TWO MORROWS
We were born two years apart — Matt first (May 1, 1986) and Stacy after (October 13, 1988) — and grew up as undeniably privileged 90s kids with parents who somehow turned fun into a profession. Our dad was a pediatric dentist and our parents worked as independent contractors for commercial Nintendo displays, which basically meant we got to live every millennial kid’s dream before they even knew it existed — convention floors, prototype systems, endless swag, and every console imaginable.
While most kids were just getting into gaming, we were already test-driving Nintendo, Sega, the Philips CDI, the Cybiko, Dreamcast, and every “too-ahead-for-its-time” gadget that ever hit a booth. We didn’t realize how rare that was — we were just two kids lost in the glow of our screens and our own imagination.
Our friend group was basically a tiny LAN party — two other boys, one N64 controller, and Zelda: Ocarina of Time on endless rotation. Our sibling bond got built somewhere between Hyrule and the living room floor.
When SimCity 3000 came out, we were obsessed. But when The Sims dropped — oh, it was war. We fought over the computer constantly, both completely addicted to building worlds, designing dream houses, and testing how long a Sim could survive in a pool without a ladder. Then came Napster, burned CDs, and the early internet music craze — until Matt’s LimeWire activity took down the family computer in one epic virus meltdown.
Travel was another constant for us. We were lucky — we got to see the United Kingdom, France, Australia, New Zealand, Germany, and everywhere from Hawaii to the Caribbean and Mexico. Those early adventures built our lifelong love for seeing and experiencing the world from every angle — and they still shape how we see things today.
Music became both our divide and our connection. Matt took Stacy to her first music festival, Sonic Bloom 2007, which classically ended in a sibling shouting match over bad MapQuest directions and a garage door slam to Stacy’s face. But, she still went to dozens of his jam band shows (STS9 — 30 times!) even though she claims she’s more “rave, bass, and dance” than “jam, chill, and hippie.”
We’ve never not gotten along. We’ve had our fair share of fights but it’s always had the undertone of real love between all of the slug bugs we shared to the arm, gut, or chest over the years. We have that deep sibling comfort — knowing every side of each other, where we come from, who we love, and what we represent.
We’re just two sides of the same coin — one more logic, one more creative — both shaped by a childhood full of tech, gaming, music, travel, and a shared sense of adventure that has been engrained in us since birth.
Stacy Morrow: Right Brain
imagination | emotion | color | communication
Stacy is the expressive half of the Morrow mind. She is a communications-driven creative who turned her lifelong obsession with media, music, and connection into a full-on career. She’s impulsive in the best way: led by instinct, sound, and story. While Matt refines systems, Stacy amplifies meaning.
With a degree in Communications and an unshakable pull toward music and digital storytelling, she’s built her path in the entertainment and tech world through intuition and emotion. She sees patterns in chaos, builds brands out of feeling, and believes everything from live music to the internet is a form of language.
The right brain keeps the dream alive, human, and felt.
Matt Morrow:
Left Brain
logic | systems | craft | execution
Matt is the structural mind behind the Morrow duo — the one who takes abstract ideas and turns them into functioning, profitable realities. With a degree in philosophy and about two decades of experience in brewing and business ownership, he’s spent years mastering how things work.
He personally designed, brewed, and built his brewery’s operations from the ground up, from dialing in recipes that won national awards (Juice Box IPA, 2017 National IPA Champion) to engineering and running a mobile canning business that serviced multiple breweries across Idaho and Washington. It wasn’t easy but it taught him how to balance creativity with consistency — and how to lead with both. Where others see chaos, Matt sees process.
The left brain of the operation — steady, grounded, and built for endurance.
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It all begins with an idea. Maybe you want to launch a business. Maybe you want to turn a hobby into something more. Or maybe you have a creative project to share with the world.
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It all begins with an idea. Maybe you want to launch a business. Maybe you want to turn a hobby into something more. Or maybe you have a creative project to share with the world.
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It all begins with an idea. Maybe you want to launch a business. Maybe you want to turn a hobby into something more. Or maybe you have a creative project to share with the world.