Determined Society with Shawn French | Adversity & Mindset - Betting on Yourself: How Adversity Builds Determination and Discipline | The Turning Point
Episode Date: April 17, 2026Most people talk about chasing their dreams… but very few have the determination and discipline to sacrifice everything when adversity shows up. It’s easy to say you want it—but real growth happ...ens when your mindset is tested and you’re forced to choose between comfort and commitment. In this episode, rising country artist Coey Redd shares how she went all in, selling the only thing she owned to bet on herself, and how that decision built the mental toughness, high performance habits, and consistency over motivationrequired to keep going. This is what it looks like to face adversity head-on and respond with real determination. If you’ve ever felt like quitting, this conversation will challenge your mindset, strengthen your discipline, and redefine how you approach risk, rejection, and trusting your journey. Key Takeaways If you don’t go all in on yourself, nobody else will—determination has to come first Rejection is often protection that builds your mindset and direction You only truly fail when you quit—adversity is part of the process Success comes from action, not perfection—discipline beats hesitation Authenticity builds real connection and long-term success Trusting your journey requires mental toughness and belief The hardest seasons are where determination and growth are forged *Socials* Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/theshawnfrench Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/476624146831479?checkpoint_src=any Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5kS9tkLGQLcVyRgB3mDznw Apple - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-determined-society-with-shawn-french/id1555922064 YouTube- Coey Redd - https://www.instagram.com/coeyredd/ Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Discussion (0)
At 12 years old, you were writing hooks for rappers just to earn studio time.
Somebody's cousin did rap in the Bay Area.
They were like, oh, she's like 12 years old writing these songs.
She's got the hook.
She's dope.
She's got the bars.
Like, let's do it.
I sold that 2019 Jeddah.
So the only thing I've ever owned just to come out here to move to Nashville and fund basically that move.
Because if you don't go all in on yourself, then nobody else will.
I'm listening to what you're saying.
That's not country music.
That was the number one comment.
money to get all the time.
Yeah. That's not country. That's not country.
I'm like, okay, cool.
Now to really go and hold true to your comment, you can buy my merch.
Yeah, buy her merch.
You country people don't act like you don't like hip.
What's up, guys?
We are back and we're in a different space today.
We're at Nashville Creative Spaces, Rory Vaden Studio, here in Nashville, Tennessee.
And I have with me today, Coie Red.
You guys are in for an amazing treat.
She is the epitome of determination.
discipline and resilience, country artists from California in my neck of the woods.
Welcome to the show, Coney.
Thank you so much for having me.
I can't believe we're finally here.
It's been like a year or two since we've been connected.
It's so crazy.
It's so funny when you meet people through social media and then you meet them in person,
you're like, I feel like I've known you forever.
And it's my first time meeting you.
And it's actually cool in the energy matches, right?
It's like you can be one way online and then meet somebody and like they're completely different.
Exactly.
And that's always like so hard because in my line of work, I meet a lot of great people like yourself.
And, you know, I got to do a show with my favorite, you know, Tony Goldwin's my favorite actor.
And it's like when you meet people like that, you just hope they measure.
Exactly.
You know.
And it's always nice when they do.
So you did it.
You match.
Like it's all good.
It's all good.
I feel like it's probably harder for you too, especially having a podcast.
And if you interview somebody and they're like very lively on social media and then you meet them and they're just like, kind of like, don't.
Dude, I've done some show.
Dude.
And you're like, oh.
I've done some shows where it's like, you know, it always happens virtually.
If you do a virtual show, it's like you're staring out the camera on your or the screen, you're like.
Yeah.
It gets real awkward.
Yeah.
Well, it can.
But then you can see the time.
You're like, all right, cool.
I can see the time.
Yeah.
You know, but it just, you know, you're not going to always mesh with everybody.
But as long as the audience gets what they need out of it, I'm good.
Exactly.
I am so good.
So and just like with you, with your music, it's like you want to impact your audience.
Yes. Always. Always. That's always the goal for sure.
Vacaville, California. Good old EV. Let's go. Dude, it's so crazy. Like I told you, I used to play baseball in Vacaville right by the Budweiser factory every weekend from the time I was 13 and 14. And my allergies were so bad there.
Oh, so bad. My eyes would itch and they'd go red. I couldn't see. But I was I was playing ball girl.
All those rolling hills, you know?
Dude, is that what it is?
All of those, all those trees and I mean, it's beautiful.
I'm just, I was, I'm not going to lie when, when, you know, you were like, oh, my gosh, such a fail.
Like, where are you from?
When you knew where Vacaville was, I was like, oh, okay, yes.
Because typically, especially out here in Nashville and I'm like, I'm from Vacaville and they're like, what?
Vaca.
Vaca, Vakaville?
And I'm like, yeah, I'm like, it's like in between San Francisco, Sacramento.
It's like right outside of Napa.
Like, I have to preface.
It's very small, but like, it's part of my childhood, too.
I mean, because I was there a lot, you know?
Oh, yeah.
And we, it's so, it's just, it's such a small world.
And that's why I do love social media.
I use it the right way.
Yeah.
As you do as well.
I use it to build relationships.
I use it to, you know, build my show.
And, you know, everything else is off limits for me, you know.
But I want to get into your story because,
it's amazing what you did.
And for the audience's sake,
like, you know, you're this artist now.
And it, but it didn't start that way.
You were behind the scenes.
Oh, yeah.
Right?
At 12 years old, you were writing hooks for rappers
just to earn studio time.
Walk us through that there because that,
that is amazing.
Pretty interesting.
Yeah, I think I knew from like a really young age
that I loved music.
I loved writing of storytelling.
I love all of that.
And I come from, you know, my dad was a garbage man.
My mom was a stay at home mom.
We didn't come from money.
I didn't come from connections or knew anybody in the music industry.
So it was kind of like a get in where you fit in.
My parents were always super supportive, but it was also like my dad came from the baseball world too.
And, you know, you got to, you know, if you really love something and want something, you have to do it too.
It can't just be everyone pushing you, you know what I mean?
You can't just throw money behind your kid.
Yeah.
You know, like, oh, because then it becomes.
you know,
inauthentic.
It becomes something forced
and not something that genuinely like,
oh, I want to fight for this.
Like, I want this.
Yeah, I just, I loved writing.
And I started kind of doing like skeleton tracks
to where I would like take songs
and then I would kind of write my own melodies
and my own lyrics to them.
And it was kind of getting where you fit in.
And there was a couple kids around the corner.
And they were a little bit older than me, actually.
And he worked out Burger King.
I'll never forget that.
It's so funny.
He worked out Burger King.
He was like 16.
My mom grew up with his dad,
and but they knew that I could, like, write and sing,
and I was just always doing music stuff,
and I was doing small shows and talent shows and stuff.
And they were making music on, like, you know,
garage band and all that stuff.
And I'll never forget, we had, like, a Jordan shoebox,
and he had, like, a headset from Burger King
because he didn't have a microphone,
and we stuck it through the shoebox
and wrapped it with toilet paper.
Okay.
Kind of, like, make a makeshift studio.
Wow.
And we would just go on, like, YouTube and, like,
just rip instrumentals. And I would just write hooks and things over it. And it ended up,
somebody's cousin did rap in the Bay Area. And they were like, oh, she's like 12 years old
writing these songs. And so then it was like, oh, yeah, we like what you're doing. Okay,
come here. Okay, we have this show. Do you want to open for this guy? Yeah, sure. Okay, come to this,
you know, studio in the Bay Area or whatever. And what's even crazier is my parents were like so supportive.
Like I'd be like rolling up to like straight trap studios and like the middle of Oakland and my mom was just like all right like lock the doors but let's go like let's get out like we gotta go do this like they were always supportive and just but in a way of if you want it you have to you have to work for it.
But the thing was was music was music and I just wanted to create so badly that I didn't really care and the hip hop community was so especially in the Bay Area at that time.
was just so welcoming and like just didn't, didn't matter my age, didn't matter what I looked like,
didn't matter that I was a girl, like nothing. Like, everybody was just like, yo, like, she's got
the hook. She's dope. She's got the bars. Like, let's do it. And it just progressed from there.
And ultimately, I mean, if you were a music producer living in Northern California, you probably
were able to afford to make a steady living there off money. And I didn't have money to make music.
So it was like, get in where you fit in, you know?
It's such a cool story because, you know, I look at adults now.
They say they want something.
But they want the map.
They want everything figured out for them instead of just taking action and moving.
And that's the one thing that I really love.
At 12 years old, you understood the secret to success.
It's like, if I want this, not only do I have to take action,
but I got to work diligently in order to, like you said,
get in where I fit in right now
because you don't know where it's going to lead
and now you're sitting here in Nashville.
Exactly.
Like it's wild to me.
And I feel like it was always part of the journey
to like where I am now is what I've always wanted to do.
And it's funny because I've always considered myself a songwriter first
because storytelling is my favorite thing in the world.
I love it.
So in any facet of that.
And so combining kind of the genres and effusions that I do now
is just kind of a product of where I come from, who I am.
And, you know, people might not get it,
but people that do come from where I come from
or know who I am or know how I got my start
or, you know, know all the background,
know my background.
They are like, yeah.
So I'm getting goosebumps right now because it's like,
I'm listening to what you're saying
and I'm looking at your hat.
That's not country music.
And so for the audience, you know,
her hat is so sick.
It's one of her merchandise.
It is.
And it says, that's not country music, because a lot of people put country music in a box and you've exploded that freaking thing.
Oh, yeah.
And the thing is, is, you know, I actually, the reason why I wanted to make my merch of that's not country music is that was the number one comment I used to get all the time.
Yeah.
That's not country.
That's not country.
I'm like, okay, cool.
Yeah.
Like, now you have a hat.
So now to really go and hold true to your comment, you can buy my merch.
Yeah, buy her merch.
You know.
Coreyred.com, right?
Exactly.
Yeah, buy the merch.
Exactly.
But, you know,
but the thing is,
is like,
I got it very early on,
as you know.
Uh-huh.
Like,
I,
I'm like,
you definitely did.
I remember,
I remember when you wrote me
and I was like,
way, like,
you know,
you're like,
and you said something along the lines of you're like,
oh,
you kind of remind me of like a country pop,
like a Leah kind of,
and I was like,
yes.
And I'm so,
that's another thing is I love 90s fashion.
It's like my thing.
You know what I mean?
As like a mid-90s baby,
you know,
like grew up in that era.
So,
like I just, I love all that. I love throwbacks. I love, you know what I mean, that type of era. And I think
I kind of missed the curve of being able to really like be able to participate in that era, but I
was a dope era, dude. It was a dope era. So essentially, yeah, I just, I love like the baggy stuff and like the
Calvin's. That's, you know, what a lot of people. And it's funny now and I love it so much because people get
like, oh, I see people wearing, you know, like, oh, the Calvin thing. Just like, you know,
you do and I'm like, that's freaking awesome.
Like, I love it. Like, yeah.
Like, 90s fashion. Like, please make a comeback.
I love it. Yeah, no, it's funny because I picked up the Aaliyah vibe right away.
She was my favorite.
And I remember when she passed, I was in college.
And I just remember just reading it in our school paper in Louisiana.
And I literally got up and walked out of class.
Like, so like when I saw you and I saw just the bars and just the way and then the way
you dress, like you had the Calvin class.
lines up, I'm like, wow.
Yeah.
Like, she's bringing it back.
Like, she's bringing that shit back.
I got to be, I got to be along for this ride.
So let me ask you a question.
So with the writing the bars and everything like that where you came from, that's obviously
influenced how you write and produce music.
100%.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's so funny because even out here, like I'm just, even the more pop or the more country,
like country stuff that I do, I'm just very wordy.
And that comes from the fact of writing hip hop for years.
Yeah.
I mean, it's kind of embedded into my writing style and just who I am.
And it's also what I love.
So I was like to say, yeah, like that genre like chose me.
I don't feel like I chose it.
I don't think people realize, like, because they look at me, you know, and like, vanilla dude.
No.
No.
Like,
Vanilla dude.
I mean, like growing up in the San Francisco Bay, like,
it was all hip hop.
It was,
you know,
I grew up in the ghetto.
Like,
I was running away from the bloods
after, you know,
when I'm walking home at eighth grade,
I'm like, what?
Sorry,
probably six,
seventh grade.
But it's like,
that area can give you
such a cultural vibe
that nobody can understand.
It's crazy.
There's so many innovators
that come from Bay Area too.
And it's funny because,
Vaccaville's like the outskirts, you know what I mean?
Silver bag.
But it's still, yeah, it's still, you know what I mean, considered that.
And there's just so much culture and there's so much like just artistic vision out there.
I mean, you can even see it with artists that have come out.
Directors.
I mean, you have Ryan Coogler, just did sinners.
You have Kalani that just won a Grammy.
You have E40 who is literally considered, you know, one of the goats and kind of an innovator of hip-hop.
because he did it in his own way.
Mac Dre,
who still died.
Did you ever hear RBL Possey?
RBL Possey?
That does sound, wait, give me something.
Balance of this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, there it is.
Sometimes I'm like,
I've grown up around so much Bay Area music
that sometimes I'm like,
like, in two D, like, you know,
like I gotta respect the OGs too.
You have to.
And like, like, RBL, I mean,
I still listen to it in the gym.
You know, because that's my childhood.
It brings me back.
But like just again, my point for everybody listening and watching is, you know, in order to understand an artist, you have to understand where they come from.
And then you'll fully understand and appreciate it.
You know, I look at what you're creating.
And I'm very proud of you, by the way.
Thank you.
Very proud of you.
Thank you.
So much.
Absolutely.
Is you have made it your mission not to fit in, but to stay authentic.
how has that blessed you but also caused you stress?
Because I think there's two different paradigms here, right?
Oh, yeah.
You know, like we talked about rejection earlier off camera.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
That rejection really is protection sometimes.
And even though you might not see it at that time, usually later you'll have that
aha kind of moment.
Thank God.
Oh my gosh.
Okay.
Like I understand it now.
And you kind of need those.
You need those kind of divine interventions to kind of like, you know, to get
frustrated to just be human. Because in that, it'll also frustrate you, but it'll put you in a
position to like, listen, you're either going to go one or two ways. You're going to go 10 times harder
or you're going to give up. Yeah. And giving up for me is not an option. I don't think my family would
ever let me give up at this point, even if I wanted to. And that's actually happened before,
you know, so. That right there. Okay, because this is something that drives me crazy. There's so many
people out there they say, I've never wanted to give up. I know I'm it. You're a liar.
Yeah. Or delusional or like maybe you need medicine because I mean, I think I've wanted to quit
10 times last week. Yeah. But it's not an option. It is a, it is an current state of emotion.
Oh yeah. You know. And so dig into that because the audience listening and watching,
some of them right now are in the middle of wanting to give up their dream. Oh, yeah. No. And the thing is,
is like, don't do it.
Don't do it.
The thing is,
is once you give it up,
then it's like,
then what?
Cool.
You lost.
You,
exactly.
And I,
I truly believe in the,
in the phrase or the saying,
you only fail when you give up.
Mm-hmm.
You'll,
that's the only time you'll ever fail.
And when you have that mindset
and that mentality,
you'll realize that even the slow progressions,
like with me,
I was sitting at,
you know,
I had,
you know,
over a million followers on TikTok and all this stuff.
And I was putting out music and I'm, you know,
serving in restaurants on weekends and funding all my own stuff and
and doing all this.
And with that being said,
my Spotify numbers were only,
you know,
50,000 monthly listeners.
And I sat there for a really long time.
And my goal was just,
I just want to break 100,000 monthly listeners.
And I gave everything that I could.
You know,
I moved out here.
I won a car on the prices right and sold it to take that money to.
You were on the prices, right?
Yes.
Get the hell out of here, dude.
That's another, like, fun, funny fact about me.
Yeah.
I won.
I actually, I won the Tokyo Showdown.
And that 2019, Jeddah is the only thing I've ever owned.
And I, yeah.
And I remember it was, it was in 2019.
And it was around the time where, you know, TikTok and stuff,
everything started happening in 2020.
But it was always part of the plan of me being here and doing the music that I'm doing now.
Yeah.
It was always I wanted to kind of infuse you.
use the two worlds that I grew up in.
You know what I mean?
And what I listened to and what my mom loved?
And you know what I mean?
That was kind of embedded in me.
To really just,
this was all part of the plan.
And so it's funny.
Yeah, I sold that 2019 Jeddah.
So the only thing I've ever owned just to come out here to move to Nashville and fund
basically that move.
Because you got to go all in on yourself.
See,
if you don't go all in on yourself, then nobody else will.
This is so good.
You know?
This is so good.
Like the only, like you said,
I want the audience to hang on to this
because like the only thing you ever owned,
when you own something for the first time,
it's like, I'm never letting this shit go
because I don't know if I'm going to get something else ever
and I want something on my own,
but you saw it as leverage.
Yeah.
You saw it as a tool to get you
where you wanted to go ultimately.
And I think that's such a special quality of you,
about you.
Oh, thank you.
Absolutely.
It's just, you know, that moment is the reason why you've gone from 50,000.
Almost 200,000 now to almost 200,000 monthly.
You know, I'm a little offended that church is not at least at 1.5.
Can you guys start streaming church, please?
What the hell is wrong with you?
That is my, I love that song.
It's so deep.
That was my first release.
Church was?
I thought Wildcard was.
No, church was.
first release.
So good.
And that song came from such an authentic and organic place because I was at that,
I was at that pivot point of wanting to quit, wanting to give up.
But it also, like back to what I was saying before, if I give up, okay, so I spent my entire
life almost signed to this invisible contract knowing that this was what I meant to do,
not trusting my journey and just give it up.
Like, no way.
Yeah.
So instead, my roommate, or my old roommate at the time was going through a hard time. And he was also my producer. And he was sleeping on my couch, was going through breakup, having a really, really hard time. And he was on my couch. And he started singing like this little like hook, like melody. And I was like that. And at that time, I was in a really, really rough spot. And I kind of didn't know what I, what my next move was. Like I wanted, I was coming out here. But I wasn't getting, I mean, I would show up and have 10 sessions. And every single one of them would cancel.
It was just, it was really, really rough.
And it put you in that, in that position of like,
maybe this is a sign, maybe, you know what I mean?
And it's like, no, I'm gonna make something happen.
And I'm, of course, was singing that melody
and had that guitar riffed and I was like, sit.
And we sat on my couch that night
and we cut the entire song within like 30 minutes.
Are you kidding me?
Yeah, and I just like, almost like freestyled out,
like the verses and stuff and I just knew that,
I need to find, like, and that's what the song was about.
And it's not necessarily, and people always take it as like, oh, like actually going to a physical church.
It's like, no, church isn't here.
Like, church is in here.
Like your relationship with God, like, I'm, you know, a follower of Jesus Christ and God.
And like, whatever you believe in.
Yeah, but like whatever you believe in, you know, like, it's in here.
You know what I mean?
And that's church.
And that's, you know what I mean is admitting to yourself sometimes like, man,
I'm down, but you know what?
Like, I have so much faith and like, I'm going to crawl out of this.
There's two, there's two, I don't know what you call them because I'm not a musician,
but there's, I'm going to call them lines or verses or whatever that I resonate with so much.
And here they are.
Screaming out, but nothing's leaving your teeth.
Mm-hmm.
And overlooking the flowers just to dwell on the weeds.
Yeah.
Those two make me feel some type of.
emotion because at some point we've all felt like we are screaming, we are trying to say something,
but nothing's coming out. Yeah. No one is hearing it. And then in life, there's so much adversity,
so much adversity with anything. I don't care if you're a teacher, hotel, you know,
you work in hospitality, musician, podcast hosts, like the amount of adversity that you're going to
face on a daily basis is astronomical.
And so when I heard the line
Overlooked the flowers just to dwell in the weeds
I'm like dude I'm doing that shit right now
Yeah look how beautiful this is
I don't have to go and check in with a boss anymore
Oh for sure
I don't have to do anything I could talk to great people
Every single day I'm living a freaking dream
Does it look like what I want it to yet? Nope
No but look at how far I've come
Yeah but like I'm in Nashville right now dude
Yeah
You know like what in that world
Happened but like
and this is something that I want you to answer too because I'm having to reflect on this a lot lately.
I keep I keep looking at, you know, my brand, you know, the business.
It's like I got to get to that next level and I got to get there quick because I get somewhere and I'm like, okay, this is neat, but what's next?
And what we forget is to reflect back.
Oh, for sure.
And understand how far we've come.
Yeah.
How do you deal with that?
I'd say, you know, I've had like some divine intervention.
So when I would say about this time last year, exactly, I was probably the most miserable
version of myself.
I was very comparative.
I was very frustrated.
The why me?
Like, why, why am I?
Like, I'm doing this and I'm, you know, all of these things.
And I just wasn't happy.
Yeah.
And what I realized was that.
I was not trusting my journey.
I wasn't trusting myself.
It's hard because it's unseen.
And then it's crazy because I have to remind myself.
It's about trusting the journey.
It's about trusting yourself.
Like the universe isn't going to reward you
when you're over here worrying about this, that,
this, that, and the other.
It's going to reward you when it's like, oh, she's ready.
And I've always said, you know,
there's no such thing as luck.
It's always when preparation meets opportunity.
And the universe has been,
and I haven't had a big moment.
and I haven't been put on by a big artist.
I haven't had a big record deal.
I haven't had like a big moment or an opportunity.
But I know it's coming.
And I know that when it does happen,
I'm going to be so ready for it and so prepared
because I've gone through all of these steps.
So it's always reassuring that and telling myself that,
that, you know, going back to that and I kind of had this moment spiritually with myself.
And I, it dawned on me of,
yeah why haven't i been like look it like i'm in national like i'm doing this like i'm going on tour like
i have all of these great things i have fans i have people that relate to my music and that's all i've ever
wanted like focus on that focus on the good dude you got three in this room yes and the little one right
there that just adores you with the cutest cowgirl hat on now she is cute but it's one of those
things yeah like you have to trust your journey and and i and i
am a very spiritual person in that in that aspect. I don't relate all of my spirituality to like
biblical. Like I've said, I've always said, it's in here. Like your relationship with God,
everything's in here. And so, yeah, I just relate back to that. If there's such a plan in store
that's bigger than I ever imagine. We don't know it. And I'm trusting the journey. And I know I'm
exactly where I'm supposed to be. And I know that when those opportunities come,
you're going to be ready. You're already ready. Just the world has to
caught up yet. And that's just kind of one of things. Thank you. No, absolutely. It's just,
it's just what it is. And it's funny because, you know, my good friend, Dan Tufferello,
he was my boss at Paychecks and we ended up becoming like brothers. And he is now on my team.
He left corporate America. He went and taught for years. Like, I'm not doing lesson plans. I'm
out. And he said to me, he goes, I promise you guys, the audience, I'm going somewhere with
this. He goes, I'm done.
let me know if you know anybody.
I'm like, well, do you want to come work for me?
Like, he's like, yeah, absolutely.
And so like I brought him along.
And this is what he says to me yesterday.
You know, because I told her, you know, I told him that, you know,
my wife was coming and, you know, and everything.
And, and Mia, and I go, he goes, look, dude,
I want you to understand something.
And he texts me this after we had the conversation.
He goes, dads don't get a whole lot of crap.
at it, like they don't hear how great of a job they're doing from their friends,
et cetera.
He goes,
but the fact that you're able,
that you are able to build something that your family can be along with and enjoy,
he goes, dude,
you're winning.
And I looked at that.
I'm like,
what?
Like,
it's so true.
It's like,
because this all pertains to the journey.
Exactly.
Like,
this isn't normal.
Yeah.
There's somebody right now that is a podcaster going,
like, I want that.
And I'm looking up here and go, I want that.
Exactly.
There's always this, the grass is always greener on the other side kind of thing.
But you're so right in that aspect of like the opportunities that come from,
come from what we do, whether it be music, whether it be entertainment, whether it be whatever,
are things that will last a lifetime.
Like, I mean, just like a small thing.
So I grew up riding dirt bikes.
That's like a passion that me by dad.
Not surprised.
Not surprised.
But it's one of those amazing things where when I first came out to Nashville,
or like official, like I would say it was like two years in.
Two years ago, Supercross was happening in Nashville.
And I was working with WME and they were like, hey, we have these tickets,
like these really cool tickets.
Do you want to go to Supercross and whatever?
And I was like, yeah.
Of course, me and my dad used to go to Supercross every year.
Like we still, to this day, that's like kind of our bonding thing.
That's so cool.
And we'll call and talk about like the races and heats and like who's win.
Like big fans.
And it's just a bonding thing that we do every week.
Like if it's baseball, it's either baseball or Supercross.
Okay, so baseball, what's his background of baseball?
Because you mentioned that early.
He was pitcher.
Where?
So he was drafted in his high school parking lot when he was 16.
He was a stud.
and yeah, and then he tore his rotator cuff.
Been there.
Been there.
And was trying to kind of get back into it.
I'll be honest, not to circle back,
but he's one of the reasons why,
no matter what's happened or any setbacks that I've had in music,
why I'm hungrier than I've, than ever,
why I'm always come back.
Because, you know, he put into perspective,
one night when I called him and said that I was, you know,
I'm done, done.
I'm not, I can't do this anymore.
I'm just tired, dad, I just, I don't.
And he was like, I love you.
I'll support you through whatever, but I can't let you quit.
And I was like, why?
And he was like, because do you, can you, do you have, you have two legs?
Can you write a song?
Can you sing?
And I'm like, yeah.
And he was like, well, guess what?
I had a dream and I worked really hard for baseball.
I loved baseball.
It was my first passion.
And he was like, and it was out of my control to still continue that dream.
I got hurt.
I couldn't do anything.
You don't have that excuse.
Think about kids that are sitting in hospital beds right now that don't have the even luxury to even go after something that they want.
And you're sitting here complaining, saying you're tired.
Like, think about how, you know what I mean?
And he was like, granted, and it always makes me emotional when he said this.
He was like, granted, my job.
dreams changed and it was to be your dad. And he was like, but my dream is also to see you live your
dream. Come on. And I was like, someone says that. What the hell? What? Yeah. Okay. Fine. All right. Well,
I guess I can't quit now. Went on the overalls again. Like, let's go. We're running it. You know,
like, go get the Calvin's. What do you eat at? The Calvin's again. No, but it's one of those things,
you know, and it's all about perspective. It's all about perspective when you look at, you know what I
mean things like that you're like wow you're so right like I feel I feel like such an asshole
like oh my god yes yeah but you need that one of the need those divine intervention you do and
one of the things that I will say about your dad I also had that injury I went to LSU I played in
the college world series and I didn't have that choice because I got hurt my first year there
and then for two straight years,
I was working so hard to get back on the field.
When I came back, I wasn't the same.
Like, I couldn't throw like I used to.
It just got in my head.
So to your dad's point,
like that's one of the things too
that keeps me from quitting
what I'm doing now
other than the fact that I'm obsessed with it.
I honestly think I love this more than I love playing baseball.
Oh, yeah.
In some weird way,
the thing that nobody knows about me
and I'm going to say it right now
for the first time I'm on air
is what I love more than podcasting
is being on stage.
What I love more than that
is being a husband and a father.
I love that.
So I understand your dad's paradigm
where he's coming from
and my biggest fear
is when I look at my three beautiful children
is I don't want to ever see him quit anything.
If you make a commitment
and you're doing something,
you're going to finish
the season, the year out,
whatever it is.
and pivot. If that's not your thing, cool, you tried it. But if it's your passion and it's your purpose,
you're not allowed to quit. You can't. And that's what I want the audience to really pay attention on
is because what you said about your dad and how he walked you through that. So if you're a parent,
you have a child looking to quit something, replay that. Yeah. Run it back. Run it back.
Because run it back in your own mind, right? I don't care if it's a fitness journey. I don't care
fixing a marriage or
or being promoted
in your career, you cannot
see the future.
You don't know what's coming.
Like two weeks ago,
I didn't know I was going to be sitting in Nashville.
Here we are. I didn't know.
I had no idea. Yeah.
You know?
Opportunity with Jana Kramer came up,
an actress and I'm like, okay, cool.
I'm like, wait.
Coe's there.
Wait. Wait a second.
Film war's there.
And so.
All the opportunities aligned.
All the opportunities aligned.
Went to a friend.
I said, hey, best studio in Nashville.
He goes, Nashville creative spaces, brand builders, Rory Vaden.
I'm like, dude, set that up.
And then we got Rory coming on tomorrow too, which I haven't met, but I've known
of them ever since I've been in the space.
Yeah.
And it's so funny I'm going to tell them yesterday, I mean tomorrow, but I'll stay here on
there.
So many of my close friends are because of Rory Vaden.
and Rory Vaden doesn't even know it.
Really?
He doesn't know it.
That's actually amazing.
Matthew Heathen.
You can meet tomorrow?
Yeah.
We're going to hang out.
We're going to do a show.
Oh, I love that.
So, like, one of my good friends, Matthew Heading, like, heard a podcast with someone that I'm no longer connected with.
I'll leave his name out.
And he's like, well, hey, if Rory Vaden's on this pod with him, then maybe I should join
his community.
And I was in that community.
and we both left, but that's how me and him met,
and we've been close friends forever, like three years now.
Love that.
I mean, so it's like, there's this big spider web.
Anyway, I'm getting on a tangent, but, but like two weeks ago, I didn't know.
It's my point, right?
You don't know what the next second's going to bring.
So if you quit, like, what the hell?
I think the thing is that's always brought me back to is just I love for it.
Like, kind of like you said, like, there's nothing more that you love.
And that was my whole thing, too, is it's like, I can't picture myself do it.
anything else in the world.
So even if I'm 80 years old,
still doing it,
like I'm still gonna do it.
Like, because I love it.
Yeah.
Even, like, regardless of my success level,
when I pee, whatever,
like, when you love something
and the intention behind it is just genuine,
like, you just, you love it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like, I don't, you know,
I've never been signed to a record label.
I've never been signed to anything.
I don't, I don't get it.
I'm sorry.
What are you guys doing?
Rejection is protection.
Because like I said, when that does happen and when the right people come around,
they're going to get it.
And then it's going to be off to the races.
Like, I love the fact that, and I used to hate it.
I used to be so envious.
Like, why can't it just be easy?
But nothing worth it is ever easy.
You know what I mean?
Nothing worth it.
The long job, think about some of the most successful people in,
the industry, regardless of, you know, like I said, entertainment, music, sports, whatever.
Think about like Tom Brady.
Dude.
You know what I mean?
Like, the rise out of the ash, and to end up being one of the greatest football players of all time.
Oh, yeah, definitely the best quarterback.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Hall of Famer.
Oh, easy.
And last, you know, last drafting class, right?
Like, nobody expected him.
And he came out of Michigan and he wasn't, like, crazy in Michigan.
But, like.
No, he was.
But then he came out and just, he understood, he put, he put everything into it.
I want to tell you something because I saw this clip of Tom Brady being interviewed on stage.
And you've probably seen it.
Everybody's seen it.
But if you guys haven't, listen up and watch.
So he went up to his coaches at Michigan and said, hey, look, I'm only getting three reps of practice.
Three snaps of practice.
How am I going to develop and get better with only three snaps?
you know what the response from his coach was
those three snaps you take
make them the best three that you've ever done
and clearly you did
so like the
the thing is with that right
it's like it doesn't matter
how much playing time you're getting
or how many interviews you do
or how many stages you're singing on
that moment make it the best
that you can do
and now he is
the best quarterback of all time.
Oh, for sure.
Which kind of offends me
because I was a Joe Montana guy.
So that sucks.
But I did meet Tom Brady.
Oh, really?
I met Tom Brady.
So he's from San Mateo.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's a Bay Area boy.
Yeah, he's a Bay guy.
So right before the draft,
I went to college of San Mateo
in junior college
before I transferred LSU.
We walk out and he's playing catch
with his dad on the football field.
I say, man, what's going on?
You're ready?
He's like, yeah, we'll see what happens.
I was like, well, hey, man,
nice to meet you, good luck.
So crazy.
The rest is history because he trusted his process.
He had his journey.
He didn't give up.
He knew that he was going to go on to be greater than what he probably could have imagined,
what anybody could have imagined at the time.
And that's what I'm saying is that perspective of like just run with it.
Like don't think why me think why not me.
Why not?
Or what is this teaching me?
What am I supposed to learn from this, right?
There's got to be a reason.
It's like, I haven't peaked yet.
You haven't peaked yet.
there's a reason because we need to learn a lesson and we need to enjoy this and like for for me when
I look at everything I go would I have wanted it quicker you're damn right I have a family to take care of
I would love endless amounts of money so I could travel with them you know when I'm not recording
you know I'd love to just hop on a plane you know and and and and shoot off to yellowstone for the
weekend on a surprise just not time yet but the one thing I'll say is through
all the adversity and the pain that I've gone through and that you're going through when we get
there, we're going to appreciate it so much more than the flash in the pan overnight success.
Like, let it take another five years. Yeah. I'm only 47. Only 47. Jesus Christ. Listen, 26.
Run with 26. That's fine. That's fine. Hey, look, I feel young, you know. But I think
the journey and all the pain.
Because we talk about this a lot on the show.
It's determination and discipline.
That's what we go through here.
It's like leaning into those moments,
a lot of people like to run from them.
And my wife knows this.
I feel that pain so deeply.
And I put my face in it.
Because then I know what I'm feeling.
And then when I get out of it, I'm like,
I can appreciate the next moment.
Yeah.
Do you also find yourself like really accepting the pain
and not running from it?
Yeah, no, definitely.
I think it's one of those things, too,
especially recently, like I said,
this time last year I was, you know,
in kind of like a rougher spot.
And it's one of those interesting things.
You said something really interesting in the fact of,
you said, do I wish it would have happened sooner?
Yes.
Sure.
I, looking at myself now,
thinking back to a year ago,
when I wanted that success,
I wanted that overnight success,
I look back now,
I'm like, shit.
I was not,
I wasn't ready.
Like right now, like who I am now,
I'm writing the best,
and hasn't come out yet,
but I've been writing the best music
I've ever written in my life.
And I needed to go through all that.
Oh, I'm standing by it.
Come on.
The records that I have been doing,
I would say this past year
are the best records I've ever made.
And they haven't come out yet.
And you know why?
It's because I embraced my authenticity.
I realize that I,
chased so hard that and I put so much pain on myself and so much pressure on myself to kind of be
something that I wasn't in a way. You did? In a way. I mean moving out here, you know, I really wanted
to be kind of accepted into the country world and I really wanted, you know what I mean, to make
friends and rub elbows with all of these up and coming people that clearly didn't want anything to do
with me because they're like, who are you? What's this hip-hop shit? And you know, you know,
Kind of in a way or like, or like a almost like a dance monkey dance kind of thing.
Like I'd get called in the sessions and I'd be super excited to write because what people don't realize is like I had come from also.
I took songwriting courses when I was 10 years old when I was 15.
And I paid for those.
Wow.
Myself through on Skype every day.
I would meet with a songwriter from Berkeley College of Music and he would basically go over the curriculum that he went through for songwriting and taught me the basic formula of pop writing.
So people sometimes don't realize that I do have that background as well.
And they call me into sessions and be like, okay, well, I want you to put a verse on this.
And I'm like, okay, well, that's not writing a song together.
That's like you wanting.
That's you wanting to collab with me.
Yeah, that's like a feature.
Yeah, exactly.
That's like a fee.
That's not like me coming in and writing a song with you, you know?
But like it's one of those things, yeah, where I definitely had to face that a lot.
But like I said, it was now I'm like,
so confident in what I'm doing and who I am and I don't care what people think.
I love it.
And you shouldn't, you know, like, because I think everything about your music is what I love.
Thank you.
Because I love pop.
I love hip hop.
And I do love country.
Yeah.
It's like, wait a second.
I can go to one place and hear it all.
Exactly.
Like, like, you country people don't act like you don't like hip hop.
I think it's funny too.
And I talk about all the time.
I'm like country and hip hop are the cousins in the genre.
Sure.
They're a lifestyle genre and they're also a storytelling genre.
And that's what I fell in love with with hip hop originally was storytelling.
I mean like I loved TLC and Outback.
Oh, too.
I'm such a robot, man.
We've talked about this before, haven't we?
Yeah.
TLC, Left Eye is like what inspired me to want to.
You can ask my mom growing up when I was a little girl.
I used to love, love.
There was three music videos.
that I loved that would come on.
And they're so random and so weird,
but I loved Waterfalls by TLC.
That's a great song.
Oh my gosh.
I actually have a country cover of it coming out.
Stop.
Yeah.
And it's actually phenomenal.
And when you hear it,
it makes, you're like this 100% could be an interest.
It's phenomenal.
Of course I hit the left eye right.
Of course you did.
But thriller by Michael Jackson.
and, of course, man, I feel like a woman.
Yeah, Shania Twain.
Those were like, and any man of mine I used to love to.
That's a great one.
I really like that song.
Yeah, like, or I'm thinking of the, yeah, I think, yeah, that was the music video of her, like, with like the cropped gene and the jeans.
And she's like, I'm thinking, is it, who's bed of, have you, no, no, no, it is any man of mine.
Yeah.
When she's, like, on the tractor, let out.
Oh my gosh.
And I thought she was so beautiful.
I was like, you know, like when you're little and you just like watch, you know, things like that.
But yeah, no, I loved all.
They're just, they're all kind of related genre wise.
You know, it's awesome because it allows you to create this art that's so different.
Yeah.
And sometimes, you know, people are like, I'm not ready for different.
But when they are, they are.
And it's astronomical.
And I'll tell you what.
I want to go back because you talked about at one point, you know, they didn't get it.
I remember having this conversation with my wife very early on.
I'm like, nobody gets to the determined society.
And I said, you know, in fact, I don't even know if I get it.
I don't know what it means.
I don't know what it is.
It didn't make sense.
Now it makes perfect sense because of consistency, right?
And overcoming certain things.
and, you know, I made a move in my own life to get very healthy.
Because about, you know, November of 24, I was probably the most depressed that I've been in a very long time.
And I remember laying down on the couch and not being able to get up and do anything unless I was recording.
I was just, I wouldn't work out, wouldn't do anything.
But then I changed that, you know, and I got lean and I got in great,
in better shape and now I'm in better shape
and we keep moving on that.
But I became the brand.
I became the determined society.
Instead of just talking about determination discipline,
I'm now the billboard for it.
And then that's when the show went,
wow.
And so, you know, I just think that's such an important point
because, you know, people will get it.
Oh, for sure. People will get it.
Now it makes perfect sense, the determined society.
Oh, you live,
a determined lifestyle and you have people on that.
Talk about determination and discipline.
That makes sense.
It's like, duh.
And then you'll have people that are inspired by what you're doing.
And I think that's also like just a magical thing is seeing people that love what you do,
that get what you do.
And then you inspire them to do their art form or what they're doing in a different way.
The most rewarding part about this isn't the amount of listeners a month, the streams,
to add revenue,
it's when I get messages like I did
from this dude in New Zealand.
I got it two days ago.
He had just found out
about an affair
that his wife had four years ago
and he's struggling in his marriage,
trying to figure out
what he's going to do to stay
and if he's going to stay
and is it okay to stay
or do I need to leave?
How do I be a great father
only seeing my kids half a time?
That's some heavy stuff.
But he was searching,
through Spotify and found my show.
And he started binging it like a couple weeks ago.
And he wrote me a message and I responded and, you know,
and I followed him back and I'm pouring into him.
That to me is the most rewarding about this whole thing.
I read somewhere that an army vet,
and I don't know if you know this,
but an army that said your music helped them open up about his emotions.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I actually, so crazy story.
And I remember I cried when I got.
So I've had a couple vets reach out to me.
One, unfortunately, Mark, he passed away.
And I sent him a Coe Red Hat, and I sent him a video.
Damn.
And he was, he had Parkinson's, and he was a, I think he was a Vietnam vet.
He was older.
And my manager reached out to me and was like, Coie, I'll talk about, I know exactly what
you're talking about, but I'll talk about that one. Sure, no, of course. No. Um, and Nico, my manager
reached out to me, was like, Coe, you'll never guess what just happened. I'm like, what? He's like,
one of my homies, like, in like, North Carolina. He's a caretaker for this, for this vet. Um,
this, like, Vietnam vet named Mark and, you know, he's, Parkinson's. He can't really, like,
talk or like, you know what I mean? He's kind of towards the end. He's kind of towards the end.
And, um, and he's in his wheelchair and he was like, I've seen you. He's, he's like, I've seen
you post this girl's stuff that you work with.
And he's like, okay.
He was like, and Mark is over there just jamming on his phone.
And it was your artist, Coe.
And he was like listening.
I can't remember what song it was or what it was,
but he sent Nico a video of him.
And he was like rocking back and forth,
like with like, in like his thing.
And he was like, oh, Mark, you like, you like,
Coie Red?
And he was like, yeah.
And he was like, just jamming.
And so I sent him.
him a video message. And he goes, like, listen, like, totally up to you. But, like, I just had to send
this to you. And I was like, let's run it. Like, let's send him a hat. Like, let's, like, I'll send him
a video, like a personal video. Like, hey, what's up? So, like, Mark, oh my gosh, like, I love you.
Like, thank you for your service. Like, I can't wait to meet you when I come to North Carolina,
you know, all this stuff. He ended up passing away, unfortunately. But I was like, I'll have a ticket
waiting for you. Damn. And then the caretaker sent a video of him watching my video. And he's like,
he's watched it like 20 times.
Like he just is like so and he was like getting excited and like,
uh,
just it's things like that that just put,
like I said,
uh,
make,
make everything all the,
all the,
all the,
the,
the,
the,
the,
the,
the,
doubt,
everything that you go through.
Like,
I'm exactly where I need to be.
I'm doing exactly what I've always wanted to do.
That's it.
Um,
but I did,
I did get a,
uh,
I got a,
direct message from this, uh, from this guy one time. And he was like, hey, um, he's like,
I feel comfortable sending you this because I don't think you'll ever read it. He's like,
because you have a lot of followers. You know, like, but I do, I do. I try and reach, I try to read
everything as much as possible. I mean, I'm only human and I, you know, have, have things going on and
and I can't get back to everybody. But I really try to because I'm so appreciative. Like,
there's thousands of great artists in the world. You could listen to anybody. Like, you want to listen to me. Like,
I want to give you a hug.
Like,
I wish you could hug everybody.
You know,
and just like,
thank them because I,
like I said,
I had to work really hard.
Like,
I haven't had a lot of people
believe in me,
especially coming up.
Like,
a lot of people,
I was,
like laughed at.
I was mocked.
I was,
you know what I mean?
I know that feels.
And bullied for,
you know,
um,
so having,
like,
oh my,
like you have no idea
what this means to me.
But I got this message
and he was like,
hey,
um,
you know,
you'll probably never read this.
So I feel comfortable
saying this.
but I, you know, did three tours in Iraq.
I have a beautiful wife.
I have two beautiful little girls.
But sometimes it just, I don't feel strong.
I don't feel like I'm strong enough for them.
And I listen to your song, cry like a man.
And for the three minutes and two seconds made me feel like I was seen for the first time.
Dude.
And he was like, and I just want to let you know, thank you so much for writing that.
and you have no idea how much that song meant to me
in these type of moments.
And I was just like, I don't remember crying.
And I was like, I remember I called my mom
because I was called my mom for like stuff like,
I was like, what do I do I do I do?
What do I do I do?
Is he going to be like, oh my gosh, she opened it?
She saw it.
Now I'm mortified.
Now I'm like, more to fight.
Like, oh my gosh.
And I was like, yeah, just writing him back
and say like, you know, thank you.
And I'm like, yeah, but I don't want to, you know,
it's kind of like manly.
You know, he's like buff dude, tattoos.
like gym. You know what I mean? And I was like, oh shit. Like I don't want to, you know, but I also was
just like, oh my gosh, like I'm so touched. Like I love that you love that song. You're exactly
who I wrote it for. I'm so happy that my music found you. And I think, yeah, that's, you know,
with church, with cry like a man, I, even wild card. Like, I get that all the time. And I can't
tell you how much connecting with people through writing. It makes me feel.
so seen. Because like I said, I've always considered myself a writer first. So getting that people,
even you sang some of the specific lyrics to me, I'm like, get it. I get it. You got those.
Yeah. I get it. I get it. I get it. I get it. I think it's, it shaped the way you've written your
music because it's deep. Yeah. It's not empty. And the world needs deep right now. Yeah.
The world needs deep. But I have one more question for you before we shut it down. I could go like,
I know seven hours with you. I feel like I spiral too. So I'm like, no, you're, no, you're great.
This has been a very fun conversation with a lot of value.
Yeah.
That is literally the root of this show.
And I'm just grateful that for your friendship first and foremost.
And then secondly, that we got to connect and do this together.
I'm so grateful too.
I was just telling somebody I'm a little bit shy in the sense of I don't put a lot of myself personally out on the internet.
I get a little bit nervous.
Interesting.
The internet's a scary place.
Dude, you're telling me.
I get picked apart already for music that I'm like, oh, like, like.
You know, it's hard to, hey guys, how's it?
Like, you know, to do the, the camera.
Yeah, that's hard.
It gets a little nerve-wracking.
I'm like, am I even, I'm boring as shit.
Like, I just sit down with my, with my Pomeranians.
Like, you know.
So, so I can't tell you how much it means that you invited me to come on today.
Well, absolutely.
We'll do it again, you know, and we'll do it when you're on a big tour.
Yes.
That'll be really cool, right?
The dream.
But don't worry.
We don't get much hate here, like, on the show.
You're not going to get destroyed.
It's okay.
But one more question.
Again, when I started the show, you know, one day I said this statement.
I just want to wake up in a society where people are determined to chase their dreams no matter how they feel emotionally at that time.
Yeah.
That's my definition.
That's my definition of determination.
What's yours?
Of determination.
Of, hmm, that's a good question.
My definition or my definition of determination is trusting the journey.
and just doing it.
Just doing it.
You can sit around and sit and think about it forever,
but until you just go out there and do it,
and it's going to be scary.
It's going to be scary.
You're going to put yourself out there
for whatever it is you want to do.
Whatever it is you're pursuing.
It's going to be scary.
You're going to feel silly.
You're going to feel, oh, my gosh,
you know, if you're putting yourself out there
with music for the first time,
whatever, let's just say that or a podcast.
You're probably going to get three views.
You're probably going to get five views.
Yeah.
Keep doing it.
Yeah.
Keep going.
Keep doing it.
And it's, and it's,
hits the ego a little bit.
It hits your pride.
You're like, yeah, but I'm so good.
Why is it?
You know what I mean?
Trust.
Yeah.
Trust the journey.
Trust yourself.
You got to earn it.
Yeah, exactly.
You got to earn it.
You have to earn it.
Because when you do earn it,
when it's not handed to you,
when you do earn it,
it makes you a better person.
It genuinely does.
Truly does.
I mean,
think about, you know,
people that have,
like we were talking about people that,
you know,
didn't have it easy or wasn't handed or it wasn't like this God gift and just it just happened for
them. They really had to work for it. Most of the time those people are also the most humble,
appreciative people. That's true. In their, in their, in their craft, whatever they're doing.
That's so true. Because they, they knew what it was like. They knew what it was like to be in those
positions. Yeah. It's true. And they, they did it. Then they're real people and they're down to earth
and they're cool and killer like yourself. Thank you, Coe. Thank you so much. I'm so happy we did
this. I'm so happy. That was an amazing determination definition, by the way. Oh, thank you.
I feel like I spiraled a little bit. So no, it's okay to pause. I'm like, it's okay to pause.
I'm like, it's okay to pause and think. That's called authenticity. Yeah. See, we don't cut things out
like that. I want the listeners to hear that. Oh, I love that. Yeah, we don't, we don't.
You're like, we don't cut nothing. No, no, no, no, nothing fabricated here, my friend. All right, guys,
thank you so much for listening. Please do me a favor. Go to at Coey Red on Instagram. Go to her website.
search her on Spotify and listen to her music.
My personal favorite is church,
but there's so many great ones.
And like she said,
she's writing some more stuff
and recording some more stuff.
So check her out because I'm going to tell you one thing.
One thing.
One day, she'll be the biggest country female artist
on this planet
and you want to be along for the ride to watch her growth.
So go get it done.
And until next time, stay determined.
