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Episode 19 – Markets for Makers

Episode 19 - Markets for Makers Interview

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Show Notes

Markets and Pop-Ups are all the rage nowadays, and in Episode 19 I interview Natalie and Trista of Markets for Makers who are KILLING IT with local markets in Clearwater (Pierce St Market), Night Market in Tampa at Ferg’s, Orange Blossom Market out in Lake Wales, and a special Holiday Markets in Tampa and Los Angeles.

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

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Transcript

Kyle: Welcome to Great Things Tampa Bay. We podcast about great eats, great places, and great people in the Greater Tampa Bay Area. I’m your host, Kyle Sasser, a Tampa Bay native and realtor. This is episode 19, Markets for Makers.

This is the Great Places feed of the Great Things Tampa Bay podcast where you will only hear episodes related to parks, stores, events, shows, and things to do about town. In our main podcast, which you’ll find under Great Things Tampa Bay, in addition to these chats about entertainment and events, we also cover great eateries and delicious grub as well as interviews from the great people, movers and shakers in the area. You can find our main feed at greatthingstb.com or you can subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play just by doing a search for Great Things Tampa Bay. Thank you and enjoy.

This is Kyle Sasser with Great things Tampa Bay and I’m here with…

Natalie: Trista Tripp and Natalie Nagengast.

Kyle: Of?

Natalie: Of Markets for Makers.

Kyle: There we go. Yeah. So I found you all on social media and you all are doing some pretty cool and great things in the area. I even overheard, and I’m sorry but I got ears, but you all are looking to expand all the way out to like Lake Wales. Was that it true?

Natalie: Yeah, we’re doing a little, tiny market out there. We’ve been working with other festivals. So it’s been fun. Whenever we get to put a little…even if it’s a tiny amount of local, we always jump at the opportunity.

Kyle: So if you’re anywhere in Tampa Bay, all the way out there, and including Tampa and St. Petersburg, you’ll definitely wanna listen to this, because it’ll be some good stuff. So tell us a little bit about what you all do.

Natalie: Yeah, so we run markets, so we run a lot of local markets in the Tampa Bay area. We’re kind of focusing more as we get bigger on bigger markets less often. So we have a lot of handmade, and we have all kinds of items you can find in the markets. A lot of them are a lot of mom and pop shops and food trucks, etc.

Kyle: So this definitely isn’t like the crap fair, as my wife calls it.

Natalie: No, and it’s not a farmers’ market. That’s where a lot of people get that wrong.

Kyle: Like a lot of markets you go to, you go and everything is basically sourced from China…

Natalie: We do a lot of boutiques because we feel like those have been hand curated and so it’s fun because we get to pick out boots that are not just handmade but they’ve put something together, they took something and they upcycled it, making something better.

Trista: It’s different. We really curate our markets.

Natalie: Sometimes people don’t necessarily hand make it themselves, but they’ll design a T-shirt and then they get it printed.

Kyle: So you all do actually vet the people that you have at your markets. You’re not just taking all comers…

Natalie: Oh, it’s funny. In the first 2 years, we had about 1200 applications and I think we rotated about 400 to 500 out of that 1200.

Kyle: That’s impressive actually.

Natalie: We are very picky but we look at a lot of aspects to each person and each booth and that has been part of the success of our company.

Kyle: No scrubs at the Markets for Makers.

Natalie: No, it’s really hard.

Kyle: How did you all get started with this?

Natalie: I had a handmade jewelry company a while back and I was attending a lot of markets in St. Pete and Tampa, and there weren’t any in Clearwater. And so, I kind of had this idea of, “Oh, let me just put something together, like 40 booths and that way I don’t have to drive so far.” And so, I put something together and it was October of 2015. And I had the first market, we hit 60 vendors, and I found this perfect spot in Downtown Clearwater. And the city was amazing in getting us started and it exploded. It went amazing. So many people turned out because my background is marketing. Basically I had 60 booths and then by November, we had another huge turnout. By December, I went in front of the Downtown Development Board and asked for funding. So they gave us $15,000 right off the bat to get us going and we put all of it into marketing.

Kyle: Very nice.

Natalie: I know. It was awesome. So we got huge.

Kyle: Was there a name for that market? Would people know it?

Natalie: Yeah, it’s Pierce Street Market. So it was on the waterfront in Downtown Clearwater. Basically, we got so big after two years that the city put the whole market out for a public bid because it was of a certain size. And so that’s when I brought Trista on. She came in to kind of…first of all, I had to figure out, “Okay, how are we gonna win the bid or not win the bid, and if we don’t, what are we gonna do?” And Trista’s background was in consulting, go ahead.

Trista: So I basically had a background in consulting for businesses and I was doing that in Hawaii at the beginning of this year, which was really fun and really nice but…

Natalie: She got a really nice tan.

Trista: I had a great tan. I really liked it. But Natalie came up to me and basically, the timing was just perfect. And I was done with the job I was working in Hawaii and she needed help, and I loved the whole idea of it. Because this again is like helping small businesses and it’s helping bring the community together and that’s something that I was just very passionate about. So I came in. I also have a background in fashion as well, which I know is kind of interesting but because of that, a background in PR and helping with that aspect of things. So coming on here, I could bring what I knew about all of that previous stuff into this.

Natalie: And she’s from LA, so she brings a whole big city vibe to our company. I’m from the Midwest. I’m from Indiana, so like, “What do I wear? What do I wear for this TV shoot or photo shoots?”

Kyle: And you’re the, “Uh-uh. Uh-uh.”

Natalie: She knows it inside and out. My style has gotten 10 times better. The girl boss vibe is on point.

Trista: On fleek, as I like to say.

Natalie: Yeah, on fleek. [inaudible 00:06:19]. And so she and I together, we’re able to transition the company over to basically doing a lot of night markets. We got that started before we found out about what direction the company was gonna go in and we’ve just been hustling like crazy.

Kyle: So you started with the one in Clearwater. What markets are you running currently?

Natalie: What happened with the public bid was that two other companies bid and unfortunately we didn’t win the bid, which for us was incredible because that pushed us forward as a company. So what it did was we weren’t even really thinking about night markets. So when we found out that the company could be moving and transitioning into something else, we started the night markets. And so that’s at Ferg’s and the last one was in December.

Kyle: And that’s Ferg’s in Tampa, right?

Natalie: Yeah, downtown across from the Amalie which they’re gonna be moving because of the whole Water Street project. It’s gonna be interesting but everything has exploded for us. We have to be careful with how much we promote now because of how many people come out. Our fire marshal doesn’t like too many occupancy in a small area.

Trista: Exactly. It’s been so successful to the point where we just don’t have to barely market at all. We still put a lot into it because it’s important to us but the fact that we don’t have to is kinda cool.

Natalie: We’ve gotten this reputation and that’s been amazing. And so when we found out about Pierce Street with her, we’re like, “Okay, what do we want to do as a company? Do we wanna just do night markets? Do we wanna try to find a new location for Pierce Street?” I actually was vetting a lot of options for Pierce Street to see if we wanted to move it, but the truth is, is we’ve never been about trying to compete with any other markets. I want there to be more markets. I want all my vendors to do amazing. I don’t ever want to be the reason why someone doesn’t do well, like I had to call a vendor and…do you get what I’m saying? It’s just not what we’re about.

Kyle: High tide lifts all boats.

Trista: Exactly. That’s what we want.

Natalie: Exactly. And we never wanna be the reason why someone doesn’t do well. So the plan was to figure out what we wanted to do and we found a couple of markets that grabbed our attention, like the Renegade Craft Fair is huge all around the U.S. and unique in a way.

Kyle: I’m not familiar. Tell me about it.

Natalie: Yeah. There’s West Coast Crafts. It’s these large scale indoor markets where the booths are more expensive or they charge a door fee, and they are less often but bigger. So that’s kind of…

Trista: Highly curated.

Natalie: Highly curated and what’s great is that they’re not as often so that you can get better vendors, you can do a lot with those. So we basically decided as a company, instead of trying to get so much quantity, let’s work on quality, because we wanted to hire more people and when we looked at having lots of staff and lots of salaries, and we wanna pay people well. Our staff, we wanna make sure that they’re not just minimum when working for us. They’re supporting themselves. This is something that they get to do that they love but also be able to support their families. So we looked at it and this was the future for us. So Trista was incredible and found this warehouse in Ybor, which we’re sitting in Ybor right now because we have a huge holiday market this weekend.

Kyle: And if you all have been wondering about all of the noise in the background, we’re actually at the bunker down here at Ybor City. Lovely coffee shop.

Natalie: If we’re not in Clearwater in our office, we’re in some coffee shop in Tampa. We have a list of our favorites all over the area.

Kyle: This one’s pretty good.

Natalie: Oh, we love the [crosstalk 00:09:34].

Kyle: Also, I like The Hall on Franklin. I just did an episode on that.

Natalie: And then you got the Foundation Coffee.

Kyle: Yeah, that too.

Trista: And we have a great…what was thing that we always get there?

Natalie: Foundation?

Trista: A coffee that we get…it’s not coffee, it’s a tea. What’s this right here?

Natalie: Chai tea?

Trista: They have really good chai tea latte.

Kyle: They’ve got magical tea?

Natalie: Exactly. So we now have the holiday market happening this weekend. So we’re gonna have about 100 vendors for 2 days. And then, we’re bringing in now full beer and wine which goes 100% to a nonprofit. Yeah, we’re working on that one with the educational, it will go towards entrepreneur and entrepreneurs’ college, so that’s gonna be exciting. It’s our future. After December, we might do some night markets but the hope will be is that we have a night market on Friday nights and then we find a great location for Saturday and Sunday. So we’ll just ride out the weekend.

We have a holiday market that we’re gonna probably be doing annually and then anyone that wants to check us out, go check out our website which is marketsformakers.com. And we’re probably going to have, quarterly, a large market in the Tampa Bay Area. We found this amazing warehouse in Ybor, so the longer we can have it, we might do something every other month. At this point, we’ll try to…because we’ve painted the whole place. It has been quite a project.

Kyle: Put the heart into it.

Natalie: Oh, my gosh, and we’re so happy because it looks so amazing now. And so, we’ve that one and then we have an LA market.

Trista: We do.

Kyle: Exciting, exciting.

Trista: Yeah, we’re on bose [SP] coasts. I just said bose coasts, I meant to say both coasts.

Kyle: I felt that was like the cool new term.

Trista: Oh yeah, I just create new terms as I go.

Natalie: But we’re trying to expand into major cities so that way, we can have our own footprint in the big city.

Kyle: For a long time, listeners of the podcast, you might remember Alessandro and the Aoki Family, they’ve also been out in LA and New York and stuff like that. So I’m gonna try to hook you all up and you all can collaborate and…

Natalie: Oh, I love it. I love it.

Trista: I would love that.

Kyle: Get something done. There’s some good guys over there.

Natalie: Oh, yeah, it’s so much fun. Yeah, that’s our future. It’s is going to be hopefully all over the U.S. and lots of big markets less often.

Kyle: I love it. What do you feel is your most successful failure?

Trista: I think this will be our greatest learning experience and probably the thing that we’ll look back on as being so happy for it having happened.

Natalie: Yeah, it was a bit of a shock because for me, you create something, you put your heart and soul into it for a few years and to hear that it was going to be changing than what I had expected before. And I think that at some point though, I looked at it and was like, “You know what? I’m a little bit outgrowing this.” At the moment, it didn’t necessarily…it was a bit of a, “Oh, my gosh, what happened?” And then afterward, I looked at it and went, “Okay, this is a great opportunity for someone else to hopefully grow their business and then this allows me to take that next forward.”

But as far as small, little failures, we fight generators every night market. And that’s always fun.

Trista: When the lights are going on/off, on/off. Why won’t it stay?

Natalie: I know our favorite amazing failure.

Trista: What?

Natalie: I talked Trista into getting a trailer. And we’re like, “Okay, we’re gonna get this trailer. We’re gonna pull up to all of our markets…”

Trista: And I was really not into it by the way. I was like, “Convince me, Natalie, convince me.”

Natalie: It was like a $5000 trailer. I’m like, “Okay, it’s so cute. It’s vintage. We’re going to get made. It’s gonna be amazing. We’re going to have all of our outside markets…” This was before we decided to the less often markets, so I was like, “Okay, we have to go.” And we only got a couple days to get there. So we literally were driving up to Chattanooga where this trailer is being built.

Kyle: Now, that’s a good drive.

Natalie: And there is a hurricane coming.

Trista: We were trying to outrun the hurricane.

Natalie: This was that hurricane that hit Alabama. It was like the fourth hurricane that came through. So we’re trying to outrun all of this hurricane and the wind. We drive up to Alabama…not Alabama, Chattanooga. We drive up to Chattanooga and we’re doing like 95 miles an hour to get there. It still took another like four hours. I feel like…

Trista: Every time we stopped to get gas, it added an hour.

Natalie: It did. Every time we stop for like 10 minutes, it was like, “Okay, another 45 minutes to get there.” So we go to pick this thing up and we buy all these tarps and we wrap it up, and there’s this like…

Trista: It looks like a narwhal.

Natalie: I know. There’s this huge pole sticking out the back, and we had to wrap the whole thing. We’re exhausted and we’re driving like…we were really ready to be…

Trista: We looked like complete white trash [crosstalk 00:14:01].

Natalie: Well, I had my slippers on and I had my…like I just looked terrible. So we drive up there, we wrap this whole thing, and then the brake lights keep going out. We’re driving it back.

Trista: So slow.

Natalie: It took twice as long to get home. We’re at the Florida and Georgia line, and it’s a two-way act.

Trista: We’re trying to outrun the hurricane coming at 20 miles an hour.

Natalie: And it’s the weekend… All the kids are graduating, so every single hotel is totally booked out. And so it was a nightmare and it was something where it’s still sitting in a warehouse of one [crosstalk 00:14:33] Shout out for Rockin’ Rhino which is an amazing company because they do collectibles, because they have been housing this trailer for a month. And we’re gonna have to drive the whole trailer back up, because we have to like put the skins on and we have to paint it. And we’ll probably just sell it because at this point, we’re not going to be doing as many outdoor markets.

Trista: It’s not what we’re gonna do. So it was a little bit of a waste.

Kyle: Yeah, but the one truth about being an entrepreneur and owning your own business is things never…you never end up where you think you’re gonna be. [crosstalk 00:15:03]

Natalie: The other thing was was the tarp kept ripping. So we duct taped it…

Trista: There was so much duct tape on this thing, we looked like crazy people.

Natalie: [crosstalk 00:15:11] I’ll send you a picture, because we duct taped everything. And then, we were fighting over the fact, like, “Oh no, you need more here.” These wires…

Trista: We kept 10 rolls of duct tape by the way. You can get the idea of how much duct tape was used.

Kyle: If you send that to me, I’ll put that up on the show notes, I’m sure some people will wanna…

Natalie: I will send you the picture. We looked like [crosstalk 00:15:31] a little smiley face on the back. One day it’ll be beautiful but we have to drive this whole thing back up to Chattanooga. And I’m like we’re just staying there for a few days and enjoying that beautiful area.

Kyle: Yeah, there’s lots of good stuff up there.

Natalie: Yeah, so that was probably the one time in which we came home after 25 hours of driving.

Trista: We wanted to kill each other.

Kyle: Yeah, that’s probably was not the best use…

Natalie: Yeah, we needed to take a moment after and…there were certain points when I’m like, “Let’s just put a Book on Tape on for a long time and podcasts.”

Kyle: There you go.

Natalie: It’s a really cute vintage trailer. If we could figure out what to do with it, we would keep it. I think we’re gonna probably fix it up and…

Kyle: Well, if anybody is in the market for some interesting trailer and they like the looks of it…

Natalie: It looks like an old Shasta. So cute.

Kyle: So where do you see yourself in five years?

Natalie: Our year plan this year would be to do at least five or six markets.

Trista: Major markets.

Natalie: Yeah.

Kyle: That’s 2018, right?

Natalie: That’s 2018 and we wanna be able to do at least 2 or 3 holiday markets, 3 different cities in December, and then more probably the next year. It’s a matter of how many can be done without going down in quality. So we are always slowly adding people to our team and it’s a lot to bring in a new market. It’s like starting a whole new company because you have to go, vet a lot of new vendors. But as we get bigger and bigger, we hope that our reputation gets better and better as it has been. We’ve exploded this past year and a half.

Kyle: Yeah, it sounds like it.

Natalie: No, 2 years we’ve been in business and we have now 50,000 plus followers.

Kyle: I’m still working to figuring out that section and space.

Trista: Oh, we love social media. That’s definitely our forte.

Natalie: Yeah, it’s a lot of constant…posting all of the time.

Kyle: So my forte is tenacity and follow-up, as you all probably know, because I sent out quite a few follow-up emails. [crosstalk 00:17:17]

Trista: So we appreciate that, we appreciate that..

Natalie: When you’re juggling…I don’t know, I probably answer around 100 to 150 emails a day.

Kyle: The one rule in sales is most sales…and I consider this sales because I still do on interviewing, but most sales happen on the ninth or more contact.

Natalie: Ninth or tenth, yeah, I read that.

Trista: As entrepreneurs, as business owners, we appreciate that. There’s so much going on all the time and it’s so nonstop. It’s the person that keeps persisting and keep going for it.

Natalie: That’s how we are, too.

Trista: Those are people who, like, yeah, we need to do this.

Kyle: Or have the software to remind you, which is my case. Is there one problem that you wish that you could solve right now?

Trista: More hours in a day.

Natalie: Oh, my gosh, that’s…

Trista: If we could figure out how to get more hours in a day. We’re doing so many things that [inaudible 00:18:04]

Natalie: Well, the thing…I don’t know if you’ve ever had this with emails, but you come to your email box, check, “Okay, great. I have 75 emails I need to get to today.” You answer them all and then you’re like, “Oh, my gosh, you still have 75 emails.” Because everybody answers you back. That’s why I love answering at night and I love answering on airplanes.

Kyle: Personally, I keep a zero mailbox policy. So I look at it two or three times a day. So like what my real estate clients would tell you, like I tell them, “If you send me an email, I’ll get to it but it’s not going to be immediate.” I just zero it out every day. I don’t usually read stuff. I just delete it if it’s not pertinent, just ruthlessly.

Natalie: I’m a believer in unsubscribe. Any time I get something I’m on a list, I’m quickly like “unsubscribe.”

Kyle: But please don’t unsubscribe to the Great Things Tampa Bay newsletter please.

Natalie: Oh, no way.

Trista: No.

Natalie: [crosstalk 00:18:48] That’s when I haven’t signed up for it and somehow they sign me up for some random investment something.

Trista: It happens more often than I like.

Natalie: It’s some random person in Kentucky trying to sell me houses or something…

Kyle: It’s true. I know, like me personally, because I have a list that I built over the years and whenever I start up something new, I use the list for that. I apologize but sorry, not sorry.

Trista: [inaudible 00:19:15] sorry, not sorry.

Kyle: Any memorable booths you’ve had to reject or cancel?

Natalie: There’s a lot of booths that are an amazing fit for our company but I don’t know, like there are some that are terrible, that we don’t really know what they did, they are like upcycling something and they have no idea what they’re doing.

Kyle: Like hot-gluing shells on the things or something?

Natalie: That’s a big one. That’s a really big one is like hot-gluing shells on to random items which sometimes have no purpose. But what I say is that there’s a lot of markets out there and sometimes they’re just not a good fit. I know our target market and I know the right fit for our target market is women between 20 and 40. And so I happen to be one of those women and so I put items in the market that I would personally buy. Sometimes I put items that I would maybe buy for my parents too, but I really don’t have any grandparents around, so I don’t really know what they would buy or not buy. So we tend to stick to specific types of vendors that do all kinds of different things like candles and…

Trista: Totally, all of that. We also find that between 20 and 40, I just wanna touch on that, those are the people that are buying the most as well, spending a lot of money.

Natalie: For us, we have a lot of boutiques. We have a lot of, like I said, candles.

Kyle: I don’t think about going to markets other than the times that my wife is like, “Yeah, let’s go,” and I’m like, “Uh, all right.”

Natalie: Exactly. So we try to put some men’s items in there. We have beard care and…

Kyle: It’s appreciated.

Trista: We do think about you guys.

Natalie: What’s been great about the night markets is there’s a bar. So the guys go to the bar and the women…

Trista: Yeah. So it’s kind of a win-win.

Natalie: But you know what’s funny, because there’s a lot of amazing artists, like fine artists, and they try to get into our markets and they’re not the right fit because most of people, they’ll spend anywhere from $10 to $50. So when you bring in a couple of $100 item, they’re just not gonna buy it.

Kyle: Yeah, it’s tough. I couldn’t imagine dropping $2000 or something on a piece of fine art.

Natalie: Hey, that’s when you have made it and I feel you don’t really make it until, unless you’re really lucky, until you’re 40 or 50. But even then, it’s like, I don’t know, for us, if you have a lot of money and you are our age, you’re gonna be investing it into real estate.

Kyle: Please give me a call.

Natalie: Exactly. [inaudible 00:21:20] Most people, if they had a great following and they’ve got some really great products, that’s awesome. Sometimes, there’s fair food, and we don’t really… We just know who we are.

Kyle: No fried butter at Markets for Makers?

Natalie: No, not with us but you can go to the state fairgrounds. [crosstalk 00:21:36] experience. So you need to know who you are and embrace it.

Kyle: Yeah. Gotta hit the market.

Natalie: Exactly.

Kyle: So what exactly does it take to get a booth at your market?

Natalie: So our website, marketsformakers.com, has all of the markets listed and then you can apply. Some of the applications have a small fee, anywhere from $15 to $25, but others are free depending on our timeline. And if it’s a newer market we tend to try to incentivize people in and once we fill up, we’re full, that’s why we have a little bit of a fee is because it covers a lot of administrative costs.

Kyle: Yeah, and there’s always administrative costs.

Natalie: Oh, and try to make sure people are really serious about the fact that they really wanna be in the market because we don’t want people applying and then we never hear back from them. And so when we’re looking at a booth, we’re looking at their overall layout, their products. We look at their social media. The first thing I do, I don’t even look at the photos they sent me. I go directly to their Instagram and their Facebook. And I’m looking at how many followers do they have and how often do they post.

Trista: And it kinda shows us how serious they are about it. You know what I mean?

Natalie: Yeah, a person that’s more serious in trying to build their brand is going to be a higher priority for us to put in the market than somebody that it’s just a side hustle. If somebody has left their job…I remember there was this one company that was like, “We left our jobs to do this.” That was the company name. I was like, “What is this? What is it that you’re selling?” I don’t know if they’re still in business. I just know that they weren’t quite the right fit for us, but we love the passion.

Kyle: And honestly, I’m intrigued that you all actually curate your booths like that.

Natalie: It’s having a really amazing selection of vendors and then it’s also, for us, we’ve been really focusing on the vendor experience. And so we have, like for this next market that we have, huge Instagram walls, we have a whole Christmas wrapping station for free.

Kyle: Awesome.

Natalie: Yeah. So when somebody comes in the door, even though we have a ticket sale, then they feel like they’re coming in for a memorable experience. They’re supporting the entire market. What that allows us to do when we have a ticket as well for any of our markets is we get to take all of those vendor fees and dump it right back into marketing and helping promote those businesses inside the market. So that way, it incentivizes us as owners to get a lot of people through the door and so it’s a really great strategy that seems to be working really well for us.

We have our market this coming weekend and we have presold over 1000 tickets and e expect thousands of people out for the night.

Kyle: That’s pretty good. It’s almost like a self-driving machine almost.

Natalie: I’ll tell you about my [inaudible 00:23:59] I have to hustle in order to make sure that you’ve got people here. So your money is safe with me, it’s going into the user experience, it’s going into marketing and…

Kyle: And they can see where it’s going.

Natalie: Exactly and I love it. It’s so great. We want it to be something where someone walks in the market and it uplifts them, and we’re lifting an entire community. That’s the part of our game plan since day one, is know we could work…there’s a lot of different types of jobs out there and it’s great. Especially for you, you’re helping people find a new home and that helps the entire community.

Kyle: So two final questions. First up, wind or rain, what is the mortal enemy of outdoor markets?

Natalie: Definitely wind. You cannot have a market with wind. You can have a market with rain.

Kyle: Yeah. Those sandbags can only do so much.

Natalie: Oh, my gosh. You can’t even set up a table sometimes. Especially in Clearwater, it was just insane.

Kyle: What’s the funnest part about getting an outdoor market permitted, with the various cities and municipalities?

Trista: There’s fire… Oh, what is funnest part?

Natalie: There’s a lot of hoops to jump through and there’s a lot of people that could just say, “No, you can’t have this market.” We try to make sure we get the whole city on board with the entire idea of what we’re doing.

Trista: The funnest part is when we get the permit.

Natalie: Yeah, that’s the best part.

Kyle: You’re just like, phew.

Natalie: It’s literally like, “Please tell me we’re good to go.” I almost had a heart attack because we needed to make sure that we had the fire sprinklers in place for this big warehouse and it was [crosstalk 00:25:26].

Kyle: Fire marshals are always fun.

Natalie: It’s scary but it’s also one of those things where you have to, as a business owner, understand their job is to keep everyone safe.

Kyle: For those who aren’t familiar with it, if a fire marshal finds something an issue, it’s usually going to be $10,000, $20,000, $30,000 to… [crosstalk 00:25:42]

Natalie: It’s like, “Oh, by the way, you need to fix your sprinklers this time. Yeah, that’ll be $50,000.

Kyle: And it’s not like you need to add a whole new zone. It’s, “Hey, this needs to be four inches over this way.” I have had experience.

Natalie: Yeah, you get it. I think the one great thing about us as a business is that we understand that they are there for everyone’s safety. And if we can keep everyone’s safety our number one priority and really acknowledge that and tell them that’s what we’re about, they are a lot more easier to work with than trying to fight them. So we try to create a really great relationship with the community including anyone that is there because, for us anyone that’s in police and fire, we’re so thankful.

Kyle: Good stuff, good stuff. All right. Well, thank you so much, Trista and Natalie, for being on. If you people wanna know more, where should they go?

Natalie: marketsformakers.com.

Kyle: And we’ll have all this information in our show notes as well as I’m imagining a hilarious picture of a trailer that was towed all the way back from Chattanooga.

Natalie: Oh, yeah. Oh, my god.

Trista: Oh, we got a narwhal to show you.

Kyle: Well, thank you so much and check them out.

So I want to take a little bit here towards the end of the episode, just going to give a little information on what we’re doing. We’re lining up some new things for the new year here. One of the things we’re doing is reaching out to local bands and musicians, asking them to submit music that they would like featured on the podcast. We’ll probably put it in the lead-in and give a shout out to them in the show notes and also on the audio here. Pretty excited about that. I had a lot of great feedback in my initial asking who everyone would like to hear.

Things should be going pretty well here towards the new year. We’re going to be having some new episodes out. Specifically, there’s gonna be a Christmas episode coming out. So keep an eye out for that. And that’s going to be full of great stuff like where to go to see some cool lights, just holiday events, where to go ice skating, all sorts of cool things like that to make it feel like the holidays.

Segment 2. In England, there is a hereditary office known as the Queen’s Champion, and his job is to defend the monarch against any challengers. Whenever you hear the phrase “throwing down the gauntlet,” that is what this guy actually did. Historically from what I read, he would throw down the gauntlet three times during the coronation and he would basically call people out and challenge them to a fight if they wanted to try to challenge the claim of the new king or queen. And they also are the standard bearers, so whenever the king or queen goes into battle, this would be the guy next to him with the flag on the pennant and horse charging and all that. This is still an actual position in the English Order. It’s still an actual position and the current heir to the office is an accountant, which is relatively amusing.

Thank you for tuning into the Great Things Tampa Bay podcast. It’s been a lot of fun this year and we’re going to continue having fun next year. I would like to ask that you share a little bit. Just think of one person, just one person. Just share this with them. Just go to the website and share it with them. It’s really going to be through your referrals and your friends how we’re gonna build the following for this and make it into something truly awesome. I’m very appreciative of you all listening and looking forward to 2018.

And before I forget, if you like the podcast and would like to support it, all you need to do, just go to our website, greatthingstb.com. There’s a link there. You’ll see the Amazon logo. Basically, just click on that. That’ll take you to the normal Amazon site and just shop on Amazon as you would normally do. They pay us a little bit of a commission just for sending traffic. So if you’d like more content like this, just go to our website and click on the Amazon link. Thank you so much.

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Category Episode Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 17 – We’re All Stars Now At The Boat Show

Episode 15 - Get Your Game On! Tampa Bay Club Sports

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

There’s water to be found everywhere in Tampa Bay, and water means BOATS.  In this episode, we cover the three major boat shows in the Tampa Bay area and tell you which one to go to if you’re looking for sailboats and which one caters more to the fishing boater in you.

We also read some listener email who talks about the greatest Meatloaf they’ve ever had and finish up with the HMS dolphin who found the deal of a lifetime in the south pacific.

Transcript at the bottom of the page!

Boat Shows

Tampa Bay Boat Show

Florida State Fairgrounds, twice a year.

Free Entry. Mostly small fishing boats and pontoons.

 

Tampa Boat Show

Tampa Convention Center

12$ Entry, Huge selection of power boats and small selection of sailboats on water.

 

St Pete Power and Sailboat Show

Albert Whitted Park, in front of Mahaffey Theater

Around 20$ Entry. Huge selection of power and sailboats, large and small. Easily the best onboard access of any boat show.

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Friendly relations were established between the British sailors of the HMS Dolphin and the South Pacific locals. The relationships became particularly friendly when the sailors discovered that the women were eager to exchange sex for iron. This trade became so extensive that the loss of nails started to threaten Dolphin’s physical integrity.

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Transcript

Welcome to “Great Things Tampa Bay,” the podcast about great eats, great places, and great people in the greater Tampa Bay area. I’m your host, Kyle Sasser, a Tampa Bay native and realtor. This is episode 17, “We’re All Stars Now at the Boat Show.” This is the “Great Places” feed of the “Great Things Tampa Bay” podcast, where you will only hear episodes related to parks, stores, events, shows, and things to do about town. In our main podcast, which you’ll find under “Great Things Tampa Bay,” in addition to these chats about entertainment and events, we also cover great eateries and delicious grub, as well as interview some of the great people, movers and shakers in the area. You can find our main feed at greatthingstb.com. That’s greatthingstb.com, or you can subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play just by doing a search for “Great Things Tampa Bay.” Thank you and enjoy.

So, Tampa Bay, you know, we got water all over the place. We got Tampa Bay Proper, Old Tampa Bay, Hillsborough Bay, Intracoastal Waterway, Gulf of Mexico’s out there. We got the Straits, all that good stuff. So yeah, lots of boats running around, and with that comes a lot of boat stores, and also, boat shows. We’re gonna be covering three boat shows, and these are the primary boat shows in the area. There’s two over in Tampa, and then, there’s one over here in St. Petersburg. They typically happen in the colder parts of the year. Most people do not want to be walking around outdoors when it is blazing hot. So, usually around late August, September, October, November, those are the times where the boat shows are gonna be up and going on.

The largest of the state’s is gonna be down, you know, the Miami/Fort Lauderdale Boat Show, I think maybe the largest in the world. Don’t quote me on that, but it is huge. The boat shows that we have up here are actually very respectable, lots of choices, and each one kinda has a little bit of a different focus. First up, we got Tampa Bay Boat Show, and some of these might have already passed. You know, you can just make a note to remember this for next year, but I have been to each one of these, so I’m happy to give my personal experience with each of these.

So, first up, we got the Tampa Bay Boat Show. Typically, this one is at the end of September. Takes place over at the Florida State Fairgrounds, which is…that’s over there where 301 crosses Interstate 4. That’s where all your concerts and a lot of Hillsborough County High School graduations happen. The nice thing about the Tampa Bay Boat Show at the Florida State Fairgrounds is that pretty much the only cost is parking, which when we went this year, 2017, it was about five bucks. So, the Tampa Bay Boat Show does not have any sailboats, so if you are in the market, or just want to look at sailboats, this is not the one to go to, and even the powerboats, they will be on the smaller end. I think there was maybe one or two that was over the 40-foot mark, and they were on the woodblocks, and all that. Mainly, this is small pleasure crafts, 15 to 30-foot range, lots of fishing boats, pretty good selection of pontoon boats and things like that. So, yeah, so if you’re in the market for something like 15, 30 feet, it’s around late September. Give the Tampa Bay Boat Show a try.

Next up, we have the St. Pete Power and Sailboat Show. This one is my particular favorite. You know, I like sailboats, mostly. This is the show to go for if you are in the market for a sailboat. This one takes place down in front of the Mahaffey Theater and the Dali Museum. They actually build some temporary floating docks over there, kinda up next to the airport. They also have some displays up on land, you know, like, the smaller 10 feet, maybe, like, 20-foot powerboats up on land, but the stars of the show is definitely on the water. And you will see everything from 30-foot Beneteaus up to, you know, like, the 96-power yachts with separate crew quarters, its own little, you know, engine room. So, crazy, crazy stuff. Problem with some of these boat shows as you go, and, like, the really big cool stuff you don’t really see all that much, a lot of times, they’ll want you to set appointments, and blah-blah-blah, and pre-verify your income and all that good stuff. But the good thing about the St. Pete Power and Sailboat Show is the boats are a lot more open, and yeah, you can go tour some really cool stuff.

I think last time we went our favorite was the Beneteau 42. In addition to, you know, just being a brand-new sailboat, which is always awesome, the entire back transom kinda dropped down and made its own swim platform, which is sweet. And I know, you know, some of the old salty sailors don’t really like the Beneteaus and the Jeanneaus all that much. I don’t know, they’re missing that magic wooden something that people go gaga over, but I gotta say, it was pretty awesome. And the other cool thing about the Beneteau was that whenever you went down below decks, like, they didn’t really have the walls dividing up the space. It was just open. It made it feel huge, which was amazing. So, it’s good to see a ton of boats like that because you can really rapidly figure out what you like and what you don’t like. You do have to pay to go to the St. Pete Power and Sailboat Show. It’s usually about $20 each, and you know, there’s parking and stuff like that. It can get slightly crowded. Yeah, it’s not too bad. And, you know, you’re out there walking around on floating docks in the water, so, you know, if you get some motion sickness, sailboat might not be the best thing for you, but just be sure to take your Dramamine or associated motion sickness pills before going out there.

And last up we have the Tampa Boat Show, not to be confused with the Tampa Bay Boat Show. And just as a personal side, it does irritate me when there’s multiple things in the area, and one is the Tampa Bay whatever, and the other one is the Tampa whatever. And then, they get mad when you get them confused. And it’s just like, well, you know, there’s like three letters difference between the two of you. Maybe you should tighten the branding up a little bit.

So, the Tampa Boat Show takes place usually early October. I think this year it was October 13th through 15th. It was delayed a little bit due to Hurricane Irma, but it takes place at the Tampa Convention Center. You do have to pay to get in. Usually, it’s $12 to $15, somewhere in that neighborhood. They have a pretty good mix of both power and sailboats. So, in the convention hall proper, that’s where you’re gonna find the majority of your powerboats. And honestly, the selection is gonna be larger here than at the state fairgrounds boat show, so yeah, if you’re in the market for a powerboat, they definitely have the selection. They also have a marina section outside, kinda down across from Harbour Island where they have some docks set up. You can go out there and tour. Access isn’t quite as easy as the St. Pete Power and Sailboat Show. It’s also usually a little bit more crowded. Can be tight quarters if you’re trying to access boats out there. They don’t have as large of an on-water section, but they do have a really good selection of large power vessels, and some sailboats.

So, just to recap, you got the Tampa B-A-Y Boat show, which is at the Florida State Fairgrounds, typically at the end of September. You have the Tampa Boat Show, which is at the Tampa Convention Center, and that’s usually late September, early October. And then, the St. Pete Power and Sailboat Show, which is my personal favorite, and that is usually, like, November, December, somewhere around that time.

All of this information is in the show notes, so you can either click on the information button on the podcast app that you’re using, or you can just go to our website, and we’ll have it there. And, as always, if you have any questions, please just send me an email.

We did actually get some listener mail in. This email comes from Wendy, who states that her nine-year-old son claims that the best meatloaf in the world is at Ella’s Folk Art Café over in Tampa. And, for those of you that are not in the know, Ella’s Folk Art Café is on Nebraska Avenue, just south of Hillsborough, and that’s over in Tampa, basically across the street from Green Shift Comics. A little bit of a heads up on Sundays they usually change the menu up. Sundays is usually more of, like, a Southern barbeque sort of thing, and then during the rest of the week, they do, you know, the regular menu. Also, a good place to catch a live band if you’re into, you know, Rockabilly and people playing slap bass, in addition to other genres. But, yeah, it’s a good place to catch a relaxed show while having some delicious food.

Wendy also recommends the Smokehouse in Dunedin, which you longtime listeners know that barbeque is very near and dear to my heart. In the first episode of “Great Things Tampa Bay,” I led off with my favorite restaurant in the area, Urban Brew and BBQ. So, I have eaten at Smokehouse in Dunedin, and yes, they do have very delicious barbeque and sides, so definitely recommend if you’re up in Dunedin. So, thank you for that email, Wendy, and tell your nine-year-old son that he is a culinary genius, but thank you for the email, and please keep them coming.

So, the HMS Dolphin was a 24-gun frigate of the Royal Navy, and yep, she had many adventures. Main claim to fame was that she was the first ship to circumnavigate the world twice. As you can imagine, lots of interesting things happening on this voyage, and quite a few ports to call, one of the more notable ones being Tahiti. But probably the funniest instance that happened on this voyage was just how friendly the crew got with the natives, especially when they learned that the natives were eager to exchange sex for iron. As you can imagine, trade was brisk, eventually to the point to where it was actually threatening the integrity of the ship because the crew had pried so many iron nails out of the wood planks to ensure this goodwill with the locals. Luckily, the captain, you know, had the foresight to put end to all of that. Luckily, they made it back safely. Hats off, I suppose, HMS Dolphin.

So, I want to thank you for sharing “Great Things Tampa Bay” with your friends and family. You can share us by going to our website greatthingstb.com. There you’ll find “share it” buttons on nearly every page. You can share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you are looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor, specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas County. So, if you wanna talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111, or you can send me an email at kyle@sassergroup.com. That’s kyle@sassergroup.com, and I’ll be more than happy to help you find your next home here in Tampa Bay.

I also need your feedback. I need you to tell me where we should be going, and what we should be eating, and who we should be talking to. So, please go to our website, greatthingstb.com, and you can hit either the “Contact Us” link at the top or the “Get Social” links, also at the top. If you wanna be a cool guy, or a cool girl, you can call our voicemail number, which is 727-440-4455, and leave us a message. I’d love to hear from yah. So, thanks for listening, and I’ll see you next time.

And, oh, by the way, if you don’t want to miss the next episode, please subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play. That’ll guarantee that you get the next episode delivered straight to your mobile device of choice. Thank you so much, and I’ll talk to you next time.

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Category Clearwater Episode Further Afield Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 16 – The Great (Movies) Outdoors

Episode 16 - The Great (Movies) Outdoors

Alexa,
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Show Notes

In Episode 16 We tell you all the great places to catch a movie now that the weather has cooled off!  And you can find Drive-Ins or Movies in the Park in every corner of Tampa Bay!

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

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Transcript

Welcome to, “Great Things Tampa Bay,” the podcast about great eats, great places, and great people in the Greater Tampa Bay area. I’m your host, Kyle Sasser, a Tampa Bay native and realtor. This is episode 16, “The Great (Movies) Outdoors”.

This is the “Great Places” feed, of “The Great Things Tampa Bay” podcast, where you will only hear episodes related to parks, stores, events, shows, and things to do about town. In our main podcast, which you’ll find under, “Great Things Tampa Bay,” in addition to these chats about entertainment and events, we also cover great eateries and delicious grub, as well as interview some of the great people, movers and shakers in the area.

You can find our main feed at greatthingstb.com, that’s greatthingstb.com, or you can subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play, just by doing a search for “Great Things Tampa Bay”. Thank you, and enjoy.

So, you know, we’re getting a little bit further on in the year here. Things are gonna be cooling down here shortly. I know cool is a relative term here in Tampa Bay, Florida. Fun fact I learned the other day about Tampa, is the temperature has never actually gone above 99 degrees, which is really tough to believe, the reports that I saw swore up and down. It must be the way they measure it with the fact that it’s, you know, at a certain altitude and all that good stuff, because I don’t buy it.

So, since it’s cooling off, people are going to be venturing outdoors a little bit more, spend a little bit more time outdoors enjoying the cooler weather. And what better way to do that than going out and seeing a movie in a park somewhere? So we do actually have quite a few places here in Tampa Bay to partake in a movie in a park. Most of these really get going around October, there’s a couple that do it all year long, but yeah, Saint Pete, Tampa, they usually stick to, you know, the cooler months, October through May, April, something like that.

So without further ado, over in St. Petersburg, in Straub Park, we have movies in the park. And all of this stuff, I’m going to be putting the links in the show notes, so you don’t have to really remember this. Just, you know, pop on the website, it’s got links, you can see what movies are coming up and all that stuff.

So downtown St. Petersburg, there’s movies in the park at Straub Park, which is downtown. Over in Tampa, there’s actually two. There’s one out in Channelside, at the Grand Central, on Kennedy, and this one’s called Flicks and Food Trucks. This one is on the third Thursday of the month, and it goes from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., roundabouts. This is kinda cool because they line up a bunch of food trucks there, so you can kind of go down the line there and sample it. They usually have a couple of Savory guys there, some actual food stuff, and then there’s a sweet truck, maybe some cupcakes or something like that. It’s really a nice place if you’ve never been there, and a cool place to take in a show.

Also in downtown Tampa, the City of Tampa puts on movies in the park, which is at Curtis Hixon, which is down in front of the art museum, you know, where all the water fountains are and stuff like that. They’re starting that up October 7th. They haven’t released the movie schedule yet, but they do have it slated with a October 7 start.

And finally, back over to Pinellas County, at Clearwater Beach is Sunset Cinema at Pier 60. And that one’s actually going on right now. You can go down there this weekend and go watch some movies. It is a little warm, and I say that as a native. But, yeah, if it’s something you wanna do, they’re located at 1 Causeway Blvd, and if you use your noodle a little, bit you can figure out that most of these get started around sundown.

So, besides the movies in the park, what else is there to do? Well, we actually have quite a few drive-in movie theaters hangin’ around. We did use to have one over here in St. Petersburg, it was over on 28th Street. Unfortunately, that closed back in 2000, if I remember correctly, but we do still have three. So the big one that most people know is the Fun Lan Drive-In Theater, which is over 2302 East Hillsborough Avenue. During the day, on the weekend, they usually have a flea market. So if you drive by and you see a flea market, don’t stress, that is the drive-in theater, you just need to come back later.

I will say that they usually play a little bit more bold movie choices, I guess you could say. They’re not afraid of PG-13s, and all that stuff. Last I checked, they we’re playing “Dunkirk” and that new “Annabelle” movie, yet most of the other ones are gonna be a little more family oriented. With Halloween coming up, you know, go see a scary movie at the drive-in. If you’re a fan of ’80s movies, you know how that turns out.

So, we still have two other drive-in theaters. There’s one in South Hillsborough County, down in Ruskin. It’s called the Ruskin Family Drive In, and that’s located at 5011 U.S. 41. It’s been there since 1952, and they only accept cash, so keep that in mind when you go there. And the third drive-in theater is the Silver Moon out in Lakeland, Florida. And that’s located at 4100 New Tampa Highway, Lakeland, Florida. Silver Moon has been there since 1948, and I can remember as a kid driving by, seeing the big screens with the movies going on and thought it was the coolest thing ever.

I really need to go to more drive-in theaters. I was telling Abbie about this one and she kinda got excited, the Fun Lan over in Tampa. So, we’re definitely gonna be making a point to go. That’s all the fun things to do to watch a outdoor movie. Of course, it isn’t really something you wanna do in the middle of July or August. Just it’s an exercise in being miserable, which I cannot recommend. But as the weather cools off here, definitely check one of these out. And any interest in this, please just go to our website, greatthingstb.com, find the show notes for episode 16 and I’ll have links to all this stuff there.

So, I wanna thank you for sharing “Great Things Tampa Bay’ with your friends and family. You can share us by going to our website, greatthingstb.com. There, you’ll find share buttons on nearly every page. You can share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you are looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor, specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas County. So if you wanna talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111, or you can send me an e-mail at kyle@sassergroup.com, that’s kylesassergroup.com, and I’d be more than happy to help you find your next home here in Tampa Bay.

I also need your feedback. I need you to tell me where we should be going, and what we should be eating, and who we should be talking to. So please go to our website, greatthingstb.com, where you can hit either the “Contact Us” link at the top, or the “Get Social Links” also at the top. If you wanna be a cool guy or cool girl, you can call our voicemail number, which is 727-440-4455 and leave us a message. I’d love to hear from you.

So thanks for listening and I’ll see you next time. And, oh, by the way, if you don’t want to miss the next episode, please subscribe to us on iTunes, or Google Play. That’ll guarantee that you get the next episode delivered straight to your mobile device of choice.

Thank you so much, and I’ll talk to you next time.

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Episode 15 – Get Your Game On! Tampa Bay Club Sports

Episode 15 - Get Your Game On! Tampa Bay Club Sports

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Get our there and get active!  In Episode 15 we cover Tampa Bay Club Sports, one of the best ways to burn some calories while having some great fun playing your favorite sports (and some not sports such as Golf or Cornhole).

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

Tampa Bay Club Sport

WWW.TampaBayClubSport.Com

Sports Offered:

  • Soccer
  • Football
  • Softball
  • Volleyball
  • Kickball
  • Basketball
  • Tennis
  • Bowling, Golf, Cornhole, Bar Games

Locations all around the Tampa Bay Area!

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If you don’t read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed.

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Transcript

Welcome to Great Things Tampa Bay, the podcast about great eats, great places and great people in the greater Tampa Bay Area. I’m your host, Kyle Sasser, a Tampa Bay native and realtor. This is Episode 15, Get Your Game On!

I’d like to thank you for giving us your time. I know there’s lots of things vying for your attention and I appreciate you choosing to spend your time listening to me in this podcast. I promise I will do everything I can to bring you something awesome. Also wanna let you know that we now have express feeds. If you’re only interested in our food reviews, just do a search for “Great Bites, Tampa Bay.” If you want more of our interviews with interesting movers and shakers in the area, just look for the feed, “Great People, Tampa Bay.” And for things to do in the area, shops or other events, just do a search for “Great Places, Tampa Bay.” These feeds are listed on our website, greatthingstb.com, under the heading “Express Feeds,” up at the top there.

So, you know, one of the annoying things about getting older, growing up, and all that good stuff, is that, you know, there’s not really anyone around to play games with anymore. Yeah, I’m sure you keep track of one or two, friends over the years, but, you know, the days of going through the neighborhood and be able to throw together a pick-up football, basketball, or soccer game, are many years in the past. Everyone’s just got way too much stuff to do.

Thankfully, we got a little place here, locally, it’s called Tampa Bay Club Sport and it’s a great place for adults, young and old, to get together and play some sports. Those of you that actually know me know that I wasn’t really too big into sports in my younger days, definitely something I’ve grown into as I’ve gotten older. Honestly, I wish that I would have done it a lot sooner, it’s very rewarding and fulfilling. So, if you’re someone who’s just kind of sitting around…honestly, I spent years in front a computer and if you’re doing the same, you know, get out there. Even if you don’t really know what you’re doing, it’s worth it to get out there just to have a little fun and meet some new people.

So, Club Sport was founded in 1995, specifically as an outlet for young adults to play sports. I mean you’re pretty good up through college with being able to throw people together, but once you get past 25, it starts getting really tough, you know, jobs, sleep, kids, career, all that stuff sort of gets in the way.

Tampa Bay Club Sports has locations all around the Bay Area, from Brandon, over on the other side of Tampa, they have some in Tampa. Coquina Key, they don’t have some in the extended area, they have some affiliated clubs down in Sarasota and the like. But, yeah, they more than likely have something close to you. And they cover a wide range of skill levels from recreation, up to intermediate, to competitive. And it can get pretty competitive out there, I can tell you.

Nice thing about it, they do charge a fee, of course, for all this. They paint lines and stuff, it’s not gonna be a pro-level field or anything like that, but they do pay the referees, so you do have someone out there making calls and all that good stuff, which is awesome. They have a ton of sports available. They have soccer, which is my favorite. I currently play every Wednesday, over here in St. Petersburg, at Puryear Park, which is awesome. They also have softball, volleyball, kickball, which my wife played for a couple years there. They also have football, which I’m guessing is of the flag variety, I have not actually signed up for that yet, but I can’t imagine that they would have tackle football. Basketball, tennis, golf, cornhole, which is questionable sports, bowling, and, finally, a Bar Games League, which is Flip Cup…I don’t know if they have Flip Cup, but I know I saw pictures of beer pong. So those last few are definitely more of a game than a sport, but there you go. And, yeah, I know some of you all are probably kinda mad saying that, you know, golf’s a sport, but, yeah, let’s get real. And I say that as someone who loves golf.

So, you don’t actually need a full team to play, so you don’t need to get together, you know, 10 people to play soccer or anything like that. If you just wanna play solo, just give them a call, they will sign you up as a free agent and place you on a team. The team that I’m on, we actually all were free agents, and we started just after the last World Cup. We’re still around, which is pretty good, real good bunch of people. So those on the Moist Towelettes Soccer Team, that are giving us a listen, it’s a lot of fun playing with you guys. So, their website is www.tampabayclubsports.com, and you can go there and it’ll display all the leagues and give you all the options, and all that good stuff. Or, if you just rather just call them, their phone number is 877-820-2582.

Segment 2, “Tell ’em Twain.” Mark Twain is one of the most quoted Americans of all time. I saw this one the other day. Thought it was rather appropriate for our new modern age of yellow journalism, and it goes a little something like this, “If you don’t read the newspaper, you’re uninformed. If you read the newspaper, you’re misinformed.”

I wanna thank you for sharing Great Things Tampa Bay with your friends and family. You can share us by going to our website, greatthingstb.com. There you’ll find share buttons on nearly every page. You can share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you are looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor, specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough/Pinellas County. So if you wanna talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111, or you can send me an email at kyle@sassergroup.com. That’s kyle-S-A-S-S-E-R-G-R-O-U-P.com, and I’d be more than happy to help you find your next home here in Tampa Bay.

I also need your feedback. I need you to tell me where we should be going, and what we should be eating, and who we should be talking to. So, please go to our website, greatthingstb.com. Or, you can hit either the “Contact Us” link at the top or the “Get Social Links,” also at the top. If you wanna be a cool guy or a cool girl, you can call our voicemail number, which is 727-440-4455, and leave us a message. I’d love to hear from you.

So, thanks for listening, and I’ll see you next time. And, oh, by the way, if you don’t want to miss the next episode, please subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play, that’ll guarantee that you get the next episode delivered straight to your mobile device of choice.

Thank you so much and I’ll talk to you next time.

Categories
Category Episode Great Places Location St Pete

Episode 14 – Deflate Things Tampa Bay (Places to Avoid)

Episode 14 - Deflate Things Tampa Bay ( Places to Avoid)

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Things aren’t always sunny in Tampa Bay.  Rain falls.  Lightning crashes.

While it’s good to know what places are great, it’s also valuable to know what places to absolutely avoid.

Dayton Andrews Jeep on 34th in St Pete is one such place, and in this episode I give my personal experiences dealing with them.

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

Dayton Andrews Jeep
St Petersburg

Dayton Andrews Dodge Chrysler Jeep Ram

2301 34th St N, St. Petersburg, FL 33713

  • Poor Service
  • Unknowledgable Sales Staff
  • Unhelpful Staff
  • Used Vehicles interior not cleaned

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Transcript

Welcome to Great Things Tampa Bay, the podcast about great eats, great places and great people in the greater Tampa Bay area. I’m your host, Kyle Sasser, a Tampa Bay native and realtor. This is Episode 14 “Deflate Things Tampa Bay.” I’d like to thank you for giving us your time. I know there’s lots of things vying for your attention, and I appreciate you choosing to spend your time listening to me and this podcast. I promise I will do everything I can to bring you something awesome. I also want to let you know that we now have express feeds. If you’re only interested in our food reviews, just do a search for “Great Bites Tampa Bay.” If you want more of our interviews with interesting movers and shakers in the area, just look for the feed “Great People Tampa Bay,” and for things to do in the area shops or other events, just do a search for “Great Places Tampa Bay.” These feeds are listed on our website greatthingstb.com under the heading Express Feeds up at the top there.

So this episode, we are going to come at things from a little bit different angle. Obviously, we’ve had 13 episodes so far, and we’ve featured a great thing on every episode. But, you know, I wouldn’t be truthful if I said that everything about Tampa Bay was great. You know, a lot of times it’s just as important to know where not to go as where to go. A lot of times certain types of businesses, you know, if you have a bad experience then, you know, it can be real bad. So anyway, I thought in this episode we would cover one of those. This is from my personal experience, and just so you know, I don’t do this if I just have one bad experience. You know, I don’t think it’s worthwhile to judge a place based on one interaction with it because, you know, sometimes people have bad days or, you know, certain circumstances can align to make things bad. Let’s just take, for example, if you’ve not had a lot of rain and then, you know, you want to go take a canoe down the Alafia River, you can’t get too mad because there’s not enough rain to run the river. So, it’s all about circumstances and all that.

But, my personal belief is that if you have a few interactions with a park or a place and each one just leaves you thinking, “Man, this place is horrible,” then, you know, it’s probably a good thing to let other people know so that they can avoid it and they don’t have to waste their time. So with that in mind, in those caveats, so my wife and I, Abbie, we went to, you know, we were just curious driving around looking at Jeeps, specifically Jeep Wranglers. So we went to Dayton Andrew Jeep on 34th Street North. That’s U.S. 19 and like 23rd. We’ve been there a few times. This story is our most recent experience there, but the other two times that we have been there it was a very, very similar experience, so, and we were looking at two different vehicles each time. The first time we were looking at a Jeep Grand Cherokee and this last time we were looking for Jeep Wranglers. Specifically, you know, used Jeep Wranglers, manual transmission.

So we pull into the Dayton Andrew Jeep dealership, you know, they have a little…I can only call it a guard tower. It basically looks, you know, like they’re trying to patrol a prison there or something. I’m assuming it’s so they can see, you know, the buyers, you know, walking the lots and they can coordinate and all this stuff. When we pulled up there, there was no one on top of the tower and there was a guy sitting underneath the tower. Basically, you know, covered in sweat, very disheveled, sweat-soaked shirt. Honestly, I thought it was one of the guys that wash the cars that was just kind of taking a break. But then he, you know, popped up a little bit and said, “Hey, how can I help you?” Then confirmed that he was a used-car salesman. We then asked, we were like, “Hey, you know, we’re looking for a Jeep Wrangler, manual transmission.” He’s like, “Well, Jeep Wranglers are over there. Stick your head in to see if they’re manual transmission or not.”

Now, those of you that might not be familiar with Jeep Wranglers, they’re near and dear to many people’s hearts. They’re kind of like, what’s similar, so like motorcycles. They have, like, similar culture, like Jeep owners will wave at each other on the road. Almost like the, you know, the reverence of like say the BMW 3 Series or the Porsche. So, it’s not unusual to ask for a manual Jeep Wrangler. Now, they don’t make so many of them but, you know, it is something that people actually look for pretty regularly, and I would think that they would know what on the lot is manual and what isn’t. It’s not like they have 5,000 of them, they had about maybe six, five or six. So anyway, the salesman just kind of pointed in the general direction of the Wranglers. So we went and looked, opened the doors. The cars themselves were in pretty bad shape, like, the carpets were filthy, just, you know, looked maybe they hadn’t been vacuumed at all. The outsides were actually fine, but the interiors were, let’s just say, not the most care given to it. And I come to find out after we looked on our own, that they did not actually have a manual Jeep Wrangler.

Now, we then went over and looked at the new cars, thinking that maybe they would have a manual over there because honestly, I hadn’t really been in a Wrangler since, I don’t know, high school, which was 1990, I’m not going to tell you. Yeah, but just to say that it has been quite a while since I’ve been inside of one. You know, I was just curious of what they look like nowadays and how they drove and all that good stuff. So we go over to the new car side of the lot there, thinking that, you know, maybe they would be a little bit more knowledgeable and be able to point us in the right direction. They did have a row of about 25 Jeep Wranglers there. We then went to the new sales guy and basically the same thing, it’s like, “Hey just, you know, walking around, checking out stuff and we’re looking for a manual Wrangler. Do you have any?” And he said, “They’re all locked, but stick your head through the window, you know, look through the window and you can see if they’re manual or not.” So we walked down the 25, 30 cars there. None of them were manual. And as we were doing this, he didn’t even, like, help us look into the windows. He basically just walked, kind of, like, down the fronts, and basically just, kind of, through real salesy questions at us.

We got to one Jeep Wrangler that was this lime green. Nothing against lime green or, you know, those neon colors, but they weren’t exactly what we were looking for. But yeah, he just kept pounding on us. He was like, “Hey, you know, it’s a really great deal on this. You’re never going to find the cheaper one, blah, bah, blah, blah, blah,” and we just kept repeating like, “Listen, we don’t like the color. We’re not interested in the color.” He was just like, “Well, you could probably just paint it for like 300 bucks. A few hundred bucks you can get a new paint job on it.” Which is absolutely ridiculous. Like, I’m not going to buy a new car, you know, just to put a new paint job on it, just because some schlub tells me that it’s the best deal ever.

So that was our experience looking for the Jeep Wrangler. As I said, whenever we were looking for the Grand Cherokee a couple of years ago, it was pretty much the same experience. It’s one of those things where you get in the car and you drive away just like, “Man, I never ever want to go back there. I don’t want anyone to ever go there.” So this was my personal experience, and I would love for them to listen to this or, you know, to kind of take stock of their customer service and turn things around. But basically, as it stands, I cannot recommend them in the least. If you are interested in purchasing a Jeep I would recommend driving up to Fitzgerald’s Countryside Chrysler Jeep, which is up 19. It’s north of Clearwater and all of that stuff, so it’s a little out of the way for most people in Tampa Bay, but it’s absolutely worth it. The staff there is very knowledgeable. They’re all fans and Jeep advocates and enthusiasts themselves. If you head up there ask for Steve Flescher. He was very nice, showed us a couple Jeeps, was very knowledgeable, answered all of our questions. All around, just a good standup guy.

So our two thumbs down to Dayton Andrew Jeep on 34th street, just, I can’t recommend them. Anyway, if you have any comments or other horror stories on places you like to absolutely avoid at all costs, just drop us a message. You can find us on Facebook, or you can just send me an email Kyle@greatthingstb.com.

So I want to thank you for sharing Great Things Tampa Bay with your friends and family. You can share us by going to our website, greatthingstb.com. There you’ll find share buttons on nearly every page. You can share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you’re looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas County. So if you want to talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111 or you can send me an email at kyle@sassergroup.com, that’s, K-Y-L-E, S-A-S-S-E-R-G-R-O-U-P, dot com, and I would be more than happy to help you find your next home here in Tampa Bay. I also need your feedback. I need you to tell me where we should be going, what we should be eating, and who we should be talking to, so please go to our website, greatthingstb.com, and you can hit either the Contact Us link at the top or, the Get Social link also at the top. If you want to be a cool guy or a cool girl, you can call our voicemail number which is 727-440-4455 and leave us a message. I’d love to hear from you.

So thanks for listening and I’ll see you next time. Oh, by the way, if you don’t want to miss the next episode, please subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play. That’ll guarantee that you get the next episode delivered straight to your mobile device of choice. Thank you so much and I’ll talk to you next time.

Categories
Category Episode Great People Great Places Location St Pete

Episode 12 – World Thrift Popup Shop and Kitchen

Episode 12 - World Thrift Popup Shop and Kitchen

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

In Episode 12 we interview Berto, Nick and Alessandro of the AOK Family, World Thrift Popup Shop and Kitchen

 

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

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Transcript

Kyle: Welcome to “Great Things Tampa Bay” the podcast about great eats, great places and great people in the greater Tampa Bay area. I’m your host, Kyle Sasser, Tampa Bay native and realtor. And this is episode 12 and I’d like to thank you for giving us your time. I know there’s lots of things vying for your attention and I appreciate you choosing to spend your time listening to me and this podcast. I promise I’ll do my best to bring you something great. I did wanna give a little bit of an update to our podcast format.

We’re actually changing it a little bit. This form is a little shorter than usual. So we are shortening up the format, we are going to try to keep it between 15 and 22, 23, 24 minutes. We’re also only gonna do one main segment part and to trade off on that is we’re going to move to a weekly release. Also, in addition to the main “Great Things Tampa Bay” podcast which you’re listening to right now, we’re setting up three separate feeds just in case you don’t really have any interest in some of the things we talk about.

So we’re calling this “Express” feeds and if you look on iTunes or Google Play, wherever you get your podcast feed, you can do a search for “Great Bites Tampa Bay’ and that’s gonna be for, you know, our food reviews and restaurants. “Great Places Tampa Bay” is going to be about events and parks and all sorts of things to do in the area. And then “Great People” is going to be our interview feed. So if you listen to the main feed which you’re listening to right now, then you’re gonna get all three of these.

This is just for people who just don’t have any interest in making a…maybe they hate “Great Food” for some reason and, you know, they can like just to listen to the “Great Places” and the “Great People” interviews that we do. Looking in our website those will be listed under “Express” feeds and we’ll have a little bit more information for that at the end. This is episode 12. We’re calling this World Thrift. AOK Family and Pop-up Shop and Kitchen and that’s segment one, World Thrift.

So I was able to interview some local entrepreneurs by the name of Nick, Berto and Alessandro and basically they run a thrift store and also they do a pop-up shop which, you know, if you’re a little bit older, you might not know, but it’s, kind of, all the rage right now. But basically, it’s just a little booth that pops up. It’s kind of temporaries, a lot of times it’s just part of a larger group of them or festival but it can also just be an event that’s hosted on its own and basically, you know, they set up a little booth, they have some clothes in particular.

They also have food from a great chef in the area here. So kind of adds a lot of interest and value to the area and had a lot of fun interviewing them, hope you enjoy listening.

So I’m here today with the AOK Family and I’m gonna let each of them introduce themselves.

Berto: Hey, how you guys going? It’s Berto.

Nick: I’m Nick.

Alessandro: And Alessandro.

Kyle: They’re some entrepreneurs here at St. Petersburg and nationwide doing some great things.

Alessandro: So as the AOK Family, we’re basically just a collective group of individuals. We don’t like to go by, like, incorporated or anything like that because we feel that any one that’s in this with us is family. So that’s why we came up with the name AOK Family and what we do is just each of us have different visions and we all come together to help each other out and bring them all into fruition basically.

So, I personally have a brand. It’s called World Thrift that we’re all in on and that’s a buy-sell trade business where we buy sell trade clothes, vintage, anything that has a resale value clothing-wise, we want it.

Berto: So basically, I’m a chef and well, we do catering and private chef company. We do creations by Berto and I also work at a lot of the events. We basically bring my own twist on diner classics and Street food…

Kyle: That sounds delicious. What’s your best dish, do you feel?

Berto: We could do best sell. We probably had for dinner our first plate. I made a homemade peanut butter and a strawberry jam, like, deep fried, like, a French toast and topped with banana fosters.

Alessandro: It’s like a good midnight snack, top dish. It was real good.

Kyle: All right, cool. So Alessandro, you got the clothes, right?

Alessandra: Mm-hmm.

Kyle: And Berto, you got the food?

Berto: Yeah.

Kyle: So Nick, what’s your key role in all this?

Nick: What do you call it, Alessandro?

Alessandro: The FLO, F-L-O, so Financial Legal and Operations, but on top of that, like, Nick is in it, like, Nick’s in it with the food, Nick’s in it with the clothe. Like, Nick came over yesterday and he had a bag full of thrifted stuff that he went out and got himself, so he does everything.

Kyle: So on the food front we have American Street food.

Berto: I’m like classically trained, so like French and Italian cuisine and I work at the Birch & Vine now. So I do a lot of fine dining, food and good plating and stuff there. So, I do that twist on, like, say you’re walking around New York or in L.A., like, any other street food you have out there, all the little bodegas and stuff. I put my own little twist on it, my flavor and I try to bring, you know, a little bit higher end touch for a little price.

Kyle: Yeah. Well, I will say, speaking of Birch & Vine, my wife and I went there a few months ago and had the Carpaccio with the gorgonzola ice cream [crosstalk 00:05:13].

Berto: Yeah. Oh, God.

Nick: Nice.

Berto: I like that place, it’s delicious.

Kyle: So how did y’all meet? How did y’all get started?

Alessandro: So Nick and I met at the bus stop when we were in middle school. I was in sixth grade and he was in seventh and me and Berto met…I still work there actually part-time at the Brown Boxer at Madeira Beach. I’ve been working there since I was 18 but Berto was just working there. One day I just said hey to him basically. We had never met. I had heard his name. He had heard mine. We had mutual friends and stuff.

So, I don’t know, the connection…Like, our friendship just really kicked it off. We actually only met maybe like four years ago. So it’s pretty crazy that we are as close as we are.

Kyle: Cool.

Nick: We’re all really close but this whole venture didn’t really start until March actually getting things down brass tacks, working out the numbers and figuring things out, that’s when it all started, March of 2017.

Kyle: Also, I was kind of an onlooker I guess, you could say, because Alessandro, I had kind of known you around that time, we’d meet a couple times. And yeah, I just saw y’all kind of take off from, you know, just a few little blips on social media and then basically a flood of stuff, y’all went all over the nation, right?

Together: Right.

Kyle: Doing shows and stuff.

Nick: We were out in New Orleans, we just got back from L.A. not too long ago.

Alessandro: Yeah. We were in Los Angeles in June, we went to New Orleans, I think in May and those were like back-to-back events. And New Orleans we did a couple like small pop-ups just in the area but in L.A. we did a couple different ones. We were out at Venice Beach. We did one in downtown L.A., like a rooftop pool area, and then we did one at a clothing store, which I’ve got their shirt on, it’s Good Mood and so that was actually…

We held like a pop-up shop and kitchen there and it was actually the first time I was ever able to do a fashion show, which I really liked, and we just did another one this weekend at Furnish Me Vintage. So that was the second one I’ve ever done.

Kyle: Yeah. So who does the social media?

Berto: We all help.

Kyle: Because I gotta say, you all do a really good job and it’s very interesting. I mean, I know I’m not exactly your target demographic, being an older…

Alessandro: Actually, believe it or not, you are. You guys have more money to spend on us because we have friends that, like, they’ll support us till the death of them but, you know, they might only have $43 in their pocket and we always want all of our events to be for everyone. I have a lot of girls that are like, “Oh, I can’t come because I have my son that day or a guy.” “Oh, I have my daughter.” Bring them along. We always try to make it all inclusive and fun for everyone.

Kyle: And just for the record, your ages are?

Berto: I’m 27.

Nick: Twenty-five.

Alessandro: Twenty-four.

Kyle: All right. And your lovely host here is 38 years old. So we have the American food, right, with the artisanal touch I guess you could say, right?

Berto: Let’s keep American, but like I said, since I’m Italian-French, like, trained, I bring a lot of the elegance the Italian food brings but with like a grilled cheese or like a cheese cake or something, you know.

Kyle: Like, how would you describe the clothing?

Alessandro: I just watched a couple other brands and different people selling stuff online and everyone has their markets. So if you go online, I have some friends, they specifically only sell jerseys because that’s just what they specialize in. Some people only do vintage. Some people just do band tees. With our concept of world thrift, I want to try to have everything. I want to be able to appeal to everyone and then, also another thing that goes into is I’ve always really loved to travel, you know.

A lot of people they’re like St. Pete vintage or San Francisco vintage and they’re only thrifting out of that one area whereas anytime we’re traveling, anytime I go out of town, I’m grabbing stuff. So that when you buy something I can maybe let you know where it came from or…

Berto: Give it a little background story.

Alessandro: Yeah. Give it a little bit more of a story than just, oh, we just found these in the local thrift stores in St. Pete. Sometimes like, the pants I’m wearing right now, like, I got these from Malaysia, you know, so…

Kyle: And a lot of times the story is actually what’s gonna sell something.

Berto: Yeah. And makes it.

Alessandro: Right. So yeah, I guess in short, I try to bring in just the best of everything really.

Kyle: And I’m looking around here, we’re kind of in storage room currently in, you know, I’m seeing some colored shirts and some Umbro jackets. Very ’90s feel would you say?

Together: Yes. Definitely.

Kyle: I was gonna say, this does kind of remind me of my middle school.

Alessandro: There you go.

Kyle: I don’t see a starter jacket around.

Nick: We have members only.

Kyle: Members only. I like it.

Alessandro: A lot of it’s nostalgia honestly, people see something that reminded them of when they were young. Maybe they didn’t have that item or couldn’t get it, now they can so that’s a big thing.

Nick: A lot of our customers are sports fans, just getting a piece that really takes them back like, we have this Dolphins’ shirt jersey 95. Last year, Don Shula, was head coach. If you’re a true Dolphins’ fan you’re gonna love it and that’s what we try to bring to a lot of our pieces, you know, and say, “I have to have it.”

Kyle: So my brother, bless his heart, is a very long suffering Buccaneers fan and I know that he has a lot of lover’s heart for the old Buccaneer, Bruce, you know, from the ’80s. They were breaking all the wrong record, I should say. So y’all are traveling around the country doing shows, doing all sorts of great things. What was the best failure that y’all have experienced so far?

Berto: We kind of split on that one. We had a easy like Sunday morning brunch event at the Green Bench Brewing and it was on the outside looking in it went great. But for like our opinions, like, the power wasn’t working, the band weren’t playing quite the right music we wanted. Everything was like, I had a meltdown.

Nick: Yeah.

Alessandro: We all had headaches by the end of the day and we were…

Berto: And it was a long night. It was first like early morning event, like, all of our events…So we kind of, that’s when we get our sleep, you know, I’m up prepping till 5:00 or 6:00 in the morning so I crash out at like 7:00 or 8:00 and get a four-hour nap and this one, like, the event started at 11:00. So like, I got done at like 7:00 or 8:00 and it was just like, all right, shower and it’s pack and it’s [crosstalk 00:11:00].

Alessandro: Let’s get it going, yeah.

Kyle: So that was down at a Green Bench?

Berto: Yeah. They’re doing wrong. We love Green Bench like, they worked great with us, let us host this amazing event. It wasn’t anything to do on them. It was just like small things just kept little domino effect, you know, that butterfly’s wing and whatnot.

Alessandro: That’s a good example of a really good event that, you know, just have like a couple things go wrong, but we’ve also done events where it was just such short planning. We literally tried to throw an event together in like two days and two days later when we get up and get over there and set up, I think like three people came the entire night. So definitely, a couple different ways you can like define like best failures or worst failures but those are some of them.

Berto: I was high on that place, man. Nowhere I was snoopy boy.

Kyle: Those are the one you’ll tell people when y’all are rich and famous?

Alessandro: Our first event was March 8th and we’ve done close to 25 events since then. So one thing we’ve learned is now we’re focusing on bigger events.

Berto: As opposed to, like, when we first started it was like get us a name where we can go.

Alessandro: Get us many more gigs, you know. Let’s do five markets this week whereas it’s a lot easier to just plan out bigger things as opposed to having to move all the stuff downtown five different times in one week.

Nick: It’s kind of like the same concert they did with, like, the McGregor, Mayweather fight. They’ve been talking about it since 2015, you know, just space it out. Let people like plan their day out, like, if this is an event, like, I have to go out to see this and like give me enough time to plan for it.

Kyle: Yeah. It’s true. Y’all have been doing some shows, any other successes that y’all are having?

Alessandro: Yeah. So recently, you can call them retailers, I prefer to call them installations, but we’ve set up a couple different partnerships with some local businesses. One of them being Furnish Me Vintage, we absolutely love them down there, they’re like family to us. And another one is Mesu project. Mesu360 project gallery, they’re by St. Petersburg, they’re on the corner of 6th Street and 1st Ave North. So what we’re doing with those two different stores is providing people with the seven days a week permanent location where they can come and shop and then that way they don’t have to wait for the pop-ups, and what we’re trying to do with each location is have different things.

So at Furnish Me Vintage, we’re trying to have less brand focused items, things more focused on loud colors, loud patterns, just crazy things like you would see on that ’70s show “True vintage” and then at Mesu, because they sell sneakers. It’s more of like a street wear where we’re in a tight place, that’s where I’m gonna have some of these truck jackets, more brand focused things. So depending on what type of shopping experience you’re looking for, you’ll be able to go to those different locations.

And then these we’re in the middle of kind of redoing it now from this used to hold everything to where this is now gonna be private gallery where we’re gonna keep the best of the best and we’re gonna have like a spending minimum to be able to even come back here and see what we have. So you’re pretty lucky.

Nick: For those who really want to be pampered, if you pay an additional amount you can get a personal meal made by Berto.

Kyle: Oh, sweet.

Alessandro: Yeah. We’re working on doing like a couple different things advancing and then guiding more and more experiences for people to come by and check out.

Berto: And for those of you that don’t know, Furnish Me Vintage is a great place. It’s down on Central Avenue, down in St. Petersburg. They have four floors of vintage material. On the bottom floor, I’d say it’s sort of like, Danish mid-century. Second floor, they have that cool, the guy with the vinyl.

Alessandro: Yeah. The second floor is redone to where there’s like a couple furniture pieces but it’s a clothing boutique now, vintage sound, records, so yeah. The second floor is just they’ve kind of just added a couple other things that just go with their vintage theme that just expand their inventory and then third and fourth floor are more great furniture honestly and stuff.

Kyle: And y’all are going to be located…which floor are y’all gonna be located?

Together: We’re on the second floor.

Alessandro: We’re currently on the second floor there.

Nick: The party floor.

Alessandro: Right, and the Mesu360 project gallery will be in the October-ish, November first by the way.

Kyle: So Furnish Me Vintage is located at 1246 Central Avenue in St. Petersburg, Mesu360 is located at 578 First Avenue North also in St. Petersburg. Next time y’all are in St. Petersburg looking to check out some cool stuff, come check them out there. I always like to end on this question. What’s the one thing that I didn’t ask y’all that you wish that I had asked?

Alessandro: Yeah. What is the one thing?

Berto: We all have a couple ideas actually, what we kind of where it all should end. Like, I have a menu that I’ve been working on for a couple years now. It’s a concept called Middle Schools. So it’s gonna be like a higher-end version of all your favorite middle school lunches.

Kyle: Are we talking what, like Jello with grapes on it?

Berto: But like, I’m gonna make the Jello and do some molecular stuff to the grapes. That’s like my dream. Alessandro has a couple shops he wants to open.

Alessandro: I really love clothes and fashion and it really is my passion. So like me and Nick we talked about it all the time as we grow, you know, we are gonna have to let go of these things like operational duties, like, being the salesmen in the shop. Unfortunately, that’s not something that I like ever really wants to let go of and so we’ll see what happens, but I just want to keep growing with the clothes.

Again, I really love traveling. And growing up I always wanted to see the world. So I just want to travel, surround myself in clothes and fashion and be happy with my friends and family.

Kyle: Awesome. And Nick, where do you see it?

Nick: You know, I see myself just being able to do what I want to do. You know, to put your all into something. That’s something that I haven’t really been able to do with a lot, but this is something that I’m literally putting in my off.

Kyle: It’s always amazing when you take something from nothing and then just you create a whole cloth out of nothing. It’s like, “Hey, this is our thing.” Like, this is what we’ve made. It’s awesome.

Alessandro: I mean, I’ve always been real confident in anything I do, but when we first started, people were like, “What are you guys doing?” “Oh, you know, we got these like little pop-up stuff.” Some people didn’t get it, but now, like, I love when people ask what I do.

Nick: It’s more defined.

Kyle: It takes a while to get your message down. So awesome and last question, how much for the Buccaneers helmet over there?

Berto: Oh.

Alessandro: We’ll do $30 for you.

Kyle: Sweet. All right. You heard it, they gave me a deal. All right. Well, thank you to the AOK Family and that was Berto, and Nick and Alessandro and you can check them out at Furnish Me Vintage or Mesu360.

Alessandro: Yeah. Mesu360.

Kyle: All right. Thanks, fellas.

Together: Thank you, too.

Kyle: So I’d like to thank Nick, Berto and Alessandro for that interview, as you can hear we had quite a bit of fun. They are really fired up about the clothing and the kitchen. Lots of excitement and passion there. If you’re interested in seeing their wears, you can find them at Furnish Me Vintage which is at 1246 Central Avenue in St. Petersburg, Florida. If you wanna find them on social media, you can go to Facebook or Instagram and do a search for World Thrifts and/or you can do a search for Pop-up Shop and Kitchen and they’ll pop up there as well. So, thanks, guys.

Segment two: Just the facts. Did you know that the average person spends six months of their life waiting for red lights to turn green? If you’re anything like me, it’s a pretty sobering thought. So if you’re listening to this in your car and you have to be sitting at a red light, just know that you’re counting up the six months of your life waiting for red lights to turn green.

Outro. So I want to thank you for sharing “Great Things Tampa Bay” with your friends and family. You can share us by going to our website greatthingstb.com. There you’ll find the “Share it” buttons on nearly every page. You can share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you are looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas County.

So if you wanna talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111 or you can send me an email at kyle@sassergroup.com, that’s K-Y-L-E-S-A-S-S-E-R-G-R-O-U-P.com and I’d be more than happy to help you find your next home here on Tampa Bay. I also need your feedback. I need you to tell me where we should be going and what we should be eating and who we should be talking to. So please go to our website greatthingstb.com, there you can hit either the “Contact Us” link at the top or the “Get Social” links also at the top.

If you wanna be a cool guy or a cool girl, you can call our voicemail number which is 727-440-4455 and leave us a message. I’d love to hear from you. Thanks for listening. I’ll see you next time and oh, by the way, if you don’t want to miss the next episode, please subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play. That will guarantee that you get the next episode delivered straight into your mobile device of choice. So, thank you so much. I’ll talk to you next time.