Mick Unplugged - DJ JayLew: From Beats to Business, A Journey of Innovation and Impact
Episode Date: April 19, 2025Justin Michael Lewis, also known as DJ JayLew, is a renowned DJ and entrepreneur who has successfully navigated the world of entertainment, business, and education. Born in Columbia, Maryland, and cur...rently based in Las Vegas, Justin's journey began with a passion for DJing that sparked at age 12. By his early twenties, he had achieved many of his youthful dreams, including performing at festivals and hosting live events. With a unique approach to goal-setting and collaboration, Justin went on to become a successful business leader and co-founder of Data Global Hub, a company poised for billion-dollar success in the data tech and AI industry. He is also a professional boxer with three title belts, and a committed mentor and advocate for education and empowerment in the minority communities. Takeaways: Purpose behind Goals: Justin emphasizes the importance of having a clear purpose behind every goal, ensuring they align with where you're headed and evolve as you do. Power of Collaboration: He highlights the significance of collaborative goal-setting and how having a supportive team can be a game-changer in achieving success. Resilience and Adaptability: Through his journey from DJing to professional boxing and founding a tech company, Justin underscores the value of resilience, adaptability, and learning from failures to achieve long-term success. Soundbites: "My goal is to inspire other DJs to do more than just music and make an impact before seeking notoriety." "Sometimes we have to take inventory to see if our goals align with the next version of who we want to be." "The greatest advantage I've had is playing a fool to catch a fool; it's something that God has blessed me with." Quote by Mick Hunt: "When I did the intro, I said one of the greatest business minds that I know. And that's why I truly mean that." Connect & Discover DJ JayLew: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/djjaylew/?hl=en Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/djjaylewtv Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/djnocap/ 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 main thing that I would suggest for anybody who is trying to set goals that align with
where they're trying to go, first and foremost, there has to be a purpose behind why you're
doing it.
And I think a lot of times when we set goals, we don't think about purpose.
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 Mick Unplugged, and today I need you to turn the volume all the way up. We've got a trailblazing DJ who's refining the art of mixing with electrifying beats and a knack
for bringing people together on the dance floor.
He's more than a DJ.
He's a storyteller through sound
and one of the greatest entrepreneurs that I know.
Please join me in welcoming the dynamic,
the innovative, the unstoppable, my guy, DJ J.Liu,
my guy, Justin Michael Lewis.
DJ, how you doing, brother?
Thank you, Mike.
I appreciate that.
What an incredible introduction.
I'm just glad to be here with you on your podcast.
And yeah, man, it was actually great
to see all the incredible interviews
you've been doing so far.
Well, I am honored to have you on here,
honored to be in your presence. I know you're so
busy. So for you to take some time for me, the listeners and viewers, that's what means the
world to me. So I appreciate you, brother. Absolutely. Yes, sir. So let's get into it,
man. Like, I don't know, I can't say the king of DJing because to me, that sells you short.
Like your energy behind the decks is unmatched, man.
So what first sparked your passion into DJing?
The first thing that sparked my passion to DJing
had to be when I was growing up,
my mom, she threw this incredible party for me
for my graduation. And with my opportunity, I threw this incredible party for me for my graduation.
And with my opportunity, I actually touched the turntables for the first time.
And that was my first time actually being exposed to the art of DJ.
Then I actually ended up going over to a friend's house who owned the set of 1200s.
And just kind of played around with those. And then I just fell in love with BJH. That's great, man.
So where were you born and raised?
Where were you born and raised?
Columbia, Maryland,
but I lived in California for almost a decade,
currently based in Las Vegas.
Good stuff, good stuff.
And so that passion started early, man.
So what was
your because? Like on Make'Em Plug, we talk about that thing that's deeper than
your why. What was your because for wanting to use DJing as a way to let
your message or story be told?
Hmm. Well, it's changed over the years because my why initially when I started DJing ultimately
was to be famous.
That was the original why.
Full transparency.
As I continue to grow as a man and in my career, my goal with DJing has been to educate people
to inspire other DJs to do more than just music and to get out there and you know like you said be a trailblazer,
start a business, provide impact over notoriety really. I mean the notoriety is the bonus I think
after you provide the impact but I think a lot of people get into DJing as well as a lot of other
things because they're trying to meet the notoriety before they meet the impact. So I think that initially when I
so it's a great question. When I was 12 years old, I made my goals list. And those goals lists
to me at 12 years old was, you know, unimaginable. So the goals that I set when I was 12, I had,
I had accomplished those goals goals before I was 20.
And things like going on tour, things like performing at a festival, things like meeting
some of the famous people that I wanted to meet at that time, hosting certain events
with live entertainment and artists, being on the radio.
All these goals that I set for myself, I had pretty much achieved though before I
was 20.
And because when you're still a young man or young person growing up in this world,
you're not very familiar with how your life is going to kind of transition and go in different
areas and you know, which way you're going to kind of go.
After I graduated from college from music business, I ended up finding myself working in corporate.
I found myself working as an educator teaching other DJs how to DJ.
Then I found myself working back at ground level again as a TA for a film director.
Then I ended up becoming a music director. So, you know, life is interesting in that way.
But to make a long story short, I redid my goals.
I would say in my late 20s, probably around 27, 28ish,
I redid my goals and I realized that the goals that I set for myself
when I was 12 years old didn't match the goals that I wanted to
see for myself long term.
So one thing I will say to anyone that's watching this podcast is
sometimes we have to take inventory and
see if our goals that we set for ourselves fill align with where we're trying for our
next version of who we want
to be.
Because what I see a lot of times, even in business and also in, I would say, when people
are looking to go into different fields, their goals sometimes don't match with where they're
trying to go.
So I think that's very important.
Man, I love that.
And that's one of the things I actually talk to people about on a regular basis.
So I'd love from your viewpoint, man, from your viewpoint,
what are some things that people can do right now,
or what are some steps they can take to make sure that their goals are in alignment
with where they're trying to go
or who they're trying to be?
The main thing that I would suggest for anybody
who is trying to set goals that align
with where they're trying to go,
first and foremost, there has to be a purpose
behind why you're doing it.
And I think a lot of times when we set goals, we don't think about purpose.
We think about a goal to achieve something, which is another point.
A lot of times when we set our goals, we're doing it by ourselves, which is why teamwork,
partnerships, collaboration is so important.
Why your circle defines how successful you'll be.
Because I've realized as I become more successful
in my career, that the goals that I set now,
they come from a collaborative space.
So I'm not the only one behind a lot of the goals
that I'm trying to achieve as a team.
And I think that's the most important aspect
when goal setting is to not only have your personal goals,
but also have your team goals,
whether you're a part of a team or you're ahead of a team,
but having those different milestones
that you can actually see,
and then also not just depend on yourself,
but have other people depending on you.
I love that, man.
And one of the things that I know about you personally as a friend is the power of collaboration.
How did how did that value add first become an important pillar of the foundation of you?
Well, I think that a lot of people who meet me full transparency, they're not used to
meeting people who are just completely genuine and honest and authentic because it's really
hard to find in the world.
I was raised very naive.
My mom, she raised me to pretty much look at the world through a singular lens.
So I've been burned a lot because my mom always said treat everyone how you just want
to be treated, which I still believe that to this day. But I've also realized that I've gotten older
that not everyone deserves their time to begin with. So I think what happens a lot of times,
especially in how I've become, you know, the person that I am now, the man
I am now, has been for me, honestly, trial and error in meeting people and offering value
and seeing some people that didn't want it and then other people who have, you know,
the people I'm still working with today who have looked at an opportunity for them to
grow.
Like, I'll did you a great example
My business partner mochi
we're we're we're the co-founder the data global hub and
We're putting on four different events currently. We have a billion dollar company. I know it's going to be a thing another company
We've been doing very very well
Me and mochi we connected at Forest last year, 30 under 30.
When I met him, he already had a business, and I had my own business, but we instantly clicked because we saw that we could add value to each other's businesses.
So it wasn't any ego. It was just, how can I help you? How can you help me? And then ultimately, we came together and
said, you know what, instead of us partnering, we need to just come together and co-found this
company. So now I'm in the data tech and AI space. And who would have thought that a guy coming from
entertainment media would be in the data tech and AI space, which is the future? Because now, it's
funny how roles change and switch. Now the people in entertainment
media who don't have any connections to data tech and AI, now all of a sudden everyone
wants to be a part of data tech and AI now. So now I'm a cool guy again. Because now I'm
somebody who has access to something that most people now want to have access to. Now, I don't consider that inauthentic. I just consider
it being in the right place at the right time. And that's one thing that I'm very, very good
at. And a lot of people said, told me a long time ago, oh, you just take pictures with
people. You don't really know these people. And to a certain extent that's true. But the other part what they
didn't realize was that I knew I was going to see those people again.
And every time I saw those people again I would reference the time that I met
them and I would let them know like hey this isn't the first time I met you
before here this is us together. So it wasn't a flex, it was a strategic strategy for me being
able to remind people where they met me at. And the same goes with all of us. You don't have to be a
big shot to do this. If someone meets you casually and they say, hey, I'm really a big fan of your
work, you might have to take a picture. You may not remember them, but if you meet them again
and they show you a picture and say, Hey, I met you
here, here, here, this is us.
We talked about this distance briefly.
You're going to now this very attentively.
And to, and to my point, I built a very successful social media
marketing company doing that.
And a lot of the people that match that strategy, and we're saying a
lot of negative people that match that strategy, and we're saying a lot of negative
things now, they regret it, because a lot of them want to work with me now. And it's
hard for me to work with people that had a mindset like that. But just like in 48 Law
of the Power, they say your enemies become your greatest allies. And I do believe that because I've hired some
former people who didn't believe in the company and the vision and they've been
doing extraordinary for the organization. But there is a cap I think when you do
that because anyone who is a great CEO knows that they can't necessarily
promote you past their comfortability level.
So there still is a ceiling for how far you can go if you do decide to double back
and be friends with someone who you necessarily weren't fond of before.
Yeah, yeah, I love that, man. And, you know, when I did the intro,
you know, I said one of the greatest business minds that I know. And that's why I truly mean that being a huge fan of yours for the last
year, year and a half and seeing all the amazing things that you're involved with or that you
influence that you have your hands around, man, like it's, it's mind blowing. Where did that
Where did that personality type start? Meaning you knew that you were a person
that could influence businesses, influence people,
but more importantly, make strategic decisions.
Because I think that's where,
I'm not saying people sleep on you in that realm.
I think that's what people don't see
is the strategy mind that DJ J.Liu has.
Well, that's the greatest superpower of mine.
The greatest superpower of mine is being sought,
seen as someone who's oblivious.
For a long time, I've been underestimated
because people will see me out doing certain things,
and then they underestimate my intelligence. So it's actually
now that I'm getting older because as you continue to get older what I'm starting to realize that I'm
in my early 30s but as I'm starting to get older I'm starting to realize how I'm pulling away
from certain people in my age group and then I'm also communicating with people who are wanting
to transact with me who are older who haven't even reached the level that I'm at and I'm 20 years
junior.
So I realized that the greatest advantage I've had is what did
they say?
Play a pool to catch a pool or something or play dumb.
Yeah, something to that.
So something to that extent and I've never done it.
Be honest. I've never done it.
Be honest. I've never tried to go out of my way to be less intelligent.
I never have.
It's just something that God has blessed me with to be able to carry out a certain
lifestyle and a certain way of doing things in a way to where it seems almost
effortless, but it's, but also, I'm doing a lot.
It's almost like I'm not,
I get that I'm just a really good at organization.
I'm a really good strategic player.
I also am really good at cultivating relationships.
I enjoy working on things from the ground up.
I'm a builder.
So that's another thing too.
I actually like coming in when things are bare bow. And I think that's kind of scary for people. Because most people,
I've realized that owned businesses, especially owning a marketing company, like a lot of
marketing companies, like some of the clients that I had that were, that used to be local clients,
they used to say, why do you want to work with me? I'm just a small business.
And I would tell them like, the reason why I'm going to work with you is so that maybe
we can go into business together eventually.
You know, not just for right now, you may not have a huge budget right now, but I'm
confident in my services to where you will have enough money to start investing in other
things and also expand on your business.
But then again, you know, it goes back to business one-on-one again.
You know, if that's not in your brain, if you're thinking that you're a small business,
you'll stay a small business. And that's something I'm learning too, as I'm getting older,
because my time is getting more and more scarce, is that if people don't see themselves at being high
level, sometimes you just have to, sometimes the money is not good enough to even work
with them.
If they don't see a bigger vision for themselves, then if you have a bigger vision for your
client than they have for themselves, it was probably better to walk away from that client
unless you wanna stay at that level with your client.
Totally agree, totally agree, man.
And another thing that I admire about you is resiliency,
right, like you never give up, right?
You got a plan, if you've got a vision,
you make sure that you see it through.
What are some of the obstacles that you've had to overcome?
And then how did you overcome those obstacles?
Oh man, when I started boxing a few years ago,
when I got invited to go on celebrity boxing,
a lot of people don't realize,
but that was probably the best thing
that I could have ever done for myself. The reason why I did
it was because I was told that I couldn't do it from a former friend who I ended up realizing
wasn't a true friend, you know, was very negative. So you have to get away from that too. You have to
eliminate all negative influences in your life. But when I started boxing, I realized that it was something that I wasn't
good at. And the type of person that I am, I like to be good at things. And I was relentless.
It taught me a lot about how much I really had inside of me, which translated into how I do business now.
Like a lot of people don't realize boxing is like chess.
It's a strategy.
You know, you have to monitor your opponent's weaknesses.
You have to monitor your opponent's fatigue levels.
They're feeding their footwork their hand their their their
hand movements.
You have to memorize which punches they threw
three or four times back.
Then again, a lot of boxers don't do that because they're, you know, like, I'm just
being honest because like I was the type of person that I wasn't a great boxer when I
started, but I became a professional boxer when I ended with three title belts and world
when one world Championship belt. So the way that I did
that was by putting myself in an uncomfortable situation, which scared me, having the face of my
fears head on in an environment that I wasn't comfortable with. I was raised in a family that
told us not to fight. You know, my mom always said, it's better to walk away, right?
You know, if someone put their hands on you,
defend yourself, but by all means,
walk away if you have to.
So now I'm putting myself in a position
that I've never been in before,
where I have to now be around people that like to fight.
Some people don't have anything to lose,
don't have degrees, don't have, you know,
anything close to what I've built.
No social media, just people that are coming out of jail,
people that like to fight.
So now I'm in this type of environment.
I'm in a very aggressive, hardcore environment
and I had to rise to the occasion.
And I will say that during my amateur career, I put myself, I sparred every, the biggest
guys in the gym.
I didn't, I didn't go for anyone that I could beat.
Like you have that too.
I noticed, you know what's funny?
I noticed a lot of things in the boxing gym.
I noticed that people do in business and in the real world.
So in a boxing gym, you have guys in there that are in incredible shape, but they they never they never spar people that are better than them. They always spar people that are a little
bit less. They don't have the great that I always spar people that were better than me. And and I
got and I got beat. I would say never actually, because I never got knocked out in sparring.
I would say that there were a few times that I felt like I didn't win the sparring match.
But when it was time for me to actually fight on my record, I would always rise to the occasion
that I would win. But that was because I put myself against the best.
And on top of traveling and fighting other people
that were the best.
So I would say that from my personal experience,
what got me to that point was having to start
from ground from zero again, having to listen to a coach.
I'm used to being in charge of everything as a DJ,
my money, my travel arrangements, even my management. I'm used to telling my manager
what they need to do. So being in an environment now where the coach is like, you need to run on
a treadmill and not having any backtalk. You have to go over here. It taught me how to be a great listener.
It taught me more discipline about myself,
even my posture.
When you learn self-defense training,
you can walk and stand tall and have confidence.
And people feel that confidence
and it's not fake confidence, it's real confidence.
They feel it on you.
Whether you're with a female
or just in a group where you're just in presenting
like a business meeting or like with your team.
So I would say that was probably the greatest blessing.
And one thing I will say is that out of that experience,
because of the business person and the business mind
that I am, I started eight season.
Eighth season came out of me bossing. So all of that turned into me creating a brand that was for combat sports originally.
Now it's turned into a lifestyle luxury urban luxury lifestyle brand, streetwear and high fashion brands. So it's funny how things in life can take you one place
and then they turn into something, you know,
on the other end of it, you know?
Totally, totally.
I know one of the things about you also
is giving back through mentorship.
Who were some of your mentors for you
as you were going through your journey,
and even through today?
Yeah, you know what?
Well, we just did a milestone yesterday.
So Data Global Hub company that I co-founded with Mojit,
we actually received 1500 Data Tech and AI scholarships
from DataTamp yesterday.
We were approved for the scholarships to be able to give out to the community, you know.
We're also partnering with Forbes Black on Juneteenth in LA.
We're doing a huge event.
We'd actually love to have you as a panel speaker if you're available.
We're doing it with they were fourth black on June 19. And we're giving out scholarships for data tech and AI. And to go back and answer
your question, as far as my mentors growing up, DJ cool was very influential for me. DJ
cool. He did let me clear my Throat back in the 80s.
Let Me Clear My Throat, and then, and then, and then,
and then, and then.
Very influential figure for me.
He bought me on tour for CIAA Tour in 2010.
And it was the greatest experience I ever had
being on tour with the DJ.
I have met Jazzy Jeff, Kate Capri, Fuck Mathaflex,
all the people.
He had no envy, envy, envy in it.
Envious energy in his body at all.
Anyone I wanted to meet, he would say, go get him champ, go meet him champ.
He wasn't introducing me, but he gave me the opportunity to be in a room and I
think that that's the main thing that we have to realize as business people and as professionals.
If you see someone who's talented and invite them into the room you don't have to pounce for them,
you don't have to say oh this is my man, this This is my guy But you do the right thing if the guy has talent or the or the girl has or the woman has talent
Allow them to be in a place where they can actually grow because by default they have to say oh, I'm with
Jay Luke or oh, I'm with you know
At that time I was a DJ cool. They say oh who you with I'm with you. Yeah cool time I was a DJ cool they say oh who you with I'm with
you get cool oh okay cool cool okay okay how you doing you know so that's okay I
mean I think that that's what we're missing right now I think a lot of
people man you know mentorship is out the window because I bought this up
recently on on on on a group team call,
and I told them, I said,
look, your mentor is not your competition.
We have too many mentors trying to be in competition
with their mentees,
trying to overly power the mentee
instead of giving the mentee the opportunity
to learn from the mentor, right?
As a mentor, I think, because I feel like I'm in a position now to be a mentor, and
I am a mentor actually to a lot of people, even though I'm paying them.
I would say, Minyon, like, I'll give you an example.
I have, I'm getting so many people in Las Vegas
that are asking me to privately teach them how to DJ. And I could be, I could be a guy that says,
oh, no, I'm good.
I don't have time for that.
But you know what?
I said, you know what?
Okay, I'll start trainings of people on the side for free,
you know, because I DJ, I still have a studio, I still DJ.
But what I'm gonna end up doing probably
is opening up a DJ school like I DJ,
like I used to teach at in LA, you know, here in Vegas,
where, you know, just monetize it so that, okay,
since this is a demand, people wanna DJ,
why don't we open up an environment where people can actually come
and DJ from other DJs?
You know, I'm only one person, but I've realized that being here in Las
Vegas, there's not anyone that actually trying to help other people accomplish
their dream of being a DJ.
So that's one way that I think we can solve that problem. Another
way is giving out opportunities, right? Like I mentioned, there's nothing for any of us.
It's nothing for any of us to be able to give someone opportunity to showcase their talent.
Right? Like, that's right. A lot of people don't realize like, I made all of my money
from being a servant by people coming up to me, asking me for help, or me going up to them and saying, hey, this could make this, I could
help you do this.
Everything I've done has translated from that, just that alone.
And I think that that's what's missing in a lot of people and why they're not happy
with where they are is because too many selfish people and the selfish people that I've seen don't even have
anything to be selfish about which is the sad part you know like I'm the type of person that
like when you have an exotic car I don't care if someone takes a picture in front of my exotic car
you know I don't I don't care if somebody wants to sit inside of the car.
Like, we have too many people now that are so stuck up.
Like, oh no, you can't take a picture in front of my car.
I used to do that.
Like, who cares?
Like, you should be happy.
You should be able to say, oh wow, someone actually appreciates the hard work I put
in to earn this car. Have fun. Take as many pictures that you want.
Like for somebody to be out there in like to bash the body to say, Oh, you're a poser.
You're not doing this. We should be congratulating people. Who cares if you're really successful.
It doesn't matter. It's it doesn't matter it's it doesn't matter you know and I
started to realize that because I've had to harness a lot of um of uh of people that you know
called me so many different names over my career so where now it's like okay okay, the tide is shift.
There is a power ship happening.
And I'm humbled.
I'm humbled because I understand there's a power ship happening.
And I still want to transact with people that didn't want to transact with me when I was
in my development stages.
But these are going to be the same people,
you included Mike who we'll see,
when we're on New York Stock Exchange,
when we're doing the CMBC squat box interviews
and all the other stuff.
I still have love for that.
And I want people to understand I'm coming from hip hop, like rap music.
When I listen to that music now, I completely understand J-X-Z and why he doesn't want to
be affiliated with certain things.
Because now even with my business partnerships and my affiliations,
you can't go into certain settings.
I'm doing a huge launch party on Saturday for eight seasons
with my creative director, Amy Kirsten.
That party is at an art gallery. There's no way you can go at an art gallery.
There's no way you can go into an art gallery
and start playing a bunch of derogatory music
in that type of environment.
So we have to also realize what we're doing too.
Are we pouring poison into the community? Or are
we adding life and value to the community? And where I'm at right now, because going
back to my point about DJing, the reason why I haven't DJed is because the music has gotten
so bad to the point to where me being a hip hop or rap DJ actually holds
negative connotation to every part of my businesses that I'm going into at this point.
Anyone that's in data tech and AI doesn't want to hear anything about hip hop or rap.
They don't want to hear about people getting drugged. They don't want to hear about people
smoking illegal drugs, you know. And also my lifestyle doesn't align with that.
It never did, to be honest.
And I think a lot of people in hip hop need to be upfront about it.
A lot of people in hip hop need to be transparent and say, you know what, I'd never do drugs
like that.
I just say it for entertainment purposes, right? Like instead of them having
a rated R, the rated R or explicit content on CE labels, maybe they should put for entertainment
purposes only. Maybe they should change that. Because a lot of times when we look at this stuff,
you're, you know, I remember it was cool. Like when you used to buy, buy CE's at this stuff, I remember it was cool.
When you used to buy CDs at the store,
it was cool to buy the explicit content version.
Because we were kids, we were children.
We wanted to say curse words.
You wanted to do what the older guys were doing,
but you weren't really doing what the older guys were doing.
You just liked the beats and stuff.
But as a grown man, especially if it's successful,
you know, living in a nice neighborhood or, you know, accomplishing my own soul big business,
there's really no place for you to be listening to that type of music, to be honest. There's really,
there's really, there's no, there's no barrier. Yeah.
No, totally agree, man.
Totally agree.
You dropped so much wisdom for us today.
So much knowledge, love again,
love you as a friend for everyone out there.
You dropped so much knowledge on socials, man.
Where can people follow and find you?
Yeah, definitely.
Across all platforms, DJ J. Lou, V-J, J-A-Y-L-E-W.
And our mission right now is, across all of my companies,
is to help out the community, especially
the minority community.
Our goal is to give back as much as we
can to the minority community and help
those that are in need. We're also using our resources to partner with bigger organizations
that don't have the access to the minority community. And we're using that as a platform
as a as pretty much a bridge so that these corporations that want to get involved, they can work with a company that's trustworthy that they can trust to do that with.
So for instance, like I mentioned, one way we're doing that is through scholarships.
We're giving away free scholarships.
We're starting with $1,500, but every year we plan on giving away a thousand more scholarships.
Even next year, we talked about it on the call on a business meeting earlier today. We might even just give away 10,000 scholarships next year.
You know, we just might do that.
You know, a part of me and my business partner's goal,
me and Moji's goal is to open up schools all around the country.
Is to open up schools. All around the country, our goal is to open up.
Schools in Africa as well for people to learn data, tech and AI.
So we have a lot of different things that we're doing.
On a, I would say on a global scale.
That that we had it that we that we had it, I would say, given all of the details too for people to support.
But these are things in the pipeline that have already been created that we already have the resources to do.
Well, it is what it is.
So right now we're working with Shaka Zulu, he's a partner in our next event, he's based in Congo.
And we probably will start there. We also have partnered with Pan African Lifestyle,
which is a massive, massive community, over 25 million members.
We've also partnered with Uncover AI, which is a leader in data tech and AI community.
We also partnered with AI Technologies, Black Wealth Committee, Blackstone Tech.
It's a lot to name, you know, but all of our partners, like some of the people that we're working with right now,
have our Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, SpaceX.
We're dealing with some of the most brilliant minds in every industry.
So we want more people like that to join the team.
We see this as being the, I would say the black Google,
you know, is what we're building here.
You know, my co-founder is a data UX designer,
so be the coder.
And that's one thing too, I'll leave you with this, Mike,
I know we're wrapping up here, but in our community, we don't understand
power dynamics. My skill set is not a highly technical person, but I'm technical enough
to be able to work with someone who is highly technical. So highly technical people, they need people who are hunters out there on the ground,
meeting people, they need more extrovert energy, right?
So what we have to do is instead of us looking at
the people who are in the community,
we quote unquote call you nerds,
we actually need to start partnering with those people.
We need to start asking them, how can we help you?
If you're a promoter, how can you partner with someone
who's highly technical, who can't get their product out
there, who is having trouble getting out that app
that is extraordinary?
How can you work with them using your skill set of getting things
out there instead of you promoting all these nightclubs, why don't you go and
promote something that can actually give you some value and give you some money,
make you some serious money, right? That's just one thing but in our community we're
taught the complete opposite. We're taught from a young age, you're the star. You are, you're
going places. You're the, you're going to the NBA or you're going doing this. No one
talks about you should be a mechanical engineer. You should be, you know, something off the
grid. Like if we want to make progress, we have to build things.
And in our community, we're used to servicing a lot of things,
but we're not building things.
And that's what we're doing at David Robaham.
And what I'm doing right now is we're actually building things.
I love it, man.
I appreciate it.
You're a rock star, more than a DJ.
Again, one of the most brilliant minds that I
know, one of the busiest people that I know. I appreciate you just taking some time to bless us
with your time, brother. Thank you, Mike. And one thing that I'm going to make sure to do,
because I think more billionaires should do this. A big shout out to Robert Smith.
But when I become a billionaire, I want people to understand and know that
there's no malice intentions for what, for me, you know, I really do want
our people to succeed.
And when I say our people, I mean, anyone,
no matter their background, race, color, ethnicity,
whatever, I want everyone to have an equal
or fair shot to succeed.
And I truly mean that bottom of my heart.
And we want people that want to help people get better
on our team.
And that has no race to it.
And that's one thing that I would say
that I will make sure of as I continue to grow
in my businesses is to make sure that every single person
that I interact with, they're gonna,
I'm adding value to them and they're gonna be able
to get benefit out of me.
Amen, I love that brother.
I love that. Thank you Mike.
DJ JLU again, thank you so much for blessing us
for all the viewers and listeners.
Remember your because is your superpower.
Go unleash it.
Thank you Mike.
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of Mick Unplugged.
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