Mick Unplugged - Beyond Comfort: Personal Growth and Brand Authority with Ty Schmidt
Episode Date: February 20, 2026Ty Schmidt is a force of nature, a dynamic storyteller, and a branding guru who transforms individual narratives into powerful connections. With a background rooted in journalism and a deeply... personal journey of overcoming adversity, Ty passionately empowers leaders and entrepreneurs to authentically build their brand by tapping into the heart of their story. Her mission extends beyond business, aiming to inspire growth, purpose, and impact, making her a beacon for anyone striving to live and lead with intention.Takeaways:Storytelling as Branding: Effective branding is fundamentally about authentic storytelling, not just advertising, creating a deeper connection with your audience.The Power of "Because": Understanding your personal "because"—your deepest motivations and experiences—is crucial for defining your purpose and driving your impact.Serve Before You Sell: Prioritizing service and providing genuine value to your audience builds trust and natural sales flow from that authentic connection.Leadership Branding: For C-suite and business leaders, personal branding is essential because people follow people, not just companies, demanding authenticity and vulnerability.Just Start: The biggest barrier to developing a personal brand is often the fear of not knowing where to start; simply begin, be yourself, and don't be afraid to ask for help.Sound Bytes:"Storytelling is at the soul of branding to me and that's really how, you know, it goes way back with the journalism, you know, the journalism interest.""You're making it too much about you. A lot of people make it too much about them and their pain and their story.""The most important thing they can do is just start and not be afraid to mess it up and not be afraid to fail and not be afraid to really just be themselves because people will sniff out the not themselves real quick these days."Connect & Discover Ty:Instagram: @littlebigmediamkeLinkedIn: @ty-schmidtFacebook: @ty.schmidtTikTok: @tyschmidttyBook: Triumphs of TransformationPodcast: Quick Before You Forget🔥 Ready to Unleash Your Inner Game-Changer? 🔥 Mick Hunt’s BEST SELLING book, How to Be a Good Leader When You’ve Never Had One: The Blueprint for Modern Leadership, is here to light a fire under your ambition and arm you with the real-talk strategies that only Mick delivers. 👉 Grab your copy now and level up your life → Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books A Million FOLLOW MICK ON:Spotify: MickUnpluggedInstagram: @mickunplugged Facebook: @mickunpluggedYouTube: @MickUnpluggedPodcast LinkedIn: @mickhunt Website: MickHuntOfficial.comWebsite: howtobeagoodleader.comWebsite: Leadloudseries.comApple: MickUnpluggedSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody. Really excited to bring you this episode with my good friend, Ty Schmidt.
Ty and I actually met on Instagram.
Like, she reached out to me, hit me up, and she is one of the best brand experts in the business.
So if your social media is struggling, if your storytelling is struggling, this episode is for you.
But we start out really personal.
We talk about, you know, Ty overcoming some things in her life and moving forward with a lot of things in her life.
You talk about her love for roller coasters that started as a fear.
but she's going to give you a lot of really cool tips to enhance your leadership brand,
why you should be focused on your brand in general.
Ladies and gentlemen, I present my really good friend, Ty Schmidt.
You're listening to Mick Unplugged, hosted by the one and only Mick Hunt.
This is where purpose meets power and stories spark transformation.
Mick takes you beyond the motivation and into meaning,
helping you discover your because and becoming unstoppable.
I'm Rudy Rush, and trust me, you're in the right place.
Let's get unplugged.
You know what?
I am so grateful to be here.
Thank you for that kind intro.
I'm the honored one.
I'm the honor.
You know, like, a lot of times on LinkedIn, I don't accept every request.
I don't even look at things.
You came across, I mean, this was months ago.
And then I go look at your bio.
and then I'm listening to your content and watching your content.
And I was like, oh, I need to learn from Ty.
So, Ty, like, I've been implementing a lot of the things that you talk about
just in my overall strategy of brand to brand development and visibility.
Where did that come from?
When did you know that that was who you were destined to be?
Wow.
What a good question.
Well, you know, I honestly, it goes back to storytelling.
I was a reporter for the local news.
And I was a reporter for a national teen magazine written four teens by teens in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, called Gumbo Teen Magazine back in the early 2000s. It was such a fun experience. And I got to meet and learn from some amazing humans who taught me so much through their stories. And through the, through the process and over time, I realized how much we can all learn and grow from each other stories.
So, you know, when I think about branding, I really think of it more as storytelling.
And, you know, I've tried to integrate that into my social media, which is why it's really
special to me that you recognize that because I actually purposely and intentionally leave
different parts of my story in different places. Because what reason is there for people to follow
you in all the places if you're not giving them something a little different in each of the
places. So storytelling is at the soul of branding to me. And that's, that's really how, you know,
it goes way back with the, with the journalism, you know, the journalism interest. Yeah. And I think
what, what initially drew me to you was one of the storytelling, but just how after watching a
few pieces of your content, like I felt like I knew tie. And by that meaning I genuinely knew you,
right? Like, like maybe not the person that you were.
I don't mean this the wrong way,
but the person you were trying to put out there in content,
because you know a lot of times, right?
Like, even myself, like sometimes,
it's like, I don't want you to know everything about me,
so I'm going to give you this, right?
I felt like I genuinely knew who Tye was,
what your core values were,
what family means to you,
and just all the things,
and you were not necessarily trying to do that in your content,
but that's what drew me to you.
And because I know more about you
than probably I, than most people that I follow on social media because I interact with you and all that jazz.
I love for you to tell us what's your because.
Like, what's that thing that's deeper than your why?
Like, and I'll tell you, she's going to answer it.
But if you just go look at her Instagram, you're going to figure out, you're going to see her because because she lives at it in a day every day.
But for us that are listening and watching, Tyler, what's your because?
Thank you for that question. It's a very honestly soulful and layered question for me. So I ask for your patience as I've given it some thought. As a fan of yours, I had a feeling that I would be working through this because you are the king of purpose and understanding and getting to know your purpose. So thank you for the opportunity to answer a bit lengthy. So when I think about my because it's kind of something that's evolved over time and the
common thread is people and helping, helping people. So my because started with wanting to help my dad.
He had bipolar disorder and I went to school to be a counselor so that I could help people like him
because his doctors didn't end up helping him. And he ultimately went to heaven early in 2009 by his
choice in a choice that my mom and my sister and I were left to figure out the why. And when that
happened, I was actually studying to get my master's degree in clinical psychology to do the thing,
to help the people. And I told more than one person that, you know, when that happened, I said,
I'm not, and there's no way. There's no way I'm going to finish this degree. There's no way I can
actually help people. This is too hard. And when you are as optimistic and bright and happy and
sunny as I am just naturally, it was very hard to feel so dark and so down and so depressed.
And working through that, I didn't cope well.
I turned to alcohol and it nearly killed me.
And I gave up alcohol when I became a mom.
And that's the first layer of my because or my why, because my boys have, I always wanted
to be a girl mom and God had other plans.
So he gave me these two boys who are rucketka.
and loud and of not like they're they're crazy and I love every every bit of being their mom
but they've taught me so much and the biggest and most important thing that they've taught me is
how important it is to really go just go outside your comfort zone because growth happens
outside your comfort zone and one of the ways that they've taught me that is through roller coasters
we we I was not a roller coaster person and somehow I found myself on roller coasters I was
I've ridden 50, 50 roller coasters in two years.
And I've learned a lot.
That's the whole sidebar of its own.
But the first part of my Y is my voice.
And the second part comes into play where, you know,
things got rough during COVID again.
And I made bad decisions again.
And I landed myself in the transplant ICU for 16 days.
At the age of 35 years old,
I was told that I would need a liver transplant and that I was probably,
I probably had cirrhosis.
That was hard.
You talk about a wake-up call.
That was a wake-up call.
And also very much the second part of my why or my because.
Because I am very grateful and I get kind of emotional talking about it,
but I'm very grateful and happy to report that after a lot of hard work,
a lot of God's work, a lot of inner work and all of that,
I now have a healthy normal liver.
And my doctors call me a miracle.
And they call me that, you know, I see that as a calling.
I see that as like a purpose.
I see that as a how God has given me the second chance.
And I am here to do something with it.
I want to empower people to build their unreal life from the ground up using tools like
music, mindset and movement to build their unreal life.
from the ground up so that they can remember who they are while they're building who they're
becoming. I want to listen. I want to serve. And I want to be Matthew 5 or 16. I want to be
the light. And that that is my full full circle because. Simply amazing. Simply amazing. And
there's so much of just that and that story that I want to unpack and unplug a little bit.
So, you know, talking about you going to college and majoring in something specifically to help your father.
What was not to go into the deep memory bank, but talk to us about, you know, what that's like as a child to see a void.
And then to want to go help, you know, complete that void or solve that void.
Like talk to us through that decision process and what that was like.
for you growing up? Well, my childhood was a lot of fun. We had a lot of really good times,
but we lacked stability. And, you know, that remains something that I continue to work on because
the lack of stability led to a lot of just kind of chaos and the inability to find your footing
and, you know, just kind of uncertainty knowing because, you know, when you have bipolar,
it's really, really, really, really good or it's really, really, really bad.
And we had a lot of both.
And, you know, figuring out that I truly and sincerely wanted to help people like my dad,
you know, it wasn't even like I thought about it that much.
It just felt, again, almost like a calling.
Like, I just felt like, you know, this empathy for him,
but also for everybody that has something.
heavy or has something that they're carrying behind the scenes because breaking news, everybody does,
right? Like everybody and every family and every single situation that you come across, you know,
I think I saw Jay Shetty had a clip on his social the other day with some people like walking in the
road and, you know, the little, the words above them like got laid off today, got in a car crash,
going to visit their grandma in the hospital, you know, like you never really know what a person is
going through. So, you know, figuring out that I wanted to bring some level of stability and clarity
for the people that are struggling, it just seemed obvious. Like, it seemed like, well, this is what I'm
supposed to do. But then I recognize the fact that I am also very, very empathetic. And my concern
with deciding to do counseling and be a therapist right away after everything that happened with my dad was
that I did I knew I couldn't leave it at the office. I knew I would take it home with me and that that's
something that I you know actively decided then to not pursue even though now you know a few years
later I'm thinking well gee maybe I should go back to school maybe I should get that 3,000
hours of you know supervised service to people because you know just it feels it feels like it
might be right but I think I think that answered your question I'm not I'm not sure no no no it
totally did. It totally did. And so then the next part that I want to like unpacking and kind of
start to parallel is psychology, right, doesn't equal brand development, brand building.
So when did little big media, like when did that become a thought process as you're going
from all the things that you've overcome personally, from?
your father, from your personal, all the great things that you've done. When did little big media?
When did that become like a focal point? Well, I would argue that psychology plays much more
role in branding than we think. And I'm good with that. I think I think it does. I think
that psychology and branding go hand in hand because you think about branding as a as a as
as one of your tools and your tool about marketing. And marketing is very heavily based in psychology.
So I decided to do and to pursue little big media as a relatively intentional career pivot.
So I loved my job as a newspaper reporter. I loved my job at the magazine. And I recognized very
early on that just as papers like newspapers get smaller and thinner, it means there's less people
working there. So I decided to pivot. How can I tell story? How can I continue to offer a platform
and be a storyteller in this emerging world? And that happened through Little Big Media. So I started
Little Big, and it's named after my little and my big, my sons. That's what it's, that's what it's
named after. And I started it in an era, right, the day after I accepted an award from the Wisconsin,
I think my goodness, I'm going to mess this up, but the Wisconsin Newspaper Association, I won an award
for some investigative journalism that I did. That next day, I started Little Big Media as a way
to be a stay-at-home mom and also continue to tell people's stories through branding, through content,
through marketing and social media.
And I did a lot of different things.
I've done so many.
I'm trying not to like laugh in my microphone too much because I were
breathed too heavy because I'm learning how to use this microphone.
But I got to do so many.
I mean, I wrote I wrote pieces for like $3 from Upwork.
You know, like I did a lot of random work that I learned something from.
Every single thing I learned something from.
And that's, I'm very grateful for every little opportunity that I had along the way.
But that's kind of how it happened.
I evolved with time and I made that intentional choice that, you know,
I had this very expensive degree, which I'll be paying off until after I'm dead.
And I wanted to be a mom.
So I was like, how can I be a mom and continue to tell stories?
And that's where Little Big was born.
Amazing.
Amazing.
And so for those that are watching or listening, let's talk about the things that Little Big does.
So what are some of the services that you provide?
that you do.
Thank you for that.
My goodness,
I'm so grateful for the open door.
And I will run through it.
Let's go.
Let's go.
So a little big is a,
you know,
a conduit for,
for storytelling with the,
with the branding specifically.
So what I want to do is I want to help people,
businesses and companies tell their story
through social media.
And one of the ways,
you know,
one of the,
I'll just give you an example of like a,
a format and a structure. And this is this is just added value for your listeners who,
you know, particularly like nonfiction authors, right? Like I love helping nonfiction authors because
they've written something that they're very proud of as they should be. And a lot of times
just because you're an author doesn't mean you know how to do any amount of social media marketing.
So something that I find to be very helpful for clients is a framework that,
that I've started to call HSA.
So it's hook and then it's story and then it's action.
So a lot of times they'll see an author, particularly in the nonfiction space,
they'll put their video out there, which is oftentimes really hard.
Because they're used to kind of working in a silo of writing in an office
and then they have to like do this thing with the camera.
Why?
You know?
So they tell it.
And I hear it and I hear it backwards.
Like I have a good friend who finally posted.
her very first video on her book last week. And I was so excited because I've been coaching
or I've been talking with her. I'm like, let's get this out there. Let's get your story out there.
So she finally posts her video and I listened to it and she buried the lead. Like she buried the
hook. The hook was like three-fourths into it. And I just said, friend, you did so good. And
you need to put that little nugget that you saved for a minute or, you know, for 45 seconds in.
you need to put that at the beginning.
That's the hook, right?
That's the pain.
That's what people will stop the scroll for.
You need to put that at the beginning.
Then you tell the story and then you give the call to action.
And she just watching her face, she said, oh, my gosh, of course that makes sense.
But we don't, we don't, you know, authors don't necessarily think of things that way.
So it's, it's, what little big is for is helping to provide the clarity and then the strategy so that people, so that these authors,
who are very gifted, particularly in, you know, so many ways to just shuffle things around a little bit and have more impact, ultimately.
So we're friends, Ty.
We're friends.
So we're going to have a friend.
So everybody is watching and listening, you know, over a million downloads and streams a month.
Million people are about to hear this.
We're friends.
I'm mad at you.
I needed help.
I needed help.
I need help.
Where was my help, Ty?
Just because, yes, I did out of the gate go USA Today bestseller.
I did.
Yes, he did.
But I didn't do anything social media with the book.
And my best friend over here didn't give me wisdom, a nugget.
Okay, I'm joking everybody.
Like, she did offer, I'm just saying.
But you didn't give me a proposal.
You were just like, hey, here you go.
So now my question.
to you is Ty.
Am I not good enough for you to work with?
Is that really what it is?
Like, I'm just not good enough.
You know, I'm not going to lie, Mick.
I, too, get imposter syndrome.
And I, too, feel sometimes uncomfortable,
which is here we go with the growth and the uncomfort.
But I feel uncomfortable throwing myself out there sometimes.
But I would be honored to help you in any way,
which is why, as you know, and if our friends want to go check it out.
I mean, honestly, any of this is like Mick,
keep saying any of it is documented on the internet. Like I have all the things that you can go and
follow any of these, any of these loops and any of these threads that we're talking through.
And one of the things that I, that I do actively on social is, you know, maybe I wasn't comfortable
asking, hey, I want to help you. And I still do. We can talk about that later. But the bigger,
kind of maybe more important thing is I do find ways to support and elevate and lift people who I see
that are doing amazing work. So I actually have, you know, a little bit of a reputation of being a
fan girl. And, you know, I've had some leaders in my life tell me that that's not a good thing.
Like, you know, stop me. Stop. That's embarrassing. And I've decided to embrace it as a superpower.
Because I think being a fan girl of the people and the places and the things and the music and all
of the things that bring you joy and happiness and inspire you, you can some more.
like your job. Like you need to share that because they're they're you know these people are these artists
these you know storytellers these people are not you know necessarily they don't know how to always do it.
So I I feel it's part of my job to say hey I love this song. You guys need this song in your life or
you need this book in your life and to bring things back full circle for us. That is what I did do
even though I didn't reach out about helping with your social which I would love to still do.
I did, you know, go out of my way to make sure that everybody that follows Ty Schmidt knows that they needed Mick Hunt in their life.
And they needed Mick Hunt's book in their life.
So I mean, that was a very long-winded way of saying, yeah, Mick, you just were not good enough for my services.
Like, you can just say that.
Like, I don't have a ego.
It's okay.
It's okay.
Sorry.
I hired somebody yesterday, though.
So I'm good now moving forward.
Sad.
I missed my chance.
See, you guys, that's why you can't.
Can't wait. Don't be a waiter. Maha Abu Elanine. That's like one of her number one things. Don't be a waiter. Get it done. Do it now. Absolutely. Absolutely. So I want to shift gears, but not shift gears. I want to talk more about little big media, but more about your perspective of what do you see people doing wrong that they can improve on? So let's just say Ty has a big clientele and she can't really bring on new clients, especially me. Like she couldn't even bring me on. So whatever.
But you can give tips and wisdom right now.
For the person that's watching this listing that's like, all right, Ty, I get it.
I'm probably doing something wrong.
One, what's the big thing that you see most people doing wrong?
And then two, what's the fix for that?
You're making it too much about you.
A lot of people make it too much about them and their pain and their story.
and I think we all have the gift of connection to so many people.
And like we've talked about, everybody's got something going on.
So when I think of my content, I think about what people will gain or the value that I'm
bringing to the table for other people.
And then I work into my story, you know, like, and carefully.
And I try to use highest value, fewest words, but it doesn't always work out that way because
I've always been a wordy human. And, you know, I just think that if you come from a place of
abundance and gratitude in every part of life, not just in this, but if you come from a place of service
and of honestly trying to fix a problem that somebody doesn't necessarily even know they have,
that's the best way to truly serve and the business will follow. And because you're leading
with heart. And that is value that people, especially with like our era of AI and things kind of
feeling very chaotic and out of control with content right now. The thing that really resonates
and really brings people in is that authenticity and it's that humanity part of it. So the thing,
the biggest thing I would say is serve. Do you serve, serve, serve, serve, serve, and then you sell.
right like you but it has to be like that and it has to come from an authentic and genuine place yeah
totally agree totally agree with that and you know when you talk about people making it about them
I see that all the time especially I mean I'm not even talking social media here I'm talking
when you look at professionals and their websites or you look at people that are
consultants and I hate that term now but you look at people that
that provide personal services, right?
Like, it's never about the problem you solve
and the people that you've helped solve with.
Like, I'm a huge fan,
and I'm not just talking about authors here.
I'm talking about entrepreneurs in general.
The way viewers and prospects and clients connect
isn't necessarily about you.
It's being able to see that, oh, they solved this problem that I have,
and someone else can validate that they've done it.
I'd love to get your viewpoint on just that, the power of testimonials, the power of third-party
validation to sell yourself or to sell your product or to sell your service because people
don't want to hear from you how great you are or how great your product is.
But someone else can say the exact same thing and it goes further because I can see myself
or I see my pain or I see the solution I'm seeking into what someone else just said.
I feel like I'm a little bit of a broken record saying this, but I think it really comes
down to connection and feeling that sense of connection and community with whoever you're selling to.
You know, in terms of I have a website that needs some love. My website needs like TLC, it needs updating.
And simultaneously, I have been able to work with some of the most incredible thought leaders and authors
and businesses and organizations. And I've done almost no marketing. I mean, aside from having that
website, right? Like it exists on the internet and people, my people have found me because of that
exactly what you said, because of they, they trust, it has to do with trust and they trust other people
and what other people are saying about you matters. Your reputation matters. Honestly, you know,
I, that's another, I don't know if you can tell, but Maha Abuelanin's seven rules of self-reliance
has become a bit of my, you know, cultural Bible of sorts.
And, you know, that's another one of our things is that your reputation is your currency.
And people speaking about you matters more than you speaking about you for exactly that reason.
Amazing.
Amazing.
What are some things that business leaders can be doing right now to show, to build, to develop,
their leadership brand in that visibility because I don't care these are the thoughts and
beliefs of Mick and Mick only but we're at a day and age now where not only is
everyone a brand everyone's a their own publicist right like like meaning you can say
do promote however you want to and you have the power to do that but I don't
think most people understand that especially when you talk about C-suite leaders
right you talk about folks that are running
Fortune 500, 1,1,1500 companies.
And they're like, oh, no, my company is the brand.
And I'm like, no, no, I promise you externally and internally,
you are the brand and you are your publicist.
Like talk to us about how folks can develop that or the strategy that they need to look at for them.
Thank you.
Well, people follow people, not companies.
And it's increasingly that way in this climate we're in.
So knowing that, it's so important.
And I think it's different for everybody.
I have, fortunately, I have been blessed with opportunities to work with some C-suite
leaders who needed that exact help.
And coaching them and working with them taught me a lot, too.
But the thing that I would say is, I think the most important thing that they can do
is just start and just be themselves.
And a lot of them don't start.
A lot of them just say, well, I don't know where to start.
So I'm not going to do it.
And, you know, you can get help too.
Like asking for help is a thing.
And I think maybe maybe that's something that the C-suite folks struggle a little bit with is literally making to ask for help because it shows a level of vulnerability.
And, you know, they have learning to do too.
but there's there's a lot to be to gain from these leaders who may not have like the right
words to say or don't know where to go but the most important thing they can do is just start
and not be afraid to mess it up and not be afraid to fail and not be afraid to really just be
themselves because people will sniff out the not themselves real quick these days so
I think it's it's just so important and who they are is a gift you know we all
have struggle and we all have gifts that need translating sometimes, but they are no different
than that. And they absolutely have so much to offer. So I think getting through and just honestly
starting and not being afraid to fail and ask for help is the most important thing.
No, agree. You've dropped so many amazing insights and tips, Ty. I adore you so much. And before I get you
out of here with my rapid fire top five.
I know how to find and follow you,
but where can everyone else find and follow Ty Schmidt?
Oh my gosh.
Mick,
I am so grateful for you.
I am so,
so grateful because I,
I am really trying to build all of the social right now.
So my most,
I have actually like 15 million views across all the different platforms.
And the majority of those came on TikTok.
So I have been,
posting daily very much of my dear diary behind the scenes, very private but super public diary
is on TikTok. So that's T.Y. Schmitty. And then on Instagram, I am Tyler T. Schmidt. And there I share
more of like the snapshots. And I do try very hard on all the platforms, honestly, to share the good
and the bad and the ups and the downs. And that, you know, that speaks to the roller coaster stuff and all
that, but I've learned so much from riding so many roller coasters, too, by the way. And then Facebook
is, you know, mostly very specific group oriented folks. So, but I'm also on Facebook and
substack. I launched a substack called Quick Before You Forget based on my very, very brand new podcast,
which is also called Quick Before You Forget, and is aimed at bringing people on to, honestly,
I really truly want to listen. I want them. I want it to be a showcase.
for their story and for the lessons that they've learned because I believe that we feel seen
in other people's stories. So my new podcast is a, you know, I'm working on the first two
episodes. I've been so honored by the guests that I've had so far. I have had a guy named
Brent Bailey, who was Target Santa in the advertising campaign that Target did the last couple of years.
I had an actor named DJ Piper and I also had a dear friend named Coach Doc from the super
supernatural app that is the fitness workout app that honestly saved my life. So those are the main
places, but stand by. There's more coming. There we go. There we go. One day I'll be bold enough
and ask you if I could be on your podcast, but I'll wait until later. I'll get my courage up to
ask you. We'll see. We'll see. Stop being a waiter, Nick. Let's do it now. Let's go. People can go
from this podcast and then they can go listen to our podcast together. They can just double do it.
Like that we first we listen to Mix.
Yeah.
And then they'll hear this and then they'll go listen to us to ours.
So you're coming on next week.
All right.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
It's out there.
It's out there.
All right.
Rapid Fire.
You ready?
Five questions.
I'm ready.
Yes.
The biggest success story that you've had with Little Big Media was who?
There's got to be a huge success story there.
Yes.
So the biggest success story I had was a also a very big struggle.
But that that's a whole other story.
And this is not a rapid fire answer.
So I will keep it brief.
and say the leadership development firm that I got to work with was the long-term relationship that lasted about five years.
And that was that was by far the biggest success story.
Okay.
If you could collaborate with anyone right now, who would it be in why?
Oh my gosh.
Andrew McMahon in the wilderness.
Andrew McMahon is my musical healer.
I don't know how else to describe it.
But I would want, he's going to come on my podcast too.
but he's amazing and anything he does is magical.
Love it.
I love it.
What's one tool that you cannot live without for Little Big Media?
Like one tool or app you got to have?
Is it too ethereal to say people?
No.
Because honestly that's the, that's, and I don't mean that.
And it sounds kind of negative, but people have made that what it is.
and I don't, I am like actually really bad at technology.
So when it comes to using tools and apps, I'm not great, but get me in front of people.
I can rock that.
I can rock any room.
So honestly, you know, leaning into relationships, maybe more is a better word, relationships
as opposed to people, but leaning into relationships and networking.
Networking is the, the tool, honestly.
Love it.
I love it, love it, love it, love it.
Speaking of roller coasters, you've been talking about that,
little bit. What's your most favorite roller coaster now? My most favorite is Maco. And there is a story. I don't know if we have
time for me to tell it. But Maco is at SeaWorld. So we were waiting in the line. And my son, my 12 year old son,
was thinking we couldn't do it. And he really truly was so scared. And I was scared. And my,
my younger son was like, this is no big deal. It's a 300 foot drop. What are you guys so
afraid of? And my, we get on it and we start down this massive drop. And my, my son goes, I'm dead.
I'm dead, I'm dead, I'm dead, I'm done.
I'm dead. But you know, I'm alive. And then the whole way down, all he said was he was alive.
And it was just the coolest demonstration of fear and excitement being the same chemical in your brain.
And you getting the choice to pick, which one you're feeling.
Love that. Love that so much.
Last question.
When the story of Ty Schmidt, Ty Schmidt is almost finished.
When that chapter, when that book is almost, I'm not talking about life.
I'm talking about the story, right?
What's one word you want to define you?
Impact.
Love it.
So my best friend of the world of Robert Irvine, that's his word to impact.
I love Robert Irvine.
My husband and I are huge food network people for years.
So Restaurant Impossible was on a loop for us for a very long time.
So big, big fan of Robert Irvine, but not just the actor and, you know, like the personality and the cook and the chef, but he does so much good in this world.
He's used his whole empire to make good in the world.
And that's honestly, when I say impact, that's what I mean.
I want to be like that.
We all do and we all should.
I mean, Robert, again, not only my best friend, but my mentor.
And just what he does, you can't put words on.
And the way that he makes humans feel and in the way that he wants to change lives,
not just give you something, but truly change lives.
so unparallel and he is the greatest human that I know and I don't mind saying that publicly.
He knows that too.
And you do know if you want, you can come see him in March with me because we're doing it.
We're doing this event together in March, you know.
You can come down.
I'd be honored.
There you go.
There you go.
Good stuff.
Ty, I appreciate you more than you know.
I'm huge fan of you, the person.
Keep doing the great work that you do.
Appreciate you, dear.
Thank you. Much love to you.
You got it. And to all the viewers and listeners, remember your because is your superpower. Go unleash it.
That's another powerful conversation on Mick Unplugged. If this episode moved you, and I'm sure it did, follow the show wherever you listen, share it with someone who needs that spark, and leave a review so more people can find there because.
I'm Rudy Rush, and until next time, stay driven, stay focused, and stay unplugged.
Thank you.
