Listen to the Podcast About Hustle & Bustle Events
![Podcast for Hustle & Bustle Events](https://www.felixandfingers.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Jazmyn_Pederson_youtube_cover-300x169.jpg)
Podcast Summary
On the latest episode of Eventful Endeavors, host Austin Reed celebrates the Hustle & Bustle Events with its founder, Jazmyn Pedersen. Jazmyn helps to explain the passion and dedication that defines her wedding planning business. She shares insights on Hustle & Bustle’s comprehensive services, which range from day of coordination, long-term planning to content creation and marketing work for wedding vendors.
Besides the core wedding services, Jazmyn has expanded Hustle & Bustle Events to include content creation and networking business. She enjoys offering couples a behind-the-scenes recording of their special day, providing them with a unique keepsake. Such extensions of her brand demonstrate her commitment to making every wedding day special and distinct.
Jazmyn explains that her interest in wedding planning began at an early age, kindled by movies and childhood dreams. It’s this passion for weddings and dedication to her craft that have shaped Hustle & Bustle into the successful, extensive operation it is today. Her career in the industry started a decade ago at a full-service venue, Berry Acres, which served as the foundation for her entrepreneurial journey.
This podcast emphasizes how Hustle & Bustle Events leaves no stone unturned in creating memorable moments that last a lifetime. Through a combination of hard work, creativity, and a keen understanding of the industry, Jazmyn Pedersen ensures that every wedding is a reflection of the couple’s unique love story.
Learn more about Hustle & Bustle Events
This interview was provided by Felix and Fingers Dueling Pianos
Podcast Transcript
Felix And Fingers (00:25)
Hello everyone, welcome to our episode of Eventful Endeavors. Today I am joined by my special guest, Jazmyn Pederson with Hustle and Bustle Events. How you doing?
Jazmyn Pedersen (00:35)
I’m good,
how are you Austin?
Felix And Fingers (00:37)
So good. You know, not only are you my first guest personally for me on this podcast, but you are also a dear friend of mine. So I’m really looking forward to this today. It has been way too long since we connected last. yeah, I mean, just tell me, tell me about your business. Tell me about Hustle & Bustle.
Jazmyn Pedersen (00:54)
So Hustle and Bustle Events is a wedding planning business first and foremost. But I do a lot of little extra things here and there that I’ll tell you about. So my passion is weddings. So I do wedding planning, day of coordination, longer term planning, all those things. And so I’m with the brides on their days. But I also do content creation, which is something I added about a year ago. So a lot of phone.
recording so they get to have a little behind the scenes of their wedding day. And then I do some marketing work for wedding vendors and I also run a networking business. So Hustle & Bustle Events is just kind of…
Felix And Fingers (01:24)
you
It’s a hustle, yeah. mean, you’re driving everywhere. it’s pretty fun. And you’re bustling the dress. Yeah, you had to come up with the play on. Yeah, I love that. Love that. So what got you into the wedding industry? Like, what was the start?
Jazmyn Pedersen (01:33)
Yeah, exactly. And then on wedding day, I’m bustling the dress. So, hustle and bustle.
Exactly, yep.
So I always loved weddings and I used to tell people that I wanted to be a wedding planner because I saw the movie Wedding Planner with Jennifer Lopez in it and that was I mean that that’s like that’s what I remembered being like I want to do that someday, but I want to tell you something funny. I was looking in my little baby book recently and in that book my parents would ask me what do want to be when you grow up?
Felix And Fingers (02:00)
A great movie.
Jazmyn Pedersen (02:15)
and I always put the same thing in it’s so funny because I didn’t remember that I apparently wanted to be a wedding planner back in like early elementary school before the groupie the wedding planner came out because it’s written right there she either wants to be a dancer or she wants to be a wedding planner so I was like oh it’s it was meant to be I’ve always wanted to do that so yeah
Felix And Fingers (02:28)
you
very fun. I love that. Yeah.
said I don’t know I had the lot of chances so I wanted to be an astronaut and then I switched. I think there was one point where I said I wanted to work at a grocery store. I very low standards growing up. But you know I ended up in the in musician or the music industry which led me to the wedding industry which is just a it’s such a powerhouse here in Kansas City. I feel like it’s there’s just a lot of uniqueness there’s a lot of just difference like the cultural diversity that we have here’s like the clients that get to
Jazmyn Pedersen (02:47)
Nice. I mean, that’s cool too.
Yep.
Alright.
Felix And Fingers (03:07)
work
with, just kind of all over the place. And it’s just really a beautiful, just like, messa of just, it really is, yeah. There’s something to be said about just the Kansas City area, the music industry, the wedding industry, all of that. So yeah, even from a young age, that was, that was…
Jazmyn Pedersen (03:14)
community.
Yep.
And so then when you asked how I got started, I, it was 10 years ago, actually. So, well, 10 and a half. I started in the wedding industry. I started working for a venue first and I was at this full service venue for six and a half years. So that it was called Berry Acres. It’s called Berry Acres. so it’s an Odessa and it’s a full service venue where
Felix And Fingers (03:43)
What was the name? okay.
Jazmyn Pedersen (03:51)
the brides and grooms come and they can get married with no stress because it’s all in-house. They take care of, you know, like the coordinating plus the DJ, the food, the decorations and all that stuff. So I worked as, you probably call it the venue manager. so I oversaw all of those different categories and the different aspects. And I also did the social media for them and the marketing. And so.
I did that for six and a half years and then decided I wanted to start my own business and get out of my own and do just instead of all the full service just focus on the planning.
Felix And Fingers (04:32)
So is Hustle & Bustle primarily based in Kansas City? Or do you guys… Yeah.
Jazmyn Pedersen (04:37)
Yes, Kansas
City is the main area that I focus on. I love that industry and that area. it’s, I don’t want to go out too far because I’ve spent so much time building relationships with the vendors and being able to tell these brides like, I know these people, they are great ones that you can work with. And so I love the Kansas City area. So I’m mostly home based there, but I do have connections in Iowa as well.
Felix And Fingers (04:51)
Of course.
Jazmyn Pedersen (05:04)
And I don’t mind traveling if somebody wants to take me to, you know, Colorado or cross the border. Yeah, exactly. So I’m open.
Felix And Fingers (05:09)
somewhere pretty, you know, all the scenic
places. Yeah, that is one I feel like of the benefits of being in the Midwest is a lot of the planners and companies that I get to work with, especially, yeah, they’ve taken us on several different destination weddings and different events like that. But it is a lot of fun. But no, back to Kansas City. So you were born and raised here?
Jazmyn Pedersen (05:28)
So fun.
So
I was born and raised in Iowa, is so Lamona, Iowa. It’s just exactly two hours north of Kansas City. my family members in Kansas City, my sister went to school, so we were there all the time. So it was just a second.
Felix And Fingers (05:40)
Yeah.
What’s the Graceland,
I’m assuming?
Jazmyn Pedersen (05:52)
So
Graceland was my family went there, but I went to UCM University of Central Missouri. Yep, exactly.
Felix And Fingers (06:01)
So tell me, What do you find unique about the Kansas City wedding industry? This area and the planners people you get to work with. What’s unique about us?
Jazmyn Pedersen (06:13)
So
I think that the community over competition aspect is the most unique thing. You’ll ask other people from different industries that they’ll have an experience in Kansas City and they’re from a different place. I’m like, my goodness, this is not the same. Everybody is one for themselves everywhere else. But when we come to Kansas City, it’s about.
community, working together, making sure that the clients are happy and we do everything for them to make sure that happens and a big part of that is being able to work together. So that’s my favorite and I just sit back and I’m like I have so many friends in the industry and it’s even planners like they’re it doesn’t matter that they’re my competition that I get to support them and cheer them on when they have successes and they do the same for me.
Felix And Fingers (06:53)
It’s true.
Jazmyn Pedersen (07:02)
So, I love you.
Felix And Fingers (07:04)
It really is just a beautiful thing because I feel like it spans across like many industries in Kansas City. It’s not just the wedding and like the music industry is like that, the corporate industry is like that. It’s just it’s just big enough of a city to get the big city feelings but it’s such a tight community.
For everyone knows each other, and especially in the wedding industry, mean the amount of referrals and stuff that you work like that you just find on the vendor, it’s just, it’s a really, really cool and just like next thing. I just, yeah, I gotta love it.
Jazmyn Pedersen (07:38)
Yay.
Felix And Fingers (07:38)
okay, tell me about like passion projects. I feel like everybody that works in this industry, so like for us, we have what’s called like a dream 50 client and like it’s 50 people. like, I would love to work with you type of things. That’s kind of like our passion project. Like tell me about like kind of What is maybe on your horizon or just stuff that you would love to do or work with someday.
Jazmyn Pedersen (08:00)
Yeah.
So I have a really cool passion project that I’ve been doing for the last, since 2022. So there was this networking group called Thursday therapy in the Kansas city. And I believe it started back in 2011, something like that. And so what it is is people come together in the evenings and they just network and mingle. And that’s part of how the, mentioned before the community.
Felix And Fingers (08:09)
you
Jazmyn Pedersen (08:29)
industry got together and started being friends with one another because they’re spending time together and getting to know each other. And so this networking group called Thursday Therapy was part of that. And I joined it in 2022 and took over the social media marketing aspect of it with my partner, Abbey Church of a wedding come true. And we started after COVID. So it took a little bit to build it up. People were not sure they wanted to get back out. And
So we were sharing with like 16 people attending these events when there used to be 50 set to 70. So we worked it back up from 16 people and now we regularly have anywhere from 80 to 100 people attending these events. And it’s actually grown to be something bigger. So we do what’s called a style shoot at these events. And basically that is where we bring a group of vendors together to do a mock wedding.
and they pretend that this model couple is getting married and somebody provides the flowers and the cake and the photography and all the things to make it something that is worthy of using for your brand and for your portfolio so that these vendors can build their businesses and use it to grow.
And so what I love doing, the passion part for me is being able to create a space for people to build their businesses, number one, make something beautiful. And then in the evening portion of the night, we get to all mingle together, meet and see what they have created in the day. And so these vendors are coming and supporting all of what happened throughout that day. So.
That was Thursday therapy and Abby and I, actually changed it and rebranded to call it monthly merriment last year. It used to be nationally owned and we wanted it to be locally owned and ran by just the two of us. So we rebranded and now it’s grown to be this amazing thing that we’re really proud of and love. we
in turn have started a new thing which is a charity event to occur every December. So with that, yeah, and we call it Cheers and Charity. We’ve done it two times now and we work with another networking group called Wedding Vendor Social and Wedcase Seed advertising wedding industry groups. So yeah, we put this charity together every December and we choose a charity and everything that we make goes towards
Felix And Fingers (10:35)
wow.
Yeah!
Jazmyn Pedersen (10:57)
that charity and each of the vendors do a like this is our volunteer work this is we’re gonna give this service and everything goes to them so for me it’s just really exciting to see everybody come together and I get to help facilitate that.
Felix And Fingers (11:11)
Yeah, for sure. Yeah, having
worked, just like been a part of a couple of those Thursday therapy events, it’s really cool to see, just like to hear about how that’s grown and to what it is now. That’s really, really neat. I feel like the ones that I think Ashley and I were on were…
Jazmyn Pedersen (11:24)
Yes.
Yeah.
Felix And Fingers (11:28)
some of the earlier and even were amazing they were so much fun
Jazmyn Pedersen (11:30)
Earlier ones. Yes, I know. Isn’t it fun?
Felix And Fingers (11:34)
I think I still have one of the they had a vendor that was painting hats there I still have that hat it’s hanging on my wall
Jazmyn Pedersen (11:38)
Yep. Yep. so fun. Yeah.
Yeah,
we, I sometimes people will bring things and we get to do little activities and stuff. But one thing that happened recently in January was a murder mystery event. And so we had like actors pretending that they were part of the mystery and like some of the bride died and.
It was like a whole thing. And because it was such a big production, we actually had a huge turnout of 140 people. And that’s the most that we’ve ever had. So we went from 16 to 20 people, 140 people in just a couple of years. And so exciting.
Felix And Fingers (12:18)
so
cool. And you brought up Abby Church. I Abby. She’s actually, I think I’m interviewing her on Monday. So I’m so happy. Again, I get to just talk to all my friends. I love this so much.
Jazmyn Pedersen (12:31)
awesome. She’s so great and she’s kind of like a mentor to me. She’s been doing her business for 10…
learned so much from her.
Felix And Fingers (12:40)
Oh
absolutely, a planner that I admire. Yeah, she’s amazing. So okay, well that, you kinda told me about like the little murder mystery thing, that’s super fun. I was gonna ask you, this is just kinda like a quirky question, but like, Has there ever been an event where like the world was ending, right? But only from our perspective, like the vendors, and then you were able to just tie it all together without the client knowing.
horror stories like that one.
Jazmyn Pedersen (13:09)
So my first reaction to that question was, it’s not exactly the answer that you’re looking for, but it kind of felt like the world was ending to everybody instead of just me. Like I always want it to be where it’s just the vendors, but there was an event one time where there was a tornado and it was coming. It was coming and everyone knew it. And we were like, okay, what are we doing?
Felix And Fingers (13:28)
I’m not gonna lie.
Jazmyn Pedersen (13:35)
and the venue didn’t have a basement. So we stuck women and children in this tiny little storm shelter and we put the men in like bathrooms and we made them all stay there and I think we were in there for like 30 minutes and like the power went off and everybody was just a little nervous.
But it was funny because the bride and groom were still in such good spirits and they thought it was funny and they were just walking around checking on everybody and we tried. We let them do that. So that happened. And for some reason, I don’t know how this happened, she said, you know, there was a tornado at my mom’s wedding. The bride said that. Like, that’s so crazy. Yeah. Yeah, like, wait a second. Is this gonna be funny? Your daughter was… Yeah.
Felix And Fingers (14:20)
Yeah, that’s like generational, that’s like emotional damage,
know, that’s man, that’s funny. That’s funny.
Jazmyn Pedersen (14:26)
Yeah, so, but not that
actually everyone knew about that. I mean, not exactly a behind the scenes thing, but.
Felix And Fingers (14:33)
think there’s anything
more Midwest than saying, hey, there’s a tornado coming. I know we’re at the wedding, but the party goes on. We’re gonna keep this fun.
Jazmyn Pedersen (14:42)
Yeah, that’s what they did.
They went back to dancing once it passed over.
Felix And Fingers (14:46)
Yeah, we had one
not too terribly long ago at the Abbot and it was right before we had snowmageddon out here. We got the two foot whatever it was. And it was that Saturday when we had all the ice come through and
just kind of freaking out about the ice. The bride and groom go outside and they are just like, you know the commercial where it’s like just the people just wearing the socks and they like slide into the room. We’re trying to reenact that outside and as you know we’re just playing, we’re doing our thing and we’re just like you know what they are just having the time of their lives. They’re not letting the ice or anything scare them away. I’m just happy that they’re happy.
Jazmyn Pedersen (15:11)
yeah
you
Yeah.
couple can just roll with it and instead of letting things get them down, that makes me so happy because inside I’m just like so scared for every little thing that goes wrong. But that makes it so worth it to just…
Felix And Fingers (15:29)
Yeah.
Well, because at
the end of the day, mean, if anything happens during the wedding, who do they look for? They look for the planner, the vendors, it’s like, all right, you messed up, it’s you. They find someone to point a finger at. But yeah, when they’re loose and easy, just having fun, that makes our lives easier, you know, and especially with the band, you know, that’s our only goal is to keep people happy, as I’m assuming it is the wedding planner as well. Yeah.
Jazmyn Pedersen (16:09)
make it my personal goal to never let them see me nervous or scared or upset or anything and I think I’ve done a decent job at that because my constant feedback is you were just so calm you gave me the best calming presence throughout the day I’m like okay that’s what I wanted like even if things weren’t going the best yeah
Felix And Fingers (16:29)
It’s one of those traits that just can’t be taught. You either
have it or you don’t. yeah, the wedding industry can teach you about how to panic very calmly. Things are mellow. And here it’s insane. It’s crazy. So many people. Yeah, I can only imagine from the planner’s perspective.
Jazmyn Pedersen (16:38)
Yes, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, exactly. Like, okay, this and this and this. Yeah.
Yeah, I know. Well, and that’s why we have
to be on the same team, because when chaos breaks out, everyone thinks something has to happen a certain way, but we gotta work together.
Felix And Fingers (17:01)
100%. Well, so you’ve been in this for a little while then. So you’ve been in the industry, you’ve won your fair share of weddings. What kind of, What experience and planning do you have that makes you and Hustle & Bustle unique?
Jazmyn Pedersen (17:12)
Actually, so that ties back personally, I think, to my experience in full service weddings. because I didn’t start out with just, I want to be a planner and just get into it and learn from a planner. What I did was I knew…
every single thing that needed to happen for a wedding to go smoothly from the beginning. So I knew that the caterer has to have the food warm at this amount of time and has to go out at this point for it to be the best for the couples. I knew that the DJ needed these cues in order for the music to start on time and to have the right timing. I knew
that transportation had a 30 minute buffer of when they needed to show up just in case, like all of these different aspects. And so as the coordinator who not only coordinated the wedding day at this full service venue, but I also coordinated all of the staff and all of the different things going on. I was able to learn so much. mean, the people that trained me, they just had a wealth of knowledge. They’re Alan and Angela, Barry and Barry acres.
They had done it for, they’d done hundreds and hundreds, thousands of weddings before. So I got to learn under them and that six and a half years that I just had so much knowledge given to me when I was able to go out into my business. Now I have every single thing in my mind of this, what’s what this person needs. That’s what this person needs. Instead of just, this is what I think needs to be happening and this is what I know the client needs. I have the entire picture.
And so something that I think is unique that I get to bring to couples is that I am going to bring your day together and I’m going to work with everybody and it’s going to be as perfect as possible. yeah, that’s what I’m bringing.
I love it.
Felix And Fingers (19:12)
It’s such a great industry. It’s taught me so much. Coming into, it’s just the music side, at for me, but just getting immersed into it, being able to work with other planners, just different effect coordinators. really just is, each one’s a unique experience. And even if you’re working with the same thing consistently, it’s just beautiful to meet how unique it is.
I have been, let’s see, music industry for probably 10 years now, wedding industry full time for around five, give or take. So not terribly long, but I’ve done, yeah, I’ve probably averaged at least like 100 to 150 weddings each year though, so like it’s just.
Jazmyn Pedersen (19:50)
Thank
decent amount of time.
That’s a lot of weddings.
Felix And Fingers (20:02)
It’s a wildfire, yeah.
And then we do the corporate side of it as well. So definitely there’s always work, but it’s always just so much fun to learn about everyone else’s experiences and just kind of grow collectively from that. Because that’s kind what this community here is all about. Like you said, it’s not competition, it’s community.
That’s really, I think, what the wedding industry is and should be about is community and just not competition. I try to put myself in a groom’s shoes. I’m not trying to compete with anyone on that day. I just want to have fun and just be free.
Jazmyn Pedersen (20:41)
think that you have to have the mindset of this is the most important day for these.
If somebody comes in and they’re just working and they’re like, yeah, another wedding, another weekend, this is just my job, then you’re not giving your all to them because you’re not realizing the significance of the day. So I just think it’s so important when vendors are just like, I’m here to be here for you and to make sure your day is as good as it can.
Felix And Fingers (21:07)
beautiful. On that note, what’s your favorite part about being a wedding planner?
Jazmyn Pedersen (21:13)
favorite part is that every single person that I’m working with is happy. They’re excited, they’re ready to celebrate, they are just like looking forward to this day and people don’t get to have that in everyday life. They are at their desk job, their corporate job, they’re working with people maybe in customer service that aren’t always happy all the time but generally overall everybody is so happy in that.
So I get to help bring it all together and make beautiful friendships and get to watch a love story unfold right before my eyes.
Felix And Fingers (21:49)
love that. I love that. And it’s so true. My favorite part of any wedding is the first dances. And it’s always my favorite part when I get to do it live.
It’s just, it’s one of those moments that as a musician, it’s, you know, I play hundreds of shows every year. But there’s nothing that compares to just the intimate moment of a live first dance. And there, you know, when I first got into the industry, was, was tough for me not to choke up on some of these songs. I watched them, just bawling and I’m just sitting here trying to be pretty and sing. It’s just one of those beautiful moments. And here recently, I’ve been able to do a lot of
Jazmyn Pedersen (22:09)
Okay.
Yeah. Yeah.
Felix And Fingers (22:25)
private last dances, which is just even more just like hits you right there. did one.
Jazmyn Pedersen (22:27)
Ugh.
Yep, because it’s just the like,
we did it, we’re here and we got to this amazing day.
Felix And Fingers (22:37)
Yeah,
we did one, I was in Destin, Florida. We were on the beach and they didn’t know that they had a private last dance scheduled. So they set me up in this area to where they thought they were just gonna get like a last moment before their send off. And I was sitting there with the guitar. I was just kind of hidden in the back but they come out and I was already playing stand by me. And my gosh, immediately both of them sobbing.
Jazmyn Pedersen (22:58)
Ugh!
I hope you
have a great
Felix And Fingers (23:02)
And
I am sitting here like joking. It’s one of those moments where yeah, I mean that’s our biggest goal is just to make people happy, to make their big day the biggest it can possibly be, the most spectacular event, the one they’re going to talk about for the rest of their lives. And I I love that so much about this industry.
Jazmyn Pedersen (23:25)
I
always encourage a last dance too. My favorite thing about, so when they’re like, we have these two songs and we can’t decide between this for our first dance, I’m like, well how about a last dance song? And then you get both and it’s perfect.
Felix And Fingers (23:39)
feel like it’s kind of a newer trend, at least for… I’ve noticed, even just a few years ago, that was just such a foreign…
Jazmyn Pedersen (23:50)
It’s just been like one or two years, really.
Felix And Fingers (23:52)
It’s really neat.
Jazmyn Pedersen (23:53)
Somebody on
TikTok came up with that probably.
Felix And Fingers (23:56)
TikTok
and content creation, yeah, it’s the day and age for sure. Yeah, so I guess kind of talking about content creation, you mentioned that earlier as kind of one of the things that makes you unique. What kind of got you started with content creation?
Jazmyn Pedersen (24:15)
So content creation, I picked up on that being a thing kind of before the wedding industry in Kansas City started it. I was watching it. You know how things happen on the coasts and then they work their way in, especially wedding trends. So I was watching people do it on the coast because I do get on TikTok and I watch all the wedding things and.
Felix And Fingers (24:29)
you
shamefully, same here.
Jazmyn Pedersen (24:38)
yeah.
So, well, and actually my business, when I first started, I knew that I needed to get my name out there and, without having a lot of weddings to display and to show, I knew that if I put myself on social media, then it would build. So I spent the first year and this will sound crazy. I’ve made a year, a real, day for.
six months. Like, so I had one reel that I put my face and you know I was doing the mouthing and whatever is going on and I was talking about weddings and my Instagram went from nothing to 3,000 in the first year which is crazy to me because I don’t know all those 3,000 people but I just had a viral reel happen one time and I had 11 million views on it and it was interesting. It was about
a bridesmaid and groomsmen who switched clothes and they were during the grand entrance so they were wearing each other’s outfits and I just taped it with my phone and I put it on Instagram and TikTok and it isn’t funny. So I built my business, I released my presence on social media through content and then I noticed this content creation thing coming about in weddings and
Felix And Fingers (25:41)
I’ve seen anything like that, I love it.
Jazmyn Pedersen (25:55)
I should probably jump on that because I’m capturing a lot of the things throughout the day on my phone anyway so that I could build my social media and I decided to include it as a package and so I offer that to couples. Most of the time it’s not me capturing the content. I’ve trained another gal where I have her come on wedding day and she gets all the behind the scenes, has the phone footage and then she gives it to me and I edit.
Felix And Fingers (25:57)
Yeah.
Jazmyn Pedersen (26:24)
videos for couples and so then they maybe they have a videographer and that’s way cooler than what I do but they do have some behind-the-scenes things going on and little video clips that they can put on their social media and be able to share their wedding over and over so I think it’s really fun little thing to do it’s not my main focus but it’s kind of like a side gig that I just love.
Felix And Fingers (26:49)
It is the
day and age of content creation.
can at the weddings and it’s difficult to do when you’re playing but you get a good talent for it over time. It absolutely is like oh I saw you on TikTok, I saw you on Instagram, I saw you on Facebook. It’s like oh yeah yeah I was there.
Jazmyn Pedersen (26:55)
you
Well, it makes it hard to keep up with though. I had a kind of a busier personal last year and I was not as present on social media.
Felix And Fingers (27:16)
I’m so bad about it, maybe I’ll have you guys just take over my social. I’ll hire you guys. Just do all my work.
Jazmyn Pedersen (27:19)
I
do run social media for three wedding vendors. So it’s one of my marketing things I do on the side.
Felix And Fingers (27:29)
That’s interesting.
Well, yeah, that kind of wraps up our time today. just do want to add on, Jazmyn has added that if she’ll add on six hours of wedding day content creation for anyone who books a planning coordination package through Hustle & Bustle, if you find us here on the podcast. So, of course, know that. Jazmyn, I want to thank you so much for your time today. Like I said, it is really nice to interview a longtime friend of mine.
also just someone that I get to work with here in Kansas City. So I appreciate you and yeah, thank you very much.
Jazmyn Pedersen (28:05)
I had lot of fun time.
Felix And Fingers (28:08)
saying likewise. So we will talk to you soon.
Be the first to leave a review.