Mick Unplugged - Bonus Episode 13 | Commanding the Kitchen: Chef Robert Irvine's Recipe for Success - Mick Unplugged
Episode Date: June 18, 2024In this powerful episode, Mick Hunt explores Chef Robert Irvine's extensive career, his approach to leadership and philanthropy, and the impact of his work on various communities. Chef Irvine shares h...is personal challenges and triumphs, offering insights into the resilience required to lead and inspire effectively in the culinary world and life.Robert Irvine's Background: Known for his dynamic presence in the culinary world and beyond, Chef Irvine blends his kitchen expertise with a deep commitment to philanthropy and leadership. Defining Moments: Chef Irvine discusses his approach to overcoming challenges, including the scrutiny of his background and how it fueled his mission to help others. Discussion Topics:Chef Irvine's philosophy on leadership and the importance of empathetic management.Insights into his book "Overcoming Impossible," which provides tools for effective leadership and personal growth.He discusses the role of his foundation in supporting veterans and emergency services personnel and how he uses his platform to make a tangible difference.Key Quotes:"There are people out there that need my help. I've been given a blessing to be able to pick you up no matter what walk of life you are from.""Money does not drive me. It's about how do we make a difference in people's lives that are lost."Next Steps:Explore: Visit Chef Irvine's foundation website and consider supporting their initiatives.Reflect: How can you incorporate empathetic leadership and service into your career and life?Engage: Share how Chef Irvine's story and insights inspire you to lead and serve in your community using #MickUnplugged. ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Are you ready to change your habits, sculpt your destiny, and light up your path to greatness?
Welcome to the epicenter of transformation.
This is Mic Unplugged.
We'll help you identify your because, so you can create a routine that's not just productive, but powerful.
You'll embrace the art of evolution, adapt strategies to stay ahead of the game,
and take a step toward the extraordinary. So let's unleash your potential. Now, here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode of Mick Unplugged, where we delve into
the stories of remarkable individuals who transformed the ordinary into the extraordinary.
And today is a bucket list for me.
We have the honor of hosting a true legend, not just a chef.
He's a force of nature, a relentless advocate for fitness and a true leader.
With a heart as big as his culinary expertise, he's touched countless lives through his mission driven work and unwavering dedication.
Ladies and gentlemen,
please join me in welcoming Chef Robert Irvine. Chef, how are you doing today?
What's up? I love the shirt.
I'm representing.
I love it. I am representing. I have the book, which we're going to talk about. I got this two weeks ago.
It's changed my life as a business leader. I just want and need you to understand that.
For those that think Chef is just a chef, this book has changed my life. I've been posting about it all day on social. This book,
if you're a leader, is a must-have, and I mean that. So Chef, I'll make unplugged. I like talking
to individuals about something that's deeper than their why, and I like to call it your because,
right? Like I think that your because is what drives you and what fuels you. Your why to me is very superficial.
If I were to ask Chef Robert Irvine today, what's your because?
What's that thing that keeps you going and driving and that thing that keeps you at the top of your game?
Because there are people out there that need my help.
And that's a true statement.
For me, I'm in a blessed position, although I've had to work to get there and fight the good fight,
as they say, like everybody else. But now I have a platform. I want to continue to use my platform
for the betterment of other people that are less fortunate. Whether you've been in the military,
whether you have a restaurant, whether you're just down and out of luck, I feel that I've been
given a blessing to be able to pick you up, no matter what walk of life, what revenue stream you have or don't have,
whether you live on the street,
whether you live on a tent,
whether you live in a mansion,
whether you're a Fortune 500 CEO, anybody really.
And I think that's what drives me every day
to get out of bed.
Money does not drive me.
It never has, it never will.
It's about how do we make a difference
in people's lives that are lost? And I use this as a great
statement because I just had yesterday a 30-year veteran of the airport call me because he's lost.
Service above self, doesn't know where to go. And I find that happening a lot to service members,
firefighters, police officers, all those that have been in service that when they retire,
have lost that sense of purpose. That's so deep. And you talk about all walks of life.
You connect really well with people. One of the things that I love about watching you,
obviously, on TV and then researching you and getting to know you over the last several years
and now reading your books is that you are one of the most relatable people I've ever met. Meaning
you can give someone tough love, but then you're going to pat them on the back and encourage them
to get through it. Why and how do you do that? I come from a very tough upbringing. We've lived
without a house, right? So I've been there. I've lived without food. I've lived without clothing
as a young man when I grew up. Then I joined the without food. I've lived without clothing as a young man
when I grew up. Then I joined the military. Then I was the youngest at this and the youngest at that.
So for me, there has to be, even in the shows, and you said it quite eloquently there, I'm me.
I had some tough teachers. My father was one of them. Not a very, I don't know, loving, yes,
but not outwardly showing that more of a tough character
my mother the opposite you know loving to death we didn't have much so growing up for me was an
adventure that's an understatement you know the early years of tv for me were very different
because I was very like in tv 48 hours fix it fix it, don't listen. They're failing, but I can read a P&L
and I can see why you're failing at a service in a nanosecond.
But what I've learned over the years
is after self-reflection is listen more.
So if you notice the shows the last, I don't know, five, six years,
it's a completely different switch for me
to listen to people,
compute what they're telling me,
and then go back with the answers.
P&L is still the same,
and the service is still the same,
and the people are still the same.
But if I can understand them a little bit more,
it helps me to solve their problems.
And early on, I wasn't all about that.
I was about, look, I know how to fix it. Be quiet.
Just let me do my job and you learn. So I think it's self-reflection of me in my business life,
in my personal life, in my TV life, which by the way, are all the same because they intertwine so
much. And I think it's that reflection of, you know, when you become a TV personality,
I won't say star because I hate
that word. I hate celebrity, a personality, people look up to you. You know, we're human,
we make mistakes. And anybody doesn't believe in that, then they're just stupid. You know,
we make mistakes. That's just life. And for me to be able to put my life experience into everything I do, all my 13 companies, my TV shows, my 7,500 people
that I employ, I now understand that's what that book was all about, how to lead and build great
teams. And that's through experience and my failures. One of the things, and I'm just going
to go to the book, Overcoming Impossible, because this isn't fluff. It is literally changing my life, starting with chapter one, where essentially you told me to stop micromanaging.
And what's crazy is I feel like most leaders today will tell you, oh, I don't micromanage.
But the reality is, if you were to ask their staff, if you were to ask their leadership, micromanaging is what they do most of the time, right? Like I will tell you, I probably micromanaged, and I use past tense because I changed, through P&L statements every day, looking at EBITDA margins, looking at income coming in.
And then I realized after reading your book, that's not leadership.
Starting chapter one, stop micromanaging.
It's interesting.
Let's talk about the book.
And the reason I wrote this book is because, look, I think 28,000 restaurants, all be told. 350 on Restaurant Impossible, 93% success after
the last three years after COVID. But hundreds and hundreds of restaurants call us every week,
you know, thousands, 2,000 to help them. And I can only do one a week, right? So I wrote this book, not only for restaurateurs
and hospitality, but also Fortune 500 company leaders and families, right? Because the crossover
is very intimate. And there's four things that I write in that book. And you talk about chapter one,
well, you know, we talk about empathetic leadership. What does that actually mean?
It means that I know that, for example, you have an autistic son or daughter or a grandmother that fell down or a wife that's got, you know, heart disease or whatever those things are. I have to
understand why you come into work every day and you're not the best you can be. And my job as a leader is to alleviate those pressures some way,
shape or form to make you feel good that A, I'm taking an interest in taking care of you and your
family, because that's why we do this at the end of the day. And if you know that maybe I pay some
medical bills, maybe I give you time off and still pay you, i whatever that case may be you're going to give me 100
loyalty and 100 work and i'm going to be 100 invested in you and your problems and your family
regardless that's number one then comes into leadership is trust number three is ego mine as
a leader and yours as a person that works with me. You're not an employee to me, you're a partner
to me. And I think that's the difference. And number four is authenticity. You can't be like
a yo-yo up and down, nice one day and then not nice next day. And I think if you incorporate
all four of those principles, look, in 15 years, I've lost three people because I decided to lose them because they weren't a good fit for our organization.
They didn't do their job.
And there's one thing I will not stand for is somebody badmouthing somebody else and standing on them to get to the next level.
That will never happen because I'm a military guy.
We've got your front, your left, your right, good or bad or indifferent.
We've got to take care of each other. And that's why our team has been so strong for 16 years,
is because of those principles. And it's funny, we talk about micromanaging. Let's go back to
that piece. I don't tell my guys when to take off, when to work. I have a strict rule that if I get a
call from somebody high up in the military chain, chairman of joint chiefs or whatever, you get the call 10 minutes later. No matter what time of day, no matter where
we are, which side of the coast or which side of the world, you have to pick up in that 10 minutes
because somebody else's life depends on that. I don't tell my chefs or my people when to go on
vacation. You want five, six weeks vacation, go ahead. Just make sure that your work is covered and that's really important we have a program where the guys and i've got a
chef right now in switzerland we're as busy as heck coming up with with d-day we'll talk about
that later but i don't believe in micro managing as a leader here's my goal here are the tools
here are my expectations run and i'm gonna'm going to follow up. That's it.
It's as simple as that.
Wholeheartedly.
And I love the four items you just gave because I actually have five and I have them written
down here because, again, I've been taking diligent notes and I'm going to keep saying
this about this book.
This is a must have for all leaders.
So I had written down, stop micromanaging.
And then I have a dash, trust your team to handle things independently.
I got that from you.
Second thing, embrace failure.
But more importantly, learn from the mistakes and use them as stepping stones.
You talked about building trust and authenticity.
I mean, I can't tell you how much that resonates with me and who I am as a human being, because
I tell people no matter what with your team, you have to be you at all
time, right? Because that's what your team is going to see. And that's how trust is built. It's
built through being authentic and nothing else. Then the fourth thing I have that you talked about
is adapting technology. And then I thought the most incredible moment in your book was talking
about hiring exceptional talent, always hiring people that are better than you, that are more
capable than you and hire the talent versus hiring the position. And you didn't necessarily say those
words per se, but that's what I took from that. And that was so amazing to me. And it totally
has changed. I personally have stripped like job descriptions and it's like, hire the talent.
You know, a lot of leaders or so-called leaders are afraid to hire people that are smarter than them.
I've got three chefs that are 10 times the chef I will ever be.
And I am not afraid of them taking the limelight.
I'm not afraid to shine a light on them because they do the work.
I'm talking about cooking for heads of state,
you know, real heads of state around the world.
And I know that if I get on a plane three days later and they've been prepping for a state
dinner or whatever, I have no worries. I come in, I taste everything and it's going to be perfect.
So for me, I do that in all our positions. We have 13 companies from drones to clothing to
nutritional products to food products and the list goes on. But I hire people that are in that industry, number one, that can teach me.
I'm like a sponge.
I love to learn new stuff.
You talk about technology.
We have self-ordering product.
We have the change of the restaurant we're building.
It opens in two weeks, a restaurant of the future with all technology.
Very little cooking,
funnily enough, but it will hopefully do 3 million with two people using technology.
Say that again?
You heard me right. $3 million with two people. So when that opens in a couple of weeks,
that's a test. And then we'll roll out after that. There's going to be some tweaks as we go along
because it's technology. I'm not a standstill human being that's happy with life
just because we're doing so many things. I want to be on the cutting edge of something and a leader
in my industry, but also a leader just like, and it's so funny because I tweeted last night about
Chris Como having a story on his show about a chip for the brain that connects neurons to disabled folks.
It was absolutely unbelievable. And I talk about technology and this young man who couldn't do
anything because his body, he couldn't raise his arms or his legs or, you know, he's in a wheelchair.
And all of a sudden now they put this chip in and the neurons that he thinks work on a computer. It's just fascinating to me when technology
is used in the right way, how it can save mankind. And those people that are, again,
less fortunate, they've had an accident at birth or an accident or whatever, and technology is
changing their life to give them back their life. And I love that. So I'm always looking about what's
next. And again, not for money. How do we use technology in the food industry, in the clothing you, overcoming impossible, you personally have had to do that in your life, in your career. What's like one particular tough moment that
stands out for you that you had to overcome? But then more importantly, how did you overcome that?
I think, look, over the decades, like I'm 59 years old, almost, there's always been failures
and things. You know, I had one in 2008 when somebody said,
oh, you didn't do what you said you did, right?
Your resume was fake.
And basically that I was working with the royal family, which I did.
But, you know, then days we never had any pictures, right?
So only my service record would show you, but I can show you right there.
That's me right in the middle there next to Prince of Diana, right?
And that came to me last November
on a website right somebody the official photographer sent me the pictures but Food
Network suspended me they did all those kind of things so they did their their due diligence and
then found out it was it was all true and and whatever but the ridicule I was actually in the
president of United States office when that story broke on CNN Headline News,
right? He's like, you know, what is this? So I've been there. I've been adversity. I overcome it.
And you have to have faith and belief in who you are and what you stand for. And I don't think I've ever changed that. Failure of a restaurant. You know, I talk about that a lot in the book,
failure of a company, you know, Beyond your control, I used to sell meat
to the military that was tossed in seasonings. And then Topps, the hamburger company who used
to do it for me, went bankrupt because they had a recall of 90 million pounds of hamburgers,
right? That wasn't my fault, but I had to deal with it. So I think there's a lot of tests. And
I use that as a great segue to what I'm going to say next. And it. So I think there's a lot of tests and I use that as a great segue to
what I'm going to say next. And it's, I think that whether you believe in God or not, that's up to
you. That's your own personal thing. I think for me, God gives me a test to get me ready for the
next thing, whatever that is. And I don't know what that is. You know, he'll give you as much
as you can handle. And some people don't like it when I say that, but it's the truth. I think you get what you can handle. And when you've overcome that,
something better comes. And I truly believe that. That's what I believe in my heart. And if you
follow me on social media, you'll see what I put out. I try and help everybody and give them hope
because food to me is hope. I don't know. I'm blessed at this point in my career that I want to help
other people overcome their adversities.
And you're doing that every day. I promise you. I promise you you're doing that every
day.
I wake up every day trying to do that. And that's what drives me. There's not much
that drives me anymore except that. It's not money. It's not fame. My wife and I, Gail, when we met 15, 16 years ago,
one of the things we said were like, no matter what happens, and she's a Hall of Fame wrestler,
you know, famous in their own right. And I was on Food Network. Whatever happens,
we've always got each other and we can cook hamburgers on the beach. You know, that's,
if we lost everything we had, that would be, you know, and I'm okay with that. You know,
you have to grow up knowing, and as they grow up, not age-wise, but grow up in maturity, knowing that this could all be gone tomorrow.
And if you grow up like that, then it's okay.
I love it.
One of the other things I love about you.
I should hire you for my publicist.
We can, when I tell you.
Anybody who loves you is good. When I tell you that I'm a huge fan of
following for those that are listening and you can't see, I have a Robert Irvine fit crunch bar,
which from the moment that you introduced those have been my favorite. Yes. The shirt. I love it.
But let me explain to you my affinity with peanut butter and jelly. And when I tasted this for the
first time, I immediately bought the whole box from
target like i bought all 30 because i said i want these in my life i have at least one of these a
day and it's always peanut butter and jelly and you know how when you have something over and
over again after a while your taste buds get used to and it's not this this every day it's the most
amazing moment of my my wife is around the corner babe i promise you i don't it's the most amazing moment of my... My wife is around the corner. Babe, I promise you I don't mean this.
The most amazing moment of my day, Robert, is when I...
Except waking up next door and seeing her smile, right?
That's right.
That's right.
Aside from my wife, this is amazing.
So again, you made a nutrition bar that actually tastes amazing.
And not just the peanut butter, but the cookie dough, like all of them.
I think what you have to understand is this, and I'll get into that story in a second. Number one, every product that we make,
we own. We own the manufacturing. We own the distribution. The only thing I don't own is TV
companies, okay? Everything else we own. 11 years ago almost now, we started Fit Crunch,
and I wanted to be different. So we baked the cookie on the bottom. It's the only baked six layer bar in the world.
And we have the only machines that can make it, right?
They're painted machines,
$10.5 million each, believe me.
But we used to make them by hand.
Used to be 18 lines, sorry, three lines of 18 people
putting stuff on and coating with chocolate
and then freezing and then refrigerating
and then packaging by hand uh we used
to 70 000 a day and now we do 300 000 a day 95 000 retail locations and again it's like everything
else chef curated it's like a liquor alcohol i am part of the recipe development period nothing goes
out without my okay and i mean that bar. So we just launched a new
wafer peanut butter and a chocolate mint wafer. Very different to what you're eating there.
Lighter, almost like if you've had a nutter butter kind of thing, peanut butter wafers like that. And
then the chocolate mint. We've got a vanilla and a strawberry one coming out soon. I want to stay
on the cutting edge of color. We've got a peanut butter pretzel one coming out soon. I want to stay on the cutting edge of product.
We've got a peanut butter pretzel one I've just finished, right?
So I'm in the R&D space on not only the bars, but also our liquor, our food that we sell
all around the world.
And the beautiful thing about being a chef is, you know, I have taste buds.
And if I like it, you're going to like it.
And that's how my mentality thinks.
If I make, you know, we make our vodka and gin, the gin is made with 13 botanicals I
use in the kitchen.
We own the distillery.
We give everything that we make, a big portion of what we sell for goes into our foundation.
And we can talk about that later.
So when I create something, it's because there's a cause.
For example, our strawberry strudel bar,
the money goes to Susan G. Komen for cancer. So there's always something that I want to do
for somebody. And if food can help that or nutrition or liquor or clothing, that's what I do.
And the protein bar, if you'd have said to me 10 years later, we were doing X amount of millions,
and I mean a X amount of millions,
and I mean a big number in millions, I won't tell you what it is, but it's extensively big.
We're the only bar manufacturer in the world that's owned by a single person. That's me.
Everything else is owned by conglomerates. Three right now in the world, in our category. So I want to be the best in business practice. I want to be the best in class,
biggest by any way, shape or form. But we try to be, you know, we try to do the best we can do
with a team that we have and we enjoy what we do. Otherwise you wouldn't do it. You know, we create
products. There's a need in the marketplace. You know, we've got protein powder. We've got RTDs
coming out next. There's a huge, I think we have 212 SKUs total of food and liquor,
you know, and all the other stuff. But again, that goes to the end user, which is the men and
women that wear the cloth foundation and our first responders and their families to help take care
of their issues. You know, is it food insecurity? Is it home? Is it wheelchairs? Is it post-traumatic
stress? Whatever it is, we fix it or we try to fix it. Is it psychedelic Is it wheelchairs? Is it post-traumatic stress? Whatever it is, we fix it,
or we try to fix it. Is it psychedelic treatment in Mexico, right, for post-traumatic stress?
We have a program there that really does help. We're about to take 70, well, 300,
70 World War II veterans back to Normandy with American Airlines on June the 3rd,
do a dinner on the 4th. The USS Normandy will be there. The heads of state
will be there on the 5th. And we do a memorial to the 80th anniversary of these amazing giants that
we stand on their shoulders that are left. Then we fly to Scotland and do a 56 mile march with
a thousand coalition wounded, you know, double amputees, triple amputees, burn victim, you know.
Again, I don't know how to tell you, it's,
it's so humbling to be around people that have done so many extraordinary things in their life.
Vietnam veterans, World War II veterans, Afghanistan, Iraq, Medal of Honor recipients,
firefighters that cut people out of cars and jump into buildings, police officers that protect us,
EMTs, doctors, nurses, teachers, 911 operators, you know, all these people that
get lost in the mix. And I want to make sure we honor them. And, you know, through COVID,
we were the first in the country, by the way, to make hand sanitizer. Not because I said so,
because my distiller said, hey, we can do this. And it's so funny because I'd have to sign a big
liability thing, but six 50-foot trucks of alcohol in a residential neighborhood.
We give the sanitizer away in the tri-state area to National Guard, to doctors, to nurses, to police forces, firefighters, a Fit Crunch brand, which you love and I love, hospitals and National Guard bureaus and all those that were working.
We took care of that.
And I think that's why the brand is successful.
We don't want nothing for it.
I just want to make sure that, again, we're doing the right things.
Totally agree.
One of the most amazing things of all the things that you are and what you represent
is what you were just talking about, you and your philanthropy.
And here's what's amazing to me and why you personally
inspire me most of the things that you do being the personality as you referenced earlier the
personality that you are you don't do it for that i'm going to say this on behalf of you there are a
lot of people that are personalities that everywhere they go there's a camera everywhere they go, there's a camera. Everywhere they go, there's an article written about it. Everything that they do, there is media. You don't give a damn about any of that.
Everything that you do is from your heart and you do so much that most people don't even know.
And that's why you amazed and inspired me. I know there's a lot of that out there. Only recently,
we just started talking about the foundation because I was always nervous and I still am. People feel that if it's in the media
that it's about promoting you. So for eight years, we didn't even talk about the foundation and the
work it does. It's only recently that I started doing it simply because the foundation program,
we used to be a foundation
that give money away to other foundations. Then we started, I wanted to start my own programs.
So Breaking Bread for Heroes, where twice a week, somewhere around the world, Afghanistan, Iraq,
Poland, Spain, Syria, Germany, Italy, we feed troops twice a week somewhere. Reuniting the
brave, we just put 750 1st Battalion and 5th Marines back together
after 20 years of war and the Gold Star families and the snipers in San Diego. You heard what I
just said about Normandy. We're doing a big dinner for my foundation with these amazing human beings
in Normandy. We have a dog program. We have a wheelchair mobility device. It's not a wheelchair. It was designed by Dean Kamen, the Segway guy, that brings you up to eye height so that nobody's bending down and talking to you.
It can go up and down stairs on its own.
All those kind of things that we do, we want to be the best in class.
We just started doing bowhead bikes for double amputees.
You know, there are 1,500 double amputees in the war on terror
Afghanistan and Iraq. My goal is to make sure every one of them gets a bike, 20 mile an hour
bike. It goes 45 degree angle. They can BMX kind of stuff. So in Colorado every year, there's 300
to get together. My aim is to get the 1,500 together and get them out in four wars to stop that suicide rate. So I have a mission
here, right? I have a big mission. We're helping the military modernize their feeding platform
across the joint force now, which has been my program for 15 years. And we're finally getting
it done. There's one thing you can say about me. I'm very persistent and I don't care who you are.
I'm going to bark at you until I get what I think is right
for the people that we need to get it right for. Every day is an experience and a challenge
because I challenge me and my team to do more than what we're doing now. And that's what excites me
the most. We're heading out tomorrow to the Bahamas for a fishing tournament with Michael
Jordan, where our foundation is doing a dinner on Saturday. Hopefully, we'll raise funds for that,
for the foundation. So, you know, again, opportunities come. My team this week were
the Nationals in D.C. They were in Cincinnati with disabled American veterans teaching entrepreneurs
how to start their own businesses and run their own businesses correctly.
We have a program called Let's Chow.
It was developed by a Lieutenant Commander in the Navy,
he's a JAG officer, where we put veterans into food trucks.
We train them how to run businesses,
and then we put them in brick and mortar
when they actually figured it out.
So there's a lot of great things on the horizon
coming up in the next couple of years.
And again, in the vein of doing something. And we support so many other charities, you know, TAPS, Tragedy Assistance
Program for Survivors, Gold Star Families, you know, Sinise, Fisher House, all those great
charities that are doing different things. Our foundation is all about mental and physical
health. I don't build houses. Gary does. You know. I take care of this and this. That's it.
I'll try to anyway. You do it well. So getting you out of here on this, number one, I appreciate you
being so gracious with your time. And again, this is a bucket list day and moment for me.
Where can people follow you, donate, contribute? Where do you want people to know about Chef Robert
Irvine and the foundation
and organizations that you're a part of and helping i think they can go to robert irvine
foundation.org but if you do here's a warning make sure you have some tissues there's some
amazing heartfelt stories there you can donate time you donate money you know be involved uh
you can see me on twitter and by way, you'll know it's me
because there's no punctuation. It's 140 letters, characters straight. You'll get the message,
but I get some Twitter police like, Robert, you can't spell. Nope. I don't want to either. I'm
not changing my life for you. So you can hate all you want. At Robert Irvine, Instagram is
at Shep Irvine, Facebook at Shep Irvine. You'll see what I'm doing. If you're on LinkedIn, you'll see on LinkedIn.
Again, we do so much.
You think it's kind of interesting.
If you think what we do in a week,
it's what most people do in a year.
So yeah, they're all the places,
but I really like to drive people
to the foundation website, robertirvinefoundation.org.
And if you want to talk to me,
the only way you talk to me is on Twitter,
at Robert Irvine, because I'm the only guy that does that. The other guys do Facebook and
Instagram and all that because I'm not that smart. I can't do Twitter or X or whatever they call it
now, but there we go. Well, I will have all of your social links and a link to the foundation
on the show notes, and I'm going to post everywhere. And if you are a listener,
follower of me and Mick Unplugged and any of my other brands, I'm challenging you to donate,
to get involved, to help out. And he's correct. When you go to the website, be prepared to be
moved. I'm going to leave it at that. Be prepared to be moved. Chef, I appreciate you more than you
know. Thank you for spending time with me today. It has made my year by spending time with you.
So I appreciate you.
Where are you living?
Where do you live?
What state?
I'm in Greenville, South Carolina.
So next time in South Carolina,
because I have some military bases that I take care of,
we'll get together.
We'll have a cup of coffee or a beer or dinner or something.
We'll break bread.
You got it.
And for all the listeners, remember,
your because is your superpower. Go unleash it. Thanks for listening to Mick Unplugged. We hope this episode
helps you take the next step toward the extraordinary and launches a revolution in
your life. Don't forget to rate and review the podcast and be sure to check us out on YouTube
at Mick Unplugged. Remember, stay empowered, stay inspired, and stay unplugged.