Skip to main content

The Try Guys Built a Brand Loved by Millions by Not Being Afraid to Fail


#TheTryGuys #NedFulmer #KeithHabersberger #ZachKornfeld #EugeneLeeYang #TheTrypod #Success #Failure
With more than 2 billion views and 5.8 million subscribers and counting, Ned Fulmer, Keith Habersberger, Zach Kornfeld and Eugene Lee Yang have succeeded because of the power of trying.
Of course, that's their entire brand. The four friends are The Try Guys, creators of an award-winning comedy documentary series that has seen them get outside their comfort zones and try just about anything, from labor pain simulators to dog sledding in Alaska.
In June of 2018, the former Buzzfeed employees started their independent production company 2nd Try with the aim of creating even more projects with the philosophy that being open to new experiences just makes you a better human, and their perspective is one that has deeply resonated.
Now entering into their second year of business, the guys are about to embark on what they have dubbed The Summer of Try.
They recently launched a new podcast called, naturally, The Trypod, and their first nationwide tour, Legends of the Internet, begins on June 21 in Los Angeles. On June 18, the Try Guys will release their first book. It chronicles their experiences tackling their biggest insecurities through trial and a lot of error -- and it’s titled The Hidden Power of Fucking Up.
In a wide-ranging conversation for How Success Happens, the guys reflected on the year that was and big plans to come.
On finding great collaborators
“We have this shared vocabulary and shared understanding. But I think we make each other better in the ways that we're different. So our backgrounds are really diverse in the content we enjoy and the content that we aspire to make,” Kornfeld said. “The best version of this is that we pick up where the others maybe aren't as strong and we balance and challenge each other. I think for any creative partnership it's important to surround yourself with people that can challenge you intelligently and creatively.”
On the learning curve of being your own boss
"The biggest change when you're completely running the show is, when everything is focused around The Try Guys brand, our time management became a big challenge. We try to delegate as much as possible, yet there were still so many things that required one of us in person, either helping out, reviewing something or being on camera,” Fulmer recalled. “So finding the proper structures to be able to delegate our own work and to create a community around that, those are some big early challenges. I think to trust that other awesome creative people are going to come and take what you do and make it even better, I think that is something that is always difficult.”


On the importance of failure
"There's so much growth in failure and there's a reason that we're not just the 'success guys,' we're the Try Guys. In every video, we don't master anything that we try, but that's not the point,” Habersberger explained. "By going in and simply trying and failing or doing OK, being open to a new experience and broadening your horizons just makes you a better person. We have seen it. We have become smarter, more emotional, more sensitive people as we have grown and tried the 200 things we've tried. We want to really encourage that idea to others and in all the stuff that we do. We want to keep that freshness of going into something with an open mind, being respectful, giving it your all. And if you totally suck at it, that's OK. It's not about how well you do it, it's about you learning and trying something new.”
On creating work that makes an impact
“Content isn't just a brand or message that you develop yourself and then throw out into the echo chamber. It's a mirror. And the mirror that you were reflecting back at yourself can be so well-informed, not only by your friends and family but by the audience members, who then help lead you to understand what is most poignant for them [in terms of what you make]," Yang said. "The four of us have shifted a lot in regards to the aspects of our personalities and our stories and even the way we formulate content, from what people like, in Patreon, or what the audience have said they like about us. You never know what makes you special outside of that little thing in your head telling you what you believe. I think as you become a more open person and let others in, just in your regular life, you'll be surprised by how much you find and how you can then incorporate that into the work you put online.”
Check out the Try Guys’ five favorite videos below, and for the full conversation, take a listen to this episode of How Success Happens.
1. Why We Started A Company

"We told the story of the struggle, anxiety and ultimately rewarding success of our decision to leave BuzzFeed and start our own company, 2nd Try. It was a challenging, special time in all of our lives that is now chronicled forever."
2. The Try Guys Bake Pie Without A Recipe

"Our 22-minute pilot for a TV cooking show. It's suspenseful, funny and heavily stylized."
3. The Try Guys DUI Series

"Our first big risk as a new company, we love this series because it is a socially responsible message showcased in a hilarious way. Classic edutainment."
4. The Try Guys Try Labor Pain Simulation

"172 million views and counting, this was our most shocking exploration into motherhood."
5. The Try Guys Try Not To Die Alone

"This was our first really long video and our first branded video. It's a wonderful blend of survival information, character growth and longform storytelling that proved we could make big projects together."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is "intimacy avoidance"? (Glossary of Narcissistic Relationships)

  #Intimacy #Narcissistic Relationships #IntimacyAvoidance #Therapy, #Triple5light.com ACON Adult Children of Narcissists BAITING A narcissist loves to provoke a reaction from you, especially in public. They will provoke you into responding in an angry or emotional manner. (Your angry response is further evidence of your unbalanced state of mind). BLACK SHEEP The black sheep is blamed for just about everything that goes wrong within the dysfunctional family. They can’t do anything right. Their achievements are not recognized by the narcissistic parent and are swept under the carpet. BOUNDARIES Boundaries are a code of conduct or an unwritten set of rules which we consider to be reasonable behavior from those around us and our response when someone steps over the line. CLOSURE Closure in a normal relationship involves open and honest communication about what has gone wrong, you then wish each other well, say goodbye and move on. After a relationship with a narcissist e

How a Group of Gay Male Ballet Dancers Is Rethinking Masculinity

#Queerness #Dancers #Ballet #Masculinity #Dance #LGBTQ #Gay These men are finding new stages on which to express their #queerness, collapsing gender barriers in the world of dance. 1. The Ballerino When I was 15, I met a dancer from Canada’s  Royal Winnipeg Ballet . The company had come to  Los Angeles  to dance in the  Olympic Arts Festival , and my parents volunteered to host a post-performance dinner in our backyard. I recall about 200 people — family friends, Olympic officials and maybe 25 dancers — eating curry (is that right?) off paper plates. But that’s not what this is about. No, this is about the ballerino — my word for him — I met and what he represented to a lonely gay kid in Southern California in 1984, a kid who had never before met another gay person. Earlier that evening, I had seen the dancer turn, leap and smile onstage, expressing through the mute language of ballet who he was. Something about his movement told me he was gay, and I felt he was dancing not

Juneteenth: An important day that marks the end of slavery in the United States.

  #Juneteenth  #Hope #Empowerment #Celebration #EmancipationProclamation  #AbrahamLincoln #Holiday #BlackAmerican #AfricanAmerican  #AmericaHistory #AfricanAmericantherapist #Triple5LightTherapy  The Emancipation Proclamation, issued by President Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863, declared freedom for enslaved people in Confederate states. However, it took over two years for the news to reach enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas. On June 19, 1865, Union Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston and personally announced the end of slavery, effectively emancipating the remaining enslaved individuals in Texas. His arrival and announcement marked a turning point in the history of slavery in the United States. This momentous event became known as Juneteenth, a combination of 'June' and 'nineteenth.' Juneteenth is a day to remember and celebrate. It's an opportunity to honor, recognize, and celebrate the achievements and contributions of Black Americans to the n

"Love is a combination of six ingredients: care, commitment, knowledge, responsibility, respect and trust". Bell Hooks

#AfricanAmerican #BellHooks #Love #Respect  #WhereWeStand  #ClassMatters  "Love is a combination of six ingredients: care, commitment, knowledge, responsibility, respect and trust". Bell Hooks A writer, teacher and cultural critic, bell hooks is best known for her work examining systems of domination, especially racism and patriarchy, and how they may be overcome. She has published more than twenty books, including  Talking Back: Thinking Feminist, Thinking Black; Killing Rage: Ending Racism , and  Where We Stand: Class Matters . hooks says that uncovering and naming the forms of oppression in our society is an extension of her lifelong curiosity about love and her desire to see love manifested. “Perhaps the most common false assumption about love is that it means we will not be challenged or changed,” she once wrote in the Buddhist magazine   Shambhala Sun . “When I write provocative social and cultural criticism that causes readers to stretch their minds, to think