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Yo yo yo, welcome back to our ongoing series looking at the greatest three-album runs in hip hop history – and today is a special one. Today we’re talking about […]
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The room was hot, the jokes were flying, and then the story landed: a no‑show “support” group sparked a Thread post that filled a room with twelve hungry creators. That moment became Influence Society—a Charlotte‑born, no‑gatekeeping collective where members share contacts, swap media kits and rate cards, and actually get each other in the room. We dig into how they structure rollouts, set expectations with venues, and decide when not to post, especially when comps don’t match deliverables. If you’ve ever wondered how to pitch better, negotiate fair value, or avoid messy lounge collabs, this is a blueprint built from trial, receipts, and honest debriefs.
We also get personal. These women juggle nursing shifts, a salon lease, boxing classes, and parenting while building audiences with under 1,000 followers—proof that engagement and consistency beat vanity metrics. They walk us through joining criteria (content over follower count), why the group “sweeps” inactive members, and how sharing an airline collab lead in the chat opened paid doors for others. The vision is bold: expand to Dallas and beyond, become the directory brands trust, and get creators paid—because salmon bites and sugary cocktails don’t cover editing hours.
Then we pivot into intimacy and vulnerability. Intimacy isn’t just sex; it’s emotional, intellectual, experiential, and psychological connection. Fear often looks like humor, low‑maintenance posturing, or hyper‑independence. The talk gets real about men’s mental health, generational conditioning around crying, and why awareness comes before fixing. In a world of surface‑level connections and endless pitching, that kind of depth might be the competitive edge creators need most.
If you’re building a creator career in Charlotte (or any city), this conversation delivers tangible tactics and the emotional tools to sustain them. Subscribe, share with a friend who hates gatekeeping, and drop a review telling us the one contact you wish more creators would share.
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Yo yo yo, welcome back to our ongoing series looking at the greatest three-album runs in hip hop history – and today is a special one. Today we’re talking about […]
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