Mick Unplugged - Adora Crystal Evans: From Self-Development to Media Powerhouse and Visionary Leader
Episode Date: May 12, 2025Adora Crystal Evans is a visionary media powerhouse, executive producer, and host who is redefining collaboration and empowerment for women in entrepreneurship. As the mastermind behind the Diva Netwo...rk and host of Dining Divas Texas and Destination Divas TV, Adora champions financial, spiritual, emotional, and physical sovereignty for women—always in partnership with supportive men. With over 20 years in the self-development and media industries, including roles with Napoleon Hill Institute and key events alongside legends like Les Brown, Adora's story is all about strategic alliances, elevating women, and building authentic, joy-centered connections that lead to quantum leaps in personal and professional growth. Takeaways: Strategic alliances and authentic relationships collapse time: Adora reveals the power of forging just a handful of deep, meaningful connections to fast-track growth, both personally and professionally. Empowering women through collaboration, not isolation: Her journey is rooted in elevating women—financially, spiritually, and personally—within supportive networks that also include men as key allies. Leadership evolution comes from service and community: Adora’s leadership philosophy has evolved from individual achievement to amplifying the voices and visions of others, especially as the Diva Network expands to global impact, notably throughout Africa. Sound Bites: “You only need one to four major connections that can really collapse time.” “Mentorship isn’t just what you’re told—it's what you catch from how your mentors show up in the world.” “Being a connected person is about genuinely seeing people—whether you’re in the boardroom or at the grocery store.” Quote by Mick: “As leaders… we’re not teaching people the right thing. And so I personally believe as leaders and also I think for you too, with women, like really mentoring this next generation.” Connect & Discover Adora: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/adorasgroove/?hl=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adora-evans/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/adoracrystalevans/ Website: https://adoracrystal.com/ Book: Majestic Money: The 30-Day Femme Manifesting Game FOLLOW MICK ON:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mickunplugged/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mickunplugged/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@mickunplugged LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mickhunt/Website: https://www.mickhuntofficial.com Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/mick-unplugged/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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the strategic alliances and creating core connections that really will move the needle.
You only need one to four, you know, major connections that can really collapse time.
Welcome to MICK Unplugged, the number one podcast for self-improvement, leadership,
and relentless growth.
No fluff, no filters, just heart-hitting truths, unstoppable strategies, and the mindset shifts
that separate the best from the rest.
Ready to break limits?
Let's go.
Ladies and gentlemen,
welcome to another exciting episode of M.I.C. Unplugged.
And we've got a brilliant person for you today.
She's a media powerhouse,
a champion for women entrepreneurs
and the mastermind behind the Diva Network.
As the executive producer and host of Dining Divas Texas,
we're gonna talk about Dallas in a moment.
And Destination Divas TV. She's redefining collaboration and empowerment in the industry.
She's a visionary. She's empowering. She's innovative. She is. Adora Crystal Evans.
Adora, how are you doing today?
The crowd goes crazy.
And the crowd goes wild, right?
It's always so fun, right? Do you feel that way when people read your bio?
You know, I introduce people how I wish I got introduced.
So I try to give everybody at least a little something,
something for the day.
Well, thank you.
Thank you.
That was fun.
Good stuff.
So we were talking offline when I'm a huge follower
of you on social.
So I need to apologize to you in the world. Adora is a Dallas Cowboys
fan. Die hard. Yes. Well, I would say by blood. I'm not die
hard. Like I was like an excuse. True. It's not. I don't say that
I watch all the games. But if you ask me, Dallas is my team all the way, all day.
Yes.
Okay.
I'll give you that fault.
You can't be perfect everywhere.
You're perfect everywhere else.
That's one fault that you have.
It's okay.
I love it.
I love it.
We'll always have this banter and it'll be awesome.
Probably our story.
There you go.
When you're here next week, I hear.
I am in Dallas next week for a couple of days, so that'll be awesome. Probably our style. There you go. When you're here next week, I hear. I am in Dallas next week for a couple of days,
so that'll be awesome.
I won't go visit the stadium.
You know, a little secret, Adore,
my mom is also a dihier.
Yes, she knows.
So this is just rebellion.
That's all that you're doing.
Okay, I'll let you have that now.
There you go, there you go.
So Adore, before I get into the now,
I want to talk about your because.
That thing that's deeper than your why.
That thing that's like your purpose.
And I know for a lot of people,
your because changes over time.
So if I were to say Adora, right now, 2025,
what's your because?
What's your purpose?
I love this question. I really do. And it's funny, in my 20s, I spent a lot of time wondering
and wanting to make sure I was on the right purpose. I don't know if you remember the
purpose driven life and everything was all about. And in your 20s, I don't know if it
was this way for you, but for me, I was so confused because I was very curious and, but the funny thing is my because hasn't changed.
Even in my twenties, I always wanted to be a part of elevating women financially, spiritually, emotionally, physically,
and sovereignty for women.
And I always saw that in collaboration with men.
So it wasn't sort of the feminist type of movement,
nothing wrong with, I think everyone holds their mantle
and it's beautiful.
But even at 17, I was saying some version of that. And I just had it in
different packages. Maybe it looks like this. Now it looks like this. So I've there's a
through line for me. And now at 46, I look back and can go, Wow, I was saying it at 17.
I was saying another version every year that that hasn't changed. So it's really nice to be at an age where I go, I'm right in.
I'm right in the center of where I'm meant to be.
There you go.
And not a moment older than 26.
I'll take it.
Listen.
So tying in your because and your purpose, right?
So you were founder, creator of the Diva Network.
Tell me about how that came along.
A lot of times, we have ideas.
We have thoughts.
And a lot of times, we put one foot in front of the other,
and then something happens, and that idea goes away,
and we start working on something else.
But you kind of redefined resiliency in starting the network.
So tell us a little bit about the purpose of the network and more importantly,
how did it become an actual thing versus just the idea?
Yeah, I love that. So first of all, 20 something years in self development.
And so I was one of the first Napoleon Hill certified leaders.
I had spent a lot of years in different ways
working in that industry.
And I kept happening into media.
So 23 years old, I read Think and Grow Rich.
It was a breakdown moment in my life
that those breakdowns to breakthroughs everyone
talks about or lots of people talk about.
And Napoleon Hill had interviewed all these successful people.
So one of the many things that I wrote down was that I wanted to interview successful
people because that seemed to work out for him, but I wanted to be paid for it.
And so at 23, without even finishing the book, I went from working in a nightclub to producer
for Pat Sumerall Productions on the Discovery Channel, where I was interviewing CEOs who
were revenue 10 million or more as part of my process of producing a show.
I wasn't even done with the book yet.
So I really, that only strengthened my belief in what's possible when we get an idea in
our, or we're exposed to new information that unlocks something.
And that was such a quantum leap for me.
I literally could not believe, but I could, but I couldn't believe where I was
sitting and what I was doing and how it happened that because I didn't go apply.
Someone called me and said, hey, there's a job ad in my 20s.
It'll help you. I trusted that person.
I had no idea.
I just got an Ann Taylor suit, tried to look older than I was, you know, be very mature, pass
the psychology test. Then I found out and landed in what I had written in my vision
board. And so that kept happening to me. So what I learned there opened I was already
a connector. So there are
a lot of connectors. I don't know, do you feel like you're a connector? I feel like you're a connector.
There are a lot of connectors in the world, but that job specifically gave me
the ability to speak to very high level, busy people in a succinct way to understand how to deliver
a win-win message fast. Because with CEOs, you have to deliver it fast. And that skill
set, set up what I did the rest of it. Like I became not just a connector, but really able to connect at every level.
So the highest levels when I need to.
And so that kept opening these different doors.
But I kept happening in the media.
I ended up in 2006.
Do you remember when the peace signs came out again?
Yeah. OK, so I worked with the designer who we were the reason that happened.
We dress Cher, Katy Perry, Rihanna. Yeah. And I, even then my celebrities were the authors. Like
I could name off the author of almost any book, but half the celebrities we were dressing,
I was looking them up and I was there for the peace signs and the global movement and the glorious fashion and all of that.
Again, that was a moment where I happened into media.
I helped with the movie, The Secret,
brought a couple of those people in there.
I was a senior writer for Fashion and Art Magazine in Egypt.
But in the pockets between, I was doing like with the,
there's a woman, Elaine Hendricksrix who was the stepmom and parent trap.
You remember she gets lizard. She's been a bunch of other things. But she and I had a company in LA before the peace signs.
Girls Gone Gorgeous Beauty Inside Out. Right. So I was so I was always doing this in between. So even when I was in media, my vision was one day I'm
gonna help all these women the way that I've been helped by the
authors, speakers, teachers, and I'm, you know, I just always
had this vision. So speed it up. I'm working as president of the
Napoleon Hill Institute.
I had already produced events with Les Brown.
Him and I did an event in Atlanta together.
I had worked with, I did a Think and Grow Rich tour
with Brian Tracy, Les Brown, Bob Proctor,
all the legacy names.
Actually, Bob was on the new the legacy names. Bob was on the
new psychology of winning. He already passed away by
thinking grow rich, excuse me for that. So thinking grow rich
tour. I realized, wow, I have all these legends and waymakers
in the industry, all men over 70. You know, like they're my incredible mentors,
but I need, where are the women on this?
I need more women.
So I was introduced to Christine Curran,
which I need to say by then I'd already written a book,
Majestic Money, The 30 Day Femme Manifesting Game,
The Rich Queen Movement, all this stuff.
But now I'm the president of Napoleon Hill Institute
doing these events. Christine and I fall in love online in front of everyone on this virtual
event. Six, eight weeks later, we did a Think and Grow Rich mastermind in St. Lucia. And
we filmed it. That kicked off destination divas, where once a
year we would do a mastermind. And for me, mix still, it was my
fun thing, my glitter party, my, but over here was very serious
about the transformation of the planet with and I and I was
making the right moves. It was with the right people, with the biggest brands, you know?
And the divas started,
because we were doing these masterminds,
Christine started elevating
what she expected out of her cast.
She wanted them to participate in self-development.
We created an old gossip policy.
We started, and the divas that started coming in
wanted more self-development in between.
And so Christine said,
why don't you start your women's empowerment movement
over here?
And at first I was like,
that's my fun glitter party thing.
I'm already on, you know what I'm already doing,
these big things.
But as I kept experiencing,
when I would get with the women,
the quantum leaps that were happening
because we move different.
We're on set in some of the most serious moments
and the way we break tension, someone starts dancing
and then everybody's dancing and then boom, we're reset.
Or we're, oh, I love your hair.
We're built different.
And so what happened out of that joy is the base
with very driven entrepreneurial women, sitting
with some of the greatest entrepreneurial minds and business owners on our TV show is
that we all started experiencing quantum leaps and like never before. All very connected
women doing things, but it just, and I really believe it's because of the joy at the center,
because we were in an environment that is built for women by women, you know? And so,
I know I've given you a lot there. I could land the plane, but is there anything you want to say
or ask before? Yes.
So we're going to unpack and unplug a lot in there because here's what I've heard you say it several times.
You've referenced it several times about leading.
Here's what Adora is not going to say about herself.
So I'm going to say it for her.
Adora is one of the top five leaders in the world,
and I truly mean that, from my soul.
So Adora, with you in leadership,
was there like a pivotal moment in your career
that kind of shaped your approach to leadership?
Because like, I know I have had that moment,
but I love to hear like,
what was that moment for you that's like,
ah, I get it now?
You know, I think there have been lots of mini moments, but
I can tell you there right now I'm in the center of a whole new
leadership leaf leaf. And part of that is as I cast this vision
with the Diva Network, which the Diva Network for us is a community
where people can get connected and acts driven, inspiring, visionary, authentic leaders get
connected to the right people, ideas, resources, collaborations that will have their vision not only be birthed, but
live and thrive and collapse time. Right. And I believe that when we get behind visionary
leaders, every person, God's given them a vision for certain people, for children, for tribes, for babies, for marriages, for sex lives, for, I mean,
people for art, for people have visions for the world. And then when we get behind that,
we're taking care of the world, we create a ripple of effect. And so what I've realized,
because we're global now, and we're going into the continent of Africa.
Let me give you that. So isn't that, I'm going to tell you, Mike, this has been kind of crazy
because Texas, Florida, California, as the main shows in a country where we say for English press
one, for Spanish press two, you would think Latin America and the Latin market is where we're going next.
It's where we're going third. But what happened is as we opened the Diva Network and started bringing people in,
in our room of 30, initially, a third of the room, people had never met each other before, were all from Africa, doing something major in Africa,
or had a heart for Africa. So they started saying, let's take this to Africa. We're ready to go to
Africa, right? And so by community, it got, we went into Africa first. And very quickly,
first and very quickly, just in the pre conversation, I realized, even though it's my vision that we impact the world and it moves me to tears, it moves me greatly that we have the opportunity
to go there and to experience and elevation and sisterhood and all that. I realized very quickly that movement had to be led
by African women who know what is going on,
what the narrative is, what is needed.
And then we, me, I'm the supporting role
and the sisters here and the men who support us,
we support that. And so our first meeting with
71 influential people on the call from the continent of Africa, everywhere from South
Africa, Ghana, Zimbabwe, like all over, we had two African women open it. I went in the
middle, two African women, and they sang this anthem that's really known
in South, they taught me Ubuntu. Yeah, it was just chills on chills on chills and it really was like
less of me, that's how I feel more of this. And so leadership for me now is how it's it was always about my story to help
other people's stories unlock theirs. But now it's more how do I unlock and position
well other leaders in a shared vision, because we're all dreaming this dream in a different way of a better world for our children,
of safety, of freedom, of collaboration,
of economy, of thriving, of expression.
And so this next leap for me is, it's already happening,
but it's gotta go even further than I've ever gone
in really just positioning leaders very well.
And then driving the vision, but also hearing well the collective vision, you know, it's
more community and group brain than, than like the lot of years before. A lot of people go through this
where you get your story together and you share it
and then there are lines of people going,
me too, me too, me too.
And that was profound.
But where it is for me now is her story,
her story, his story, right?
More of that, more than ever in my life
and more listening, Which is interesting.
I love it. I love that completely. You know, and the second thing that you talked about
is the power of mentorship. Right? So like for me, you mentioned Les Brown. Les Brown
is one of my mentors. I talked to Les five times a day.
Literally, he just sent me a text right now.
I love him.
I love him.
Yeah, Les and I spend a bunch of time together.
So can you discuss the role of mentorship in your journey
and its importance in empowering women
and also empowering leaders?
Because I personally think this is where our society is missing the mark.
There's a lot of business mentors,
there's a lot of influencer mentors.
If you're not making a 100 grand a month,
I can show you how to do that.
If you're not doing, that's all great,
but we're not teaching people the right thing.
I personally believe as leaders,
and also I think for you too, with women,
like really mentoring this next generation,
but I'd love to hear your take on that.
Well, I love that you talked to Les so much
and that you present the different types of mentorship
in the way that it's offered.
And I wanna talk both to men and women, as you said, my top mentors,
many of them have been men, amazing men that opened doors for me, showed me
ways of communicating, showed me things that, that I could apply and quantum leap in life. Right. So and a mentor
really is the most important thing. One thing that I love Jim Rohn said it. I remember being
18 in a boarded up home with no electricity and on a Walkman radio, battery operated.
I heard Jim Rohn say, get a mentor.
And he said, if you cannot find one, the library is full of them.
And you can go for free.
And now we live in a world that podcasts online, live, all of that.
And that can be confusing when there are so many
peeps so many options so a real mentor when you're with them it's not just what they're going to tell
you and what they the advice that they give or the book that they wrote it is what you catch
or the book that they wrote, it is what you catch in their way of being when they're not thinking necessarily about what they're passing on to you, if that makes sense.
So Dennis Waitley, one of my, he's like a dad to me, was a mentor to Les, even, that's
how we met Les. less. There, there are so many books, and he is very well known
to the people he's known to. But what has impacted me most over
the years about Dennis is his consistent year after year, day
after day, showing up kind, and really being kind to people even
Les Brown had a story of being nine years old and giving his first speech.
And, you know, this guy going crazy and he couldn't see and it was Dennis standing ovation,
you know, just started the roaring ovation.
So you know, mentorship is more what you catch in the relationship and who they are
between the lines as much as what they can tell you to collapse time and to open doors.
And it is one of the most important.
You become who you hang out with.
So you always want people that are further and farther along and that represent where
you want to be. Because if you're just hanging out with people at your level, you're going
to stagnate. There's maybe you get you get to be the duck that's a little higher, the
goose that's a little higher, but it's always going to be at a certain standard. So mentorship 100%. Now with the Diva Network, what I've realized is
that I didn't anticipate, Mick, is that I knew we would impact men through because we're women
that love our husbands, our children, our business partners, our babies. What I didn't anticipate is
when men would come into our environment, just like we got the privilege of going,
I got the privilege of stepping into a business structure
created by wonderful men.
Until one day I was sitting, you know the mad stump man,
he's saying, I like to move it, move it.
You're all right, okay.
So he was on a Diva Network call.
He's written a song for us, by the way,
I'll have to send it to you, the Diva.
Yeah, it's very cool.
But he was on a call and he started crying.
And then I could see in the zoom, you know, you see those some some like,
Sean is here and he started crying here.
Jimmy started crying here.
And I have no intention to like, hey, I'm gonna make you cry.
Right. Yeah.
But what it what it is, is that when healthy men come into our environment, one impact seems to
be they get connection to their heart or to their vulnerability.
And there are other ways we're impacting too, but that's been very cool.
So I want to take mentorship a step further.
Another place you were going earlier and
Again, a door is not gonna give herself credit. So, you know, I said she's one of the top five leaders
I know she is one of the top two
Connectors that I know her and Damon John I think are the two greatest connectors that we have on earth
So a door for the listeners and viewers,
how important is networking
and fostering strategic partnerships?
Because again, I think that's also something that's missing
because it's real easy to grab your phone
and do things on social media.
But getting to know real people will never get old.
Yeah, it's so true.
So for me, community and relationship
is the most important investment of our time.
When you get to the end of your life,
I've been told by my guys that
are 92 7880 and they're looking what they say peering down the
hallway and their friends that have passed on when it there
four or five people that you very likely will want around you.
And that's about it. Right? So the relationships that we invest in,
that is always gonna be, when it comes down to it,
the most valuable thing.
When you think of your best moments,
even if it was achieving some kind of award
or doing something, there was someone looking at you
and you were receiving something from them
and that mattered mattered or it meant
something someone you impacted some contribution you made and you were seen by someone that you
wanted to be seen by so and then when you look at you know here in the US we went through
wildfires unexpected in LA we went through a president. We've seen all kinds of things happen
globally. Whether it's fires, and we saw celebrities like Mel Gibson lose every, you know,
normal people. In that moment, it's going to be a person, a relationship that says come stay at my
house. Here's where the water is here. So it doesn't matter if it's disastrous or
it's exciting. Like AI is coming. Let me show you a better
way to use chat GPT. Let me show you where the money is flowing
in the marketplace right now. Let me tell you why you want to
be online, right? Or whatever club, it's going to be a person that tells
you that it's going to be a relationship that gives you the fast track to that. So relationships
matter so much. But one thing that I think is really important is a lot of times people
think, okay, as a connector, you certain connectors, they're awesome at acknowledging everybody's birthday and sending out postcards and gifts.
But even if you are being a connected person,
so meaning present, you're in the grocery store,
eye contact, acknowledging the human being
that's feet are probably pounding
because all day they've been swiping
and they've got whatever,
fruit juice, meat juice on their hands, you know what I mean? And they're serving. And
I know there's less of that now. We can serve ourselves at those checkouts. But the eye
contact, if you just notice what happens when you make eye contact with someone and they sometimes
I've seen people get startled. They're in this sort of like, hey, and then I look at
them and say, hey, and they're like, it's almost like, Whoa, you see, like, hi, how
it could be as simple as busy today, happy to be, and just that connection is life. So, so
first of all, being a connected to your life and reality person,
and the moment that you're in and the humans that are in your
life, taking that moment and maximizing that will go very
far. And I, you know, I gave the example of the peace signs,
or the PN.
That woman, when I walked into her studio,
I was not looking for a job.
I didn't even know she was sitting there.
I was going wild over the designs on the phone.
Someone was late.
She takes down her glasses.
Hey, sit down.
I haven't heard someone talk about my designs like that in a while, right?
And we connected.
So being a connected human, first of all, is huge.
But then to the strategic alliances and creating core connections that really will move the
needle, you only need one to four, you know, major
connections that can really
collapse time and being able to move your vision, your life forward.
So I know I went down a tangent different than you, than we started,
but it's a way of being first that will give you a better quality of life
anywhere. And sometimes you're in rooms and you don't know who's looking at you. You like
that designer. I didn't even know, but because I was being connected, we connected and it created this whole new leap. So you can have the right
strategy, the right script. And if you're a connected person, then when someone meets
you and they like you and we like each other, Mike, I already like you, you've hyped me
up so much, right? And I like your energy is soft. It's fun. We have our Cowboys banter.
We've got our stuff going. When you like someone, then you want to know, what are you up to? How
can we play together? What can we do? Right? Like what? So that's why I'm saying be a connected
person first. It's not something you, people feel it when you flip on to agenda. Like, oh, I have a target, and I know what I want
from you. And it feels a certain way. So but then, yeah, networking is the number one, everything I do
everything major, that is in collaboration and connection, anybody who looks back and go, oh,
yeah, that was a collaborate, like right now, Diva network is a collaboration with dining empire.
We have a collaboration with Napoleon Hill things coming out. You know,
it's, it's just a fast path and it's right now is the fastest way.
So there used to be a phrase,
I don't know if you ever heard this make where they say, if you want to go fast,
to be a phrase I don't know if you ever heard this make where they say if you want to go fast, go alone. And if you want to go
far, go together, go together. Yeah, I've heard that. But I
think in today's day, if you want to go fast, or you want to
go far, you go together. Mm hmm. It's true. I mean, you just it
collapses time you bring your resources. I bring mine
You've everything's lighter. The load is easier
everybody wins
It's just it's the way in any economy to to move faster. It's why you see Starbucks
collaborating with Target, it's why
You know box collaborating with Target. It's why, you know, Oprah with Weight Watchers,
you know, what, you know, you see it happen a lot.
No, totally agree, totally agree.
So let's talk a little bit briefly
on the Dining Divas TV.
So talk to us a little bit about that,
what you've got going on there.
And most importantly,
cause I talked to Christine about it,
when does Mick get his own show?
You know, I've got a smoker,
I've got a flat top, you know, guys who smoke,
sounds like a good show to me.
I think that's a great, I love,
I love smoked food, by the way.
I really do. Yes.
Yeah, so I think that's a great show.
Christine's in charge and Fubu TV,
but you know, we've got the opportunity.
So are you far down that track?
Hey, we're gonna talk about it.
I think.
I need you to nudge her for me.
I will, I will nudge her.
I will nudge her.
You may have to wear a Cowboys jersey.
Then I'm not gonna have the show. You know, contract negotiations
ended that quick.
That quick.
Okay, Mick, one more. Not on the show. Would you wear it on any
occasion?
So I got a custom made one. I took my mom last year for her 65th birthday.
We went to Cowboys game, the home opener.
So I got a custom Jersey that I have not worn since then.
And I never will.
You got me one time.
You missed me last year, Adora.
Okay.
Well, dang it.
All right.
Well, the show is not contingent on that.
I just wanted to see what your buy point was.
You know, some people hold,
like have a really strong and some are like,
whatever, I'll put it on.
So that's fun.
I know you're-
So you wear a Patriots jersey.
I'll consider wearing a Cowboy's jersey.
Oh, you'll consider.
I'm not doing it for consideration.
It has to be a swap swap.
Then it represents world peace.
I mean, it could be leading by going first. I'm
not gonna do it there. I don't see I don't even know who my favorite cowboy would be to wear a
non custom jersey. Like I don't know. I could wear a custom jersey. I'll wear a custom Cowboys jersey.
Okay. Okay. And my name on the back will be Adora made me do it.
Okay. Okay. And my name on the back will be Adora Made Me Do It. I love that. There we go. I love that. It's awesome. Yeah. So Dining Divas, you want to know about the
collection of shows that we have as well. So it's been really cool because when we first started,
Christine had Dining Divas, the original show out of Florida.
And she has received lots of awards from mayors and different for what she brought to the
hospitality industry there.
And then Destination Divas kicked off where we started going to different destinations.
And that is a total blast.
Columbia was one of my favorites.
New York, we've had so many great experiences.
But you haven't been to the Carolinas, my feelings are hurt, but whatever.
Well, that's because you didn't invite us properly.
So the destination ones have been really, really fun.
Those went on travel channel.
And then like I told you, things started really expanding as we were growing and expanding.
So before it was we TV and travel channel.
Now we have the partnership with Fubu TV for For Us, Bias TV, and then we're going on to
Google, Apple, Prime, Roku, all of that.
And we have Dining Divas Texas, the Florida original, California, New York, and destinations. And so each show has its own flair, you know, because there are
different leaders and they're amplifying different parts. I look at the Texas as its own character.
And so I really agree. I really it is right. And so even though Texas is vast and you can find anything you want here like most states nowadays
I really play we really play up in Texas
I'm wearing more cowboy hats and boots than I've worn in my whole life
We're playing up some of the values like faith
family
veterans
American-made, you know, even though we could go all over the place,
I just think Texas is a great state
to represent those kinds of things.
So in our episodes, we've had lots of, you know,
good old country boys and women and prayers.
And we went to one vineyard where they sing
the national anthem before they
you know have their concert at night. So again there's a lot more than that available in
Texas but because I don't know of a better state to represent that part of faith, family, veterans. I'm just really leaning heavy on it.
And California is a different vibe.
Miami is a different vibe.
Destination Diva is a different vibe.
What's always in common is the host are business women
or they have a nonprofit, they're driven women.
And we're showing the best nonprofit, they're driven women.
And we're showing the best of, you know, the best of Texas.
So it though there's always a great food scene or for usually some dancing.
Sometimes, you know, the experiences are different, whether it's a helicopter ride,
horseback riding, but med spas, that kind of thing. And then we always get to talk with the owners
and the creators, how'd you create this?
And really tell the story of, like you,
you're bringing out my story,
bring out other people's stories.
Really, we're in a world where, for me,
it's really important to align with brands and the brands
are built by people that have some core values.
And I want to flow my energy and exchange my energy, including my money and what I wear
and with brands that I align with.
So it's fun to tell the stories.
I love it.
I love it. I love it.
So I'm gonna put you in the hot chair,
ask you a couple of rapid fire questions.
Let me sit up.
Let me hydrate for my jar.
Hold on.
Let's go from the Mason jar.
The Mason jar like my grandma.
Let's go.
All right.
You ready?
I'm ready.
Can Adora cook?
Oh, select.
Yes, I can cook.
Do I cook a lot?
Okay.
No, but can I cook?
Yes.
All right, so when Adora cooks,
what's your go-to meal that you're cooking?
Like when I come over, what you're making?
Oh, well, hopefully I'd have a conversation with you first,
but my go-to favorite, it's gonna sound weird,
it's sweet potato lasagna.
Right?
Which is why I would talk to you first.
Yeah.
Yeah, sounds interesting.
Surprised.
Sounds confusing,
and somewhat sounds like it could be a good thing.
It's delicious.
My 14-year-old daughter, very favorite thing, and she's a very picky eater? It's delicious. My 14 year old daughter, very favorite thing.
And she's a very picky eater.
It's delicious, but it's different.
And some people can't get over their eating sweet potatoes,
but most people love it or they like it.
And I think they love it.
Does Dora like barbecue?
Barbecue is my second favorite food.
What's your favorite?
Middle Eastern food. Mediterranean. I love the veggies, you know, all the veggie options.
I eat meat either, but I love great vegetables.
And so Middle Eastern people do that, right?
Cool.
So my follow up to barbecue then, because only you can answer this question, because
I know you're going to tell me the truth.
You ready? Yes.
What region has the most overrated barbecue
and why is it Texas?
Oh, it is not Texas.
It is not Texas.
Texas is not, it is not overrated.
We have the best barbecue because we do it a lot.
We do it all the time.
We have a lot of cattle.
Just because you do beef. Okay. you do beef ribs. Okay, so
what?
Brisket.
Everybody does brisket. You just talk about it more.
No, I've had brisket in other places. And I've had some I've
had some okay, but the sauce, how tender it is.
See, folks like me will tell you when you have to oversauce the
meat, your barbecue skills ain't all that strong. Just gonna
throw it out there.
Texas. Okay, talking to you.
It's on the side, but I love the different flavors.
No, I'm talking to all the Texas I know. Have you had a
brisket? baked potato? Like the baked potato with a shy brisket
on topsy? Then I don't know what you're doing. Go ahead.
It's because I don't like brisket, but it's okay. Okay.
Okay. That's okay. Okay. Where do you think the barbecue is
before you throw this next question at me?
The Carolinas all day long.
Why?
All day.
Why?
Because we do it right.
We understand how to smoke correctly.
We understand that you don't need a ton of sauce
that is all in the rub, right?
We do things right in the Carolinas.
We'll see.
We'll see when you have your show, come check it out.
Yeah, we're gonna have a battle of the regions and it's going to be us versus Tech
TV.
And I know a couple of barbecue people here that are really about it.
So that would be great to smoke out.
We'll see.
We'll see what happens.
We'll see.
We'll see what happens.
Now, if you could leave the listeners and viewers with one tip on self-improvement, leadership, whatever
it is, the floor is yours.
What's the one tip you're going to leave everybody with today?
Well, number one was given to me by Tony Robbins, which is that constant and never-ending improvement
committing to that. That is, wave on wave, I am so grateful that 20
something year old version of me committed to that is when you're
committed to growth and development and really growth,
which means you've got to get in different rooms, you got to get
around different people, you got to find different mentors, you
got to question who you've been, because no matter how great it is,
this is the end, unless you, in order to go to a new level,
or the next version of you, have to leave behind
a lot of the greatness that represents what you are now
to move to that next level.
So growth is addictive once you start catching that vibe,
but it gives back in legacy.
It gives back in your children having a different life
and your life being different, better, greater quality.
So that's it.
Commit to constant never ending improvement.
Amazing answer.
Adora, I know you're so busy and you took time out of your day to bless us with
your time, your presence, so I can't thank you enough for that. Where can people
find and follow you? Oh, on social, Adora's Groove on Instagram. I love to
dance, always have. So Adora's Groove is that Instagram we have diva all the diva connections
are in there from diva network to the Texas show to the
Florida show you can find there.
Join the upcoming Carolina show.
Yep. What show? The Carolina show. Yeah, all in there. Also join the divas.com is a great
place I can join for you to come check out. Being in our community every Tuesday, we have
a speaker sharing something for elevating your ability to connect, get ahead in business. I love it. I love it. Adora, you're the greatest.
You really, really are. I appreciate you. I appreciate
we could just get you a better football team and better
barbecue, you would be almost perfect.
There's always a new place to go. You know, we can agree to
disagree on that. I know when you're eating barbecue,
barbecue in your jersey that says the door made me do it
and it's Cowboys star that we'll both have a shared moment.
But in the meantime, this represents world peace, right?
We can agree to disagree.
Mick, thank you.
I just wanna thank you so much for having me on today, for being a person that really,
one, you made me feel really welcome, at ease, and connected.
And I know the level of work that you're up to and how you're impacting people and investing
your own time, not just for me today, but for your listeners.
And I know that comes
from a heart of contribution and service. And it's awesome. And so thank you.
Thank you so much. And for all the viewers and listeners, remember your because is your
superpower. Go unleash it. Go unleash it.
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of Mick Unplugged. If today hits you hard, then imagine and I'm gonna be the one to
waiting for you. Have a question or insight to share? Send us an email to hello at mcunplugged.com.
Until next time, ask yourself how you can step up.