On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Dhar Mann: Not Where You Want to Be Yet? (Follow THIS 5-Step Framework to Stop Overthinking and Finally Take Action)
Episode Date: May 20, 2026Today Jay sits down with one of the world’s most influential digital storytellers, Dhar Mann, for a raw conversation about failure, identity, and resilience. Dhar opens up about growing up feeli...ng caught between two worlds, battling loneliness, depression, and self-doubt, and how those painful experiences ultimately shaped his purpose. Together, they explore how our deepest wounds often become the message we’re here to share, and why real healing begins when we stop hiding who we are. Dhar also breaks down the mindset and systems that helped him turn his lowest moments into a global storytelling brand. He shares why success comes from repetition, failure, and emotional connection, not validation, and reveals the story behind the one video he almost didn’t post that changed everything. In this episode you'll learn: How to Keep Going After Rejection How to Find Confidence Through Consistency How to Build a Purpose-Driven Brand How to Stop Hiding Your Struggles How to Pivot When Life Changes How to Choose the Right Partner How to Create Success That Lasts Some of the most meaningful breakthroughs happen after seasons of rejection, loneliness, and uncertainty. Keep showing up, keep believing in your growth, and keep taking the next step forward even when no one else can see the vision yet. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty JAY’S DAILY WISDOM DELIVERED STRAIGHT TO YOUR INBOX Join 900,000+ readers discovering how small daily shifts create big life change with my free newsletter. Subscribe https://news.jayshetty.me/subscribe Check out our Apple subscription to unlock bonus content of On Purpose! https://lnk.to/JayShettyPodcast What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 03:01 The Hidden Cost of Childhood Pain 05:36 Growing Up Desperate to Belong 08:47 The Real Meaning of Belonging 11:17 The Hustle That Started It All 16:05 What Failure Teaches You That Success Never Will 18:57 Fear of Failing in Public 26:07 The 5-Step Formula for Success 27:25 Owning Your Story (Even When It’s Messy) 32:35 How to Make People Actually Trust You 41:42 The Systems That Actually Build Success 49:39 The Key To Connection 54:20 Turning Content Into Impact 55:52 The Moment Everything Fell Apart 01:06:12 Choosing the Wrong Partner Can Cost You Everything 01:10:39 What Love Teaches You That Success Can’t 01:14:44 Dhar on Final Five 01:18:52 The Story Behind What Happens Next? Episode Resources: Website | https://www.dharmann.com/ YouTube | https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_hK9fOxyy_TM8FJGXIyG8Q Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/dharmannofficial/ Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/dhar.mann/ LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/dharmann TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@dhar.mann X | https://x.com/dharmannSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Failure is not the opposite of success.
That is actually a part of success.
You didn't go to business school.
You didn't have a business you were inheriting.
And you didn't have someone say,
duh, here's a million dollars.
Go and start a business.
Where did you learn business skills?
There's a five-step process.
that if you follow, I promise you, you will be successful.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose,
the place you come to become happier, healthier, and most healed.
Today's guest is one of my dearest friends,
someone's I've known for quite a few years now,
and I can't believe this is his first time on the podcast.
Darman is one of the most watched digital storytellers in the world,
reaching billions with videos that turn simple stories
into powerful life lessons.
Dar has achieved so much success in his career.
He's been named as one of the biggest creators by Forbes.
Please welcome to the show, my dear friend,
an insane creator, Dar Man.
It is great to have you here.
It's such an honor, Jay.
I really appreciate it.
It's been a long time coming.
And I'm so glad that it's happening now
because we've gotten, what, seven, eight years
of building this amazing friendship together.
One of the things I knew when I started my career
was that I never wanted to be lonely on the journey.
And I feel like there are certain people,
and we have a lot of mutual friends that we've all connected with,
that we're all in the industry,
we all want to see each other win,
we all want to support each other,
we want to give each other advice and guidance
and give each other insights where and when we can
and really grateful to you for as a friend as well,
is that watching your success, which we will dive into today,
watching your story unfold
and the incredible businesses you've built will get into today.
Darra, I want to start off with a question
because I know a little bit about you.
You've told me your story,
and I want to dive into it for the audience.
Tell me about a childhood memory that you have
that defines who you are today.
You know, what's interesting is that
as I think back upon my childhood,
I actually can't remember a lot of it.
As I look back now as an adult,
I realize that's because I created this emotional detachment
because of all the struggles and pain
that I went through as a kid.
It was a tough childhood.
I grew up around, you know, constant yelling and arguing and violence that I try to block a lot of
it out.
And it's hard because as a child, so much of your perspective in life is shaped by your parents.
Right?
As a child, you think that whatever your parents tell you is the truth, is, you know, how you're
supposed to see the world.
And then it's not until you get older.
that can you actually start to realize that my parents are also flawed human beings,
that they don't always know what's right and what's wrong.
You know, my parents had just come from India to America,
and they came with $6 in their pocket.
My dad, you know, didn't even get finished like an equivalent of a high school education.
So he was just trying to figure everything out in life in America in this world
where they didn't even speak English.
And they made a lot of mistakes in the process.
And that's the toughest thing as a child,
especially when you grow up thinking that your parents are your hero,
to have to now all of a sudden start to see, you know,
all of the mistakes that they made
and took a long time for me to have to try to unlearn some of the things that I was taught
and also to try to heal from them.
But at the same time, I'm so grateful for the tough childhood that I had
because now I have the opportunity as a father to show up for my daughters in a way to be the parent that I never had as a child.
And that means so much to me because my goal as a parent is not to try to be perfect.
There's no such thing as a perfect parent.
But my goal is to give them so much love and support that my daughters don't have to spend their adult life
trying to overcome the traumas that they received as children.
But, you know, I'm just had a place my life
where I believe that everything that happens is for a reason,
and I try to see the positive from it.
It's super powerful to hear that
to think about how you're parenting differently
because of how you were parented.
And I know that when you say that,
we actually share a lot,
and we've had dinners where we've talked about this,
that we share a lot of history and how we were raised
and what we came up through.
And, of course, both of us are Indian,
although you grew up in the States
and I grew up in London, I've always joked that I had three options growing up, which was to be
a doctor, a lawyer, or a failure. What did you think you were going to be? Or what did you expect
from yourself when you were growing up as a young man? When I was growing up, I just wanted to be
accepted. I just wanted to fit in. I just wanted to find a community. So when I was eight years
old, I actually had a turban. And as you can imagine as being like the only Indian at my elementary
school wearing a turban, I was often made fun of, I was bullied. It wasn't in like today's
environment where there's a lot more awareness. I'm not saying that doesn't happen today,
but it was a really hard time. And so I grew up just feeling like I never fit in to the American
community. But at the same time, if you're Indian and you follow the Sikh faith or, you know,
any sort of religion, you know that there's different aspects or there's different levels of people
that follow the faith. And so the time that I would be in an American school, I never felt like I
quite fit in. But also the opposite happened when I would go to our temple on Sundays, because I may not
be as religious or I didn't wear a certain amount of garments or because I didn't pray as many times
in a day, I also felt like I wasn't good enough for that community. So,
For a long time my life, I just felt like I was too Indian for the Americans and I was too American for
the Indians. So I fell in some place in the middle. I remember spending a lot of high school just
trying to find people that I could have lunch with. Every day, that was my biggest anxiety is I didn't
want to have lunch alone. And my school was very racially segregated. So, you know, everyone from each
culture kind of ate at their own table. And I just found myself as this outcast. And the
And so there were a lot of days that I would eat lunch inside of the bathroom because I didn't
want anyone to know that I had no one to sit with.
And as I got to my junior and senior years, I actually would start having lunch with my
teachers because I connected with them more.
I, for a long time, chased that feeling of belonging and feeling of community that I
never quite got.
And again, just kind of looking back as to how I look back in my life and realize that
Everything happens for a reason.
Now, today, because I was seeking to build that community and didn't have one,
I was able to build one of the largest communities in the world of other people that also felt like they didn't really belong at some time in their life.
Yeah, it's incredible how the stories you tell now are so wired by the messaging of what you experienced.
even if it may not be just the South Asian American story,
you're appealing to so many young people around the world
who are feeling othered, who are feeling like they don't belong,
who are feeling like they're bullied,
who are feeling like they don't connect,
they don't know where they fit in.
And it really is this incredible pain-to-purpose story,
which sounds cliche,
but when you actually hear your story back,
you're like, oh, wow, no, that's true.
Like, you're literally telling stories that are helping people
who are going through what you were going through all those years ago.
When was the first time you actually felt in your whole life that you did belong?
I wonder if you even feel that now.
Very recently, I have started to feel like I belong.
You know, there's different aspects of belonging, right?
First is sort of on the professional side of things.
As a creator, as an entrepreneur, and being successful,
and I'm very grateful to have received a certain level of validation
that has come from my consistency in doing things,
that have made me feel like, okay, I belong.
As much as I could try to convince myself of that before,
I would never have been able to
until I reached a certain level of success objectively.
And I think that's important for anyone
that's like struggling with self-confidence.
What I would say is the repetition and the consistency
and eventually the success follows.
That's when you start to build that self-confidence.
And that continues to propel
as you go further into what you,
do, right? Like today, you have interviewed the biggest guest. So whoever, I don't even know which
is the biggest celebrity that you've not interviewed, maybe Beyonce, the Rock, I don't know if you've
interviewed these guests yet. I'm sure they're coming. You would not be nervous about that because
you've already put in all these repetitions, right, and have interviewed all these other guests and
built that self-confidence in yourself. And so I would say professionally, I have felt more recently
like I've belonged because of the practice and the effort. And that all comes from all the failures of
like trying to figure it out. But I would say the other part of belonging and the more important one
that I realize now, as I get into my 40s and my perspective has changed, especially as a father,
is just realizing that you actually don't have to belong. You know, we're actually born to stand out.
and the people that really support you and love you, they're going to be there no matter what.
And so what I always remember is if I have nobody else in this world, I have my daughters,
and as long as I have a tight relationship with them and I'm showing up to be the father that I want to be,
I'll always feel like I belong.
Yeah, so that's a great answer.
What was the first business you ever started?
Oh, my gosh.
And not even like a, not even, it may not even be an official business.
I mean, like, what was your first hustle?
Because I think about it, like, I used to buy jackets of the streetwear brands from outside of England and then sell them to people in England.
And so I'd order, like, Avericks jackets and shock jackets.
These were brands that I remember people in my area loved having.
And I'd always find them early and then sell them.
And I was doing this when I was like 15 years old at school.
Yeah.
And that was like my first kind of entrepreneurial venture.
I was obviously, I was delivering papers before.
for that. What was your first job? What was your first business? Well, you had a lot more foresight than I did.
Mine wasn't as calculated. I probably started my first business venture, quote unquote, when I was
in fifth grade, 10 years old, and I would just set up little stands where I would sell baseball cards.
So, you know, I'd make like a couple bucks. I've done everything from like selling lemonade to selling,
I don't know if you remember when the CD burners came out. Yeah. And it was really popular to be able to
now have custom soundtracks on CDs. So I was the guy, because a lot of people couldn't afford
CD burners, so I was the guy that for 10 bucks, you could say like what your favorite songs were.
I'd put them on a CD and I'd even learn how to like print custom artwork and I'd put it like on
the sleeve so you could have this like really cool jewel case. And then as I got older,
you know, in college, I would say like my first real business was I was trying to find a place
to live. And at that time, this is pre-Cregslist. This is pre, you know, all the tools that
exist today online. And so the only way to find places to live was like you'd have to go to
the local bulletin boards. And it was really hard because bulletin boards were messy. Your
flyers would get taken down. Like a lot of times, they just weren't maintained properly.
So at a certain point, I found a two-bedroom apartment and I needed a roommate. I didn't know
one that wanted to, that was looking for an apartment. So I decided that I was going to put flyers
all around these bulletin boards. I woke up super early. There was probably like 30, 40 bulletin boards
all around campus. I posted these flyers. And then I went home, showered, came back like later in
the day as a student. And I realized half my flyers were like torn down. Half of them were just like
they fell off the bulletin board. I was like, man, this is a real struggle trying to be able to reach
people. So I started this business called Davis Marketing Services where basically I would help businesses
that were trying to reach students post flyers on bulletin boards and that continue to evolve.
I set up like a sales team that was commission only. I worked with a local sorority that would do my
distribution that would go and like post all the flyers. I hired a graphic designer that would create
really cool art. And I started getting clients like apartment buildings that would say,
hey, help us fill our housing. And I started making money that way. You know, I probably had like a
five-person team by the time I was like 19 years old or so, which was cool. And then after that,
I got into real estate and I started what now is sort of known as like a boiler room or like a call
center. And I probably at the peak of it had like 40 students working for me where they would just
call people and asked if they were interested in refinancing their home or selling their home.
I became a real estate broker pretty early on. And so that was like at the peak right before
the 2008 real estate crash. I got the front page of like our student newspaper highlighting like
the business that I built. We got to three offices. And yeah, it was pretty cool. I even bought like a
Lamborghini when I was 21 years old. I bought two houses as investment properties. The hard part
about that is life is going to give you certain levels of validation, even if you're on the wrong
path, right? Even if I'm doing things for the wrong intentions, success could still blind you
because you're receiving a certain level of validation. Maybe you're receiving a certain amount of
money or people that are around you, whether they're good influences or not, are saying, hey,
great job. And they're all sort of benefiting from like what is happening anyway. But ultimately,
if you do things for the wrong reasons, it's never going to work out. And I had to learn that
the hard way multiple times in my life. So I spent a lot of my life in my late teens, early 20s,
just misdirected, trying to chase money over meaning. And that led me to a lot of bad short-term
decisions that ultimately I had to come later in life to realize weren't the right way of doing things.
And that's why I'm such a believer in second chances, in self-growth. That's why I started my whole
studio to say that you can make mistakes, you can get everything wrong in life, hit rock bottom,
and completely change your life and become someone entirely new. That's what I did with my life,
and that's what I try to inspire others in knowing that they can also do the same.
You didn't go to business school. You didn't have a business you were inheriting from your family,
and you didn't have someone say, duh, here's a million dollars, go and start a business.
Where did you learn business skills?
I was always just really motivated with a lot of big dreams
and I was never scared to try and fail
because what I realize is I was working retail
like in my late teen years.
Like my very first job was at Gap
and then I worked at Macy's for a little bit
and when I was thinking about starting my own business
I just realized like hey, okay, what if it doesn't work out?
What if you fail?
Okay, then that means you just go on and get a job.
just like everybody else, trial by failure, right?
How did you become a great public speaker?
It kind of goes back to our conversation
that you had to probably mess up a lot of times on stage
to be able to have the confidence that you have, right?
How does anyone become a great athlete?
You miss a lot of shots before you actually score.
The hard part about business is, let's say, in baseball,
you hit one out of three balls and get on base.
You're an all-star player.
But in business, right?
It feels like so much pressure if you lose or your business fails or your idea doesn't work out because we're worried about everybody's judgment on us.
We're worrying about failing in public.
But the thing is, is even if you fail nine times in a row and you succeed that 10th time, the thing that people are going to remember you for is that 10th time that you actually succeeded.
How much you wait, wonder, right now about 1.000.
I'm at 183. We should race.
No, I want to leave here with my original hip.
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In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth.
You doctored this particular test twice in silence, correct?
I doctored the test once.
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Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Americopa County
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This isn't over until Justice.
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podcasts.
What would you say to someone who says, I'm scared, I'm going to put out a video that's cringe?
I'm scared that I'm not going to have any customers for my business.
I'm scared that no one's going to buy my product.
I'm scared I'm going to fail.
You know, when I think back about putting out my first video, I had those same thoughts
of self-doubt. And keep in mind, I started putting out content in my 30s. A lot of times,
you know, people that are a little bit older might think, oh, I miss my window because I see a lot
of creators that are teens or in their early 20s, right? I didn't start my journey until my mid-30s.
And when I was recording my very first video, I was stuck, you know, feeling that level of paralysis
where, hey, what are people going to think? What if people laugh at me? What if no one watches the
videos. And what got me over that hurdle was remembering that even if one person watched my videos
and it made a difference, a positive impact in their life, then that's a reason for me to keep
going. And I put out that video for that one person. And it was also a good thing I had that
realization because there was probably only that one person that was watching my videos in the
beginning. And it was my mother-in-law, like Laura's mom was so good at like liking and sharing my
videos to all of her network. And for a long time, you know, I wasn't getting any views. Then I
kept at it, right? I kept switching formats. My whole content was about not giving up after failure
because I was somebody who just found myself having failed so many times in my life that I wanted
inspire people that even if you have failed, you can keep going. So as my content wasn't taken off
the way that I wanted to, as it was failing, I wanted to give up myself, but because my messaging
was to not give up, I had to keep going. That inadvertently became my own motivation. And so I kept
trying new formats, new types of stories. Eventually, I landed on asking friends and family members
to be actors and videos. Everything was shot in my small little studio apartment.
on iPhones. And one of the very first videos that ended up going viral was a video that honored
housewives, because I realized that housewives, especially at that time, there was not a lot of
content that made it obvious as to how hard it is to be a stay-at-home mom. And so I created the
storyline about a mom who has this to-do list and she wakes up in the morning. She has to get her
kid ready, she has to get herself ready, she makes lunch, she takes her kid to school,
she comes back, she cleans the entire place, she's doing all this work, and then she's making
her husband's favorite lunch for when he comes back. And right before he comes home, the child
makes a complete mess out of the house once again. So the husband comes home and he looks around,
and he's clearly upset. And the wife goes like, what's wrong, honey, do you not like it? I made your
favorite dish. And he goes, I like it, but what did you do all?
day, were you just sitting around doing nothing? And you could tell she was completely heartbroken
by that response. And she walks off in tears. And so the husband is upset and, you know,
feels like his wife doesn't appreciate him because of his hard work and he's the only one doing
hard work. He goes and he finds the notebook of her to-do list and sees all the different things
that she had to do that day. And at the very end, it was making.
dinner for the person that I love and he instantly felt this guilt realizing how much she
actually did but he didn't see it and what was so special about that video for me
was the very first one to ever go viral but what was so special was not just the
amount of views yes that video went on to get 250 million views but what was
more important to me were the comments there were
so many women that said, this video helped me feel seen. This video helped me feel like being a housewife
or a stay-at-home mom is appreciated. And on the flip of it, there were so many husbands in the
comments saying, wow, I decided to bring my wife flowers today to let her know how much she's
appreciated. I'm going to start to tell her how much I love her and I see the hard work that she's doing.
So I started seeing the actual change that happened in the world.
So what I would say is if you are looking to create content, if you are looking to start a business,
if you're looking to do anything that is worthwhile, start with your why, start with your purpose.
And if your purpose is to try to help people, which I hope it is, as you and I can both relate to,
no one wants to start something to make the world a worse place, right?
We all want to make the world a better place because of what we have contributed to it,
then just remember, even if one person is able to be better off because of what you have done,
then it's worthwhile pursuing.
My very first comment on a video, do you know what it was?
It was one of my quote-unquote friends that said, who do you think you are?
Tony Robbins?
And that hurts so bad because I was like, oh my gosh, who do I?
think I am. But then I also realized that that video is not for him. That's such a great story,
man. I love the reframe of putting yourself out there being cringy, being awkward, being uncomfortable,
because it may help one person. I love that reframe because one of my friends recently started
making food content. And she was telling me, she was like, oh gosh, anytime I put out of video,
I just feel so awkward and cringe. But the thing that keeps her going is someone who messages her and
says, I made your recipe for my daughter tonight and she loved it or like, I made this for my husband
tonight or my wife tonight and they loved it. That is what keeps us going. And I think when you get
lost in the views and the numbers and the digits, you lose that love. And I think that happens
even in the astronomical numbers. We've both experienced insane numbers. And if you don't look at
the comments with those insane numbers, you stop being fulfilled because the numbers don't last for that
long, like they can eventually get, you can get used to them as well. But it's that comment,
it's that DM that makes all the difference. If people start making content like that,
now talk to me about what makes the shift where like, okay, you were putting it out. It was
making one person happy, your mother-in-law. And that video you just told me about was your personal
story with Laura, where you were ungrateful to her, right? That's what it was.
I'll get there. I'll ask Laura later, her to-do list, like all these things.
This was at a time where she was not a mom yet.
Okay, okay, fine.
But talk to me about the difference between I'm making videos.
It's making one person happy.
I'm doing it for the right reason.
I'm doing it for a mission.
But hey, I need to get better at this.
Like, I need to understand how to connect with more people.
Because if I'm going to make this my livelihood and actually have a team, I know you have a
huge team, you have incredible studios now.
Like, what it's grown to is a real machine.
And I think this is something I want to make people aware of that you can.
can do what you love, but if you want it to last and you want it to sustain and you want it to
grow, it is going to have to become more effective, organized and machine-like to some degree.
Talk to me about how you tested and what you did as a business person in order to go from,
I want to make a difference in the world. One person is happy, but actually we need to reach
more people if I'm going to make this real. There's a five-step process that anyone who's
looking to be a successful creator or even to own a business or being an entrepreneur that if you
follow this five-step process, I promise you, you will be successful. To make it on-brand,
right, I came up with an acronym as to what this five-step process is. So the five-step process is called
heart. H-E-A-R-T. Step one is H. Honor your story.
you can easily follow trends, but instead tell your truth.
We were talking about this earlier that there are so many people that want to be creators out there.
There are so many businesses out there.
It could feel overwhelming.
If you have a goal right now, that's probably in the back of your mind.
There's already so many people.
How am I going to stand out?
But there is only one you.
There is only one person that has.
lived the life that you have lived and is able to tell your story. So start by honoring your story.
And I'll tell you a quick example. There is this friend that I have. She's from Columbia and she
has this thick accent. She's always wanted to be in media. And so when she came to America,
she was working as a news broadcaster. But she would be given a hard time by the producer because
the producer would say, you're not pronouncing certain words right. That's not how it said and would
constantly make her feel insecure and criticize her because of her accent. Eventually, she got fired
from that job because of her accent. So she decided, instead of giving up on her dream of becoming a
content creator, that she wasn't going to let any producer control her destiny. So she decides to
start a YouTube channel. And naturally, she just got fired from her job. She's insecure about her
accent. She's trying to sound more American, right? Because of that. But she's putting out
videos and she's speaking in her authentic voice, creating whatever the type of content that she was
creating. And ironically, the reason that her content succeeded is because of her accent.
There were so many people that also had an accent that looked at that and said,
I can relate to this person because they sound like me.
So take the thing that makes you unique and make that your superpower.
Let's talk about that one for a second because I really do like that one.
And I think that's why I've noticed, especially in short form content,
the incredible rise in people just sitting in their car.
It's so intimate and personal
And you're showing someone's life
And I've heard people just ramble
Like sometimes someone just rambling
Like I think there's a lot to be said
For people are like
I'm not a good public speaker
I'm not well spoken
Some of my favorite videos
Are just wanting someone vent in the car
Because it just feels so real
And I feel like I'm in the car with you
And I feel like I'm your friend
And then there are some people who are more polished
Who are more clean about what they want to say
Are more clear about what they want to say
And I think
I love the part of honoring your story
in who you are and where you come from
because that's all you have anyway.
Like you can't, like she couldn't change her accent.
This person can't change where they live
or what they're doing.
You are going to have to put yourself out there
and I love the idea of just being really clear
about not thinking you have to be more or less polished,
more or less professional.
Some people I love because they're not professional
in how they put out videos at all.
And there are some people I love because they're so professional.
And then there's some people who I love
because they're really fashionable.
and there are some people I love because they don't care.
And it's like that is what's so fascinating about the point you're making is that we don't all follow one type of person.
You might follow someone who's just always put together and then you love following someone who's always a mess.
It's not like this, it's not like there's one person in the world that everyone thinks we should all follow and that we don't want to follow other people who do it differently.
It's the hardest thing in the world to actually believe this and take a chance on this.
but the things that you are most insecure about are actually what makes you the most relatable
and makes you the easiest to connect with others.
Your greatest struggle is actually your greatest superpower.
And I'll give another example because we both have a mutual friend, Jamie Kernlema,
the founder of It Cosmetics.
She started her career also in media.
and she was always ashamed or made to feel bad about herself
because of different skin issues that she had.
Yeah, rosacea.
She had rosacea.
And she can never find a product in the marketplace
that actually worked for her.
So eventually she decided to create her own product.
She turned her biggest struggle into her biggest superpower
and eventually sold her brand to L'Oreal for $1 billion.
So think of her first.
about those areas in your life that you feel you're actually trying to hide from.
And those actually might be the things that take you to success and grow you into having
the biggest audience of people that are experiencing something very similar to what you're
going through.
I love that.
All right.
What's E?
The second step is E, earn your audience's trust.
It's easy to get somebody to watch a video one time.
But if you're going to build a sustainable career as a creator, you have to get them to keep coming back.
And how are they going to keep coming back is if they trust you?
And the only way to get your audience to trust you is if you know who your audience is.
What are they like?
What do they feel?
What drives them emotionally?
What do they connect with?
What are things that they're struggling?
If you help your audience become seen, they'll want to come back and watch your videos over and over again.
So the number one comment that I get with our stories, because we tell stories that have very diverse
characters, this was in a time where, you know, Hollywood traditionally has been mainly white.
And when I started creating content, I created content with people in the videos that look just like me.
I mean, I'm Indian. My wife is Hispanic. Our team is very diverse. So those are the types of people
that we put in our videos. And it represented all types of people. And all the storylines from the
beginning came from my own life experience of failure. And because other people could relate to what
I had been through or experienced similar types of hardships, they said, I see myself in your content,
and that's what was able to connect with them. And so similarly, we were just talking about this
actually before we started the podcast. You have so many people that want to come on your podcast.
And sure, maybe you know it's going to get a lot of use.
Because they might be a controversial person.
And as we know in today's environment, if you say things that are controversial,
you'll probably get a lot of use.
But you made the decision that your platform, your brand,
your mission stands for something.
It's who you are.
So you have made certain decisions to not platform someone
that might have gotten you a lot of short-term success,
but because you believe in your long-term success
and more importantly,
because you wouldn't ever want to disappoint your audience.
So everything you do,
you need to think about earning your audience's trust
if you want to build a sustainable career as a creator.
What do people do when they feel like everyone's watching
and then now no one's watching and everyone's watching and no one's watching?
Like you almost feel like you're trying to earn your audience's trust.
You thought they'd be interested in this,
but now they're not and you're feeling dishonest.
by the fact that, God, the last video got like a million views, this video got like 10,000
views, the next video, or let's not even talk about that astronomical.
My first video got 1,000 likes, I felt really good.
My second video got 100 likes.
What do you do when you feel like it's flip-flopping?
What are you doing wrong?
What are you not understanding?
I think when it comes to pivoting, right?
In business, in life, there's going to be a lot of times where something is working and it no
longer is. So how do you know when is the right time to actually switch your strategy? Because what is
the common advice? Don't give up. Keep going. Guess what? I peddle this advice too. But there is a point in
time where, hey, you might want to go do something else. And there's three reasons, I would say,
that you ever want to pivot. Number one is when your inner goals no longer align with the outer
outcome. And what I mean by that is your purpose is no longer aligned with what you're doing on a daily
basis. And a lot of times we might feel that when you're trying to become successful and it's not
working, that's when you probably need to pivot. I know just as many people that are actually very
successful at something, but they're successful at doing something that no longer serves their
mission or fulfills their why. And that's the hardest thing in the world to take something that is
already successful and decide that I'm no longer going to do this because it no longer aligns
with who I am. But if you don't make that decision, it's always going to end badly. So if you're ever
feeling like you no longer are aligned with your purpose, that's the first reason to shift.
The second reason is when the market has changed or the audience has changed.
We keep wanting to put out the same thing because it's worked one time or it's worked for many years.
But at certain points in time, trends change.
The algorithm changes, desires, public interest, whatever it is, changes.
And so we have to be able to face the hard truths of reality.
And those who often get you to try new.
things. There's this great book called Who Move My Cheese? Yeah, yeah, great book. Yeah. And it's basically
about mice trying to go to the same place that they've always found cheese. And then as an experiment,
that cheese gets moved to a new location. There's a certain group of mice that keep going back
to that same place that that cheese was not found. And they keep going again and again and they
never give up. And then there's another group that after a couple times where they realize the cheese
wasn't there, they actually go a different path and start looking at different areas.
The ones that were able to move on the quickest were actually the mice that survived the longest.
So if the cheese in your industry has been moved, you have to be able to see that.
The third thing, I would say, is if you are not pivoting, is it because you are worried and not facing the truth about reality?
Because it is scary.
It is so scary when something has worked for so long.
and the idea to now all of a sudden have to do something new that you've never done before.
But the longer you stay stuck in that place, the longer it's going to take for you to find that new way of success.
So just ask yourself, are you not pivoting because you think the data is wrong?
Or is it because you're in denial?
And if you're in denial, then you have to face that hard truth that it's time to make a change.
change. And I will say, there's always greatness on the other side of that mountain. I know it sounds
scary. Anyone listening to this right now, you are at a place in your life right now that if you look
back five years ago, you're probably at a better place. And that's because you embrace certain
hard changes that might have felt scary at first, but you made those decisions to get to where
you are today. So don't doubt your ability to overcome whatever new environments and changes that are
going to be there for whatever this new chapter in your life is going to bring. By the way,
thank you for being so systematic. This is why I love Daar because Daar has a system and a methodology
for everything. And those three points help so much. And one of the ways I practically applied that
in my company from day one was what I call the 7030 rule, which was that 70% of our content would
always be what we know works and 30% would always be trial and error. And so we were okay if 30%
of our posts absolutely tanked and didn't work because the one that did work would become the next
phase of the 70%. And we've seen that time and time and time again. You will see us trialing new
formats and trialing new types of content all the time, but that's 30% of our output because that 30%
will become the future 70%. The mistake we make is you do 100% of what works. And when it
you don't know what's going to work, and now you have to go 100% in trial, and then you'll have
90% failure, and that gets really, really scary. And so these points that you just shared are
huge, and that's been one of the ways that we've implemented it. I even saw in the early days,
like, I saw a lot of my peers in the space when I started, which was actually just 10 years
ago, 2016, Jan, this year, I saw a lot of my peers become one platform people, and I saw
a lot of people become like a YouTuber. At that time, I was a Facebooker through and through. Like,
that's where I made content. And I saw people, like, I saw peers of mine, or even actually
even people before me, hindsight, the OGs, who literally paid off their parents' mortgage because
of how much money they made on YouTube. And then the next year couldn't pay their own rent.
They were living with their parents. They were living with their parents. And I'll pay that house I bought
you. I got to move into now. And I was so heartbroken. I was watching that. And I was like, God,
that's scary.
And I noticed that you couldn't be bound to a platform.
So even though one platform was killing it for me,
we were always building multiple platforms
and multiple businesses off the back of that
because you couldn't rely.
And so everything you're saying are practical things
that even in my life,
even though I didn't have that methodology you just laid out,
those are the practical ways we were doing it.
Let's go to A.
The third step is A, architect a system.
What you're describing right now is a framework for success.
The goal shouldn't be to create a piece of content.
the goal should be to create a company or a content machine.
It doesn't matter even if you want to be a one-person practitioner or if you want to have
a 5,000 person team and become the next Disney, the goal should always be to think about content
as creating a company.
And what I mean by that is you have certain systems in place.
You have certain methodologies.
You have ways of testing new content and also super serving the content that is working.
And so for us, you know, we have processes when a process.
it comes to how do we green light content, how does something flow from script all the way to
screen and all the different processes that are involved in between. We have a great team that's
always leveling up and learning new skills that we've empowered in order to make sure that the content
has continuity because I know so many people that have gone viral once and that should never be
the goal because if you have the company infrastructure underneath and all of these systems and
processes that make sure that you can keep putting out new content every single week or new
products or whatever your goal is, that's what's going to ultimately lead you to long-term success.
How much you wait, Wanda?
Right now, about 130.
I'm at 183. We should race.
No, I want to leave here with my original hips.
On the podcast and matchup with Lillia, I pair prominent female athletes with unexpected guests.
On a recent episode, I sat down with undisputed boxing champ, Cloressa Shields, and comedian Wanda
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means to be ladylike. Open your free IHeartRadio app. Search the matchup with Alia and listen now.
Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports Network.
In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle to prove the
the truth. You doctored this particular test twice in so-ins, correct? I doctored the test
once. It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case. I wanted people to be able to see
what their tax dollars were being used for. Sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg Gillespie and Michael Marincini. My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Americopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges.
This isn't over until justice is served in Arizona.
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Hello, gorgeous, it's Lala Kent.
Host of Untraditionally Lala.
My days of filling up cups at Sir may be over, but I'm sure.
still loving life in the valley. Life on the other side of the hill is giving grown-up vibes,
but over here on my podcast, Untraditionally Lala, I'm still that Lala you either love or love to hate.
I've been full on over sharing with fans, family, and former frenemies like Tom Schwartz.
I had a little bone to pick with Schwarzy when he came on the pod.
You don't feel bad that you told me I was a bootleg housewife? I almost flipped a pizza in your lap.
Oh my God, I literally forgot about that until just now. Sorry, I don't want to blame all
I got to blame that one on the alcohol.
This is about laughing and learning when life just keeps on life in.
Because I make mistakes so that you guys don't have to.
We're growing, we're thriving, and yes, sometimes we're barely surviving.
But we do it all with love.
It's unruly, it's unafraid, it's untraditionally la la.
Listen to untraditionally la la la on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
There's one more thing you reminded me of that I loved.
We did this years ago.
we used to do something that I learned called the board test.
And so what we would do is we'd watch a video
or we'd watch a podcast as a group as a team
and people would start putting up their hands
as soon as they got bored.
And it was almost like when you watch America's Got Talent
and someone presses the buzzer
and the person has to keep performing
until everyone pots their buzzer out.
And it was amazing because we got to see
every moment in which it was like,
God, this podcast got boring at 30 seconds.
What are we going to do at 30 seconds to help people feel connected?
Or this video got boring at three minutes, 17 seconds.
What are we going to add there to keep attention?
And it was these systems that allowed us to create engaging content.
And I think people don't realize how much engineering and how much thought and how much intentionality goes into serving a great piece of content.
When you look at the best TV shows you love, when you look at the best movies that you're fixated on,
it's because someone has obsessed over every single line in that script and every single visual and angle that you see, you're not just watching it because it happened to capture attention.
And I think we almost have this false belief that are like, oh, when you make art, it just works.
And I'm like, I'm not sure about that.
It's as much art as it is a science.
Half of our revenue from content comes from just repurposing the same videos into other platforms or into different,
types of content. Here's what I mean. In traditional media, if you create a hit franchise,
right, let's say Friends or Seinfeld, how many times are you able to sell that show to so many
different places? You're watching it on Netflix. You're watching it on Hulu. You're watching it on Disney,
all these different places. So the people that created that content, they can keep monetizing it
over and over. But on social media, it doesn't work that way for creators. You put out one piece of
content, whatever it's going to generate in the first 30 days is typically about 95% of the money
that you're ever going to make. But it doesn't have to be that way. And so what I started doing
was I started figuring out ways to give that content new life. I started doing this several years
ago. Now it's a little bit more known of a system. But let's say I create a YouTube video.
and that video is 21 minutes.
I am being served an audience that is watching that video who wants to consume 21 minute videos.
These are people that are probably eating dinner and have about 20 minutes to watch,
watching in their living room, but there's a whole other group out there of people that want two-hour videos.
And that's what the algorithm is serving them.
And then so what I did was I took my existing videos and I would combine,
there about 20 minutes each, I would combine, combine six of them. And I would come up with the theme.
Let's say there's a whole theme around kindness. You know, the kindness you put out into the world
always comes back to you. That is what I consider packaging. I'll put six videos together
that have that sort of a lesson. And then I will put that on a standalone channel as a separate
video. And now YouTube is going to go and serve a whole different audience that content.
So now out of those six videos, I'm getting another life out of that content.
You do this with the content.
A lot of people do this with content.
That's a known thing.
The other thing that we do is cutting down the content.
A lot of people know clipping, of course, now you take that same piece of content, you
find one-minute versions, you put it on TikTok, you put it on Instagram Reels, you put
it on YouTube shorts.
Yeah, great.
That might not be generating much revenue, but it's helping you gain a certain level of
exposure that ideally is going to lead to long-form views.
back to your main YouTube channel, your podcast, whatever it is.
But we also do something called reversioning, which is taking a 20-minute piece of content
and we'll cut it down into, let's say, a seven-minute video.
We'll look at the retention graphs of the video.
We'll take the most interesting parts.
And before we post it, we have a whole system of testing that piece of content.
We'll take a 20-minute piece of content, create 20 different versions of it in a 7-7.
minute video, run Facebook ads. And by the way, when I say this, I know it sounds expensive.
I'm talking about we'll spend like $5 testing each video. See what the best performing one was and then
post that one on our Facebook. So it just goes back to having a system in place of testing,
of optimizing. These are the things that are going to ultimately help lead you to long-term success.
That's the difference between what big creators are doing and smaller creators that they
may not understand. It's not that big creators have more time in their day. They're not necessarily
working harder than you are. I know lots of small creators are probably working just as hard,
if not harder as I am. They just have a method of doing things. And so if you can learn what those
methods are, that's going to give you the advantage for success. I'll give you one last analogy.
If someone asked you, go out and cut as many trees as you possibly can, and they're going to give you
30 days to accomplish that job and hand you a pickaxe. What are you going to do? Most people would
grab that axe and start chopping. And sure, in the beginning, they're making progress. Let's say that
they can cut one tree a day. I don't know how this all works. How many trees you can cut a day?
I'm not encouraging anyone to cut trees. Let me get that. Let me also get that out there.
All right. We love trees. But that one person can, let's just say, cut one tree a day for simplicity.
The other person goes and thinks, hey, I'm not going to start cutting trees.
I'm going to create a system for cutting trees.
I'm going to create a tree cutting company.
I'm going to go out and recruit people now or build a whole tree manufacturing facility.
And I'm going to spend 29 days doing this.
So on the surface, it looks like that one person that's cutting trees, they're way ahead.
They've cut 29 trees in 29 days while the,
other person hasn't cut a single one, but on the 30th day when that person shows up with an army
of trim cutters and all the sophisticated tools and supplies and a whole factory, they're going to cut
300 trees on the day that someone was going to cut one. So focus on building the company,
not the content. Yeah, well said. So step four is R, reach people emotionally. And the whole idea
is that we're so obsessed about having the perfect edit or the perfect lighting or the perfect
angle.
All those things at the end of the day, yeah, they help a little bit, but that's not going to be
the reason why people watch.
No one is listening to this podcast right now or watching it on a video.
Think, oh my gosh, the podcast isn't great, but the lighting.
The lighting is amazing or the sound effects or whatever else.
So it goes back to what we're talking about early.
Don't try to worry about being so poli.
The real success is in trying to keep that emotional resonance with your audience.
We call it retention, but really what is retention of any video?
It's your ability to connect emotionally with an audience.
The only reason that people are still listening right now is they're feeling something.
That is the ultimate retention graph.
So don't get overly concerned about all these metrics and the data and all those things.
matter in architecting the system, but you also have to reach people emotionally. And with my content,
I think that's why it is worked. I have so many families, for instance, that watch our videos.
So many moms come to me and they say, Dar, I have a hard time trying to get my teenager to listen
to anything I say. But for some reason, when they watch your videos, they suddenly get the lesson.
And because now I've been able to embrace watching your videos with them as part of our nightly routine, that's actually improved the relationship that I have with my child.
That is an emotional connection, right, that exists and has been the secret for our success.
Because people feel something, they'll want to share it with others.
They'll want to comment.
My favorite comment is, this video made me cry.
this video improve my relationship with my spouse.
This video helped me realize that even if I failed,
I can get back up and try again.
And I'm sure your comments and your DMs are flooded with those sorts of things.
So I would say that's step four.
Try to reach the heart.
I couldn't agree more.
I remember years ago, this is before, I mean, this is an old, old article.
There was research done on, I think it was like 7,000 pieces of violence.
viral content. And I believe it was in the New York Times and they found that there were only five
reasons content went viral. And it was because you made people feel one of these five things.
It was adventure. So when you see someone like skydiving or you see someone like water skiing or
whatever it is, someone's doing something that makes you feel a sense of adventure or they're
traveling and like you feel this thrill and this burst of like, wow, they're on a journey.
The second was humor. So our good friend Adam W., who knows how to do this best, like when people laugh,
in the same ways your comments are, this made me cry, people who say, this made me crack up,
I send this to my friend, we're rolling on the floor laughing, like making people for humor or a comedy
video. Or a laugh so hard I cried. Yeah, or that, or that you get both. Yeah, then you get both. Or cried so hard,
I laughed, I guess, in your case.
but like, yeah, I was watching a clip of Trevor Noah the other day from his new special,
and it was so funny that, again, is one of them, so humor.
So adventure, humor.
The third was negativity.
So the news makes you feel a certain way.
That's why we don't skip a news story.
It's why we share it.
It's why we talk about it is because it makes us feel something, in that case, negativity.
Fourth was inspiration, which is yours, and what I try and focus on as well is that our content makes people feel inspired,
or that's at least our intention.
And the fifth was surprise.
And I think you do this really as well as well
because your stories have so many like turning points
and twists and things like that.
And so a sense of surprise.
So the point is I always say this to creators.
If your content doesn't make you feel adventure, humor,
negativity, hopefully not,
inspiration or surprise,
it won't be shared and therefore it won't be seen.
And I feel a lot of people are like,
what is this going to teach someone?
or what is this going to like, what are people going to remember?
And it's like, no, no, no, what do people feel when they watch your content,
when they hear you speak, when they hear your voice, when they look into your eyes,
what do they feel?
And so I love that reaching your audience is the fourth aspect.
Yeah, reaching their hearts, reaching them emotionally.
Yeah.
And number five is turn views into impact, right?
You can get a lot of views and still be unsuccessful.
You can get hardly any views and still be very successful.
Because at the end of the day, I think we're all here on this earth to make some sort of a positive impact, right?
Nobody wants to spend their life doing something that they're not proud of or didn't feel like someone was better off because of their existence.
So more important than just trying to chase numbers, chase meaning, chase adding value and giving back.
and that's what the whole brand has been built around
is letting people know that even on your worst day,
that brighter days are ahead, that you can fail,
everything can go wrong,
but you still will get a second chance.
Everyone deserves a second chance.
If they never ask for your side of the story,
then the side that they heard is already everything
that they already feel about you.
So don't waste your time explaining yourself
to people who are dedicated to misunderstanding you.
That five-step system is absolutely brilliant.
The three reasons to pivot were fantastic.
I really feel like if anyone follows that,
they actually have the exact blueprint you need
to build a successful business,
whether it's a YouTube channel,
whether it's a product, a podcast,
or whatever it may be.
And I know how dedicated you've been to your mission.
Like, it's so clear to me
because I know all the ups and downs
that come with everything you go through
and the fact that you've held on to that
and how important that was to you.
So much of that is based on your own story.
And I want to kind of go back there for a second.
I'm sure it almost brings tears to your eyes to, like, think about how when a kid messages
you or sees you or runs up to you at like Disney, which I've seen videos of this happening,
when you're out of Disney with your kids and other people's kids run up to you and they want
pictures with you and they recognize you and they are moved by your videos.
I mean, I'm sure that makes you just go, God, I never thought.
when I was going through all that stuff,
that this would be happening.
I'm so grateful for where I am in my journey
because when I turned 30 years old,
I reached the lowest point in my life.
And I truly felt that my life was over.
I was broke.
I was depressed.
I just got out of a bad breakup.
I had anxiety.
I had depression.
I had family issues.
I was days away
from getting evicted from my apartment.
And honestly, I'm sure, like, those listening have probably felt this type of feeling before.
It just felt like everything I have ever dreamed of was falling apart,
and my life was not going to amount to anything.
And I stayed in that low place for a long time.
The one thing that really helped me was reading stories of inspirational people.
And it turned out that every person that we look up to that is successful,
they've encountered a lot of failures leading up to that success.
So I read stories about how Michael Jordan was cut from his high school basketball team.
Or how Oprah was fired from her job as a radio host.
Or how J.K. Rowling had so many publishers turn her down before Harry Potter came out.
Or how Walt Disney went bankrupt multiple times before even coming up with Mickey Mouse.
And reading those stories made me realize that failure is not the opposite of success.
That is actually a part of success.
Those people didn't become successful because they didn't fail.
They kept, they became successful because they kept pushing through those failures until they finally got to success.
So that motivated me to keep going.
And what I decided to do was that's when I started thinking, how many other people,
are out there that are struggling like I am.
What is the one thing that makes me unique?
What is my superpower?
I just failed a lot more than everybody else.
I made a lot more mistakes than most people out there.
So instead of hiding from that, I'm going to embrace that.
I'm going to talk about that openly because that's not something that you hear quite often
people say.
I messed up.
I'm wrong.
I failed.
I'm sure a lot of women hearing this probably wish that their husbands would say this more often
or vice versa, you know? So I started saying that, right? That here's what all the things that I did
wrong in my life. And in the beginning, I would just talk to camera thinking that, you know,
my videos would go viral because I was giving this profound advice. And I remember posting my very
first video on my birthday because I thought, oh, I'm going to get extra love. You know, I'm going to
get prioritizing the algorithm because everyone's going to be coming to my page. So I post this video
and I refresh and I refresh and I refresh.
And that video got no views.
It didn't even break 100 views at that time.
And I kept thinking like if I could just get a comma in that number, right?
And for a long time, I thought that the algorithm was broken,
that something was wrong because this video was so good.
No one was watching my videos early on.
But you know what?
Because this was mission driven and because I was trying to have,
help people get through hard times. I kept going. I kept putting out video after video. And ultimately,
I started switching my formats. That's when I started storytelling. My views went from 100 to maybe 500.
So then when I started storytelling, you know, the ceiling that I got up to was about a thousand views.
And I couldn't seem to break past that. And so as much as I tried, I kept putting out video after
video, nothing seemed to break that ceiling. And I got a little discouraged. And so one day, I told my
wife, I said, you know, I'm thinking about giving up. Maybe I want to still inspire people. I want to,
but maybe like creating videos is not my way of doing that. Maybe it's writing a book or maybe it's
talking on stage. And God bless Laura, she's like, no, you can't give up. Like I see how passionate
you are about this. You have to keep going. So I keep putting out videos. I can. I
keep, you know, every single week, no matter what, I kept being consistent, kept showing up,
kept putting out video after video, and still none of them were breaking a thousand views.
So one day I tell Laura, all right, you know what, I have tried my best.
It's just not working out for me. I'm just not meant to create videos.
So this next video that I create is going to be my last one.
She didn't want to accept that, but, you know, she's supportive.
me and my decision. So I used to write my scripts on napkins at that time. And everything was a story
that taught some sort of a positive lesson. And at that time, my brother-in-law was visiting me and my
wife's friend was over. This was in our small studio apartment. So I'm writing this story on a
napkin and I decide to talk about infidelity and about how infidelity can start with seemingly
small innocent acts, such as liking an ex's Facebook post. So I came up,
with this idea about this husband who's liking this ex's Facebook post while his wife is cooking
him dinner in the kitchen. As I'm staring at this napkin, I look up and I see my brother-in
scrolling Facebook on his phone with my wife's friend cooking something in the kitchen with her back
to him. And I suddenly got this inspiration. I don't call it serendipity, call it fake, call it God,
whatever it is.
Because at that time, keep in mind,
I wasn't doing any visual storytelling.
I wasn't creating scripted content.
So I walk over to my brother-in-law and my wife's friend
and I said, hey, will you guys be in this video?
They're like, what do we have to do?
And I was like, nothing.
Just literally stand there and do what you're doing.
I mean, to hindsight,
I probably should have told my brother-in-law that I'm portraying him as a
cheater.
But I just was like, no one's going to watch this anyway.
So I had,
one team member at that time. I asked him to record on an iPhone, right? And instead of me telling a story
just talking to camera, I narrate a story while my brother-in-law and my wife's friend are just doing
what they're doing. And I'm saying, hey, you know, cheating can start a relatively innocent act,
such as liking, I'm narrating this whole story. I shoot the video. I go to bed that night.
Don't think anything of it. I schedule that video to go live at 6 o'clock in the morning.
The next morning, Laura is waking me up.
She's shaking me.
She's like, Dar, Dar, wake up.
I'm like, what's going on?
She's like, that video that you posted, it's going viral.
And I'm like, yeah, right.
I'm still half asleep.
I'm like rubbing my eyes, like trying to see it.
And sure enough, the last video that I ever planned on posting was the one that went viral.
And I say this story because I want people to know that you could always be one opportunity, one phone call, one door, one piece of content away from massive success, from achieving all of your dreams that you've ever wanted.
And you'll never know unless you keep going.
Because imagine if I had given up one video before.
none of this would have ever happened. So going back to your story about how it feels now
when people come to me and they say, Dar, I watch your content, the reason that it feels so
special to me is because I know that I started putting out content for people to be able to
overcome their toughest times in life, to be able to know that if you failed, failure is an event,
It is not a person that you can pick yourself back up and keep going.
So it's more so the way that people describe how my videos have affected them
or how my videos have brought them closer to their mom or their spouse or their children
or help them believe in themselves or feel seen in a way that they've never felt before.
That's the greatest gift of all.
I couldn't agree with you more.
I mean, it's so interesting to me how you all always won.
win away.
Never underestimate God's ability
to change your life in an instant.
You're much closer than you ever think.
And it could happen
tomorrow,
but you would not know
unless you keep going.
If you put yourself back there
and someone told you this is going to be the journey you're on,
I guess you wouldn't even believe it.
It didn't even seem possible.
You know,
I was just so broken.
I had failed so much.
much in my life that I honestly felt like my life was over, that I was never going to amount
to anything, that none of my dreams were ever going to work out. I had worries that on my tombstone,
people were going to say, here is darn man, the biggest failure that has ever existed. Like,
literally, that is what went through my mind. And so if you could tell me back then that I would be
where I am today, like, I would just say you're, you're crazy. Like, there's absolutely no way.
And I think that's what gives me so gratitude, so much gratitude, like for this journey.
And that's why every step, every win, I am so appreciative of that because I remember what it's like to be on the other side of this and feeling like completely hopeless.
What if mind control is real?
If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have?
Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car?
When you look at your car, you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings.
feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you? I gave her some suggestions to be sexually
aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP was used on me to access my subconscious.
NLP, aka neurolinguistic programming, is a blend of hypnosis, linguistics, and psychology. Fans say
it's like finally getting a user manual for your brain. It's about engineering consciousness.
Mind games is the story of NLP. It's crazy cast of disciples. And the
a fake doctor who invented it at a new age commune and sold it to guys in suits.
He stood trial for murder and got acquitted.
The biggest mind game of all, NLP, might actually work.
This is wild.
Listen to Mind Games on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, it's us to Jonas Brothers, and guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, new?
Huge news.
We created our own podcast called, Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast.
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to a...
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts throughout there.
But this one's extra special.
So how did we actually come up with a name, Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
Well, we were thinking I'm originally calling it
one of the early names of our band.
Before Jonas Brothers was...
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing, a bit for the podcast,
where people could call in and say, hey, Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas,
and offered it up as a potential title for the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen. We don't care where you hear it.
When you feel uncomfortable, what do you put on?
Biggie.
You put on Biggie when you feel uncomfortable?
I want to get confident.
This is DJ Hester Prince.
Music is Therapy.
A new podcast.
from me, a DJ and licensed therapist.
12 months, 12 areas of your life.
Money, love, career, confidence.
This isn't just a podcast.
It's unconventional therapy for your entire year.
Listen to DJ Hesterprin's Music is Therapy
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Talk to me with the importance of having a good partner
when you're an aspiring entrepreneur.
For me, having the right partner is the biggest decision that you will ever make in your life.
And when you're choosing the right partner, don't choose someone that you can have fun with.
You should choose someone that you can struggle with.
Because anyone's going to be there during your good times.
When you're high on life, when money is flowing, when it seems like everything you touch turns of gold, guess what?
there's going to be a whole army of people around that want to be your friend.
But when you're at your lowest moment, when you're there sitting in the emergency room at
three o'clock in the morning, how many people are going to show up to hold your hand?
Very few people.
And when you find that person, that is the person that is meant to be in your life.
And Laura has been that person for me.
I'm so thankful that she came into my life
because she came from a different set of values and upbringing than I did
and she helped straighten my life in a way that I never would have been able to.
I grew up where operating in a gray area was okay, right?
Like if, as long as you made money, it was okay.
The means didn't have to justify the ends kind of a thing.
But Laura came in and she was so black and white about,
everything, her morals about, you know, the way that one should live. And that really helped to get me
on a better path in my life. She believed in me when I had nothing. Like in the beginning, I couldn't
even afford the ticket for the parking garage when she came to visit me. Like, that's how broke I was.
But she still saw something in me that I couldn't even see in myself. And she kept believing me
and she kept making me feel like all these big dreams I had,
all these ideas that they weren't silly,
that they weren't over, that I could still achieve them
if I just focused and worked hard enough.
You know, I remember early on,
there was this influencer brand trip that we got invited to.
And the brand that was paying for it
would only buy economy tickets.
They wouldn't buy business class.
I was just grateful to get a plane ticket,
but what I didn't realize is that every other influencer paid to upgrade their ticket.
And at this time, Laura was the influencer.
I wasn't creating content.
So these were all her friends.
So all of her friends were sitting in first class.
And Laura and I came on in the plane and you probably know this feeling.
Anyone listening to this probably knows the feeling.
We walked by first class and all of her friends are watching.
and we went all the way to economy
and like the friends in the seats,
they were kind of like looking at us, somewhat judging.
I felt so embarrassed.
And I said, babe, like, I'm so sorry
that I couldn't afford to upgrade us to first class.
And she's like, as long as you're next to me,
that's all that matters.
I don't care if we're sitting in economy.
I don't care if we're riding the bus.
And like at that point where I felt like I was nothing,
And I was just humiliated and was, you know, sort of laughed at because of that to have someone
that believed in me and stood by me despite that. That meant so much to me. And, you know,
what's interesting is like fast forward to today. A lot of those people, you know, riding in first class
are now the ones riding an economy because they didn't manage their money well or they were
spending, you know, incorrectly. And I'm grateful to have built success in a way where, you know,
we've managed our finance as well and made good long-term decisions where we've built something
sustainable so we can fly the way that we choose to now. I mean, I love hearing about your relationship
because I know Laura, she's incredible, like she's unbelievable. She's such a special force of a
human. And I know how much she loves you and cares about you. And so hearing about you speak about her in
that way is super, super heartwarming. What has love taught you that success never could?
I think in success, you think about the big wins, but love is actually in the details.
And I'll give you a great example of this. One time Laura and I were flying to go see her
favorite artist perform. Laura was so excited. She gets unbelievably excited when it comes to like
seeing her favorite artists.
And she spent all this time on her makeup, on her outfit.
She had all the pictures planned that she was going to take.
We get to the concert and her phone dies.
She forgot to charge her phone.
Now, I could look at that and say,
why didn't you think to charge your phone and blame her for that?
But instead, I took it as something I missed.
Because I know my wife.
she's not the best at charging her phone.
And it's also very important to her to take great content for moments that she enjoys.
So going forward after that day, now today, whenever we go anywhere, whenever we travel,
as soon as we get to the hotel, I put her phone on the charger.
I always look for any opportunity that she could run into a problem and think,
how could I prevent that before she experiences that pain?
And by the way, because of things that have gone wrong in the past,
that's why now I always have snacks on me.
I always have Advil.
I always have safety pins.
I always have boob tape or tampons or whatever it is.
Because sometime in the past, Laura has really needed something that she didn't have,
and I saw it as an opportunity for the way that I could serve her better.
So literally and figuratively, Laura's gas tank is always full and she doesn't have to worry about it.
So love taught me that it's in noticing the small details and you win when you serve others.
Taking that same application can also apply to business.
And when I did that, that's when I started winning big.
When it came to my team members, for instance, or it came to certain brand partners.
If I'm in a room and I happen to overhear someone say that their favorite artist is coming to town,
I'm just going to surprise them with artist tickets.
They wouldn't even know that I was listening.
Or if I happen to overhear a conversation of someone saying they always want to learn how to play guitar,
I'm going to surprise them with a guitar and try to sign them up for guitar lessons.
If there is someone that tells me that they have a child, I'm not going to say,
how old is your kid again the third time I met them? I'm going to say your kid is six right?
Her name is Ava. She's in kindergarten. How's kindergarten going for her? That makes somebody feel seen
in noticing the small details. And that's what transcends people feeling like the reason that they exist in your
life is for some sort of business purpose and that you truly care about them. So I'd say love has
actually taught me quite a bit in how I could actually apply those same.
lessons to business that has made me more successful.
There's so many connections in how we treat one person into how you treat your company,
into how you treat your partner.
And it's almost so much of it is so much more interconnected than we give it credit for.
And I think a long time ago, everyone would be like, well, this is how I treat this group
of people and this how I treat this group of people.
And you start to realize that our mind's not that good at segmentation.
It's almost just bleeding the energy that you have for one person into the other.
Dar, I've learned so much today.
You have, as always, even though we've had many many dinners, Indian dinners usually, where we're having these conversations, I feel like I've learned so much more today, not just about your journey, about strategy, about growth, about your approach to business.
I think people are going to get a lot of value from this.
We end every episode of On Purpose with the final five.
These questions have to be answered in one sentence maximum.
Oh, shoot.
So, Darman, these are your final five brought to you by State Farm.
question, what is the best advice you've ever heard or received?
The reason that you have certain big ideas and dreams in your head is because God put them there
for a reason. God wouldn't put these big ideas, these big dreams, these big notions in your
head that keep you up at night because you're so excited about this vision of what your life
can look like if you weren't meant to achieve them. So always remember that God's vision
for your life is bigger than your own. Don't doubt him. And sometimes all you have to do is get out of
your own way. Second question, what is the worst advice you've ever heard or received? The worst advice
that I ever received was someone said, Dar, you should change your name. And that's because at that
point in my life, I had failed so many times that the only thing associated with my name,
was failure. And for a long time, honestly, I did think about changing my name. But then I realized
there's so many people out there just like me that feel like a failure. I wanted to create a brand
that lets people know that you can have second chances in life. You can get knocked down and
get back up again. And so instead, I decided to create a whole studio
that is now one of the biggest storytelling studios in the world that lets people know that regardless
of how bad life has been, better days are ahead. And my name is associated with positivity and
overcoming hardship. So I'm glad that I didn't listen to that advice. What were you thinking of? What were
the ideas? I could change my name to Jay, you know, like good things would have happened.
What was the short list? Question number three, what makes a good friend? Someone that focuses on giving more
than getting. A good friend is not somebody who shows up just when times are good. When money is flowing,
when it feels like you can't miss, because there's always so many people wanting to be in your life then.
A good friend is someone who shows up during your hardest times, someone who shows up at the
emergency room at 3 o'clock in the morning and is holding your hand, letting you know that you're
going to get through this. So whoever's with you during your struggle, they're the ones that
deserve to be with you during your success.
Question number four, what do you say to yourself when you're at rock bottom in your most
difficult moments?
Don't underestimate God's ability to change your life in an instant.
God's vision for your life is so much bigger than your own.
And a lot of times, the reason that stops us from getting that life is us.
We're holding on into things that he's trying to remove.
how many of us have stayed in that bad relationship
or stayed in that bad friendship group
or hung on to those bad habits
or those bad ideas or the bad job or situations.
We have to get out of our own way.
When God is trying to remove certain things from your life,
let him.
Because you can't hold on to today's burdens
and also receive tomorrow's blessings.
Fifth and final question,
we ask this to every guest who's ever been on the show
if you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow, what would it be?
Just be kind to one another.
You never know what someone is going through.
People don't walk around with signs saying, I'm trying to hold it all together right now.
We tend to think of the people that have like the big public breakdowns as the ones that are really struggling.
But there are so many people out there that are struggling in silence and you never know.
So just be compassionate because you never know what someone is going through.
Dar, obviously, I'm so excited about this because you just launched your own podcast,
which I know has been in the works for many, many years.
Tell us about the podcast.
It's called What Happens Next.
And the reason I came up with that name is every successful person in life,
they've all encountered so many failures, so many hardships, but what matters the most?
What happens next?
So this podcast is just a platform where I sit down with some of the most inspirational people in the world
that have overcome some of the biggest challenges and have still gotten to unbelievable success.
And so for anyone that's looking to get inspiration or vice, I think it would be a great podcast to listen to you.
I'm really excited.
And I hope that one day that you'll come on the show as well.
Absolutely, man.
Congrats.
I can't wait to tune in and so excited for people to check out what happens next.
Thank you so much.
Awesome, man. Da, I'm so excited to see what you continue to build with your company, your mission,
your drive. I am your friend all the way. I'm excited for you. I'm pumped for you. I can't wait
to see you keep winning. I'm excited to see the content you're going to create, whether it's film,
TV, movies. I know you've got so many incredible plans in the studio you're building,
and it's amazing to see what you've created. I can't wait to be able to, I can't wait until you start
building theme parks. Like, I'm like, I'm just ready for it, man. So I'll be right.
there lining up to attend all of it. And I want to thank you for being such an incredible
source of inspiration in the world to millions of people across the world and for being a dear friend.
I appreciate you deeply. Thank you, man. Yeah, it's a huge honor. Thank you so much.
Thank you, brother. Thank you, man. If this is the year you're finally ready to start that business,
level up your goals, or build real momentum in your life, you need to hear my conversation with Alex
Hormosey. I have a very simple framework that I encourage people who are starting out to follow,
which I call Closer. So C stands for Clarit.
but you begin the conversation like, hey, why'd you respond to my thing?
Hello, gorgeous, it's Lala Kent, host of Untraditionally Lala.
My days of filling up cups at Sir may be over, but I'm still loving life in the valley.
Life on the other side of the hill is giving grown-up vibes, but over here on my podcast,
Untraditionally Lala, I'm still that Lala you either love or love to hate.
It's unruly, it's unruly, unafraid, it's untraditionally Lala.
Listen to Untraditionally Lala on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast.
2%. That's the number of people who take the stairs when there is also an escalator available.
I'm Michael Easter.
And on my podcast, 2%.
I break down the science of mental toughness, fitness, and building resilience in our strange modern world.
Put yourself through some hardships, and you will come out on the other side a happier, more fulfilled, healthier person.
Listen to 2%.
That's TWO% on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or...
wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, it's Joe Interesting, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology,
natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life.
And today, I'm talking with my dear friend, Krista Williams.
It can change you in the best way possible.
Dance with the change.
Dance with the breakdowns.
The embodiment of Pisces intuition with Capricorn power moves.
So I'm, like, delusionally proud of my chart.
Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed human.
