Business Money Hacks

Episode 3: Re-Branding Your Brand with Tnnr Wytt

 [Music]

Dustin: Every morning you need to mind-hack and murder-hack your brand.

Bridge: Exponential growth is exponential

Dustin: Look at your calendar, and burn it. What is your personal winning résumé?

Bridge: The number one thing that they don't teach in school is to make money

Bridge: Entrepreneurs

Dustin: Entrepreneurs

Bridge: Entrepreneur

Dustin: Entre-manure

Bridge: Produce, produce, produce, PROduce

Dustin: Iam literally a god

Leonidas: Spartans!

Dustin: Business

Bridge: Money Hacks

[Music ends]

Bridge: Hello everybody, and welcome to b-

Leonidas: our arrows will blot out the sun

Bridge: Forgot we kept that

Dustin: Yeah [mumbles]

Bridge: Alright, well let's start again. How's it going everybody. This is Business Money Hacks. I'm Bridge Stuart. I'm Dustin Taylor Hahn

Bridge: Today we got a great episode lined up. We’re gonna be talking with our guest, Tanner Wyatt, and we're going to be focusing on specifically branding. It's very important to just get your name out there and understanding how branding can take you to the next level in regards to business, in regards to your personal life, whether it be with family, or friends, or you know relationships. Branding hits many levels.

Dustin: We spoke about cutting your ties with your old family and starting anew, and I think that's kind of the thesis of starting anew is putting your name on people, putting your name on things, if not metaphorically, but literally putting your name on things. I have a special burner. I burn my name into

Bridge: That's good, I mean it's important, and you know to own yourself, I'm not talking about slaves here, but you know, own other people, like you own them in a way that you can talk with them at a level where you're owning the conversation.

Dustin: Right, when you're talking in the conversation, sometimes you just want to yell out your name, and then people remember

[giggling]

Dustin: You just want to yell out your name, like we'll do it, we'll do a little play here. “Bridge, how's business been doing?”

Bridge: “Oh it's-”

Dustin: “Dustin!” So now, so now Bridge right now knows that I'm above him in the conversation. Now there's a tactic where a Bridge can yell out his name, but it has to be a little bit louder, and then we realize that the conversation is more about him than it is about me. Let's do this again

Bridge: Yeah, I mean

Dustin: Bridge, Bridge, how's business? Dustin!

Bridge: Bridge! Bridge! Bridge!

[both giggle]

Dustin: Yeah so that's kind of

Bridge: And god, I'd hate to count the number of times I've been in a boardroom where it just devolved into

[both laugh]

Bridge: I'd hate to count the number of times I've been in a boardroom where it just devolved into everybody screaming their own name

Dustin: Yeah, well that's also the issue with, when we discussed making this podcast in the first place, we're like “how many secrets should we give away? This is a huge secret, because we can't just have people in boardrooms yelling out their names and then nothing gets done.”

Bridge: And that was a worry about this podcast is that it was just gonna be us screaming our own names constantly

Dustin: I have the urge every moment to scream my name, and I have this little buzzer on the side of my ankle that buzzes when I think about screaming my name. It hurts a bit, but it happens. It's connected directly into my egg, my egg.

[both giggle]

Bridge: You got it, you got, you have one of those egg implants.

Dustin: There are certain issues that I have with, it’s starting new issues, but we can we can get into

Bridge: Yeah

Dustin: Into that kind of thing later. I do want to go back to branding before we meet up with

Bridge: Tanner Wyatt

Dustin: Tanner Wyatt, an influencer. So where did branding come from what's the history behind branning- branding? In the old days branding would be cattle farmers or people who owned a lot of land would have to physically brand people or things that are on their farm. My father used to do that, because he had a lot of children. We, I had siblings, and he would brand on the bottom of our feet. So I had, if you could look at the bottom of my foot here, you'll see that there's my family sigil

Bridge: Wow

Dustin: Yeah, well that's a- these are two snakes choking a goat’s neck

Bridge: Oh okay

Dustin: And that forms an “H” and then there's my number right there.

Bridge: Wow

Dustin: And he actually branded both of our feet, because it made it harder for us to run away. So you could see that both of my feet

Bridge: Yeah well that, I mean you must take a lot of pride in that sort of thing. You're your father just, at a young age, branding his children with the sigil of the family

Dustin: Well he took it I, when I was, I think, four, that's the age of becoming, he would take the hot iron and for a while, I don't want to be on the subject too long, but for a while my, he would refer to all of his children as just the number of the baby that came out, what number came out, and then by the time we became a certain age we got to choose our own names, and I chose my name based off of the Dust Bowl, because we, all the siblings got together and we decided we're gonna choose our name based off of tragedies at the time.

Bridge: Okay that makes sense, because from great tragedy comes great greatness

Dustin: Mm-hmm

Bridge: And so you know, obviously you've achieved that

Dustin: Yes absolutely

Bridge: You know, we’re in a compound in New Zealand!

Dustin: Beautiful compound

Bridge: It’s a gorgeous, expensive compound where you're testing on live animals. If that's not success, I don't know what is.

Dustin: Well, thank you, Bridge, and I'm sure, I'll be sure to tell my brothers and sisters, Titanus, Marcus, and Franquake

Bridge: Franquake?

Dustin: Franquake

Bridge: Franquake. Okay.

Dustin: She was based off of the San Francisco earthquake of 1906

Bridge: Yeah. yeah that’s what I probably thought

Dustin: All right, well let's get to it

Bridge: That’s great

Dustin: Unless, Bridge, you have anything more to say

Bridge: No. No, I say we just bring, bring in Tanner. Tanner Wyatt, everybody, we get, we're bringing him on.

Tanner: Suh, dudes

Bridge: Tanner

Tanner: You see my video? Suh dudes. Those guys.

Dustin: First off, Tanner, you smell great

Tanner: Thank you, thank you yeah

Dustin: What is that?

Tanner: It's Axe body spray

Bridge: Axe

Tanner: Yeah, they’re one of my sponsors

Bridge: Wow

Tanner: This one particularly is Phoenix Risen. So

Bridge: Okay

Tanner: I feel pretty good about it yeah

Bridge: And you're being sponsored

Tanner: Yeah, yeah, I mean you know, we were talking about, you guys are talking about branding. That's why you brought me on here, right, and you guys were talking about physically branding yourself, well another way you can do it these days is tattoos. You know, tattoos are cool. It's a good way to get yourself out there, show people when you go on Instagram, you take pictures of your tattoos. I actually get tattoos of all my sponsors. So I have Axe body spray on my back

Dustin: Oh that’s smart

Tanner: I have Big Lots on my thigh, you know

Bridge: Wow

Tanner: And that way, like you know, when I'm doing my shots in my underwear, people get to see my sponsors, you know what I mean, you feel me?

Bridge: Very cool yeah

Dustin: I like that

Bridge: Very cool, Tanner

Tanner: Yeah, for sure, for sure

Dustin: You have an Olive Garden on your neck, now

Tanner: I do, yeah

Dustin: Is that still  

Tanner: No

Dustin: Your sponsor?

Tanner: No, no, I'm actually switching over right now. I'm going to In N Out. So it's kind of a conflict of interest. The weird thing is with Olive Garden is they, I guess they didn't like this video I did where I basically had sex with bread. Bread sticks are like a big part of their business model

Bridge: Okay

Tanner: I thought it was edgy. They thought it was inappropriate. I don't know.

Bridge: Give us a rundown on what's your rise to social influencer here

Tanner: Shit, man I was pretty much born influencing people. I mean, when I was a kid everybody wanted to wear the backpack I had. Everybody wanted my hairstyle. I was just that kid, you know. I got my nose pierced in third grade

Dustin: A born winner

Tanner: Yeah, I got my mom to take me down to Claire's, got that shit done. Everybody thought it was super cool. Next thing I know people are wearing fake nose rings. You know, so people were just, they've always, they've always looked up to me. And then when social media came along, I was like “look at this. This is the perfect avenue for me to show people how cool I am.” So I started with Vines. Did some amazing six-second Vines. I had one where I come out of a Starbucks, and this girl hits me in the head with a coffee cup, just bang right in the head, and just keeps playing over and over it is so funny, dude, so funny. That thing got, I think, about 27 million loops in the first day.

Dustin: Wow

Tanner: Yeeeeah

Dustin: Now, a loop

Bridge: Twenty-seven

Dustin: That means people are watching it over and over again con-

Tanner: Yep, that’s right, I mean it’s 

Bridge: I like to call it “locked in”

Tanner: Yeah

Bridge: Like they just, they get, they’re eyes are there, and they’re locked in. They're completely focused on you.

Tanner: Yeah

Bridge: And I love it when people are focused on me, you know so that's a very

Dustin: Dustin! See right there, I locked yah

Bridge: I see, yeah

Tanner: I like this

Dustin: Yeah two techniques right there, and I locked you both in. You looked at me for a good,

Bridge: I couldn’t

Dustin: We had the stare, we had the tiger stare.

Bridge: I couldn't take my eyes off you when you screamed your own name.

Tanner: Which that makes me feel very uncomfortable, because I'm used to people looking at me. So I'm gonna take that technique and I'm gonna apply it to every meeting I have. I might just start doing videos of me just screaming my own name, you know, just like: T-Dubs! T-Dubs! Tanner Wyatt! Tanny Wyatt!

Dustin: Dustin! Dustin!

Bridge: Bridge! Bridge!

Tanner: Tanner Tanner Tanner!

Dustin: Yeah, that was, that’s good. I didn’t know who to look at. I was trying to

Bridge: I was confused

Dustin: And Tanner, you have, on your jacket here, on the collar your jacket, you have mirrors on there

Tanner: Yeah yeah

Dustin: So I guess, at any point, when you turn

Bridge: Yeah

Tanner: I guess well it's, the other thing is, I like being able to just, if I need in a pinch, I can just look at my sleeve, and I go “Oh, okay, my eyebrows look good. I don’t need to go in and get them done, you know what I mean”

Bridge: That’s great

Tanner: So it's like, it's kind of like having your phone, you know when you look at your phone, and you can like look at yourself and people use it as a mirror, but like it's like the old-school way.

Bridge: Very cool, very cool

Tanner: Yeah

Bridge: Well, I've definitely seen some of your stuff online

Tanner: Oh, thank you. Thank you

Bridge: And I gotta say, you know the brilliance of how you just suck people in to watching your content is, you know, I would dare say breathtaking

Dustin: It's almost hypnotic the way you do things

Bridge: Yeah

Tanner: Guys you are too kind. You are too kind. I mean it's really more of a gift, you know. It's one of those things that you can try to replicate it, but you just have to have it. It's like what you guys do, you know. Not everybody can be out there testing on animals or creating this massive empire. You gotta have that within you, you know. Part of its your upbringing, you know what I mean. I grew up in the suburbs. I had two brothers. We had a relatively easy upbringing, which made me a really bored kid. So I was like “What the fuck am I gonna do with my time?” So I just decided, you know, let's just do stupid shit, and it's made me millions of dollars.

Dustin: Yeah, I

Bridge: Well that’s

Tanner: So I'm just gonna rebrand my name here. I'm gonna take out all the vowels, you know. So I'm actually, I'm on this show announcing this today. I'm no longer Tanner Wyatt. I'm Tanner Wyatt, but I'm “Tanner” with T-N-N-R W-Y-T-T, because you know it's cool. It's like, you know, it's one of those ways that you can kind of mix things up while still maintaining your original image, but it's edgy, you know what I mean. It's like, who needs all those vowels? you know

Bridge: It’s almost like

Dustin: So how would you pronounce that?

Tnnr: It's still just “Tanner Wyatt” it's the same thing, yeah

Bridge: Yeah, Tanner Wyatt, or like a “Tinner Wutt”

Tnnr: Yeah, I mean like that's the thing is I want to confuse people. I thought about putting a period in the middle, you know like “Tanner dot Wyatt” You know what I mean, and then people are like “do I say the ‘dot’? Or is it a period? Or do I stop? What do I do here?” you know, like grammar is hard for people these days so

Dustin: Confusing people within a conversation is one of the best ways to get attention

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: And it puts you above them as well, not just screaming out your name

Bridge: That's a very good point um, one thing I like to do with people is say sentences, but say it like a question. So that really often throws people off. So for example I was in the board room of Softsoft the other day, and I said “I'm gonna fire your ass” to an executive, but I said it as a question, and I looked him in the eyes like “I'm gonna fire your ass?”

Dustin: That-

Bridge: He didn't know how to take it.

Tnnr: Yo

Bridge: He didn't know if he was fired, or if he, I mean, what else could have happened to that guy? I mean, so, I think it's very important to throw people off, is what I’m-

[all laugh]

Dustin: I’m thrown off right now yeah

Tnnr: Yeah, that’s

Bridge: I think yeah, I think it's just very important to throw people off.

Dustin: Even within your close social circle, it's just, you have to you have to be the top dog, or the top cat.

Tnnr: Yeah that's why like, honestly that's why I love doing my prank videos, you know. I got my mom, I got her arrested one day. Oh my god, it was so funny so basically-

Dustin: People like this

Tnnr: Oh they love it, they loved it, so I went and I shoplifted a bunch of stuff from Kmart, and then I put it all in back of my mom's car, and then I called an anonymous tip in to the police and I was like “Yo, there's this white lady. She was driving down the street in a Prius, and she's got a bunch of stuff from Kmart that she stole, and she spent the entire day in jail, and we filmed the whole thing. It was hilarious bro. It was hilarious, yeah

Dustin: How many view- how many loops did you get on that one?

Tnnr: Oh, that one? Over a hundred million, yeah. Yeah, that thing, somewhere- I mean Vine is gone now, but I think that shit’s still looping right now, yeah

Bridge: So you've been able to monetize this pretty well. You’ve found a steady stream of cash flow through this media.

Tnnr: Yeah, the money's coming in bro. I pay people to count my money now, you know.

Dustin: Yeah

Bridge: Wow

Tnnr: That's how much money I have. I mean, it's one of those things where, it's like I didn't go for the money, you know. I went out there to create good content, and then the money found me you know what I mean. So I'm gonna take it as it comes, yeah.

Bridge: You're an artist

Tnnr: Yeah, for sure bro. I know I think we all are artists in our own way.

Dustin: Sometimes what I'd like to do is I like to grab a duffel bag of money,

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: Toss it out the window, and try to run down the stairs to catch the money, so it feels like money's just coming at me.

Tnnr: Yo

Bridge: it's like you're

Dustin: It's a race

Bridge: Like it's raining money almost for you

Dustin: I want it to rain money on- that could be a good loop for you

Tnnr: Yeah bro, I'm stealing that shit, which, that's another thing I want to talk about with branding, is like: you don't have to create everything, you know. You can take other people's stuff, throw a watermark on it, like you know, so like, that's what I do. I usually like, probably seventy-five percent of my pictures on Instagram, I just find some photographer who did a good job, I take that shit, slap a watermark on it, throw it on my page. No one ever knows. By the time their lawyers come after me, it's like

Dustin: Natural business

Tnnr: Bruh, I got so much money, it's like, I don't care, you know, they can-

Bridge: I love that, I love that

Tnnr: You know

Bridge: It's, I mean, you know, I think we can all relate to just stealing stuff, like just being able to take, you know?

Dustin: Taking physically and also taking people's minds, and taking their

Tnnr: Dignity, yeah

Dustin: Taking their dig- sure.

Bridge: Yeah, the mental, just the, by sheer w-

Dustin: Well it's not taking if it's, if they're unw- if they’re w- if they’re unwilling. Well, if they're unwilling it's still taking, but if you will them to be unwilling…

Bridge: Yeah that’s totally, yeah

Dustin: That's what I

Bridge: That's acceptable. It's legal, I think

Dustin: Sure well it’s legal out here. It's legal out in the sea

Bridge: I mean, yeah, and I always say, you know “ocean laws or bust”

[Bridge and Dustin laugh]

Bridge: It, yeah

Dustin: So Tanner

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: You started with prank videos. Tell me about your earliest prank vi- you said you were doing this when, since you were born.

Tnnr: Yeah, oh yeah. Yeah, I was  

Dustin: What was like the earliest prank, cuz I noticed

Tnnr: I mean

Dustin: You have a tattoo of OshKosh B’gosh. I don’t know-

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: -if that company’s still around anymore.

Tnnr: [simul.] yup yup yup yup yup

Dustin: That must’ve been one of the-

Tnnr: Yeah that was, that first one had to do with- So my brother had this pair of overalls from OshKosh B'gosh, one of my younger brothers, and I thought it would be funny to sew the pant legs shut, so every time he tried to get in, it was just like euugh, he was like trying to jam his legs in, and he couldn't get in, and it just over and over and over again. So I filmed that one. That one was just on like a regular VHS tape back in the day. I released it as like a 20th anniversary edition last year, and it did phenomenal

Dustin: Ooh, Disney, I like that

Tnnr: Yeah

Bridge: That’s great

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: Rebrand your-

Tnnr: Yeah, you got to let it out the vault sometimes, you know what I mean?

Bridge: Yeah

Tnnr: But I also just always enjoyed OshKosh B'gosh as a brand. So eventually-

Bridge: It’s a great brand

Tnnr: I'm gonna like, it's not so much for the video, I, they’re more my sponsors

Bridge: It's a great brand. I've, you know, I think the name is a very, you're always gonna remember that, and you know like you were saying, by screaming your name, it’s the most important thing is to, for the other person to remember that name, and there's no way I'm gonna forget OshKosh B’gosh.

[All three yell a cacophony of “OshKosh B’gosh” over and over]

Bridge: There's no way. There’s no way. It sounds like gibberish, and that's what's brilliant about it.

Tnnr: Yup

Bridge: You know, going into this rebranding thing: I've always thought of rebranding as almost sort of like taking your skin off, and like putting on a new skin, you know. It's like you're walking around in a new skin, um when I think of rebranding, and when you go through that process, sometimes it's so profound and deep that you might even forget your own name. It's like I feel like a different person or something.

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: I've been experimenting with cloning myself. I would love to, I would love a younger version of myself. So when I get older, as you do, I could put myself into that body, and I know that Bridge, you were talking about creating robo- robotic versions of yourself so that

Bridge: Yes

Dustin: Your brain can, well your egg can go inside

Bridge: Yeah, this

Dustin: The new equipment

Bridge: This shell that can, that is ten times stronger than a normal human body, and can rip open doors, and rip open steel. That's yeah that's the goal

Dustin: I imagine

Tnnr: That sounds dope

Dustin: going into a board meeting yell- screaming your name out “Bridge!” ripping open the door

[Bridge and Dustin laugh]

Tnnr: Yeah that sounds sick

Bridge: That's the dream right there is just a robotic version of me ripping open the boardroom doors and

[Bridge laughs and says “goddammit”]

Bridge: Screaming my name “Bridge! Bridge!” in this animatronic voice that would terrify everybody because it's a giant robot that’s screaming “Bridge” and I think that's, I mean, I certainly would listen to that robot if it was it was charging at me

Tnnr: That's wild, bro

Bridge: Yeah

Tnnr: That's wild. That sounds dope. It's like Robocop. You guys ever see that movie?

Dustin: I love that movie.

Bridge: I love it, it’s great

Dustin: I thought the cop, the Robocop, was sort of the antagonist in my, when I

Bridge: Yeah

Dustin: I felt Omni Consumer Products was, they were just doing their job keeping Detroit safe.

Tnnr: Yeah

Bridge: Yeah

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: With giant robots

Tnnr: Yeah

Bridge: Well, Detroit seemed like it was out of control in that movie, so

Dustin: And I think right now, if we're looking at Detroit, we might need to-

Tnnr: It’s yeah, we need some robots

Dustin: Art reflects life, or life will reflect art, and hopefully in Detroit we will have giant robots.

Bridge: Um, one question I have: what's new you've conquered the social media platform

Tnnr: Yup

Bridge: What's the next thing? is it the movies? is it, I mean your social media business of some sort I'd imagine? like

Tnnr: You know, bro, like honestly social media has been very good to me, and I love it, but I want to do something different, bro, like I'm trying to put like, you know I'm trying to spread myself across all platforms, you know, like an STD. I just want to be like ooh just everywhere, you know what I mean. So I'm thinking about I'm probably to drop this album that I've been working on, yeah

Bridge: That's great, so you

Tnnr: Yeah it's like a rock, hip-hop thing kind of like a-la like a Limp Bizkit, you know that was my favorite band growing up so

Dustin: Well, that's really popular now

Bridge: Yeah, it's catching back on

[giggling]

Tnnr: Yeah, yeah, so I got some cool features on there. I got a Scott Stapp from Creed. He does the hook on one song.

[all giggling]

Tnnr: Yeah also got, I got, oddly enough I got a Dolly Parton on a track

Bridge: Wow

Tnnr: It’s wild, yeah I mean I just, she didn't actually like record it for me. I just stole something that she worked on

Dustin: Smart

Bridge: That's like

Dustin: Like a new “We Are The World”. remember in the 80s “We Are The World”?

Bridge: Yeah

Tnnr: Yup

Dustin: You might be a little too young for that, but

Tnnr: That's the image we're trying to do, we’re trying to unite people you know.

Bridge: Yeah I mean that sounds like it's gonna absolutely explode onto the music scene.

Tnnr: Yeah, well I appreciate that

Bridge: People are frothing at the mouth for a Dolly Parton resurgence.

Dustin: Rap, hip-hop

[Bridge and Dustin giggle]

Bridge: They're hungry. They're hungry for yeah, that sort of content. I can, I guarantee it, and it sounds like you're, you've got your fingers just squeezed around the pulse

Tnnr: Yeah, deep up in there

Bridge: of what these teens want

Dustin: What was that little hand gesture you made when you said “deep up in there”?

Tnnr: Oh this? Yeah it's like a, I call it a “shocker” yeah. I don't really know. I think it's just because it's like kind of a shocking symbol you know. Like no one really knows what you're doing when you do this. I think that's where it came from, but yeah, like I feel like I got my hands just deep in the pulse of the teens you know.

Bridge: Yeah that's very good that's it’s

[all giggling]

Bridge: It's great to have that.

Dustin: Yeah

Tnnr: Yeah

Bridge: I've branded a lot of teens

[all giggling]

Bridge: So

[Bridge laughs]

Bridge: You know, I've thought about so many rebrands and brands that are so important to American society and stuff, and one thing that always comes up is Steve Jobs

Tnnr: Mmm

Bridge: That guy, that guy was a, in the in the mid 90s he was a failure. He was a huge failure, and everybody hated him

Dustin: mm-hmm

Bridge: And he was able to completely rebrand himself with the iPod, and that is such an inspiration I’ve found, and it's so important to just embrace that rebrand. I'm so proud of what Steve Jobs did

Dustin: A lot of it also is the logo. Now, Tnnr, you

Tnnr: Yeah, yeah

Dustin: You have a lot of experience in logos

Tnnr: For sure

Dustin: Obviously

Tnnr: Yeah

Dustin: Do you have your own logo?

Tnnr: I do.

Dustin: Did you look into logos

Tnnr: I do. So what I’ve found is with any sort of social media avenues: sex sells, you know. I have about, in any given day, 50% of my photos, which is about 100 photos a day, are just pictures of women that are scantily clad or have no clothes on

Bridge: Okay

Dustin: Hmm

Tnnr: So what I did is I took my name, right, and I basically wrapped it up in this like kind of oval-shaped creation, but it's pretty much just a vagina.

Bridge: Mmm

Tnnr: Yeah I’ve found that like that’s, I mean you look at Nike. like Nike, the swoosh is just a dick you know. you feel me, it’s like.

Bridge: I can see that

Dustin: Yeah

Tnnr: Amazon Prime, they have that little arrow thing. it's just a dick

Dustin: It’s a dick

Tnnr: Yeah

Bridge: That's-

Tnnr: Yeah so

Bridge: Apple

Tnnr: Apple, yep yeah, I mean that's just obviously one breast.

Bridge: Yeah

Dustin: Well, a breast that's bitten into, sure

Tnnr: Yep yeah that's for sure what that is. I mean AT&T, that logo: another breast. You put those two together, you got one and a half, one three quarters breasts

Bridge: Yeah

Dustin: Subway, all the letters look like misshapen dicks to me.

Bridge: Yeah

Tnnr: Yeah yep, I mean that’s

Bridge: Absolutely, McDonald’s

Tnnr: McDo-

Dustin: Two di- like a split cock.

Bridge: Two dicks

Tnnr: Yeah yeah

Bridge: Yeah two limp dicks just creating an “M”

Tnnr: Pizza Hut just a dick with a hat on

Bridge: Yeah

Tnnr: So I mean that's the way I look at it. I mean, ultimately like it's about what is personal to you, and it's got to have some importance to you, but at the end of the day it needs to be about sex. People don't care about anything else.

Bridge: It's very important. That's very important, and it sells across so many platforms, and you know people want excitement. People want danger with that sort of stuff so yeah

Tnnr: Yeah

Bridge: That's, yeah it's a very profound approach

Dustin: Because you don't know when you're gonna get an STD

Bridge: Well all right this has been a, it's been a great episode I think. I think we've learned a lot through branding, and through Tnnr Wytt about the core of what branding is.

Tnnr: Yo, thank you guys. I appreciate it. You guys do great work up here, so you know keep at it. Tnnr Tnnr Tnnr Tnnr Tnnr Tnnr Tnnr!

Bridge: Bridge! Bridge!

Dustin: Dustin! Dustin!

Bridge: Bridge! Bridge!

Dustin: Thanks so much for listening. Next week we'll be talking to a Mr. Dr. Corvis Sasserson, Harvard graduate in economy uh economy, and he'll be talking about the economy.

[Music]