Life Wide Open with CboysTV - TWINSICK Is The Next Big DJ Duo
Episode Date: February 28, 2023In today's podcast we are joined by DJ Duo TWINSICK, they have songs released with millions of streams across all platforms. They've opened for some of your favorite A-list celebrity DJs and it's only... a matter of time until they are headlining the biggest festivals in the World. Hear their beginnings, wild stories of late night adventures, and much more. Thanks to our sponsors! For 65% off plus free shipping go to https://www.hellofresh.com/wideopen65 and use code wideopen65 Follow us on Instagram @cboystv and @lifewideopenpodcast To watch the podcast on YouTube: https://bit.ly/LifeWideOpenYT Don’t forget to subscribe to the podcast for free wherever you're listening or by using this link: https://bit.ly/LifeWideOpenWithCboysTV If you like the show, telling a friend about it would be amazing! You can text, email, Tweet, or send this link to a friend: https://bit.ly/LifeWideOpenWithCboysTV You can also check out our main YouTube channel CboysTV: https://www.youtube.com/c/CboysTV Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, boys, welcome on the podcast.
So me and Micah are joined by our two buddies.
Alex and Casey over here.
They are the DJs of Twin Sick.
Is that what you guys call yourself, just DJs?
DJ Duo, yeah.
DJ Duo, yeah, DJ Duo.
And Twin Sick.
So we've filmed with you guys about a year ago where we were in Okaboji.
You guys said pull up to our set.
And that was kind of the first time hanging out with you guys.
And ever since that, these dudes are special.
They got that it factor to them.
and we're excited to sit down and kind of hear you guys a story about how you became DJs
and where you're going because you guys are going to the moon.
Thank you.
And you guys are both from Minnesota, which makes it cooler.
I've known you guys, known of you for a long time and, like, yeah, you're definitely making waves
and it's so cool to see because that's all we could ever hope for you guys as fans.
And yeah, it's been really cool to see.
So happy to have you on.
Yeah, I appreciate it.
You guys are on a road trip.
right now to Canada to Winnipeg and they have to leave in like an hour like I just love it yeah
we'll sneak in for a podcast yeah it's on the way we're like might as well do it so always on the move yeah
how'd you guys pick DJing because it's I mean it's kind of like being a YouTuber it's very
unconventional you know in school when people are like what do you want to be when you grow up
you're like a YouTuber or a DJ like they they both seem you know unrealistic but you guys are
making it happen how did that start yeah that's a good question I guess like just started by
the fun of it and like the love of music
Just like bringing people together and having fun.
It's just kind of what led to this.
And we just never stopped.
Just kept going with it.
Were you guys always on OX?
Like at parties and stuff?
Kind of, yeah.
Like high school at parties, I would love that.
Like SoundCloud mashups that people don't know about and like those secret, secret edits.
You had to have been like, man, I'm really good at this.
And I know what people want to hear early on though, right?
Yeah, I used to make like matchups on SoundCloud.
So back when Vine was like a big.
thing everyone would do like those like edits like those compilation type stuff so i'd like put the
audio behind all those edits and stuff and then that led to just some like opening gigs in
minneapolis um so you're making like tic-tok sounds before before the tic-tok so it's like we kind
of like understood the tic-tok stuff through the vine stuff and you got some gigs from that we were
just looking in the car on the way here i was like 17 in the club getting paid by drink tickets and
I had to use it on water and red and yeah and then that's how we met actually is in the club
they knew how old you were yeah they knew and they're just like send it really you're good yeah so
you grew up in in minneapolis yeah is the music scene down there very like prominent or or what's
that like i mean i don't think it's not great not comparatively not yeah not comparatively to where
we've been before but you guys live there still yeah why don't you just move to l. i don't know like
we still like it here. It's a good home base. It's like central. So we fly every single
weekend. So it's like we got to go to the West Coast, got to go to the East Coast. It's like it's nice
to come home and have a good home spot right in the middle. And also just like family and
friends here. Like when we come here, we come here and get our work done. And then we fly out
Thursday through Sunday and then come home and just repeat the next week. It's nice to like not
distract too. Yeah. If you're in LA. But I think you guys, I mean, have whatever it is we have,
it's like if your roots are here obviously you can always move away but yeah that makes sense you
your shows are all over the place literally all over yeah i mean yeah i mean where have you guys
been in the last month and where are you going in the next month huge spring break tour plan
spring break is the big thing that we're excited for for sure so we just announced our first like
headline tour and we started off in the first stop was boston yep was boston and then we did
Penn State, and then the next day we flew to Barcelona. We did Barcelona, Florence, Italy,
and then Rome, Italy. Wow. And then that was our first, that was my first time in Europe. Casey,
I'd never been to Italy, but. It was a good time. We got some good tour stuff in. And then
after that, we flew to New York, landed at like 8 p.m. late at like 11 p.m. So like straight to
the hotel shower. Didn't get a chance to like adjust to the time schedule. The time change at all.
We were like, kept looking up, like, what time is it in Barcelona right now?
We're like, we're so messed up.
Don't even look.
It's like 5 a.m. when we play.
But then, yeah, we did that.
And then we flew home on Sunday and played at noon on Sunday a day party.
We just threw like a little pop-up show back home.
I like our favorite local bar.
The ski show?
The ski show.
Yeah, those are always fun because it's like all your friends can go.
Those parties are the best.
Yeah, your friends got to be like, yeah, this is sick that you see what you guys are doing on
Instagram.
You guys are traveling the world.
putting on these shows and then you come back to the local ski town and you put on the show
for all the homies that's sick same thing just having fun with your friends good time always how do you
guys not get burnt out and sick of traveling like if i travel for one video by the time i get home i'm
like man i'm so over traveling yeah i mean we we get tired but it's you just got to be like
think like how lucky we are to do what we're doing yeah it's like getting you know paid to go
travel in these cool places and party with people.
It's like part of the goal that you guys set out to make and do.
Yeah, but it is interesting because when we travel like for this last snowmilling trip,
we're almost constantly like making sure that the video is moving along correctly.
Like we're filming enough.
And for you guys, you can stack as much or as little content as you want.
Same for anybody making content.
But you guys show and you have like your climax, perform, hit the show.
And then after that, it's like you can.
obviously do what you want, relax or at a party.
I guess it doesn't mean.
How aren't you like constantly hung over?
Like,
because you got to,
are you guys boozing every single day?
Every single day.
Every show.
Every show.
Every show.
We kind of have to because it's like,
it's weird if you're on a different like level than the crowd,
right?
You got to kind of match it.
I'd be the same way.
I always see you guys pre-gaming and I don't think I could do it any differently.
Mike would be blacked out by the show.
Mike,
I don't know if you could be a DJ, bro.
Where's the DJ?
Oh, he's just blacked out.
Yeah, I know, seriously, always sleeping.
He's going to do what he can.
No, you never want to be that guy that, like, turns down a shot with, like, a fan or, like, anything.
It's, like, I love it.
And I would do the same thing.
So, yeah, I used to say, um, every, like, time we were on the road, I'd be like, I never get hangovers.
I'm good.
And then the moment I turned 22, just fucking hit me.
Yeah, dude, you're old now, yeah.
Yeah, same with me.
23.
I feel like, you know, I just can't do it like I used to.
Yeah.
I mean, dude, straight up.
Yeah, like, when you're 21, you don't get hung over.
No, because it's like, it's like fun.
It's like you're like, you just keep going.
Just, yeah.
Just keep going.
You guys ever gotten too, too wasted before the show?
Nothing you couldn't handle.
No, nothing we couldn't handle it.
But there's been, he used to get pretty fucked up at like the end of the show.
Yeah, towards the end.
Towards the end.
Like when we first started.
Oh, dude.
Last year when we were in Okoboji, you were passing around the bottle of tequila.
Yeah, fancy.
It was like, ding, ding, ding.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah. And like, I was up there for, I hopped in like,
your guys is a little booth for, I don't know, a minute.
And I think we did two shots in that minute span.
I got down and I was like, holy fuck.
I don't know if I could be a DJ, dude.
I'm a lightweight.
You feel like a dick, too, if you like, if like someone with a table hands you a shot
and you're just like, uh, yeah, you always got to take it.
No, I mean, it would always catch up to me at the end just because you're concentrating
the whole time with your DJ and it would just like, you're drinking.
You're just not thinking about how much you're drinking, but I got that figured out now.
It kind of sobers you up, too, in a DJ.
Yeah.
It's the tricks of the trade where you figure it out.
That's when you become a seasoned vet.
It's like, oh, no.
Yeah.
He's clearly new to this.
He's getting way too drunk too early.
So you have the formula figured out.
You guys are doing shows and how, obviously, this is a goal from any DJ standpoint.
Like, when did you guys say we need to work on our own song?
We need to work on our own music.
Yeah, we've used a couple in the videos, too.
Some really good vocalists.
And yeah.
Yeah, we have.
You're right.
Yeah.
A couple times.
Thanks, guys.
Yeah, I mean, we got to start, like, in, we started everything in 2019, and, um, honestly,
only did, like, a few shows, like, some frat parties and stuff with our friends.
And then, like, spring break happened.
We did a couple of shows and then, like, COVID hit.
So after that, like, we kind of all sat down and we're like, okay, this is like a break
that, like, we can work on stuff now.
And we kind of, we kind of always knew we needed to put out music.
It was just kind of like, you can't rush it.
You need to build your kind of fan base at first and then make sure that.
there's like a want for the original music.
I agree with that completely.
And then you did, and then it was killer.
I think that, and that separates,
that's the biggest separation
between someone trying to make it as a DJ.
Music industry is kind of at a weird place right now too
where it's like all these remixes are popping off on TikTok.
So it's like, it's kind of hard to be like,
all right, we're going to step away from the remixes
because they're working, right?
It's like you can't mess up what's working.
Yeah, we went back into that.
We started with doing remixes and posting them on SoundCloud
and then I would say this summer.
we started again, or this last summer, and that's been our main focus.
Yeah, it's just what pays now with the short form and TikTok.
Like, there's like a DJ like Wookie.
He just makes the beats, and then he just does his shows and just plays all the beats that he makes.
That's it.
We literally met when I opened up for him.
Really?
Yeah.
That's awesome.
Me and Casey met at the show.
And we have a show with him coming up in March in Miami.
So we're excited.
It's like a full circle moment.
Yeah.
Do you guys find that it works better to have two of you versus just one solo DJ?
100%.
I'm sure you guys get compared to chain smokers all the time.
Yeah?
I mean, yeah.
It's got to be a compliment though.
I wouldn't say like getting compared, but they were definitely our like inspiration when we started.
Oh, yeah.
Like we were all their YouTube videos, everything is kind of what got us into this too.
Yeah, they kill it.
But they also have like their one-off singles too that they release.
And that seems to put these DJs, at least in my eyes.
I'm not super a part of like the.
music industry. Like, Mike is,
is super into like EDM or like
house or anything in that. Yeah. Right, right. Where I wouldn't say I'm
like really into that, but I like, I like the singles that you guys produce and I like
the mashups and everything because it's, it's super easy to just consume and it seems like
it's all like party music. So call me basic, I guess. It works. It works. Yeah, and that's how
you almost apply to or you are appeal appeal to the masses yeah yeah that's why like i think
we have found recent success is just because we can play to like any audience we've played
like Atlantic city shows which is like kind of like a Vegas crowd it's like an older crowd
and variety of people we'll play like sweet child of mine but like into like an edm and like even
if you don't like edm you still will like that yeah but i like when you guys do it like that yeah
where you take like the classics where everyone can remember that song and that moment
and then you put it into like a new like modern day EDM twist on it versus just
yeah yeah yeah like some randomize yeah yeah we're like Mike and Ken we call it wiggle dick in
music me and CJ call it wiggle dick in music because Ken'll just like sit there and wiggle
dick to it and we're just like these are just fucking noises just wait you'll once you get into like
the sing-along you'll kind of progress and you'll eventually get to that
Yeah, yeah.
There really is like levels to it because some people are like, yeah, like hard shit.
And then you'll play something hard and they're like, this is way too much.
And then there's just, there's levels to it.
It's funny though when you're like, when we're in the boat and somebody sneaks one of those wiggle dick songs on.
And then pretty soon we're like, everyone's dance.
Yeah, everyone's dance and do it.
It's like, yeah, it's almost the environment that you're in that dictates it.
But I can't imagine driving down the road listening to.
No, that's true.
We're going to sample that for a song.
Yeah, you guys, uh, let's see those wiggle dick in.
We can make like an intro for you guys.
Yeah, that'd be,
you guys like grew up on the lake pretty heavily.
Yeah.
I would say like you guys as lake life might go a little harder than ours being around
Minatanka.
Tonka's a spot.
But like, it is really interesting how much it's changed like even in the last like six
years we're out on the boat you know everyone gathers let's say it's fourth july the main boat blasting
the loudest music is full-blown wubs yeah full-blown like excision what what you know like crazy stuff
and it blows people's mind like blows the the surrounding people's minds that kids are getting
down to this that they're almost looking like they're like a little bit on drugs or something they
must think that but yeah it's it's it's pretty funny to see how that's changed it is yeah but at the
end of the day that like your house music is going to be the best seller but yeah it's just wild well let me
paint a scene here for everyone to just imagine this all right so living on the lake is very expensive right
so the people that do live on the lake are generally older and they have kids and they are at the lake to
relax right so they've made it in life they've made some money they bought this lake home they can go and
relax go out on the pontoon go to the sandbar
right now you got this younger age millennia gen z group of kids showing up on a 300,000
wakeboard boat they're like one how did these kids get this boat and two what the fuck
are they listening to because then it's just cranked and there's like 35 people on the boat and it's
just like a straight up mosh pit party out in front of the boat one boat surrounded by 50 pontoons
of the upper class of people that also live on the lake.
But there's always that one wakeboard boat in the middle.
That's just the mosh pit.
So, yeah, yeah.
And then, so being a part of that wakeboard boat in the mosh pit,
I always enjoy looking up and just watching the faces of all the,
the moms and dads, or they cover their kids' ears.
They're like, honey, don't be like that when you're older, please.
No, it is crazy.
Yeah, Fourth of July is always a great time.
We're thinking about throwing a party this time around the, on the lake.
Yeah, we want to do some, like some pop-up style and like smaller, like not thousands
of people, but a few hundred people and film the whole thing.
That'd be sick.
Yeah, it'd be fun.
Like a full stage on there.
That's something, yeah, we'd like to come.
Yeah, I think more and more people, or you guys are making music for our generation
though.
And you guys have the eye for what people, or the ear for what people,
want to hear and you just got to almost just stick to that and do you guys see it like continuing
to change like year after year for sure yeah or has it been pretty consistent like over the last like
six years it's definitely changing i'd say this last two years definitely like house music has become
more popular even like what from we started making like the stuff on our spotify is not
what we represent represent us now it's like completely different now so it's like everything's just
changing just like house music to I mean we got into like it was called future base which was
more harder like more wubs and stuff like that's like that's what we'd play at our shows and now
it's like a little bit more mature like relaxed but still like those party songs that still get
everyone going we play a lot of like frat shows too and like we noticed recently that before it'd be
kind of frat kids would just know like sing along stuff but now they're actually kind of like
getting in the scene and they actually kind of like know the actual house music which is cool
Because we'll play some like
Sometimes like late in the night
We'll play like some more underground shit
And like kids will still know it which is sick
Because usually we just play like Mr. Brightside
On repeat
It's got to be the best though
When you guys are up there
And you're looking out onto a crowd of people
And they're all singing along to what you're making
Or what you're playing
It is a good feeling
It's like the best dopamine hit
It literally it'll change your mood in a second
We'll like be down bad
Like traveling all day
and then it's like all right you see a crowd like going hard it's just like you got to you just do it
yeah it just fires you up yeah one thing i was thinking about too is how different it looks
from the crowd back up at us from what we see so that's just like something i always think about
it's like you know if there's if the venues maybe not completely full it's like the people in
the middle like it still doesn't look any different to them like just a random thought that
always comes in mind and like the light show of like shows there's a huge part of it yeah lights
If you don't have proper, like, lights, visuals, any of that stuff, the show looks half the size as it is.
Do you guys have to bring those lights and set everything up, or is it that, like, the venue has to provide that?
Typically the venue, but, like, if it's more like a private party, like, say, like, we do something here, we'd, like, hire a production company that would come and bring everything and set it all up, so.
How does that work?
I've always wondered.
How do you synchronize the lights to the music and, like, the beat drops?
Lighting guys and visual guys, that's their job.
They just have, like, a control.
So do they know what you guys are playing ahead of time or they're just like on it and they're listening and when the beat drops like they set off the smoke or whatever?
I would say half the time they know and then half the time they're just kind of guessing going with the beat and yeah.
Yeah, that's what I didn't know is like they're on a controller and they're they're controlling it live.
Like this might be a niche question but like so lasers are making their way into every DJ set and now they're like the more lasers the better and some of it is.
wicked, but
like, is there a point where it's too much?
I don't think so.
I don't think so at all.
And like the people that are really in the scene,
like they go to a bunch of raves,
fucking love that shit.
Yeah.
Every time there's lasers, everyone just screams.
Everyone loses their shit.
I guess I should say, like, I could see a certain point
where they're being like, okay,
it's just lasers, but.
Yeah, no, it's cool.
When it's pitch black, you see some lasers.
I definitely think CO2 is like the biggest,
like the big,
on every drop that makes the biggest,
Debrance in a show.
100% yeah.
Dude, we were front row at Diplo and Vegas and I will admit that was probably one of the
times I became a wiggle dicker.
You know, he was playing the house music and like the underground stuff that I had no
idea what it was, but I was up there just dancing along and biving along.
I was probably pretty liquored up.
But we were front row and we were right behind like the CO2.
Yeah.
Dude, I didn't know how cold that stuff was.
So at the end of it, I'm freezing.
Like, I'm, like, continuing to just get blasted with what felt like just, like, cold, cold or frozen ice.
You blew all your clothes off?
I mean, damn near.
And, man, I got so sick after that.
Shirts hanging out.
You guys go to Vegas a lot?
Like, once a year.
It's about all we can handle.
Nice.
I've never been.
Oh, you guys have never been?
Are you guys performing in Vegas?
Yeah, in May.
When?
At, uh...
Are we allowed to say yet?
Is it announced?
I don't know.
Tell us off, tell us off, but we might have to come.
Yeah, 100%.
It's my first time.
You got to go.
Oh, bro.
Because he would go.
I was 21.
Casey was still like 19.
And I was like, yeah, what's, oh, so you just didn't.
No fake IDs in Vegas.
Yeah, he would like.
Yeah, you got to be 21 in Vegas.
He would like get to hang out with all these DJs and I'd be at home.
Like, that is the crazy part.
Like, Vegas just houses, like, you know, literally the residency.
Yeah.
I just learned about that.
that they just live there and DJ
every single night at one place
but there's ups and downs to that
but a lot of ups.
Is that the goal?
Is that like to have your own residency?
That's got to be the best, right?
That's like the top.
Like once you get a residency,
you like pretty much make it.
Oh, interesting.
It is interesting how comfortable that looks for like Steve Aoki
or whoever's.
We hear stories all the time
where it's like Vegas is like DJ's homes
just because they get the same hotel every time,
same dinner every time.
They actually get a routine.
Routine.
Yeah.
It's like.
The same kind of income and the flow and the vibe.
Yeah.
They know where they're going to get with the crowd too every time.
Yeah.
That's a big thing for us.
Like we play shows.
Like some of the crowds are like lit and then some of them just aren't as lit just because
it's like we're at that level.
So it's like we don't really know what we're getting into all the time on shows.
But when you're at that Vegas level.
So do you ever have like a let's say you have a half time like even just a couple
seconds and the crowd's not lit?
Like are you guys like what you have a set of steps to take or are you just kind of
take it as it goes and do your best do our best but i mean we definitely have like we don't play
all our bangers right away like we save some for the end and we always know like there's some that can
just completely change it'll work it'll work and you can kind of tell like at the beginning of a show
what the vibe is going to be like just like looking in the crowd and like seeing the people out there
you can kind of tell how it's going to go you guys met a lot of djs pretty good amount yeah good
amount. I mean, at like festivals. It's like however many D-days are on that lineup, like 20, 30
sometimes. So it's like you're all in one place for one. Who's the favorite, I guess, of what you
guys have? I'm going to say chain songers just because I've always looked up to them. Yeah, same.
Yeah. I played a show with them in Minneapolis. We opened. Yeah, that's legit. It was like full
circle because it was super surrealia. It was like all our family was there. Like my parents never really
see the shows. Like they don't go to them any. Right. So it's like kind of hard to explain because you kind of
got to be there to see it yeah and then when they're there they're like oh wow this is like real
and you guys is uh i guess well who does the film and the videography you i mean whoever you have
with but like your guys's shows are incredibly well documented and that's important yeah yeah
yeah we always look at like old videos and be like damn i was doing the way here but i everything like
as much as we can on an iphone just because it's easy it's always in your pocket and um i mean i bring
a gopro around i have a little film camera that's like just disposable just
rip those all the time and then combine that with venue photographers and everything else and
it all kind of goes together you guys met any DJs that just like don't give you the time of day
because they like are so big they just think they're hot shit if if you don't want to say any names
you don't have to think so we met not really no we met Tiesto he was cool which that was really
crazy he gave us a time of day like right before a big set and he gave us like 10 minutes we talked
and he's sick he pulls up in like a huge like suburban and he just like talking about
talk to us for five minutes
hops right on the stage
it's cool yeah they gotta be stoked to see
like younger kids coming up
doing like because Tiesto's pretty old
isn't it yeah he's been in the game
for a minute yeah he's known
with like David Geta and and
yeah I mean chain Spokers
has been in the game for a lot they're getting kind of old
number 30s yeah there's a few
like Geta who else
Tiesto there's a couple others that
that have been around forever just
oh yeah 50 50 years old still
doing it. It's crazy. I saw this TikTok the day. It was like David Gedda, like, it was in his hotel
and he literally had 20 suitcases and he's like, I'm so burned out. I haven't been home and do
do. Dude, how do you do that? That's like on a different level. You know what else is insane is
being 50 but still having such a pulse on what people want to hear. Yeah. And like, think about how
many different ages he has DJed in front of like from I don't know what back in the 80s I
listened to a podcast when he was talking about like yeah it used to be like dance dance disco music
in the 80s and then like disco balls and just like seeing all the changes over the years but
and I mean the equipment they played on back then was a thousand times harder than now yeah yeah
now we can literally show up to a show with the USB just plug it in and play like back then they
would have like their whole crates of actual records which is crazy to me
So, be honest with me.
Are you guys actually doing that much up there?
I knew that.
I was constantly hitting buttons and spinning shit.
And I'm like, all right, some of this is just got to be for the show, right?
There's no way that they're doing that much.
Like, right?
You got the playlist and it should just be going, right?
Like, what the fuck are you guys doing up there?
A lot of people think, like, we're making music up there.
It's like, no, we're not making music.
Everything's made on a computer.
But, I mean.
We spend the whole week editing the set.
And honestly, now we don't even have order for our set.
Like, we just have a crate of, like, 200 songs.
And we have maybe the first five minutes.
But what you're saying about the buttons and shit,
like, a lot of the time that's habit of just, like, adjusting stuff.
Small adjustments, like, touching, just like.
Or is it because so many people, you know so many people are watching you
and you're like, fuck, I guess start doing something.
Well, you get, like, awkward up there.
Well, dude, it is like so stupid or you take a pull.
Yeah.
You either touch the board or you take a pull.
Yeah, that's what Alex is over here, just wasted by the end of it.
Yeah, yeah.
No, I mean, there's always people that say something, like, everything we post on TikTok,
like, these guys are fake DJs.
They're not even doing anything.
It's like, yeah, we are.
Like, are we really, like, are we really like?
That's got to be so frustrating to hear because, like, I mean.
It's just like funny at this point.
I've said it, I don't know, a while back on the podcast, but it's like,
what you guys are doing is incredibly appealing to me as a career choice.
Obviously, a lot of people, but like it really is in the fact that you guys are
making traction, like good traction is just.
just, like, really, really inspiring.
But, like, overall, I think being a DJ, you get a lot of scrutiny.
People are like, I mean, the fact that they're calling you fake DJs
and you're, like, literally living it full-blown, making music, and playing multiple shows a week.
It is tough.
It's tough.
I don't let it get to me anymore.
It's like, you know, we put it in the work.
This is what you wanted.
We are playing the shows.
It's like, I know what I'm doing.
I know what I'm capable of.
I don't need to prove anything at this point or that kind of.
So do you guys have like, I mean, this has to be hard with how much shows you play,
but like crazy stories.
Like, I mean, the craziest place you've been.
You got to have random fans get up on the, try and get, like, behind the booth or like,
yeah, that's always like the security guards.
Yeah.
Deal.
But what about just like random people that are like a part of the entourage of like the
DJ booth that like keep on like coming up when you guys are like up there spinning and
mixing?
Like, does that get annoying?
I don't mind it.
it's more fun when it's like a party up there when it's just us up there like i mean i would
say like more towards the end of the show and it's like everyone's like you know been drinking a good
bit it's like it's a good party up there it's always fun i don't mind that but we always have fun
and afters yeah after parties i can't think of like any specific moment but like we're our signature
is like we'll end the night like just roaming the streets it'll be me Alex and our manager nick
and it'll be us three just like super fucked up roaming the streets
Like, we were just in, when we were in Europe, it sounds fun.
I love that.
We were in Florence and there was nobody out.
It was like these sick, like European streets like, dead silent.
Dead silent, like, and we were just blacked out running through Florence.
Trying to find a pizza shop open.
Yeah.
What about the chicks?
Like, I can't imagine the chicks that are just throwing themselves at you guys.
Like, you guys are up there spinning, getting all these wiggle dickers going.
And the chicks got to just be staring at you in awe, and they're like, oh, my God.
The girls like the Snapchat clips and the B-reel clips.
Yeah, the B-reels are big.
Yeah.
Take my B-reel.
What about when they, like, put their Instagrams there and they, like, hold them up.
I try and get good videos.
There's some pretty creative signs that.
That trend has been unreal.
Like, the phone sign trend of, like, who can hold up the most fucked up on sign.
It's crazy.
It's always funny.
Like, because, yeah, if whatever they're saying is messed up enough, you're like, I got to get this.
Yeah, exactly.
With the name Twins, you always hear stuff about something, something, twins on the sign or whatever.
Oh, yeah, you can do your imagination on that one.
Yeah.
So, do you guys, like, clean up on the girls being DJs?
We just do our job.
It's the literal best answer that you could have given there.
We do our job.
We go to the airport and we go to the next city and get some.
Get some lunch.
I got a goal.
That's amazing.
You guys fly first class usually?
We don't buy first class, but sometimes upgrade.
We get upgraded a good bit just because we're pretty loyal to Delta.
Really?
We love Delta.
Yeah, I guess random.
Yeah, we usually fly Delta and when we flew to Revelstow, Ken bought us United flights.
I'm not going to get mad at Ken for that.
You might.
Well, I'm not mad about the flights, dude.
I'm not that Ken puts us back by the bathroom in.
the middle seats every single time as soon as we were on the first united flight and we were we
upgraded to first class and i was like this i'd still rather be on a delta in the back of the plane
at least i get to watch movies the united first i mean delta is just the best but yeah yeah it's not
close i'd say the worst thing is though when you're hungover and you find out you have a middle
seat that's that's gotta be yeah we we we said that too like a middle seat between two strangers
has to be the worst.
Then you're actually like anxious
because you're like, this sucks the whole time.
You're like, can't do anything.
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You ever had a plane yak?
Have you?
I don't think I have.
We're so used to it.
As soon as I got on a flight, I just fall right to sleep.
It's more like right before.
But we don't throw up really.
No.
We don't throw up really.
You guys are laughing in the background.
Is that not true?
I mean, everybody throws up.
Yeah.
There was one time when we were in Toronto, and I was like pretty bombed.
And it was like one of the first times we were like,
hanging out with our, like, new team, like, management and stuff.
And I was, like, really bad.
Because we were, like, just, like, it was like a party with him.
We were trying to, like, just have a good time the first time.
Yeah.
Put it, pull together, get to the airport, get on the plane.
Never say no to a shot.
Dude, there's few things worse than flying and traveling hungover.
I mean, where are you guys do it?
You just kind of got to do it.
You guys are just veterans.
Just wait until we're, like, three years into it.
Oh, man.
Yeah, you'll be even bigger veterans, but it might hurt more.
It might hurt more.
That's for sure.
You'll be flying private by that point, though, so it's not, you're going to just use
the plane as just another excuse to just keep the bender going.
Yeah.
Have a bed on the plane.
Yeah, that'd be cool.
You guys have always, like, traveled with your, your close homies, anybody that supports
you, anybody that is clearly there to make your experience better also.
But I really appreciate that about, like, you guys have reached out to us for multiple
shows that we haven't gone to for for no particular reason besides being busy but like i really
appreciate that about you guys you guys are always reaching out come to this show come to this show so like
we appreciate that and i i love that you keep your close original friends with you
that's the best that's what keeps it fun it's like parting with your friends and just giving people a
good time that i guess normally don't get to do that kind of stuff and you know traveling flying to
like miami and going to a show like it's fun so it's cool experience for like our friends
to like see what goes on too because they always hear about it yeah it's like when you're actually
they're experiencing the show it's it's cool yeah you're at dirt bike anymore Alex we went like off-road
riding in Colorado we went and got an Airbnb in Breckenridge back in August that was my first time like
doing some off-road mountain riding so that was a good time but haven't rid since then and
you used to race though didn't you yeah I raced I raced my whole life started riding when I was like two
two and a half years old yeah no I mean Alex is quite a bit better dirtiker than I think
I think maybe all of us.
Yeah, I don't know for you anymore.
But, yeah, maybe you're a little rusty now,
but that's to be expected with how busy you are with DJ.
But, yeah, you kind of like embodied all the things that we do.
That's, I guess, yeah, we're pretty similar, like with similar stuff,
like snowmobiling, you know, lake life and all that growing up.
And I went snowmilling yesterday, actually, so that's kind of cool.
Yeah, I saw your stories.
This is the last time.
Yeah, last time in the snowmilling before a month on spring break.
I'm like, well, I'm happy to see you get.
literally like the both worlds yeah no but i grew up racing i raced my whole life i actually like
i did like online school for like the last two years of high school racing and then made it all
the way until i got my pro license when i was 17 or 18 or 18 i guess about that time was when i was
like getting out of it and then starting to dj and all that like i think it was actually the day we
like announced or the week we announced twin sick the next week i like raced at millville and
tried doing my first pro debut but you know i hadn't written it was kind of like it was like i wasn't
focused on it or anything so that's pretty crazy it's it's it's really interesting to be i mean really
good at two things and have to pick i guess but i think you made the right choice yeah it was much as
it was i loved it like every minute of it like growing up and you know all the friends you meet at the
tracks and all that and yeah it's where i met a lot of good friends so and it's the same thing now
just you know different genre of people but yeah it's actually funny at at that race
at Millville, my, like, I race during the day and then at night we threw like a huge after
party at like the RV and like we were DJ in there and all that. So it was cool to blend the two
together for sure. Definitely. Yeah. That's what I want to do. I want to have like a DJ party
out at the track. I think that'd be so fun. It's sick. You can just throw a DJ in any like situation
and make it cool. Yeah. Anything. That's what I mean. A lot of people, I guess when they think of
DJs. There's like either the mainstream DJ of people putting on these music festivals or there's
the wedding DJ. What's the deciding factor between somebody going the wedding route or the festival
route? Because it seems like two completely different lifestyles. Yeah. Like do these people all start out
in the same? Those are two completely different people. It's like you either get the branding aspect of it or you
don't, I think. It's like if you can brand yourself as like you're an artist just compared to
like it's your job, I think that's the main difference. And like if you make music, that's
another big thing. Like there's not a lot of deep. I mean, there's like none out there that have
no songs out like under their name that are big. Right. You got to have like original music that
people come to your shows for your music, not just to see you DJ. So would you guys DJ my wedding
one day maybe? Well, yeah. DJs do like what big like famous ones do like wedding. So 100%.
I mean, obviously, if the price is right.
Yeah, I saw Diplo's story.
He was DJing some, like, Indian wedding.
That's crazy.
We haven't done one yet.
I haven't done one yet, but it'll be fun when we do it and we'll be wearing
suits and just getting fucked up.
Yeah.
We get ass all the time.
Looking to clean up on some of the bridesmaids.
Yeah, we get asked by, like, friends and family.
All the time.
Can you do you do my wedding?
Like, I'm not going to be the one announcing when you're walking out, but we'll throw an after party.
We'll throw a wild after party.
That's got to be tough, too.
I'm sure you guys get that a lot.
You guys should come and DJ this
And it's just like genuinely not worth your time
And you don't want to be a dick
But you got to tell them
You got a book
Yeah, that's gotta be tough
So you guys watch a lot of YouTube
Not as much anymore I used to
I was like I guess too
I have like a background of like videography and photography
And that was kind of what got me into DJing as well
So I would say like I used to watch that pretty regularly
Like throughout end of high school and through college and stuff
but not as much anymore.
Keep up on your guy's stuff, though, I go a bit.
Well, thanks.
It's been crushing.
I think, I guess the reason I ask is if there's, like,
DJs that do YouTube that show the lifestyle behind it,
I guess I'm not super familiar with it,
but I think it'd be really cool if you guys almost just, like,
vlog, being, like, DJs.
We're working on that.
That's, like, the biggest thing we're working on right now.
Oh, really?
It's, like, to figure out how to document when we travel.
Just because we're at the level right now,
we are traveling a lot so we want to like put it all on film and but it's just hard to as us too
filming it's it's a lot it's a lot more to put on our plate you need to have like a full time guy
because then yeah you have a full time guy in the editing and then that's kind of going back to what
i was saying it then you're not just showing up and the show is the climax yeah then it's like
however much you want to turn it on and be on camera is up to you guys and the more that you are
the better the video will be yeah but then it gets to be like well that that that trip was
a lot of work because we tried to make changes yeah whatever but with how many shows you
guys do and with them sometimes blending together i think like something that you can do to like
engage with the city or the people that you're at like some sort of segment i don't know what that
looks like something that changes it up um like whether that's like interviewing a fan or just
having someone come take shots with you guys or something something special for each city that's
good yeah yeah but sure fisher kills it
We like his videos a lot
He has really good
Like behind the scene stuff
Just because his personality
Is a character
But insane
He's crazy behind the camera too
Which
I mean being on camera
It's like
I'm more used to it now than I was before
But I think even if
You know we have someone filming us full time
It's like
It's just gonna only get easier
As you guys know too
Totally
When we first started
And CJ started pointing the camera at us
We were like
What?
We have to talk
Like so yeah
I mean it'll get a lot easier for you guys
Like even at the start
just taking a video and posting on your story of your face it was like that was hard at
yeah yeah i forgot about those sometimes yeah sometimes you have to look at it like uh even if
yeah even if you think you look super weird just send it and like everyone else is just like
you'll you get like one out of uh the 20 responses you get that would say you look funny doing
this and that's it yeah i don't know it doesn't matter you get one out of 20 i get a lot more
give or take
I remember like the weirdest thing
back back when we first
you know started making videos and
and just watching ourselves on YouTube
what you sound like on camera
yeah so weird that's like
classic you're like damn that's my voice
or that's like how I look
when I'm not looking at it
and anytime anyone ever says that
I just sound to get over it literally
whenever anyone's like I hate how he's sound on camera
I'm like get over it because you can
because everyone hears your voice anyway
Yeah, like, you know, like, because it's possible.
It is possible to get over it.
Like, it's so weird when we, like, let's say we're doing a promo and you're editing yourself.
Like, you're editing a video of yourself talking basically to you.
And it's not even weird anymore.
But back in the day, this is the weirdest thing ever.
Same with us.
We're like, when we're behind the booth, like, doing our little dances.
It's like, when, you know, we're vibe into the music, it's like, back in the day, I was like, is that really what I'm doing?
Yeah.
Is this weird?
Yeah, but, like, now it's, like, natural.
It's just.
Do you guys like, have, do you guys ever do brand deals?
I don't know, look, that looks a little different for a DJ versus a YouTuber,
but, you know, promos or like some sort of,
they pay you to wear a shirt while you are spinning.
Yeah, I mean, we've kind of held off on that for now.
Just really focus on our brand right now and doing everything we can to grow ourselves.
Yeah, we basically work with, like, our homies if we're going to make, like, merge or something.
Like, we just, luckily, we know everyone that can kind of have the resources to make stuff happen.
Yeah.
yeah yeah i mean the the hats are sick like you definitely need some yeah i was like we we were just
talking about this like how we started merch way too early but um because that is a thing you know like
it's like oh we just got off the ground we just did our first show get the merch it's like what
too soon yeah so soon but uh i think in this day and age you got to have it just a small amount
at least to start for people that genuinely want to support you yeah that's what we always did we
started just we did free hats and we throw them out at the shows and you know
Everyone would try and get one.
People love the hats.
This was actually,
especially, yeah,
the first hats we've ever sold.
They never sold any merged besides it.
Especially if it's like limited.
Like,
basically you come to the show with six of those hats and that's it.
It's it.
Yeah.
People are like,
I need one of those.
I didn't get one at the show.
Yeah,
we did a few that were like labeled like spring tour 2020 and stuff like that.
So maybe those will be vintage one day.
Yeah.
Where did twin sick come from?
We got it from.
Everyone thinks we're twins.
We're not.
Yeah, right.
But, like, we literally get that ass to us every single show.
I don't think we've ever, we ever, like, said this on an interview or anything,
but we got it from Twin Cities, both from Minneapolis area.
And we were, like, just sitting in a room one day with our homie, Mitch,
and I had a few words written down, and one was twin.
One other one was, like, lost or something.
We had, like, twin down because we're, like, twin, two people, like, Twin Cities.
It was like kind of something.
He just needed some other word to go at the end of it.
I always came up with Twin Sick.
It's just, it's good.
Easy to remember, easy to spell.
Yeah, easy to say.
Thinking back now, it's like, what would I have done different?
I have no idea.
That's the hardest thing.
How do we say that all the time?
We say that, like, how did C-Boys come to be?
We're from Cormrott when we were a group of friends.
A bunch of dudes.
All of our surrounding friends or like friends outside of our main group would be like,
hey, I'm going to hang out with the Cormant boys because of our
group where we all grew up in Cormorant.
Yeah.
And yeah, and then it just became, yeah, I'm going to hang.
This one girl, man, she deserves a little equity for this one.
She started just calling us the C boys.
We were like, don't call us that.
I think at first we didn't, yeah, at first we didn't like it.
That's great.
And then we were like, well, it's cool to have a name.
And then I think the best part is, is that the debate came down whether or not our
YouTube name should have a hyphen in it or not.
Oh, my God.
It really did.
And then it...
And then Ken changed it without asking.
No, he changed it and he added a hyphen.
And then we were all like, why did you change it without asking?
He's like, I just thought it needed a hyphen.
And then we're like, well, it doesn't.
See, I was going to fucking murder, Ken.
I remember that.
He was so mad.
Doesn't need a hyphen and you can't change the channel name without talking to it.
Or yeah, maybe...
The C-Boys and the TV.
But we got a lot of those, like, small details matter so much.
Yeah.
Yeah, it does.
it does but in hindsight you know obviously it's it's our brand and and we made it our brand but like
what what would it be if it wasn't that would it be a successful memorable easy to spell or see
or uh you know recognize when you saw it yeah who knows but also names don't really mean shit
until you build a brand around us yeah if you think of j names they're so stupid there's some
some of them yeah yeah copy like in yeah yeah cj are saying you don't want to copy other people's
names too because then you're just constantly affiliated with them we see we see something boys
tv all the time now oh my god i imagine yeah i don't know which is always flattering but it's like
yeah i just tell them hey you are going to want to come up with a different name because that one
is just like ours and we will almost always overshadow you yeah and uh yeah just push people
to be like a little more original with it but there's some about like once you have your name
locked in and you like it and if you like it then just push it
Yeah.
What's your DJ name?
Little Zipai?
No, I think I would just go by like Sandman.
That's a good one.
That's good.
That is pretty fine.
Damn, like that's fire, bro.
Make the SoundCloud right now.
Like, I can already hear the music that you'd be dropping.
To be Instagram.
I've made one, I made one mix on SoundCloud, and it's like about nine out of ten in the EDM hard scale.
It's pretty hard.
Ben would listen to it and go, well, this isn't too good.
Pop up the album art, though.
It's pretty fire.
That made some album art.
That's funny.
It's fun.
The original album art, because I used to make matchups, it was so bad.
I'm sure it's out there somewhere.
I literally, my logo, everything, I had no idea what I was doing.
It was terrible.
I would do these cringy overlays, like, galaxy, like above, like.
I feel like
That's really funny
You say that
It's just like all
Edm
Like album art
I'm pretty sure
Like the one album art
I made
Has like a galaxy
Of course
Mike you got
264 plays
Not bad
Keep in mind
This is an hour long
Mix
So like
Or whatever
We're gonna blow it up
Mike you gotta change
Your
SoundCloud name
This is the star
This is the star
I love going on there
This is the start
Of pushing Mike away
Go follow your dreams
bro
One new play this week
Yeah
See, the only reason I haven't pursued it is because, like, can't risk getting too good at it.
Maybe if we do the summer party, you can open up.
Oh, dude.
You could learn how to DJ in like two weeks.
Yeah.
100%.
That would be a really, really fun video bit and a goal.
If we do make that happen, I will open up for whatever we want to call it.
But have you guys seen the Cody Co.
a video. I just watched that. It's pretty funny. And he also kind of does the same thing. Obviously, he's been
making music for a little while now, but he just like goes to show how easy, but also like he showed
the awkward parts pretty well. Yeah. Also, he had Dylan Francis backing him up. So yeah, that was pretty
cool. I mean, yeah, like we started off. We were not playing, like that was like a legit show that he had.
So that's like impressive. Yeah. You can just go in front of that crowd like that for the first time.
Yeah. Yeah. It is different. Like, where we saw.
say like our atmosphere at a club versus like a I would say like a theater like when you're just
like the more visible you are to a crowd it makes you feel different as well so like he was very
visible yeah he's like he was just up there he was like talking to the mic like normal he was just
having a casual conversation with the people out there he didn't know what to do he was like scared
a little bit he was like I thought it was going to be in the corner imagine being a DJ you know most
time you're behind a booth or behind like a wall right but imagine being a DJ in your little soundboard
is just up on like a music stand like remember in like band class or like choir like just a music
stand and it's just right there and you're just like so you can see your legs the whole time
and your knees that'd be good that'd be good you guys play instruments in band yeah I was in percussion
I say I played trumpet same I you think that uh you got you're kind of like your beat you your
sense of rhythm from percussion yeah I used to went into making music and having good
rhythm 100% I used to play piano
Like, I took the whole, like, piano lessons and stuff when I was a kid.
And then I did drums, and then I did percussion in high school, or middle school.
Dude, that's crazy.
I used to take, I took piano for like eight years.
Oh, shit, nice.
Yeah.
Never got good at it, though.
We just got an amber alert.
We got an amber alert here?
Missing child from Lakeville, Minnesota.
Oh, my gosh.
That's where I went to high school.
Really?
Yeah.
You guys both went to Lakeville?
Did you guys just get that, too?
Yeah, I got it too.
Yeah, I got it too.
Yeah.
What the heck?
It's super weird and, like, so ironic that it was from.
I thought of my phone was ringing out.
So, yeah, I took piano for like eight years and I hated every minute of it.
Bro.
I never figured out how to play the piano without, one, like, reading the music, but I never practiced.
I never had any ambition to do it.
Same.
Some people do.
Some people don't.
And I just, like, after eight years, I was like, Mom, this is so dumb.
Yeah.
I'm just wasting eight years of time and money here.
Yeah, same.
I would, like, hate piano just because of the practicing, like you said.
and then I was like, Mom, I want to quit.
So I quit and then just made my own piano stuff.
So you played drums, though?
I played drums, too.
Yeah, I did drum lessons.
Which I thought that was more helpful and, like, interesting
because that gets you the rhythm.
Right.
It's like DJing a lot of, it is like all rhythm.
Yeah, you got to know it.
But, I mean, it's cool.
Like, I can kind of play guitar a little bit.
We'll throw some guitar stuff in our song.
I wish I knew how to play it better, but...
Both of my siblings were really, really good at either singing.
or playing the guitar.
My sister was a good singer.
My brother was a singer and guitar.
And then it was just me back there, like eight years old,
just ripping the drums, right?
Drums are hard.
I think the drums are the dopest.
They are the dopest.
If you can hop on a drum set and just shred it,
people are like, whoa.
Bad ass as fuck.
That's pretty sick.
As nerdy as it is to say,
Ben's been on a kick where he's calling everybody nerds,
so he's going to call me a nerd for this.
If you are in high school or whatever, middle school,
you should play in the band.
It's pretty fun.
They don't ask a whole lot of you.
If you have a natural talent, you don't even really have to practice.
I would never practice, and I would always get stuck with the triangle.
What?
What?
Like, for percussion, right?
Yeah.
Everyone had different parts.
We'd have, like, six guys in, like, percussion.
And they would always get, like, the cool, like, snare parts or, like, the timpony.
Like, yeah, like, or, like, the vibraphone or whatever, and I'd get, like, the triangle in the back.
That was still a little bit better than just being the
Psh, the symbols.
I mean, yeah.
I was going to mention that.
I was like, but if you put in the very little practice
and pick percussion, you'll be playing the triangle.
Yeah.
The Glock and spiel.
The Glock and spiel.
Yeah.
Do you guys remember having to go to like one-on-one lessons though?
Yeah.
Like in percussion?
Bro.
Like being pulled out of class to go to the lesson.
Did you have those things where you had to like perform one-on-one
and like get like, judge?
That was terrifying.
Yeah.
That was so scary.
I remember, like, sitting in, like, a line with, like, all the other band kids.
And, like, one by one, you'd go in the room and, like, they'd grade you on the spot and, like, give you feedback.
I was terrified by that.
I remember my friends would always come, like, we'd go to the football games.
I didn't do a marching band, but, like, they'd come in at halftime be, like, fuck that.
That was so annoying.
And they'd watch the game, like, with their full band fit, like, from the stands in the student section.
And that is why you might get called a nerd.
to be fair i'm like i'm only calling people nerds that are nerds yeah yeah yeah i kind of
put that in your mouth yeah yeah yeah i wouldn't call these guys nerds they're cool dudes
you kind of got to be a nerds like this we're nerds computer nerds anything dj nerds yeah they
might be yeah music nerds i mean honestly like like like i tried to do like computer science stuff
like that i couldn't get it but like making music is pretty like it's yeah it's pretty intense
science any program you can use pretty much like now like if you go into photoshop you can learn
one percent of it or a hundred percent of it and it's crazy you can learn it all on youtube too
that's how i learn same kind of yeah yeah yeah with editing yeah yeah you can obviously put in
the time to figure it out but like if you just sit down and try and just do it right away
without any direction it's pretty difficult to figure out 100 like anything you figure it out
over time yeah and i was joking about you guys standing up there not doing anything i don't want
to sound like a dick, obviously.
I'm making a joke about it.
I don't want to the TikTok comments.
If anyone doesn't believe us.
We're going to come in. We're going to be known as the fake DJs.
No, no, no. You guys are the real deal.
Otherwise, everyone would be doing it.
Yeah.
Because I was going to say it, dude, like, what would be better than traveling around
making music with one of your best homies and then going and seeing the world?
Like, yeah.
And that was a question I was actually going to ask.
We are going to start doing a lot more traveling.
Where do you guys recommend that we go after?
after seeing so much of the states, but even abroad and stuff.
Are you talking to the states or broad?
Either one, either one.
And you guys kind of know us.
You guys would have fun of, I think, Arizona.
Arizona?
Arizona. I think you guys would have fun of Arizona.
I mean, we're going to, we're going to Mexico.
We're going to.
Do you want to?
Cabo, maybe?
I don't know.
Portova.
Oh, yeah, Porto Verda.
Yeah.
We're going there.
So, I mean, I've never been to Mexico, but we'll let you know how that goes.
And then we're doing, um,
Can't be bad.
Dominican.
So it's not good.
The bar scene in, like, Arizona, like Scottsdale, it's super sick.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Can you do, like, a lot of action stuff down there?
Like, there's desert.
Desert, yeah.
Good time.
Yeah, we swamling through Arizona last year, but we're going to do another RV tour coming up.
Probably next month.
We're actually getting in a meeting after this and plan it.
But just go hit, like, the whole west.
Are you guys big, like city guys?
You like to go out in the city or no?
Well, yes and no.
We like to experience it, but it wouldn't be our first choice.
Yeah.
Because I was going to say New York's always fun
I do want to see New York
That's definitely on my pocket list
New York's always fun
I mean it's like the clubs that are just unreal
You can go till 6 a.m.
Where's your guys' favorite spot?
It was cool
I don't know
I always liked like Salt Lake City area
Especially for being a YouTuber
There's like
And that's why so many YouTubers live there
Is you're so close to so many different things
And you can do so much there
It's only been there once
It's really cool
I don't know if it would work for you guys quite as much
with the party scene because they're all Mormons there.
They don't boo us, but...
We were asked to do this...
Oh, gosh.
This like Mormon party.
High school party or something.
Yeah?
Like these kids would rent out this like...
$30 million house.
Just this mansion.
And there'd be just these Mormon kids just pulling up.
And we were asked to DJ it.
A lot of them.
Wait, what was the party for?
It was like a Halloween Project X.
Project X.
And it was like massive.
We were like.
Sober.
Sober.
Sober.
Like we weren't allowed to have like we got the contract before.
We didn't end up doing it.
But we like no booze.
Like no swearing in the songs.
Like yeah.
Super strict.
And we're like why like why are we the ones that are doing this party?
Like our brand is like we kind of booed.
Yeah.
You're thinking there's got to be some some DJ or DJs out there that can handle a completely sober show.
then also embody that maybe.
No swearing.
No swearing.
It's like every song.
You can go without boozing for one night, but no swearing.
I don't think they ended up having anyone.
The thing that's really-
Oh, you didn't do it.
No, no, we didn't do it.
I think they just had a friend DJ, but.
The Mormons are, like, as an outsider,
you'd be like, man, that, no boozing at like a project act type party.
Like, it doesn't even sound like a party, but to them, it's like, no, it's normal.
It's normal.
I think they go harder.
We like to booze, so they go hard and, like, they're just energized off of, like, the love of the game.
100%.
And they're just energized off of, like, their homies being together.
And, like, I follow a bunch of different people that just so happen to be Mormon.
And they're always, like, partying, but I know they're not boozing.
Which is crazy, but I mean, good props to them.
Yeah, seriously.
Yeah, it's a healthy way to have a good time.
They're just loving the music and loving the vibes with their friends.
They're dancing and shit.
Yeah.
That's like the main thing.
$30 million house.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was massive.
It was,
yeah,
it was mind-line.
I don't know.
If you guys get that opportunity again,
100% try it.
You might have to take that because it would be pretty interesting.
Just the content we could get from that too.
And these Mormons have a full.
Oh,
yeah.
Yeah.
A bunch of 16-year-olds throwing the party.
My question is like,
how do they rent that?
I try to rent like an Airbnb with like five of my friends and we get in trouble for that.
Like,
how do they rent that?
Might be one of their.
One of their parents.
You guys could do,
like bar mitzvahs or something like that too i'd imagine there's a ton of money in bar mitzvahs yeah i'm sure
we will yeah we haven't we haven't done many private parties besides like they're kind of fun just
just because it's like different yeah you're gonna get into the paychecks right yeah i mean
you might as well a bar mitzah to me does not sound that fun unless the paycheck was right
how old are bar mitzvah like is that 15 i think it's like yeah i think it's like 15
i feel like these 15 year olds would be just getting lit if you'd have to play all tic tic tic tic
songs. Yeah, but give me a playlist to it, like, they would be so lit. At that age, when it's
young, like, we've done, like, some, like, high school parties and stuff, like, they, like,
mosh pit. They, like, open up the pit. I love that. And, like, get in a circle and they put,
like, one kid in the middle, and then they hype them all up, and then everyone just runs in
the middle. It's like, that doesn't happen at a club or anything, but it happens at every single,
like, front, like, high school play. It's definitely not enough people to have a mosh pit.
It's funny, too. It's got to get you guys fired up up there, though.
yeah it's funny when we play a song that like doesn't seem like we're too young for or we're too old for and like the kids just have no idea what we're playing it's like a sing-along that like you think everyone would know and then they have no idea and we just like laugh or like what's doing well I guess not that one then nothing else in that time frame yeah uh no you can't really switch just like that like that kind of just got to own it yeah own it right yeah you lay into the next one but yeah but a nice shit you guys got a literally
Get up to Canada.
Go to Canada.
I wish you the best getting through the border.
Appreciate it.
It shouldn't be too hard.
But, and again, you guys invited us to the show.
We have some filming to do this weekend, but it would be a lot of fun.
We'll make it one happen.
We'll do it.
We'll do a party this summer.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right, guys.
Thanks for having us.
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Thank you.
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