Customer Service & Working with Couples with Sean Big Daddy McKee – E142

Matthew Campbell of My Wedding Songs and Sean ‘Big Daddy’ McKee of James Daniel Music chat about customer service and skills working with couples.
Celebrating 33 Years with JDE, Sean Big Daddy is ready to make your wishes come true! If it’s a wedding or other party, Big Daddy will make sure the event goes just as you dreamed it would. With a brand new team of motivators and MCs, Big Daddy is going to bring Bar/Bat Mitzvahs, Sweet 16s, and Quinceaneros to the next level Our new setups, including state-of-the-art video walls, digital monograms, and brand-new staging, we will bring your event to the next level. Big Daddy’s passion is to make every event, BIG or small, THE BEST EVER!!! Smile as Loud As You Can!!!!
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Show Notes:
- Introduction
- Memorable Wedding Experiences
- Advice for Couples Selecting a Wedding DJ
- Working with Couples on a Tight Budget
- The Booking Process
- Building Wedding Playlists
- Music Trends and Couple Preferences
- Handling Unhappy Clients
- America’s Got Talent and Personal Reflections
- Closing Remarks and Advice for Aspiring DJs
Matt Campbell: Welcome everybody to the Wedding Songs Podcast. I am Matt Campbell. Today we’re going to be talking about customer service and working with couples. And to help me out with that, we have Sean “Big Daddy” McKee. He is the GM of James Daniel Entertainment. He is a DJ in Connecticut, New York, but, you know, as DJs today, we can travel wherever. So welcome to the show, Big Daddy.
Sean McKee: Good morning. Good morning. Good morning, young man. It’s an honor to be here with you.
Matt Campbell: No, it’s an honor to have you here. I’m totally excited about this. So I have to ask you a question before we get started, and that is: do you want to share any details about a memorable wedding that you had?
Sean McKee: I’ll be honest with you, every wedding for me, of all the thousands I’ve done, they’re all pretty memorable because they’re all different. Everything that I do and say is different. Just like the one I did on December 20th, these kids had no idea, you know, they heard me saying, that’s how they booked me. They booked my partner, Jimmy, because he did the parents of the bride’s wedding 37 years ago. So he was a shoo-in, and they brought me in to be the singer and semi, you know, co-MC with him.
And one of the things that happened, Jimmy was phenomenal. My boy, Jimmy and I, we’ve been together for a long, long, long, long time. And I sang “Come Sail Away” right after the toast and everything else. The groom comes walking up to me, and I’m going, and he didn’t have a smile on his face. He just walks up to me, puts his arms around my neck and goes, “There’s nothing I can say, but I love you.”
And thank you. Here’s the deal. Everybody’s wedding is completely different than the next one, but memorable. Just, you know, it’s funny. I’m doing a bar mitzvah in 2026. I’m 70. I’m doing a bar mitzvah. I’ve got my great crew around me. I am doing a bar mitzvah for a kid whose parents I did. They’re not only their wedding, but their bar and bar mitzvah.
And I did the grandparents’ wedding over 30 years ago, you know, so everything is, they’re all memorable because they’re all different. But every, every wedding is memorable for me. You know, you have, you always, there’s always going to be a clunker here and there, you know, no matter what you do, 98% memorable.
Matt Campbell: Well, and I think that too, like you’re trying to get at is not every playlist is the same. Of course, we all have our main hits, but you have to curtail that playlist to that couple. And that’s why they’re all different.
Sean McKee: Yes. And the big thing now, you know, as before, when I started, we either had vinyl, then it was tapes, then it became CDs, and then back up and, you know, CDs was so much easier than tapes, and even more easier than vinyl, and I did start on vinyl a long time ago, but the playlist now, well, completely different than anything we’ve ever seen before.
Matt Campbell: That’s what they want. That’s what they get. As long as they’re going to dance, you know, who cares? Amen. So if you could just please introduce yourself to our listeners.
Sean McKee: I am Sean “Big Daddy” McKee. I’m blessed to be able to not only be a DJ, entertainer, singer, I’m also a motivational speaker, and I travel to a bunch of conventions here and there just to teach love and smiles.
And to kindly tell everybody to remember none of this is about us because if there’s no them, there is no us. And also, twice cancer survivor, grandfather of four boys and two girls, and a father of two amazing sons.
Matt Campbell: That’s awesome. And it reminds me that we cannot forget how important family is in our, in our existence.
Sean McKee: So it took a long time because, you know, I left, I had gotten divorced in ’93, moved up to Connecticut, reproved myself all over again, start over with everything. And here I am 33 years, 32 years later, and I’m a blessed man. I got people like you in my life, and I got, you know, some wonderful friends and brothers and sisters in this business because of what we’re able to do.
And I can’t forget, you know, I’m down here. My younger son, Casey, was down here with Asher, Kellen, and Cece. And then I’ve got my, my Desi up north with his wife, Shannon, and Sean, who they named after me. And then we have Caden and Piper. So I’m going to be working till I’m 180 years old because of that.
Matt Campbell: But that’s, that’s a good thing. That’s awesome. So let’s get a little bit more into our topics today. What advice would you give to couples when selecting their wedding DJ?
Sean McKee: First of all, it comes from here. How does this, how does this person or persons make you feel? Do they give you that little hair on the back of your neck standing on end?
Do they talk about themselves incessantly? It’s not about your gear, you know, just how do you feel? First impressions are the most, you only get one chance at a first impression. It all depends on how they communicate with you too. Because now it’s not only email into phone calls, it’s email, texting, social, whatever, and. You’ve got to be able to connect with them on every, you know, my brides and grooms are 28 to 30, to 35.
I just did one that was 45 and 50 years old. You’ve got to be relatable to that. And so what I have done to make it different for me is I’ll be the emcee. I’ll do the entertaining in the beginning, but then when it’s time to rip it up, I’m bringing a younger cat with me, and I’m not stupid.
Listen again, Big Daddy’s Big Daddy is not stupid. I’m older. I have their mixer, and I can do everything else.
But it all depends on what they’re looking for. And one of the things, the younger folks do not want to be pressured. They want to have their music played, and then they don’t want it. You’re not going to see the full-length first dance anymore.
Father, daughter, mother, son, cake cutting, very rarely guarded bouquet, never anymore. They don’t want to be the quote-unquote center of attention. They want to come in, do their thing, and then just blend for the rest of the day, if that makes any sense. So you’ve got to, the one thing we were born with is two of these, one of these, Listen with these first before you say anything because every, every bride and groom want all we want everybody to dance.
We want everybody to have a good time. Lately, it’s been, we don’t want to do any of the old stuff, the cookie-cutter stuff. That’s fine. Whatever they want, they’re going to get. If it’s not working, please give me the chance to turn this around, still play your music, still whatever you want, but throw in some stuff for the folks that are paying for this.
And you know, a few other things, if that makes any sense, but always listen, because, and I’ve told the story a number of times, Grandma Sarah’s birthday, just about two years ago, Grandma Sarah’s birthday. They forgot about it. The bride and groom. I’m walking around during cocktail hour because I knew half the people that were at this wedding was like the third wedding for this family, and they were telling me, you know, I listen.
I said, it’s Grandma Sarah’s birthday today. I hope they remember everything else. Well, you know me, Matt. I’m calling everybody for their birthday and everything else. I said, right as we started main courses, and guys, please forgive me. There’s something special that we need to recognize right now.
And I made sure that the caterer knew, had a little cupcake for her and everything else. Yeah. Today’s a very special day for a young lady that’s sitting right at the table right next to me. I walk over, Grandma Sarah, I hear it’s your 35th birthday today. The crowd goes wild. They’re laughing. I said, for those of you that know me and many of you do, I call people for their birthday.
Well, Grandma Sarah, today you are going to get a live version of that phone call. And the bride and groom came up to me about 10 minutes after I finished. And they go, “We completely forgot.” I said, “I got you.” I said, “You know, Sarah and Robert wanted to recognize your birthday.” I made them the stars of the show.
You got to listen because you never know what you’re, if you don’t listen, you’re going to miss something. That was not, were not said in the final or whatever, even the initial booking. So listen first, talk next.
Matt Campbell: Love it. All I can say. So how do you handle couples on a tight budget, but still want somebody like yourself, a professional DJ experience?
Sean McKee: You try to work with them as much as you possibly can, because there’s always going to be that company that’s going to go out for real, you know, you’re going to get the phone call. Well, I got a guy that says he can do exactly what you do for a thousand dollars less. What can you do for us?
I said, this is my price. I may be able to give you like 100 off or something like that, just because it’s a repeat, you know, repeat family, whatever. And then 48 hours later, I’ll get the phone call, if I don’t book you for my daughter’s wedding, she’s going to not let me go to the wedding. But the only thing you can do is you can bend, but don’t break.
Because there’s always, listen, you’re not for everybody. Either it’s price-wise, personality-wise, whatever the case may be. And if it goes for price and the, I don’t want to call them undercutters and this and that and the other thing, but we got to do what we got to do. Yeah.
Matt Campbell: Well, we said, know your worth and you have to, you, you have your price and that’s what it’s going to take for me to come out. That’s it.
And you know, now you’ve got all the extra stuff too. You’ve got your photo booths, you’ve got your uplight, and you’ve got everything known to man. And in Connecticut, you can’t do, the sparklers.
Unless you have a special license, everything else that’s going to go away soon, I think the sparklers and stuff. Can you guys do them in Vegas? Don’t they have, you have to use a special one special or two special companies because they have the license to do it. Yeah. In the state of Nevada, you have to have a license, but I know on the strip, they, some properties don’t allow them at all.
Sean McKee: Right, right. I did see that. All you can do is bend, not break. So let’s pretend that you’re getting an inquiry from social media, Facebook, Instagram, whatnot. What is your booking process look like from the inquiry to the big day? Well, to get them on the phone, number one, let’s talk, emailing, texting, they’re not going to feel how excited.
I am to be able to do to be able to have the honor of doing their wedding from here. They’ve got to hear it. Just give me five, five minutes. That’s all I need. And we can talk it out. You’ve seen what we do. You’ve seen what I do, whatever. And it’s all about you. If we can get, give me five minutes on the phone with them.
I’ll book. But, you know, through emails and texting and, video sending out and stuff like that, but they’re still not going to get that feel that we’re going to have you and myself, we’re going to have getting to do their wedding, they’re not going to be able to get any of the feels.
And that’s a big problem. That’s a big thing. It really is. Sometimes it’s not, but 90 percent of the time it is, there’s only so much you can do on TikTok, and, , any kind of social media whatsoever they see it.
You know, you’ve got guys like Nick Spinelli, Nick is a rock star superstar, and it’s all from number one.
Talk to him for a minute. You’re going to book it. You see his videos. You see everything he does. He is a rock star and very proud of everything he does. That’s how he gets booked. Again, you got to talk to them.
You know, talk to him for a minute or so. Jason Jani, Joe Bunn, all these guys, Mike Walter, Mike’s killing it.
You know, you got my friends, Jerry Syracuse, Chris D’Amico, all these guys, they’re doing it, Mars Lawhorn in Chicago, Jody out in Vegas, everybody’s got their own little niche, but again, Ben, don’t break, and it starts at a phone call or whatever, and it goes through, talk to mom and dad,
If they’re paying, let them talk. I said, guys, shop, go around, I’m not the only one in the market.
Take a look as if you can get yourself to be maybe not the first phone call, but maybe the second. But anytime below four, you’re done. If you’re the first phone call, yay. But if you’re the second, third or fourth, you’re okay. Anything below five, they want to shop. And one thing is if there’s some of these ladies are shopping from their office desk, the first thing is if they see your website, And user comes off on the website.
We’ve talked about this forever. They’re going to done and they won’t deal with you again. They don’t want noise. Cause they don’t want anybody to work.
Going off of that? Do you ever book couples that don’t get on the phone yes, I’ve done emails and stuff because they’ve seen me before I’ve done the sister, the brothers, they go, we don’t just send us a contract, you know, that’s very rare. But yeah, I do that.
I do that. Some texts, you know, maybe a FaceTime or two, even if it’s a FaceTime. I want these folks to feel comfortable. Thanks to Zoom during COVID, they were able to go home, sit, have a glass of wine and talk.
They don’t have to come to an office. We can sit in their office, whatever the case may be.
That’s the easiest way now, having, brick and mortar. It’s few and far between now. You know, you’ve got your little office at home or we’ve got an office, but most of our stuff is AV there. And very rarely do I go to the office. It’s I’ll meet them somewhere or I’ll take the time.
You give me the best time that you’re comfortable with. We’ll do a FaceTime or Zoom. Done. Love it.
So now you’ve got them booked and we talked a little bit this before we hit record. What’s your biggest challenges working with couples to build their wedding playlists?
Sean McKee: They know what they want. One of the biggest challenges is you get every once every two or three years, you get that one groom that wants it played in that exact order when to cut it out, this, that, the other thing. So I’m a jukebox for the day. So I set up my program. I have not had that yet, but I’ve had DJs in my company that have, the biggest challenges.
Getting back to you. Let’s get it. Let’s get a little meeting in so we can at least go over cause now introductions are not what they used to be either. A lot of times it’s not going to be couples. A lot of times a wedding party is going to be introduced.
Guys first, girls first, whatever. And then just the bride and groom or everybody’s on the dance floor. Just bring the bride and groom on, so just getting that together is sometimes a pain in the neck because of their schedules, that’s called patience is a virtue. Well, we all get gold medals for that, but you know what?
The way the world is nowadays, people are working hard or, you know, just trying to get ahold of them like the wedding I did this past Saturday, the fourth, they’re both dispatchers for 9 1 1. They worked right up until the day before their wedding. Getting a hold of them to do anything was tough, but we did it.
We made it work. I went over, everything. It’s all about you have to dot your I’s and cross your T’s no matter what and make them feel like because a lot of these folks think it’s the only one you do, then you’ve got the other ones that think it’s the only one you’re ever going to do again.
But we’re the pro, we’re supposed to be the pro to help them. That’s why they booked us. So to make it as easy as on them as possible is the only way to go. Speaking of that, we’re talking a little bit about music. Can you just talk a little bit about how music has changed and where they are now? What, what music’s popular now that that’s making the couples happy?
Sean McKee: You know what? It’s funny. The wedding I did on Saturday night was a little bit of everything from Latino to hot to go this and you know, some of them want the Cha Cha Slide, the Cupid Shuffle, all that stuff. Then the other ones want nothing to do with that.
And you’re still getting your classics. One of the big classics right now, of course, “Mr. Brightside,” all the EDM, you know, the punk stuff and classic rock, Bon Jovi, AC/DC. I played, “We’re Not Gonna Take It” a couple of weeks ago. They went berserk for it. So you’ve got it. You just, again, you’re going to get your rat pack stuff.
And the ones I had on the 20th, they were old souls. They had rat pack stuff for this, that, the other thing. And then we went in, we had, you know, some pitfalls, some stuff like that. But then I get into the AC/DC. “We’re Not Gonna Take It” stuff like that. They went off to off the chain.
So it all depends on the person, that all depends on the family. And that’s all I can say. Do you think that it’s becoming more important to not play the, you know, “We’re Not Gonna Take It.” It’s not on everybody’s playlist, but it’s still one of those epic party songs. If they leave it up to you to read the crowd, but then there’s these ones that this is the only songs you want and no requests, everything else.
So my announcement is, “Guys, already in Samantha have chosen a wonderful playlist of music. Enjoy it. Let’s dance. Let’s have a great time.” And that’s all you can do again. That’s all you can do because social media and one of the things is trying to get them to be in the moments. Like Saturday, the wedding I did, she wanted no phones at all during the ceremony off.
So besides the gentleman that did the ceremony. I made an announcement and then during introductions, same thing, “Be in the moment. No pictures taken while I’m getting introduced to that.” I made it a point because I can’t believe you did that. And I said, “Not one person put out their phone until after your first dance.”
Who’s going to argue with a big fat guy like me? But you know, it’s again, it’s all depends on what they’re looking for. It all depends. You know, again, they don’t want any pressure put on them. Pressure is walking down a flight of stairs. To get into the room, then right into their first dance, and their first dance is 90 seconds.
Well, these folks on Saturday, they wanted it long. They wanted the whole song. And everything else, so, you know what? Again, Listen, listen, listen. Well, I think exactly what you’re saying too. We were talking about, not wanting them to be, recorded being famous, and then also it really depends on the couple where maybe they do want to be famous.
So then they’re going to hire Nick Spinelli or, or somebody that’s going to get that broadcasted out and it’s really finding out where the couple lies.
Sean McKee: Correct. Correct. You got your Jason Cohen’s. You got your high Kevin’s. There’s so many people. There’s so many amazing young folks. Nate Nelson, my boys, Chad Allen, Blackburn, Lance George in Chicago, Howard Wallach, Howie Weinstein, all these guys.
There’s so many people. Now let’s go with age. Johnny Rozz, one of the all-time greats, 75 or 76 years old. Let’s still and we do what we have to do. We do what we have to do. We’ll be together at MEX and, mobile entertainer, if you’re in the area, if there’s some sort of education in your area, DJs and whatever else.
You can never stop learning. Learn, learn, learn. I’m still learning after all these years. I’ve been in the business in one way or another for 54 years. Singer in a band, running nightclubs, DJing in nightclubs way back when, and now doing this full time for 33 years. This end of it, 33 years.
You can never stop learning.
The minute you think that you know it well, is a minute you’ve done one wedding 1000 times and every wedding is different. Every couple is different. Every, every event you do, birthday-wise. Sweet 16. I just did a sweet 16. Matt, you have to see this. Thank you. Note I got from them. I’m like, “Oh my God, I guess they forgot.”
I was 70 years old for a few minutes. I may be 70, but my grandkids are more mature than me. You have to adapt. And is my schedule going to be as full as it has been? No, but I’m also going to bring roadies with me and everything else like that. And try to get as much time with family as I can. And everybody’s got to remember every one of us, if there’s no them, there is no us.
That’s a great transition for our, our One question I definitely wanted to ask you is, let’s say you’re dealing with an unhappy client. How do you try to resolve that situation? Unhappy after the event?
Sean McKee: Well, it all depends on how heavy they come at you. And you know, I’ve had a few, we all have had that one or two.
And all you can do is say, “I apologize. I’ll own it.” If you made a mistake, like I’ve made a mistake with introductions, whatever the case may be, own it. Right then and there, own your mistake and move on from there. Tell the truth. That’s all you can do, but then you’re going to get some of those clients that no matter what you did, they want money back because they all of a sudden got, “Oh my God, I spent this much money. Somebody did something wrong.” So I got to get some of them. I got to recapture some of my, some of my money. All you can do is say either no, or “I’ll give you a discount on the next party.” Done. It’s all you can do, but if you may, if you personally make mistakes, own it. If you didn’t own that too, that’s all you can do.
I a hundred percent agree because we’ve all made mistakes and, and even a company that has 505 star reviews, and then you might have another company 499 with one one-star review. I. I personally, human nature is to go with the guy that has the one bad review because it means that human nature, we’re, we’re not all perfect.
Sean McKee: Right. Listen, five-star reviews are great. That’s wonderful. In my head, like the wedding I did Saturday night, they had a great time. I’ll book three or four more from it. But in my eyes, it was a five because I worked my behind off and there was, some things that, it’s just. There’s all these, you know, crush this crush that there’s times when you don’t, there’s times when you don’t.
And the best thing you can do is break out and do something different. And always, always, always check with the bride and groom. It may sound like you’re being a pest, but you’re not. You want to make sure and make sure that mom and dads are happy. If it’s a wedding, whatever the case may be.
I had a client.
They were very happy, but it wasn’t hip, hip enough for them. I said, “Guys, I played everything that this kid wanted. I had all my young folks out front, everything else, and I’m going to get a good review, but my heart hurts because I didn’t do, in their eyes, the complete right thing. I live with that.
Matt Campbell: Yeah, that’s one thing that we do as professionals, the regrets, but then we just learn from that and move forward. That’s all we can do. Yep. Do better the next time. Okay, so I just have to ask you about America’s Got Talent.
Sean McKee: Okay, I have I’ve already sent in my video with my bio and my story. I am going to do a live Zoom on January 24th. I can’t say anything more about that than that. The petition that was put out was put out by a wonderfully amazing brother friend of mine whose family I am very, very tight with out in San Jose, California, their daughter, Jennifer. Their younger daughter, June, is, oh my God, what a voice this girl’s got.
Everything else, and Adrian and I have been friends, he goes, “I want to see when America’s Got Talent, what do I got to do?” I said, “Just, you know, if I do get it,” he goes, “No, I got to do something more.” So they put out this petition, and they’re going to try and get it to whoever. I thank everybody, I’m humbled by all the attention and everything else like that.
All I want to do is go in once, just once. All I want to do is spread the smile as loud as you can, and every other mantra I have. Because right now we need as much positivity in our life as we can and no matter where I am, what I do, and it’s a lot of I put a lot of a lot more stress on myself than I should.
But I do it anyway. I want everybody to know that they have that one person. If you need me at three o’clock in the morning. My phone is on. I don’t care. I want everybody to know that when we get up in the morning, we put our feet on the ground. We face forward. And now we’re in 2025. We thrive in 2025 because there’s nothing we can do about yesterday.
Nothing. And do I still have a lot to learn at 70? Yes, I do. I have a lot to learn. Again, I’m blessed with the two sons that I have, my daughter-in-law of North, She is a gem. My six grandkids and just taking a look. I don’t, I’m trying not to put as much pressure on my shoulders as I have before. We all do that, Matt.
Every one of us that really has a heart in this and everything else, you know, getting told, getting told, “Oh, you’re too old for this way.” Well, don’t tell that to my clients who I’m getting five, you know, the Google review this, that, the other thing. No, I’m going. And if I’m not the main player on the event, I’m okay with that.
As long as they know that Big Daddy’s dotting the I’s, crossing the T’s, they don’t care. They want me there in that room. Am I gonna be in a dance floor leading dance? Hell no! I’d have to have a walker, wheelchair, and a guy that goes, “Clear when I get done.” You gotta use this, and this, before you use this.
Because we can all get the same equipment, Matt. We can all get the same lights. We can all get the same everything. But what do you do? What do you bring to the table to make that bride and groom or bar and bat mitzvah or corporation, whatever? Why are they going to go with you? Customer service still matters.
And also if they call you and leave you a voicemail, you better get your ass on that phone and return that phone call or email ASAP. Sometimes, you know, you’re going to get the spam emails it’s other companies looking for pricing and this, that, the other thing. Answer it anyway, who cares?
But you can tell by the language in that email or that voicemail, if it’s a real lead or if it’s a spam or whatever the case may be, just watch your P’s and Q’s and enjoy life because if you’re doing this for your full-time job, you better be thinking and using your heart full time and make sure that everybody around you, especially your family knows that you are there for them.
Simple. I love it. That’s a great way to close it out. So is there something that we missed that you wanted to share today?
Sean McKee: No. Again, never stop learning. And the stuff that’s on that bookshelf behind you, my friends, if you ain’t getting it, get it now. All those, the books, the monthly, everything.
Because it’s funny. You think you know your music. Until you go to one of your Spotify lists or whatever, a Jim Sarone, everything else. You go, “Oh my God, I forgot about that song” or something like that. Learn, put these on. And as my dear brother and friend, Marcellus Mars Lawhorn from Chicago said, “Free your mind and I won’t say what the other word and your butt will follow.”
Open up these, take the blinders off because the world is an open market right now because of social media and us being able to do this and everything else. If you ever need anything, all you gotta do is go on my Sean McKee page on Facebook or at Big Daddy, Sean James, Daniel on I ig. Reach out. I’m always here.
Somebody said I was unapproachable. I said, “Oof.” What are you outta your mind? And the the funny thing is when I spoke at, harvest the Sound, some of the, the younger kids that were there and getting these young kids to go to these things. Because they think they know everything because they can see it on YouTube or this or that or the other thing.
No, it’s not just about sitting in front of us doing this and listening to what we’re saying. Talk to people, go to these things, sit down, invite them to lunch, invite them to whatever. Get to know people outside of your market. Because, “Oh, I could never pull that off in my market.” Why not?
Because if you don’t try, it won’t happen.
Because they told me out in L.A., I did a couple of gigs out in L.A. and Vegas, my approach wouldn’t work because I do different things with, and thanks to Randy Bartlett and Mike Walter and all my mentors. You got to take the chance. If you don’t take the chance, it’s never going to happen.
So I pulled off one of Big Daddy’s things from the east coast out in LA. Cater comes up and goes, “Oh crap, they don’t do that around here.” I said, “I know I’m from the east coast.” He goes, “I’d like to see this more.” I said, “Okay, I’ll teach anybody how to do that.” I, down in Orlando in 1998, they were doing introductions right to the head table. They weren’t doing first dance. So after dinner, I said, “Gosh, you got, you want people to dance? You want people to party?” Yeah. We’re from up North said, “Let’s if, if, and luckily the GM was a good friend of mine back then, and he goes, “Let’s do it.” And from then on, they did it my way. They did it to East coast, everything up front, you know, front load everything. So this way, you’ve got more time to dance.
Don’t give them a reason to sit around and wait. That’s the big thing, but it’s all about. Listening, watching and learning, Matt. I am honored to have been chatting with you and when we come, when I come to max, we’re going to chat again. Well, actually, we’re gonna have to do that before we’re going to do it later.
Because on March, I’m going to do 1 for Mr. J. Y. And I want you on one of my fantastic. I’m ready.
Matt Campbell: Instagram. Is there any other platforms you want to mention of how listeners can connect with you?
Sean McKee: I.G. Threads. I’m on at Sean Big Daddy. Sean McKee on Facebook. I do have a big daddy, Sean McKee, but I don’t use that that much because everybody puts it up under Sean McKee anyway.
And, for those that were listening, our listening, when we do this, thank you from the bottom of my heart for treating me like a king. I am humbled by all the attention and just know that I am here 24 seven and Matt. You know that.
Matt Campbell: Absolutely. Well, thanks, Big Daddy, for being on the show today.
Sean McKee: A pleasure, my friend. Have a great rest of the day and I will see you very soon.
Matt Campbell: Yes, sir. Thanks everybody for listening and have a great day.