority that they carry
on the inside of them. And that's my why behind things.
And I've just always been in a place where I
(56:27):
know I'm called to communicate and it's looked totally different
in different seasons of life. Sometimes it's behind a camera,
sometimes it's in front of a camera, sometimes it's in
a different settings. Sometimes it's being the only person that's
willing to table really hard truths. So with people who
don't want to hear it, like whatever you're calling is,
you can look back through your life and identify, like
what are those areas where you've been utilized and the
biggest place of resistance that you've experienced probably identifies a
(56:50):
huge part of your purpose in your desk. So that's
where the show Kylie Jean, I've always wanted to do
a podcasts before podcasting was cool. Yeah, I just really
want to do this. I think it'd be something that's
amazing there And uh, never really pulled the trigger until
my best friend was like, if you don't do it,
like you're gonna regret it. Let's just do it. I'm
(57:11):
here like to help you in any way you need help.
So my best friend Kelsey producer kelse Happening, she produces
it with me and we just really allow these like
conversations to begin to unfold, and crazily enough, they always
end up having themes, the stories, unpack the purpose and
it's a really fun good time.
Speaker 2 (57:29):
That's awesome. Yeah yeah, and you enjoy it.
Speaker 1 (57:31):
I love it. Yeah, it's amazing. I have like incredible
partners United is one of them. That's awesome. Shameless shout out.
Speaker 2 (57:37):
Yeah, yeah, I need to talk to you about that,
Like I need to figure out how we can get
some some sponsors to this show.
Speaker 1 (57:42):
Yeah. Well honestly they like is they They came to
me and it was totally like again, I just think
when you have you have, not because you asked, not,
Like I just got really literal the Lord. It's like
I need income and I need people who are in
the same value system and he'll bring them. Yeah, but
it sounds like incredible at making relationships.
Speaker 2 (58:01):
So yeah, we're getting there. Yeah, I mean we have
one with Parlor. Like Parlor has been a big, a
big blessing.
Speaker 1 (58:05):
It's awesome.
Speaker 2 (58:06):
Yeah, it's been a big blessing. I don't know if
I would still be podcasting with me being so sick
after I amfest without if I wasn't don't I don't
know what the show would have looked like. But yeah,
like that's good for you. I mean, that's incredible. So
what's the next stage of your life look like? What
do you what do you podcasting? Speaking?
Speaker 1 (58:22):
That's a really good question.
Speaker 2 (58:25):
Yeah, because you you strike me someone that doesn't stay
in one place for very long.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
You have a lot of wonder what strikes that.
Speaker 2 (58:31):
I don't know. Maybe it was the nineteen different jobs you've.
Speaker 1 (58:33):
Had, so yeah, well you know what's funny about that
is I had this huge revelation. So I was brought
to Dallas to help this amazing organization kind of do
a little bit of a refresh and bring some productions
to the next level. And so because of that, I've
been based in Dallas for the last couple of months,
and uh, it's super fascinating Dallas as a city that
I don't know, I just never saw myself in and
(58:55):
I have two brothers here. I've only experienced good things
in Dallas. But for the longest time, I was like,
you couldn't pay me enough to live in Dallas, not Texas.
Not Texas. I'm not a Texas girl. And so then
when I came here, it provided this amazing opportunity to
really define what do I actually want in life, and
that is I think it's a little open ended right now.
I think I've lived so fast paced. Actually I know
(59:18):
exactly what I want. I just sometimes you don't want
to be vulnerable and sharing it. I'm like super excited
to be No, I'm super super excited to believe in
myself in a way I've never believed in myself. And
I think that the next phase which is coming on
the horizon because I have some commitments that I'm really
excited to bring out to the finish line, and that's
going to end amazingly incredible people involved. But this next leg,
(59:40):
I'm like, you know what, at the end of the day, Like,
what I really want is I have loved this last
two years being able to travel the nation and see
young girls and women and grandmothers come into the full
revelation that one they can hear God's voice and recognize
their purpose and their destiny. And for me, that's been
so huge and that shifts everything, that shifts away that
(01:00:02):
your mom, that your a wife, that you're an executive,
whatever industry that you're in, whatever your field of influence is,
it gives you purpose. It gives you purpose, It changes everything.
So there's a huge thing in my heart where I'm
launching these women's retreats. So my first one, I don't
know when this podcast is like in camps. Oh no, yes,
(01:00:23):
the ranch, the ranch retreat, actually ranch treats. It's so crazy.
For the last two years I've been visioning ranches. I've
been wanting to do like these ranch retreats, and now
all of a sudden, I had this incredible family who
are like, they have this beautiful ranch that's right in
between Houston and Austin, Texas, and like, we want you
to host a retreat here. I'm like, no way. And
then I had a couple of others come and they're
all ranches. So it's like, that's so cool because those
(01:00:44):
are important.
Speaker 2 (01:00:44):
Camping is so great on ranches.
Speaker 1 (01:00:46):
It's not it's luxury, luxury cabins.
Speaker 2 (01:00:51):
Like amazing, I'm kidding it'll be I will stop sabotaging
your retreat camps.
Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
I probably just need to like do some inner healing
or something.
Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
Yeah, I think it's some like past trauma of camp.
Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
I guess I don't know, it's being forced to do something.
Speaker 2 (01:01:07):
Okay, so camps podcasting speaking.
Speaker 1 (01:01:09):
Legit because the retreats.
Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
Yeah, like we're so amazing.
Speaker 1 (01:01:14):
It's it's gonna be awesome. We're doing like vision dreaming.
It's like a lot around vision building. But then outside
of the vision building, we're doing super fun things like
horseback riding. There's like a guy that's gonna come and
teach us how to clear a room, which I love
learning how to be able to protect yourself. Yeah, awesome
stuff like that pickleballtern.
Speaker 2 (01:01:28):
This is the coolest person you met in your journey
so far.
Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
Oh that's a big top five as far as like
famous people are just people.
Speaker 2 (01:01:35):
You've enjoyed, Like yeah, I mean maybe that have the people.
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Are one of my favorite. Just like when I was
working doing it on camera gig Trace Adkins brought nobody
with him zero ego, which I love to see, and
I was in an environment where people who aren't that big,
we're like thought they're super big, so they're their whole
entourages and all this stuff. Terrace Atkins just like chilling
back there and I got to interview him, and for me,
like I grew up listening to him, so that was
(01:01:58):
like a really fun, like cool mom mom. But what
I loved was like you just came by himself. He's
like super down to earth. That was like a memorable moment.
I'm like, I haven't met I've been in smaller rooms
with Donald Trump. I haven't met him yet, but that
would been I'd love to meet Malania. I was on
the Baron bandwagon before Baron was cool. He's one I
would love to interview same. Oh my god him the
(01:02:20):
first person here. Baron will be like, yeah, I want
to actually, uh Kai, I would be legit. So I'll
love following her stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:02:29):
So I'm starting a golf show.
Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
Oh way to go? Okay, tell us about this multi dimensional.
Speaker 2 (01:02:33):
Yes, so it's called the Conversation Cart. I haven't officially
really announced it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:36):
You're going to do it on like golf cart.
Speaker 2 (01:02:38):
Yeah, So it's freeing this in between holes as we drive.
But also pay Brice to Shamba. That's my dream.
Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
So if I could do Shambo, pass him up.
Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
If I could do anything in life, it would be
golf content.
Speaker 1 (01:02:50):
That's awesome.
Speaker 2 (01:02:50):
And so we're working on it. The hard part is
I have to make money.
Speaker 1 (01:02:54):
Well, a parlor to sponsor it, all the things on it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:58):
We are working on it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
If you want help, we strike a deal.
Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
Yah, working on it and uh. And but if I
could do anything, it would be that. And so Kai
is when I have on my list, that would be awesome.
I'd love to just golf with her and talk with her.
And I think the golf course opens people up. I
think sometimes when you walk into studios you have to
work to get people's guards down.
Speaker 1 (01:03:17):
I think things are so much better when there's action.
Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
Matter yes and they yes, and golf is it's a
booming sport and people and you know, it'll just be fun.
And so if I could do anything and find some
sponsors or sponsors, if you're listening, it's a great idea.
Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
I think it's a great idea.
Speaker 2 (01:03:31):
And I trademarked it. I owned the r L. The
conversation cart dot com is mine And but we're gonna
golf like it's gonna be like a video like bo
did with Trump when they go, but more conversation.
Speaker 1 (01:03:44):
And well, the cool thing is if you do like
the conversation cart is, you could have like eventually like
a morph into any kind of cart yes, anything, yes, branding.
Speaker 2 (01:03:51):
And like it could be we could take it to
NFL training camps, you know, and they could take it to.
Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
Like NBA every once in a while.
Speaker 2 (01:04:01):
Well I might need some Well you are a vision.
You can help me with the vision, like just when
it comes to building show because I've never built job
and put together team.
Speaker 1 (01:04:07):
Oh, it's super fun.
Speaker 2 (01:04:08):
Sure I talk.
Speaker 1 (01:04:09):
Actually, yeah, we canka conversations.
Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
Okay, you can hire me, I mean, or we just
going together and get some equity or something.
Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
Perfect. I love a good equity conversation. I just something
that's still another friend who's like building something really cool
and I said something about equity and they're like, nobody
thinks about equity. I was like, everybody thinks about equity.
Speaker 2 (01:04:23):
Yeah, I have equity in four companies right there.
Speaker 1 (01:04:25):
Yeah exactly.
Speaker 2 (01:04:26):
But anyway, that's what I'm working on. That's the secret.
That's the first time I've actually said the name.
Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
Congratulations, that's huge. Yes, I'm excited for the Mercier line. Yeah,
are you on? It's gonna be cool. That's awesome.
Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
Yeah, But anyway, this has been fun.
Speaker 1 (01:04:37):
Thanks ranging out? Is this okay? Yeah? We like met
like an hour.
Speaker 2 (01:04:41):
Thirty second year. Yeah, and I was just like, why
don't you come to say appreciate it. I'm not gonna
like felt little intimidated by you. Really, yeah, I hope
not just about your name, because so this is why,
like I followed you as a fan.
Speaker 1 (01:04:52):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (01:04:52):
And I was like, man, this is cool content, Like
I like appreciate what you do. I appreciate what you
stand for. And then, uh, what was that Wednesday?
Speaker 1 (01:04:57):
Isaiah?
Speaker 2 (01:04:58):
You were Thursday? You were just like yeah, and You're like, hey,
Kylie jeen Tannhill, Like I'm like I know that name.
Speaker 1 (01:05:04):
Crazy, I know that name?
Speaker 2 (01:05:06):
Why do I know that name? And then I'm like
I was like, bro, I follow her on Instagram and
it's crazy. It's like, well she might be her Friday.
I was like sick. And then you showed up and
I was like, dude, let's do it. So hopefully it
wasn't a letdown.
Speaker 1 (01:05:17):
Oh no, it was like a grand surprise. Yes, it
was great. I appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (01:05:22):
I was fun.
Speaker 1 (01:05:22):
I was saying like I was on the set earlier
today and peeled off all my shll ac so we're
coming in, like coming in authentic, real hanging out.
Speaker 2 (01:05:30):
Yes, this is the best. This is the best shows.
This is the best show.
Speaker 1 (01:05:33):
I still love it. I really appreciate it, and even
just thinks for sharing a little bit about you. You
got a good thing going. You're building some legacy, very valuing.
Speaker 2 (01:05:40):
I'm excited perfect well before we end, because I think
we're all hungry.
Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
My Steven crowd, did you guys mine too?
Speaker 2 (01:05:49):
Mind too?
Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
Gosh? Mine like did twice? And I thought, because you
know what I've eaten today, which is terrible since I
really love Maha, but peanut Eminem's and Americano our junior
would be so disciplined.
Speaker 2 (01:06:03):
That's it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:04):
Yeah, I've been on the go. That's not good. Trust me,
I'm hungry.
Speaker 2 (01:06:10):
Oh are you still? You can't have gluten?
Speaker 1 (01:06:11):
Right? I can't have gluten? Yeah. We never finished that story,
but maybe for another time. Yeah, next time of alternative
health I can dive into.
Speaker 2 (01:06:19):
That's do Let's do that next time.
Speaker 1 (01:06:21):
Perfect, Let's do it. Bring Motley with me all the time.
Speaker 2 (01:06:24):
So that sounds great. Love the Junior on can we
do that? Can we do a joint podcast?
Speaker 1 (01:06:30):
Let's do it? That'd be awesome, But like, let's do
it on the road. We should start hitting the streets.
I would love that kind of stuff. We can pitch it.
We can put a pitch back together. Sounds fun. You
want to be our producer, our editor. Cool, You're in.
Speaker 2 (01:06:44):
Of course done.
Speaker 1 (01:06:46):
Awesome.
Speaker 2 (01:06:48):
It's a great idea that it's gonna change. It's gonna
be amazing. I love it. I love it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:53):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
I give the opportunity for all my guests to plug something,
to promote something to my listeners. At the end of
every show, this is your opportunity to tell all the
listeners where they can find more of you and where
do they want to go.
Speaker 1 (01:07:03):
Well, you can find me at Kyliejeen dot com, check
out my socials at Kyliejeen, Tannehill on Instagram, at Kylie
Jean on YouTube, and yeah, just google me. I have
women's retreats coming up. I have this errors Women's Retreats.
October twenty fourth is going to be the first one,
and so we're about to have some really incredible things happen.
(01:07:24):
But please come find me, Come be my friend. It's
my favorite thing in the world to be able to
connect with you and connect with people. We're launching some
awesome things coming into the fall.
Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
So just don't send her dms.
Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
I'm really bad at checking dms, like I just I
just don't. I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (01:07:37):
Yeah, and thank you for watching this episode of Didyll
in English show. Thank you to Kylie. Thank you for
coming on so like last minute here. This is awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Awesome is the best. So much.
Speaker 2 (01:07:44):
Thank you so much, And thank you guys for listening
to this episode. Dyling the show as always, Please like,
come and subscribe, share with a friend, family member. If
you enjoyed this, check out Kylie stuff. Thanks, she's a podcast.
Probably almost didn't.
Speaker 1 (01:07:54):
Even plug my own show. Check out Kylie Jean the
show on Spotify. You two everywhere.
Speaker 2 (01:07:59):
Don't stop listening to my show to listen to her show.
But if you have room for more, listen to both.
Speaker 1 (01:08:03):
We're both very different. I'm both very fine.
Speaker 2 (01:08:05):
Yeah, Like, obviously you should just only listen to our
two shows on repeat.
Speaker 1 (01:08:08):
There you go.
Speaker 2 (01:08:08):
I like, bye, see how's the next episode?
Speaker 1 (01:08:12):
Peace? Thank you so much,