Built for More Podcast

Built For More: Two Dads One Mission Why we are Here

Greg Pingel and Jonathan Roberts Episode 1

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0:00 | 26:58

Ever been called out so hard it changed your life? We open with the moment a tough question cut through excuses—“Would you die for your family? Then get in shape for them”—and follow the ripple effects across fatherhood, marriage, money, and work. Two dads, different styles, same mission: lead yourself first so you can lead at home without faking it online.

We share how grinding for income but disappearing at home poisons trust, why presence beats performative gifts, and how simple routines—lifting, sleep, morning walks—restore energy and patience. Then we collide on money philosophies. One of us buys the future to feel it now, the other stacks cash to buy optionality. We unpack a practical middle ground: automated investing, clear rules for big purchases, and using experiences as fuel rather than debt traps. The win isn’t flexing; it’s freedom—time to coach, space to listen, and the bandwidth to be the steady one when life gets loud.

Parenting gets real with two working models: chore-driven responsibility versus sports-and-school priority. We compare what actually works—explicit expectations, consistent follow-through, and rituals that anchor kids. We also get honest about purpose and masculinity in a changing world. With AI erasing busywork, identity can’t hang on a job title. Strength at home looks like boundaries and empathy, truth and tenderness, discipline and joy. No theory-only sermons here—just stories from dealerships, deployments, and day-to-day dad life, plus frameworks you can use this week.

Built for More drops every Monday morning. If you’re ready for straight talk, real stories, and practical steps to be present, capable, and trusted at home, hit follow, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a quick review so more dads can find us.

SPEAKER_00:

Purpose of this podcast is really just two dads who figured out winging it wasn't the easiest thing to do. I think is where we're going with this, right?

SPEAKER_01:

Kind of like winging this.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. And that's pretty much exactly what it is. We've got a little bit of a script and idea that we're going to go through here, but we we've got a solid idea for the podcast. But let's just really get into it and create an intro episode to get going. So, Greg, I'm going to have you start off, man. I wanted you to give a quick little introduction of yourself. I don't know, drop your name, kids, how long you've been married, you know, pretty much what my sales calls start off with.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, yeah, totally. So Greg, right? Two kids, six and three, married eight years. Figured it out because of him at one point. Kind of. I mean, it's kind of kind of you're still trying to figure out.

SPEAKER_00:

What's uh what's like one of your you know biggest struggles as a father, husband, and you know, business that you've had to come through, some failure you've had, something that's just really kicked your ass.

SPEAKER_01:

Dude, you know this.

SPEAKER_00:

I know.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, they know stories. Oh, okay, true. They don't. So running a car dealership, and this guy was my coach, and he was not the nicest coach in the world. Super nice. We're on the phone one day, and he's like, Greg, he goes, Do you love your family? Like, yep, of course I love my family. He goes, Would you die for your family? Of course. Why would I not die for my family, Jonathan? Seemed like a good question. Good question. Yeah, good question. He goes, Why won't you get in shape for them, you fat ass? I was like, damn, this is what I needed. And this is what, like a year and a half ago? This is crazy. That was my biggest struggle was being out of shape, drinking, not being there for the family, just grinding six days a week, grinding my life away at the car dealership. Woo.

SPEAKER_00:

So, badass. What would you say? What's like a big win you've had since being a father and all of that? Something that you could just, you know, share and give a little bit of value early on in this.

SPEAKER_01:

You can't, you can't lead your family until you learn to lead yourself. That's huge. Because too many people like try and lead the family and like their stuff's all messed up on the backside. And you can't do that until you start to really become the person you need to become. Then your family will come with you. Because that's how it was for me. It's the same thing, same story.

SPEAKER_00:

So I'll spin my intro real quick. I'm Jonathan Roberts, two daughters, 14 and 11, almost 15 and 11. And I've been married. We talked about this last night, actually, upstairs. 16 going on 17 years in about four months. So yeah, been married a long ass time. Oh, yeah, we're gonna have to get into your dad origin story too. So we're gonna cut back to you on that one. How you started a family. Oh, true. So Brittany and I, that's my wife, we were college dropouts together, literally sitting at a red red light during Christmas break 20 2009. Decided we didn't want to go back to college. I joined the military about that was February 5th, 2009, November 22nd, 2009. I arrived in Afghanistan for a year. Later that February, came home for two weeks, a little two-week vacation from Afghanistan, knocked her up and came home from Afghanistan and she was eight months pregnant. First thing I looked at her after we had the little ceremony and stuff, I pissed her off. I looked at her and said, You've really let yourself go these last last year. Oh, she loved that. Oh, I thought it was funny. Apparently she held it against me forever. Like it was just a good joke. But yeah, so we had our oldest daughter in Germany, got restationed in Alaska, had our second daughter, and it was pretty badass. I would say my biggest struggle, really my biggest struggle is uh has been like being so dedicated on what I'm doing that I kind of put them aside. Like whether it's work, business, hobbies, activities, like you know, trying to do everything and trying to buy, you know, the little bit of love with money and shit like that, but like never being present, never being around, definitely something over the last four years I've changed in my life. And biggest thing I've learned is kind of what you said. Like you've got to be the best version of yourself and you know, the best leader of yourself to be able to lead, you know, the family, to be able to lead others, to be able to inspire the wife, to be able to inspire kids. Like I know when, you know, I thought getting out of the military and getting into sales and running dealerships and stuff, I thought, hey, if the platinum card's getting paid off every single month, everybody loves me. And don't get me wrong, like we did a lot of cool stuff, driving cool cars, nice houses, vacations, like we did whatever we wanted, but you know, half the time I wasn't there. Realistically, it was like 80% of the time I wasn't there. And when I was there, I was so busy, you know, at work, you know, trying to think about what deals were possibly missing or how we could improve this, how we could improve that, where like my mind wasn't there at all. And I mean, it started well before that. You know, in the military, I was trying to go into the special operations world. So waking up at four, getting home at eight, nine o'clock at night sometimes, you know, working out three times a day, and then you come home on the weekends and crack open a six-pack because you need to relax and bitch about how you don't have time for anybody else. So yeah, it's just being present where you're at is the one thing I would say is when you go home, try to separate from work as much as possible. And when you're at work, try to ignore home as much as possible. Or better than that, combine them all. I'm just impressed you got a proof for an Amex. Yeah, dude. I had that since 2011. It says it on my card. Yeah, I had good credit. No big deal. Had keyword. Had. Had. Had good. And I always keep buying shit. So I've got good leverage. So you kind of shared how we already how we connected. You'd actually reached out to the company I'm with, the Elliott group, and I don't know why why'd you originally reach out? I think you guys have been training with us or you'd seen our content or something. Do you think that's a good one? Yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, because you guys had a big account with Lithia. And then I was like, see ya. And I left Lithia and went to Ken Garth, and that's where they didn't have any training. We were training on old Grant Cardone.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. So And then you had you or somebody about me with Dan, and then you were a big part of that. And I think it was probably after six months or maybe a year, probably about six months after you guys, your dealership had got on the platform. You somehow reached out, or I reached out to you, I don't remember, and had a couple conversations, and probably on about the third conversation is when I told you you're a fat ass.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

And I think it was because you were bitching about like being tired or not having time for the gym or something like that. And I finally honestly, I was probably just in the mood, or I was being a fat ass too, which is where some of my best coaching comes from.

SPEAKER_01:

You're just being a dick. Yeah, or being a dick. That's where the best coaching comes from.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, just being my authentic self. And yeah, kind of framed you and set you up with a question about your family and basically turned your words around on you. And what's cool is you actually took action, started going to the gym, started, you know, getting up early, getting in better shape, lost an ass ton of weight. How much did you lose before you started working with us?

SPEAKER_01:

Before, like 60 pounds.

SPEAKER_00:

60 pounds, you've dropped another 40 or so.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, like yeah, it's crazy. Damn, you just from like one decision, you know how that stuff works.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, of treating yourself like you would treat your family. Yeah. Because you're gonna let your wife and kids have those bullshit excuses. No. But you'd let yourself.

SPEAKER_01:

Even my three-year-old, you don't let them have that excuse when they leave like rappers and stuff out. Nope. No excuses. No excuses in the house. Pick it up.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I'm working on that one. My kids are older, so they're more of a pain in the ass, I think. Not a pain in the ass. They just now are smart enough to argue with me. I should beat them up. So yeah, that's how we connected. Anything you want to share on that?

SPEAKER_01:

No, you're just always a dick. This is coaching style, it was great. Just mean. Mean every time. But at least it was truth. Yeah, but coming to hear that.

SPEAKER_00:

Know me now for the next year, year and a half. I'm not that much of a dick, am I?

SPEAKER_01:

No, you still get to know me.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, you're still a dick.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I don't like liars. Yeah, you just work with it. I don't like it. I'm gonna freaking tell you what's on my mind, and I have no filter. So the next thing we'll jump into here is like I said, this episode is 100% an intro. Just get an idea of who Greg is, get a great idea of how awesome I am, and uh yeah, get an idea what this is gonna be about. So let's talk about a few things first, just so people can get the idea that we're not the damn same and we have an opinion, even though I've shaped all your opinions. Oh, I'm kidding.

SPEAKER_01:

He's full of shit.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. So let's talk about. I think the first one we could talk about is money. Because you spend money way differently than I do. Yeah, you spend all the money. Yeah, man. It's going, it's it's disappearing. It's fake.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. It's always on a metal card for Jonathan. Here's the money.

SPEAKER_00:

You gotta pay the metal card off, F. Here's the money.

SPEAKER_01:

Here's the money.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. People can tell me no later. No, I've just always and I think it was coming from like being broke as a kid, watching my mom work her way up. So going from, you know, no money food stamps to having, you know, not freedom for money, but definitely having a good amount, having basic necessities, and then some covered. I don't I never grew up like anyone in my life ever saving money and always spending it, which I've learned later in life in 36 now that you know saving it's a little bit more fun for the long game, but at the same time, driving fast cars, badass vacations, nice houses. I'm not too disappointed. And you've saved some though.

SPEAKER_01:

Just a little bit.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, you're quite a bit more than I have.

SPEAKER_01:

See, I was a lot more successful than Jonathan was in the car business. So I made a lot more money. So in making a lot more money, you could save a lot more money while still having the fancy cars and the nice house and all the other stuff, too, as well.

SPEAKER_00:

I'm gonna need your W-2s. Also, you worked at a fucking Ford dealership so you could drive your product. I worked at a Hyundai dealership.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, that's true. I wouldn't be caught dead in a Hyundai.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I had to drive BMWs.

SPEAKER_01:

But I didn't sell cars at Ford. I was just a GSM at Ford. I sold cars at a Lexus, Cadillac, Infinity, Jag, Volvo, Land Rover.

SPEAKER_00:

What did you drive then?

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, everything. Cadillac, Land Rover, Lexus. I was trading cars every like six months.

SPEAKER_00:

Man, that sounds like a fucking fuckboy.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, a little bit. Yeah. Getting a new car every six months. I just my goal was never to pay the registration.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, see, I I always just got new cars in my Sirius XM trial subscribe or subscription and did luckily BMW, it's every year. So yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, and Hyundai's don't have Apple CarPlay. So they do now.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, now they were the first one to have wireless after BMW, after their patent disappeared.

SPEAKER_01:

But that's how I see money, is you just gotta save, like you just save a little bit of it, Jonathan. Just a little bit. What are you saving it for? It's just devaluing in the bank. It's not necessarily just in the bank. It could be in the stock market, it could be in real estate, it could be anywhere else. All right. Jonathan just spends it.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, it's going out of style, dude. Parenting. How do you parent your kids? I don't think we actually know too much. I mean, you hang around my kids and shit, and I'm around your kids, but we've actually never had this type of conversation.

SPEAKER_01:

Not on parenting, not at all.

SPEAKER_00:

No.

SPEAKER_01:

No. That's a really good question. How I parent my kids. I'm very strict on my kids. When it comes to like wrappers being out, clothes not being put away, they help clean the house up like every Sunday. They'll help pick up all their toys, put it back in the toy chest. One my son loves to broom and mop, so he'll like try and mop and broom. And then he hits his sister with it, and then the rest of the day is just lost because they're running around like animals. But I would say that they definitely help out a lot around the house because I ask them and show them how to do it.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay. My kids don't do shit around the house. They're pretty much responsible for keeping their rooms clean and their crap that belongs in their rooms in their rooms. But Britney and I have kind of come up with a theory where as long as they're playing sports and active in school, like they have shit to do, we pretty much, you know, they don't have any chores or anything. We make them, you know, try to make them load dishes in the dishwasher and clean up their own mess and not leave crap around. But like helping out with just day-to-day tasks or weekend cleaning, getting things right, they don't do a dang thing. They can cook now though.

SPEAKER_01:

My kids can cook lunchables. No big That's what happens when you have a six and a three-year-old. I can cook lunchables and PB and J's.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, no, mine can use fire, which is kind of cool. Or I even cooks for us a little bit, so that's dope. So what's your uh bring me through your life like your background experience? Basically from I don't know, high school on.

SPEAKER_01:

High school on, man, that that how old are you? Oh 37.

SPEAKER_00:

God, you're freaking old.

SPEAKER_01:

Dude, you're 37. No, I'm 36. When do you turn 37? Yeah, 22nd. Okay. Almost 37.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, you're collecting ARP soon. It's on eBay. I dude, I am. So high school to now. What's uh what's your background? What got you to where you're at? Just a quick little run through.

SPEAKER_01:

We can make this very quick. So high school, went to college. You didn't do much. Got a degree. I know you didn't do that. That was a big challenge. I know you went and did something else.

SPEAKER_00:

Congratulations, you wasted your time.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, got a degree. And then I sold cars. I started selling cars. Did sold cars for 10 years. I didn't sell cars for 10 years, sold cars for three years, but did, you know, this car sales, finance, GSM, all that good stuff, and just like moved my way up in the car business. And ever and every year just made more money and moved up and made more money and move up. It was a it was a really rough life at that point.

SPEAKER_00:

All right, we'll talk about that more later. Yeah, mine's, you know, kind of the same. Tried the college thing, realized it was a waste of time, joined the military, got my ass kicked for seven years, ten months, and got out of the military. I actually wanted to be a cop, failed the psych test for seven departments in Oregon. So I guess I told you he's a dick. Yeah, I guess I'm not.

SPEAKER_01:

Can't even pass a psych test.

SPEAKER_00:

I'm not right for it. A little bit crazy. I probably beat blue-haired hippies too much. But yeah, I got into auto sales literally as hey, I'm gonna try to become a cop. It takes you know six months to a year to go through all the application and crap. I'll just, you know, put food on the table and put a roof over our head. And that was like my main focus getting into it. I s I sold cars briefly in between my senior year of high school and when I started college. I actually did it like the first three months while I was going to college and just burnt myself out too much crap. So, I mean, I kind of knew what I was doing or had a little background in it, but yeah, did pretty well in sales. I only sold for seven months, moved to sales manager. I went ahead and was just so awesome. Unlike you, skipped finance, skipped GSM, and went straight to a general manager of a franchise store. No big deal. Some people fuck around with their life and waste time. I just lead teams and kick ass. So, you know.

SPEAKER_01:

I just wanted experiences.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, whatever. You don't need that experience. What did it help you?

SPEAKER_01:

Well, helped me a lot in the car dealership world. Sell some gap insurance. Sell some gap insurance and warranties, focus on my penetrations. Yeah, man.

SPEAKER_00:

For a thousand bucks, I'll piss on your tire. I'm just kidding. Buy Xylotech or whatever the hell it is, it might be good. Yeah. What strengths do you have in life, man, that you're gonna be able to bring to this podcast and be able to share with people?

SPEAKER_01:

Well, I mean, just think about it. Like the life we've lived, the life we've been through. How many times do we get on the phone with somebody and they're just their life is an absolute disaster? All the time, right? Yeah. That life was the life that I was living like a year and a half ago, or the life that you were living like three years ago, before we even started doing this and started this whole self-development journey.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I would say for me, I mean, being able to just talk and share things, and we're gonna try to keep this as real as we can with just random stuff and talking shit like dudes do, but also at the same time, like giving value, things that we've been through, things that we've had to overcome. And I'd say, like, one of my strengths that I've always been able to take forward is I just basically say I'm gonna do random shit and figure out how to do it and stay disciplined to that. Like, you know, we talk about the money thing. One of the best ways I've ever given myself in a uh raise in the auto business was just buy something I can't afford. Usually it was just a nicer car, and then what you got 45 days to first payment, you got 45 days to figure that shit out. And so far it's done pretty well for me. It's my favorite kind of salesperson. I haven't filed bankruptcy yet, so we're good. It's working.

SPEAKER_01:

Just here you go. Just buy the new truck, buy the new car. Yeah, you've got to have start making more money.

SPEAKER_00:

No, it's not all about money, but you've got to have a little bit of a taste of the life that you want. Like, I tell a lot of people this because we work with a lot of business owners, entrepreneurs, but really we've worked. I mean, I've got some clients that are with a SWAT team here in town. I've got nurses, doctors, I mean, really everybody, but a lot of people want a bigger life or they have dreams or they have goals, but they don't even know what it feels like to get it. For example, you know, people I I haven't flown anything but first class in probably the last two, three years of my life. I'm six foot three, I don't fit in economy, it's annoying. If I can, I'm booking first class or JSX. Shout out to JSX, it's a game changer. But I tell people this like if you want that lifestyle, you need to go book your ass a first class ticket somewhere. And I don't even care if you just go spend a day in Burbank or something, fly to Burbank first class, it's an hour flight, and just see what the difference is. Yeah, they might not feed you and stuff, but you're gonna get on the plane, you're gonna get a drink before everyone shows up, you're gonna have leg room, the seat's gonna be pretty comfortable, and it just eliminates a lot of the stress. Or take another step and fly JSX and JSX sponsor me. And you know, you skip TSA, you arrive at the airport 20 minutes before the flight takes off, throw them your bags, get on the jet, and you're up in you know, in California to your destination in an hour and a half. It's freaking amazing. So if you've never experienced something like that in life, go do it. Like, I'll tell you, it's way more fun to drive a M5 than it is a Honda Civic.

SPEAKER_01:

Or a Hyundai.

SPEAKER_00:

Or a Hyundai.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

So if you want a nice car, if you dream of you know having an M5 someday, go find an M5 to rent for the weekend. Don't go post a bunch of BS on Instagram making people think that you've earned it, but at least get a taste for it, at least get an addiction for it. So I say that's one of my you know better strengths is being able to experience something and then figuring out how to repeat it over and over and over again in my life. So pretty damn badass. So let's get in the meat and potatoes, though. Why the hell, other than it was my amazing idea, did we decide to shoot a podcast? And we've been talking about it for about two weeks now.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, two weeks. Why did we decide to do this?

SPEAKER_00:

Because we wanted it to be real and not just and authentic.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, we're kind of tired of seeing the bullshit out there because there's so much like crap on the internet, and you're just like, damn, I don't this person hasn't done anything they're even teaching on or coaching on or talking about. Like they haven't lived it.

SPEAKER_00:

I think we also got hung up a little bit because we wanted to be able to give value and give value that can actually help people and actually grow people. You know, we talked about doing a business one for a while and then a sales one. Yeah. There's a million of those. Coaching. And that's what we do on a day-to-day. And a podcast ain't gonna help you too much on that. Yeah, no. And then we just kind of decided, like, hey, what do we both kind of have in common that we could talk a little bit about? And it just became being dudes. Yeah. Being married, having kids, you know, being quote unquote, you could say successful. I don't you I don't consider myself successful, but you could relate to the average American. I think we're both doing pretty dang well. We both have found, you know, you could say jobs. I don't really consider that a job either, but we've both found ways to make money that for the most part's enjoyable. It's still stressful as hell from time to time. But I mean it's a Friday and we're shooting a podcast versus being at the office. Yeah, we've gotten ourselves, we're not, we don't work. You're playing bags, I guess. Yeah. So got a lot more freedom there. So, you know, I I think one of the big ones is to be able to help people bridge gaps in their life. Like problems they're having, things they're overcoming, and just may need a story, may need some advice that inspires them or gives them an idea that they can go implement in their own life and be able to make change.

SPEAKER_01:

That's that's huge. That's what all this is about, is like really taking people from where they're at to where they want to go, but through real stories.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Not just like, oh, I read a book or I saw a podcast or I did this. No, like we actually lived it.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. Like we went through this. Yeah, this isn't going to be teaching from theory. No. Until I've tried something and seen if it works or fucks it up. I'm not, we're not going to do a book review. And then talking about this a bunch. And you know, we've been, you've been with the team for a year and a handful of months now. We kind of have a shared mission of what we're trying to achieve. Yeah, totally. I'm just trying to make America not a bunch of bitches.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm trying to help and impact lives while not making a bunch of bitches.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, giving men the ability to be men again, you know, growing up in Dude, that's so lost. Yeah. So lost. We devalue masculinity and devalued femininity or feminine energy too. Femininity? Femininity. I don't know, whatever it is. Whatever. The feminine and masculine, like we got away from that. We told everyone they're the same, and we all like the same. So this is complete bullshit. Like it's complete bullshit because we're not all the same. We all have different beliefs. We all have you know different things. Like, I'm six foot three, I'm probably not playing in the NBA anytime soon. There's a whole other reason. But six foot white. You can't jump. And I can't shoot the damn bass. And you can't run either. I'll smoke all these guys. But I don't run and I'll still smoke them. So we just had a you know similar view on life, similar view on family, even though you know you're a fucking helicopter parent. I'm just kidding. No, you're not. It's funny because you're more strict when it comes to cleaning and stuff, but I'm more strict when it's like we're out in public at you know that little amusement fair thing the other day. Like you'll let your kids venture off a little bit more. Mine are twice as old as yours. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Dude, they're hard. I just let them go. Go explore, go have fun.

SPEAKER_00:

You can make it if you lose one.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

It's kind of fun.

SPEAKER_01:

They usually come back. They're at the age that he can't, like, Oliver won't run away too far. He'll always come back. You know.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. Mine will disappear.

SPEAKER_01:

See, that's the difference.

SPEAKER_00:

So, what what what's gonna make this podcast unique in your opinion, man?

SPEAKER_01:

It's just the authenticity. Being authentic, like I said, being authentic, having real stories, living the life, doing the thing, being in the trenches, actually doing it every single day. Not just like you said, like not just talking off theory and being like a little parrot. Yeah. Just hearing something and repeating it. Actually, like talking through our experiences. Because we do stuff, people like we do stuff people want to do every single day in terms of like changing lives, even being around Andy. Like, dude, we help Andy out with all this stuff, and like we see how many people reach out every single day.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, 100%. And I think just being able to share that experience with people is gonna be huge, especially in the world that we're coming to with AI and everything, is a lot of your typical jobs are gonna disappear, and people are really gonna need to be able to find a purpose in life. Yeah. And, you know, it's not that you're not gonna have a job, but it's gonna be you're going to have to act more on your purpose. I think it's a good thing. I think people are gonna be able to be more creative. I see this podcast influencer, whatever you want to call it, space, getting a lot bigger just because you know, people are gonna need inner to be entertained because machines are gonna take a lot of just the day-to-day activities out of life, but it's also gonna cause a lot of people to be lost if they don't know who they are and what their actual purpose on earth is. So be able to share that. So let's cover really quick who is this podcast for and not for?

SPEAKER_01:

I will cover who it's for. I'm gonna leave you to the not for. That's my favorite. You'll be more direct with it, right? Dads, men, looking to scale, looking to grow, just become the best version of themselves. People who maybe, like Jonathan said, are just a little lost, like a little stuck, like don't have that real purpose in life, looking for that impact. That's who this is for.

SPEAKER_00:

Who it's not for? Bitches. No, really. Who it's not for, I mean, I really want to say it's for everybody, because I truly do believe that men and women both have purpose. We all have some sort of purpose. But who it's not for, or it might take you a little bit to get on it, if you're easily offended, if words hurt, like bitches, yeah, you're not gonna love it. If you can't be called out, if you don't realize the world's not perfect and everyone lives this little fantasy life, like it's not gonna be for you because it's not gonna be fake. Like I knew getting into this podcast, like there's very gonna be very, very little scripting. Like we have a whiteboard with four topics on it, just so if I start rambling, I can get back on pace somehow. So if you don't like real talk, if you don't like real world scenarios, if you don't like, you know, not acting like you live in a white picket fence house and the world's super perfect and everyone around you is amazing, this podcast isn't gonna be for you. And at the same time, if you're easily offended, like if you can't take a joke, you're definitely not gonna like me. So that's gonna be good. Luckily, our audience that we already have is pretty pretty tough.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, you got in trouble a couple weeks ago.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I cursed a little bit too much. He swore a little bit too much. It was pretty funny. It wasn't even a bad call. I mean, I I thought I wasn't in good behavior, but I'm trying to drop uh a few bad words, but I promise you they're gonna slip out, and uh, there's been a bunch that have already slipped out here. So if it hurts your feelings, it's not gonna be for you, but you know, it's not gonna be me just like on my last podcast, uh speaking my mind, which was pretty rough a couple times. Now I got a better mind. I learned bigger words. So here's what everyone can expect. So this podcast is gonna be in this format. Greg and I just bullshitting with each other, talking shit. Ripping. Yeah, we'll have a couple ideas, things that happen in the world. We'll bring guests on occasionally and chat with them and break them and see what we can get away with. But really, it's just gonna be conversations about life. It's gonna be conversations about family, a little bit of business, hell, maybe some sports if I ever decide to watch sports again. And initially it's gonna be dropping every single Monday. Did we pick a time? Nope. Probably be like six or seven PM, a.m. a.m. a.m. a.m. Yeah, six or seven a.m. Phoenix time. And we'll have one drop every Monday. We're not shooting it on Monday, so it'll be a couple days behind, but we're not hitting too many current events unless there's a cool conspiracy theory that comes out that I need to talk about.

SPEAKER_01:

Then we will have an emergency episode for that.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh, we could have emergency episodes. And it may change it may change in a few months to two or three times a week. Who knows? But at first, it's gonna be every Monday, so make sure you subscribe, make sure you set it up on iTunes, Spotify, wherever the heck it is. But the biggest thing I can tell you is we're just gonna commit to being authentic. There's gonna be no bullshit. If we bring on a guest and they want to go down some scripted bullshit, I'm gonna break their ass. And we're gonna have real conversations with people. So, and each other, and you, and anybody else. You got anything?

SPEAKER_01:

I got nothing.

SPEAKER_00:

All right. We'll see you guys next week. Appreciate you listening to the episode one, the introduction. I just named it. Oh, did we ever drop the podcast name? Didn't you just come up with the name like five minutes ago? No, we came up with that like last week. The Built for More?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, Built for More.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, yeah, yeah. We came up with that last week. That was our last week meeting when we're playing cornhole. So we'll see you next week on Built for More.