 Hello, welcome to my drug kitchen. Oh yeah, this looks good. I'm Steve Bermucci and I am here with Hannah Hart. We are talking about life on the internet and of course one of our mutual favorite subjects, good food. I love food. So I saw that obviously the first episode kind of started on a lark. Like it just kind of came out organically. Yeah, it's kind of crazy when I think about it because our knowledge now of what the internet is is so different from it was in March of 2011. In March of 2011, I did my drug kitchen just as a joke for a friend and I sent it to them via YouTube because that was just the way you sent people videos, not like the way you produced shows. And it seems so crazy because every time, every time I actually meet people and they're like, oh my God, you're not drunk or that sort of thing. I'm always like, yeah, I'm not drunk most of the time. You know, I think sometimes the internet gets accused of being disconnective but for you it's very much a connective environment. How does that play out? It's more authentic. It's kind of like, you know, it's since everything that you create on your channel, self-produced, self-edited, you really get a chance to say exactly what you wanna say. And you know, I think that's really a blessing because there's no gatekeepers behind it. And my favorite part of the internet is the fact that the internet is people. At the other side of whatever little tube you're typing into, there's just another person and it was that connection over web connection. Sorry, I'm just being silly about it now. But like, it was that connection that really drew me to pursue this. People kind of glorify this idea of being a YouTube star as if it were easy but I see the hustle that you're in the middle of. So give us kind of a little bit of the background on that. I mean, honestly, you know, so the channel, so My Drunk Kitchen is to Heart Doe which is like the name of the channel as Friends was to NBC, right? So it's one show on the channel. What they don't see is the community built around it. You know, we make movies. My friends and I have made a movie called Camp Dakota, Dirty 30. There's a lot of different aspects of the business. So what I do as a digital influencer, it's not acting. It's more like you're building a small business and the business I produce is media. So it's more like being an entrepreneur. You have to stay informed and you have to try your best to make intelligent decisions. But you can't ever predict it. I mean, Snapchat, who saw that coming? Is there any advice that you can give? It's tough. I mean, it kind of goes back to, I think the only advice I could give that's relevant is take risks for opportunities you don't want to miss. Everybody says, strike while the iron's hot. But I kind of believe that you have to make the iron hot by continually striking. Heat up the iron. Yeah, you have to be like, I'm going, I'm doing it, I'm going, I'm doing it, I'm pursuing, I'm pursuing, and then it makes the iron hot. So tell me about what you guys are doing in the community, because you are taking it offline and going into real life also. Well, one of the in real life aspects of community that I am so happy about, proud to be a part of is what we call Have a Heart Day. This started back in 2013 when I went on a Indiegogo tour around the country of filming with people in their kitchens and then also volunteering at food banks. And what I noticed was some of the cities after I had left, they continued to volunteer together. And I was like, whoa, that's so great. And it started with like five cities, but now we have over 36 cities in nine different countries volunteering on a monthly basis and getting together in real life and hanging out with other members of the heterosexual community. It's more of a philosophy, a philosophy of love. I feel very blessed, slinks out of frame. Why? We're done. We nailed it.