Living The Red Life - How I Went from a Terrible Dancer to a YouTube Superstar - Matt Steffanina
Episode Date: February 20, 2025SUMMARYMatt Steffanina, a world-renowned dancer, choreographer, and YouTube sensation, joins the conversation to share his journey from an awkward beginner to a global dance icon. He dives into how he... built his massive online presence, the power of giving away value for free, and why connecting authentically with an audience is crucial for long-term success. From early struggles to viral success, Matt reveals the mindset shifts that helped him turn his passion into a thriving business.Throughout the discussion, Matt also opens up about the challenges of entrepreneurship, including losing his first YouTube channel and having to start from scratch. He offers valuable insights on how creators can monetize their brand beyond sponsorships, emphasizing the importance of unique selling propositions (USP) and community engagement. He also shares his personal growth journey, highlighting the importance of mental well-being, balance, and taking the time to step back from the hustle to generate new ideas. Whether you're an aspiring content creator or an entrepreneur, Matt’s story is packed with lessons on resilience, creativity, and strategic growth.CHAPTERS02:30 - From Hobby to Viral Sensation04:45 - The Power of Talking on Camera07:10 - Giving Away Value for Free – The Ultimate Growth Hack09:35 - How to Build a Loyal Community That Buys from You12:00 - Going Beyond Swag: Turning Influence into a Brand14:25 - The Struggles of Entrepreneurship Nobody Talks About16:50 - Bouncing Back After Losing Everything19:15 - The One Business Lesson I Wish I Knew Earlier21:40 - The Secret to Work-Life Balance as a Creator24:05 - From Awkward Beginner to Dance SuperstarGUEST DETAILSGuest Name: Matt SteffaninaInstagram: @MattSteffaninaYouTube: Matt SteffaninaWebsite: www.dncr.comDNCR App: app.dncr.comConnect with Rudy Mawer:LinkedInInstagramFacebookTwitter
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My name is Rudy Moore, host of Living the Red Life podcast.
And I'm here to change the way you see your life in your
earpiece every single week.
If you're ready to start living the red life, ditch the blue pill,
take the red pill, join me in Wonderland and change your life.
What's up guys?
Welcome back to another episode of Living the Red Life.
Today, we're going to talk all about influence, building a tribe,
a brand, a mass movement, which this guy is definitely done.
Here with my friend, Matt this guy's definitely done.
Here with my friend, Matt,
he's built his following to over 30 million.
Yes, that was not an error.
30 million, we've been friends for many years,
met in LA originally, and now look,
we're both here in Miami.
So welcome to the show, buddy.
Yeah, man, thanks for having me.
Great to finally connect here.
Yeah, so 30 million, right?
And you guys have probably seen this man dancing around.
You may have not known it was him,
but probably the most famous dance influencer
and educator, I would say,
is that a pretty fair statement or one of, right?
And you've been doing it how many years?
I started on YouTube in 2007.
So coming up on 18 years on YouTube.
So 30 million, but key point already,
not an overnight success, right?
It's not like, hey, I started this YouTube a year ago
and got 30 million.
So let's start there.
What's the story over the last two decades?
Yeah, so I started in a smaller town in Virginia.
Was bored in high school.
Thought I'd pick up dancing.
I saw Usher, Chris Brown, Justin Timberlake.
I was gonna learn that. And there weren't a lot of opportunities. So, I found YouTube really early and I thought,
man, like I could probably learn by posting my videos here. People give me feedback. Maybe
I'll meet other dancers. And so, it really just started out as that and I sort of fell
into this viral YouTube thing really early on, you know? But the main thing that I noticed is that
the more I shared my story and my vulnerabilities
along the way, my failures as well as my successes,
the more people engaged with the channel.
And so I was really early on showing how bad I was.
You know, I was starting out as a 17 year old kid
in a small farm town trying to learn how to dance.
And you know, here we are today.
And like you mentioned,
it was probably about five or six years
of not taking it seriously,
posting a video here and there.
And then I moved to LA and I thought,
oh, now I'm in LA, it's gonna get easier.
I'm gonna get all these jobs.
And it wasn't that at all.
It was very, very difficult.
And so I leaned even heavier into content.
And that's when my audience really exploded
about 2014, 15, 16.
Yeah, because we met probably what, five, six years ago?
Yeah.
And like you were big at that point,
like really doing well,
but you've had some cool experiences along the way, right?
Like you've danced with some cool people.
Yeah, I got to dance for Taylor Swift,
a choreographer, Jason Derulo.
Yeah.
I was on the Ellen show, Step Up,
So You Think You Can Dance, you know,
pretty much everything I ever dreamed of doing as a dancer.
And you know, that's why even today,
I'm huge on encouraging people to create content
because there's no better way to reach an audience
in a really, really genuine way than by creating content.
Well, and I think for YouTube,
it's kind of funny because like podcasts too,
like when you did it 10 years ago,
it's like, oh, you're a YouTuber,
or you're a podcaster.
And then like Joe Rogan podcast is like,
oh, you're a podcaster.
And then MrBeast and stuff, it's like,
oh, you're a YouTuber.
Now it's like changed how the world,
obviously we already knew it was like in the industry,
but like now the world, I think has like
a very different level of respect.
Yeah, because these people that we admire
have come over to this side, it's like now it's admirable
to create your own things.
I actually got dropped from my agency
and fired from several dance jobs early on
because I was a YouTube choreographer. And that was how looked down upon it was.
So now it's crazy to think that there's no dancer in the world that doesn't have videos
online and isn't using it as a tool.
One is like the opposite, right?
Because it's now like CAA and the big agencies are like, whoa.
Like one of your follower accounts, right away.
And brands too.
Absolutely. Brands are paying as much
for big influencers like you as they are
for A-list celebrities,
because your audience is sometimes way more engaged.
So let's talk about that.
This is a business show, entrepreneur show.
Maybe everyone listening can't dance like you,
but hopefully they can grow an audience one day like you.
So what are some general tips like throughout all these years
of growing such a big audience?
Yeah, well, it's definitely a repeatable skill.
Creating content, a lot of times people will say like,
oh, it's cause you're a dancer
and TikTok favors dance videos.
Most of my viral content and definitely my connection
to the audience has nothing to do with dance.
And you were way big before even TikTok came out.
Yeah, yeah, right.
So like what I really lean into is storytelling.
My biggest video this past year on YouTube
was about me genuinely just telling my story
about, like I said, starting in a small farm town,
moving to LA, all the failures,
the things I got fired from, the struggles,
thinking about moving home and giving up
and how I overcame it and what I did to reset
and find new inspiration.
And that video outperformed all of my dancing videos.
I think I saw that, it went by, yeah,
you had crazy engagement.
You know, and so the best skill you can learn
if you're starting content or even if you're creating content
and you wanna improve it is really storytelling.
And whether you're a fitness influencer,
you're an entrepreneur, you're selling courses,
whatever it is that you're doing,
if you can create it about your story and why you're creating courses or why you're making fitness content.
Maybe you were bullied as a kid and so you went really hard into fitness.
Maybe you couldn't find your passion and then someone helped you and you're paying it forward and helping others, right?
I think that's interesting because a lot of people listen in.
I think people think that their audience doesn't care about that.
But you're basically saying the opposite. They care the most about that.
Yeah, because if you don't admit some of your flaws or shortcomings, how does the audience know to trust you?
Yeah, and you create the genuine connection because I think if you don't do that, you're like this godlike celebrity figure and they're this
random person. But like what I try and teach is, no, you want to remind them that you were the
random person at one point and you're still a down to earth person, right?
Yeah. And it's really difficult for, especially people that are entrepreneurs and perfectionists
to get this. It's hard for me still. I still post videos and I'm like, I don't wanna post this one.
I don't wanna post this one.
I won't post, right?
Because I know that it's important,
but I work with a lot of people,
like you do, I'm sure.
They're like, no, everything has to look
professional and perfect, you know?
And so it's very counterintuitive,
but the way that people consume media now
is so different than 10 years ago, 15 years ago, right?
You'd like read a magazine and it's like Jay-Z and he's perfect and he made dollars
and like you never got to see his flaws.
Well, even the celebrities now, like there's like, I can't remember what celebrity it was the other day,
but they're like, they'll film themselves crying and talking about some politics thing or whatever, right?
Or a breakup. Like 10 years ago, every agent would have
been like, no, you could never, never, like, there's no way you could do all those things.
Right? So I think as social media as a whole now, it's like, it's changed a lot. It used to be this
polished resume, right? Now it's the real day to day you. And that's why reels took off. That's
why stories have took off. Cause it's like the vlog of your life, you know?
And I guess YouTube used to be the vlog spot, right?
People would vlogs to the heavily.
And now I feel it's there's less of that.
And it's like daily vlogging on socials.
Yeah.
And you know, as far as actionable advice that I give to a lot of my friends and clients
that I'm helping with content is use TikTok as the training ground. TikTok is a really great place to mess up because your
friends aren't really on TikTok, your peers aren't on TikTok as much and if you do a video
and it doesn't do well, TikTok doesn't show it to anybody. So like there's really no downside,
right? On Instagram it's like, well my friends from high school are here. My person I'm trying to collab with is a lot more pressure.
Well, they even just I saw have now released an option where you can test it.
The trial reel on Instagram.
Have you tried it? Not yet.
Yeah, I tried it. It's interesting.
I don't know that I love it, but, you know, it's cool to see the innovation.
But, you know, if you go hard on TikTok and you make three to five videos a day or two to three weeks and you just say I'm gonna try doing a product,
I'm gonna talk about my story and I'm gonna do one other thing.
I can do this for two, three weeks.
You'll have 30 videos, you'll have a lot of data in a short amount of time and then you
can say okay these are working, this will work really well.
Let me put that on Instagram and YouTube because I actually like that one.
These worked but like I'll keep them on TikTok, right? Like you start to develop a plan for yourself
on how you can really scale this. It's really important up front to go hard.
And I think one other important point, like Tai Lopez really hammered this into me when I was
partners with him, is like, and he's like really interesting
because half the world love him
and half are like, you know, kind of weirded out by him.
But he's, he was one of the first, I mean,
to understand like creating content
for the consumer versus you, right?
Like I can sit with him or would sit with him
at the highly intellectual conversations,
but for the consumer, he would go and create, you know, like, hey,
here in my garage.
Here in my garage.
Yeah, yeah.
So he mastered that game like before anyone else, I feel almost.
And so how do you see that?
Like creating content to attract a new audience and reach the masses versus like that polished
resume sort of content.
Yeah.
So a good example that translates to other sectors too, is I was a
choreographer in LA and I worked so hard to be a professional dancer,
professional choreographer, agent, all this stuff, right?
The videos that performed the best for me on YouTube in my entire career
were my beginner dance classes.
Yeah.
So like Jason Derulo, wiggle, wiggle, wiggle, right?
Or like these fun pop songs, easy choreography.
And everyone would be like, why are you posting those?
Like, that's embarrassing. You're a professional.
Yeah.
And I said, 90 percent, 95 percent of my audience are beginner dancers.
And sure, I'm definitely advanced stuff for me, for my art and to push myself.
But like at the end of the day, if I want to teach and I want to impact the world and I want to help the world dance, for my art, and to push myself, but at the end of the day,
if I want to teach and I want to impact the world
and I want to help the world dance,
the best way for me to do it is make dancing relatable,
make it accessible, make it fun.
That's why I created the DNCR app.
You just download it, take a free class,
and boom, you're dancing, right?
And it's really important, just like you said with Ty,
all of that is in the beginning,
you're mostly marketing to the people
who don't know who you are,
who don't know what you're talking about.
They're not an expert in your field.
As you build, you can niche to those more advanced topics.
And I think that's even probably like one of the hardest
for entrepreneurs of every category,
because they're like trying to get investors on board
or like get into a grocery store
or impress a shark
from Shark Tank while then doing this. But what I try and remind them is most of the
smart investors that have crazy money and invest or like Dame and John, they get the
game. So they're not like freaked out by you doing this silly TikTok. Cause it's like,
they actually understand why you're doing it. The people that don't understand it are like
your staff member or best friend that say, oh, that's weird. Right. So don't be afraid because the
people that play in this world at a high level, they understand what you're doing. Right. They're
like, oh, that's smart. He's creating this silly, this controversial headline because he wants to
lure people in. So I mean, yeah, I mean, it's great. So next question, you know, obviously you got in early, right, YouTube and all these things.
If someone's listening now and inspired by it,
would you still say start on YouTube?
Would you say start on Insta or TikTok?
Where would they start?
It depends what your goal is
and who you're trying to reach, right?
For instance, if you wanna do long form educational
type stuff, you wanna do podcasts, you wanna do all do long form educational type stuff, you want to do podcasts, you want
to do all of that, YouTube is still, in my opinion, the best platform in the world for
monetizing, for brands, for creating true educational long form content.
But if you're like, I want to make these little 15 second skits and funny stuff and whatever,
TikTok is probably going to be your best platform.
So it depends on your goals.
For me, the thing that I love about starting on TikTok
is I was saying about looping a lot of content
really easy on TikTok.
The bar is really low and people love relatability.
They love low production.
So you can just pull it out
and literally make a selfie
as you're walking down the sidewalk.
Here's three tips for like how I did this and this, right?
Post all those and then take the winners
and put them on Instagram, put them on YouTube,
put them on Facebook.
It's kinda cool because that's exactly what I've taught
for like eight years on the ad level.
Like we'll test a lot of the headlines
and even test opt-ins and like free downloads
and then we'll take the winner and make a low ticket product
without like, you know, creating the whole course,
membership site,
follow-up sequence, and then you launch it and it flops
because the hook was weak.
So now we test all the hook, you know,
the last five, six years, we've always tested the hooks first
on some ad spend or to our email list.
And then, and we don't even sell the product.
We'll do it as like a free download or a coming soon RSVP,
like get on the pre-sale list.
And then we take the winner and put all the time and efforts.
It's kind of the same test it in the 15 seconds
before you spend 10 hours filming
and then it's in a 20 minute YouTube, right?
Yeah, I like that.
So the next question everyone always asks me,
if I wanna ask you this, YouTube feels so,
I mean, they're all competitive,
but YouTube feels like so hard now because it's like mr
Beast and all these people have raised the bar to like almost documentary or Netflix level quality
Do you need that to do well on YouTube? No, absolutely not
What you need on YouTube one is consistency most people will give up because it is hard
but I would say that it's actually in a lot of ways
gotten easier because even five years ago
before TikTok and the algorithm shift,
it was so difficult to reach new people, right?
And if you had a thousand subscribers,
the chance of getting a video that did 100K views
was almost zero.
You kind of had to just grind and slowly grow and build.
Now you have shorts, now you have this incredible
recommended video algorithm that I get recommended
on my page all the time, videos that have 500 views.
And I'm like, who is this?
Why is YouTube showing me someone with 500 views?
I don't even subscribe to their channel.
Click it.
Damn, that's a really good video.
Oh, okay. I'm gonna subscribe, right? And that's recent. It didn't used subscribe to their channel. Click it. Pam is a really good video. I'm gonna subscribe.
Right?
And that's recent.
It didn't used to be like that.
So yes, there's more competition now,
but if you figure out how to make great content,
it will rise to the top and you can grow quicker
than ever before on YouTube.
Like it.
Next question I get asked,
I've heard mixed things about putting the shorts and the videos together
because it brings in a different subscriber
and some people split the pages
and some have them all in one.
Do you have an opinion on that?
Keep it together.
Okay, yours?
Keep it together.
There's a function now on YouTube
where you can tie any short related to a long form.
Cool.
So what I do is a mixed strategy.
I'll do some shorts that are completely standalone and they're just meant to bring in new
viewers, bring in subscribers.
Those people may or may not convert to the long form, but I'm okay with that.
Then I'll do some shorts that are specifically in the longer form.
So if I'm telling a story about how I struggled to make money in LA as a dancer, I'm going
to do a short that's just
the most viral part of that. Really crazy like... but I'm gonna leave off the end and I'm
gonna say go watch it. And so with those, try and convert those for viewers
along for it. Those are never gonna go as viral as the standalone ones but
that way you can take the traffic and kind of move it over as well. The
algorithm is getting better though for blending the channel.
Which I think it has to eventually, right?
Cause if it like screws it up, it's like it's screwing itself and all of its people.
Yeah.
Good.
Next question.
I want to go a bit broader now.
Like we talked about YouTube and Instagram, TikTok growing 30 million
followers, crazy numbers.
So congrats by the way.
Not many people in the world outside of A-list celebs
have done that, right?
You've got to be one of the top influencers.
And I mean, it's so great that you've done that
for so many years and now built a brand
and a tribe behind it.
So that's what I want to get into.
Talk about the brand and tribe if people don't know
and how you transition, because if people don't know and how you transition.
Cause if people don't know,
like you have sellout events around the world basically,
right, these massive dance parties, you know.
So can we talk about that part?
Yeah, one of the things that I realized
as I was building my following is that dance content,
especially cause you're not talking to camera,
it's hard to build that relationship, right?
People will be like, oh, I love your dance videos but they don't really know your personality.
And when I started to do tutorials, I love teaching, I love the energy exchange, I love
helping people and people could feel that in the tutorials that it was authentic.
And even views were never as good on the tutorial but what I started to notice is my classes
in real life when I would do these tours just started exploding because now I had
this relationship with my viewer that was different than you're the good dancer. It was now like you're
my mentor. You're my teacher, you know? And that's why even though people sometimes are scared to
talk on camera, it's so important to talk on camera because you build this bond with your viewer
that's just different than any other skill.
And so that was really the basis.
I started to be the pretty much only teacher, especially in LA as a professional dancer,
was willing to give away my choreography for free, teach tutorials for free online because
I just wanted to build my community with people that had a similar passion.
And you know, I think the biggest lesson from that is in the beginning, you just wanted to build my with people that had a similar passion. And you know, I think the biggest lesson from that is
in the beginning, you just want to add as much value as possible.
Sometimes people gatekeep stuff too early on
and it's like you really want to build that relationship,
you want to build that rapport with your audience
where they're like, this is my guy, he always gives me good tips and things and that
and build, build, build, build, build.
And then you're like, and now I'm doing this insane mastermind and I'm going to keep it really
closed, right? But if too early on you're like, here's two tips but if you want more,
you got to pay for this and that. You flip the rapport building step, you know? So, it
can be difficult to build that and it can take a lot longer sometimes than people expect it to.
But if you can hold true to that and hold off on selling in the beginning,
it'll pay dividends in the end when your community is strong.
Yeah, I like that. And what are some tips for... Because we've kind of come from opposite ends,
I almost feel like I was a business guy and then started to work on content and create influence,
you big influence, right? And now you build in the business side. So it's really fascinating. Like they both have
their struggles, right? So what are some tips for people similar to yourself where they build
a good following, have some good content, stuff's going viral and they're like maybe just selling
affiliate products right now or other people's and they wanna build like that brand and community.
Yeah, it's obviously case by case,
depending on what your following is built on.
But for most people that have created a successful brand
online and created great content,
there are people that want to learn
how to do the same thing.
I have a lot of friends that are photographers
and now they're selling their different filters packages, right?
They're selling courses on how to do photography and so instead of just showing these beautiful
images that they took, they're showing the behind the scenes.
You know, oh, that looks like a normal mountain range.
Like I don't mind to take a picture that looks like that and then boom and then you see the
finish.
You're like, wow, how did they do that?
Right, now I'm interested. I wanna buy that guy's course.
And again, dance, photography, entrepreneurship,
it doesn't matter, like mix and match
whatever vertical you want, it's the concepts,
and it's understanding what is the thing
that you can provide for your audience
that they can't get from just a 30 second Instagram post,
right, and maybe it's that you give them actual coaching and feedback.
Like in DNCR, that's one of the things implementing is like,
hey, you can learn how to dance at your local studio.
But if you want an instructor that's from LA that's been through the grind
and book jobs and work with artists and really knows what these agencies are
looking for to critique your video, there's only one place you can do that.
Right. And so that's a really powerful upsell.
And so figuring out what those things are for your audience and providing them is a
great hack.
Yeah, I think that's great because I mean, a lot of least influencers I've met, it's
like the go-to swag and then they get stuck, right?
And it's like, what's next?
But yeah, I love that.
And the way I teach that and the business side is what's your USP, right?
So it's like everyone can sell swag, but if you can create that clear USP, that's when
you'll win.
So that's a great example of, yeah, obviously you can get dance teaching and lessons anywhere
and critiques, but our USP is we've been through the system on where you want to go.
So I love that. So that's a few questions around like entrepreneurship now
because you are an entrepreneur.
Had this amazing growth,
but like it's gotta be with some difficulties.
I say every entrepreneur,
probably they have this one thing in common
that they've been like,
it's been great from the outside,
but there's lawsuits,
or someone stealing from you,
or someone letting you down and downing yourself.
So do you mind sharing one of the biggest things
and how you work through it?
Yeah, we definitely all share that in common, right?
There's at least one or two places where you're like,
do I quit?
Like, is this the wrong idea?
For me, one of the biggest ones was about five years into building my first
YouTube channel, I got completely shut down for copyright music. This was back in the
day. Now they just, you know, restricted in some territories or they mute the video or
whatever. But it used to be if they decided that they didn't want your video up and you
used music, they just blocked.
And three strikes, you're out.
So one day, open up my email and it's like,
your YouTube channel is banned.
Just no appeal, no nothing.
And I was thinking to myself like, five years,
I probably posted 500 videos and all of this.
I got up to a couple million subscribers at that point.
And I decided to start back from zero. And I created them. a couple million subscribers at that point and I decided
to start back from zero.
Oh, you never got it back?
I never got it back.
Oh god.
Until three or four years later, they changed the rules and they're like, hey, your old
channel...
I was like, guys, I think the momentum has died a little bit, you know?
So now, my main channel, the one with 14 million, is...
It was actually a second channel I created
and I have a second channel which was my original one which is like three or four million.
I post like behind the scenes and stuff there.
But you know, that was a really big gut check for do I want to start over and you know,
I debated it for a few days and I decided, nope, I'm gonna do this and I'm gonna go
even harder.
I'm gonna double down on YouTube and I decided, nope, I'm going to do this and I'm going to go even harder. I'm going to double down on YouTube.
And you know, it ended up paying off.
But yeah, every entrepreneur faces some kind of crazy.
I mean, for an influencer or anyone else, like I didn't have quite that,
but we were doing about half a mil a month in my 20s in fitness and our ad accounts got shut down.
And it was like 80% of our revenue.
And so we went from 500k a month to like 100k a month, just like that.
Right.
And we had 20 employees.
So I remember it's like, that's a real like, oh shit moment.
So it's good for you for, you know, getting back on and doing it.
Next question.
I always love to ask this one.
If you had a time machine, you could go in it
and speak to your younger self, what would you say?
Oh man, business wise,
I would have thought about the business elements.
Right?
Yeah.
You know, I'm very, very grateful for everything
that I've been able to accomplish and experience.
But, you know, I was talking to you earlier and said,
I wish that five or six years ago,
I hadn't been so hung up on the creative side
and the LA industry and kind of caught up in all of that
and realize how much potential there is
to help people on a grand scale
and create a real business around this.
I ended up doing it with DNCR now,
but it took me a while to realize the potential
that online content, you can really tap into a community,
like how much power that really has.
I think also too, you know, for me,
LA was an incredible opportunity,
but it was also a huge distraction.
Coming out to Miami and having some downtime and some time to process things, I find that
a lot of ideas have come to me just in having that space.
So I wish I had gotten a little less absorbed in the industry and focused on my instincts
a bit more.
I think like LA, it's so great to meet people
and all that, but yeah, like we were saying earlier,
you can every day be busy, right?
At some event or some networking thing
or hanging out with influencers.
And that's great to meet people and shake hands
and make those connections.
But yeah, some of your biggest breakthroughs are like,
or at least for me, some of the biggest breakthroughs
are when I'm free and I have this million dollar
business idea, you know?
And you don't get that when you're in the weeds,
like either in the business or in your world,
creating the content and networking and the brand deal.
So what about, same question on anything on a personal level,
like more around personal development,
if you could speak to your younger self
from the personal side.
I grew up in a small town, you know,
and when I moved to LA, it was very overwhelming,
you know, as it is for most people,
even if you don't come from a small town.
And just in the past, you know, two years,
I would say I've really reconnected to regular workouts,
meditation, breath work, started this company
Mad Chill based on that idea that, you know, physical work is great but it has to be balanced
with the mental.
And going really hard and grinding for your goals is great but you also have to take care
of your mental health.
And finding a work-life balance, even if it's really heavy on the work
and small on the balance,
it's still important to maintain that.
And like I said in the previous one,
I definitely got lost in the LA craziness a bit.
And now being able to find that balance is huge for me.
It's so important for just ideating and everything.
When you take that minute to just meditate in the morning
or take a breath work class and like calm down.
It's crazy how many things fall into place.
Yeah, yeah, good, good.
And last question, well last couple of questions.
Someone wants to learn to dance.
Where do they go?
Oh man, app.dncr.com.
Come onto the DNCR app.
I still do free tutorials online, on Instagram, and
on YouTube. So, if you want to take something just like quick on YouTube, just look me up.
Everything's Matt Steffanina. But the app is great. We're doing live stream classes
and we're even doing a lot of dance fitness stuff now because I know there's, you know,
everyone's intimidated to dance. I was intimidated to start dancing. I was like, I'm awkward, it's embarrassing.
You know, so a lot of the classes are catered to beginners,
follow along, and I'm working on a special class
for dancing for guys right now too,
which will be out later this year.
Cause I know as a guy, it's even harder sometimes
to get the courage to get on the floor.
Like I was saying earlier,
only time you catch me dancing is under the influence.
But I think what's cool too, like just to finish this episode is you were like started and you were
once awkward, right? It's like now when you watch you dance guys, you know, if you haven't go watch
his videos, you look like a dolphin in the ocean, like flowing like as part of it, right?
That's a great, that's poetic Rudy. I appreciate that.
It's kind of true. Like when I watch your videos, that's poetic, Rudy. I appreciate that. It's kinda true.
Like when I watch your videos,
like you're like blending with the wind or somehow,
you know, so, but it's great
because it shows like anyone can do it, right?
Yeah.
And back to what you were saying about content,
that's even more powerful than the story of,
I was just born a dancer,
my parents put me in it at two years old,
and so often people think that that's something negative,
like I'm not that good, and I'm like, great,
tell people why you're not that good, document that.
Did you ever repost your original
when you were terrible dancer?
Oh yeah, all the time.
Do they go crazy, like comments?
It's the best hook, this used to be me,
and I'm like, you know, look at me now, boom,
and people are like, how did he do that?
It's like, lean into it.
What you think are your weaknesses are often your strengths.
Yeah, love that.
Cool, well guys, that's a wrap.
Hopefully you learned a lot.
We talked a lot about influence,
building the brand, the community,
obviously tips to building a channel going viral
and obviously all your story
and how you've worked through challenges along the way
like we all have.
So hope you're inspired, go check out the dance videos
and I'll see you guys soon.
Keep living the red light.
["Red Light"]