Greetings, welcome to the Dolphin Entertainment fourth quarter 2022 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If you wish to enter the Q&A queue at any time, please press star one on your touchtone phone. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to your host, James Carbonara, Investor Relations. You may begin.
Thank you, operator. Once again, welcome to Dolphin Entertainment's fourth quarter full year 2022 earnings call. With me on the call are Bill O'Dowd, Chief Executive Officer, and Mirta Negrini, Chief Financial Officer. I'd like to begin the call by reading the safe harbor statement. This statement is made pursuant to the safe harbor statement for forward-looking statements described in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements made on this call, with the exception of historical facts, may be considered forward-looking statements within Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Although the company believes that expectations and assumptions reflected in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it makes no assurances that such expectations will prove to have been correct.
Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements due to various risks and uncertainties. For a discussion of such risk factors and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements, please see risk factors detailed in the company's annual report on Form 10-K, contained in subsequent filed reports on Form 10-Q, as well as in other reports that the company files from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Any forward-looking statements included in this earnings call are made only as of the date of this call. We do not undertake any obligation to update or supplement any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent knowledge, events, or circumstances. I'd like to turn the call over to Bill O'Dowd, Chief Executive Officer of Dolphin Entertainment. Bill, please proceed.
Thanks, James, and hi, everyone. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today. As always, we'll start with the review of some financial and operating highlights, followed by a full financial review and then open it up for Q&A. From a financial highlights perspective, the fourth quarter set a new record for us, with revenue of $11.1 million. First time we passed $11 million in a quarter. Full year 2022 revenue exceeded our target, increasing 13% year-over-year to a record $40.5 million. In 2022, our balance sheet continued to improve. As followers of our company know, our put obligations have all been finished, and we now have only one remaining earn-out from our previous acquisitions left to go, which will be paid this spring.
Thus, our below-the-line items that need to be fairly valued will be cut in half from 4 such line items to just 2, which will dramatically simplify our financial reporting going forward. Furthermore, of the 2 remaining items, one of them are our outstanding warrants, of which there are only 20,000. That's right, just 20,000 warrants. The other is the last remaining convertible note, which needs to be fair valued, which only has a principal amount of $500,000. Thus, as we near the completion of the acquisition strategy that built our supergroup, the volatility in net earnings that resulted from needing to fair value large amounts of puts and earn out consideration is nearing its completion, which will allow us to more closely align our net income results with the metric we measure ourselves by, which is actual operating income less depreciation amortization.
To put it simply, what was a more complicated balance sheet over the past several years has been tremendously streamlined and simplified, and I think we're a stronger company for it. Let's move to some operational updates. I'm thrilled to begin with the news released this morning that veteran Fortune 500 executive Ellie Doty has joined Dolphin as Chief Marketing Officer. I would like to take a few minutes to explain the strategic importance of this position. First off, Ellie has over 20 years of experience in high-profile positions at major enterprises like Burger King, including being CMO there, Taco Bell, KFC, including being a CMO there, and Chili's, including being CMO there, which have shaped her into a formidable brand strategist and creative leader.
Since leaving Burger King a little over a year ago, Ellie caught our eye by flexing this brand-building expertise across several other sectors, including hospitality, tech, beauty, and lifestyle, assisting startups with creating long-term brand-building growth strategies. Dolphin is at the next stage of its growth. I mean, this is strategic for us, not just because we brought in a CMO of Ellie's caliber, but because specifically, we expect to bring in multiple 2.0 opportunities over the next 12-24 months. Opportunities like Crafthouse Cocktails, wherein we get paid a cash fee to secure the services of the various Dolphin agencies working on the account, but also where we receive equity in the product or services we are marketing. Some of these swings at the plate, since it's opening day baseball, right? Some of these will work, some will not.
However, they all have a much better chance at success with Dolphin's agencies working for them. They agree, or they would not be willing to offer revenue and equity in exchange for our supergroup supporting them. Furthermore, all of these opportunities need a point person within Dolphin to interact with the partner and guide the best plan for success. With Ellie's background, that person is her. Ellie has built marketing plans that range the gamut from startups with literally no money to an annual budget of $400 million at Burger King. She came up in the business through brand strategy, which is the path we value the most, as opposed to media planning, let's say, which is all well and good but isn't helpful to many startups or early-stage brands that don't have any money to pay for media, right?
You can media plan all you want, but if you don't have the money to pay for it, what's the point? Whereas brand building is essential. We expect that the vast majority, if not all, of our 2.0 opportunities will be brands that need building to hit their goals and dreams. Collectively, we have the ability to do that at scale. We need someone with the time and experience to guide our partners to the best results. For the companies we are receiving an equity stake in, they are getting access to a seasoned Fortune 500 CMO, which is a resource they would never be able to have on their own. Basically that is the why about Ellie, and now I'm gonna talk about the why now.
Because we're starting to prep for the immediate future, one in which we expect to increase the pace of our 2.0 opportunity evaluations and negotiations. I know many listeners out there really like opportunities such as Crafthouse Cocktails for Dolphin. Quite frankly, these opportunities represent the value of building a supergroup. It's what we knew from the very beginning. We have something unique, and companies are willing to pay us cash and equity to tap into our ability to reach consumers at scale. They believe that what we have and what we can do can be game-changing for them. It's that simple. From our business perspective, we receive equity in companies we believe in without putting up cash ourselves. Actually, we receive cash along with the equity.
It's a win-win, we get to fairly monetize what we have put together, the ability to access consumers at scale through every major vertical of pop culture: movies, television, music, gaming, culinary, hospitality, and consumer products. Who else has that ability? We believe we have a strong pipeline of those opportunities. We needed to organize ourselves to be able to execute on a slate of such opportunities, and that's why we hired Ellie now. Lastly, as CMO, part of Ellie's role on Dolphin's growing executive leadership team will be traditional, to design and execute a communications plan that for the first time turns the spotlight on ourselves, communicating what we have built and giving an additional platform to both the work we are doing and to the incredible leaders within our Dolphin family.
Currently, Ellie is collaborating with a team across Dolphin agencies to update the company's branding, messaging, and materials. She too is a huge believer that the most powerful marketing is earned, which is to say public relations and influencer marketing. She is working hard to develop new messaging and methods to share our unique story. As we continue with Q4 of 2022 and recent highlights, Ellie's addition then becomes even more impactful due to the fact that in Q4 we expanded the number of companies in our supergroup. To that end, in mid-November, we announced that Dolphin had brought leading influencer marketing agency Socialyte into our family of best-in-class entertainment marketing agencies. Along with our West Coast influencer firm, Be Social, together the two agencies represent over 200 leading creator talent with hundreds of millions of followers on social media.
Socialyte and Be Social operating under one roof immediately creates an unrivaled bicoastal combination within the influencer marketing industry and we think gives us the entertainment industry's leading influencer marketing firm to go along with our best-in-class PR firms, 42West, Shore Fire, and The Door. Part of the reason that is so important is because the influencer marketing industry has experienced strong double-digit CAGR over the past 5 years, increasing from global brand spend of less than $2 billion in 2016 to an estimate of $14 billion in 2022. That's a 7x according to Grand View Research. honestly, if we're being, you know, transparent, we think those numbers may be low. Influencer marketing is just exploding.
Anecdotally, I don't think there's anybody on this call that isn't aware of influencers on YouTube, on Instagram, on TikTok, that have enormous followings and enormous brand appeal. With Socialyte and Be Social, we now expect that influencer marketing will represent 25% or more of our revenues in 2023. Because influencer marketing is absolutely one of the fastest-growing segments in all of marketing, we expect that percentage of our overall revenues to grow in the coming years. Speaking of influence, Shore Fire Media, Dolphin's industry-leading music PR firm, had its influence shine in Q4 of 2022 and year to date in 2023. Shore Fire represented clients who collectively earned an incredible 45 nominations for the 2023 Grammy Awards.
Then in February, those clients received a collective 14 Grammy Awards, including Song of the Year for Bonnie Raitt and Best New Artist for Samara Joy. For those who ever want to know the difference of elite PR versus very good PR, then I would say Shore Fire just gave a master class in that for especially those last 2 awards. Bonnie Raitt and Samara Joy are extremely talented artists that benefited from a beautifully run PR campaign to pull off upset wins in 2 of the biggest awards at the Grammys, right. Song of the Year and Best New Artist. Incredible. Also, let me just give a quick word on 42West, our film and television PR powerhouse.
Their work on Top Gun: Maverick supported a worldwide box office total of almost $1.5 billion, the biggest of our client Tom Cruise's career to date. Additionally, its Top Gun's Oscar campaign resulted in six Oscar nominations and an Academy Award for Best Sound. This all on top of running nearly 100 Emmy nomination campaigns last September. Holy sugar. Sticking with our PR firms for the moment, The Door, our leading culinary, hospitality, and lifestyle PR firm, had a busy fourth quarter that included placements for client Rachael Ray in Variety, work on campaigns for Häagen-Dazs and Tao Group Hospitality. Giving a few words to Be Social, previously mentioned, Dolphin's West Coast influencer marketing group.
They had a busy quarter that included a holiday showroom as well as influencer partnerships with Victoria's Secret, The Wall Street Journal, Cartier, Canada Goose, Resy, and American Express, to name a few. Lastly, to say a few words about Viewpoint Creative, Dolphin's respected creative relations agency and video production boutique. Viewpoint's work in Q4 and year to date included a brand image campaign for CBS News, New York, NBC Peacock's Sunday Night Football promos. I witnessed those live, watching the games many times, PayPal, of course. Now let's shift gears to turn to providing updates on projects where Dolphin and its shareholders have equity and participate in the upside that our best-in-class marketing companies regularly enable for our clients. As many of you know, in 2022, Pan-Asian restaurant Hidden Leaf at the Midnight Theatre in Manhattan West opened.
Midnight Theatre also held its soft opening and has partnered with Mastercard as presenting sponsor for its programming. Dolphin manages all aspects of publicity and marketing for Midnight Theatre and Hidden Leaf and facilitates talent and commercial relationships within the entertainment and culinary industries. Dolphin also holds a meaningful ownership stake in the venture. Throughout its soft launch, we have held several private events, some of which were full buyouts. Many of which were also movie or television premieres. We continue to ramp up the original programming in the theater, as well as nearing completion of the development of our own magic show, which we expect to begin previews here coming up in Q2, with full opening of the theater. We're very excited for that. Turning to NFTs.
In Q4, we were pleased to report that our flagship NFT collection, Creature Chronicles, minted on the Solana blockchain and featuring 7,777 custom-crafted avatars designed by Anthony Francisco, generated more than 13,000 SOL in primary sales at the mint time, equaling about $435,000. Many of you remember that occurred at over 90 minutes on a Sunday afternoon. It was a complete sellout. We can credit the success of the project to the stunning visuals from Anthony, the commitment of our team, and the dedication of our community. We are very proud of this success.
With all of that said, though, despite the success of this initial collection, as noted in our Q3 earnings call, we have paused the development of any new NFT collections while we wait to see if there's an improvement in overall market sentiment towards these products, as well as the reinstatement of secondary royalties for new collections from the leading platforms. It was also in 2022 that we announced a multi-year agreement with IMAX to jointly finance the development and production of a slate of feature-length documentaries for the global market. The first project, Greenlit, is The Blue Angels, developed and co-produced by J.J. Abrams' Bad Robot Productions and Zipper Bros Films. The Blue Angels started filming last summer and is nearly finished production. We expect the film to hit IMAX theaters in the second half of this year.
On a side note, this film looks really, really good. You can never predict hits in this business, but I've been doing project financing for entertainment content since 1996, so I would say keep an eye out for this one. We look forward to sharing more details in the coming weeks, but man, it looks good. Additionally, during 2022, we drove value for Crafthouse Cocktails, a pioneering brand of ready-to-drink, all-natural classic cocktails created by world-renowned mixologist Charles Joly and esteemed restaurateur Matt Lindner. This is an arrangement that I mentioned at the top of the call wherein Dolphin received an ownership stake in the company and is compensated to manage publicity and marketing for the brand through our network of agencies.
All of these Dolphin ventures or Dolphin 2.0 projects are at various stages of development and will begin to create meaningful revenues for us here, we expect in 2023. As I mentioned in the beginning, with Ellie joining as CMO, we will be focused on building a slate of ventures where we put up no cash, get paid cash, and receive ownership stakes generally between 5% and 10% of the companies, where our agencies can accelerate their growth. When we ramp up to full speed on the evaluation, negotiation, and execution of these deals, we expect to be able to add about 3 to 4 of those types of deals for us each year.
Within a very short period of time, those deals will create meaningful cash flow and will represent significant upside for Dolphin across the slate. In summary, 2022 was a great year for us, highlighted by the acquisition of Socialyte, the 50/50 deal with IMAX, and the soft opening of Midnight Theatre, and we expect 2023 to be even better. We had double-digit growth crossing over $40 million in revenue. We certainly expect strong double-digit revenue growth again this year, with positive results from our 2.0 ventures to share as well.
Lastly, we expect 2023 will be the year we complete the original vision of our super group with the acquisition of a live events production company that will give us the ability to take ownership stakes in that vertical as well, which is highly strategic for us since our PR firms already market some of the country's most well-known food and music festivals, among many other live events. I could not be prouder of what Dolphin has built, where we are today, and the path we are on for this year and beyond to maximize shareholder value and to provide exciting opportunities across a broad range of entertainment. Thank you for joining us. To that end, I'll now turn it over to Mirta.
Thank you, Bill. Good afternoon, everyone. I will now discuss results for the year ended December 31st, 2022. Revenue for the year ended December 31st, 2022 was approximately $40.5 million, 13% above the revenues for the year ended December 31st, 2021 of approximately $35.7 million. Overall operating expenses for the year ended December 31st, 2022 were approximately $45.1 million compared to approximately $41.2 million in the prior year. Operating expenses are composed of direct costs, payroll and benefits, selling general and administrative costs, SG&A, acquisition costs, impairment of goodwill, change in fair value of contingent consideration, depreciation and amortization, and legal and professional fees. Direct costs for the year ended December 31st, 2022 were $3.6 million compared to $3.9 million in the prior year.
Payroll costs were approximately $29 million compared to $24 million in the prior year. SG&A expenses for the year ended December 31, 2022 were approximately $6.6 million compared to $5.8 million in the prior year. Legal and professional fees for the year ended December 31, 2022 were approximately $2.9 million compared to $2 million in the prior year.
Operating loss for the year ended December 31st, 2022, of approximately $4.6 million include the non-cash items from depreciation and amortization of $1.8 million, impairment of goodwill of approximately $900,000, a gain in the fair value of contingent consideration of approximately $47,000 and non-recurring costs consisting of acquisition costs in the amount of approximately $500,000 and legal and professional fees in the amount of approximately $600,000 related to the restatement of our 2021 third quarter financial statements, the change in the audit firm, a financing arrangement, and the filing of our Form S-1.
This compares to an operating loss for the year ended December 31st, 2021 of $5.5 million, which includes non-cash items from depreciation and amortization of $1.9 million and changes to the fair value of contingent consideration of $3.7 million.
Net loss for the year ended December 31, 2022, of $4.7 million includes non-cash items from depreciation and amortization of $1.8 million, impairment of goodwill of approximately $900,000, gain in the change of fair value of contingent consideration of approximately $47,000, non-recurring acquisition costs of approximately $500,000, legal and professional fees of approximately $600,000 related to our restatement of the 2021 Q3 financial statements, change in audit firm, a financing arrangement, and filing of our Form S-1, and gains from the changes in the fair value of certain liabilities of approximately $800,000.
This compares to net loss for the year ended December 31, 2021 of $6.5 million, which included non-cash items from depreciation and amortization of $1.9 million, $3.7 million from changes in the fair value of contingent consideration, and $3.1 million from the changes in fair value of certain liabilities, offset by a gain on the forgiveness of the Paycheck Protection Program loans of approximately $3 million. Basic loss per share for the year ended December 31, 2022 was $0.49 per share based on 9,799,021 weighted average shares outstanding, and fully diluted loss per share was $0.56 per share based on 9,926,926 weighted average shares outstanding.
This compares to $0.85 of basic and fully diluted loss per share based on 7,614,774 weighted average shares outstanding in the prior year. Unrestricted cash and cash equivalents of $6.1 million as compared to $7.7 million as of December 31, 2021. That concludes my financial remarks. I will now ask the operator to open the phone line for Q&A. Operator, can you please pull for questions?
Certainly. At this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue.
For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Once again, please press star one if you have a question at this time. One moment while we pull for questions. We did have a question in queue. Once again, ladies and gentlemen, it's star one if you wish to ask your question. The first question is coming from Allen Klee from Maxim Group. Alan, your line is live.
Yes. Hi, good afternoon, and congrats on so many things. Just so I'm trying to understand, like, the momentum. If I wanna try to strip out, like, NFTs to think about, it's reasonable to say the $433,000, that won't repeat. Is there anything else, like extra money you were making on Dolphin 1.0 of marketing them that was material that we should think cuts back in 2023?
No.
No?
Thank you for the kind words at the start, Alan. If, you know, if anything, 2022, removing NFTs is a net positive for us in 2023. Not because we weren't successful in selling that collection, and Charlie D'Agostino and the whole team did a great job. You know, we invested over the course of maybe 15 months, over $1 million into building out our NFT capabilities. Over $800,000 of that, I believe, hit in 2022 that were all expensed, with the expectation that we would launch multiple NFT collections over the coming years and make a nice return on investment. Certainly $400,000 on the first collection is a good start, right? To recoup $1 million.
As you can see, since we paused the NFT business, just by not doing NFTs, you know, 2023 should be a net of $600,000 or so, $400,000-$600,000 better just because we don't have to re-expense the build of the platform. With that said, if we ever restart NFTs, then we don't expect nearly the type of expense to put up another collection of them because we don't have to do so many actions more than once. It's a shame where NFT has headed, after, you know, we spent so much time and energy building an expertise in that. We'll see if they come back.
Okay, great. If I have to guesstimate a little bit of 2.0 revenues in 2023, the big picture way to think about it of stuff that is that you might get something from Midnight Theatre and Hidden Leaf maybe more in the second half if you have the full launch of Midnight Theatre in the second quarter. The IMAX movie could be more like a third quarter event. Is there anything else I should be thinking about besides those two things?
Those two are pretty big.
Yeah.
Yeah. With Midnight Theatre getting to fully programmed and then, you know, sometime this summer or late summer, early fall, being seven days a week of programming and theater and private events and the restaurant, then that'll be meaningful. The IMAX movie could be very meaningful, based on, you know, what we've seen so far. You know, our expectation is that'll be in theaters late Q3. That's nice. Yeah, those are certainly two things we wanted to highlight. We have some more 2.0 opportunities we expect to generate some revenue in the second half of this year that we'll be announcing in the coming weeks, certainly, that we're excited by. Nothing we want to announce right now.
Okay. Thank you. Socialyte, it's... I think you had published somewhere that I think that they did, like, $4.5 million in nine months of 2022. That's gonna be a big benefit for your 2023 numbers. Is there a way to think about if it's gonna happen, those synergies between them and Be Social that we could see in 2023?
Oh, yeah. Thank you for that question, Alan. I mean, we were blessed to bring Socialyte in to complement Be Social and then, yeah, obviously we'll look at opportunities to have those companies come even closer together, if you will. There's highly strategic benefici-- they benefit and complement each other. The scale that on the... Each company has two main divisions. They have a talent management division, and by combining the two, you know, we have scale to compete with, and we think we have established a leading, if not the leading, influencer management firm. On the brand side, the other division, it gives us the highly complementary skills.
Socialyte does paid campaigns, when a brand, pick one, you know Airbnb comes and says, "We want to do a fall campaign. We have a $1 million budget. Will you help us identify the right influencers based on the demographics we want to hit, go contract with them, organize the campaign, make sure the influencers do what they're supposed to do on the time they're supposed to do it, report back to us the metrics, et cetera." That's paid. And typically, Socialyte takes a percentage of the overall campaign. If it's 20%, 30% of $1 million.
Be Social does organic campaigns where the brands may come to them and say, "Hey, we don't have money to spend on the influencers, but we'll give out sample products, free products, if you can get them to try it and post about it. We'll pay you a fee of $20,000, $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 for each of those campaigns and do more volume of them." The reason why it's highly complementary besides now owning a leading agency, if not the leading agency for each type of influencer campaign, is that not just can you offer both services now in-house, but many brands run both types of influencer campaigns within the same campaign. They could have both paid and organic to support their fall launch. Certainly, almost every brand runs each type of campaign at some point throughout a year.
You get longer client relationships, deeper client relationships, as they say, a bigger share of client's wallet, and you just have a lot more ways to cross-sell in the influencers as well. We're now fully bi-coastal. B.Social was only in the West Coast. Now we have New York as well, we have Miami, we have Nashville. Everywhere where our PR firms have offices, we now actually have on-the-ground influencer marketing people as well. You know, that shouldn't be understated. In today's world where, you know, breaking marketing down into two buckets, paid media and earned media, is the province of public relations and influencer marketing. They're the two legs that you stand on in earned media.
As longtime listeners have heard, you know, for every company that can afford a paid media campaign, there are nine companies, I think, that can't. These brands that launch will need PR and influencer marketing to get their word out and get their products and services noticed. You really want to have influencer marketing to complement PR. If you have both, you have a powerhouse, and that's what we think we've built. Hopefully, that gave you a sense of the strategy of why what Socialyte and Be Social together have is formidable.
Thank you. When I look at the other PR and marketing firms that you have in your portfolio, what are the drivers for organic growth in 23?
A couple of things, and we're starting to see it. One, the cross-selling just keeps going, right? That's what's driving our organic growth. You know, even before Socialyte in 2021, many of you remember how fast we were growing just organically from, I think it was $7.2 million in Q1 to $8.6 million in Q2 to $9.4 million in Q3 and $10.5 million in Q4, and that was all organic. There was no acquisition in there. That happens because we're getting better at creating synergies between our companies. Secondly, you can go after different types of clients.
You know, PayPal's been one for a while, we've signed other clients now that are, let's call it traditional Fortune 500s, or large companies, that don't have a direct tie to entertainment, but they want to use pop culture to get the word out about their product. Quite frankly, if you have any consumer-facing product, you could probably use pop culture to create consumer awareness, right? We're all human beings, and we have multiple interests. I might want to buy this makeup line today, but I'm a huge fan of The White Lotus, right, which is a TV show that 42West represents. Are there organic ways to, you know, have conversations or reach out about different things, and to the consumer or let them know about different opportunities that way?
Where a lot of our organic growth among the PR firms can come from, and there are many different sources, but one such source is just going from 0 to 50 in terms of the number of classic non-entertainment companies that use our services to reach the general consumer. I'm thinking of, you know, we mentioned Häagen-Dazs on this call. There's a great example out of the consumer products division of The Door, again, Charlie and the team there are handling that account where, you know, Häagen-Dazs, by the way, does a very large influencer marketing business with us as well, that would not have been a client of traditional entertainment PR firms perhaps even 3 years ago. And they've had celebrity campaigns now through The Door and others that have done very well.
If you can have a company with a PayPal, with an Häagen-Dazs, with blank, blank, blank of some of our other clients, you can just grow organically. Ad infinitum.
That's great.
As we hired Ellie Doty, you know, for the first time, as I said on the call, now we've hit scale in a different way. We've hit scale in the types of companies we have under the umbrella, and we've got reach. Now if we market ourselves, that could be to Wall Street, that could be to our own stakeholders, but that could be to the broader business community, corporate community. All of a sudden we've got something different. There are a lot of chief marketing officers, digital marketing officers, social marketing officers out there, and these companies are trying to figure out, how do we get our word out? Here's Dolphin over here that has all these different services and all this different type of reach using pop culture. You can't fake it.
You can't just say, "Oh, we're a traditional PR firm. We'll get you into entertainment." you know, how are you gonna do that? Versus Dolphin, where we can say, "Well, we promote James Bond, Top Gun, Mission: Impossible, Bruce Springsteen, Chance the Rapper, Dave Matthews Band, Rachael Ray, Robert Irvine, Emeril Lagasse, South Beach Wine & Food Festival, New York City Wine & Food Festival, Super Bowl Music Fest," you know, case closed, right? That's what we wanna do, and I think that's what we're gonna drive a lot of organic growth for our PR firms.
That's great. Last quarter you mentioned a business you were gonna be starting up a celebrity chef business in New Orleans, I think with Nina Compton. Any update on where that stands?
Sure, yeah. ShaSha Lounge. We're excited for that one too, and quite frankly, that should be one of those things I was mentioning that it should happen in the second half of this year. Memberships will go on sale in the next few weeks. Thank you again, Charlie. It's the Charlie D'Agostino show on Westwood One/Dolphin fourth quarter earnings call. The Door, again, has done a great job ideating that with Nina and her husband, and then bringing that to life. It's about to kick off, and we couldn't be more excited for that because with success in New Orleans, many people that listened on previous earnings call know that, you know, we have a very scalable model there.
Since Nina and Charlie and the team have brought in other celebrity chefs to do guest appearances, for lack of a better word, at the lounge and restaurant in New Orleans, that could become the home for the same concept in other cities. Whether it's Michelle Bernstein in Miami or Rodney Scott in Charleston or Stephanie Izard in Chicago, you know, we're hopeful for that. I don't know if many of you listening saw the profile, this was it last week in The New York Times, about just the proliferation of membership-only restaurants in Palm Beach, in Florida, where I'm from. Interesting profile in The Times. You know, we see that just burgeoning.
By the way, if you're not familiar with this concept, I mean, the initiation fees to join a restaurant-only club in Palm Beach start at $10,000 in many places, routinely $20,000, and there are some that go as high as $250,000. Whee! That's quite an initiation fee for a restaurant that you then go pay to have a meal at. This type of idea of private membership clubs, which. The hybrid, that's what Nina will do, you know, open to the public, but also a private membership club, is something we're very interested in and that we feel we're uniquely positioned to promote. That could be a massive growth driver.
I'm not just talking about ShaSha, but just the general category of those type establishments over the next 3 to 5 years. Because the economics are extremely appealing if you can market them and get the membership. Seems like we're well positioned to help people that wanna do that.
My last 2 questions are financial related. First, how do you think about operating expense growth in 2023 relative to revenue?
You'll see the jump in SG&A in 2021 or 2022 to 2023. It'll also be a little bit of a jump in 2023. Sorry, 2021, 2022. Yeah, 2021 and 2022. It'll be a little bit of a jump in 2023 as we, you know, as we have Socialyte for a full year. We don't expect operating expense increases beyond typical payroll increases. We like where we are in terms of operating expenses. Some of it will go down because again, we're not expensing the building of an NFT business. I don't expect any surprises. Obviously we highlighted too that the change in audit firms was an expense that we didn't anticipate prior to the year. It's a one-time expense of $600,000.
We don't anticipate having that again this year. Other related expenses to the change in audit firms. Yeah, we feel pretty good about not having some of those one-time costs just won't recur. We don't anticipate anything on the horizon that would cause our operating expenses to jump up.
Okay, great. I don't know if you can answer this. Maybe I could ask this offline, I just was trying to get a sense of your operating income was for the quarter was around -$3 million. If I add back the various one-time items you mentioned of Impairment of goodwill, change in fair value of contingent non-recurrings. I think I get to around $880,000 of kind of a This is back of the envelope, adjusted EBITDA. I don't know if you can tell me if a sanity check on that makes sense or we could take it offline.
We can go through each of those numbers offline. Happy to do it. I mean, you know, we have relatively significant non-cash expenses and then there's one-time charges. It's kinda why we highlight it so people can see that we're. You know, we hit $40 million in revenue, but we expect to do double-digit growth on that this year. Wouldn't surprise us if we're 50-plus. You know, we expect to be EBITDA positive. We measure ourselves by operating income and taking away the non-cash charges like depreciation and amortization. That's how we know if we feel like we're doing well. We're, we're transitioning Dolphin into that stage where we want to be and expect to be cash positive on an annual basis.
We have these 2.0 opportunities such as provide that, you know, really great upside. You know, if you have something that could pay off 7-figure profits to you from a successful 2.0 venture, when you've got a $40 million, $50 million revenue company and single-digit millions of profit in cash, that could double your profit, triple your profit. It's meaningful to a company our size. That's the mousetrap we've built. You know, I know, Allen, you've been with us from the beginning. You've seen it from when we acquired 42West and wanted to uplist to Nasdaq and hopefully build a group.
For those on the call that have known us for a while to see where we are now, 7 acquisitions later, one more to go to complete the original vision of building a supergroup that would be unique in the market, that would be cash positive, and then have the upside of these 2.0 opportunities. You know, we're pretty far along in that story now, so very lucky and feel very blessed about that.
Fantastic. Thank you for answering all my questions.
Sure.
Thank you. There were no other questions from the lines. I will now hand the call back to Bill O'Dowd for closing remarks.
Okay. Well, thank you. I did get an email from someone wondering if we were gonna represent James Carbonara for his singing career through Shore Fire. We have not successfully signed James, those who know James maybe wanna push him in our direction. Maybe he'll sing the safe harbor statement on the Q1 earnings call. That would be very exciting for all of us. And for Wall Street, I'm sure. Thank you, everybody. I know many of you have. Many on this call were on our Q3. You're seeing the progress, hopefully quarter-over-quarter of our company and what we think we're building. As you heard me say to the last of Allen's questions, we certainly like where we are.
2023 is an exciting year for us because we expect to collect revenue from our 2.0 investments. We expect to significantly increase the number of opportunities we have in our slate with the hiring of Ellie and the management team we're putting in place to be able to handle that. That should be very exciting for our company and give us a lot of upside in the future. Thanks everybody for both listening to this call and joining us on this journey. Look forward to the one in just about 6 weeks. Thank you, everybody.
Thank you. This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.