They Quit Their Jobs and Each Put in $6,000 to Launch Their Dream Sports Business. Here’s How It Led Them to the College Football Playoff and Beyond.

From launching a scrappy start up to getting acquired, entrepreneurs Andrew Carter and Ben Walnick share their playbook for success in sports and entertainment.

By Dan Bova | Jan 05, 2026
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“We’re two guys who covered tornadoes and high-school football. Each put in six grand, bought some gear, and started cold-calling companies. No business degrees. No investors. No playbook. Just passion, timing, and the belief that storytelling was shifting from broadcast to digital. “

That’s how and describe the career path that led them to launching their own company, Let It Fly Media, which was acquired in 2024 by , a global sports and entertainment marketing company that works with the likes of the NFL, College Football Playoff, Premier League, and EA Sports.

After the acquisition, Carter and Walnick stayed on as executive vice presidents for Two Circles鈥 North America division. As the College Football Playoffs take center stage in sports, Carter and Walnick took a time out to share their advice on taking gutsy career risks and coming out with the W.

How did you get started?
Ben Walnick: We both left broadcast news 鈥 I spent eight years as a TV meteorologist and Andrew spent the same time as a sports anchor and reporter 鈥 to build Let It Fly Media, a content agency focused on fast, high-quality storytelling. What started as a two-person video shop became a full-service visual production company doing video, photo, design, and animation for major sports organizations and brands. We wanted to combine newsroom speed with creative agency quality. That formula helped us grow from a $12,000 startup into a company with a national footprint.
Andrew Carter: Then, in 2024, we became part of Two Circles, a massively successful global leader in sports. As we said at the time, it felt like taking a Ferrari off the streets and hitting the Autobahn. Everything we built started moving faster and further. It鈥檚 been an amazing opportunity to blend art and science in how we create sports marketing content.

Related: This Attorney-Turned-Executive VP Has Closed Hundreds of Sports Deals. Here Are Her Top Tips for Successful Negotiations 鈥 and Relationships.

What was your inspiration to try your own thing?
AC: We wanted more control over our creative future and saw inefficiencies in the market. When we started out, big agencies were slow and expensive, and freelancers were hit-or-miss. There was this middle ground that nobody was really serving.
BW: Our 鈥渁ha鈥 moment came at the 2018 PGA Championship, when the PGA of America noticed our work and reached out to collaborate. That鈥檚 when we realized this could be something bigger.

Any productivity tips you can share?
AC: Don鈥檛 get stuck in 鈥減aralysis by analysis.鈥 You can鈥檛 plan your way to perfect. Take action, learn, and adjust later.
BW: Write everything down. Lists keep the chaos organized and make sure nothing slips through the cracks.

Related: The NCAA Kicked Him Out for Monetizing His Platform. So He Turned It Into a Career.

What is something you wish you had known when you were starting out?
BW: Relationships are everything. Never burn a bridge. Stay persistent and keep communicating 鈥 that鈥檚 what opens doors.
AC: Remember that the work isn鈥檛 about you. It鈥檚 about the client鈥檚 story. The greatest creators listen first, then build from there.

Can you share one of your proudest moments in business?
BW: Standing on the field at the College Football Playoff National Championship was a big one. That was the moment we looked at each other and realized we鈥檇 gone from local TV to one of the biggest stages in sports.
AC: Just as meaningful has been building an incredible team and a culture that people actually want to be a part of. Moving into our custom office in Kansas City and seeing 20 people collaborating, laughing, and doing work they鈥檙e proud of 鈥 that felt like success, too.  

What does the word “entrepreneur” mean to you?
BW: Owning everything. When things go right, celebrate it. When they don鈥檛, you still own it. That kind of accountability is tough but freeing. It forces you to grow, trust your instincts, and make bold choices.
AC: 麻豆社ship is about taking risks, acting fast, and leading with purpose. It鈥檚 caring enough to do the hard stuff and believing enough to keep going when everything falls on your shoulders.

Related: How a Simple Game of HORSE and a $2,000 Investment Helped This Philly Kid Buy His Hometown NBA Team

How do you personally define success?
AC: Loving what you do, who you do it with, and being proud of the work. The money comes when the meaning is there.
BW: Building a place where people love the work and still have a great life outside of it. Balance is the reward. It鈥檚 the point.

“We’re two guys who covered tornadoes and high-school football. Each put in six grand, bought some gear, and started cold-calling companies. No business degrees. No investors. No playbook. Just passion, timing, and the belief that storytelling was shifting from broadcast to digital. “

That’s how and describe the career path that led them to launching their own company, Let It Fly Media, which was acquired in 2024 by , a global sports and entertainment marketing company that works with the likes of the NFL, College Football Playoff, Premier League, and EA Sports.

After the acquisition, Carter and Walnick stayed on as executive vice presidents for Two Circles鈥 North America division. As the College Football Playoffs take center stage in sports, Carter and Walnick took a time out to share their advice on taking gutsy career risks and coming out with the W.

Dan Bova VP of Special Projects

麻豆社 Staff
Dan Bova is the VP of Special Projects at 麻豆社.com and host of the How... Read more
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