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September 22, 2025 26 mins
It is a privilege to welcome alt-pop recording artist and producer ROHAN to The Jake’s Take with Jacob Elyachar Podcast.  

ROHAN was an Australian kid with big dreams. Indian parents raised him in Australia and Singapore. He was introduced to music through Australian Idol and Green Day’s American Idiot, which led him to explore computers and front bands in Melbourne and Singapore.  

After high school, he moved to California and attended Stanford to continue exploring his love for technology and music. Now, out of his own studio in San Francisco and pulling inspiration from Australian recording artists such as Skeggs, 90s R&B and hip-hop such as Ms. Lauryn Hill, and contemporary pop artists like Dominic Fike, he’s ready to officially introduce himself with his own blend of Australian indie rock with R&B, electronic, and folk musical influences that form his self-produced confessional alt-pop anthems.  

Earlier in 2025, ROHAN opened for Chappell Roan’s favorite pop artist, Devon Again, at her sold-out show in San Francisco. He also opened for Contradash, Frex, and Marco Luka.  In October, he will be supporting Will Paquin when he visits the city.  

On this episode of The Jake’s Take with Jacob Elyachar Podcast, ROHAN spoke about performing alongside Green Day, overcoming challenges while staying in the music industry, and shared the stories behind some of his most-streamed Spotify songs.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/jake-s-take-with-jacob-elyachar--4112003/support.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Hello, everyone, Welcome to another exciting edition of the Jakes.
Take What jacobout our podcast. I'm your host, Jacob Aushara,
Chief content producer and writer of jask dot com, a
pop culture entertainment news website. If you're watching us on YouTube,
please get us the thumbs up. If you're listening to
this audio on our other platforms, please give us a
five star rating. Download this episode and more. I'm very excited.

(00:43):
Welcome to our lady's guest to day. He as this recording.
He is an alternative PLoP recording artist and producer with
over twenty thousand, four hundred monthly Spotify listeners and twelve
thousand YouTube subscribers and forty four thousand, four hundred TikTok followers,
and his videos have been viewed over as of this
recording four hundred and twenty nine thousand times. Please let
me welcome Rahan to the Poodcast.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
Hello, how's it going all, Rahn?

Speaker 1 (01:09):
How are you doing today?

Speaker 2 (01:10):
I'm good. I'm good. Just it's like a nice Sunday
morning weather. It's not too good, but chilling, chilling my dog.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
Hello there, Yeah, what's her name?

Speaker 2 (01:22):
Costa Pasta?

Speaker 1 (01:24):
How are you a costa.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
He's good.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
He just ate.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
He's he's not gonna ask me too much, I hope.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
Alrighty, alrighty, Well we always love when Doggie, when Doggie
gets chiming. So let's get oh there he goes right now,
thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
I'm gonna have to I'm gonna have to switch locations
real quick, honestly, let.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
Me let me get already. Alrighty, we just have for
a few technical difficulties were let's continue our conversations. Raw,
that's it, alrighty. So Rohan, when you get interested in music,
how did that passion evolve into desire to recruit career
and recording industry?

Speaker 2 (02:04):
You know again, I mean I've got out to music
really young, like I my you know, when I was
living in Australia and my mom got me into piano,
which is like a very I feel like Asian parent
thing to do, but I really enjoyed it. I picked
it up very quickly. And after that it was like
it was my sister Asha who showed me Green Day

(02:25):
and I was like three four years old, and I think,
just like seeing Billy Joe, you know, she showed me
the bullet in the Bible, which is like that live
that sort of like live Concertsirius Milton Keys that Greene
did and she doesn't five And I just think watching
Billy Joe kind of do his thing just made me

(02:46):
want to be a rock star. And so I picked
up the guitar. I played in a lot of bands,
were a lot of songs, and I just I just
generally played in a lot of bands throughout like middle school,
high school and stuff. And then I think when I
came to America and my life taste sort of diversified
from like the indie punk sort of stuff, I just
felt like I had something to offer. So I started recording.

(03:08):
I built my own CD, and I just started started
going at it. And I think, maybe just like set goals,
new goals every day.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
But yeah, and that's amazing, Til's being a guy. I
feel that The American Idiot is still one of the
greatest rock albums of all time.

Speaker 2 (03:23):
Yeah, And I have that on my on my wrist.
I got that.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
Twenty one Guns America the title album and Boulevard of
Broken Streams still three of the greatest rock songs of
all time.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Yeah, yeah, I agree.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
Yeah, all right, So besides green Day, who are the
recording artists, the musicians and producers who inspired you your
SAP and.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
Yeah, I mean it's a pretty diverse set, but I
feel like, you know, one of the other biggest inspirations
I had, maybe not to my current sound too much,
but sort of like that got me branching out of
punk and pop punk really is his band called Beach Coons.
They're in They're from San Diego. It's mostly the lead
singer of Pablo. But you know, I I found them.

(04:14):
I can't. I found them because I watched I went
to this, like I went to this sort of like
concert festival in Berkeley that Billy Joe's Sons band was
playing in and they played and I was really like
taken away by them immediately. They had a really good
live energy and they had this like kind of they
have this indie punk vibe, like very fast paced, but
it was like very melodic and some of it was

(04:34):
in Spanish and it was it was really cool, and
so I was a huge fan of them for a
while and that like kind of branched me out of
you know, just like the straight you know, pop punk
stuff and inspired me to like kind of do my
own music a lot. Seeing how how they took a
spin on it and how Pablo took a spin on it,
and I actually like smoked. I smoked a jay with
him outside of his show. I don't know if I

(04:57):
could say that.

Speaker 1 (04:58):
Wow, that's definitely something that you can. This is definitely that. Yeah.
I can't believe you had the opportunity to do that.
So definitely did you just did a smoke, hung out
and did a smoke with him? Yeah, also playing with
his father because in twenty twenty three, you actually were

(05:18):
on stage of Green Day and he scrabbed. How that
performance happened with my audience?

Speaker 2 (05:23):
Oh honestly, like that was just I was just really
drunk at the show and I was really hyped, and
I honestly I couldn't even remember how I got on stage.
I just got on stage somehow, and then I got
on and then I was like what am I doing?
And then Billy Joe was just like signaling me to
sing the song with him, and then I did. And
the crazy thing is that after I finished the line

(05:45):
it was in the song Stay the Night from the Trilogy,
and then I went in to jump back into the stage,
he slapped my bone and he's like, oh, go jump
go crowds ORF stage five, and I did, and then
no one caught me, like I, oh, no, dude, I
was bruised.

Speaker 1 (05:59):
I mean I was.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
There was moch adrenaline from having done that that I
was like hyped, but I like the next day I
was like, dude, I'm fucking bruised all over.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
Alrighty, I think that. But here's the thing. At least
you got to sing with your heroes, and that's something
that not a lot of people get to do.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Yeah, at least the Armstrong hopefully you have Hopefully the
Armstrong fanis say, hey, do you want to open for.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
Us one day? I don't know. I don't know if
the music fits. I don't I don't know if if
the genres fit anymore. But like you know, who knows.
Maybe if I have some kind of like more green
day as stuff in my in my back catalog in
my in my like bolts, so maybe maybe the lines.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Absolutely, So we'll get back to your we'll get to
your catalog at the minute. But first, what have been
some of the challenges that you fasting in the recording
industry and have you overcome those obstacles and just not.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
Knowing what I signed up for Honestly, like I I
think that when I began, I was like just kind of,
you know, enjoying figuring out I've always done music, always
played music, but I think I was enjoying figuring out
my sound and the intersection of like these artists I like.
And then like, as I got really better at it
and I started really believing in the music I was

(07:10):
making and like really believing in you know, like that,
I think it can be a part of the conversation.
Like I think just like realizing that I wanted to
really take it places not realize like but not then
realizing how much you know, work it is on this
on like the TikTok side, and you know, like the

(07:33):
the promotions, it's like a it's a hustle, man. It's
like I I in the beginning, thought I can just
I can just release music, that's it. But there's so
much stuff you have to do. You have to post tiktoks,
you have to post all these content and videos, and
it's like everything's just like it's it's it's a hustle
and a half. So yeah, that's that's one thing it's
just sort of been saying. I think every artist will

(07:53):
tell you that, but I think just saying a top
of that has been has been a struggle, honestly.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
Welcome to the cloud. When it comes to content creation,
Yeah yeah, And I can say this that someone that
has been doing content creation since for almost fifteen years.
It is a hustle between writing and like fends transcribing
interviews all the way to recording recording podcasts and try
and figure out when's the best time to post on

(08:19):
Instagram or on LinkedIn, yeah, or Twitter. It's so tough,
and like, the thing is, I lost my interest with
TikTok because the thing is I don't know how to
master that algorithm.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
H Yeah, it's tough, man. I feel like I've definitely
rotted my brain a little just watching all the TikTok
that I have trying to get an idea of how
you know how to leverage the algorithm and stuff. It's
pretty crazy.

Speaker 1 (08:42):
But yeah, yeah, not to mention the fact, it's like,
how many do I work with bot? Three hashtags or
ten hashtags?

Speaker 2 (08:51):
Yeah, yeah, I don't know the answer to that.

Speaker 1 (08:55):
I don't need I don't either. It's always you got
to try it, You gotta try it, and then once
you find something, stick with it. But however, you gotta
get used to throwing spaghetti at the wall.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
Yeah yeah, true.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
All right, so let's go back to your catalog. I
want to talk about some of the most Spotify stream
songs and the stories behind them. Yeah okay, So let's
start with your latest single, how do You Feel Sweet Ass.
As of this recording has twenty thousand, seven hundred Spotify streams.
So what is the story behind that.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
That song? I my family was visiting me, My family,
like my my family from Australia was visiting me. They
stayed me for three months, three or four months, and
like it was a full house for like four months.
It was like the time.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
It was the best time. Like we went to LA
and YC Houston and like, well, like I, I obviously
live in a totally different continent to like my family,
so this was like just kind of a dream come
true that all my siblings were around and everything. And
after they left, it was like really jarring.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
It was very lonely, like a week, like I was
still adjusting to kind of being alone again, and I
think I just picked up my acoustic guitar and I
like wrote this song and it was like sort of
like a song about like you know that, like it's
sort of like it's kind of like a depressive song,
like if you look into the lyrics, it's like a
it's a song about like sort of like going through
a depressive phase. But it was It's like when I

(10:26):
wrote it, it wasn't like, oh, I'm depressed, it was like,
this is like I'm in a bit of a temporary pit.
It's like how it's sort of how like sometimes the
lows can feel more permanent than they are, but that's
what that's what that song's about. And then I recorded
it totally at home. It's been a week just going
ham on it completely in my kitchen basically, and then

(10:50):
I sent it to Mark Core, who was like the
guy who did a lot of the Green Day videos
back in the nineties Time of your Life when I
come around boss the case, and he he loved it,
and we made a video together and in Joshua Tree
at Olivia Wilde's ex husband's house.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
Jason Sadeka is a fellow Canes City And yeah, yeah,
that's pretty cool that you can that you can say
I actually did a music video at the josh Point
at the Joshua Tree.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Yeah. Yeah, it was a really cool experience. And then
the funny thing is my my my siblings came back
to help me film film that, or my sister came back,
and then one Nights went from high school there as well.
And it was really cool with all these paintings of
naked women in the house, and it was like there
were all these like ships and like broken down pianos
and broken down cars and everything. It was insane. It

(11:44):
was like just prop heaven.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
Yeah, that could have also been used some adios to do,
like Boulevard and Balkan Dreams.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
If you want to do a cover of that, Yeah,
I should do a cover of that. Write that dad.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
Actually, well that's a great I'm so glad I was
able to add that idea. Here suggestion box right now.
All right, So one of your featured songs is I
Wish I Could Tell You And as of this recording,
it has over thirty one thousand, four hundred Spotify strips.

(12:16):
So the so the same thing. So the third behind
that song.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
Yeah, sorry, that song came after a breakup. So my
one of my ex girlfriends and I broke up on
Halloween night. It's pretty pretty hellish relationship, honestly.

Speaker 1 (12:36):
And that's mentioned in Nightmarish Time to exactly.

Speaker 2 (12:39):
Yeah, little lot of detail, but yeah, we we broke
up and then I you know that that post breakup
period is pretty insane. And I was, you know, writing
a lot of stuff.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
I was.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
I was definitely back in a low period and I
was writing a lot of stuff in my apartment. And
this song was like a folk song that that I
kind of put together, which is like, you know, it
lives like you know, I wish I could tell you.
I know that you hate me. I know that you
go get good reasons and bad ones. It's sort of
like the things that you wish you could tell someone
but you can't because you're like in a no contact period.
You know, you're not talking to each other. And I

(13:16):
went back to Australia for like the New Year's Christmas time,
and I was built a studio in my grandma's house
and I recorded it there and then we made a video.
And when I came back to the Bay Area, we
made a video with one of my siblings came back
with me from Australia. We made a video with Mark
again and it was it was cool. Yeah, We went

(13:37):
out to this undisclosed location in the Bay Area and
it was like the coldest. It was the coldest day
of my life, the coldest ever been. I was like
freezing in that video, but it was you can even
see my face it is almost like pale in some
of the shots. And then yeah, we we put it

(13:58):
out and Spotify. It got on like the Fresh Fines Australia,
which was a big, a big sort of achievement for me.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
That's and that's amazing too that you can be able
to do that and hopefully it didn't develop hyperthermia.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
I think I was honestly close. Honestly, I feel like
I was close to.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
H I'm sorry about that. Anyway. Your song Tomorrow is
not the same as the famous Tomorrow that's from the
Anti musical, is it?

Speaker 2 (14:26):
No? I think it's a little bit different.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
How different?

Speaker 2 (14:30):
I actually don't know that song. I couldn't even tell you.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
But however, forty one thousand point four people love streaming
your your song Tomorrow, so I've met the into the original.
So what's the song about?

Speaker 2 (14:45):
Tomorrow? Is about fucking up in a relationship and the
empty promises that you make to like do better. I
definitely can relate to this because I, you know, it
was in a relationship one of my one of my relationships,
Like I definitely was like the more problematic one. Like
she was very patient, very kind, very forgiving, and I

(15:09):
was always, you know, I was always doing some function.
And I wrote the song long after we broke up,
but I was thinking about her for a little and
I was like, ah, I was just thinking about all
that stuff, that all the patience she had and all
the all the times I said I'll try again, I'll

(15:31):
try again tomorrow, And that's what the song's about.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Yeah, I definitely think there's a lot of people like
both ways. It could go easily one way or to
the other. And also the thing is, I've always like
a lot of people have said that you have a
lot of patients, but sometimes that patience can really be
very sometimes you could be have a short thing used too.
M m.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
Yeah, that's true. That's fact, all right.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
I gotta say this. I love when I think of
your song, Fizzy, I think of soda that I'm opening up. Yeah,
but I take it that's but I take it that's
seventy as if it's recording that seventy five thousand, seven
hundred strong Spotify streams is not about song is not
about soda at all.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
It's about it's about a certain type of drink. I mean,
it's somewhat about you know, drinking, and if you look
at the cover, it's me and a bunch of wine
bottles and a bat tub. But no, there's a few
metaphors in that song, but you know, I think the
main one is that, you know, Fizzy is about like
a relationship that fizzles out. It's like it's about a

(16:36):
situationship or relationship that keeps fizzling out. You know, it keeps,
it keeps sort of you know, just like you know,
just like the bubbles and a soda. You know, it keeps,
you know, yeah, fizzling out, bubbling up with all these
issues and chaos and it's active. But yeah, that's what
the song is about, really. But it's also done in

(16:58):
like a very cheeky sort of like summary way, not
like I wish I could tell you it's like a
bit more sad boy. This is sort of like a
bit more happy boy.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Which is great, which was great because the thing is,
it feels like with today's music industries, feels like a
little bipolar because we have all these sad songs that
Billie Eilish and Monitor singing. We have the purpose songs
from Taylor Swift.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
Yeah yeah, yeah, I like doing both.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
So oh yeah, you have to balance it out. Yeah.
I think you have to be successful, especially in the
pop industry, You've got to balance it out. Yeah, alrighty.
I gotta say this, I've never heard a song called
nicely before and a hundred and when when it started
to get like to the over thee hundred thousand Spotify streams,

(17:44):
What goes through your mind when you say, oh my god,
it cleared one hundred thousand streams.

Speaker 2 (17:49):
Yeah, I mean, look, when I started making music, I
was just like, I just want like two thousand listeners
and I'll be happy. And I got two thousand. I
was like, I want ten thousands. I got ten thousand.
I want one hundred thousand. I'm on the hundred listeners yet,
So you know, I think, like my mind, I'm like
a professional goal post shifter, honestly, Like that's what I do,

(18:10):
you know, all the things I do. So, like, you know,
I think when it hits one hundred k, I'm just
like I want a million and when I hits a million,
and when it hits a million, I'll definitely be like,
I want a hundred million. That's just the way my
brain works. But also it's a level of fuck I don't.
I feel less and less like an imposter each day,
which feels good.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
It's a long time, even for someone like me, and
it's been in the industry for fifteen minutes, I still
get a poster syndrome. It's like, for example, like I
can imagine I can have all like I've had an
Emmy nominated producer, I've had Emmy winning journalists, I've had
a Tony winning producer, and also I've had some reality
TV legends, and I'm like, I still care sometimes I
feel like at times I'm like, am I really good

(18:50):
enough for these kinds of guests?

Speaker 2 (18:52):
Yeah? Yeah, I feel you, man, I definitely feel you.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
Oh yeah, it's definitely. There's definitely a lot of times.
But like one of your biggest dream songs is big Screen. Yeah,
and as a two hundred and as this record has
over two hundred and thirteen thousand Spotify streams. So what
that is that song about?

Speaker 2 (19:12):
That song is a parody. That song is about, you know,
the sort of trappings of wanting to be like famous
and better than other people, like and you know, wanting
to you know, make it that people admire you and
when you walk into a room, people you know want
to be with you, wanna wanna talk to you. It's
sort of like about that. It's sort of like that
desire to Like it's sort of like acknowledging that, like

(19:36):
real like unveiling that sort of like internal desire to
sort of like be better than other people and be
like more famous, more cool, more like hot, more like rich.
Like that's like that kind of like ego thing that's inside.
I think a lot of us just like sort of
like acknowledging it.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
Yeah, I definitely agree that that there's a lot with
a lot of people going on. It's like, yes, you
get with all the interviews you get and everything as well,
like yeah you need to find Yeah, they could go
easily go up and do like this flashy streaming things,
but like you have to think to yourself, do you
want to be someone that's an I'm sorry, an asshole
or do you want to be someone that can be

(20:13):
admired because you work through hardship and everything, and I'd
rather do the latter, because the thing is, yes, I
don't want to. I want to be around longer and
not have like where I where are they now?

Speaker 2 (20:24):
Be drawn? Mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Yeah, And guys, it always pays to be nice. You
never know what kind of legacy you're going to leave
behind once you leave the sirt.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
Yeah, yeah, I agree, all right?

Speaker 1 (20:38):
So who are your dream collaborators, the singers, the songwriter,
it's the musicians and the producers, and how would they
enhance your sound?

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Dude, I would love to make a song with obviously
Green Day, this is an obvious one. I think, like
especially with Mike space Plane, that would be sick. And
like I think we do a song that has that
kind of pop punk vibe. I don't want to say
pop punk, but maybe like just that sort of like

(21:09):
punk punk, but like melodic punk, like you know vibe,
and you know, we can throw some of my more
SOFA vocals over that that'll be cool. Maybe some electronic touches,
some like like R and B touches will be sick.
And then I would love to do a song with Skeggs.
You know, I think like it would be sick to
do a song with an Australian artist and Skeggs obviously

(21:33):
there were a huge inspiration for me, like just sort
of like doing again like similar to beachcreens, honestly, like
seeing how that sort of like vibe can be delivered
in a different filter. I'd love to do one with them.

Speaker 1 (21:45):
I think you guys would, you would do Wonders with.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
Yeah with who see see yah dude, I have we
both have a song named Unstoppable. Maybe combine it.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
That would be a good remix, your version of ensemble.
And then you guys see the same things.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
At the same I'm down.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Can you yeah see if you're listening or watching this,
go kN kind of.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
Grohn please please? Well, I think we'll do someone this together.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
And I gotta say this, I would love to see
I would love to see you with a collaboration with
like someone like a like if you want, like I
saw it, he did some rap, but like maybe a
Kendrick or maybe a Kendrick Lamorrow or a Dray how.

Speaker 2 (22:27):
About Justin Justin Bieber and as well, Oh, Bieber would
be a.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
Good one as well. I definitely think it'd be great.
But I think Bieber would be great. And then I
gotta say this, especially when you brought up big Screen.
I always thought Lucky would be what you're like about lucky.
You know Britney Spears is Lucky.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
Yeah, dude, let's make it happen. I'm keen. I'm in
the studio tomorrow, alrighty.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
I however, I don't have they're listening to this. If
they're watching this, they'll go to or fans with them.
Hepn going through that as well. And also, by the way,
we spoke out about this to the universe.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
So dude, I'm a big believer in manifesting the same here.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
I same here. It's been the reason why that I've
been still straight, still been working as a back extuer
for so long.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
There you go, there, I coax that mud.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Alrighty, So we got to talk about social media. Go
back to social media. Now. Are you more of a
TikToker or Instagram?

Speaker 2 (23:26):
I like TikTok more, honestly, just because I find Instagram.
I don't know, I don't have the same confidence, and
I like Instagram to be chill and curated and like
kind of sexy, and then TikTok I just spam random
ship like I'm just like, I feel comfortable just doing
random ship on TikTok. But Instagram, I want to. I
want to, like, you know, I want to. It's I

(23:48):
feel like it's more of a portfolio piece, so I
don't like have the same I'm not posting reels daily,
you know what I'm saying. Maybe I should. Everyone tells
you I should, but I don't.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
Know how to do real like you only like, I
don't know how. I don't have the patience to go
and put one clip in and to weave everything like
on the Final cop be My final phone doesn't have
final cuts.

Speaker 2 (24:08):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, dude, it's a We got to figure
it out. We got to do a workshop together.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
Absolutely. I'll teach you more about Instagram if you teach
me more about TikTok.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Keen keen for it.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
All right, that's a great one. So are you ready
for your last question? Yeah? Throw it at me, alrighty. So, Rohan,
where can they find you on social media? Number one?
Number two? Where can they find your music? And if
you're thinking about putting on a show or like touring,
where would they find out to go? Where to find tickets?

Speaker 2 (24:41):
You should just go to my Instagram. It's Rohan X.
You can find new songs, new shows, new videos, everything
on that. If you want some more like, you know,
fun music content, go to my TikTok Chapel Rohan It's
like chop. I love that name, by the way, as

(25:03):
I was drunk, but I did that. I was likely funny.
Uh and then yeah, I'm on LinkedIn. No, I'm kidding,
don't do that.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
We are not that. We don't know each other on LinkedIn.
I think LinkedIn's professionals. But for fans Instagram and.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
TikTok, rohan x and Chapel Rohano, you should.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
You should hit those up. Hit my line.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
Let's let's collaborate. See uh and Justin Bieber.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Alright, you heard them. Fucks. So, guys, if you missed
an episode of The Jigs Short podcast, visit our channels
on Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, iHeart, Spotify, and Spreaker. Jake
sick with Jacobe shirts A C O B E L
y A c H. Now are you on social media
because I'm on social media to Facebook, Instagram, threats, Twitter,

(25:51):
I YouTube, Jacob all shirts A C O B E
L y A C H A R. I want to
find out what's going on with America. Scott talent. What's
going off the challenge? I want to see him read
my new music reviews. Well, head to the blog that
started all Jake setshake dot com. I was getting Jake
stshake dot com and Jake's Sake. Jagisher podcast is an
official twenty twenty five American Business Award winning podcasts and

(26:14):
I want to say thank you so much the American
Business Award judges for selecting my podcasts to be to
receive the silver medal in the Best Interview Talk Show
category in the Podcasting division. Rohan, you are incredible. I
have really enjoyed our conversation and I cannot wait to
see what you do next.

Speaker 2 (26:33):
I really enjoyed the conversation too. Yeah. I'm going to
add the podcast on my Spotify right now.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
Oh wow, thank you so much. Well, guys, thank you
so much for watching. Thank you so much for listening.
Till next time, Papa grate with everybody. Good Bye,
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