Ghat-that is a space for creative minds to gather, experiment, and share their work—a sort of online local art gallery for ideas, projects, and collaborations. I’ve always been surrounded by friends whose creativity attracts people like magnets, and I’m constantly asked to help bring their ideas to life. With experience in HR, business registration, management, and loans, I’ve learned how to take messy ideas and make them real. Ghat-that is my way of giving that same support to others.
The artists I’ve been blessed to know do not create for cafés or curated festivals. They do not chase social-media fame or polish their work for likes. They write poetry to see if a neighbor will raise an eyebrow. They invent jokes, projects, and ideas simply to make their friends laugh, to spark curiosity, or to see if they can provoke a reaction in someone who has seen too much to be easily surprised. The art is not a brand—but the community might be. And this community is what Ghat-that nurtures.
Most people never reach the point of needing an LLC simply because they don’t know where to start. Ghat-that changes that: it’s a place to organize projects, display art, and see what putting your talents to work could actually look like. If a project generates traffic, revenue, or momentum, I can help structure it so it has staying power.
Take my brother Jon, for example—he’s building a gamified social media project FragSocial. I handed him control of the site, and now he’s helping manage project pages in return. Tyler has ideas people love, so I turned one of his jokes into a shirt design and created a dedicated page for it.
We’re living in a world where social media is noisy and impersonal. Facebook is tired. TikTok is crowded. But what if a brand could grow organically from a space that already attracts interesting people? Even if the site never generates massive traffic, Ghat-that gives creators a place to showcase their work—a permanent, uncluttered archive of their interests that doesn’t get buried under “influencers.” The art can draw attention, even to ads, but it will never be forced to become an advertisement itself.
It’s a little chaotic, a little nostalgic, and entirely real—like the shirt designs, the projects, and even the poems we share. As Tyler once said (and I laughed until I cried), “People don’t care about what we lost as long as they can sit at a computer and have drones feed them applesauce.” That ridiculousness, that humor, and that spirit of curiosity are exactly what Ghat-that is all about.