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The Dad Edge Podcast

The Power of Being a Good Man Not a Nice Guy featuring Kelvin Davis

The Dad Edge Podcast

Larry Hagner

Education, Self-improvement, Health & Fitness

4.8 β€’ 1.6K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 10 April 2026

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, I sit down with Kelvin Davis β€” fashion trailblazer, author of Be a Good Man Not a Nice Guy, creator of Notoriously Dapper, one of the first Black big-and-tall models for Gap and Target, and dad of two daughters. This one covers a wide range of territory β€” style, masculinity, nice guy syndrome, divorce, co-parenting, and raising daughters as a single dad β€” and somehow manages to be one of the most fun and most real conversations we've had on this show.

We start with style β€” and not the surface-level kind. Kelvin breaks down why how you dress is actually a statement about how you see yourself, how the right fit and color unlocks a level of confidence that can't be faked, and why most guys are unknowingly dressing for a version of themselves they no longer are.

Then we get into the heart of the show: the difference between a good man and a nice guy. Kelvin draws the line clearly β€” nice guys are motivated by approval and the avoidance of conflict, good men are grounded in purpose, principles, and accountability. He gets deeply honest about his own nice guy patterns, including a porn addiction and seeking emotional connection outside his marriage, and how staying in a relationship he knew wasn't right ended up costing him and his daughters dearly.

We dig into his divorce β€” how the girls responded, the pressure to pick sides, the importance of therapy, and what happened when his daughters moved to Tennessee and their relationship actually deepened over FaceTime. And we close with a powerful conversation about what Kelvin believes a dad's real job is: not to be liked, but to get your kids ready for the world.

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Timeline Summary

[0:00] Introduction to the Dad Edge mission and the movement to raise leaders of families and communities

[1:01] Introducing Kelvin Davis β€” style, Notoriously Dapper, big and tall modeling, and Be a Good Man Not a Nice Guy

[4:58] Kelvin's backstory β€” knowing from age eight that fashion was his calling and going back to speak at his old elementary school

[9:23] Larry's story with style expert Tanner Gazi β€” and the fat kid still living inside him who wears dark colors to hide

[12:58] What style actually is β€” and why the right fit unlocks confidence that cannot be faked

[14:03] How to build a base wardrobe β€” know your true size, nail the fit, then add accessories to elevate everything

[16:52] What happens when you walk into a room dressed confidently β€” including the people who love it and the ones who resent it

[19:53] How Kelvin learned to stop caring what people think β€” and why we all care to some degree

[23:50] Introducing Be a Good Man Not a Nice Guy β€” how Kelvin defines the difference

[24:36] Nice guys are motivated by approval and conflict avoidance β€” good men are grounded in purpose and values

[27:25] Covert contracts, people pleasing, and why nice guys always eventually fall apart

[29:01] Kelvin's nice guy symptoms β€” avoiding accountability, gaslighting, saying yes to everyone at the cost of himself

[31:33] The one place Kelvin's nice guy syndrome never showed up β€” fatherhood

[33:34] Why dads who weren't loved well as kids tend to over-serve their kids β€” and why holding the line is still the right move

[35:08] What Kelvin's daughters would have picked up on if he'd stayed in a marriage where he wasn't showing up as his true self

[37:03] The guilt and shame of a pregnancy that forced a marriage β€” and admitting the foundation was never really there

[40:37] Seeking emotional connection outside the marriage β€” and the fear that keeps nice guys trapped

[41:38] The unexpected peace of living alone for the first time after the divorce

[43:37] How the girls responded when he moved out β€” the pressure to pick sides and what Kelvin told them

[45:32] Kids hear everything β€” the damage done when adults talk about each other in front of their children

[46:22] Therapy for the girls starting in 2022 β€” what the therapist revealed about the older daughter's emotional burden

[47:31] His job was to carry his own anger β€” not put it on his daughters

[49:28] His 15-year-old's personality emerging β€” meeting her where she is and becoming more of a collaborator

[50:43] Since the girls moved to Tennessee, their relationship has deepened more over FaceTime than it ever did in person

[52:08] Creating psychological safety β€” how connection is the foundation of all influence as a dad

[53:28] When mom was more friend than parent β€” and why the oldest pushes back on her but never on Kelvin

[55:46] My job is not to be your friend β€” it's to get you ready for the world

[57:21] Larry's 18-year-old in the 1,000 pound club β€” and the moment your kid surpasses you is the moment you know you did your job

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Five Key Takeaways

  1. Style is not vanity β€” it's communication. How you dress tells the world and yourself who you are. If you've been hiding behind dark colors and ill-fitting clothes, ask yourself what you're really trying to hide.
  2. The difference between a nice guy and a good man is what drives them. Nice guys chase approval and avoid conflict. Good men are grounded in purpose, values, and accountability β€” and people feel that difference.
  3. Your kids are watching everything β€” including how you treat their mother, who you are when your guard is down, and whether the man at home is the same man everyone else gets. They will model it.
  4. Your job as a dad is not to be liked β€” it's to get your kids ready for the world. That means holding the line, teaching respect, and preparing them for authority figures, hard seasons, and life without you.
  5. Psychological safety is what makes your kids come to you. Connection comes first. Without it, you have no influence β€” no matter how many rules you set or sacrifices you make.

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Links & Resources

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Closing

If there's one message from this episode that stands out, it's this: your kids don't need you to be their friend β€” they need you to be the man they can model their entire life after.

Kelvin Davis built a brand around showing up as your true self β€” unapologetically, consistently, and confidently. But it took a failed marriage, a divorce, and years of self-work to get there. And out of all of it, he's built a deeper relationship with his daughters than he ever had when they lived under the same roof.

That's what happens when a man stops performing and starts leading.

If this episode resonated with you, share it with a dad who needs to hear it.

Go out and live legendary.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Dad Edge podcast. The Dad Edge movement creates leaders of men, leaders of families, and leaders of communities. We will not only impact this generation of fathers, but the next generation as well. The kids we are raising will have better chances and odds stacked in their favor because of the amazing example

0:21.2

that their fathers emulated for them. We are here to change the world. We are here to change

0:27.6

relationships. We are here to positively disrupt this generation of fathers so no man goes to their

0:33.6

grave with regret. We disrupt the drift of busyness and replace it with razor-focused intention,

0:40.3

passion, purpose, and direction.

0:43.7

We are the Dad Edge,

0:45.7

and we're here to change the game.

0:47.8

We're here to change the game.

1:05.3

I don't know. Calvin Davis, welcome to Dad Edge. Good to see, man.

1:09.0

Thank you. Thank you, brother. It's a pleasure to meet you, Lairn. Yes, sir.

1:14.3

Yeah, man. I do. Okay, so I got to know the story behind this killer hat you got going on.

1:16.5

Okay. Thank you. Thank you.

1:20.1

And what better question to ask than a style expert. So what you go?

1:28.6

I got this hat. It's custom made by a guy named Willie. He owns a company called Ham Pui Hats.

1:31.3

And I wanted like a solid black hat.

1:33.2

And he made it for me.

1:37.0

And then I got this from a thrift store and I put it on there.

1:39.0

I got faith over fear on the pen.

1:42.0

And then I just have like a few feathers in the back here.

1:44.3

And yeah, just try to keep it simple but have like a little flare. Yeah, man. I like it. And you have to tell me about the glasses too, man.

1:50.3

Those glasses are killer. Thank you. I get them from Zinny. So I have a stigmatism and I sometimes

1:58.2

don't wear my glasses, but it's really gloomy out here today in Columbia

...

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