Episode 178 - Investing in Dude Perfect with Jason Illian

 

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In this episode of the Faith Driven Investor Podcast, Richard Cunningham and Luke Roush interview Jason Illian, the founder of Highmount Capital. 

They discuss Highmount's recent investment in Dude Perfect, a popular content creation group known for their Youtube channel and live shows. 

Jason shares his background and the importance of family in his life. He also highlights the trust and influence that Dude Perfect has built with families and the potential for future growth and expansion. The conversation explores the business model of content creation and the impact that faith-driven investors can have on culture through their capital.

All opinions expressed on this podcast, including the team and guests, are solely their opinions. Host and guests may maintain positions in the companies and securities discussed. This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as specific investment advice for any individual or organization.


Episode Transcript

Transcription is done by an AI software. While technology is an incredible tool to automate this process, there will be misspellings and typos that might accompany it. Please keep that in mind as you work through it.

Richard Cunningham You're listening to Faith Driven Investor, a podcast that highlights voices from a growing movement of Christ following investors who believe that God owns it all and cares deeply about the heart posture behind our stewardship. Thanks for listening. 

Hey everyone! All opinions expressed on this podcast, including the team and guests, are solely their opinions. Hosts and guests may maintain positions in the companies and securities discussed in this podcast is for informational purposes only, and should not be relied upon as specific investment advice for any individual or organization. Thanks for listening. 

Richard Cunningham Luke, we are not in a habit around here of power ranking, faith driven investor podcast guests. You know, the Lord has brought so many special people into the fold over the years of us getting to do this and just hearing their stories has been wild and overwhelming. Just to see God's work across asset classes and different types of investments. But I will say, when we're used to talking about public markets or stocks and bonds and real estate, what have you. It's going to be really fun today to say we're talking trick shots with our guy, Jason Ilion, who just made a significant investment into none other than dude perfect. And so Luke, how are you, man? What a joy we're getting to do this today. 

Luke Roush I look forward to talking about every investment. But as you said, there's certain ones that are created unequally in terms of their cool factor and their fun factor. And this is absolutely one of those for me and for you. 

Richard Cunningham Absolutely. And we're both a bunch of, sports lovers, has been athletes. Luke played football at Duke. I played baseball at Baylor. Jason Elion, who's with us, was a former TCU football player himself. He's a two time successful tech founder, former managing director of Cook Disruptive Technologies, which is the multibillion dollar venture and growth arm of Cook Industries. And cook is the largest privately held company in the US. But he's recently gone on to start high amount capital and kind of the, you know, flagship significant headline has been high amounts recent investment into dude perfect. So Jason alien from Wichita Kansas. Welcome to the Faith Driven Investor podcast man. Great to have you. 

Jason Illian Thanks, guys. Thanks for having me. And by the way, I am so glad you don't have power rankings because like, dudes would be really high and I'd be really low on the power rankings. So like, it's good that we're not doing this and we're letting the board guide us on how we do this. 

Richard Cunningham I love it. Well, folks, also, if you if you pick up any hostility in the pod today, it's because I mentioned I've got the love for the Baylor Bears. Our actual most recent FBI podcast guest of guide Stone, Brandon Pizarro, is a Baylor bear. Luke's son, Sam, who was a football player at Stanford, opens up the season against the TCU Horned Frogs, who are the biggest rival to the Baylor Bears. So if you're picking up any hostility at all, it's because we're inviting Jason on to kind of hear the other side of the aisle today. 

Luke Roush Tag team Richard, for once, you and I are on the same side of the table here with respect to college loyalty. So, you know, man. 

Jason Illian That's okay. And I'm willing to speak slower for my Baylor Bears that are listening. That's okay. So we can help them all out. It's so good. 

Richard Cunningham Well, Jason, maybe before we get into him, out in the in the background of him. Out and like, the the investment, dude. Perfect. Let's hear a little bit about you and some of your backstory. The way the Lord's worked in your life and your family, and kind of because I know it has key significance into why you're up to what you're up to today. 

Jason Illian Yeah, yeah. Well, thanks for having me on the show, guys. It's good to see you again. You know, when we talk about what we're up to, it always. For us, it always just starts with my family. I'm exceptionally blessed to have three incredible kids. Reign, who's 16 and a sophomore quarterback. As we're talking sports. He's a quarterback this year. We're excited to see him, be at the varsity level. My daughter sage is 14 and she's playing volleyball and beach volleyball and had a lot of success the summer on the beach circuit, winning a few national tournaments. And then my youngest, who's his name's rogue, and we gave him the name rogue, as in set apart for the Lord. Right. And the man is exactly how we named him, right? Be careful how you name your children. But rogue is awesome, and he is one of these guys that just completely on on fire. And the way we we keep kind of these, these three Power Rangers, point in the same directions because I married up and I have in my coverage with, Alicia, who's my wife, and we've been married now about 17 years. Absolutely love of my life. She's incredible. She is, not only the mom and kind of the CEO of our household, but when she's not doing that, she's also done some speaking and writing. In the Christian space, her heart is really for women's ministry. And so that's kind of the beginning and really the foundation of all that we do. And, you know, one of the thing that's really important to us and then, you know, we can hit on this later if you want as well. But I will say more that I've learned kind of being in my career in finance as an entrepreneur. I can tell you neither of those things go well if things don't go well at home. Right. And as I've learned that many things in life in our culture would be in a much better position if dads would first and foremost focus on running their families. Right? And if we lead our families well, then we can leave our our jobs and our corporations and our entities as well. And I haven't always done that perfectly. In fact, I don't do it perfectly to date. If Alicia was on here, she could fill you in on that. But it is become more and more of a focus for my family specifically, is how do we lead our three kids well and our family? Because that's really what's creating the next legacy and culture of companies and things that we invest in and, and places we go as a country. 

Richard Cunningham And that's good stuff. I love hearing that, and it's evident hearing you talk about your children, just the passion and the heart you have for them. Love the sports background as well. So you can kind of hear this story crescendoing as it reaches the dude perfect aspect is that it sounds like Team Alien, similar to the. The Roush family has just a deep passion and love for sport. So maybe give us some of the the high mountain background and at the same time kind of the dude perfect. And how these two kind of came on a collision course. 

Jason Illian Yeah. So, as you mentioned, beginning, you know, I started off as an entrepreneur myself, started a couple software companies and sold them. And then in 2017 ish or so, Coke Industries asked me to come up and help them build their growth and venture arm. And so did that for about seven years. And, you know, the the real blessing of being a coach for that time is when you have nearly unlimited capital. You get in a lot of very cool meetings and you get a chance to learn a lot. Right? So we had the real privilege of building a pretty tremendous network of VCs, family offices, entrepreneurs, all sorts of incredible families and groups, mostly domestic, but some all over the world as well. And by the time I'd left Coke, I think we, you know, we've had roughly $3 billion or something that we put to work, ranging from smaller investments of kind of five to 10 million to 3, 4 or $500 million investments. And, my wife and I, at that time, it just felt led that God was taking to somewhere else. And so we kind of stepped out in faith and started high capital and did that with two other partners. One of them is a gentleman by name, Dave David Hawkins. And, David's in New York City. He's an elder Redeemer Church, but he also has a background as, kind of a classically trained investment banker and investor. And so he was an early investor in Alibaba and Airbnb and Open Door and some really well known companies that you would know. But he also just thinks from a biblical framework. Right. And so that's how he put it together. And then the other gentleman that's with us is Scott Flukey. And Scott is our CEO and general counsel. And, Scott was a coach for 25 years, was about to retire. His team was overseeing most of the transactions that happened at Coke Industries. And that says a lot because we did a lot of transactions there. And he just joined our team and said, hey, this is really where my heart is. And so that was the genesis of came out and I out. It's been around is as a firm for about 18 months now. So going on two years and you know I can talk about you know, where we kind of play in the investment space. But the easiest way to say was like, we were really looking for high performance teams that are in the growth mode and early middle market private equity space, where we can come along not only as capital but as a true partner to invest in their firm, to come along and say and say besides capital and everybody's money is green, how can we really help you grow? And we do that from putting frameworks and for us, you know, biblical frameworks in place of how do we think about growth and how do we think about, you know, aligned vision and values and complementary capabilities. And if you do those things and then you align incentives, you don't guarantee success, but at least you help put these companies in position that they can be successful. And that's really the heart of human capital. And, that's really what we were doing when we ran into dude. Perfect. 

Luke Roush Maybe talk a little bit, Jason, if you wouldn't mind. So that's phenomenal background. And, you know, deals are a product of, circumstance, timing and, and in fit, maybe talk a little bit about how that deal came together. What got you excited about it? What? You know, where are you going? 

Jason Illian Yeah, yeah. You know, one of the things we talk about a lot of high amount is we think and frameworks and mental models, right. Of like, how do you do things so things aren't equations. But they're like frameworks. And we actually have a framework we think about on relationships too, because at the end of the day, we can all only have so many close friends. So we kind of have a framework that we think of, of like, you have your, you have your community, you have your network, and you have your ecosystem, and your community is like your top 20 or 25 people in your network or 25 in your community, that when they call you, you automatically pick up the phone. So, you know, Luke, as an example, you're you're in my community. Like, if you call me on something on a deal, I'm going to call you back that same day or text you right back, because I trust you're not going to just be lobbing junk over that fence to me. Like I trust we built an up relationship, that I know that whatever you're sending me, I need to spend time on. And so we built up this. There is certain relationships that we know that we trust right away. And then there's a network of people that we're getting to know that may be part of our community. And then there's the ecosystem that's everybody else that we're still trying to get to know and spend time with. But we can't all have 500 best friends, right? We just can't do that. And so the dude perfect opportunity came through our community, right? We had somebody in our and that was close to us reach out and say, hey, the dude's they've grown this tremendous business and would you mind talking to them? But they're they're going to raise some capital. And would you guys might talking them help them think through how they would do that? And frankly, we didn't go into this thinking we were going to be the investor. We did came into this with kind of a, you know, give first mentality of like, how can we help these guys? We love what they're about. We love what they're doing. My kids love to be perfect. If nothing else, that'll help my street cred. That night at dinner to say, hey, I talked to the dudes guys, right? And so like, hey, let's just talk to them. And it was through that conversation that we begin to realize, wow, they have something really special here. And that kind of kicked off the dude perfect relationship. 

Richard Cunningham That's awesome. Yeah. Henry talks about often here. When Lecrae wrote the forward for faith driven entrepreneur and, you know, Henry Kissinger, of course, co-founder of Faith Driven Investor alongside Luke Sovereign's capital alongside Luke, he said, having Lecrae right it up to street cred, through the roof. And so I can imagine rain, sage and rogue when you're coming home talking about happenings at Dude Perfect, you're like, all right, Dan, I'll listen a little bit differently. 

Jason Illian Yeah. I mean, you don't you don't get that right when you talk about a sass company, right? I mean, the business side, they're just kind of like phase. Yeah. They like hey, today we talked about dude perfect. And all of a sudden they're like, did you meet the dude? How many dudes were on there? And at that point, like, I didn't know the dudes as well as they did, right. But honestly, the the great part about that is it started to help us understand the type of, pull that the dudes really had with families and with kids across the country, and we can talk through all sorts of diligent stuff. But I would say the main thing that came out of all of our diligence is I have never seen a group that has built this much trust with families. Right. Usually you have, a lot of trust with a small group of people or you have, you know, a little trust of a large group of people. These. Guys have a lot of trust with a lot of people. And and it's not just the kids, it's the families too, because they've spent literally 15 years building it up. And so everybody can say, hey, this is an overnight success. But it really wasn't right. These guys started taking trick shots at A&M. Never really thought this would become something. And as they tell their story, there were many years that they weren't even doing this full time, right? They all had to quit their jobs. And you know, Tyler, who's kind of the lead character at times, he'd tell you, like, I thought I was going to work in the lawn business, right. Like, and can you imagine seeing Tyler come in in your backyard, mowing your lawn when you see what he does on camera? And and so it wasn't an overnight success at all. They spent this time building this up, and they had to make a lot of hard decisions, like quitting their jobs when there wasn't enough money there for turning down the adult beverages who wanted to advertise because that's not what they believed in. Right. And so all these steps along the way kind of brought them to a point that they thought, hey, we now need some partners alongside us to help us grow. 

Luke Roush I'll tell you, as a TCU grad, it's very magnanimous of you to build a bridge to, College Station. That's really generous of you. 

Jason Illian Yeah, we all need to show grace. We all need to show grace wherever we can. Just like to the Baylor side. But listen, I mean, the great thing about what these guys did it. A&M, and these, these five guys in general. Right? All of them is they wholeheartedly care about people. I will tell you, like in the diligence process we go down a dude perfect headquarters in Frisco, Texas. And it's not open to public. Right. It just says dude perfect on the building. But there's not there's not retail or anything there will be in our new headquarters, but there isn't the current one. And people will literally stop to just wait to see if the dudes will come out. And we came there one day and there was a family that showed up there, and the dudes came out because they saw him on camera. They came out and were signing autographs and talking to them. This family was from Australia. They flew into the States to be in Florida. They were on their way to California, and the only reason they stopped in Dallas was to stop by Dude Perfect headquarters in hopes that somebody would come out and say hi. Like, I'm like, are you kidding me? Like, I would never stop with my whole family of six people and a totally different city to look at a building and hope that people come out right. But that just shows you how much this family has learned to trust the dudes and what they're doing and what they're building. And I think that goes far beyond trick shots. I mean, we can talk about it as trick shots, but it goes it goes far beyond that. When you when you start to build that kind of relationship and trust with the people that listen to you. 

Luke Roush Maybe some things, that as you've gotten to know their, operations from a business perspective, anything that, was surprising to you, I mean, obviously tons of trust with tons of people, I think. I love the way you said that, Jason, but what else? Just about actually the business model of what they have built. Love to get your insight on that as an investor. 

Jason Illian Yeah, there's 2 or 3 things that were really interesting, outside of the numbers, and we can talk about that too. But one was they literally have built a very highly profitable business with the five guys and a business manager. Right. That's about it. Like they have some other people filming and working behind the scenes, but they did not build this, you know, heavy front end executive team that was out selling. Almost everything that they done had become incoming. They were being very reactive, but because they had built so much trust and had taken the time to do that. Big brands, big sporting teams, you know, right after Scottie Scheffler wins the Masters two days later, where's he go? He goes up to the perfect headquarters, right? Like like that's normal. That's not normal. Like you just won the Masters. And now he won a gold at the Olympics, right? But that's the kind of trust that they built. So one, just building this with a really small team. And then the second piece, which I thought was really interesting, is when you talked to the dudes, they made some decisions really early on, to be all equally in this together. Right. So they all shared this, they all shared the same incentives, and they also put some boundaries around things we will do and things we won't do. And so if you watch the Olympics this year, you saw that like, hey, Snoop Dogg was all over the Olympics, right? Which is interesting because Snoop, Snoop Dogg was a heavy rapper that was using every word that you would not want to share with your kids 15, 20 years ago. Right. He's made a shift to this space, but the dude's always started from this space one because they're believers and Christians and said, hey, we want to have an influence in this space. And two, they said, we also want to just create content that the whole family can watch and feel good about and not just watch, but hopefully go do stuff like they just want people to put people in screens there, like put them in screens, but then will they go play in the backyard? Can we bring toys to them? Can we do things to get them to interact? And, I can tell you, because we just talked to Disney on this and some other large brands, but they're all asking, how do you do this? Like these other brands are now asking, how do you do this? Well, because this next generation that grew up on phones like these guys, our kids are digital natives, right? Like if they can swipe through phones, by the time we can turn ours on, right, the dudes can talk to this audience really well, and other brands are trying to figure out how to do that. So they've they've made some early decisions, Luke, on building their business. And at the time it wasn't even a business. It was just how do we have influence? Well, that have allowed them to now create the business aspects of that. And the business aspects are now like, how do we do videos and content? How do we do product, how do we do merch like it's grown? But from day one it was like, what's the core? And and who are we in that core? And they've stayed true to that pretty much every step of the way. 

Richard Cunningham That's great. Yeah. My wife and I have been on a journey this summer, a little bit of kind of leaning into and almost like deconstructing you know some of those bigger kind of. What is that word I would look for, like existential type questions. And one of the things we've kind of gotten back to is like the identity piece. And we found Jamie Winship, who's got this great book called Living Fearless. And Jamie talks about leaning into your identity. And, and there are some things about you, probably as a young kid that reign true now and today. And so for me, I love sports. I love to compete, I loved organized competition. And I think of the dudes. And Jason, you mentioned it earlier. Could you imagine Tyler mowing your backyard? Like I'm sure he would do it with incredible excellence with a smile on his face. But I think of their particular work as one where I'm like, I see guys stepping into their identity of who they are, like just authentic goofballs who love sports, who are dynamic, who are using it as a platform for Jesus. And they're working out of kind of that true identity, if you will. And that authenticity as you're talking about is catching on. So and so you've come in a time out, you've got this incredible amount of influence as candidly, a very large check that has come to the door, that's helping shepherd the next generation of dude. Perfect. Where is this thing going? Like, what do you have envisioned for what is next? What does the team have envisioned for what's next? And teased out a little bit, but kind of what what do you think it's all going to look like in this next generation? 

Jason Illian Yeah. So like we said, the dude started with just the five guys. And really what it's become is more of an ethos, right? It's a dude perfect ethos. And when you even run into, you know, pro athletes, they'll stop the dudes and say, like, my kids love you and we want to do this. And we have to all agree, even as dads, when you see the dude stick a rocket in a football and throw it, 300 yards are precise. Oh, I could do that. Like we were even drawn in that, like the fact that this is fun and it's sports and it's family oriented. Right. And so what's happening is it's starting to merge where you're getting pro athletes want to participate in pro sports teams wanting to say, hey, we want to take the helmets off. Our guys and the dudes leaning into that and family's leaning into that. And so it's really becoming an ethos so that the next step is to say, hey guys, you built it to this point, and now there's some really massive partners that want to partner with us. How do we take that to the next level, where we can do more content and bring on potentially even other dudes in other areas that can participate? And I often think of it almost like, a WWE model where, you know, it used to just be like, Hulk Hogan was the cool one, but over time you have all sorts of people that are participating, and I think that's what Dude Perfect is becoming. It's becoming an ethos that it doesn't matter whether it's football, basketball, cricket, beach volleyball or whatever, how do you make it fun and how do you get the family to participate? And that's really where the dudes were saying, hey, we're at a high level. How do we take this to a legacy level? And in all fairness, like we were not by far the largest investor at the table, there were 2 or 3 other very well known large private equity groups that had come in with massive checks to say, we want to help you do this. And we we couldn't do that of our size. And we just brought a different model and said, hey, we're not coming just with the most money. We're coming with both a faith and a values orientation to help you. And if you guys want to do that, if you want to take more money, go with them. If you want to be aligned from a faith and value and still have the opportunity to create, you know, multi-billion dollar platform, then you can come with us. And I think it spoke a lot to me when they said, hey, we're willing to turn down more money in our pockets today to go build something that we think is better for families long term. And that just helped me respect them. Even all the more. They say, hey, we can we can go do something special, and do that together. And so, it's been a real pleasure to get to know these guys and their families. And if they weren't dude perfect and you were just hanging out with them, you'd be like, these are the best neighbors ever. Because that's the kind of guys they are, even when they're not on camera. 

Luke Roush Well, so it's sort of like the DC or the Marvel Universe. You've got the dude universe every time. Maybe that's. 

Jason Illian Yeah, there's an. 

Luke Roush Opportunity construct that. 

Jason Illian That's right. Yeah. And it just like every just like every movie. Right. Like there's one movie and then the other one builds off that movie and does the same thing. I think that's where it's going. And, you know, the more that we talk to people, we're feeling that already from pro sports teams and now colleges because colleges are turning into semi-pro. Right. Like how do we take the helmets off those guys and gals? And I think you're seeing it even in the international level as you watch the Olympics, like, how do you really highlight these athletes? And at the end of the day, we all know this because we're all sports fans. It's not just the athletes you get excited about. Like. You know when you there's a difference between what Noah Noah Lyles just did and and Sydney McLaughlin. Right. Noah Lyles was out there pounding is just saying it's all about me. Sidney when she won the first thing she's like it's all about the Lord. It's a bigger story. And people are like, I'm drawn to that, right? And I think that's what the dudes realize is, like, we have that opportunity to do that on a global scale. And so it's to steal your very good, you know, comparison there, Luke, is like I think there's chapters coming and I think we're still in the early chapters. 

Luke Roush Yeah. Well, it makes a ton of sense. And what I've always appreciated about that platform is, generally, their content pushes people to engage, and not just kind of passively consume, but to go out in the backyard, go out the front yard and do stuff. Right. Go have adventure. And, you know, life is something to be lived, not observed, from a distance. And so particularly with their some of their earlier stuff, you know, these are things that can be replicated in a, in a backyard context, whereas, you know, if you were to compare and contrast, you know, another major influencer or content creator and Mr. Beast, a lot of what he does is, like, harder to kind of replicate. It's more consumptive rather than, collaborative and co-creating together. And that's what I've always really appreciated about the dude's content is that it's something that you can feel like as a kid, that you're almost actually part of the co-creation process. 

Jason Illian Yeah. Well, I mean, I will tell you even later this year, you know, not to steal their thunder, but, you know, they're launching, dude, perfect bounce houses and other outdoor stuff that families can participate in because they want them doing stuff together. Right. And so that's different for Mr. Beast launching a chocolate bar just because I like chocolate. Well, okay, there's nothing wrong with chocolate, but like, these guys are being very thoughtful about, hey, how do we get families to participate and play games and do stuff together, not only as a family, but as a community? And when you do stuff like that. Wow. Like what? What's the endgame for that? I just think it keeps replicating itself, because none of us get tired of having community people around us. 

Richard Cunningham Jason I so I've got a a question here as you think about the future of dude perfect and kind of this Luke and I and John Coleman and others, you here on the FDI podcast, we use this terminology a lot of like faith driven investors getting in the game with their capital. And, you know, ironically you've got Dude Perfect with All About Games, which is a fun play on words there. But as you think about this downstream effect that we as investors can have on culture through our capital, there's a very tangible example and representation here of what's taking place in Dude Perfect. Do you see possibilities elsewhere across the marketplace? Like right now we're talking content creation, getting children wholesome content we can trust that invites them in for something fun, but then sends them out to go be a part of the adventure as well. Do you see it elsewhere across the marketplace where there's possibilities? 

Jason Illian Yeah, I do, I actually think it's, I actually think there's a huge opportunity that's beginning to turn, and I think the dudes are just a piece of that. Right. And how big they decide to grow that is going to be based on their own vision and how the Lord blessed them and how hard they work to get there. But I think, I think the more that we've to not only talk to families, but just looked at data and see, like families are looking for opportunities to engage with their kids, not just in the week trip to Disney, but what can I do tonight? And what can I do this weekend? And what can I do with my neighbors? And and because the phone's in a sense, we thought like they'd make our lives easier, they've kind of siloed us because we do a lot of stuff on our phones. They're now looking for ways to better engage with one another. And so, the dudes have done a good job to think about, like, hey, when we do videos, how do we also get them to engage elsewhere? And, and I think that same thing, things happening and, you know, you can go to early or younger kids of like, how do we get them to engage. And then even, you know, college age kids and beyond of like, how do we get them to to to engage with one another not only with products, but, you know, real life experiences too. Right? And so I think there's a huge open gap in this space. And when you see people like whether you like Mr. Beats content or not, one thing is, is he's done a good job drawing people in to say like, hey, look what we're doing. And while I think a lot of what he does is kind of like one off spectacles, I think the dudes have done a better job of creating a roadmap of like, this is the space we're playing and we're playing in sports and we're playing with families, but I think there's other ones and you could say whether it's animated films or you could say sports or you could say music, I think they're all starting to learn, like if we can help people engage with what we do versus just by one time, who knows what the upside is to that? And I can tell you a large private equity group, that's what they're looking for, right? They're looking for the engagement aspect. Because it's one thing to have a revenue line that continues to grow for three to 5 to 10 years. It's another thing to see that thing split into five revenue, five revenue lines because of the high engagement that it has. 

Luke Roush Yep. Yeah. And that makes a ton of sense to me. As as you think about. So stepping back from kind of the dudes themselves and just thinking about content creation, distribution, engagement, extension of kind of the core product where you started in the new geographies or new adjacent spaces. How do you see the business model that feels very evolutionary right now, which oftentimes creates opportunities for investors because the, you know, status quo is less entrenched. How do you see that that business going well? 

Jason Illian So the old business model, right, was a lot of the top down. Hey, we're going to go spend 150, $200 million and create this experience for this movie. And we hope they like it. Right. I think the new model is like field, the. 

Luke Roush Field of dreams. If we build it, they will come. 

Jason Illian Yes. If we build it, they will come. Right. And we've seen time and time again over the last decade that's not actually worked a lot. There's been a lot of failures in that spot. So now what's happening is you're seeing people that are building their own audiences from the ground up very authentically, and people are being drawn to that. And because they're being drawn to that, that person, to that brand, then from there they can do all sorts of stuff. They can sell swimsuits or drinks or whatever, right? Whether you like Logan Paul or not, he sold a ton of prime right energy drink. Right. Which, by the way, I don't like the taste of it at all. But it's worked for him, right? And it's because he built, you know, he built a personality for them, for himself, I think, or at least our, our thesis and belief is there's a lot of that stuff that I think is kind of fringe and on the edge or adult if you do that kind of stuff in a family friendly way or faith based way, there is it's a huge market and it's thirsty for it. And we're seeing families all the time saying, what else can we consume or do or experience in this space? And they're just not been a lot of those types of things. So I know a lot of the things that sovereign is worked on in terms of movies and films and other things in that space and what we're doing with Dude Perfect and other groups. There's lots of other groups that are trying to do this, like we're supportive of all of them. Like even if we don't don't even if we don't financially benefit from that, if we can step in and help them and do something that's going to help create something that is beneficial to families and has a positive impact and culture, and ultimately points to Jesus, that man we're in. Tell us a little bit. 

Luke Roush Well, it's like, Andy Crouch, his book on culture making. Jason, it's much easier to build new culture than to try to reform something that is kind of not in alignment with what we see as as the world really needing. And what I love about, just the cost of production. Yeah. It's what it's where you started, which is, it's like two dudes in, like, one production guy and a couple other camera folks, and that's about it. And so, you know, self-publishing with Amazon and others has also changed and democratized the publishing industry, so that, you can create and distribute content. And it's the merit is there, you can find ways to really build a crowd. It's no longer, you know, an oligopoly where, you know, there's a few folks that can effectively exclude everyone else from participation. It's much more democratized now. And that's certainly on full display in what the dudes have built over the last 15 years. So, yeah. 

Jason Illian And I think it's going to continue. Right. Because now that we have these super powerful phones that were as powerful as large camera systems in the past, and now you're going to have AI coming up where it's going to even make, like, animation, being able to be done by the average person over time so they can create an animated film that used to cost hundreds of millions of dollars, you could do it literally from your at home in the future, right? So those things are going to democratize it even more. So then it comes down to what's the story, what's the focus? How are you really drawing people in? And if it's just a one hit wonder, it may work from time to time, but that's not something you can really invest and build around versus the ones that are really thinking about kind of a more platform or market place approach to it. 

Richard Cunningham All right, Jason, two fun rapid fire questions before we close with our big one. First is if you're not one of dude Perfect's already 60.3 million subscribers and you have somehow haven't heard of these guys, and Jason Alien is showing his favorite video to someone to give a sense of who these guys are. Which video are you showing? 

Jason Illian Oh man, that's probably a question for my kids, not for me. But I would say, you know, the one that just caught me recently was the one where they stuck a rocket and a football. Being an ex football guy. And I watched him throw it like 300 yards. I was thinking like, dude, I could so do that as they either throwing it or trying to catch it myself, right? I was like that. That was just a cool. Took me back to when I was 12 years old, being playing in the backyard thinking, man, that would be just the coolest thing to do. And just a credit to them about capturing the imagination of an old guy. Or old guys. As well as the kids of saying, hey, we can all do this. 

Richard Cunningham I love it, all right? Then the next one is, have you made the ask to be in a video, or do you think we'll ever see you in a video? 

Jason Illian Let's let's hope that the dudes take this a better direction than asking somebody like me to be in a video. Maybe if they ask my kids or one of your kids, right, then they're going the right direction. Listen, everybody wants to be in a dude perfect video, and I will tell you, they have stuff coming up with, like, Steph Curry and pro athletes. But one of the things they're really talking about too is should we bring on some just big fans in certain videos on a go forward basis, like you're part of a sweepstakes to get in the video. You do this, you help somebody, you get in a video and they're thinking through like how they do more of that, which is really cool. Right. It's kind of like saying, hey, the Olympics is coming up. We're putting Luke in lane eight to just see how he does versus the other swimmers. That's going to be awesome. And I think the way that I think about that is just so cool. And like, who doesn't want to watch that or experience that? 

Richard Cunningham Luke Rash I don't know how you are in a pool, man, but I'd love to see that. And it's. 

Jason Illian Not pretty. 

Luke Roush It's not pretty, I think. And, you know, I, I've entered one triathlon in my life, and I did call for the safety canoe about 200m into my swim. 

Jason Illian But that's why the color commentary is all the better. Like, if you're sinking when everybody else is swimming hard, it's going to be awesome. 

Richard Cunningham Hey, I would put good money on you though, Luke. As a former DB on the foot race, I'd like to see an. 

Luke Roush That's, I'm more terrestrial based. I know, I'm. 

Richard Cunningham Land mammal. 

Jason Illian We've already emerged. 

Luke Roush Out of the primordial soup. We now walk on land. That's the reason why this happened. 

Jason Illian Yeah. Don't worry. I'm not only a land mammal, I'm now a slow moving, large land mammal. Versus the other days where I used to be quick. So don't feel bad. You're not alone. That's great. 

Richard Cunningham Well, Jason, this has been a ton of fun. And this is the question, man. We love to close with on every faith driven investor podcast. And that is what's the Lord been teaching you in and through his Word lately? 

Jason Illian Yeah, it's a great question. You know, I think the thing that you can teach me the most that now is in Proverbs, it says a man is tested by his praise. Starts beforehand like a, you know, a crucible for silver and, you know, a furnace for gold, that a man is tested by his praise. And I think that means that there's a few things he's working on. My heart. There is one. Not only what do I praise and where do I spend time spending like so if I'm spending all my time in work or around sports or whatever else my kids are going to think like work and sports is where their identity is tied. And if I look at my calendar and my checkbook, sometimes it's way too tied to those things versus being tied to my identities in Christ, in Christ alone. And so that's where I praise in the second piece is like, when I get praise, is it mine, or am I just redirecting it to the one who is kind enough to give me some encouragement? Right. And when I see athletes that pound their chests and say it's all about me, that is too much of that could have been me as well, right? If not saved by Grace. And so just trying to teach even my three athletes in our house, or the small football teams we coach in the local area ones. And one of the things I love about the dudes too, right, is like they're saying like, don't point yourself. It's not about you, right? It's about the one who created you, is about the one who gives you grace. It's about the one who died for your sins. And that is just a continually humbling, learning daily thing in our house that I'm learning. And, you know, the great thing about being married is you have a beautiful bride that is a giant mirror of reflection. And she is, you know, very gracious enough to tell me in kind ways when I fall flat on my face. And I do that plenty. But by grace alone. Right, I get a chance to get up and do it again. And that's my biggest hope for my kids. And the thing that God's teaching me is like when they go play, when I, I never hear about what's on the scoreboard. And I honestly, the more I, the longer I live even about the scoreboard for high mount, I'm not I'm not measuring it by what the AUM is, right, or how many unicorns we have. I'm trying to measure it more by the influence and impact that we have. And what's what next generation leaders are we creating and what hope are we instilling? And what joy are we living with if we do those things and we can control those things, those inputs and outputs will take care of themselves, and there will be days that we lose. It just happens, and God will teach us in those losses. In the days that we win, we'll celebrate and point back to Jesus and we'll do it all over again. 

Luke Roush That resonates with me in a big way, Jason. And, you know, one of my favorite quotes is that there are two things that define us our patients when we have nothing, and then our attitude when we have everything. And if I were to sort of recast that quote in the context of Scripture and what we know to be true because of who Jesus is, it's do we trust in him when things are really difficult? And do we maintain humility and understand that all things come from him when good things are happening? And so I'm excited for the opportunity. You and your partners have to co-create and to build something beautiful that is redemptive force for good in broader society. Our scorecard, our scoreboard needs to look different than the rest of the world. And I love your articulation for the ways in which these kinds of investments have the opportunity to not just generate return, but also shape culture in ways that are really meaningful and draw people towards, the hope and truth and love that we experience every day through our faith. So thank you for being on with us. It's been a joy and, super excited for what you're going to build. 

Jason Illian Yeah. Thank you guys. 

Richard Cunningham Awesome. We'll catch you next time everybody. 

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