The Few Will Hunt Show

In this episode, Joey and Drew delve into why they chose the eagle to represent Few Will Hunt. They discuss the three main values of an eagle—freedom, hard work, and service to others—and how these principles resonate with the lives of The Few. Tune in as they explore the symbolism of the eagle and its significance for Few Will Hunt.

The official podcast of Few Will Hunt, the world’s largest community of hard workers and Made in the USA apparel brand. Family-owned and operated and headquartered in Philadelphia. We’re on a mission to restore the dignity of hard work and help others live The Rules of The Few to strengthen ourselves and strengthen society. No entitlement or excuses are allowed here.

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Creators & Guests

Host
Drew Beech
Drew Beech is an entrepreneur and cofounder of Few Will Hunt. He spent several years in the sales and marketing industry, grossing over several million dollars in sales. But his love for the entrepreneurial journey and desire to escape the rate race started with his personal training business in college. Today, Drew leads the Few Will Hunt community alongside his cousin and cofounder, Joey in their mission to restore the dignity of hard work through the highest-quality American-made apparel.
Host
Joey Bowen
Joey Bowen is co-founder of Few Will Hunt.

What is The Few Will Hunt Show?

The official podcast of Few Will Hunt, the world’s largest community of hard workers and 100% Made in the USA apparel brand. We’re on a mission to restore the dignity of hard work and help others live The Rules of The Few to strengthen ourselves and strengthen society. No entitlement or excuses are allowed here.

Drew Beech:

We're out here leading ourselves, our teams, and our families. Right? Like, that's why we do it, most of us.

Joey Rosen:

Yep.

Drew Beech:

It's not for for the glory or the fame. No. It's really to provide a better life for the life that we believe we deserve and we are ready to earn and the lives we want our family members to live and our team members to live.

Joey Rosen:

Exactly. Welcome to the Fuel Hunt Show. What's going on, Eagles? I'm Joey, and this is the Fuel Hunt Show. I'm joined by Drew, my cousin and cofounder to the left of me here.

Joey Rosen:

And, I'm happy to be reintroducing us because last episode, you did the intro. I was fearing for my job.

Drew Beech:

Yeah. Not

Joey Rosen:

yet. Back, baby.

Drew Beech:

We're back. There was some there was some lows and some areas I have to improve, but every day better, like, Wednesday.

Joey Rosen:

Every every day better, man. Every day better. Who would we be if we weren't pushing our limits

Drew Beech:

Mhmm.

Joey Rosen:

Personally?

Drew Beech:

And getting out of our comfort zones.

Joey Rosen:

Exactly. Exactly. Today, I wanna talk about a couple things. Right? But what I'm gonna do first is discuss a new object that has joined us on our table.

Joey Rosen:

This table that, Kare has donated or Kare's father has donated to us from the

Drew Beech:

I was gonna say it was

Joey Rosen:

w, I believe.

Drew Beech:

It's been used before.

Joey Rosen:

It it has. Okay. So you spoiled it. So it is the bucket. Okay.

Joey Rosen:

Okay? And, it has been used before. It is a bucket that I used to use for chalk during my power lifting days. Right? But it has a special purpose for the fuel hunt show.

Joey Rosen:

And I have a story behind it, but I'm gonna get out of the way what its name is first. It is the am I good, Dane? Is it Mike too far from me? Are we good? It is the fuck it bucket.

Drew Beech:

Mhmm. That's

Joey Rosen:

what we're

Drew Beech:

calling it. Alright? I'm in.

Joey Rosen:

Alright? It is a creative name for a swear jar. So I'm gonna start cleaning up my language on the show because I should probably do that anyway. Thank you, Dane. I should probably do that anyway, but also because of one other very specific reason.

Joey Rosen:

A community member, I'll just use her first name, not where she lives, her name is Maya, and she wrote me recently with a note of gratitude, really, about what we're doing on this show and what it means to her. She's going through, again, this the conversations that I have with community members are between us, so I won't talk about the specifics, but she's going through what we would call winter. Mhmm. Right? A winter.

Joey Rosen:

A challenging

Drew Beech:

Been there.

Joey Rosen:

Yes. As have I, many times. A challenging time in her life, not only for her, but for her family. And, she wrote in and I'm going to read a portion of the note that she wrote. No details in it, just a portion.

Joey Rosen:

Your podcast and I have my phone up here just so I don't, misspeak.

Drew Beech:

I'm gonna cry?

Joey Rosen:

No. Because I cut out all of the parts that I cried Okay. Because I don't wanna cry. And, the bucket bucket stuck.

Drew Beech:

So do I have to bring

Joey Rosen:

cash? We're gonna get into the rules of the bucket, but let's just talk about why it's here. I'm cleaning up my language for this reason. Your podcast has been therapy. I listened to it in my car.

Joey Rosen:

I'm gonna get upset.

Drew Beech:

Oh my god. Come on. Come on, hon.

Joey Rosen:

I'm gonna do it.

Drew Beech:

I'm also gonna I'm also gonna cry, but

Joey Rosen:

I'm gonna do it.

Drew Beech:

A tear bucket.

Joey Rosen:

I listen to it in my car while driving my kids to school and taking the long way home. It gives me fuel to keep slugging away, which is a term I love, slugging. Luck favors hard workers, I tell myself. Thank you and Drew for quietly being the wind beneath my wings. I did it.

Joey Rosen:

I did it. So the the reason that the Maya, if you're listening in your car with your children, please turn the volume down. Should give you that warning. The reason that the fuck it bucket is here is because I now realize that many Eagles are listening to this in the car with their kids, and I need to clean up my language and be a good example for them.

Drew Beech:

I wonder if we'll be able to check the box that says made for kids on YouTube now No. When they're uploading it.

Joey Rosen:

Judging by YouTube standards, probably not. Okay. But that's why the bucket's here. So the deal you you hit on the rules for the bucket. The deal is whenever I curse, I'm going to put a 20 in the bucket.

Joey Rosen:

A 20? I'm putting a 20. But listen You're a ball.

Drew Beech:

I am

Joey Rosen:

not a ball. I have 2 twenties in my pocket today. That's it. So if I exceed 2 curses, I don't know what I'm gonna do.

Drew Beech:

Steaks, dude.

Joey Rosen:

The the cash that I put the the Andrew Jacksons that I put in the bucket Yeah. Which is now the f it bucket, because I can know I only use f word, will go to consequence of HAB. Wow. Our, partner, nonprofit, I have not told Josh. I think I mentioned it on JJ's, show that we did with her, but I have not told Josh that more than likely, many donations will be coming his way from the f it bucket.

Drew Beech:

I can participate today.

Joey Rosen:

Okay. Oh, you got you got a 20.

Drew Beech:

I got a 20 too.

Joey Rosen:

I got them on deck. I will say that, you know, like, damn. If I say damn it, I don't really think that that

Drew Beech:

Oh,

Joey Rosen:

What do you think?

Drew Beech:

I mean, Blake 182 had a song called damn it. I I guess curse words were always allowed. But and, music, but I think damn it. Let's just start

Joey Rosen:

with all swear words.

Drew Beech:

I think damn it has to be on the list. Okay. Alright. So I would

Joey Rosen:

I mean, I didn't say this was for illustration. I mean, look. I just burnt one of them, dude.

Drew Beech:

So I only have one left.

Joey Rosen:

Alright. So so I I open with that with that story because Maya's note really touched me, and it also gave me the awakening.

Drew Beech:

There was more of that story?

Joey Rosen:

Oh, a ton more.

Drew Beech:

To her email?

Joey Rosen:

It was, like, a page long. That's why I was getting a little upset when I was reading it because, like, I know what the full thing says.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

And, like, I read a part that was very straightforward, but, as I was reading that part, like, all I could see visually, literally were the other words in my head. So that's why I kinda had a moment there, man. Had a moment. But I also tell her story for another reason, and that was her comment of us being the wind beneath her wings. That's not the first time that I've heard that, like, beautiful analogy.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

And it speaks to the eagle, which is the representative, right, of our community and our company, our counter movement. So what I wanted to do today was talk a little bit about why we chose the eagle to represent fuel hunt. Our rise eagles and some of our other die hard eagles probably know this already, and we have mentioned it, you know, on other shows and things like that. But today, we'll chop it up. We'll go into a little detail as to why.

Joey Rosen:

Yep. Since I'm on a role with storytelling, let me tell another story about the eagle. Specifically, I'm talking the American Eagle, the bald eagle. Right? Tell another story, and, I think it's really gonna move you.

Joey Rosen:

I don't know if you've heard it before, but did you know that Eagles can live to be up to 70 years old?

Drew Beech:

Did not know.

Joey Rosen:

Did not know that? No. Does it surprise you? No. Okay.

Joey Rosen:

Here's something that will. Around year 40, Eagles have a decision to make. They can either die or they can be reborn. It's a conscious decision that they can choose. Eagles that decide to be reborn need to make a journey.

Joey Rosen:

It's a multi month journey. It's like a 6 month journey. They journey to the top of the mountain, and they stay there for 6 months while they go through a metamorphosis. It starts with removing their own beaks. So they literally bang their beak on a rock for months until it essentially falls off.

Joey Rosen:

Pretty painful. Mhmm. And if you've seen any videos circulating on the Internet, there are images of eagles that have their beak missing from their face

Drew Beech:

Mhmm.

Joey Rosen:

Or, like, half their beak missing or it cracked. It's pretty intense.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

Once the new beak grows in, it's not over. Right? Obviously, it grows in sharper. It was dull before for after 40 years of use. Now it's sharper.

Joey Rosen:

They use that new beak to remove their own talons, to literally pull them out of their arms, legs. Right?

Drew Beech:

That's insane.

Joey Rosen:

Think about removing a fingernail, your fingernail with pliers, but worse.

Drew Beech:

One time I had to I dropped a dumbbell on my big toe Mhmm. And I had to get it peeled off because of the the blood swelled up so bad. I would never wish that pain on anybody. So I cannot empathize with the eagle.

Joey Rosen:

Recently, I slammed my well, last year. I slammed my thumb in a heavy, heavy door.

Drew Beech:

Got caught

Joey Rosen:

in a heavy door, and it partially locked with my thumb in there.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

And that same thing happened. Yeah. It was real it was bad, dude. It was bad. Crazy story, I went to BK live.

Joey Rosen:

My thumb was, like, all messed up. Yeah. And it was black. Like, my whole nail was black and everything. And there was a dude that went through the project, Matthew, I believe his name is.

Joey Rosen:

He had the same black thumb on the same hand. It was wild. So we were like brothers. But anyway, so they pull out their talents.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

Now as their talons are regrowing, as if this wasn't enough, as their talons are regrowing, they use their new beak to pluck out every single one of their feathers. Because after 40 years, their feathers have become matted and ineffective, not as aerodynamic. So now it's time for new feathers. So they pluck out every one of their feathers, and they regrow. So this whole process takes months.

Joey Rosen:

Like I said, up to, like, 6 months. At that time, new beak, new talons, new feathers. They have a new lease on life. They can hunt again

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

For another 30 years. They come down from the mountain, and they resume life as the aerial assassin we know them to be.

Drew Beech:

And that's true. That's factually, you fact check that.

Joey Rosen:

So I would love to say that all of those reasons are why we chose the Eagle to represent fuel hunt, but they're not because the entire story is false.

Drew Beech:

Oh my

Joey Rosen:

The entire story. And did I make it up? No. It is circulating the Internet right now.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

As we as we record this show, it is circulating the Internet. I had 6 eagles DM me on my my personal account with the with the reel, right, of this story because it's told so great. And, literally, you see the eagle and, like, half the beak's missing from the face, and you're like, holy shit. Like, what what is going on? Right?

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. So and another one. Now I'm I'm done. I'm gonna have to get a loan

Drew Beech:

from you if I

Joey Rosen:

if I need another 20. And you're like, what is going on here? You know? So it's very convincing, but a quick fact check

Drew Beech:

Yeah. Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

At any, like, I mean, you just Google it. Yeah. We'll tell you it's false. So

Drew Beech:

You can't always trust the fact checkers, though.

Joey Rosen:

No. I I I did my I did my homework. You know me. I did my homework. So the the thing is you probably start asking yourself questions then.

Joey Rosen:

Like, well, why in the video, at least the one that I saw, the eagle has half a beak. Right? Why is it plucking out its own feathers? All this other stuff. Well, that can happen, obviously.

Joey Rosen:

Like, eagles can lose their beaks, like, as a result of trauma. Right? They can pluck their own feathers if they need to. If they've got one that's, you know, like, hanging or whatever or some trauma, they pluck it out. The reality of it is, like, if an eagle plucked out all of its feathers, there's follicles, like, they bleed to death.

Joey Rosen:

You know what I mean? They lose so much blood. So the whole thing is false. And I've seen so many people, hot like, high level people of influence Yeah. Tell this story as if it was true.

Joey Rosen:

And it's it's Internet folklore.

Drew Beech:

A lot of people I I listened to your story entirely because you were telling it so well and didn't believe that. I was like, oh my god.

Joey Rosen:

I rehearsed it.

Drew Beech:

It. Yeah. It was it

Joey Rosen:

was I never rehearsed anything, but I rehearsed

Drew Beech:

this. Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

Because I was like, this has to be believable.

Drew Beech:

But a lot of people have sent it to me on Instagram Okay. And the few on Instagram. And I've held off on reposting it, but a lot of times I would I would repost a dope story like that on Instagram.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah.

Drew Beech:

Because I did. I said, you know what? This sounds too amazing to be true

Joey Rosen:

and Yeah.

Drew Beech:

Too sick to be, like, this is why we why we represent have the eagle representing us. Yep. But that's why I love

Joey Rosen:

If that was true and I missed, like, all of that, like, in the very beginning when we chose the eagle, like, that would be a a huge miss on my part. There's some truth in it. I mean, I'm no raptor expert, but I'm I'm yet yet. Really? There.

Joey Rosen:

There's actually, like, a bald eagle conservation or reserve in Alaska that I really wanna go to, but that's beside the point. There is some truth in it. Like, eagles do live, like, much longer than people think. Like, they can live, I think, up to, like, 40 years, which is crazy. You know?

Joey Rosen:

But there is no, there is no journey, but there is a lot of other hard work.

Drew Beech:

So when you said they lived up to 70 years, that was a lie. I trust you a little less. That was that felt that felt real.

Joey Rosen:

Well, like I said, I rehearsed it. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. I rehearsed it.

Drew Beech:

So now it sounds stupid for I was literally just No. About surprise.

Joey Rosen:

This morning before you got here, I was watching The Real, like, on my phone, like, over and over again over the corner. I was like, watching and watching.

Drew Beech:

Pugger, for some reason, did a bunch of alligator facts the other day. I'm gonna I'm gonna start having him like, you know what? Park we'll throw some eagle facts soon.

Joey Rosen:

Uh-huh. Yeah.

Drew Beech:

He's a big field hunt. God. Big big, big on the on the being one of the few.

Joey Rosen:

Yep.

Drew Beech:

Very proud.

Joey Rosen:

Good.

Drew Beech:

So he'll be stoked to hear that.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. Well, we'll get into some other Eagle facts here with, when we discuss why we really chose the Eagle to represent fuel hunt. The there's three main reasons, freedom, hard work, and service to others.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

But I don't know if we've ever really unpacked. Like, I know I've done it on the blog. Yeah. Well, but I don't know if we've really unpacked live, how each one of those things relates to the life of, an eagle. Before we do, though, talk about big eagle guys.

Joey Rosen:

I'm a big Ben Franklin guy too.

Drew Beech:

I don't know

Joey Rosen:

if okay.

Drew Beech:

Being when I always tell the story of one of my first mentors. When you said, like, I I love Ben Franklin, I bought, like, the biography. The Thought it was Port Richards Almanac. Yeah. He was all it's on the coffee table.

Drew Beech:

Frank. Yeah. Yep. Yep. Which was hard

Joey Rosen:

to see. Isaacson has a book on Ben Franklin. It's really good.

Drew Beech:

If you have any better, easier reads on Ben Franklin that you can recommend, I would love to read it.

Joey Rosen:

Isaacson's is good. Okay. Yeah. Isaacson's is good. That's fine.

Joey Rosen:

It's in that trilogy or actually I believe. He's written Yeah. Quite a few now. Our one employee, I believe. He's written Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

Quite a few now.

Drew Beech:

Our one employee, Carly. Did did you know she's a big Ben Franklin fan as well?

Joey Rosen:

I did not.

Drew Beech:

Do you know why? I like

Joey Rosen:

Carly even more.

Drew Beech:

So here's the reason why. It's interesting. Lineage? Where and you may say this is not true, but I trust Carly with my

Joey Rosen:

with my

Drew Beech:

I trust Carly with my heart and soul of my wife. Right?

Joey Rosen:

Yeah.

Drew Beech:

Apparently, where she grew up in Ben Salem is where Ben Franklin Landed? Maybe discovered electricity. Does that sound right? I mean, it's possible to to confirm with her, what but Ben Franklin resided there at some point.

Joey Rosen:

Ben Salem's a ways away from old city. You know what I mean? So, like,

Drew Beech:

I don't know. Something with where she grow her house Now I'm curious. It's not like

Joey Rosen:

now I don't.

Drew Beech:

Where her her fat her childhood home is Yeah. Has something to do with Ben Franklin. That's why she's been big fan.

Joey Rosen:

Eagles drop all your Ben Franklin facts

Drew Beech:

But I will confirm.

Joey Rosen:

In, in the comments for sure because now I wanna learn more Yeah. About it. And I'm texting Carly after this. It's like, tell me more. Tell me more.

Joey Rosen:

So we're talking about Eagles. I said I was Ben Franklin guy, and we're also talking about Internet folklore or folklore in general. So before we get into, you know, freedom, hard work, and service to others, and the eagle, the life of the eagle, and specifically the female eagle, Did you ever hear the tale or the story about Ben Franklin's displeasure when it came to the American Eagle being selected to represent the

Drew Beech:

nation. The turkey. Right?

Joey Rosen:

So that's the thing. Right? So there's some there there's some controversy. He wrote a letter to his daughter. And in the letter, he kinda disparaged the eagle a little bit.

Joey Rosen:

And he he said that the turkey was much more noble of a bird.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

And he would have chosen the turkey over the eagle. Right? Some people take it as it was a joke. Other people take it as, like, truth. It's kind of it's up for debate.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. We can't ask them, obviously. One thing that's not up for debate is that when the gentlemen, the founding fathers came together to decide on the home emblem to represent the nation, one thing that we can't debate is what Ben Franklin came to the table with initially. And that was actually a depiction, you know, drawing of Moses parting the sea.

Drew Beech:

Really?

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. And like a a pharaoh on looking while he parted the sea.

Drew Beech:

So Could you imagine that being our country's representation nowadays? Like, actually, there

Joey Rosen:

are So here's the so so here's

Drew Beech:

un American.

Joey Rosen:

Well, here's, well, here's the that's the thing. It really isn't. So here's the thing. His explanation was that rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God or your higher self. So where it was religious in nature, the meaning was that, you know, obeying a tyrant, whether that's a limiting belief that you have or a person that's not in congruence with how you wanna live your life is essentially like disobedience to your creator or your higher power.

Joey Rosen:

So that was his his suggestion. It wasn't even a bird.

Drew Beech:

I wonder how Ben and the founding fathers would have acted in 2022.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. That shit would have

Drew Beech:

went down, man. That way. Yeah. Uh-huh. I got you.

Joey Rosen:

Alright. You got me? Alright. Alright. We're putting another 20.

Joey Rosen:

Josh, man. $60 first day, man.

Drew Beech:

You got days back for this one.

Joey Rosen:

That's funny.

Drew Beech:

That's not my mistake.

Joey Rosen:

That's funny. Alright. Let's get in let's get into the to the Eagle a little bit. So why we did choose the Eagle? We we chose the Eagle to represent fuel hunt because of 3 very specific qualities that appear in the Eagle's life.

Joey Rosen:

Freedom, hard work, and service to others. Let's touch on each one of those 3. First, how it appears in the Eagle's life. Right? And then how it relates to the community, right, and our overall mission.

Joey Rosen:

Right? So let's tackle freedom first. Pretty self explanatory, I think, for for most people. Why don't you take a stab at it before I explain the how freedom appears in the life of an eagle?

Drew Beech:

So when we first stumbled upon the eagle or or suggested the Eagle, there was really no debate or discussion. It was just, okay. This is what we're going to do. Like, we we we were on the same page. The way I see freedom and how it applies to the eagle's life is that they are the apex predator.

Drew Beech:

Right? If they want something, they hunt for it. They attack it.

Joey Rosen:

Mhmm.

Drew Beech:

They soar it up in the sky and grab it out of the water that easy. And that freedom and choosing to hunt for what they want and being the hunters, not the hunted

Joey Rosen:

Mhmm.

Drew Beech:

Allows them to design the life and live the life they want as eagles or raptors. Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. I got you. So you hit you hit on both kind of. Right? So you're right.

Joey Rosen:

Like, in the life of the eagle

Drew Beech:

No one's fucking with them.

Joey Rosen:

They are free. They rule the skies. Damn. They rule the skies. Another twenty.

Drew Beech:

I don't have a 20 hour. I don't

Joey Rosen:

have a Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson should actually just be a Bro. Guest on the show after all of the

Drew Beech:

I'd I'd do a 10 in. I mean, that's we gotta save some cash for

Joey Rosen:

That's perfect. Further to see. So you're right. Eagles are free to go anywhere at any time and pretty much do anything that they want when it comes to ruling the skies.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

Okay? So that's how freedom appears in their lives. In our community and in our company, freedom appears because we are freedom loving Americans. Right? Mhmm.

Joey Rosen:

We believe in our country's fabric, and we see freedom as the raw material of everybody's lives. And that's another reason why we chose to make everything, all of our gear here in America. So at the time, we were making stuff all over the place, but we always had the vision that we were going to be 100% made in the USA,

Drew Beech:

and

Joey Rosen:

we made it happen.

Drew Beech:

Yeah. But still, I mean, a lot of sacrifice, a lot of give on our end to do so. We we didn't really raise prices. Yep. And we increased our cost because we know the power of making things in our lands by our hands and supporting our fellow American and

Joey Rosen:

Yep.

Drew Beech:

Good wages and living a life that they could be proud of

Joey Rosen:

Yep.

Drew Beech:

Is what makes us proud to put the putting the flag on our neck tags for the first time was such a hard hitting moment for me personally.

Joey Rosen:

It was earned. Yeah. It was earned. Everything that we had done over the past 6 years, I guess, at that time was was earning that moment.

Drew Beech:

Yep.

Joey Rosen:

And we also have to say that freedom is under attack nowadays, but there are people in our community that are laying down their lives to protect it. Not just our servicemen and women, but also our law enforcement officers, our first responders who the way I look at it, and it might sound dramatic, but I don't see it as such, we would not have been able to do what we've done, and we would not be able to continue to do what we do without them hitting the street. Whether they're on foreign soil or they're in Philadelphia, hitting the street every day to keep us safe and hold the line.

Drew Beech:

Yep.

Joey Rosen:

So, that you know, that's another reason. So Freedom runs runs through not only the Eagle's life, but also our community and our company. Alright. So that was the first one, the first quality of the Eagle. Our freedom enables us to do one very specific thing, and that is work hard.

Joey Rosen:

And you know how much we love hard work around these parts. So in an eagle's life, how does hard work appear?

Drew Beech:

I feel like I have the I feel

Joey Rosen:

like I

Drew Beech:

have the same answer for both questions. But

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. Pretty much. Yeah. Well, I think one thing that you you were you were speaking and you were like, hey. Look.

Joey Rosen:

Like, eagles roll the sky. They're free to do whatever they want. They can go out and design their life, blah blah blah. It sounds kind of easy

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

Because the way they've evolved. But what most people don't know is, like, 50% of Eagles don't survive their first winner. Really? Like, life

Drew Beech:

life I should know that.

Joey Rosen:

Life is very difficult for the eaglet and the eagle. Mhmm. It requires hard work. Like, yes. Do they have the sharpest beaks, the sharpest talons?

Joey Rosen:

Right? Do they have the sharpest vision? Are they apex predators? Yes. But it doesn't make life easy.

Joey Rosen:

No. They have the tools, but at 6 months old, they're basically pushed out of the nest. Yeah. And they have to go develop skills with those tools, the skills to hunt.

Drew Beech:

Yep.

Joey Rosen:

They learn something. And this is it's so remarkable. It lines up so well with who we are as a community. They learn something within the 1st 6 months of their life, which is there are no free meals.

Drew Beech:

Mhmm.

Joey Rosen:

Everything must be earned. Right? And that's how this quality of the Eagles shows up in our community. Look at the rules of the few. Right?

Joey Rosen:

No entitlement. Right? All hard work, no handouts. Earn everything. The hard work that the Eagle does lines up directly with how every single member of the few lives their lives.

Drew Beech:

Yeah. That was well said. I have nothing to add to that.

Joey Rosen:

So So that's the second quality. That was great. That's second quality. Right? So we're talking about all this hard work that's done to essentially survive.

Joey Rosen:

Right? Like, FIFO, like how I use the acronym and not the curse, the swear word. Yeah. Figure it out, or you ain't gonna make

Drew Beech:

it. Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

No free meals. Life quickly once those skills of hunting and providing are developed, life quickly takes a turn for the eagle. They don't rule the sky and make everything about them. Their life quickly takes a turn towards service, specifically the female eagle who spends the majority of her life in service to her young. Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

To rearing young.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

So it goes it literally goes from I'm being born as a Apex Predator, an aerial assassin with the best tools ever, and I'm free to do whatever I want 2, I need to develop skills to survive.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

There are no free meals. 2, okay. Now I have these skills, and now I'm gonna use them in service to others.

Drew Beech:

Sounds like the story of 1 of the few the storyline of 1 of the few.

Joey Rosen:

Mhmm. Mhmm.

Drew Beech:

And that really speaks to the mission of a lot of us and most I would say most of our if you want community members that and I think about this a lot when I write our post. I'm like, we're out here leading ourselves, our teams, and our families. Right? Like, that's why we do it, most of us. Yep.

Drew Beech:

It's not for for the glory or the fame. No. It's really to provide a better life for the life that we believe we deserve and we are ready to earn and the lives we want our family members to live and our team members to live.

Joey Rosen:

Exactly. So so well so well said. So well said. Yeah. It's it's, you know, from the ego standpoint, you know, she's not just a killing machine at that at that point.

Joey Rosen:

She's giving life to others. Right? So it's the same thing. Like, you can go through life skilled and just start crushing everything in front of you. But are you really fulfilled?

Drew Beech:

It's an empty life.

Joey Rosen:

Right? Are you really fulfilled until you start to to use those skills

Drew Beech:

Mhmm.

Joey Rosen:

And your learnings to provide for others and help them find their purpose and their skills in life.

Drew Beech:

100%.

Joey Rosen:

You know? So very, very well said. So I don't think anybody's asking the question of, so why did you choose to be equal anymore? But in a in a succinct if we had to put it in a very succinct way that hits on those qualities of the eagle.

Drew Beech:

Yeah.

Joey Rosen:

I I would say that we chose the eagle so that every single member of the few, when they see our eagle, they remember that they have the power to free themselves of whatever confines them, whether it's a self limiting belief, whether it's a relationship, whether it's a a 9 to 5 that they're working that isn't their true calling. They have the power to free themselves of what confines them. They have the power to work hard and build a life of purpose, a purpose driven life that is in service to others. You know?

Drew Beech:

Yep. One thing to add to that, one thing that always one the evictus prayer that I always have to repeat to myself, You're the master of your fate. You are the captain of your soul. That's what was going through my head when you were saying all those.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. I think that that actually I've never lined those two things up, like, the eagle, what we do Yeah. Our community and that, but so much so many common threads.

Drew Beech:

That that prayer speaks to the ethos, like, a lot of synergy between that that that poem or that prayer and Yeah. The few on Yeah. Community and ethos.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. I agree. So we we we mentioned rules of the few a couple times. We mentioned RISE a couple of times. So, to read the rules of the few, I'll just everybody that's watching and listening, to read the rules of the few, you can head to fuelhorn.comforward/rules.

Joey Rosen:

And to learn more about RISE, what we got going on in there, you can head to fuelhunt.comforward/rise. Make it nice and easy. Any closing thoughts on the eagle?

Drew Beech:

No. I will say we just added a piece of decoration to our house. It's actually it has our address. My mother and my stepmother-in-law got it for us for Christmas. Yeah.

Drew Beech:

It's an eagle head. I'll show it to you after this, but it's Okay. Homes a great little plaque, and it says, like, the beaches or the beach family. Nice. It has eagle and American flag behind it.

Drew Beech:

It's fucking dead ass.

Joey Rosen:

Is that

Drew Beech:

And it hangs

Joey Rosen:

Is that gonna make Ernest jealous?

Drew Beech:

It hangs behind the American flag in front of our house.

Joey Rosen:

Oh, very nice. Send me a photo.

Drew Beech:

I will. I will.

Joey Rosen:

I hope it doesn't do you think Ernest knows about this other eagle

Drew Beech:

that you have in your home? Well, there's there's Listen.

Joey Rosen:

I'm not gonna explain to him. There's there's

Drew Beech:

there's there's Ernest Junior, dude.

Joey Rosen:

This is true. Could be under shoot.

Drew Beech:

That is Oh, yes.

Joey Rosen:

Yeah. Yes.

Drew Beech:

That Parker got me.

Joey Rosen:

Yes. Yes. So if you missed the episode on the FEW Fest.

Drew Beech:

I'll bring it in next next

Joey Rosen:

Listen to that and then you'll, you'll learn about who Ernest the Eagle is

Drew Beech:

Yep.

Joey Rosen:

Our new our new mascot. Alright. I don't have any other closing thoughts. I, I'm really pumped that we got the opportunity to speak about this. Mhmm.

Joey Rosen:

Since we never really went down into the depths. So what I will do though I don't have any closing thoughts, but what I will do is leave the few with a reminder. Always choose hard work over handouts. Always choose effort over entitlement. No one owns you.

Joey Rosen:

No one owns you. You're one of the few. Let's hunt. Let's

Drew Beech:

hunt.