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Actor, musician, and social media personality Nate Wyatt joins the we're out of Time podcast. I saw the movie that just came out that's actually number one on Tubi. Acting and music is what I originally came out here for, and then I kind of just got a social media following halfway through.
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You got 5 million people on TikTok, right?
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Yeah. I came out here for to be like, a successful actor and musician, and the moment you start going into that lane, that all goes out the window. Does that 5 to 10 mil sound great? Of course. I was raised by my mom, and I feel like she did an amazing job playing both role and putting me in the best situation possible that she could. You know, I didn't have a dad in my life. She was really good at putting good coaches and people around me to kind of fill in that father void that wasn't there. I just know I'm be a good dad at whatever time period that is, because I know what I. I guess I didn't have growing up. I know what I want to give my kid one day.
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Thank you for listening to the we're.
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Out of Time podcast with Richard Tate. If you haven't already, please follow the.
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Podcast rate and review.
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And if you're getting value out of we're out of Time, share it with.
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Someone else, you know. Hey, Wyatt, how you doing today?
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I'm doing fantastic. How are you doing?
B
Good.
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Thank you for having me on.
B
No, bro, thanks for coming. I appreciate it.
A
We got in last time. I was sick. Now. Now we're here, though. We're good. I'm not sick anymore. I want to be on the podcast. Like I said in there, I want to be in the podcast sniffing and sneezing and.
B
No, dude, you're. You're tight. You're fine. All right, so I want to ask you a couple of questions.
A
Let's do it.
B
Tell me a little bit about yourself and growing up in Cincinnati and what that was like. We're going to do a little character development first. Cool.
A
Cool. Let's do it. Growing up in Cincinnati was. Was great. So I was raised by my mom, and I feel like she did an amazing job playing both roles and putting me in the best situation possible that she could for me to be raised upright. Obviously a little bit of struggle here and there, but, you know, I didn't have a dad in my life, so she was I. So Cincinnati, big on sports, like, played sports my whole life. She was really good at putting good coaches and people around me to kind of fill in that. That father Void that wasn't there. And my mom was like, just the best mom you can ask for to where. I honestly didn't feel like I, like, needed a dad growing up, honestly. But growing up in Cincinnati was amazing. It's very family oriented over there. I feel like Midwest values are some of the best values to be raised up on. I feel like it's hard for me to meet someone from the Midwest that doesn't have just like that very traditional, good value. And yeah, if I could go back and change anything of how I was raised, I wouldn't. I wouldn't change anything.
B
That's beautiful. Are you still close with your mom today?
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Very close. Extremely close. Yeah.
B
Have you ever met your dad?
A
Yeah, yeah, I have. I met him a little bit later in life, like around, like, eighth grade. And when he came into my life, like, he was a good dad, but I almost feel like at that point you're. You're like. You're almost like develop. You're developed more. So it was. It felt like it was a little too late, I guess.
B
Well, I know you asked him the question.
A
Yeah. What.
B
What was the question?
A
Where were you this, this whole time?
B
Yeah. Why did you leave?
A
You know, actually, I don't even think I've gotten those full answers answered.
B
Because I have a relationship with someone until you get the elephant out of the room. Yeah.
A
Yeah, exactly.
B
You have a reason to feel like, dude, where were you? I'm 15 right now.
A
Yeah.
B
Or how old are you in eighth grade?
A
Yeah. 12 or 13, something like that.
B
Yeah, he was at 12, so, I mean, at 12 I was like, fully. I was. I was on it.
A
Yeah.
B
Okay. At 12. So you were probably the same way, right? You're like, dude, I'm 12.
A
Yeah.
B
What's going on here? Where are you? Okay, what it. What was. What did he say?
A
Oh, my gosh.
B
You asked me something like that.
A
I know. I don't. You know, it's crazy. I. I feel like I block out that part of my life so much that I don't even. It's crazy. I genuinely don't remember the conversation of, like, where were you? I just know why he wasn't in my life because he didn't play, like, a lot of, like, child support and like, stuff like that. Like, like, like I said my mom was. She did it all. Like, she.
B
Even if your father was struggling and he didn't have any money or he had fallen on hard times and he couldn't pay child support, that's one thing. Okay. But he wasn't around at all.
A
Exactly. And that actually I got reminded my. My mom said, like, he. He was welcome to come into your life if he really, really wanted to. My mom's not gonna sit there and stop, you know, her son from having his father in his life. I remember that, actually. I remember that.
B
So maybe. So maybe he felt shame around not being able to contribute to the household financially.
A
Yeah.
B
And he didn't come around. I can understand that.
A
Yeah.
B
I mean, it doesn't make it better for you and it still sucks for you, but you're getting older now. You can put yourself in his position. Right.
A
Yeah.
B
And say, man, that must have been horrible.
A
Yeah. You know, it's. You know what? Actually, I. I've not asked those questions because it's a very uncomfortable question to ask. And I think how I was raised, I was raised up so good and, like, almost like I didn't really need that figure. I don't know if I've just, like, trained my brain to think that, but I almost. When he did come into my life, I was almost just, like, happy he was now in my life.
B
Absolutely.
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You know what I mean? So I didn't really dig too much on those questions.
B
You don't need to dig into it because of the fact that you need to hear it. I think unless that elephant in the room is dressed, I don't think you're going to have the relationship that you could have with him, like, as good as it could be, I think, for sure.
A
And it's funny, we're on this topic now. Now I haven't talked to him since I've actually been in LA for eight years. Like, I kind of had a semi relationship with.
B
Why? He wouldn't. Why wouldn't he. He's your dad. Why wouldn't he reach out to you?
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I kind of stopped, I think, because I just, like, stopped. I didn't answer the calls.
B
Okay. So he felt dejected and he's going to let you live your life.
A
Yeah, that's kind of where we're at right now. And so, like, I can tell, it's like he's. He's going to be there and when I want to have that conversation or when I want to bring him back into my life. And he's open to that call and conversation.
B
How old was he when you were born? Do you know?
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He had to be. My mom was 26, so he had to be mid-30s. Mid-30s.
B
Okay. How old are you?
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I'm 28.
B
You got kids?
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No. Nope.
B
You think you could handle a kid? Right now?
A
Yes, I do.
B
Okay, well, then that was going nowhere.
A
No, I just know I'm gonna be a good dad at whatever time period that is good for you. Because I know when I. I guess I didn't have growing up. And I know what I want to give my kid one day.
B
All you got to give kids is your time and your attention. They don't care about money. They don't care about anything. They just want your attention.
A
Exactly.
B
Don't use a phone. Don't ever have a phone in front of your kid.
A
Oh, why is that?
B
Because they're not important if your phone is down and you're on their level. Because remember, they're small, right?
A
Yeah.
B
So you get on their level without your phone, and they'll go. Right. And they know what they're saying, but you don't know say things like what? Wow. Right. And you're just present. And then what happens is they'll go off and play on their own.
A
Yeah.
B
Right. It's called independent play. Right. It's. It happens. I don't know, maybe around 12 to 18 months in there. Right. If I remember correctly. And they show their independence, and then what happens is they'll turn around and if. To look for you. Because they get scared.
A
Yeah.
B
And if you're there, then they're comfortable and there's no anxiety.
A
Right.
B
And then they can go on and still. And now go back to their becoming independent.
A
Yeah. It's crazy. You have to deal with those technology things nowadays.
B
It's a beautiful thing, man. It's a beautiful thing. All right, let's get into this thing.
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Started out hot.
B
Thanks for that.
A
Of course.
B
All right. Have you ever faced moments of pressure, overwork, or substance temptation in this industry? And how did you handle those times?
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Read me that off one more time.
B
Have you done drugs? Come on.
A
No, I haven't.
B
You've never done drugs? No. You know, I'm. I'm. I'm inclined to believe him. I have not. He doesn't have any facial tattoos. None. I don't see a tattoo on this kid. Not one?
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Nope.
B
No tattoos on you?
A
Nope.
B
You Jewish?
A
No. My manager's yours.
B
You what?
A
My manager's yours. Two of my managers are Jewish.
B
That's probably for the best.
A
I haven't, but have I been around it a lot?
B
Let's talk about that, like. Of course, J. Okay. You see people falling out and overdosing all the time, right?
A
No, not overdosing, but it's actually. It's. It's not even come from the DJing aspect. No, I'm about to get into.
B
Stop. This is. This is. This is nuts. If you're up there spinning with all the hot women around you and you're looking at everybody dancing.
A
Yeah.
B
And jumping up and down. If you don't see anybody overdosing, then the fentanyl epidemic is bull.
A
No, I definitely have seen people overdose, but when I'm DJing, I'm not. You're not looking in the crowd and seeing people drop where. You know, it's where I have seen people, like overdose is when I'm at edc. It's one of the biggest electronic music festivals in the world. And this happens at, you know, multiple house music festivals or even like hip hop and stuff. But I remember going through, like the main medical tent one day and there's just people overdosing on both sides of me. Like, you're walking up this row trying to find my friend who had to go to a medical tent and just seeing people overdose, even from each tent to tent. And that, like, happens at obviously a lot of festivals because, you know, the fentanyl stuff and things that can get mixed in with. With drugs. But I've definitely been around it a lot. Not even so much from the DJ aspect, more so from just like the party scene in LA throughout the years of living out here. And I mean. Yeah, it's kind of.
B
It's kind of all around at the house parties especially.
A
For sure. Yeah.
B
Yeah. Because people feel more contained and safer.
A
Yeah.
B
In those environments. You ever see anybody die?
A
No, I had to think about that for a second. No.
B
Well, that you know of.
A
I've had a friend die. I haven't seen him die. I didn't see him die, obviously, but I had a friend that. That die from. Yeah. Fentanyl being laced in a Xanax.
B
How old was he?
A
Yeah. Oh, my gosh. He had to be 21.
B
His parents must be insane.
A
Yeah, they just boy insane in a sense of. How do you mean?
B
Like losing their mind.
A
Oh, yeah.
B
Like wanting to light themselves on fire. That. That insane.
A
Yeah.
B
Like being at their kid's funeral and wanting to jump in the casket with him. That. That would have been insane.
A
I feel like that's like the worst way for someone you love to go is like from drugs. Like something that could have been prevented maybe, somehow. I don't know. I feel like that's.
B
I don't know what's a bad or good way. I haven't given it any thought. But I will tell you this. That. And you'll know this. When you have a child, nothing else matters.
A
Yeah.
B
Okay. I mean, I was. I had the best relationship with my ex in the world the second we had a kid. Nothing I said was funny anymore. Okay? And that kid, it's all that kid was, all that mattered.
A
Yeah.
B
And I was totally fine with it because I was in love with this kid, too. And so I never was jealous or resentful ever.
A
Wait, this was her kid or this was your kid? Our kid. The child.
B
Right. Oh.
A
Because when you have a kid, it's almost like your life isn't yours anymore. Everything you kind of knew is, you know, now it's a revolver on the kid.
B
That's right. The biggest high you've ever had. That euphoria. This is so much better now. It's not more euphoric.
A
Yeah.
B
But what it does is it changes you so your heart feels like it's expanding and it's going to explode. That's how much you love your children. And so to have a child that you have to bury is that, I can tell you right now, is the worst thing that can ever happen to anyone. Burying their child.
A
Yeah.
B
Hey, I know a question I want to ask because you're around. You're around so many beautiful women.
A
Yes.
B
Seriously, if I was around the beautiful women that you're around all the time, I would just stroke out.
A
You just stroke.
B
I just stroke right out. Ease and just fall out. Just drop. Okay.
A
I feel like you're around a lot of beautiful women.
B
Oh, no, that's not true. That's not true at all. So Anyway, dude, I'm 58. I've got one foot in the grave. It's your world, son. It ain't my world.
A
I'm sure you've been around a lot of beautiful women. Yeah.
B
Yeah. When I had hair.
A
Yeah. Ken, Wait, where are you from? Are you from LA?
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah. Okay, so you've been around it 58 years. Okay.
B
Oh, yeah.
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Could you ever see yourself living somewhere else? Oh, yeah. Really? Because I can't. I lived in New York. I lived last summer. I lived. I mean, I've been around a lot of places and I can't see myself living in anywhere other than la. But also, I haven't been out here for that long. I've been out here for eight years.
B
Well, I plan on living everywhere.
A
Really?
B
Yes.
A
How does that work out? How's that working out?
B
It's gonna work out just fine. It's gonna work out just fine.
A
That left me on like a thinker. Are you married?
B
Who would have me?
A
I feel like there's a lot of women that would.
B
Me.
A
Yeah, you have a, like good energy. You have a good energy about you that I feel like a lot of. You're not boring. I really don't feel like you're a boring person at all.
B
Nobody wants me, dude.
A
Really?
B
Nobody?
A
Do I gotta pry into that? Why is that? Do I gotta. Do I gotta ask those questions? Should I flip this?
B
Well, you can ask me.
A
Why? Why does.
B
Why does anybody want me?
A
Yeah. What?
B
I don't leave the house, okay. How am I gonna find anybody? I mean, what's gonna happen? Someone's gonna knock on my door and say, excuse me, any of you losers have a phone? Or.
A
Wait, why don't you leave the house at all though?
B
Well, because I work behind that wall.
A
Gotcha.
B
And here we do our podcast.
A
Yeah.
B
And in there I've got what, seven, eight people working.
A
Okay.
B
Okay. And so this is an office.
A
Yeah.
B
We work and then I go upstairs and I go to bed.
A
I respect that. Do you ever go out to like dinners or like, just kind of just like events, like friends events, whatever. Did you do that when you were younger?
B
When I was younger, yeah. You know, it's funny, it's fun. That's an excellent point. I've never had balance, so when I was young, it was all fun all the time. I didn't. There was, there was no work.
A
Yeah.
B
Okay. And that lasted up until about, I mean, 27. I mean, I was a fitness instructor. I was, you know, selling products and stuff, but I didn't know how to have balance. And then what happened was it shifted and I got sober. And what happened was I felt like I had to make up for lost time. That's how people feel when they're getting sober. A lot of times like I gotta make up for donking off all that. All those years of being a loser. Right. And that was my thing.
A
I can see that.
B
So I started working around the clock, man. And I have not stopped except for the. After selling my last business, Cliffside, when I sold it, I had a 5 year non compete, so I didn't work. And it was the worst five years I'd ever had.
A
That might be a simple thing to some people, but what does that mean, a non compete? Like I actually don't know what that means.
B
So when you sell a business for a ton of money, they tell you you can't operate a business like that for three, five years, sometimes one year, it's whatever you negotiate. But I wasn't Allowed to help anybody anymore.
A
Oh, for five years?
B
Yeah.
A
You had to jump to, like, honestly, something, like, completely different.
B
Yeah, but I don't know anything, right? I don't do anything different. I help people for a living. I give people back their loved ones, you know? That's what I do. That's all I do. Okay. I don't know how to do anything else. Right. So if that's your purpose in life and you're not doing it, then you feel like the biggest scumbag alive.
A
Yeah.
B
Like, you're just a. Like, seriously, I felt like a bigger loser after selling my business than I did smoking crack cocaine.
A
Wow.
B
How? I'm like. Because there's nothing more esteemable than giving a father or a mother back their child. Nothing. Especially if you're a father.
A
Wait, what do you. When you said you felt like a loser after selling your business, then how did that wrap into the family?
B
That's not. That's a great question. So what I do for a living is I help people for a living, get off drugs and alcohol. But then what are you going to do next? What. What are your dreams? What are your goals? What do you want to be? What do you want to do? Let's go get there. Okay. And after I sold my business, I got a bag.
A
Okay. But that's the bad help people anymore, which is what gives you that high. Like, basically.
B
That's right.
A
Wow.
B
And then if you were afraid of the money, like I was, because I never had any money. Right. You get this big bag and you're like, what am I supposed to do?
A
Yes.
B
You get scared. You know, you're not allowed to work for another five years. So what am I gonna do if I. If I mismanage this money and I wasn't an investor, you know, I am now.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, I know what I'm doing now. It's been seven years since I sold my business. If I didn't learn it in seven years, then, you know, I'd be living in a one bedroom apartment in Culver City.
A
Yeah. What did you do after you sold your company? Like, meaning, like in those five years, you couldn't do that.
B
I got. I got good with my. With my kids and my ex. And so I've got a really good relationship with my children who I see every day, you know, and my ex and I are best friends. Okay, that's not true. She's my best friend. I'm like her 17th best friend.
A
17Th is crazy.
B
Yeah, well, listen, you can't help who you love, right?
A
That's so true.
B
So true. You know, and, and she's got a beautiful man, right. Who loves my children like they're his. And you know, I had that work to do. You know, I neglected my self care for 15 years. So first thing I did was I went and got my heart checked and that wasn't good and so we fixed that and my leg wasn't good and I fixed that and you know, I, I had all broken teeth, you know, because you know when you smoke crack you the clamp down. Right. And so my teeth would always be broken and you know, get them fixed and then they break again. And so I got, I got that handled. Yeah, you know, it was about, you know, I went and got my eyes checked and you know I go back now every year because that's part of self care. I get my blood drawn every six months.
A
I get, I get it twice a year. I'm very like health, health conscious.
B
You gotta do it, you gotta go, go to the doctor once a year for different things. So you know, for dermatology, for your heart internist, you know all this stuff.
A
Yeah, I feel like it's a little scary based because just with everything in the world, like their foods and like just everything it's.
B
But if you want it, but if you. But the whole idea is self care turns into self esteem which turns into self love, right?
A
Yeah.
B
And I've never seen anybody use drugs or alcohol. Trying to kill themselves with drugs and alcohol who truly love themselves. That doesn't exist.
A
So you're saying people that use drugs and alcohol. Extensively. Extensively. They don't love themselves. Is that basically. Or there's like something that's missing.
B
It's not that they don't love themselves, they loathe themselves. They loathe certain things about them that they're self medicating over. That's what that is.
A
I'm curious about that because like I'm extremely social person. I do like when I'm out I do like to like drink but honestly going out in LA, I would say 30, 30 of it I've been able to network and it's gotten me to like better places. Like I'm an actor and I was just, I was, I was out the end of last year, met somebody and they're like yo, as a director that would probably you know, love to meet you and have you in a movie, met that director two weeks later and now I'm about to shoot my third movie with that company with to be all. Just because like I went out and networked. But it's like I know a lot of people that are homebodies in la. I'm, I'm not a homebody. I'm trying to like, wonder where like that that comes from. From me, like liking to go out, Go out and be social and meeting people.
B
You want to, you want to see the world. That's. That's a healthy thing, man. That is a healthy thing. What I do is, okay, I always tell on myself. I don't care if I've got the number three mental health podcast in the country. I have things to work on too. Right. And one of my things is a joy of living. Okay. I get my self esteem by taking care of people. And so I've neglected myself when it comes to a joy of living. And it's not just because my grandmother said things to me like, what are you doing? Going out to have a good time.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, like it was a bad thing. Right. You know, in the music game, everybody's glorifying drugs with the press perks and the Xanax and, you know, how do you feel about that? You don't do drugs yourself. How do you feel about this whole industry?
A
I mean, I think it's definitely clearly a really bad thing, but I'm actually, I'm more so around like in like the house music scene. It's like, it's not really like Xanax and like press pill stuff. I feel like that's more on like the hip hop scene. It's more like like the, the Molly's and the like Ecstasy, pink cocaine, like 2C stuff like that. That gives you more of like that, that euphoric feeling, I guess that's in like the house music scene. Um, but it's all lace with. That's, that's. I was all of it. I was literally about to say that. But it's. You don't know what you're going to take. That's laced with if you don't get.
B
Your pills from a pharmacy. And I'm not talking about an online pharmacy because that's nonsense.
A
Yeah.
B
Okay. That you got problems with that in a big way. If you don't get your pills from a pharmacy, it's not if you're going to die, it's when you're going to die.
A
Yeah, yeah. Because they don't, I mean, these, these dealers don't know which batch is lace. You know, they don't know where they're getting.
B
They know it's laced.
A
Oh, you all do.
B
Sure. They know it's laced. Of course they do. They just don't know.
A
That's scary. Like, they know because there's. I mean, I know some people that are, like, friends with their, like, deal.
B
They're not trying to kill them, dude. They're not trying to kill you. They want repeat customers. The problem is, is that people are dying because when the. The chemical precursors come from China to Mexico, what do you think? They're doing it scientifically. You got a guy in a hazmat suit with gloves on, and, you know the whole thing, and he's got an or, and he's doing this in a big vat, and then they poured into these pill mills, pill molds, and, you know. You know, that's not scientific. One pill has got nothing in it or next to nothing, and the other thing is lethal. Yeah. Right. So, you know, this is. It's all bad.
A
I was. I was gonna say that came to my head. You mentioned China. Do you. Do you believe that, like, China's, like, trying to infiltrate, like, America with the whole fentanyl stuff to try to kill as many Americans as possible?
B
Yeah.
A
Okay, that's like.
B
But only because, look, dude, I was born at night, but it wasn't last night. That's.
A
That's.
B
That's a thing.
A
Yeah.
B
I mean, our military now is on fentanyl. And I know that for sure because I treat the military.
A
How are they on fentanyl? Is it just like the drugs that.
B
They don't know they're on fentanyl, they're on pills. They don't know. Some of them know they're on fentanyl. Okay, but most of them don't think they're taking fentanyl.
A
Are you talking about, like, active duty military? And we talk about, like, veterans.
B
I'll live it all in.
A
The pharmaceuticals are saying, but the military.
B
But the active military, they're on fentanyl, and 75% of them don't know it. Wow. Which means they're gonna die. Now, the people who know they're taking fentanyl have a tolerance for fentanyl. So a lethal dose will kill a weekend drug user. Right. Who's just doing it socially, but it may not kill the person who is a fentanyl specialist. You're right.
A
So specialists.
B
Yeah, we're all specialists.
A
Jeez.
B
All right.
A
Well, that's something I just learned.
B
Don't you think that these people, though, don't you think they shouldn't be glorifying this thing? Because I've had kids here who are. Who are big in the rap scene, I mean, I've had everybody. Okay. And they're all telling me it's lame.
A
Yeah. I. I think it's just, like, opening these people's eyes to, like, what it actually is or getting educated on it, because a lot of people, I feel like they hear, oh, fentanyl this, fentanyl that. It can kill you. But, like, what are. Like, until you talk to someone that really knows about it, I feel like it really drives that fear in the person. I should stop doing this until people know.
B
And unless people know somebody that died of fentanyl or someone that they loved, they don't. They don't.
A
Yeah. Until it. It's close to home.
B
Yeah. The second it's close to home. They're on it now. They're advocates. They're proselytizing everywhere, foundations.
A
And so.
B
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's.
A
So.
B
It's.
A
That's unfortunate that it has to, like, hit so close to home.
B
Yeah. But you know what? Then they get to save other people, because this is the worst thing ever.
A
Yeah.
B
This is the. This is. This is. This is literally killing our children.
A
Yeah. Was it always like that? Was Fentanyl always a. Like, when did it really start to come around?
B
Right when I left in 2018. Right when I sold my business, this thing blew up. Because before that, it was OxyContin and the Purdue.
A
Oh, I remember hearing about OxyContin.
B
Yeah. That was the thing. Okay. And then this thing came. Gave the one question I wanted to ask you, which I forgot about and never got back to you, was, what do you do when a beautiful girl comes to you and she wants you, but she breaks open the drugs? Like, what do you do?
A
I say no. Like.
B
Like, how do you do it?
A
I feel like I have a pretty good. What's the word? What's the word? Like, I don't fall under peer pressure, but I don't want to do something. Like, I don't do it. And honestly, I've never run into a situation where a girl is not going to hook up with me just because I don't want to do her drugs. Like, I just. To be honest, I'm not. I'm not trying to say that in, like, a. No, no, that was. No, that was the way.
B
I didn't take it that way.
A
There's another one right over here. Like, I don't need. I don't need your drugs, and she's not gonna not hook up with me just because I'm not doing her drugs. That's Why? I feel like it's been able to keep me sane and, like, kind of. Yeah, say no. It's just if I don't want to do something, I'm just not gonna. I'm not gonna do it.
B
All right, here's my favorite question. I heard you beat the. Out of a bunch of YouTubers. Tell me about. Tell me about that.
A
Actually, no, I lost that fight. But I went all five rounds. Yeah, I did a boxing match.
B
How many fights?
A
Just one.
B
Oh, just one.
A
I did it for a check. Like, I'm an actor, musician, and. And I'm in the entertainment space. I don't see myself being one of these influencer, like, boxers.
B
So you bought. So you. So you box YouTuber.
A
Yeah, as the TikToker. TikToker YouTuber. They had a boxing match. Yeah, I did that three. Three or four years ago. I had two months to treat myself ready for boxing. Never boxed in my life.
B
Right.
A
And the only person on the card that has some experience is the person I'm fighting and has amateur. But listen, they're offering me half a million dollars. So, yeah, I did it.
B
You're the best.
A
But then we got. How bad scammed at the end. We got, like.
B
We.
A
We got like a fraction of that. But it's after, like, we had to go get it. After almost a year of fighting with lawyers and stuff, the money I did get, I wouldn't have done it. But here's the thing. I had agents at the time that were literally saying, you're this. You're not going to get paid this money. But I had best friends that were also in on the card with me being like, do it, do it, do it. They. They're interested in the fighting stuff. I'm. I'm on a whole new path over here. But the money seems good. You have friends telling your boys, your two best friends, do it with us. Do it with us.
B
That you weren't into peer pressure.
A
500K that I thought I was getting.
B
You didn't think you were getting it? The guy told you you weren't getting it.
A
Well, there's these other people you didn't.
B
Hear that you're like, that I'm getting.
A
My friends were like, we're gonna get this money. We're getting this money also. I knew the person that. That was putting it on, so I was like, sure.
B
Like, what's.
A
What's.
B
What's a half a million bucks amongst friends?
A
That's right. No, I was gonna get just. I was gonna get the 500k that was gonna be my purse.
B
Right.
A
Knowing what I know now, I'm like, what the. There's. I wasn't gonna get that. That's insane. Like, that's.
B
You were never gonna get it. If you had a lawyer that went over the contract and you made it ironclad, they would have said, you know what? We're not gonna use you. We're gonna go in a different direction.
A
Yeah. How much you had lawyers too. I'm so confused, like, how that didn't get written in the. In my agents that he had a good lawyer.
B
Well, because. Because your agent was in control of the lawyer. Agent didn't give a shit about you. Let me ask you a question. You go on. Only fans. No, no.
A
You know, it's crazy. I've been approached with that. I had. I. I'm not going to lie because like, my presence online was this like, kind of like attractive figure. So at. At the time, I could have made probably 5 to 10 mil from. From. If I did it like 3 years ago when I was approached a bunch.
B
Dude, if someone said that to me, I'd go, okay, let's go.
A
Yeah, but see it. That's again. But like, I came out here for. To be like a successful actor and musician. And the moment you started going into that. That lane, that all goes out the window. Also, I'm working with like Coca Cola, McDonald's, like very brand friendly brands.
B
Right.
A
That, like, that's. That's just selling myself out there for. Does that five to ten mil sound great? Of course. But like, I just feel like that's very much.
B
You have a girlfriend?
A
No, not right now. I got out of something like a few months ago.
B
Have you ever been with a girl on only chance.
A
No.
B
The answer is yes. You just don't know it.
A
Oh, have I. Oh, have I been with a girl? Like hooked up with a girl?
B
Yeah.
A
Oh, yeah.
B
Who's. Who is constantly on only fans.
A
Yeah, but I wouldn't date one.
B
Let's say you're with a girl. Your. Your last girl. But you get one cheat pass one person who if you ever run into them that you got, you get one get out of jail free card.
A
Nobody. Because I would never cheat.
B
Excellent. But. But you have an agreement.
A
That's not the answer. He wants to.
B
No, no, it's fine. I. I love it. That's great.
A
Okay. Okay. Hypothetically, I get this free card. Okay. We're just going off hypothetically. No, there's got to be one. This is gonna be annoying once I leave here. Once I Leave here. There's gonna be. No, because it's a trick question.
B
Johansson. Jessica Alba.
A
Oh, Jessica Alba is. I had the right touch on her. Yes, Jessica Alba.
B
Because she's got that whole Hispanic thing going on.
A
Yeah. Me. There we go again. There it is. Yeah.
B
All right, man. Rant starts now.
A
Rant. I feel like we've been ranting.
B
No, no, no, no. This is the rant.
A
Oh. Part of the code. Oh, there's like a segment of this.
B
There's this segment. That's right. And you get to rant on anything that pisses you off. Like. So let me give you an example. I once did a rant on those guys who ride the bikes.
A
That ride the bikes.
B
Yeah. You know, the bike riders with the shorts and the shoes, and they just always, like, get in front of you and. Oh, my gosh.
A
Run clubs.
B
The run club, the run clubs.
A
Like, I'm all for, you know, everyone running, you know, anti aging. It's great. But, like, now it's, like, gone from like, a group of 15 people to, like, a group of kid. You not, like a thousand people.
B
Right.
A
Running across the street. I'm sitting at the red light, like. Like, it takes, like, a solid five to ten minutes for all these people.
B
Those guys to go by.
A
Yeah, right? And it's just getting bigger and bigger, though. Like, it is. It's like, have you ever. It's not slowing down.
B
It's like they're like, marathon prep.
A
Yeah. No, no. It's like a bunch of celebrities are, like, starting running groups, and that's why it's just also getting. Shut up.
B
Huge.
A
Yeah. No, like, for instance, like, Diplo does one, Diplo does big dj, and it's now gotten huge.
B
Got a run club.
A
I'm not saying that's not the one I ran into, but, like, they're all over. Like, Miami, New York. Like, just. You see them all over now.
B
I was at a thing where it was a marathon. My buddy trained really hard for a marathon, and he goes, you gotta come, dude.
A
Yeah.
B
I worked so hard for this. It's 26 miles. I'd be killing, like, 26 miles. Is dude off. He lost to a guy in a banana suit. Okay. And I was like, dude, I almost threw up in my own mouth. Mike, you just lost to a guy who ran 26 miles in a banana suit.
A
And that's got to be hot. The banana suit's got to be hot, dude.
B
It was like nine feet high with the stem up the top and his legs doing this in the yellow. I mean, it was just like, oh, my God, dude, he just beat your ass.
A
You watched the whole 26 miles? No, I was gonna say it's like, showed up.
B
I showed up for like an hour at the end, because.
A
Yeah, but he's up, coming at the end, towards the finish. Yeah.
B
It's like. And I'm like, looking in my girlfriend at the time. I'm like, babe, he's neck and neck with the banana. I'm like, that banana is going to kick his ass. He's closing in. He can't hold off the banana. Oh.
A
So the banana was trailing him for a little while. Yeah.
B
And then the banana just stuck that stem out and bam. You know, came at the wire.
A
That's probably all on camera, too. Imagine coming across the finishing line with a banana beating you. That's your picture.
B
How did I do? How did I do? How great was that? I looked at him. I go, you lost the banana guy.
A
You lost to the banana guy. I was left.
B
So stupid.
A
That'd be awful. I would never even post that photo.
B
Yeah, you know, it would be cool. I swear to God. I was thinking of seeing. When I saw the banana guy, I was like, where's the rest of the Fruit of the Loom, guys?
A
Where's the orange? Where's the straw?
B
Yeah. Where the grapes?
A
Where's the grapes?
B
Yeah. I couldn't find a Fruit of the Loom.
A
Oh, my gosh.
B
All right. And, well, listen, what are you doing next?
A
I just shot a movie that I was a lead in that comes out, I think, next month. I said a movie that just came out that's actually number one on Tubi right now.
B
To be. Yeah, which to be, too.
A
It's like a Netflix. Okay, Peacock? Like Zulu. Because like I said, acting and music is what I originally came out here for, and then I kind of just got a social media following halfway through.
B
So you got 5. 5 million people on TikTok, right?
A
Yeah.
B
5 million people on TikTok.
A
Yeah.
B
Where can people reach you, man?
A
Yeah, yeah. I'm on Instagram, My Instagrams. It's Nate Wyatt. Tick Tock Nate. Underscore Wyatt. If you have a Tick Tock, my email is Nate. What? No, I'm just kidding. It's your phone number three.
B
What's your address?
A
My zip code? My Social Security is so funny.
B
That's so funny.
A
I appreciate you having me on, honestly.
B
No, man, this has been great.
A
See you next Tuesday.
B
See you next Tuesday. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
A
Oh, okay.
B
So you get five balls.
A
Okay.
B
You throw them anywhere you want.
A
You practice this a lot? I feel like I does.
B
I just got these.
A
All right, all right, all right. Oh. Since I know I'm not, like, the best star, let's start with. All right.
B
2.
A
Oh, give it to me. I don't know if I should go for these. All right, I gotta go. I gotta go for good numbers. I gotta go for some points. I gotta get some points. N. We gotta. Let me just go first.
B
That counts. Oh.
A
Oh, wow. Okay. I just got cheated on.
B
No, you got four. You got four because that one came in in, and the other one popped out. Okay, so you got four.
A
All right.
B
Okay. I only get one throw to beat four.
A
Oh. One. Only one.
B
Only one. One, two, three, four, five. Okay, I win.
A
All right.
Podcast Summary: "Nate Wyatt's Secret to Success in Music and Film"
Podcast Information:
In this compelling episode of "We're Out of Time," host Richard Taite welcomes actor, musician, and social media personality Nate Wyatt. Nate shares his journey from Cincinnati to Los Angeles, navigating the worlds of acting, music, and social media fame, all while addressing personal challenges and the pervasive issue of substance abuse in the entertainment industry.
Nate opens up about his upbringing in Cincinnati, highlighting the pivotal role his mother played in his life. Raised by a single mother without a father figure, Nate emphasizes the strong familial and Midwestern values that shaped him.
Nate Wyatt [00:16]: "I was raised by my mom, and I feel like she did an amazing job playing both roles and putting me in the best situation possible that she could."
He reflects on meeting his father during his adolescence, expressing the complexities and unresolved emotions stemming from that late introduction.
Nate Wyatt [03:26]: "I don't even think I've gotten those full answers answered... it's a very uncomfortable question to ask."
While Nate has not yet become a father, he articulates his commitment to being a good dad, drawing from his own experiences of what he lacked growing up.
Nate Wyatt [07:43]: "I just know I'm gonna be a good dad at whatever time period that is good for you."
He discusses the importance of giving children time and attention over material possessions, emphasizing the value of presence in parenting.
Nate Wyatt [08:06]: "All you got to give kids is your time and your attention. They don't care about money."
A significant portion of the conversation delves into the fentanyl epidemic, Nate's personal experiences witnessing overdoses at music festivals like EDC, and the broader implications for the party scene in Los Angeles.
Nate Wyatt [10:07]: "I've definitely been around it a lot... it's with the party scene in LA throughout the years of living out here."
He shares the heartbreaking loss of a friend to fentanyl-laced Xanax, underscoring the devastating human impact of the crisis.
Nate Wyatt [12:17]: "I've had a friend that die from fentanyl being laced in a Xanax."
Richard and Nate discuss how substance abuse permeates the entertainment industry, from music scenes to networking events, and the challenges of maintaining sobriety amidst societal pressures.
Nate Wyatt [25:49]: "In the music game, everybody's glorifying drugs with the press perks and the Xanax..."
Nate offers his perspective on resisting peer pressure and the importance of staying true to oneself, even when faced with lucrative but compromising opportunities.
Nate Wyatt [31:21]: "I don't do it. And honestly, I've never run into a situation where a girl is not going to hook up with me just because I don't want to do her drugs."
Nate recounts his foray into a boxing match against a YouTuber, illustrating the pitfalls of influencer-driven ventures and the importance of solid legal representation.
Nate Wyatt [32:12]: "I did a boxing match... it was about a year of fighting with lawyers and stuff, the money I did get, I wouldn't have done it."
He also touches on his involvement with major brands like Coca-Cola and McDonald's, balancing commercial success with personal authenticity.
Nate Wyatt [35:15]: "I'm working with like Coca Cola, McDonald's, like very brand-friendly brands."
The conversation shifts to Nate's journey towards self-improvement after selling his business, addressing issues like self-esteem, self-love, and the essential nature of self-care in recovery.
Nate Wyatt [22:50]: "You gotta do it, you gotta go, go to the doctor once a year for different things."
He emphasizes that self-love is incompatible with destructive behaviors like excessive drug and alcohol use, advocating for holistic well-being.
Nate Wyatt [23:20]: "I've never seen anybody use drugs and alcohol extensively who truly loves themselves. That doesn't exist."
Towards the end of the episode, Nate shares his achievements, including his recent lead role in a movie topping the Tubi charts, and his substantial TikTok following. He reflects on the balance between personal ambition and staying grounded amid fame.
Nate Wyatt [40:04]: "I just shot a movie that I was a lead in that comes out, I think, next month. It's actually number one on Tubi right now."
The episode concludes with light-hearted banter and Nate expressing gratitude for being featured on the podcast, leaving listeners with a sense of his resilience and dedication to positive change.
Nate Wyatt [40:56]: "I appreciate you having me on, honestly."
Resilience through Adversity: Nate's story underscores the importance of overcoming personal challenges and using one's experiences to fuel success.
The Human Cost of Substance Abuse: Personal anecdotes highlight the devastating effects of the fentanyl crisis, calling for increased awareness and action.
Authenticity in the Spotlight: Nate emphasizes staying true to oneself in the face of industry pressures, advocating for genuine connections over superficial gains.
Commitment to Self-Care: The conversation stresses the necessity of self-love and regular self-care practices as foundations for a healthy, fulfilling life.
This episode provides a candid and multifaceted look into Nate Wyatt's life, blending personal narratives with broader societal issues. Through his experiences, Nate offers valuable insights into navigating fame, maintaining authenticity, and addressing the urgent challenges posed by the fentanyl epidemic.