All Episodes

April 22, 2024 • 87 mins
4-20 with Dave from Specialty Auto Auctions, and Manny from Tropical Glitz Paints
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:01):
Waves garage. Willie Bee's garage isnow open. Man, is this some
trash garbage weather we got going onout there. It's like seventy on Thursday
and then boom, three inches ofsnow less night. Uh, it was
snowing pretty good at some point.Most of it melted, obviously, but

(00:22):
still there's some you know, somedamn snow on the ground. If you've
got trees and they've started to blooma little bit, you're probably gonna want
to go knock the snow off ofthem. Yeah. Yeah, we got
a little more than I thought wewere gonna go. Yeah, I'm a
little higher in elevation at the houseand we got I was like, damn,
like we got a lot, youknow, I mean for you know,
what is it April twentieth, youknow, how about that four to

(00:45):
twenty celebration. Now, Oh it'sgonna be awful. I did see the
downtown got a heavier wave than thanthen most of us. Yeah, it's
Larry sort of out scared. That'sgonna be. I wonder if they got
that'd be funny because you know,there's gonna be about eighteen people show up.

(01:07):
Maybe somebody that's visiting from out oftown and they're like, hey,
we're gonna be in town for thefour to twenty. You wonder if there's
anybody that's still to this day becauseit used to be a big thing,
used to have people from all overcome in, used to have thousands people
downtown. Right, it's so rebellious, Yeah, yeah, absolutely, And
you knew, you just knew youweren't gonna get arrested unless you're you know,
obviously acting the fool. They can'tarrest us, all right, right,

(01:30):
And that was sort of mentality,and that's what made a fun and
kind of wild and different. Andyou know, back in my day was
a rebel. I went to thefour to twenty festival, you know,
living on the edge there for alot of people. I mean, but
God has been legal for you know, months and years. I'm a decade
plus. Yeah, I want tosay two thousand. I mean we've hadn't

(01:53):
met for probably twenty years now,but was it two thousand and seven?
Two thousand? Well, anyway,I say, like the build up to
the ten years twenty fourteen, Okay, so ten years has been legal and
it was such a man the fourtwenty festival. People be talking about a

(02:15):
month's out, Like honestly got monthsout. People be like you could be
twenty first of all, and they'dbe building all this, you know,
this big swell of anticipation for bandsand people and contests and crazy you know
things you could get and buy there, and everybody was you know, would
show up with the most ridiculous likefoot long joints or whatever, you know,

(02:39):
and that's what they would It's funnybecause that's what they would show on
TV. The dude with the youknow, ted ighted tank top or T
shirt with a you know, ateens doobie, you know, looking like
he's walking around a small portable campfire. But you know, it was such
a big thing for a long time, but once it becomes legal, why

(03:00):
do you celebrate? I mean,I some exit I get after the first
year or two, but after tenyears you would think they were just especially
after the run of crappy Weather,they've that's God telling you, all right,
you got your way, relax,wrap it up right, You're done
now. But they were showing ityesterday on TV. Here's what you expect.

(03:20):
Blah blah blah. Do you remembermaybe five years ago when they had
the two groups that were both tryingto host it, and the one they
had to get their permit on thesame day and the one guy got through
the back door. They sting.Yeah, that was like a shady kind
of deal too. That should havebeen the sign. That should have been
the sign to wrap it up.Everybody's trying to claim you know, who

(03:43):
was responsible for the whole No,it's mine, No, it's mine,
So everybody. Had they just workedtogether, they could have had a phenomenal
little festival, right, No,No, y'all got greedy. See that's
what happens when people get greedy too. Funny man, just a funny funny,
you know. It's what's funny isthey still try to put on a

(04:05):
big festival, I guess in thespirit of But the last couple of years
it has been this, like,out of all the weekends the last couple
of years, for whatever reason,on four to twenty, hey man,
the weekend of four to twelve gorgeous. Right, the weekend of four to
twenty seven awesome. The weekend offour to twenty sucks. Like I woke

(04:30):
up this morning and I was like, I know, the Lincoln Tech Car
Show deal is gonna be perfect nowlike the weather for that deal is gonna
be awesome next weekend for the cruisefor the car show, it's gonna be
great. You know why because lookwhat we got for four to twenty.
Too funny. Nonetheless, welcome toyour four twenty all right fun show today.

(04:56):
Man, we'll get into a coupleof things on the horizon, obviously
have we do have actually a coolevent a little bit later today. Actually
we're going out. There's a grandopening of Napa County Line and Holly.
Basically, now, I don't knowif you're aware of what they do in
the grand up and the cells,but they pack it full of just a
ton a ton of you know,consumables. Things are just gonna burn up

(05:17):
and shop beat oils, lubricants,you know, things like you know,
starter flood, your W forties,your break cleaners, your you know,
five W thirties, ten W thirties, uh, your you know, your
shop towels to you know, differentsetups for tools, different combinations for tools,

(05:38):
you know, everything from big youknow, two hundred piece socket sets
and ratchet wrenches and everything else.So they blow all this you know,
inventory in there and they sling itat a really really really really good price.
So if you do have, youknow, a couple of cars.
If you do have you know alittle shop, you know, something like
mine where a lot of guys comein and kind of use it. It

(06:00):
may be smart roll out there.I'm hoping you come out there between one
and three when I'm out there,but it's actually a weird time thirty what
oh yeah, that is a weirdtime. So whatever, but I'm hoping
to show up. I have onethirty I'm hoping to show up at one
thirty three thirty one out there.But I mean I'd run by there at
some point today for sure and snatchup some you know, just some inventory

(06:27):
of five W thirty and cleaner's lubricants, you know, break clean carb cleaner,
stuff like that you're gonna use,you know, massaves, clean all
that. You know, all thoseconsumable shop towels that everybody needs in a
garage. Maybe you pick up anew tool, said anything like that.
But it's just a good way tostock up. You know. It's one
of the few days where you couldreally get the good stuff at a really
good price. You can get itat pre pandemic prices. Can you get

(06:49):
an end of season sale for aice scraper. Uh you know what,
probably get a good one for nextyear. Yeah, I'll have min own
trucks. I was like, ah, you haven't fooled me yet. Too
funny, all right, we'll startdiving into it will be his garage.
Happy Saturday, guys, welcome tofour twenty and the snow. You know

(07:13):
what? You know, what's funnydo on four twenty? What's that snowboard?
Show up? All right? Man, we're back after breaking BPI Willybe's
garage. You're back in Willyb's garage. So what if guys? Will these
garage fired up? Man? There'sa lot going on, and I know,

(07:35):
I'm so happy. I woke upto this crazy ass weather. Text
him back and forth between me andmy brother this morning. He's like,
y'all got snow and I'm like,yeah, man, yeah, it was
like seventy just like you know,thirty six hours ago. Uh. Nuts,
But that means that the weather forPresley's Parade next Saturday is gonna be

(07:57):
great. So what are you lookingat ten day forecast? Yeah, they
weren't very optimist about the end ofthis week. Yeah that changes like crazy.
That's a whole seven days away,right, it's Colorado. But nonetheless,
if you're playing to a cool cruise, man, I would love love
to see y'all next Saturday. It'sgonna be gonna be pretty cool. Man.

(08:20):
We're gonna take it from Cabela's upoff one hundred and forty fourth into
the eleventh Annual Lincoln Tech Car Show. And we got really cool, big
time help from the Thornton Police.We got big time help from the Dinner
Police getting us to and from youknow, onder the highway and off basically
into the facilities. So really coolthere, man. The big reason is

(08:43):
Presley. Presley's an awesome little sixyear old girl who was playing at the
beginning of March. Couldn't catch yourbreath tells her dad Colton, she can't
catch her breath. Like most dads, She's like, well, just take
a break, let's let's just haveyou sit down to extrement. Didn't understand
what was going on. Well,that was a Saturday Sunday. It wasn't

(09:03):
better. They take her to thehospital and what do you know, there's
a mass, I mean a bigone that's pushing our lungs, causing them
to have fluid in their lungs.So anytime as a parent you're gonna you
know, watch your child go throughsomething like this and then get that sort
of diagnosis on what it is,what's causing it, you begin to really

(09:26):
worry. And with them, yeah, what happened was the mass was cancerous,
which not something they were hoping forby any means, not something anybody
wanted. But that's the situation.And with Presley being six, dude,
that believe it or not, that'sa big time help because you know,

(09:48):
if you're sixty, you don't havethat resiliency. But she's prepped, you
know, a big time for thefight and for us. Our jobs is
to make that little girl have themost unbelievable days. She can never recall
our job because you know, asa grown up, as somebody that's you
know, let's be honest. Attwenty you never think you're good. You

(10:11):
know you're nothing can stop you.At twenty, man, you're bulletproof,
right, twenty five, same thing. Thirty, you know, you sort
of get it, maybe a differentlittle mindset, but you don't know how
numbered your days are, you know, even forty fifty, you still don't
think about it, but you canunderstand or at least begin to understand.

(10:31):
You know, people and stories youhear about things like tseelem foma or cancer
recall last year, or boy LarryGraham and what he meant to us,
you know, fighting cancer. Youdon't necessarily understand it. If you're older,
however, you get it right.It's more accepting because you're older.

(10:54):
But when you think about that scenariofor a six year old, than whoa
things things change in a dynamic wayand she just out of all this,
you know what she wants. Shewants to be with her friends, She
wants to be like a little kid. She wanted desperately get back to school,
so they let her. So wein our part in this, we

(11:18):
need to give that girl a dayshe will never forget. And I imagine
if you're six and you see anunbelievable amount of cars, trucks, bikes,
you know, people with your stickeron their cars or trucks and everybody
out there support you, and that'sthe type day that would be right most

(11:39):
most definitely, that would be onethat she remembers. And now, once
you bring out anything that you feelis awesome, I don't care if it's
a puppy or you know, acrazy cool little bike, or just a
positive attitude of big smile and ahug for Presley. She's gonna come out
on Saturday and encourage you. Youdo too. It's gonna be funk cruise,

(12:00):
man, it really is. It'searly. I'm not gonna lie.
It's Cabelli's between six and seven amup north of one hundred and forty four
and we roll out at seven amheaded to Lincoln Tech and the Eleventhaniel Car
Show. They do have the DimmerPolice meeting us. Gonna bring us in
the back way, so that's reallycool. We do have positions to get
into the Lincoln Tech Car Show.You can park up front. If you

(12:22):
don't want to get into the show, you just want to do the cruise.
And man, do we have sometickets? I mean we got some.
It's the best do your favorite Tuesdaywe've ever had for a cruise.
You know some of the tickets right? Oh? Yeah, basically one of
them? Yeah, well couple wehave we have corn tickets five figure,
that punch. Oh, we havesleep token yep that they're jam and who

(12:45):
you missed out on that massive andon sale right you can get them us
by doing the cruise. We havefood fighters blink one, A two,
just an unbelievable stack of tickets foranybody and everybody doing cruise. On top
of that, we're working on stufffor a side of auction. So we've
got a really fantastic autograph, gotsome Maac guitar which is dope. We

(13:07):
we have a really cool Mac toolslike tool tray, you know, portable
light toolbox deal. We have leeAt Pristine powder coating that's dropped in three
hundred and fifty dollars for the powdercoding that's ut for the solid auction.
We may have this motorcycle trying tofacilitate my buddy Tommy picking it up some
time next week and getting over thefood dog. May have a motorcycle auction

(13:28):
off a Triumph. I think it'sa ninety five I recall, right,
But look a lot of things justto be able to help out Presley and
her family in the fight, youknow, because she'll use those memories is
fuel later in this battle for sure. So if you can please make it,
it'd be awesome to see you.Awesome dude cruise. Speaking of things,

(13:52):
you know on the horizon, wegot Dave now Davis, especially the
auto auction Dude. May eleventh isgonna be here before you know it.
And there is a really cool,really unique thing that happens up at Island
Grove Vincent on May eleven. Especiallythe out auction takes all these crazy cool
cars, all these you know,consignment deals, all these ones that they've

(14:13):
been you know, collecting and youknow, trying to get locked into this
and they put them up on theauction block and you get a chance to
bit on the coolest, craziest,wildest builds, some cool classics, some
ls, swap stuff, some memorabilia. It's always a blast up there,
kind of kick off to what youguys have is the auction season as well.

(14:35):
Good morning, what's up. Hey. We're in the you know,
a couple of week trunch out gettingeverything lined and ready to go. Right
now, it's kind of a bigscramble. You know, we're working,
working, working, and cars arecome in. I've had calls already this
morning about stuff wanting to come infor new consignment and all. So I

(14:56):
really got in early. The guysthat got in early, you know,
they did the right thing. They'rein early. Guys that are coming in
now I have stashed some stuff aroundand it's gonna be killers. Oh really,
so do you? Is it firstcome, first serving the numbers?
How do people get assigned numbers?I bet a lot of people don't understand
that. Uh, there's there's kindof a method of the madness on the

(15:18):
numbers. The guys that do youknow, they come in early. I
have guys that consigned ten or fifteencars and that was two months ago.
Oh wow, we have we havesome good consigners, some great guys that
have pop notch stuff and they're alwaysprepared to come to the sale. And
so you kind of lined in andthere's kind of a ramp on how we

(15:41):
stage the cars. You know,they're a little bit softer, a little
bit less expensive. First thing inthe morning, get people fired up,
get the auctioneers warmed up. Midday, mid day cars that gets up
to the big you know, bigdollar high high six figure, you know,
all the all the high dollar stuffruns in. Then it kind of

(16:03):
slows back down towards end of thesale and we kind of line them that
way. You know, more latemodel stuff, you know, the trucks,
projects, things and all we dostart out with Mimobilia first thing,
Memorobilia, motorcycles, stuff like that. That always runs first, right,
no doubt. So, man,just jumping on the preview. You guys
can go to Specialty Auto auction dotcom and look at the the lot.

(16:27):
What they say view lot. That'sall the cars that are coming across the
auction block. The first thing upis a really wicked nineteen ninety Chevy Camaro.
I rock. Here's the car thatpeople were giving away a number of
years ago, and all of asudden, about four or five, six
years ago, these things started climbing. And tell you man, it's like,

(16:51):
uh, it's like they've they've somebodythe K two. It's these things
are crazy. Yeah, I wouldlove to have a trainload of b was
about ten years ago, you know, I know they were just regular driver
cars and now they've gone through theroof. I know a guy in Kentucky
that's got hundreds of them. Iremember seeing him like fifteen years ago and

(17:12):
ten years ago or something. He'slike, man, I've got hundreds of
these Gen three Camaros and they're notworth a dime. And he's so just
hold on to him. And nowhe's sending on the biggest Gen three collection
of Camaros in the country. It'scrazy. He made the right made the
right call for sure. Yeah man. Yeah, he's also the guy that

(17:32):
found that nineteen fifty three big airboxcorvette that raced. What a crazy story.
He won the corvettes Carlisle a yearor two ago and it was in
a barn in Kentucky. It wasone of the three big air box Big
Break original corvettes. It has unbelievableracists and raced at Pike's Peak. They

(17:55):
got sent over to Guam because theguy was an army general and was stationed
at Guam. We brought car overthere and people just forgot about it.
They couldn't find it. It waslike the mythical unicorn. Then nobody knew
what happened to it, and thenboom, it just reappears like five six
years ago, you know, ata barn in Kentucky because that's when the

(18:15):
guy came back. He was hewas a Kentucky kid. When he came
back, he put in his parents'barn from from Guam and never did anything
with it. He passed. Uh. Finally this guy knew about it and
basically, you know, whittled theguy down and talked to him, you
know, back and forth, scoredthis this car. Chevy offered him a
million dollars for it, side unseen, just like, we'll back, We'll

(18:37):
give you a million dollars right nowfor it. And then he's like nope.
So he's restored it and he's gonnalet that sucker fly it, you
know, one of the bigger auctions. I'm sure the next year or so.
Crazy man, but that's a goodcall. You know that that odd
ball kind of history stuff with somehistory. It's amazing what that what that
stuff brings. I think there waslike a eighty Camaro or something yesterday that

(19:02):
sold at the Big Dance for twohundred thousand dollars and it was some greenwood
thing. It was like an eightyCamaro that had this weird white body and
stuff something that I'm not educated toknow the history or what the deal is.
But if you find something that hassome history, it's definitely investment quality
stuff. Yeah, man, it'suh, it's wild. So what do

(19:25):
you got in the world of Like, there's two kind of people that come
to Oxens, right, There's peoplethat love the original matching numbers, stuff,
So tell us a little bit aboutmaybe what you have come across the
auction block that fits that fancy.And then there's other people that are looking
for something they could drive, likea resto mod, something that's a little
different, maybe the ugly Duckley backin the day, but you know,

(19:45):
with some wheels and some stance,all of a sudden they got something unique,
cool and a little bit different.So what do you got for each
side of that coin? Uh?Well, we talked about that fifty was
a fifty seven Catillact. You know, that's an all original Yeah, numbers
matched correct deal, and we haveall the way up to yesterday. We

(20:07):
got a twenty twenty three league inFelter Corvette. That's it, you know.
So it's the you know, theguy spent like forty thousand dollars on
the magus and supercharger and tuning andall that on it. So we go
from all the way back to thebrand new stuff that you know you can
get in and drive and have someperformance, or you can just get something
just cruise. Yeah, yeah,yeah, no doubt. So all right,

(20:30):
couple things when when you're looking atthis auction, really what kind of
but most people think most of thecars are too far out of their budget.
But it's wild because when people cometo these auctions, man, there's
car is going for you know,a few thousand dollars if you're lucky enough.
Really depends on you know, what'sthe bending is like. But you

(20:52):
could score crazy great deals for greatcars. What is sort of the you
know, the price you can getin on some of these cars? Am
I wrong to say you can buycars at these auctions for you know,
three to five grand? Yeah,there's there's stuff in there that's you know,
two, three, four, fivethousand dollars that needs a little bit

(21:15):
of work. You can creshen itup and all the way, all the
way up to the totally done stuff. The good thing about an auction like
we have versus the things people seeon TV is it's an average Joe auction.
You know, anybody can come in. There's there's most of the vehicles
are going to be in an affordablerange. Yeah, of course, we

(21:37):
always have some stuff that you know, takes a little bit more money in
the in the piggybank to get yourhands on. But yeah, you know,
I think probably eighty percent of thestuff that we sell is in that
twenty thirty thousand dollars range that ifyou don't have that sitting, we've got
financing right there that somebody can goin, spend five minutes, get something

(21:59):
finance, and go pick the car. Yeah, man, looking at that
sixties Willlies Jeep truck you got comingacross the auction block. That thing's sick
at the red one. Yeah,yeah, yeah, that's pretty good.
Hey, we've got two more Wheeliestrucks coming that haven't been I haven't been
put in the line yet, butI think right now I probably got about

(22:19):
not even half of what's coming onthe website because everybody's just like we are.
We're scrambling a couple of weeks andhad to finish up a few things.
Do that, right, that's thefirst one. And it's always like
that at the first race, thefirst auction, the first you know,
showings, it's always a hustle withevery car project, every car guy to

(22:41):
get it done, get it youknow right and ready. You know when
I shot that video, steved thisamazing, y'all. We you see this
thing. There's a sixty two belAir coming across the auction block in this
auction that is sick. It's anLS converted sixty two bel Air and this
thing is, man, is itclean. It's sharp, it is doing

(23:02):
absolutely one hundred percent right. It'sgot a four to nine inch under it
LS WAP six speed like great interior, great suspension, great breaks. Like
this car is gonna be sick.Like what a cool ride. It's kind
of Matt white and Matt silver likeit's it's wild because the paint has a
ton of flake in it, aton of flop in it. But he

(23:25):
hit it with a Matt clear soit looks it looks like the Matt version
of a big Flossie and glossy withall a flake still doing this thing,
which is really cool. That isreally cool. And he's actually he's going
his his plan is to bring thatcar to the Lincoln Tech Show done next

(23:47):
weekend. Wow. So and he'sbeen scrambling and doing what it takes and
he, you know, he's likehe's set his mind to it and he's
gonna get it done and it's gonnabe there right so and then and then
he's gonna he's gonna drive it andhe's gonna bring it, bring it to
the auction. He's he's trying toget a little bit, you know,
get his name out there. Hedoes some amazing builds and he's a one

(24:07):
man show and the stuff that hedoes is right. So somebody is in
the market for something like that,that's gonna be a good one. Yeah.
That's a slick, slick, slickcar. He's man, he's done
a great job. I see anold Army Willie's jeep in there that's super
tight, so I'm like, yeah, that's kind of cool. There's an
old FJ forty land Cruiser. Uh, there's a slick for three window?

(24:29):
What do you think something like that? Because you know, I don't know,
man, street Rods started gaining alittle bit more traction. I've seen
more. It's wild. I've seenmore younger kids into like beat up oat
street Rods lately too, Like thatseems to be a thing that's growing.
Yeah, I think I think that. You know, we went through a
phase there where nobody wanted the streetRods and it was they were they were

(24:52):
tough to sell. And I thinkthe people are actually starting to kind of
get involved in that again. Andthe younger, young crowds are are loving
the old street Rods and things,because it's back to what we talked about
with the character of the vehicles,and you can do whatever you want to
them, and nobody's gonna look downon you if you're gonna, you know,
put flames on the side of it. Yeah, you don't want to

(25:14):
do that on a Hontisivik, butyou put it on something like that,
and it gets you the style you'relooking for. And these these guys are
are going nuts over now. Thesteel body street rods obviously are going to
do better than the than the youknow, kick car fiberglass bodies, but
the sky's a limit and what youcan do to them. Yeah, is
this a steel body or a kitcar? Tell me about the thirty two

(25:34):
ford Is going across the block?I think I don't quote me for sure,
because I haven't laid my eyes onthat car. I think that's a
glass body car, Okay, butI he didn't give me that information when
he sent me the when you sentme the pictures and description stuff on it.
But I think that's a glass bodycar. It's you know, the

(26:00):
cool thing about a glass body car. You're not hurting it. You do
whatever you want to to it.You still get that same cool style.
You get the drive ability out ofit, you know, and you're not
killing some real thirty two three windowcar and chopping it and doing all that
stuff with right, And to geta thirty two that's a good, solid

(26:22):
body that you can't afford to hardlybuild on unless you've got deep, deep
pockets, because you're paying at grandfor a good body exactly, which is
why these you know, these glassbodies are so popular. So and honestly
a little bit better man, alittle bit better built than what it was
true, you know, thirty twoto be honest, because you don't ford,
uh, but none less than Ohno, here we go. Hey,

(26:45):
I did want to say I sawThursday. Thursday, dude, was
the birth of the mustache, thedebut of the sixty four mustach. Did
you know that Thursday? The debutnineteen? Don't think you don't think I
knew. That's one of the greatestdays in history, sir. But but
do you know that Mustang owners inventicct's Camaro owners showed it to females?

(27:14):
Seriously, I'm not saying a word, sir. You have some cool corvettes
on there too, right, Yeah, there's a couple of cool. There's
a sixteen thousand mile pace car.I think it's a I don't know,
seventy eight man, Yeah, seventyeight one of those cars one year.
Man, that's a that's a classic. This is gonna be cool car.
Yeah. Those those have really beenwaking up too, you know. And

(27:37):
I think those eighties and nineties carsare starting to really come around. And
you know, at the time theywere just cars, and it's just it's
the same as the older cars,the fifties and sixties cars. At the
time, they were just cars.Yeah, and now a good a good
solid one that's you know, that'sreally nice, or survivor or something like

(28:00):
that. They're they're bringing quite abit of money and people are really happy
with them. Yeah. And ofcourse, man, any auction, you
know, there's gonna be a bigoffering of trucks. What do you got
as far as as trucks, man, Because I don't know that anything has
sustained like the truck has in recentyears as far as the demand, people

(28:22):
restoring them, people trying to findthem and fix them. Like, trucks
have popped off so big in thelast five to eight ten years, and
there's there's no slowing down. It'sjust wild. A lot of these makes
and models have just skyrocket and whatthey're bringing. Yeah, we've got and
we've got a variety of trucks.The trucks are just hot. You know.

(28:45):
We've got a bone stock fifty fourChevy pickup all the way up to
a sixty seven C ten that's lsand chassis and TI interior and all that.
And we've got a couple of dieseltrucks. We've got a really low
mile I think it's a Dodge dieseltruck. You know that those things bring

(29:06):
crazy money if they're the right year. I don't know a lot about them.
We've got a fifty eight Dodge truck, which you know, they wouldn't
think in a million years to streetrode one of those, and it's and
it's got a late model Hammy init. And I actually did a little
research on the truck because I waslike, what is this thing? And

(29:26):
I find out that that was abig magazine truck and has all kinds of
history and it was out of aprivate collection in Arizona and all this which
one that that red one I sentyou a picture of. Yeah, it's
got some serious history, and Iwas going through and it's it's been in
Classic Truck and Street Roder magazine andall this. I was like, wow,

(29:47):
you know, and it's the samething. We we live in a
sea of F one hundreds and Cten trucks. So somebody's like, let's
just build something it's a little offthe wall and different, and it's you
know, that's what they did,and I think it. I don't have
any idea what the market's going tobe on it, because people do like
to kind of say stay mainstream,right, but it's to kind of open,

(30:08):
you know, get outside the boxa little bit and you can have
something a little different. It's reallycool. Now, tell everybody about the
Studebaker GT Hawk. This is awild and weird car. Plus it's not
that often you get one that runsacross the auction block. No, they
only made this is the two eightynine supercharged car. Oh wow? And
they yeah, and they only madea couple hundred of them. So I

(30:30):
think I think that car is asixty three if I recall. And that
guy that can sign that, he'salways been a big Studebaker guy. He's
got probably the great wildest Studie Bakercollection that you'd ever seen. He's got
street routted Studebaker trucks and that Hawkand just all yeah, it's it's a

(30:52):
sweet car, you know, withthe gold with the red interior, which
is kind of an off the wallcombo, but it works. I couldn't
put a number on that car,to be honest with you, I have
no idea what that thing is gonnabring. But I think it's I think
we may be surprised. Yeah,that thing is gonna bring a lot of
people to the to the table.That's a very unique car and a very

(31:17):
very great offering therein uh, theinterior, the mode of the paint,
everything looks exceptional on it. It'sa supercharge version, which ups the rareity
even more. I imagine that's abig number of car at the end of
the day. I would I would, I would tend to say it is.
Again, I don't and I reallydon't know what the reserves are on

(31:38):
cars before the auction happens. Whenthey when somebody comes in, they you
know, they register it online.They come in, they check their vehicle
in, bring your paperwork in,and they set the reserve on it the
day of the auction. So Idon't know what it's going to be.
We do have guys that the dayof the auction say, you know what,
I'm just gonna do this no reserveand get rid of it. So

(32:00):
don't I don't know what the numbersare going to be on it, but
the auctioneer and the guys in thecrowd usually have an idea what it's worth.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, nodoubt. I imagine that's definitely gonna
have a reserve. Tell us realfast about the reserve no reserve deal,
how much it costs to get abidder's card. Can people just come and
look through the inventory before it goesacross the auction block, kind of give

(32:22):
us the rules, the ins andouts of what's going to be like on
on that May eleventh down there inUengrove Event Center. Well, we start
checking in cars actually on Thursday,Okay, Friday. We usually have by
Friday afternoon, i'd say eighty ninetypercent of them are there. And during

(32:42):
setup, if somebody wants to justcome up and look around and see what's
there, come on down, walkaround, look in. We're all there.
Any questions you want to just stopand say, hi, we're we're
there and we're really available. Sowe set up Wednesday, Thursday, Day,
Friday, Saturday. Doors are usuallyopen about eight o'clock. If you

(33:06):
have a car there, I'm usuallythere super early. Somebody wants to come
in and wipe it down, cleanit up, do anything like that.
More than welcome to come in early. Get your car prepped and ready right
for you know, there's always thedo I run reserve or no reserve?
As you know, I'm a kindof a no reserve guy. I put

(33:27):
it in there and what it bringsis what it brings. Yeah, but
you know I do recommend, andI've said this before that if you're new
to the game and don't know exactlywhat your car's work, you think you
have a good idea, go aheadand put a reserve on it. Put
a reserve on it. It doesn'tcost it's like one hundred dollars more to

(33:47):
put a reserve on the vehicle.And then if it doesn't get to where
you think it needs to be,no harm, no foul, you take
your car home. And a lotof times, if we if we get
real money and we're working it andyou know we we're within X amount of
dollars, if you selling that car. We're gonna make it happen. We're
not We're not there just to notdo the job we need to do and

(34:07):
get your car sold for you.Yeah, but you know, I I
think if you're again, if you'renew and haven't done it and you want
the experience, put a reserve onyour car, and we're gonna do it.
We can to sell it for you. Cool man, that's uh,
that's awesome. Plus, uh,just a wide swath of different different crazy

(34:29):
cool cars, unique builds. Theygot about half of what's sewing up on
the website right now, more tocome as we kind of ramp up for
that may level date. Uh,what a fun time. Man, It's
gonna be a good auction. It'sgonna be uh, It's it's really cool.
This is out to grow vincent becausefor people that never been, that
place is a lot more than justthat arena. A lot of people think
it's like arena or this, thatand the other. Like that facility is

(34:52):
enormous. They got a good likemassive shop garage if you will to run
the cars in that and get youryou know, your eyes and you know,
sort of hands on them to seewhat's available. Plus it's really cool,
you know, kind of front andcenter Oxen. You go with the
memorabilia early on, and again everybodycan get a Bitter's car. They do
have a really good financing there.It's just say, it's just fun day.

(35:14):
It's just a really cool day upat that event center. And the
best thing is, fellas if youwould come check out the auction. Uh,
you want to bring the wife andthe kids, let them check out
the cars. There's a park rightacross, like right out the front door,
and the kids just go bananas atthe park while you're uh, while
you're spending the family's money. Yeah, it's it's a good time and it's

(35:34):
free to bring the family in.It's free to get a bid number.
That's awesome. You know, answera few questions, bring some credentials.
You can do it right there online, or you can bring the stuff in
the day of the auction the daybefore when can get it all registered.
You have a big number. Youcome in and and do your thing,
and you know, if any andif somebody wants to consign something, I
know the numbers a little later.Right now. We do have some stuff

(35:57):
kind of that I stashed throughout thethroughout the whole process of this for some
some special cars that come in lateand I weren't ready, and that kind
of thing. If somebody wants tobring something in, give me a call,
do it online. I'll kind ofdo a hookup for the guys for
whoever wants to bring something to hearsthis on the radio, so just let
them let me know that they mentionedit and I'll give him a little hookup

(36:20):
on the entry fee for the car. Oh real man, thank you,
thank you, and we'll see Mayeleven. Man looking forward to it with
the kigafioh. You know season ofbuying cool cars. Man. You guys
have three of these events normally throughoutthe year. First one being May eleventh,
Island Grove Eventsent and Greeley Mark thatday down see out there, it's
gonna be a blast man. Allright, Dave, thanks for to day.

(36:43):
Man. What are you doing?What do you What car are you
working on this afternoon? Sixty fiveCadillac Coop de Bill, that's a cool
car. We're gonna try. We'retrying to get that ready to go to
the to go to the cruise nextweekend. We're gonna trying to roll in
something you got to do some finishingtouches on some other stuff that's that's going

(37:05):
through the auction. You know,it's it's it's crunch time right now,
so it's it's kind of out ofcontrol. Does that car have the i'm
your parent setting a speed limit controlon it? Yeah, that's the one
where we learned this on because whenwe this is hilarious. We picked this
car up and it'd been sitting along time, and it's a it's a
there's a lot of history with thiscar and the family. My wife's driving

(37:29):
the thing from where we picked itup. You know, it's smoking,
it's been sitting. And we gethome. I said, why, just
because you're driving an old lady cardoesn't mean you got to go fifty miles
an hour. He says, Ican't go any faster. I don't know
what's wrong. So I reached downand there's a little knob nex to the
steering wheel. Turn it up toeighty five. It's like a speed limit
or on it or something like that. I went back out and drove it

(37:50):
right down the road. So it'slike early old school cruise control or something
on that. So, yeah,it's like an early mechanical rev limitter.
Yeah, yeah, the stuff theyhad back in the day, you know,
mechanical engineering, which is cool.I don't have computers and all that
stuff, but it kind of doesthe same thing, so it's it's nice.
Yeah, that's uh an easier fixtoo, right right, you want

(38:19):
to go. Yeah, I triedto avoid buying anything new and new enough
to have a check engine life exactlysmart. That's wisdom, y'all. Wisdom
all right, man, Right on, bro, talk to you soon.
Specialty Auto Auction dot com where youfind that, you know, all that
inventory that sale check out Specialty AutoAuction. And again let's go to Quick

(38:39):
Male leventh out and Grove Vincent upand Greeley be there for that one.
That's gonna be cool, man,just cool way to get yourself really cool
car. All right, A couplethings we'll talk about Presley's parade a minute,
guys, so pace could have awild thing. Man. You guys
ever see the colors out nowadays andgo how they do it? How do
they do it? How they keepcontinually coming up with new shades of blue

(39:02):
or different shades of red or auburnor maroon or golds, the earth tones
now they're in paints so wild.But you know what's making it a crazy
comeback, huh, all these crazypopping off neon colors, all these real
deep candies. We'll talk to aboy from Tropical Glitz Manny about it here.

(39:22):
Shortly, I also tell you aboutNAPA. Gonna be out of NAPA
today County Line and Holly from onethirty to three thirty. So it's a
grand opening. If you have ashop or a little you know, it's
just you and your friends, maybejust you in your garage, but you
want to stock up on things likeoil, lubricants, starter, flood power
cleaner, break clean power steer,flood rags like shop towels, a box

(39:45):
of rags. Maybe you need anew set of tools, ratchet wrenches,
socket sets, all that stuff.Big big, big savings today on those
grand openings. Anytime NAPA has agrand opening, here's what they do.
They lure you in. They doa good job at it with all these
crazy deals on all the consumables everythingyou need, you know, to stock

(40:06):
up your garage, your shop orwhatever. So it's a great day to
go in there and just stock up. So if you're at about today one
thirty to three thirty. Do wehave tickets? I think we got a
pair of tickets or something out there? Is that five finger? I'll double
check. I think we got apair of tickets a five finger that you
could register for as well, SoI'll double check on that. Take a

(40:29):
quick break willi Bee's garage. Backafter a couple minutes one of seven nine
KVPI Willip's garage. You back inWillybe's garage. Alrighty guys walking to will
Be's garage Saturday. Man, whata day we gotta unfold. It's crazy.

(40:49):
We woke up this morning snow likewhat the flip flop? But I
wonder if cars and coffee is stillgoing off this morning. Oh, I
don't know. I haven't seen anypictures of it. Get your car out
and coated and snow, can't getout the damn driveway. Figure out none
of it stuck. We'll tell youtoday a couple things. So I got
that appearance snapped a little bit later, one thirty three thirty, stop by

(41:13):
if you want. We do havetickets of corn, so we get set
up on those also. Man,So a week from today Presseley's parade.
God, you guys, I wastelling you a minute ago. You know,
imagine being six with a you know, with a T cell and foma
diagnosis. That is brutal. Butthis little six year old well equipped for
the battle. What we're trying todo. Next Saturday, all meet up

(41:37):
with Cabellas up off one hundred andforty fourth. We're gonna roll from there
to the eleventh annual Lino Tech CarShow. And this car show, man,
this thing is huge. You remember, Scoom, how many years ago
did we do the cruise? Thefirst one we did the Lincoln Tech now
Lincoln Tech. I believe that carshow was just two maybe three years old
at a time we did the WalkerCruise. Okay, the so Walker had

(42:00):
a couple of brain tumors, hada few surgeries when he was two to
three years old, and man,his family needed remember that they needed diapers,
and we stuffed a box truck fullof it. I think we got
them all the diapers they needed,and they had some they could give away.
Yeah, but it was it wasjust a really cool, really emotional
cruise made you know, a bigimpression for Walker of the family, even

(42:23):
at that young age. He wasso ecstatic and now you know he showed
up at that cruise next Saturday justto be part of it, because he
was the first one and Presley isthe latest one. And by one I
mean an innocent kid who has unforcedhim come down with a really tough diagnosis.
And tis solophoma is blood cancer ifyou're not aware, and it's a

(42:46):
big battle. It's a year anda half to two year battle. It's
a lot of chemo, a lotof radiation. And really if you understand
that and understand the depth to whichhe's got to get in this fight,
then you understand how important is significantit will be for her to have a
show up next Saturday. So ifyou can make it, Kabella's between six

(43:07):
and seven in the morning. We'rerolling from there via police escort. See
that dope. They're gonna get usout and on the I twenty five thinking
the Thornton Police Department, rolling downI twenty five seventy the Lincoln Text Big
Car Show now coming into Lincotext CarShow. We have the Denver Police.
They're gonna meet up with us andget his own property on premise. Kind

(43:29):
of the back route so we don'thave to go through all the congestion that
it is a Linked Tech car show, but you should know they have a
ton of stuff out there. Thewhole campus is gonna be open. You
know. Man, that guy who'scoming on here in just a second with
Tropical Glitch, he was just talkingabout Ken Diggtt. Well, Linka Tech
has that kin digtt you know,Advanced Sheep Metal class at Lincoln Tech.

(43:49):
There's welding courses you can take atLincoln Tech. They open that tire facility,
so create it, come down,plug yourself into that and just you
know, the kick off the carshow season. You're gonna see some really
cool cars down some really amazing buildsas well, and even cooler if you
come in as part of the cruise. So play on that. Next Saturday
to the phones we go, myboy, Manny, check out Tropical Glitz

(44:12):
dot net and you'll see exactly whatI'm talking about. This man is killing
it in the paint world. Manywelcome to the show, man, Walie
Willie. Thank you so much,brother, greatly appreciate man being a guest
on yourself. Man, Hey,well we appreciate having you. I gotta
tell you, man, so Imet you on the two Guys garage show
set. I couldn't believe what youwere doing. Yo, this is some

(44:36):
crazy cool paint. And what wewere using was just in an aerosol out
of a can, and it wasit was mind blowing what he was creating.
The colors, the pop, theflop, all of it. And
that's just tip of the iceberg.But before you before you get into that,
can you tell us exactly the reasoningyou the basis of why you started
this company and what you started sellinginitially, which I think is a true

(45:00):
testament to the man behind the company. All right, yeah, thank you
did. Yeah, we started inthe late of twenty fifteen, I want
to say, like September, butI'll fast forward, you know, I'll
back up a little bit more,rewind it. You know, I got
two kids, two beautiful twin boys, and they were born in nine and

(45:22):
you know, through the whole processof everything, we eventually found out that
one of our son's like months laterafter the fact he was born, we
were having questions about him and hismobility, and we found out that paralyzed.
He was born paralyzed, a veryrare It's not a disease, not
a disorder. There's no not evena name for it. I think he's
going to be the third one inthe medical history books that has the symptoms

(45:44):
that he has. Or it's justhe's paralyzed because of a stroke that it
looks like he had in my wife'svalues. So whatever. Fast forward,
I've work in corporate America and there'sphysical therapy that's not covered by the insurance.
You know, when you have thingswith insurance, they only come so
much. So we were paying outof pocket and it just, you know,

(46:04):
it was just getting inexpensive. Andwe started I think it's called Help
Hope Live. It's like it's kindof like a go fund me, but
it's a go for me. Butyou have to actually have a doctor's letter
showing proof. It's not like,you know, it's legit, you know
what I'm saying. It's not likesomeone just made something up and do.
We did that for a little bit, but I told my wife, I'm
like, I don't want to dothis. I don't want to hand out,
you know, that was my mentalthinking there. I said, let's

(46:27):
do T shirts and then profits ofT shirts. And they said, help
Manny walk. So because he wetook him, we want a grant.
We work with a company. Wework with something called the Miami Project there
for looking for the cure for paralysis. It's a big program here in South
Florida, and we want a grant. He did some physical therapy. Six
weeks later he said, hey,Dad, I can I have to go
to the bathroom. He can feelunder his chest and we're like wow.

(46:51):
That's when we decided to start payingthings out of pocket. And dude to
game to a point that I toldmy wife one day, Hey, you
know what, I'm just gonna sellliterally pain. I've been painting cards my
whole life and building cars for myself, and I'm gonna sell glitter. I
said, it's a joke. Ireally meant to say metal flake. But
you tell that too, you know, but you sell strip or dust the

(47:13):
hell you are, dude. Soyeah, I told her that. I
said, Hey, I'm gonna sellglitter. And she looked at me.
She said, you're crazy, anduh, I said, all right,
that's what I'm gonna do. Anddude, I started selling metal flake.
I will go and load up aload up my luggage and go to the
Turkey Rod run and sell metal flakeout of my luggage. And fast forward

(47:36):
to now. We were blessed tosay we move roughly three four hundred gallons
a month in custom automotive paint fromfactory OEM colors that usually your your older
colors that I do, plus allthe custom colors I create that we have
on our website. So you know, I was saying in eight years the

(47:57):
luggage kind of worked out for meback then, but it doesn't work out
for me now, right right,right, that's crazy. It's a crazy
proachjectory, man, that's nuts tothink about it. It's been great,
really, give an idea. It'sbeen so great we had to buy a
wheelchair accessible van, right, yeah, and you know we're all car guys,
right dude, dude, you haveno clue how much this Honda Odyssey

(48:17):
cost, just because they cut thewhole bottom of the floor out and they
added you know, the ramp andall that. Yeah. Man, I'm
driving pretty much, I'm driving apretty much a Corvette, dude. But
you know, yeah with the correctprice ticker. Yeah, man, it's
uh. I've given a few ofthose away with my Carson Christmas program,
so aware with a significant change thosemaking people's lives though, it's huge,

(48:42):
huge, So understand that question.Man. It's funny, man, because
the the Tropical Glitz name is somethingthat people remember. People remember the paint.
My boys said, just hit meup. He runs our sea cars
and he's like, dust uff worksgreat on our sea bodies. And he
sent me all these cool ells andand all these cool bodies that was painted
with your with your colors on it. And when the TV show aired,

(49:07):
my brother's kid, Jackson, hissedme and goes, oh, you know
the Tropical Goods, guys, they'rehuge in the drifting world. So your
paint has definitely made an impact acrossthe board man. So that's gotta make
you proud. It's got to knowthat there's something different. What is the
difference what makes your paint? Whatmakes your I mean man look and I'm

(49:29):
I'm a believer. I saw whatyou were doing out of an aerosol can
and I couldn't believe it. Sothere's definitely something different about the pigments,
about the metal flake, about like, what is it about your paint that
makes it so stand out when you'rejust comparing colors and flop and shine and
everything else. Dude, I'm gonnaI'm gonna give you a broad answer first,

(49:53):
and I can give you any table. Pride. I think pride,
I think pride and everything. Ilook for the best of everything, look
at something that's unique. I lookat stuff you can't find. But taking
pride that you're not willing to cutcorners and you're not just trying to go
straight to to make as much profitas possible. That's where it's at.
That's the key focus. And theneverything else is the fact that we we

(50:16):
started just being directly with custom painterbecause I'm a custom painter and builder.
So my biggest thing was explain whatyou mean when you say not not cutting
costs, because what happens in corporateAmerica for people that don't know right,
big major companies, whether it's youknow, a paint company of Solva Company,
Estive company, whether it's a youknow, manufacturer like four GM Dodge,

(50:40):
you guys realize every single thing isaccounted for every you know, two
tints of a penny. You know. I will tell you this for for
example, speaking with Keviny used tobe Ford engineer. He would tell me
one day that they they were goingtoo deep on the threads on a bolt.
They were going two or three threadstoo deep into the block on the

(51:01):
thread, so they would only need, you know, whatever the boat was.
Let's say hypothetically boats that half aninch or they were going three quarters
of an inch. So to savea couple of pennies, they brought that
thread out the sheet out right,so it would only go as far as
the boat. That's how minuscule thosethings get changed. But to save you

(51:22):
know, a tenth of a pennyhere, a tenth of a penny there,
a tenth of a penny, itstarts adding up for big companies who
are throwing out, you know,hundreds of thousands of models. So every
single thing in corporate world, whenit comes to the manufacturing side, it
would say, big company, everypenny is accounted for. And it's not

(51:43):
that way with a smaller company,with a company that is like a tropical
glitch where many still has complete sayso as to the ingredients going in a
can of paint. So I'm surewhen you say cutting corners, that's what
you mean. But in the paintworld, well, can you dive into
that, explain what exactly I'm about. Really, we don't have any shareholders,

(52:07):
We're not trying to make anybody rich. I'm just trying to have an
honest living. We started this formy son and all the beginning of the
proceeds all paid for his physical therapyupgrades, this wheelchair, the van,
and then all the surplus profit wejust reinvested back into the company. So
my biggest goal was just to livelife, to have the freedom of I
didn't have to worry if my sonneeded something, if you just go with

(52:30):
the flow. Yeah, but there'sno shareholders, there's no two hundred thousand
dollars salary, sales manager, there'snothing. There's not all that red tape.
You know. I worked for CorporateAmerica and there was so much red
tape just to get things done.So it's just mean the product and the
consumer and the clients to make surethey get the best. Because if you

(52:52):
know, we met on the show, but before we met on the show,
we've already won with our products.We've already won the Rider car the
U Year, three or four yearsin a row low Ride, a trick
low Rider by because that's what Ilike. And we've already won multiple awards,
and you're talking about these cars thatare The last low Rider of the
Year was a five hundred thousand dollarsfifty seven pillari. You can't. There's

(53:14):
no cheaping out on products to tryto cut a corner to make an extra
twenty bucks on a car like that. If that paint fails, what are
you gonna tell the guy, Oh, here's another gallon. They're gonna probably
say, hey, you're you're gonnathey're gonna hit you over the head for
taking apart the car. Resprain thecar. You're gonna be two hundred thousand
dollars. You know, you're gonnabeing one thing or another. You're gonna

(53:35):
be twenty thirty thousand dollars into thistwenty thousand here. It's and reputation is
everything, brother, It's just this. This car game is a small circle,
you know it. Yeah, youhave good people. Yeah. People
tell people, hey, dude,I mess with this guy because this guy's
where it's at. If they don't, they say, hey, he's by
business. Yeah yeah, man andtrue. And when you meet with people

(53:58):
and you're looking at pigments, you'relooking at metal flake, What is it
that you're going to do that's sodifferent? Because I remember talking to you
on a podcast, there's been pigmentswhere you know, other pain or other
companies will be like, yeah,I'll take that pigment. I'll take that
pigment. Just say bulkloads of it. And you know, amongst the males
of paint whatever, blah blah blah. But you can think out of the

(54:20):
world you've turned down the different differentcolors. More so ex putting that in
your your travels hires, looking forthe ingredients that you do you do find
to put in your paint. Yeah, so without giving too much of the
secret sauce away, you know,there's there's stuff you look at other industries
and other markets, you know,let's say the marine industry, or the
granite industry, or in something that'snot used in automotive paint, and you

(54:43):
look at it and you're like,wow, can I reinvent this? And
I buy this to automotive use.And then that's one angle that I go
into. Another part is you lookinto a good example silk. Right when
you look at silk and textiles,that's all manufactured, these minerals manufactured,
majority these cutters are manufactured in India, and you're like, oh, India,

(55:04):
why India. India is the onethe country that has all these raw
ingredients and pigm into and all that, and that's when you start looking at
different options. So you cannot haveto be broader because here in the United
States of North America, we don'tmanufacture any of this stuff. We don't
manufacture it for a couple of reasons. We don't have the mining capabilities.
There's these ingredients aren't here or they'revery toxic to process it to make it.

(55:25):
So you have to kind of bebroader. So I'm tend always if
you look at my phone and brothere's so many other languages out there that
I'm speaking to with Google translators.If it's not Japanese, it's Russian.
If it's not Russian, it's checked. You never know what's on there.
But you have to really think aboutthe bigger picture and open your your you

(55:46):
know, your eyes. There's somuch that's manufacturing other places, and you
just got to be creative, dude, Like you just got to think outside
the box to be to be whatwe're to do, what we're doing,
to be honest with you, andyou really are. And I'm willing to
take risks, yeah, And I'malways willing to take a risk, you
know, I think wasn't. Onthe last podcast we were talking, I

(56:06):
say, hey, I travel allthe way to Finland to just get with
the manufacturer to look at different optionsfor aerosol camps. Yeah, you would
think you'd be able to find anaerosol can that would work for painting here,
and most companies would find something here, but not at Tropical Glitz because
there's things, chemical reactions, thingshappening inside that can, inside that liner

(56:29):
that are unique to that environment.He's aware of that, so he gives
the paint the best environment to existwith the best means of getting those colors
and the flakeout and all that stuff. So explain what you mean when you
say you went all the way toFinland to find an aerosol can to put
your pain in. So yeah,So one of the biggest things was I

(56:50):
was looking at options here in theStates. I was working with a very
large manufacturer out of the Carolinas,but they just didn't have the setup.
And when it comes to those spraycan you guys just think of spray can.
But a spray can has a straw, has a valve, has a
stem and all that, so therewas more to it. So it's like
if you're getting a crate engine,right, you know you got your engine
all right? Cool? These hadto give you this horse power with this

(57:14):
manifold, and then these heads withthat manifold give you x Y need more
horsepower because of this, and oh, let's polish out the port. So
let's check the heck because now Ihave eleven to one compression versus ten and
a half. It's the same thingwith aerosol cans, you know, like
changing just the straw, changing this, changing the propellant all plays of a
huge factor on how the paint's goingto spray. And I just couldn't get

(57:37):
all these options here, so Ihad to go to Europe and look at
different options that I was able tolink up with the best company that just
technically said I told them, hey, just let me plan your lab with
a couple of options. And Isaid and they said, all right,
shure, no problem. And Ijust was technically like the kid, just
putting a bunch of options together,building my own spray can with different stems

(57:57):
and different straws and differentness and thatto see how I wood react with my
paint and the things I was tryingto accomplish with it. Man and you
found one that works, that keepsuh, keeps the pigment and the kilcho
reactions exactly like you want, thathas the right you know, uh trajectory

(58:19):
and the propellet. What the whatthat does to the paint. So you
went all the way to Finland tofind an aerosol can. That's what I'm
talking about. He's not afraid tospend a little extra so that on this
end, we we see the benefitof that extra you know, sort of
step in the process. We seethe benefit of going that extra mile with
this. Just the unbelievable setup.Had another buddy called me and he was

(58:42):
like, oh, I love theirseductive seductive red, And I'm like,
have you seen their seductive blue,because that's what I used in It is
gorgeous. Again, this is andthis is just out of an aerosol can.
He doesn't he doesn't just do theaerosol can. We just it is
what I've used, you know,on the on the show, and I'm
familiar with My God, he's gotunbelievable automotive paint, unbelievable colors and flop

(59:04):
and metal flake. There's something elseyou do with the flake? Can you
can you share that with this,so no, of course I can share.
So yeah, when we met onthe show, we were just doing
the air or so uh thing.And it's funny because that's not My business
has been paint. We sell paintand we have people. If you go
on our Facebook, you go onour Instagram, you see just cars way,

(59:25):
my car, you name it everything, dude. I even had a
guy that painted a jet that Iwas surprised because I was, all right,
whatever, you know, not whatI was envisioning, but it looked
gorgeous when he was done. Butspray cans was something I wanted to introduce
into the market, and uh,I wanted to offer you to become a
model car guy. That's how Igot into cars, building model cars,
and I little by little got intothe building the big things, you know.

(59:50):
Yeah, Well, when we wentto yeah, and when I went
to Finland, one of one ofmy goals it took me two years.
We were trying to spray metal flakeout of an aerosol camp and that was
really something I needed to figure outand do that when I bring through so
many you know, samples and stufflike that from other vendors and other manufacturers,
so we got the right combination thatwe introduced. I want to say

(01:00:14):
maybe like a year ago and it'sbeen insane and give you an idea.
WILLI aerosols are not really was nevermy market, you know, that was
just something as an ad on,like hey, you know, you buy
you know, seductive blue for yourcar. But now you're like, hey,
you know what, I want tojust pay my suspension, or you
just want to do a little toucheson the car, or or someone says,

(01:00:35):
hey, I want to build areplica of your car, will be
you know, I'm just trying togive them the option where it's automotive great
pain in an aerosol not. Youknow, I'm not knocking down other companies,
don't get me wrong, but itis the premium product. Because there's
companies that sell you know, aerosols. You can find an auto zone for
five bucks, ten bucks. Ourproduct that's twenty five. But you're getting
the same exact great that you geton the car, the same gallon of

(01:01:00):
that you buy your your card isthe same pain in the cans. Yeah,
and that's unheard. Yeah, Well, we use the slogan says only
the best, and when I sayit, I really need it, you
know, because we go through onlythe best in customer service and quality and
ingredients and resident and I'm just Ijust like this dude, like I really

(01:01:21):
really know what I do? Yeah, you man, he really does.
You guys. Guy, He's acar guy, which makes you know,
working in this industry kind of ablessing in a lot of ways and probably
a curse in others because his youknow, his pursuit of perfection for what
he wants that has driven him tomake an incredibly uh fantastic product on all

(01:01:43):
levels, from you know, thegleums that he's sending out to the you
know what he's putting in airosols.If you want a really unbelievable paint,
just top on his website. You'llsee exactly what I'm talking about. Because
it's colors they are not seeing.It's unbelievable candies Like a lot of us
know can paint, but you don'tknow this candy paint. It's it's crazy

(01:02:04):
like it's it's unbelievable. The candiesthis guy has, bro don't even don't
even touch that. Such that wasthat was I would say that was a
toxic relationship with me and candies whenwe were making it. The companies,
yeah, dead serious. You know, there's companies that have been in business
forever and that I looked up tobecause that's how I started. And I
looked up to them, you know, and they change hands now they're owned
by another company or whatever. ButI said, bro, I was out

(01:02:28):
to get to make the cleanest,cleanest candies. When you spray them,
they're just very clean. They're notmuddy. They're vibrant, they're bright,
and they hold seat as much sunas possible because candies have the tendency to
fade with time, because they're reallymeant for show cards. Yeah, I
would make the candy spray something itlooked like, crap, give up,

(01:02:50):
put that problem, you know,put it on a back burner. Then
I'll get all motivated work on it. Two years, two and a half
years. That's why I said itwas like a toxic relationship because I always
came back to it to try tofigure it out, you know. Yeah,
and we finally did a home runand we fine tuned it. We
sent it out to you know,we sent samples to our or we have
sponsored artists all over the country,and I say, hey, guys,

(01:03:10):
tell me if you hate this stuff, And they're like, now, this
stuff is actually pretty pretty awesome,And I'm like, can you give me
any reasons you don't like it?Because I sprayed it out and I was
really happy with it. But justbecause I like it doesn't mean everybody else
is going to like it. Sure. Sure, candies, man, the
candy concentrates are crazy, really mostand most candies require you know, require

(01:03:32):
so much work and so many layers, opinion. You have to start with,
you know, for me, Idid a candy on my fifty seven
Chevy. You start with a youknow, with silver. Then you start
putting on red, and then you'reputting on you know, more clear,
and then you know, it's justit's a lot of layers and a lot
of build up and stuff like that. But you seem to master it.
You know. If you got ablack you know, base or a black

(01:03:53):
primer, you lay this candy downand man, things come alive. So
yeah, those so what you're talkingabout is our seductive and are luscious and
our cosmic. So those are candybase coats and now we made it super
since that was the one you hadyour buddy who told you about the seductive,
Uh, seductive Red. So dudethat that was another project we've worked

(01:04:15):
on for a while. That wassomething I invented like early on because I
never really wanted to sell paint,and I think we talked about this private
yet though I never wanted to sellpaint. I just wanted to sell the
metal flake in the pearls. Andone of my uh or first, my
first employee and now she's the directorof the company, she said, hey,
she saw a bunch of spray outsin the box, and he's like,
hey, why do you don't sellthis? I go, oh,

(01:04:36):
I don't know, I don't care. You know, it's but it was
a custom color that I made becauseI used to make custom colors because I
had my own mixing bank in mygarage. People were like, hey,
dude, can you saw me thatcolor? I'm like, God, it's
not really for sale, but what'sup, you know? And I started
peopre paying me for stuff that Iwas making for myself because I've always painted
cards and made my own colors.And so seductive blue, the duct they're

(01:05:00):
red is a candy basecall. Youjust have to shoot it over a black
seiler and it makes it super simpleif you don't have any experience if you
just follow like the instructions I tellyou, and you never really painted,
but you're patient about it. Butit's a home run. It's really really
hard to screw it up, tobe honest, and you when you're done
it, it's it looks like acandy, but it's like it's not a

(01:05:21):
candy. It's a candy base coat. But the ingredients in that separate where
the candy bleeds to the top layer, the pigments starts sinking down to the
bottom, and the black seiler orthe black face coat really helps unify everything
for you, so you get thatreally dark, rich undertone. Those are
those colors are by far anything that'sa duct to blue, red, purple,

(01:05:44):
all those colors that are those candybase coats. They do extremely well
in our lineup products. But they'rethey're up there and the next thing right
under it are candy and inner cold. I mean, really, dude,
it's a it's a it's a monsterof a snowball set. What yeah,
I mean your progression from y'all.He started out just bringing imagine, just

(01:06:06):
bringing some metal freaking glitter in asuitcase to you know, he had to
take over his garage and start doingout of his garage. Then he had
a shop somewhere, well that gottoo small. I grew up in another
shop. Now he's in the processof moving again because he's just exploding in
what he's doing in the world ofpaint. So that's you know, that's

(01:06:27):
a true statement because people are lookingfor quality, and I think there's been
so many let's be honest, thecar world as we know it, as
far as the products that you canbuy, the ancillary supporting cast of all
the OIE manufacturers, be it onpart side, on performance side, on
tunic side, everything from tires tointakes, all these things are really controlled

(01:06:51):
by just a handful of companies.Holly owns everything, you know. So
what happens when you have these bigconglomerates is you lose a lot of the
quality controlled, meaning they don't striveto find better products. They keep their
products running at a fast pace andrate. Well, here's the guy that's
really it's more concerned about putting outthe best product. And what's happened in

(01:07:15):
the you know, in the Ancilariasis his company has exploded word of mouth,
you know, from the RC guysfrom drifting guys to the racing scene,
the guys that do custom bikes,BMX stuff, all kinds of wild
stuff has has seen your product,accepted it, and just been amazed by
it. So it's really cool thatyou guys grew from that ground game and

(01:07:39):
have earned just this massive reputation andpeople, you know, people are loving
what they're getting. People are appreciativeof the depth to which you're looking at
the qualities of pigments, and whileyou're doing to the flake, explain how
your flake is smaller. A lotof people don't realize that this is this
is critical too. Oh yeah,so you know, metal flake originally started

(01:08:02):
made out of aluminum, but eeveeit sometime in the pysney. So now
we call we still referred to asmetal flake. Sometimes I say glitter,
but it's not really glitter. Glittersmade completely different. So our metal flake
is completely different than what everything elseis out there. It's made out of
plastic, a chemical resistant pet plastic. Pain is measured in mills, so

(01:08:25):
a part job, you know,clear code on a car is like two
mills. Basic coats, maybe amal whatever. The majority of metal flakes
out there that found the market,people are either imported or whatever they're doing.
But there are usually two mills,maybe two and a half mills,
where we're at one point five ofa mill, so it's not about half
a meal. So the fact thatthere's so much thinner and makes it a

(01:08:46):
lot easier when you come to puttingclear on it to try to bury it.
That's one of the critical things.The second thing is the plating process.
You know, you got chrome andyou got triple chrome, right show
chrome, So for me it wasa same thing. It was all right,
all right, you guys got chrome. Cool, but what would be
the process to send that through theelectrical electric class because it static, it's

(01:09:08):
electroplated, so it's a static wash. I want that triple chrome, I
want I want mirror. I wantedto look at mirror. And that was
the thing that I had to workout and have it go through the path
process of electroplating three times, threeor four times whatever, because I didn't
want an alluminum flake. I wanteda chrome flake. And then that's the

(01:09:29):
foundation of all the colors. Sowhen you spray it, it sparkles so
much harder and it's so much lessdinner. And that was one of the
key points for us in the beginningwhen we sold the metal Flake because only
the best, right, I wantedthe best. I wanted to work with
the best, And we spent somuch extra just to get these processes done
that I was able to continue toreinvest to start moving into the liquid side

(01:09:51):
of the business. So the metalFlake was a very crucial part in the
business. Just like our pigments.You know, we looked for a very
clean already. Pigments are like they'regraded like diamonds. You know, you
can go to the you can buyor your check a diamond, right,
but if it's kind of yellow,dirty, it's the same thing with pigments.
They're graded by by letters and clarity. So I'm always looking at a

(01:10:14):
lot of stuff Willie and and like, yo, what we were talking about,
Like, you know, you askedme a question about you know,
what do you do? I go, you know, we're so faint,
but I really do believe I'm inthe business of people. People all everybody
has a personal story to a car, and if it's not because it's part
of the family or it was yourdad's car, We're in the business of
hearing everybody's story with the cars andthey solving their problems. We're just the

(01:10:38):
pain is just kind of the vehicleof the solution. But you know,
people say, hey, man,you know we were talking about your car.
You know, you're the You askedme a question. What do you
do when people have a car andit's mass ere? What year is the
bar? What is goun interior?What wheels? Not? Every color goes
well with every car. You know, some color looks better on certain body

(01:10:59):
styles than others. You know,yeah, man, he's he's so right.
Some colors work well on some carsand look terrible in others. Everything
else, And again, here's aguy that really does care about that end
product. So when I asked himabout my car we were talking on the
podcast, I said, Okay,what would you say to a guy's got
you know, this type car,this type, you know year, a

(01:11:21):
little you know in the muscle carera sort of you know, styling and
blah blah blah. He's like,well, I need no a lot more
than that. I need no rimsstamps. What you use the car for,
like, you know, a littlebit in depth, And that really
tells the tell of every step ofthe process with Manny and Tropical Glitz.
So if you guys are looking fora paint, if you're looking for a

(01:11:43):
little extra on your car, somethingcool, something unique, something different,
something that will stand out. Hey, go check out this website. Make
sure you call Manny. Tropical Glitzdot net is where you find it.
He was really really just a explodeduh in this world. He's doing a
lot of things different. Just lookyou his name will pop up very quick

(01:12:08):
and very fast, and all thecomments, forums and conversations about wow to
cool paint, not to mention whetherit's drifting RC cars or whatever. Netflix.
Yeah, yeah, we're on Netflixwhere we work. We've been working
with Mike Boy for years. Andif you look at this a show on
Netflix called I think it's called MexText Mortars, huh Text Mex Text Mex

(01:12:30):
Mortars, and you'll see us there. We come out on Discovery Channel,
uh Texas Medal season two. Weput on our couple of shows years.
So the Netflix is easier. Youcan just look up the show and you'll
see us. You'll see all ourproducts there there. Bro, you see
it, dude. The proof isin the pudding Brother. You know it
really is. Well, man,I'm sure appreciate your time. Brother.

(01:12:51):
It's always good catching up. Ijust love what you've been working so hard
on and it definitely shows and itdefinitely pays off for us on the user
in man Hey, before you leave, you who's responsible for naming your colors?
Because you've got some pretty out there, all right. The colors are
the flakes because we have the personthat means all the flakes is sitting next

(01:13:15):
to me as we're driving to thespeedway and it's my wife. My wife.
I'm gonna put your speaker real quickbecause I'm looking at the mutants on
and you know it doesn't say green, but everybody knows what mutant oose color.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Whenyou think a mutant oose, you
think of a wild green. Yeah. He means he's with a smile from

(01:13:40):
Peter here he needs dollar flakes.And then when it comes to the colors,
it's a group efforts. You know. I'm blessed to have a phenomenal
team and we just started throwing ideasaround. So it's a combination of everybody.
Some is my stuff, some isyou know, different people that work
with us, but we all kindof it's a family. Have heard we
all have to love the name tobefore we throw it down there. You
know who doesn't love mutant o bubbleisious? You know what? You know

(01:14:05):
what color that is? That?My wife? My wife. I gotta
give her a full credit to this. If people ask us over the years,
don't think, God, these aregreat themes, I'm like, well,
my wife and then me, Ijust look at stuff and I think,
and it's just everything. And thecompany was also named by us too,

(01:14:26):
you know, drop uple for Miamiand then glids for the sparkled metal
plate and uh. And the artworkYeah, and the artwork was done by
local artist Alex Lopez first eighty fourand that was he still designs all her
stuff to this day. Man,I'm still working with the same group of
people that I've worked with since dayone. That's cool, man, Keep
it in the family, keep ittight. Love what you're doing with my

(01:14:47):
man, It's been a catch uppreasure many Next time you have any talk
lowrider talk, bull tie talk,give me a buzz. Let me know,
man, I'm always game. Allright, man, much love man,
You guys, enjoy your day outat the car show. Uh,
and again we'll enjoy. Uh,We'll enjoy what you guys are doing on

(01:15:08):
the paint world as well. Man, sure appreciate you your product and the
story behind it. Awesome, man, Thank you guys. Man, appreciate
the time. Much love. Takecare, Hi buddy, Take care man.
Tropical glitz dot net. You guys, tropical glitz dot Net really just
amazing paint. Amazing guy too.Man, he's uh, his whole family's
damn cool, great people, andyou see that in the product. It's

(01:15:30):
just an amazing just a really coolproduct. And if you're looking for paint,
I definitely recommend them. All Right, we gotta go to break.
Man, we got things to do. Tell you about Presley's parade here in
just a minute. Gets caught upa little bit later on today. I'll
be out and about more on that. In the second, Willype's garage one
of us to a nine kbp IWillibe's garage. You're back in Willybe's garage.

(01:15:58):
Hold on, y'all, you havethose as just like He's like,
those ones are like clawing at yourown eyeball. Yeah, that was me,
just like, what the is that? And then you rub it and
you see things. I was like, whoa, it's like seeing Jesus and
toast. All right, so thecouple things today. This is interesting.
Just so I don't know. Idon't know what channel Barrett Jackson is on,

(01:16:20):
but my buddies are watching it andthey just sent me a text and
said, a seventy So listen todespairents like you talk about like to me,
this is this is wild. Soa seventy one K five Blazer went
for fifty nine thousand dollars at BarrettJackson. Right after that a seventy two
Broncos So basically the same same years, right, seventy two Bronco one hundred

(01:16:43):
and twenty seven thousand dollars. Itwent for Wow. I don't know about
channels, but it is currently onTV dot Barrett Jackson. There's a dash
in there, so TV dot Barretthyphen Jackson dot com and you can check
it out. Currently there's a nineteensixty nine Chevy Camaro custom coup going for
fifty five thousand, oh sixty thousand. Yeah, it is an auction,

(01:17:08):
so these numbers are going on fivethousand. So what do you think?
So at the same Barrett Jackson Jacksonauction, I think you're gonna see this
car right here. We printed thisoff, so lot numbers seven hundred and
forty nine point one, the sixtynine Dodge Charger that was the Joe Dirt

(01:17:29):
Daytona movie car. Like your boysactually be all over this one, right,
Oh yeah, So do they dothe lots in order? Will one
be the first one? Yeah?They're currently on six seventy four, so
it's probably going today, Oh yeah, yeah, to go this evening.
Yeah, a couple hours from now, right, so it is the listen
to the description. So remember thecar that Joe Dirt drove, and Joe

(01:17:51):
Dirt, so think about his carbefore the foot I'm good gash was a
foot print gas pedal as I'll geta footprint yass pedal installed something like that.
So it had to go wing thatgot knocked off. And you know,
what's your name? God? Whatwas that hot chig? The I'm
your sister, I'm your sister,right, Britney, Britney? Now I

(01:18:15):
don't think it's Brittany, is it? You'll find it on Google anyway.
You know her butt was in thepassenger seat anyway, so check it out.
It's a sixty nine Dods charger.It is the Joe dirt Daytona movie
cars powered. I didn't know this. It's powered by a Dick Landy Tune
four forty, so it's got adecent a decent big block in it.

(01:18:40):
The movie car was built and restored. It's an XP twenty nine charger,
so that's a charger base model forthose that are curious. The P is
the premium, but it's still thebase, so it's a base model charger.
Before it was modified to look likea Daytona. And here's what's interesting.
So in the description, listen tothis. Before it was modified,

(01:19:05):
it looked like a Daytona and artificiallypainted and modified to appear rusty for the
movie. Oh so it's not reallya rust bucket. It just looks like
a rust bucket. Yeah, soI believe all the rust on the car
is actually airbrust. Oh wow,Okay, well, I mean head lights

(01:19:30):
are functioning. That makes sense becausethere was probably a couple of these,
especially if something was to happen toone, and they probably could just you
know, have one painted like theother, right, it'd be tough to
have the rust actually rusted out thesame exactly the same. Yeah, But
it says as functioning the headlights,has all new ball joints, break hoses,

(01:19:50):
fuel cell fuel and break lines andsteering components. So oh, it's
so it's a four to forty sevento twenty seven to three speed in it.
I don't know. I mean,what do you think Carl like that
goes for it? It's not atrue it's not true Daytona. However,
it's got the wing, it's gotthe nose cone that makes it look just

(01:20:13):
like a Daytona. It's I mean, you buy that for the movie nostalgic
part of it, but I don'tknow, do you restore it because it's
it's like a drivable Daytona. Whatdo you think what's a drivable Daytona go
for? I don't know. Imean they had an original Daytona a couple

(01:20:34):
weeks ago at the Barrett Jackson auctiongo for two hundred and three thousand,
and it wasn't running, had partsmissing. It was a survivor, but
it wasn't running, So it wasbasically a parts Daytona, parts car Daytona
and it went for two hundred andthree So what does a fake one that
runs go for? Probably somewhere kindof close to that, But what does

(01:20:59):
it go for as the Joe Dirtmovie cars too, right, And I
think, uh, I think youget some autographed stuff that comes with it
as well, some memorabilia. Well, it's going today at no reserve,
no reserve, no reserve jumpers takingit home. Yeah, it's gonna be
awesome when you think about it,it's gonna be great. Currently on the

(01:21:21):
block, there's a nineteen seventy PlymouthKudah Custom Coop. What what nineteen seventy
Plymouth Kudah Custom Coop. Oh damn. It's kind of ghostly white with a
black black top on it. Butthat then goes for some big money.
Hasn't had any bids yet. Ithink they're still in the rolling it out

(01:21:43):
phase. But I'm sure it's gonnarock it up here. Yeah, I
think it looks pretty gorgeous. Againif you're in this stuff, man,
So these are the big money cars. But when you're you know, when
you think about getting one affordable price, you gotta think, especially the auto
auction the bottom. Yeah, dude, they got a shows the bottom of
It's gorgeous. It's got it likea pearl green on it. That's a

(01:22:05):
sharp car with that silver sort ofI wonder if it was initially that green,
and that's their way of like keepingthat that nod doing. That's not
that's not original green Dodge color.Interesting, man, to be interested to
see what these cars go for.Muscle cars always bring big money. And
look, if you got a musclecar, if you got a truck,
you gotta you know, hot ofcare. If you got a beat her,

(01:22:27):
show up next Saturday and do thiscruise, press this parade for us,
Uh, well for her. It'slook, it's a great way to
put a huge smile on a sixyear old's face who deserves it. We're
gonna cruise down to the LINODN TechCar Show. It's the eleventh annual LINODN
Tech Car Show. It's gonna bea blast. Looking forward to uh seeing

(01:22:49):
everybody down there. That's that reallyawesome. It's just an amazing car show
in general, because everybody sort ofkicks off the season with that. Not
to mention, you want to seetons of bills, cool cars. They
got to pack it up there forsure. So if you want to do
that and be part of the cruise, please show up next Saturday. It'd
be awesome to see you. Man, and I really feel like if we

(01:23:12):
get enough people to show up forthat cruise, what a moment that will
be for Presley. You know,she'll use that as fuel for a lot
of those battles down the road.So if you can make that man,
please show up next Saturday. Notto mention today, oh god, from
I got weird times. I don'tknow why. One thirty three thirty right,
yeah, but I do have corntickets. I'll bring some other tickets

(01:23:34):
out there as well, but onethirty to three thirty I will be at
NAPA basically a county line and Holly. So if you're taking out twenty five
the county line or something like that, just go west for a couple of
miles and you'll find us. Butnonetheless, one thirty three thirty, big
Grand open. Then they got tonslike when you see the flyer oils that

(01:23:55):
are normally you know, eight dollars, and chains for a court are like
three bucks. You know, shoptowels got dollar so really big time discounts.
Not to mention tools. You canget tools there really really cheap.
Today. You can get all kindsof that sort of consumable type stuff at
big, big, big, bigblowout prices so it's a great day just

(01:24:15):
to stock up for that, justto you know, get all your break
cleaner, your you know, carbcleaner and shop rags, toils, whatever
you need, all of that stuffat a huge dis kind of price.
It's always the best way to stockup on that stuff is when you get
one of these Napple Grand opens,because they really do have just a ton
of it. We'll have ticks outthere for you to sign up brets for

(01:24:38):
Let's see next week obviously the bigyou know, the big Car Crews car
show, and then man who knows. I think a lot of the you
know, the the remaining drag shiftswe have opened are all opening up or
getting ready to open up, eitherthis next week or two. I think
Pueblo is opening up. The Huntis this weekend. I'm not sure about

(01:25:01):
Jewelsburg, but there's a lot oflike just cool tracks and racetracks like you
know, quarterball type stuff. Jewlsburgand Pueblo all opening up within the next
week or two. So finally,you know, that's back in play a
little bit. It's about time.Although I look at snow out of the
road, what a joke. Anyway, join us next week for the cruise

(01:25:21):
now gone. We're back Monday forthe show, and then we're gone at
least I am for the remainder ofthe week. But you can go ahead
and lock down next Saturday. Scoopwill be here running the board for the
show, but I will be atLincoln Tech hosting the garage show from there,
which is always a blast. AndI do have that silent auction.

(01:25:44):
God, we can wait. Alot of cool stuff too. Well,
I say, win, but you'rereally paying for it. But there's you
know, a godsmack autograph guitar,mac toole tray. There's a really cool
le at pristine powder coating. He'sdropped off a three hundred and fifty dollars
powder coating certificate so that that'd bewell received. Some other things, possibly

(01:26:08):
this Triumph motorcycle t oxing off soyou'll be able to score a motorcycle really
cheap. But again, all ofthe you know, every penny, all
these items, all the proceeds,it all goes to Presley as part of
the fundraiser. So you can comeout and show up in force. Please
spread the word. It's Willy underscoreKPI. You can see the digital flyer

(01:26:29):
up there I'll share it again,probably next day or two, but if
you can share that, that'd beawesome. Spread the word and we'll see
you next Saturday, bright and nearlyCabellas and then from there we'll cruise down
a link a tech car show.All right, you guys, enjoy your
day, be back at it Mondaymorning, bright and early. If you're
a first spunder, a veteran,mad respect for all y'all, do man

(01:26:49):
appreciate you. Shout out to myman Louis. We will see you today
at NAPO one to three thirty CountyLine in the Holly. It's will to
be his garage. We're out ofhere till next week. It's a seventy
nine kbp I. Willyb's garage isnow closed until next Saturday morning. Email
your questions for next week WILLYB atKBPI dot com one O seven nine kbp I
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

The Breakfast Club
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Decisions, Decisions

Decisions, Decisions

Welcome to "Decisions, Decisions," the podcast where boundaries are pushed, and conversations get candid! Join your favorite hosts, Mandii B and WeezyWTF, as they dive deep into the world of non-traditional relationships and explore the often-taboo topics surrounding dating, sex, and love. Every Monday, Mandii and Weezy invite you to unlearn the outdated narratives dictated by traditional patriarchal norms. With a blend of humor, vulnerability, and authenticity, they share their personal journeys navigating their 30s, tackling the complexities of modern relationships, and engaging in thought-provoking discussions that challenge societal expectations. From groundbreaking interviews with diverse guests to relatable stories that resonate with your experiences, "Decisions, Decisions" is your go-to source for open dialogue about what it truly means to love and connect in today's world. Get ready to reshape your understanding of relationships and embrace the freedom of authentic connections—tune in and join the conversation!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.