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- [Drew Emmer] I know

you've been a long time

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friend of Boveda.

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How long has it been happening?

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Where did this begin?

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Can you give me a frame of reference?

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I don't know your story.

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- [Abe Flores] I mean, I started,

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there was a company called Tinder Box.

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You've probably heard of the Tinder Box.

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So, Tinder Box at one point

had about 400 locations.

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They're a big franchise company.

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Way, way before that, my

grandfather grew tobacco.

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He lived in the D.R.

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Everybody in my family smoked cigars.

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Andullo, grow your own stuff.

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And tobacco has always been

in my family's heritage

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all my life.

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So, I came to United States

when I was 13 years old.

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I went to Salem, Massachusetts.

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I don't know if you know where that is.

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- [Emmer] I do.

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- [Flores] They, you know,

hang some witches, I think,

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you know?

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(Interviewer laughs)

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- [Emmer] Best known

for having a hard time

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with some witches back in the day.

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- [Flores] Yeah, very, very hard time.

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(Interviewer chuckles)

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- [Emmer] It just didn't quite fit in.

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- [Flores] Eh, could have been, you know.

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Could have been the LSD

in the wine or something.

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- [Emmer] It could've been.

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- [Flores] They were freaking.

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There's so many stories about that time

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that you know, probably was

like the wine or the water

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had some sort of, you know, bacteria

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that made people hallucinate or whatever.

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But, that town, I grew up there,

went to high school there,

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middle school and high school.

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Most of my friends are from,

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I still am friends with

who are from Salem,

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to be honest with you.

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And then I went to school at,

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I wanted to become a

musician, full-time musician.

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I did a lot of music programs at Berklee

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and the conservatory.

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I played cello and I had played bass

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in a lot of bands and stuff.

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So, to feed some of the...

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To buy instruments, I was

selling cigars on the side

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to friends of mine and to, you know,

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because I was doing like

the beginning of the boom,

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you know, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

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- [Emmer] And you got a connection.

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- [Flores] Yeah.

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And everybody's like,

oh, you're Dominican?

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Can you gimme cigars?

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Like, yeah.

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So, I'll call my cousin,

he will send me boxes.

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And I made extra money that way.

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So, I went to school,

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I went to a small school

in Andover, Massachusetts

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called Merrimack College.

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I first wanted to study like, medicine.

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And then, that was the beginning

of like the dot-com boom.

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So, I switched from medicine to MIS,

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computer science and

marketing for programming.

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And that was what got me going.

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When I got out of there,

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I was working for one software company

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and I just got tired of the whole,

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like, the high tech

industry just fluctuates,

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goes up and down.

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Like, one day is really good,

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- [Emmer] Right.

- [Flores] One's bad,

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and then you're outta work.

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But always, like, tobacco is a steady,

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alcohol is always steady,

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and I wanted to get into tobacco business.

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I applied for a job,

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and I was trying to

get to the D.R. to work

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to learn everything about cigars.

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And I couldn't, you know,

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I called La Aurora,

they didn't pay enough.

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It was like 200 bucks a month.

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I was like, what are you talking about?

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I make like way more building websites.

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It's like, no, no, no, no.

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So, these guys put an ad, I moved down.

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I came in as they were

launching an online site.

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And they needed somebody to organize

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their warehouse and the distribution.

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And I got the job.

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And that's really what

founded PDR in the beginning

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because they taught me, you

know, I already knew high tech,

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I already knew marketing,

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but I got all the foundation from them.

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Because I started designing

bands, designing boxes,

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doing my own private

label for the company.

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And eventually, I realized like,

I could do this for myself.

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And that was kind of like the building,

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stepping stone for me to

get into cigar industry,

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for building my own brand.

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I already did brands for them,

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worked for them for many years.

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And I eventually, I met these guys.

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They had a little factory in New Orleans,

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and a little factory in the D.R.

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They were Dominicans, they

wanted somebody to help them.

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And they offered me a partnership.

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And that's how PDR started,

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like in 2006, 2007.

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- [Emmer] So, that was

the beginning of PDR.

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- [Flores] It used to

be called Pinar del Rio.

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So, Pinar del Rio.

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So, it's very, when Pinar

del Rio is original Cuba

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where all the tobacco

seeds from making cigars

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come from in Cuba.

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- [Emmer] Sure.

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- [Flores] So, everybody

talks about Pinar.

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Pinar del Rio is the

west side of the island

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where most of the best

tobaccos grown out of Cuba.

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So, it was like an homage to that.

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And that's how we launched Pinar del Rio.

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Eventually, I think it

was New Orleans 2014,

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or 2000, yeah, 2000 something.

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I changed.

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I didn't change, I launched PDR 1878.

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In 1878 was the year where Pinar del Rio

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was founded in Cuba.

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And if you actually see

their seal, it'll say 1878.

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So, I wanted something more quicker,

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easier for people to pronounce.

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And that's where PDR came from.

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- [Emmer] Yeah, that makes sense.

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- [Flores] Yeah.

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- [Emmer] And then, since

then it's grown to be,

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- [Flores] Now it's grown to be,

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I don't even talk about Pinar del Rio.

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I say, if you notice

the logo has like a P,

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and the DR is like, kind of combine.

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So, now I tell them it's

Puro Dominican Republic now.

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So, it's now PDR stands

for just now for me it's,

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I try to push the Dominican

Republic more now than ever.

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- [Interviewer] Yeah.

- [Flores] When we started,

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we had one concept.

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Now, it's about more of a global appeal.

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I mean, that's the reason

you see me, you know,

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like you guys, we're all over the world.

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Boveda's all over the world.

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And, I don't just sell in United States.

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I sell in a lot of countries

in Europe and in Asia.

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So, now I look at PDR as

more of a global brand,

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a global presence.

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And we can't say Pinar del Rio.

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So, now I tell people it's just,

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- [Emmer] PDR.

- [Flores] PDR.

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- [Emmer] PDR.

- [Flores] PDR.

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- [Interviewer] And if anybody

gets specific about it,

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it's Puro Dominican Republic.

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It's beautiful.

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And how many different, can

you tell us, do you make?

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How many different, how many generations

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of this creative journey

have you been on over the,

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- [Flores] We started with the PDR 1878.

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We've revamped it many times.

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Now, it's called PDR Santiago.

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Then we got the [PDR 1878 Roast] Cafe.

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We have a line called El Criollito,

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that is pretty much our number one SKU

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that we sell globally.

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It was a line that really to

go after the Cuban market.

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Tastes very close to a Bolivar.

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That was developed by me

and 10 of the best retailers

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in Spain to go after that market

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with a good price point, a good flavor.

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Then, you know, 10th

Anniversary, that's very well.

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And then we launched the 18th Anniversary.

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So we have a lot of,

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I try to reduce as much as possible.

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We do half Coronas, Puritos

in tins, that sells a lot.

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So, we're not, we don't,

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we're not producing as much

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as I used to produce back in 2014,

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because I don't do as

many private labels now.

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- [Emmer] Right.

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- [Flores] I do less,

less, less for other people

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and more and more for me.

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And that's what I've been

focusing on the last year.

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- [Emmer] So you've been a part of the,

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For My Humidor promotion

with Boveda for years.

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Your face is typically on the wall.

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- [Flores] Oh, when I

get the right picture.

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(Flores laughs)

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- [Emmer] Yeah.

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No, well, you had, you went through

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some changes and that's great.

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So, the relationship has been

one of preserving quality,

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one of getting your finished

product to the consumer

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at the level of quality that you expect.

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- [Flores] The right percentage

of humidity to the cigar.

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So, the thing is, when you're selling to,

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all over the world, you

know, you're selling to Asia,

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you're selling to Europe,

you're selling to Spain,

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you're sending to United States.

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You know, like we are in Las Vegas,

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the humidity is like none.

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Like I'm all dry and stuff like that.

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So, imagine if you're doing that

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and you're shipping cigars from the D.R.,

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where the Dominican Republic

has a very high humidity.

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- [Emmer] Yep.

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- [Flores] Then you send it to Las Vegas

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where it has no humidity.

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The cigar is gonna get a shock.

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So, the great thing about

Boveda is it just maintains

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in that box at least, until it gets open,

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the perfect humidity level

for that cigar at all times.

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Anywhere you ship it, it's gonna maintain

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until you take it out.

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Once you take it out,

then you leave it out,

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something else happens.

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But, at least when it leaves my factory,

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it meets all the right conditions

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of burn, flavor, everything.

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The cigar is not gonna be too wet,

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and it's not gonna be too dry.

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It's gonna burn perfectly.

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If a cigars too wet,

it's not gonna burn well.

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If a cigars too dry, the

wrapper's gonna crack,

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it's gonna taste bitter,

it's not gonna have

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the right condition of the blend that I,

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the way I made that cigar and what I--

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- [Emmer] Even the cigars

sitting in the ashtray

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at the show, for an hour or two,

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if you pick it up and relight

it, it's a different cigar.

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- [Flores] Changed, completely.

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- [Emmer] It's a different cigar.

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- [Flores] So the great

thing about Boveda,

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it maintains at least the essence

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of what the cigar needs to be

when it leaves the factory.

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And the consumer, once they

open up the box and smoke it,

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and light it, they're like, oh, okay.

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They're gonna understand

what I'm trying to,

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what flavor I'm trying to bring

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across to them in that cigar.

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After that, I can't control, you know?

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If they put it in a bad

humidor with no Boveda inside

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and the thing dries out,

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then I can't control anything

after that, you know?

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So...

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But that's a good thing about Boveda.

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You know, I wish more people used it.

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(Flores chuckles)

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- [Emmer] Well, thank you for that.

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So, I gotta ask you,

what's your favorite cigar?

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- [Flores] That I make?

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- [Emmer] Yeah.

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Favorite cigar that you make and favorite,

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who else in the room are you crazy about?

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- [Flores] Hm...

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- [Emmer] Start with yours.

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Of your releases, what's

your favorite cigar?

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- [Flores] For me, the 10th

Anniversary Millefleurs

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is a cigar I've been smoking a lot lately.

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It's a Corona 5x42.

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I usually don't smoke big cigars.

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I don't like 6x60s or anything like that.

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- [Emmer] Right.

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- [Flores] You would

never see me with that.

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You'll see me with Robustos and Toros

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and that's what I like.

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I think it is the right combination

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of wrapper, binder, filler for me.

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But the Millefleurs for me is perfect.

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I can smoke that all day.

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I have no issues with it.

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For somebody else...

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You know, it varies.

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I like, well, my all-time

favorite cigar that,

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it was like a Pepin Black

Lancero that we're talking about.

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If I had that cigar now,

that one and a 601 Green,

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back in the day, that was

like chocolate for me.

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And a Fuente AƱejo Shark, that was,

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- [Emmer] Hm.

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- [Flores] Yeah.

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I had a box of those like

still from like 10 years ago.

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I think I got two left.

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I just smoke very,

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(laughter)

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The right occasion.

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You know?

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You know.

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- [Emmer] Well, and

we're pretty sentimental

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about anything Fuente

because of the role he played

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with helping Sean [Knutsen]

and Tim [Swail] get on the map.

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I mean, he was the

first real believer, so.

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- [Flores] Yeah.

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We owe him one.

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- [Interviewer] We owe a

lot to Carlito [Fuente].

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- [Flores] He was the first one

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putting the pouches in the boxes.

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- [Emmer] And he wasn't bashful about

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telling other people why he was doing it.

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And a lot of people listened to him.

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- [Flores] Now, it blew up everywhere.

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Everybody now,

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- [Emmer] It blew up everywhere, yeah.

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- [Flores] Now everybody believes in it.

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- [Emmer] And it helps for

us to have you on our team.

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- [Flores] Oh, thank you.

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- [Emmer] To be a part of our family.

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- [Flores] I appreciate it.

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- [Emmer] We really appreciate you.

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- [Flores] Thank you.

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- [Interviewer] Yeah.

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- [Flores] Thank you for having me.

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- [Interviewer] It's great to see you.

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- [Flores] Yeah, great to see you too.

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- [Interviewer] Thanks

for sitting down with us.

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Appreciate it, man.