Brendan Nash
3.4K posts

Brendan Nash
@NASHtronaut
What's the point of living if you can't pull your pants down and slide around on the ice?
Katılım Ağustos 2012
328 Takip Edilen156 Takipçiler

Druski grew up in the suburbs of Georgia.
His mom has a Master of Science in Public Health and worked at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
His dad attended Howard University, graduated from the United States Air Force Academy and is a Wall of Honor nominee at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.
Druski's latest skit just pulled 40 million views. Rolling Stone named him the second most influential creator in America. Forbes has him at $14 million in earnings. Oh, and he never needed a late night set, a network sitcom, or a Netflix special to get there.
He figured out where the internet was going before the industry did.
In case you missed how Druski got here:
He started posting comedy skits on Instagram in 2017. No agent. No manager. No club circuit.
Just character work on the platform where the audience was actually spending time.
By 2020, Drake put him in the Laugh Now Cry Later video. Jack Harlow put him in Tyler Herro. He opened for J. Cole and 21 Savage on a national arena tour. All that came because he had already built something real where the attention was.
Then he kept building on that surface.
Coulda Been Records started as Instagram Live auditions and became a full entertainment brand. Coulda Been Love, a dating show he created and owns, pulled over 100 million views on YouTube. His first headlining tour in 2023 sold out 30 markets and grossed $2.5 million.
In 2024, he sold out State Farm Arena in Atlanta. 21,000 seats. For a comedian who has never had a network television show.
In 2025, he took that same format international with a 10-city arena tour. Every date sold out. Wembley Arena in London. Major arenas across North America. Lineups featuring Snoop Dogg, Jack Harlow, Lil Yachty, Rod Wave, and Chief Keef.
Forbes Top Creators list tells the compounding story: #20 in 2023 at $10 million. #11 in 2024 at $12 million. #9 in 2025 at $14 million. Three consecutive years of growth built on the same foundation he laid in 2017.
He has equity in Happy Dad Hard Seltzer. Brand deals with Nike, Google, Amazon, Meta, Pepsi, Spotify, EA Sports, American Express, and Fanatics. His company, 4Lifers Entertainment, runs touring, production, merchandise, licensing, and a sports agency. All under one roof.
The traditional comedy path used to be the only path: open mics, club circuit, late night set, Netflix special, maybe a tour if it all worked out. That path still exists. But the comedians who built where the audience was actually moving own the comedy landscape now. The ones still waiting for a network to greenlight them are watching Druski sell out arenas from the outside.
This is exactly what is happening across most marketing budgets right now.
Most businesses are still spending their entire marketing budget on the channels that dominated five years ago. Paid ads. Social media campaigns. Email blasts. PR placements. Influencer deals. These are the late night spots of marketing. Familiar, established playbooks, comfortable. And increasingly disconnected from where the highest-intent buying decisions are actually happening.
The audience is moving.
ChatGPT now has nearly a billion weekly active users. Perplexity has over 45 million. Google AI Mode hit 75 million users in its first seven months. 59% of consumers are already using AI for shopping decisions. One in four say ChatGPT product recommendations are better than Google's.
And most businesses have zero presence in these systems.
(If you want to see where your site stands across Google and AI search, start here:
seo-stuff.com/free-audit)
The businesses that get cited, recommended, and selected by AI are not the ones spending the most on ads. They are the ones that built something real where the audience is actually going. Content with genuine authority. Backlinks from trusted sources. Structure that AI systems can read, parse, and confidently cite to a user.
When ChatGPT cites a source, it cites the most authoritative, most structured, most useful content it can find. When Google's AI Overview selects a page to reference, it selects based on content depth, trust signals and extractability. When Perplexity assembles an answer, it pulls from the sources that actually answer the question best.
No ad budget influences that. No social following affects it. No campaign calendar determines the outcome. The channel itself selects for the best answer.
Druski built where the audience was heading and let the leverage follow. By the time the industry caught up to where he already was, he owned the space.
The businesses building owned visibility in AI search right now are doing the same thing. The ones still spending exclusively on paid ads, social, email, and PR are the comedians still waiting for their late night spot.
That is the gap SEO Stuff was built to close.
seo-stuff.com
Druski went from Instagram skits to $14 million a year and sold-out arenas because he understood one thing early: build where the audience is going, not where it used to be.
The question is whether your marketing budget is building where buying decisions are heading or still spending on the channels they are leaving.
DRUSKI@druski
That Guy who is just Proud to be AMERICAN🇺🇸
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@kyroque @ChipotleTweets That’s just the cost of doing business!
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@BrooksCanBall But also half of it is full. Try being an optimist Ethan.
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Gotta tip America’s hat to East Alaska. They fought really hard #USA
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@bfbqbgurumeat @YossiGozlan Neither do I, but I’m sure the billionaire NBA owner does. It’d be sweet if the teams could be owned by the city/region they’re in, huh?
I’d argue letting Al walk was probably the right move, especially with Tatum’s injury.
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@NASHtronaut @YossiGozlan I don’t care if the billionaire nba owner of my favorite team makes an extra 10 million, I’d rather he paid the luxury tax & maybe Al horford is still a Celtic
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This is the first time I can recall in my 8 years following the salary cap that a team signed a rookie that was drafted to a 10-day contract. For the Celtics, this was done to help them narrowly duck the tax.
I expect their final cap sheet to look something like this.

Yossi Gozlan@YossiGozlan
Jon Tonje, a drafted rookie the Celtics traded for, will count $58,817 less on their cap sheet than a veteran 10-day. It’s a small amount of savings that will allow them to go into the playoffs with two veterans and a rookie (likely Max Shulga) while staying under the tax.
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@bfbqbgurumeat @YossiGozlan You can be willing to spend more on something, but then when there’s an ability to spend less it’s sometimes okay to do so
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@YossiGozlan But ownership totally doesn’t care about being in the tax or not lololol
What is the luxury tax payout per team estimated to be this year? That $8k will turn into how many million?
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@_Ceyzey Come talk to me when a guy gets 8 RBIs in a 4 grand slam game
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@AdamSchefter The raiders should interview him too. Would be a good fit
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