By Erica Scott, Taylor Dunn and Rebecca Jarvis

Steve Aoki’s shortlist of accomplishments is exhausting. The Grammy-nominated, cake-throwing superstar is one of the highest paid turntablist’s in the world, currently ranking fifth on Forbes’ “World’s Highest-Paid DJs” list by earning $23 million last year.

His collaborations include artists like will.i.am, Lil Jon, Laidback Luke and most recently, One Direction star Louis Tomlinson. His record label Dim Mak, founded back in 1996, celebrated 20 years of producing successful artists like The Chainsmokers and Bloc Party, and he holds more than one Guinness World Record, including one for being the “most traveled musician in one year,” after he racked up more than 241,000 miles doing 161 shows in 41 countries in 2012.

Add in his philanthropic work from his eponymous Aoki Foundation and non-stop international musical tours, it’s hard to imagine when he found the time to design the clothing line that debuted last week at New York Fashion Week: Men’s. It does seem fitting that the name of his documentary would be “I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead!”

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In a recent interview on “Real Biz with Rebecca Jarvis,” the international icon spoke about his fashion line, his artistic inspirations, and how he has no plans to scale back any of his many enterprises.

“It’s almost, like, 90 percent risk,” Aoki said of his clothing line. “Since I make my money doing music, with fashion I’m not doing this for money, I’m doing this because I love, it’s my passion project … I’ve been silk screening shirts since I was 15 in my mom’s house so, it’s not necessarily about how much money can I make from it, it’s how can I turn it into a sustainable business, and still continue to pump out really great stuff that’s an appendage of my artistic freedom, and be able to do some really cool stuff with great people.”

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This is Aoki’s fifth fashion collection and first in the U.S. His previous four collections were available in Japan.

As if that wasn’t enough, Aoki has also teamed up with Spotify and All Nippon Airways — Japan’s largest airline carrier — to curate playlists for the airline’s customers.

“I’ve always been the kind of person that’s just following my inspiration, it doesn’t have to be one thing,” said Aoki.

So what’s next for this DJ/producer/entrepreneur/philanthropist who’s showing no signs of slowing down? To find out more about Steve Aoki’s upcoming projects, watch his episode on “Real Biz with Rebecca Jarvis,” and follow @RebeccaJarvis for more live interviews like this one.


Originally published at abcnews.go.com on February 9, 2017.

Originally published at medium.com