- But it's kind of prideful, right?
Speaker:If somebody's telling you
Speaker:how to correct something that you built,
Speaker:it's like, you have to be mature enough-
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] To take it.
Speaker:- to listen and take that criticism,
Speaker:and move forward with it.
Speaker:Because it's coming from a good space.
Speaker:- Yes, my whole company has changed.
Speaker:I'm happier.
Speaker:They really guided me much better.
Speaker:Carrillo also, really focused on this, this, and this,
Speaker:and you'll be great.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:Even if you make 10 thousand cigars a day, you'll be fine.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- So I was like, and that's what I'm doing.
Speaker:Now I don't care if only make 15 thousand cigars a day.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:- It's not a numbers race.
Speaker:- It's not a numbers race.
Speaker:- No.
Speaker:- Now it's like, it's not about volume anymore.
Speaker:It's about quality now.
Speaker:- Yeah!
Speaker:Now we're here.
Speaker:- Yeah, it's about quality.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Now we're here.
Speaker:- Provide quality.
Speaker:Don't provide croquetas.
Speaker:Do quality, you know what I'm saying?
Speaker:Don't be Budweiser.
Speaker:There's already a Budweiser, you know?
Speaker:Be a-
Speaker:- Well, you're kind of being Budweiser
Speaker:because you know that every time
Speaker:I pick up this 10th Anniversary, I know what I'm gonna get.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah.
Speaker:- It's not gonna change on me.
Speaker:Hey, you cracked a Budweiser, and it tastes like an IPA.
Speaker:Whoa, wrong beer!
Speaker:(smooth bouncy music)
Speaker:There's a story inside every smoke shop,
Speaker:with every cigar, and with every person.
Speaker:Come be a part of the cigar lifestyle at Boveda.
Speaker:This is Box Press.
Speaker:Welcome to another episode of Box Press.
Speaker:I'm your host, Rob Gagner.
Speaker:I'm at 2021's PCA Trade Show.
Speaker:And I am sitting down with Abe Flores of PDR cigars.
Speaker:Abe, thank you for joining me today.
Speaker:- Thank you very much for having me.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah man.
Speaker:This has been a long time coming.
Speaker:- Yes.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:You've been a For My Humidor poster campaigner
Speaker:for many, many years.
Speaker:And every time I see you at a trade show like this,
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:"Abe, I've gotta get you on the show."
Speaker:And you go, "Yeah, any time."
Speaker:And then next time I say,
Speaker:"Abe, I gotta get you on the show."
Speaker:"Yeah, any time.
Speaker:I'm still here, Rob."
Speaker:So, I apologize.
Speaker:Longtime overdue, but thank you so much
Speaker:for making time for me.
Speaker:- No problem, my friend.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:We both sound like Barry White, him more than me.
Speaker:It's Vegas.
Speaker:It's dry air, something in it.
Speaker:We're gonna make it, buddy.
Speaker:- Yes.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] We're gonna make it.
Speaker:- Yes, I don't know what it is.
Speaker:It's just dry air,
Speaker:dry everything.
Speaker:Doesn't help that we smoke a lot of cigars, too, so.
Speaker:- Yeah!
Speaker:- Yeah, it's not the cigars!
Speaker:- No, no, no!
Speaker:- It's never the cigars.
Speaker:- No!
Speaker:- Never, never the cigars.
Speaker:- Yeah, I'm all stuffed up
Speaker:because I'm retrohaling sixteen cigars a day.
Speaker:- Oh!
Speaker:That's normal.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:- Do you ever-
Speaker:- That's a normal day at the factory.
Speaker:- But you don't get like this when you're at the factory
Speaker:tasting blends, do you?
Speaker:- No, at all!
Speaker:- Why?
Speaker:- Because it's humid!
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Because it's humid?
Speaker:- Yes.
Speaker:It's the Dominican Republic.
Speaker:- Because you actually have moisture
Speaker:to go back into those vocal cords.
Speaker:- Yes!
Speaker:This is the desert.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:Who wants to live here?
Speaker:- I don't know!
Speaker:Not me.
Speaker:- It's insane.
Speaker:You go outside in Las Vegas at all and it's like...
Speaker:one time I went to visit a friend of mine,
Speaker:has a house, a little bit out.
Speaker:And once I saw the highway
Speaker:and I saw how plain and flat,
Speaker:I'm like, "Oh my God!
Speaker:Why you want to live here?"
Speaker:- And you see the heat coming up off the asphalt.
Speaker:And it looks like a mirage.
Speaker:Like the highways going to end 50 feet in front of me.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah!
Speaker:- But it's just a mirage of the heat coming off.
Speaker:It looks like it's bending the highway
Speaker:to the left and to the right.
Speaker:- Yeah, why would you do that?
Speaker:Why you want to live here?
Speaker:It's insane!
Speaker:- You can fry an egg.
Speaker:If we go outside right now and crack an egg on a pan,
Speaker:it's 117 degrees.
Speaker:It'll eventually fry.
Speaker:- Yeah, you don't need a kitchen.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:You don't need a kitchen.
Speaker:- The other day I was sitting in a courtyard of a restaurant
Speaker:and it was, you know, a full building courtyard,
Speaker:not a lot of wind.
Speaker:When the wind kicked up,
Speaker:it felt like somebody opened the oven door
Speaker:and blew hot air all over my face.
Speaker:It literally made me want to get up and go,
Speaker:"No, thank you."
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] It's insane.
Speaker:It's insane.
Speaker:- But I suffered, and I smoked another cigar through it.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:Because I didn't have enough during the day.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:- I mean, come on.
Speaker:Let's be real.
Speaker:Can never have enough.
Speaker:- No, you can never have enough cigars.
Speaker:You came over earlier it's like, you gonna smoke?
Speaker:Like, no, no, no.
Speaker:And I'm smoking a cigar.
Speaker:(Rob laughing)
Speaker:I'm like I should stop.
Speaker:But I'm like...
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] But I can't.
Speaker:- I just can't.
Speaker:I just can't.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] It's part of the culture.
Speaker:It's part of what we're doing here.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:Oh no, I'm not smoking.
Speaker:It's like, okay, and I'm like, I'm smoking.
Speaker:Something's wrong with me.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:- And I didn't even have to twist your arm to do it.
Speaker:- This is the 10th Anniversary.
Speaker:So, this is the re-blended 10th Anniversary.
Speaker:I mean, it's Felito Cubano.
Speaker:Habano inside.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I love Habano.
Speaker:- It's from Navarrete Los Reyes.
Speaker:And then, the binder itself is Habano too, from the D.R.
Speaker:And the wrapper's from actually David Pérez from Ecuador.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah?
Speaker:- A.S.P.
Speaker:Yeah, it was very good.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Very good!
Speaker:- Yeah I mean, look at that.
Speaker:The burn and no whiteness on it.
Speaker:It's great.
Speaker:- You know who I just had on the show?
Speaker:I had Storm Boen from Cigars for Warriors.
Speaker:And didn't you make that cigar?
Speaker:The Hiram & Solomon Cigars.
Speaker:- Yes, I did.
Speaker:- Yeah, that was a good cigar, man.
Speaker:- Thank you, thank you.
Speaker:- Nice job!
Speaker:- They're great people.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Oh my God, yeah!
Speaker:- Fouad And Romy are great.
Speaker:Great!
Speaker:I mean, I met him many years before, Fouad,
Speaker:before he got married.
Speaker:I tell him, he's actually better now
Speaker:since he's been married.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Oh, yeah!
Speaker:- Because she like elevates him in a way.
Speaker:Makes him look a little bit more, I don't know.
Speaker:She's more high class.
Speaker:I don't know what it is about her.
Speaker:She's awesome.
Speaker:So, he's really more experimental,
Speaker:and they really get down and dirty.
Speaker:She's not a regular woman, man.
Speaker:She's really understands tastes and flavoring.
Speaker:So, other people I have given cigars and blends;
Speaker:they smoke it like, oh, this is good or bad.
Speaker:No, she really like looks for certain characteristics
Speaker:in tobacco that she wants in her cigar.
Speaker:She knows I smoke a lot of Cubans,
Speaker:and I look for old Cubans.
Speaker:When I go to Europe,
Speaker:and I usually go to Spain
Speaker:because Spain is really where
Speaker:they have the most amount of old Cubans.
Speaker:- I went and I bought a ton of all old Cubans.
Speaker:- Old Cubans in Spain.
Speaker:You go to Madrid,
Speaker:you go to Tomasito in...
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Barcelona.
Speaker:- Georgie in Barcelona.
Speaker:You got to Jorge, George.
Speaker:Go to him, and you just tell him,
Speaker:"I don't want the-
Speaker:I want the old stuff."
Speaker:And they pull it out from the back.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah!
Speaker:Open up the bottom shelf.
Speaker:- Give me the bottom shelf.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:I want the stuff four, five, six years old
Speaker:because the new stuff, no.
Speaker:Cuban cigars are great-
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] When aged.
Speaker:- When it's aged.
Speaker:Because they don't ferment really that much, the tobacco.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] No, they can't.
Speaker:- They can't, it's like-
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] They need money.
Speaker:It's printing money over there.
Speaker:- It's printing money.
Speaker:It's Budweiser.
Speaker:They need to print it.
Speaker:They need to get it out.
Speaker:But that's the reason people, aficionados,
Speaker:look for Cuban cigars because they look for box dates.
Speaker:It's like wine.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah! Vintage!
Speaker:- Very vintage, like they know, okay,
Speaker:you know, this batch-
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] 2016 was great.
Speaker:- Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker:They go,
Speaker:"Oh, 1996 Partagas Serie D No. 4, like this."
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] And this size.
Speaker:- This size, Monte No. 2 size.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] And the area.
Speaker:What factory rolled that?
Speaker:- What factory, at that time?
Speaker:Because they changed it.
Speaker:Oh no, it wasn't Laguito.
Speaker:No, but now they changed the Piloto.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Now we're really geekin' out.
Speaker:- And they're getting dirty.
Speaker:They know this #!%* like down and deep
Speaker:because they know that's gonna be a good cigar.
Speaker:Everything else is crap.
Speaker:Literally.
Speaker:- Well, it's still great cigars,
Speaker:but for the geek geek that wants that.
Speaker:Yeah, they're like,
Speaker:"No, I'm not gonna invest in that."
Speaker:- I'm not gonna invest in that.
Speaker:So it's like, they know.
Speaker:So, when I went to Cuba for the festival,
Speaker:I knew this Russian girl who was a sommelier,
Speaker:Habano sommelier.
Speaker:She's like, "All right."
Speaker:I'm like, "What cigar should I smoke?"
Speaker:She's like,
Speaker:"Okay, you're not gonna find anything old in Cuba."
Speaker:I'm like, "What?
Speaker:What are you talking about?"
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] It's all gone.
Speaker:- The Castas won't have it.
Speaker:But if you're gonna smoke anything,
Speaker:smoke the Corona Sancho Panza
Speaker:or the Belicoso Sancho Panza,
Speaker:Ramon Allones Corona.
Speaker:And then she said,
Speaker:"Maybe you can do..."
Speaker:She said, "Like a Partagas, like the Petit Belicoso.
Speaker:Everything else is too fresh."
Speaker:I'm like, "All right."
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Good to have her advice.
Speaker:- And I was like, "Oh my God."
Speaker:And then I tried something else,
Speaker:I was like, "Oh my God. It's horrible."
Speaker:And I looked at the box dates.
Speaker:This one's just packed like a week ago!
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:Like, oh my God.
Speaker:You know why those are better?
Speaker:Because they last longer.
Speaker:People don't smoke those sizes.
Speaker:They're odd sizes.
Speaker:And I'm like, "Oh!"
Speaker:And they sit longer.
Speaker:If you notice Belicosos sales,
Speaker:nobody's smoking Belicosos anymore.
Speaker:- Really?
Speaker:I guess from a manufacturer side,
Speaker:you would know that.
Speaker:But I don't know that.
Speaker:- When was the last time you smoke a Belicoso?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:- You had to think about it.
Speaker:- Yeah, oh yeah!
Speaker:Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:It's been awhile.
Speaker:- It's been awhile, right?
Speaker:- Or if I have smoked it,
Speaker:it's been rolled for a long time.
Speaker:It's been aged.
Speaker:Why is that?
Speaker:That size not popular, huh?
Speaker:- I don't know what it is.
Speaker:Things go through fads, man.
Speaker:It's like, at one point, Lanceros were hot.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Oh yeah, like two years ago.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:Now, dead.
Speaker:That goes with the little pops up and down.
Speaker:And then, like, Coronas.
Speaker:Coronas are getting up, again.
Speaker:- It's a great size, though.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] I love Coronas.
Speaker:- Coronas are just perfect.
Speaker:42 ring gauge.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] 42.
Speaker:- 44.
Speaker:- Yeah, 44.
Speaker:But I said, I mean, Belicosos are dead.
Speaker:They don't make Beli-
Speaker:I took out all the Beli's out of all my lines.
Speaker:It makes no sense.
Speaker:They were just sitting around.
Speaker:And the funny thing is, once they killed it,
Speaker:I had like one shop call me up and say,
Speaker:"God, I need some Belicosos."
Speaker:Like, what?
Speaker:You haven't ordered in like a year.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I got 27 boxes sitting over here for you.
Speaker:And that's it.
Speaker:- We had some and he bought whatever we had.
Speaker:And then he was like,
Speaker:"Oh, I need more."
Speaker:I was like, "I took it out."
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I'm out.
Speaker:- I'm out!
Speaker:- Now those molds will just sit blank.
Speaker:Maybe you could do a shop exclusive for him.
Speaker:- We're living in a very weird time right now.
Speaker:- Why you say that?
Speaker:- You know, production wise,
Speaker:I used to make like 30 thousand cigars a day,
Speaker:30 to 35 thousand a day.
Speaker:Then, COVID hit.
Speaker:And we were closed for like almost four months.
Speaker:I had to furlough.
Speaker:Let go most of my factory because I didn't,
Speaker:we didn't know when we were gonna open up.
Speaker:When we opened up again, they let us in slowly.
Speaker:Like 10 people at a time,
Speaker:and people are not gonna sit there waiting.
Speaker:And they started giving this money to the people,
Speaker:like unemployment.
Speaker:called FASE in the D.R.
Speaker:So, the people started getting money,
Speaker:So, they don't want to come back.
Speaker:So, it's been very hard getting rollers
Speaker:and people to come back.
Speaker:And now, we're getting to 15,000 cigars a day.
Speaker:And then, the problem is we're rolling less.
Speaker:I'm not the only one with that problem.
Speaker:All the other manufacturers
Speaker:are going through the same thing.
Speaker:So, there's a high demand
Speaker:or more people were at home smoking more.
Speaker:It's a big demand for cigars.
Speaker:It's like a boom.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right!
Speaker:- We can't keep up and we can't produce enough.
Speaker:- When do you think
Speaker:it's really gonna come to like a total...
Speaker:The consumer's gonna find out
Speaker:that they can't get what they want.
Speaker:And the manufacturer is gonna say,
Speaker:"I'm at way over max!"
Speaker:It it gonna be in the next 12 months
Speaker:or the next 24 months?
Speaker:- I think in the next two years.
Speaker:- Two years?
Speaker:- But then, the demand will definitely will start going down
Speaker:because more people are gonna start going to work,
Speaker:you know, within a couple years.
Speaker:- But do you think that's gonna change the way
Speaker:that they smoke cigars?
Speaker:To me, the only reason people started smoking more cigars
Speaker:is because they have more time on their hands.
Speaker:Because they stopped all the social engagements
Speaker:that prohibited the smoking of cigars.
Speaker:You're not going out to restaurants
Speaker:that you can't go smoke at.
Speaker:The kids aren't going to soccer this weekend
Speaker:because they can't play soccer.
Speaker:Now the family life is gonna come back,
Speaker:but are they going to give up cigars for the social life?
Speaker:- I hope not.
Speaker:(Abe laughs)
Speaker:- Yeah, me too!
Speaker:I don't.
Speaker:- You don't what?
Speaker:- I don't give up my social life for not enjoying cigars.
Speaker:I will go to a restaurant that has a patio
Speaker:that I can smoke at now.
Speaker:I will go somewhere purposefully,
Speaker:so I can enjoy a cigar while I'm there.
Speaker:Because now, the wager has been shown to me
Speaker:that I enjoy cigars more than I enjoy the social aspect
Speaker:of being out in public and hanging out with friends
Speaker:at non-cigar friendly areas.
Speaker:- For me, I mean, I'll tell you one thing,
Speaker:the Dominican Republic,
Speaker:I don't eat at restaurants where I can't smoke.
Speaker:- Well, in the D.R., that's like everywhere, isn't it?
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] No.
Speaker:- Really?
Speaker:There are areas that you cannot smoke?
Speaker:- There are restaurants.
Speaker:When you go, we take you where, you think everywhere.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I would have thought everywhere.
Speaker:- No, because we're taking you.
Speaker:You're hanging out with cigar people.
Speaker:- And you already know.
Speaker:- And we know where we're gonna take you.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:So, same thing would happen to me.
Speaker:If you came to Minneapolis, I'd be like,
Speaker:"Here's where we're gonna go."
Speaker:And you'd be like,
Speaker:"Great, there's no smoking ban here."
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:- Oh, yeah!
Speaker:There is!
Speaker:- Yeah, a big one.
Speaker:- There is places where you can't smoke cigars, at all.
Speaker:Literally.
Speaker:So, I don't go to restaurants.
Speaker:I got a friend of mine has a restaurant.
Speaker:He's like, "Yo, you never come to eat here."
Speaker:I be like, "I can't smoke."
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right!
Speaker:- He's like, "You can bring your friends or customers."
Speaker:But like, I can't smoke.
Speaker:Open up a patio or something.
Speaker:He had to open up a pa-
Speaker:He had to rent a space next and open up a patio.
Speaker:His wife didn't want him.
Speaker:And once he did it, I said,
Speaker:"You do that.
Speaker:Your sales are gonna go up."
Speaker:You're in Santiago.
Speaker:Most people are in tobacco.
Speaker:He's like, "Oh!"
Speaker:His wife yelled at him.
Speaker:But once he did that, he's like,
Speaker:"I should have done this like five years ago."
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:Like, I told you.
Speaker:- You're welcome.
Speaker:- You're welcome.
Speaker:You owe me money, now.
Speaker:(Abe laughs)
Speaker:- Now, I get to rent that for free.
Speaker:Have a little party on your dime.
Speaker:- They give me a discount.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:- Discounts called free.
Speaker:- Yeah, for free.
Speaker:But yeah, there's places that I just don't...
Speaker:A friend of mine, he's like,
Speaker:"Oh, I'm looking about buying a condo on the beach
Speaker:in the Dominican Republic."
Speaker:I was like, "All right."
Speaker:And he's telling me,
Speaker:"Oh, I'm looking at this place."
Speaker:I'm like, "Don't. Don't buy it."
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Can't smoke cigars there.
Speaker:- I was like, "You can't smoke cigars there."
Speaker:He was like, "What?"
Speaker:Again, he's like,
Speaker:"I thought you could smoke anywhere in the D.R."
Speaker:It's like, "Nope!
Speaker:It's not like that."
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Especially with the associations.
Speaker:- Exactly.
Speaker:We take you to places where you can smoke.
Speaker:Now, call this lady, this realtor,
Speaker:and tell her you are a smoker.
Speaker:And you wanna go to a place
Speaker:where you can smoke at the pool.
Speaker:These are your places, your options.
Speaker:There are only two locations.
Speaker:- He's buying a house or a condo
Speaker:based on being able to smoke at it.
Speaker:- That's what I told him.
Speaker:- I absolutely love it!
Speaker:- Yeah, I told him.
Speaker:You gotta be able to smoke.
Speaker:You're a cigar smoker.
Speaker:When you go down there, who you gonna call?
Speaker:We're cigar smokers.
Speaker:Oh yeah, if you're gonna hang out with your wife
Speaker:and bunch of girls.
Speaker:Yeah, no problem.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Who even knew?
Speaker:- What you gonna do?
Speaker:No, it's not worth it.
Speaker:I just moved to a new condo, because back in the day,
Speaker:it was Litto Gomez living there.
Speaker:Tony lived there.
Speaker:A bunch of cigar people, guys from General Cigar.
Speaker:I've been there for almost 10 years.
Speaker:But back then, it was like 80% cigar people.
Speaker:And we all used to sit around in the back.
Speaker:We had a pool area and smoke.
Speaker:Once they all moved out,
Speaker:and all these other people were moving in,
Speaker:like New Yorkers and whatever, none of them smoke.
Speaker:I'm like the only one that smokes.
Speaker:They decided to like,
Speaker:get rid of the pool or something, whatever.
Speaker:And they did a thing for kids, and that's fine for the kids.
Speaker:No smoking area, and they got smoking signs.
Speaker:Oh, you can't smoke here.
Speaker:I'm like-
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I'm out!
Speaker:- I'm out.
Speaker:Hochi just built a tower.
Speaker:Eighty percent, Klaas Kelner lives there, he's my neighbor.
Speaker:Eighty percent cigar people in there.
Speaker:I'm like, that's where I'm going.
Speaker:Like pool, smoking area, closed in with AC,
Speaker:outside smoking area.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Love it!
Speaker:- I'm like, yeah.
Speaker:Jochy, he was like, "Go with it."
Speaker:It's like, I didn't look at the apartment.
Speaker:I was just like,
Speaker:"Where can I smoke?"
Speaker:It was like,
Speaker:"Oh yeah, that's where.
Speaker:Now, show me the apartment.
Speaker:It has a balcony.
Speaker:I can smoke from my balcony, right?"
Speaker:"Yeah, yeah."
Speaker:"All right.
Speaker:Where's the paperwork?"
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah, I'll do it.
Speaker:- I'll do it.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Sign me up.
Speaker:- I'm signing.
Speaker:I'm gonna put my apartment on Airbnb and get the hell out.
Speaker:I'm moving down.
Speaker:That's what I'm doing.
Speaker:It's not worth it.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] No.
Speaker:- I gotta smoke, you know?
Speaker:- It's too much part of the lifestyle.
Speaker:- Shit, my first wife, I was married twice.
Speaker:My first wife's Dominican.
Speaker:She didn't smoke.
Speaker:Worst 12 years of my life.
Speaker:Second wife, she's Nicaraguan.
Speaker:Met her in the D.R. or in Nicaragua.
Speaker:She was like a roller.
Speaker:Smokes.
Speaker:Happy ever since.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah!
Speaker:- Happy ever since.
Speaker:You gotta find things in common.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- Or you could be with a woman
Speaker:that's okay with you smoking, you know?
Speaker:There's women who are like that.
Speaker:- Right, she doesn't have to smoke.
Speaker:My wife doesn't smoke, but she's okay-
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Okay that you smoke.
Speaker:- with me smoking.
Speaker:- Yeah!
Speaker:Not like, "Oh my God, you smell."
Speaker:Or like, "Oh, put your clothes in the bag."
Speaker:Things like that.
Speaker:She would do that to me.
Speaker:I'm like, "What? It's my house!"
Speaker:- Put my clothes in a bag.
Speaker:You have to undress in the garage, by the way.
Speaker:And then, come in.
Speaker:It's like, "Yeah, no, I'm not doing that."
Speaker:- No, no.
Speaker:So, nah, ain't happening.
Speaker:It's quality of life.
Speaker:- Quality of life.
Speaker:It's a good quality of life with this cigar in hand,
Speaker:in my opinion.
Speaker:It's the way I enjoy it.
Speaker:It's the way, I'm sure,
Speaker:a lot of our listeners enjoy it, as well.
Speaker:PDR Cigars.
Speaker:What does it stand for?
Speaker:- Now, it stands for Puro Dominican Republic.
Speaker:- What did he stand for before?
Speaker:- Pinar Del Rio.
Speaker:Pinar Del Rio's the region of Cuba
Speaker:where most of the tobacco seeds, you know,
Speaker:the best tobacco seeds have come from.
Speaker:So, when I started like, 17 years ago,
Speaker:I always smoked cigars.
Speaker:And I'm Dominican.
Speaker:And I was very into like Cuban and Cuban technique,
Speaker:and the whole historical portion of tobacco.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Sure.
Speaker:- And most of the tobacco seeds, the good ones,
Speaker:Corojo, Corona 99, Criollo 98, Habano, Habano Vuelta Arriba.
Speaker:There's a section of the United (indistinct)
Speaker:come from Cuba.
Speaker:So, I've been to Cuba many times before I was doing cigars,
Speaker:and I just fell in love with the whole thing.
Speaker:I wanted to...
Speaker:Back then, I was really, really focused on that.
Speaker:Pinar Del Río.
Speaker:And we were called Pinar Del Río.
Speaker:The company, I trademarked it.
Speaker:I was like, "Aw man, no one already trademarked this?"
Speaker:And I launched the company as Pinar Del Río.
Speaker:As things evolve, and I matured,
Speaker:I mean, now I'm 45, 46 in two months.
Speaker:And when I started, I was 28 producing, yeah.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Wow!
Speaker:- So, things have changed a lot.
Speaker:You know, I became a member of Procigar about six years ago.
Speaker:Yeah, six years ago.
Speaker:We're presenting Procigar, a Dominican association,
Speaker:the best producers in the Dominican Republic,
Speaker:and doing the festivals
Speaker:and people really loving what we're doing.
Speaker:And I got more and more deeper in my country,
Speaker:my culture, what our heritage is of tobacco,
Speaker:and what we're about.
Speaker:Henke Kelner taught me a lot.
Speaker:I call him the guru.
Speaker:- Yes!
Speaker:- I told this to Greg Mottola.
Speaker:I was like,
Speaker:"I started listening to Gospel of Henke."
Speaker:That's what I call it.
Speaker:And he always talks about the Indian Taínos.
Speaker:You know, when Christopher Columbus, they taught him,
Speaker:they already knew tobacco.
Speaker:They already started doing pipas in the...
Speaker:And I was like, "Oh!"
Speaker:I learned all this stuff that I didn't know before,
Speaker:because before that, in the Dominican Republic,
Speaker:there's no books.
Speaker:There's no heritage.
Speaker:Like there's no...
Speaker:Nobody's really teaching you a lot of this stuff.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right!
Speaker:- Like in the past.
Speaker:- Especially about tobacco heritage,
Speaker:Because like you said, it's all coming from Cuba.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] It's all coming from Cuba!
Speaker:- They came from Cuba to come over here.
Speaker:- Exactly.
Speaker:- Or D.R., I should say.
Speaker:- Well, D.R.
Speaker:So you see a lot of that things happening.
Speaker:- But now, it's big enough.
Speaker:or it's had a long enough longevity,
Speaker:that now it's like you said,
Speaker:you're learning about Dominican Republic's role in cigars
Speaker:and how vast it is and how that changes.
Speaker:Because like you said,
Speaker:you can't just take whatever came from Cuba
Speaker:and then replicate it in the D.R.
Speaker:It's not gonna be the same.
Speaker:The soil is different.
Speaker:The way the tobacco reacts is all different, right?
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Exactly, yeah.
Speaker:- So, now you're learning all this from Henke.
Speaker:- No, it's taken me, I evolved.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right, you're learning-
Speaker:- Even my blends have evolved.
Speaker:My cigar's tobaccos have evolved.
Speaker:My flavor profiles evolved.
Speaker:Before I wanted to do so many things
Speaker:or tobaccos with so many different cigars,
Speaker:with so many different seeds and types.
Speaker:And I used to do things with seven and eight different,
Speaker:like half a leaf, half a leaf.
Speaker:Now it's about more like stability, complexity,
Speaker:consistency, you know?
Speaker:That's what I focus on now.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I love it.
Speaker:- And I think people need to,
Speaker:why you drink the beer that you always drink?
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Tastes the same.
Speaker:- You know what you're gonna get when you drink it.
Speaker:- You know the feeling.
Speaker:You know what you're gonna get,
Speaker:but you all need to have the feeling of it.
Speaker:When you pop that beer in your mouth,
Speaker:it's like, you know that feeling.
Speaker:It's like home.
Speaker:So, that's the thing is if a cigar is always different
Speaker:or changing all the time, or just really not comfortable,
Speaker:you know?
Speaker:You're gonna try it once and then, maybe twice,
Speaker:and then that's it.
Speaker:What makes a successful brand is to be consistent,
Speaker:to be consistent all the time!
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:You have to have consistent tobacco,
Speaker:consistent packaging, consistent rolling.
Speaker:And that's what makes a cigar to last longer
Speaker:and longer, longer.
Speaker:Why people still buy Macanudos?
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- Still tastes the same.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right!
Speaker:- From like 25, 30 years ago.
Speaker:It still tastes the same.
Speaker:Romeo.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right?
Speaker:- It still tastes the same.
Speaker:- I know every time I pick up a Henry Clay,
Speaker:I know what I'm getting.
Speaker:- You know what you're getting.
Speaker:Every time.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Or Saint Luis Rey.
Speaker:- Saint Luis, you know what you get.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Every time.
Speaker:- It doesn't change.
Speaker:I think what makes these companies successful
Speaker:is the inventory tobacco,
Speaker:and to be able to deliver the same tobacco,
Speaker:the same flavor profile time after time, after time.
Speaker:What makes a Padrón, a Padrón?
Speaker:You could grab a Padrón now,
Speaker:and smoke a Padrón 10 years from now,
Speaker:and it's still the same!
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:So that's what makes you a successful brand,
Speaker:to be able to carry that.
Speaker:It took me a while to understand that,
Speaker:to be honest with you.
Speaker:Because I just wanted to do so much.
Speaker:I was like a kid in a candy store,
Speaker:and I saw all this tobacco.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- And I wanted to play around with so much.
Speaker:And you know, now it's about now delivering that flavor.
Speaker:And in 10 years smoking,
Speaker:and it's like yup, that's the 10th or that's 1878,
Speaker:or that's that...
Speaker:It's gonna taste the same all the time.
Speaker:So, I limited the farms.
Speaker:I limited the companies that buy the wrappers from.
Speaker:Same people.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:Three guys, four guys, that's it.
Speaker:One for Mexico, one for Ecuador, one for Connecticut,
Speaker:filler, same thing;
Speaker:one guy for filler, that's it.
Speaker:One farmer, that's it.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Love it.
Speaker:- He has enough diversity for me with different seed types,
Speaker:and that's it.
Speaker:Don't change, keep it like that, and do it.
Speaker:- When did you start the company?
Speaker:- The company actually started before, in 2004.
Speaker:It was called Don Leoncio.
Speaker:So, it's like that bar in New Orleans.
Speaker:There's a bar in New Orleans on Canal Street.
Speaker:called Don Leoncio's.
Speaker:They were my partners, Juan, Luis, Ysidoro Rodriguez.
Speaker:They were three brothers.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Okay.
Speaker:- So, I was working for a company called Tinder Box.
Speaker:- Tinder Box!
Speaker:Yeah!
Speaker:- I worked for Tinder Box International.
Speaker:They were the big, not a retail store.
Speaker:- They were like over 300 retailers.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah, it got to 400.
Speaker:- Over 400 retailers all across the United States.
Speaker:- Yeah, they were a big chain.
Speaker:So, I helped them.
Speaker:I ran their internet, the warehouse distribution,
Speaker:and I came in as a programmer.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Sure.
Speaker:- I always wanted to get into cigars.
Speaker:I sold cigars in Manhattan,
Speaker:and I sold cigars in Massachusetts.
Speaker:I grew up in Mass.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] You grew up in Massachusetts?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:Salem, Massachusetts.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Salem?
Speaker:- Yeah, all the witches.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Okay!
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:- Dated a witch.
Speaker:(Abe laughs)
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah!
Speaker:I love Boston, by the way.
Speaker:- Oh, Boston is great.
Speaker:I mean, I love Boston.
Speaker:I loved living in Salem.
Speaker:I mean, you have Marblehead right there.
Speaker:Swampscott right there on the side.
Speaker:Every weekend we would be at the beach
Speaker:walking up the boulevard over there.
Speaker:It's like, it was awesome, you know?
Speaker:- Were you born in the D.R.?
Speaker:- No, I was born in Queens, New York.
Speaker:- Queens, New York?
Speaker:Your parents from the D.R.?
Speaker:- Yeah, my parents from the D.R.
Speaker:So I left, I was born and I left when I was two,
Speaker:back to the D.R.
Speaker:Went to Bonao.
Speaker:I grew up with grandparents.
Speaker:He grew tobacco and was the farmer.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Okay.
Speaker:- And then, came back when I was 12, 13 years old to Salem.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Got it.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:Spoke no English.
Speaker:- Spoke no English?
Speaker:- At all.
Speaker:- At 12 years old.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- That's gotta be hard, man.
Speaker:- Yeah, it was hard.
Speaker:- How did you learn English?
Speaker:- When you come to the United States,
Speaker:a lot of high schools will have a English
Speaker:as a second language, ESL class.
Speaker:So, you start with a lot of Latinos or Asians, or whatever.
Speaker:Funny enough, that year was a bunch of Russian Jews
Speaker:that came from Croatia.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Sure.
Speaker:- Something happened in Russia.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Like a refugee program, almost.
Speaker:- Yeah, it was like a...
Speaker:There were Russians
Speaker:and Filipinos and Dominicans.
Speaker:It was funny mix.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:And, you know, they take you slowly to learn English.
Speaker:I got to high school,
Speaker:and I was able to go full program,
Speaker:half and half.
Speaker:And eventually go straight to...
Speaker:The funny thing enough, when I graduated high school,
Speaker:I was number 9 in my class
Speaker:from 285 kids.
Speaker:- Number nine, academically?
Speaker:- Academically.
Speaker:- For a non-English speaking kid.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- That's a huge achievement.
Speaker:Nice work!
Speaker:- They came up to them.
Speaker:No, I had too many potheads in my high school class.
Speaker:(Abe laughs)
Speaker:- So, the competition pool wasn't very high.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] No, it wasn't that high.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:Trust me, the five percentile,
Speaker:we were fighting against each other.
Speaker:The rest, they didn't care at all.
Speaker:They just smoked, drank a lot of beer, keg stands,
Speaker:out on the weekends.
Speaker:I mean, we were in Massachusetts.
Speaker:We got a bunch of, you know, we have forests.
Speaker:Yeah, people go into woods, Gallows Hills.
Speaker:There's like a bunch of woods and stuff like that.
Speaker:And people go up and up in the hill,
Speaker:people would bring kegs.
Speaker:And like-
Speaker:- Keggers.
Speaker:- Keggers.
Speaker:- Parties.
Speaker:- Parties and drinks almost every day.
Speaker:And people just drank and smoked pot all the time
Speaker:up in Mass.
Speaker:Oh, yeah.
Speaker:There's a reason like, when they legalized pot,
Speaker:all my high school friends are like,
Speaker:"Oh my God, thank God!
Speaker:I'm not gonna go to jail now."
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:I had a Zoom call with my college fraternity,
Speaker:and we just like did a Zoom thing, you know?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Most of them live in Massachusetts, still.
Speaker:And I'm smoking a cigar.
Speaker:It's like, "Oh, hey dude, you're smoking a cigar."
Speaker:And they're like, half of them like...
Speaker:(Abe imitates smoking)
Speaker:You know, wrong smoke.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:It's like, "oh my God!"
Speaker:It's like, "Dude, it's legal, now!"
Speaker:(Abe and Rob both laugh)
Speaker:- We could do this now.
Speaker:Just like you're smoking that cigar legally,
Speaker:we can do this.
Speaker:- We can do this, too.
Speaker:I'm like, oh my God!
Speaker:And they can't fire me.
Speaker:I'm like, oh my God!
Speaker:Like, Jesus Christ.
Speaker:The world has changed.
Speaker:- Yeah, the world is changing.
Speaker:- World's changing drastically, man.
Speaker:- Here it comes.
Speaker:Buckle up.
Speaker:- But yeah, I mean, I did that.
Speaker:I went to work for Tinder Box after a while.
Speaker:I learned a lot.
Speaker:And these guys Juan and Ysidoro,
Speaker:I met them when I used to come to D.R. buying tobacco,
Speaker:buying cigars.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yup.
Speaker:- And I was getting to a point, I mean, I was young.
Speaker:I was 29,
Speaker:27, 28 years old,
Speaker:and they said,
Speaker:I would have three years for Tinder Box already.
Speaker:And they're like, "Come on board."
Speaker:So, they offered me a partnership,
Speaker:and all I had to do is just teach them.
Speaker:- Sure.
Speaker:- Because they were rollers,
Speaker:but they didn't know about packaging, marketing, blending.
Speaker:Really, they just rolled cigars.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- Bought tobacco and rolled 'em.
Speaker:But they didn't understand
Speaker:you needed to give the consumer more
Speaker:than just rolled cigars, you know?
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- So, I didn't know how they talked me into it.
Speaker:I left Tinder Box, and I started hustling.
Speaker:And I started going down, making blends.
Speaker:They had a little factory,
Speaker:like six people in it and that's it.
Speaker:And then, we grew it and grew it.
Speaker:I almost quit like five, six times.
Speaker:And then...
Speaker:- You almost quit five to six times?
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yes.
Speaker:- What made you wanna quit?
Speaker:- It was a lot of work and-
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah, it is a lot of work to start a company.
Speaker:- It's a lot of work to start a company.
Speaker:And then, the beginning is a lot of money.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah!
Speaker:- And you could lose your shirt
Speaker:(Abe snaps his fingers)
Speaker:like that, you know?
Speaker:- Really?
Speaker:Were there multiple times where you're like,
Speaker:"Dude, I'm losing my shirt.
Speaker:I gotta get out."
Speaker:- Yeah, there's been like three times,
Speaker:after I almost quit, it's been like three times
Speaker:that I almost lost the business.
Speaker:I almost went out of...
Speaker:like something changed, FDA, well this.
Speaker:Now things are going up in a boom, you know?
Speaker:- So multiple times you were thinking,
Speaker:I just gotta toss the towel in, take my loss, and get out.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah.
Speaker:- What made you come back to I'll stick it out?
Speaker:I'll stick it out. I'll stick it out.
Speaker:Three times you said.
Speaker:- Somebody always comes in and says,
Speaker:"Wait it out."
Speaker:- Anyone specific you wanna name, or no?
Speaker:- One guy that really was there for me
Speaker:the whole entire time was Jochy Blanco.
Speaker:- Really?
Speaker:- Yeah he's always was like,
Speaker:a rock for me.
Speaker:Like in the sense of don't throw the towel,
Speaker:you know what I'm saying?
Speaker:I'll help you out, advising me what I was doing wrong,
Speaker:whatever, what to fix, what to this and that.
Speaker:Another person, Henke.
Speaker:Henke really like looked at things more globally, worldwide.
Speaker:So his thing was more like,
Speaker:don't just focus so much on the United States.
Speaker:Focus on building other markets,
Speaker:so if one market falls,
Speaker:you still are good everywhere else.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right!
Speaker:- So my strategy the past like seven, eight years,
Speaker:is just been out trying, not just be PDR United States,
Speaker:be a global brand.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- Right before the pandemic,
Speaker:I went to the China Festival;
Speaker:me, Litto Gomez, Carlito Fuentes, Jochy Blanco.
Speaker:And to sell into China,
Speaker:you have to be assigned.
Speaker:And there was only, they assigned five cigar manufacturers.
Speaker:I'm one of them.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Really?
Speaker:- Worldwide.
Speaker:So you have the Cubans and only five Dominicans,
Speaker:and that's it.
Speaker:Selling, have a contract to sell into China
Speaker:and they give you a quota.
Speaker:So, the government themselves buy all the cigars
Speaker:and then, they sell it to the shops in mainland China.
Speaker:- Wow!
Speaker:- So, I'm one of five.
Speaker:That would have not happened if I wasn't in Procigar.
Speaker:- Sure.
Speaker:Procigar and the people in it.
Speaker:- And the people in it.
Speaker:- have mentored you to keep going.
Speaker:- Yes.
Speaker:So, things have changed.
Speaker:Financially, we're doing good, great.
Speaker:I mean, I was scared for a while because the pandemic,
Speaker:but things bounced back real quick.
Speaker:I'm not producing as much,
Speaker:but I did changes in the pricing and everything.
Speaker:So, now financially, we're doing well,
Speaker:even if we're producing less.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:Well, that's good.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah.
Speaker:- You wanna sell what you produce.
Speaker:So, you're selling more of what you produce,
Speaker:instead of sitting on it.
Speaker:- Exactly.
Speaker:Before I used to sit on it, wait at a lower margin.
Speaker:Now, it's like everything I produced is sold.
Speaker:- It's exactly what you want.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:So, I mean, Jochy was a good guy.
Speaker:Henke was another person.
Speaker:- Yeah, when they sit you down like that and they tell you,
Speaker:is there any times where you're just offended
Speaker:by what they say?
Speaker:Or is it kinda like, you know when you get sat down
Speaker:and they tell you something,
Speaker:that it's your time to listen up?
Speaker:- Oh yeah.
Speaker:I mean, I always, listen.
Speaker:I've never been a person where-
Speaker:- But it's kind of prideful, right?
Speaker:If somebody's telling you
Speaker:how to correct something that you built,
Speaker:it's like, you have to be mature enough-
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] To take it.
Speaker:- to listen and take that criticism,
Speaker:and move forward with it.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah.
Speaker:- Because it's coming from a good space.
Speaker:- Yes, so, I mean, with them, things have totally changed.
Speaker:My whole company has changed.
Speaker:I'm happier.
Speaker:They really guided me much better.
Speaker:Carrillo also, really focused on this, this, and this,
Speaker:and you'll be great.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:Even if you make 10 thousand cigars a day,
Speaker:you'll be fine.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- So it's like, and that's what I'm doing.
Speaker:Now, I don't care if I only make 15 thousand cigars a day.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:- It's not a numbers race.
Speaker:- It's not a numbers race.
Speaker:- No.
Speaker:- Now it's like, it's not about volume anymore.
Speaker:It's about quality now.
Speaker:- Yeah!
Speaker:Now we're here.
Speaker:- Yeah, it's about quality.
Speaker:- Now we're here.
Speaker:- Provide quality.
Speaker:Don't provide Croquetas.
Speaker:Do quality, you know what I'm saying?
Speaker:Don't be Budweiser.
Speaker:There's already a Budweiser, you know?
Speaker:Be a-
Speaker:- Well, you're kind of being Budweiser
Speaker:because you know that every time
Speaker:I pick up this 10th Anniversary,
Speaker:I know what I'm gonna get.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah.
Speaker:- It's not gonna change on me.
Speaker:Hey, you cracked a Budweiser, and it tastes like an IPA.
Speaker:Whoa, wrong beer!
Speaker:- But that's what I'm focusing on.
Speaker:Thank God things are different.
Speaker:Things are better.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I love it.
Speaker:- There's a huge demand, now.
Speaker:I don't know how much longer.
Speaker:I think this whole thing
Speaker:is gonna last about two more years,
Speaker:and then things will normalize again.
Speaker:But I think it's changed the culture,
Speaker:how things are as I think you're right.
Speaker:It's gonna be hard for people to go back
Speaker:to going where they were.
Speaker:Because now that it's quality of life now has changed.
Speaker:- Right!
Speaker:- You know, their quality of life has changed.
Speaker:Now they're dedicating more time.
Speaker:And that's something that Americans were lacking on.
Speaker:- Oh, huge!
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Hugely, hugely!
Speaker:Americans didn't have that.
Speaker:- Stop.
Speaker:Slow down.
Speaker:- They don't have that.
Speaker:They don't.
Speaker:Most 90% of Americans did not have that until now.
Speaker:Until they were forced to.
Speaker:And now they're like,
Speaker:"Oh no, #!*% I'd rather work home."
Speaker:I got a cousin of mine that called me up.
Speaker:She's like, "Oh, man!"
Speaker:She's in Long Island.
Speaker:She's a graphic designer.
Speaker:Was like, "Man, I love your life.
Speaker:Go to the beach, you do this.
Speaker:You make cigars.
Speaker:You know, you work.
Speaker:And then if you feel like taking day off, that's it."
Speaker:And I was like, "Yeah."
Speaker:And she lives in Long Island, and she works for a company.
Speaker:And like,
Speaker:"They want me to go back to work now in the office."
Speaker:I'm like, "All right, how much you get paid?"
Speaker:"Oh, I get paid like a hundred thousand dollars."
Speaker:"Okay, that's a hundred thousand
Speaker:before tax, right?"
Speaker:She's like, "Yeah, yeah."
Speaker:"Okay, tell them to pay you 80,000
Speaker:as an international contractor.
Speaker:Pay you, deposit into a bank account
Speaker:in the Dominican Republic;
Speaker:separate bank account in the Dominican Republic.
Speaker:Now you keep 80,000.
Speaker:For them, it's less.
Speaker:You don't have to pay taxes now because you're independent,
Speaker:and tell them you're gonna work from home
Speaker:in the Dominican Republic.
Speaker:And you pay your own flight, maybe once a month
Speaker:to go and see, you know, a week, whatever.
Speaker:Once a month, every two months,
Speaker:if you have to meet the boss or a client,
Speaker:or whatever, you come up.
Speaker:Do that."
Speaker:And she did it.
Speaker:She's happy.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Wow!
Speaker:- She did it like six, seven months ago.
Speaker:I'm like, I should've done this a long time ago.
Speaker:She asked for advice.
Speaker:- Quality of life, man.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Quality of life.
Speaker:- So much, but you spoke about Romy and Fouad.
Speaker:Fouad said the Mason Code is kind of
Speaker:God first, family second, then business.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Exactly.
Speaker:- And Americans flipped the last two all the time.
Speaker:It's business and family last.
Speaker:And if you flip those two, it can get real hairy, quickly.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Exactly.
Speaker:- No matter what your family's like, you know,
Speaker:family might just be you.
Speaker:But like you said, are you happier?
Speaker:If you always put your job first and not you,
Speaker:and what you wanna do in certain situations,
Speaker:you're not gonna be happy.
Speaker:- It's like that phrasing
Speaker:of you live to work or work to live?
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- Which one you rather?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- You know?
Speaker:- I'd rather live to work.
Speaker:And I do live to work.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:- You gotta do what you love.
Speaker:You gotta love work,
Speaker:but it shouldn't be all about work and killing yourself.
Speaker:And then spending a little time, maybe once a year,
Speaker:you could take a five day vacation.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- It's insane.
Speaker:I remember working for a software company.
Speaker:I've worked in dot-com.
Speaker:I worked for like pets.com, like when it came out.
Speaker:I lived in the whole dot-com boom.
Speaker:I did all that stuff.
Speaker:They worked my ass.
Speaker:I had like, no time.
Speaker:When I worked at Tinder Box,
Speaker:I worked almost seven days a week building code
Speaker:all the time, managing the site.
Speaker:I had no time at all!
Speaker:At all.
Speaker:Now?
Speaker:I got time.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- I got time.
Speaker:- Quality of life.
Speaker:- It's quality of life.
Speaker:Quality of life.
Speaker:That's more important.
Speaker:In the end, I think it's better.
Speaker:- Oh, yeah!
Speaker:Yeah, otherwise what?
Speaker:At the end of a life you go,
Speaker:"Shoot."
Speaker:- You can have all the millions of dollars.
Speaker:When you die, you think you could take them with you?
Speaker:- You got nothing.
Speaker:I used to be a funeral director
Speaker:and they always said,
Speaker:"There's no hitch on the back of the hearse with a trailer."
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] At all.
Speaker:- None.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Nothing.
Speaker:- There's no trailer on the back of it.
Speaker:There's no hitch.
Speaker:Nothing's coming behind us.
Speaker:It's just you and the ground.
Speaker:That's what's next.
Speaker:- So you can bust your ass.
Speaker:Why you want to kill yourself so much working, working,
Speaker:working, working, working.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- And try to get all this stuff and all these things,
Speaker:and millions and millions of dollars or whatever.
Speaker:You'll just be rich or whatever.
Speaker:And when you die, you can't take none of it!
Speaker:Enjoy life, take a vacation.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- Do this.
Speaker:Hit the globe and go,
Speaker:"Oh, England?
Speaker:I'm gonna go. #!*% it."
Speaker:Do it!
Speaker:See the world.
Speaker:Experience something.
Speaker:Most Americans don't have passports.
Speaker:That drives me insane!
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Really?
Speaker:- Like most Americans don't have passports at all!
Speaker:When I hear that, it's like, "I don't got a passport."
Speaker:Like, "You don't have a passport?
Speaker:How you don't have a passport?"
Speaker:- Do you travel globally, often?
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:- You try to get out?
Speaker:- Yeah, I like traveling.
Speaker:- It gives you a different frame of reference
Speaker:for how people live.
Speaker:Like when I went to Spain, loved it!
Speaker:Siestas in the afternoon when it's really hot.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yes!
Speaker:- Going back,
Speaker:we went to dinner at 9:30 and no one was out.
Speaker:I was like, "Where is everyone?"
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] It's too early.
Speaker:- Like, "Oh, they're not coming until 11, maybe midnight."
Speaker:We were walking to restaurants,
Speaker:and I would think, this place is not making any money.
Speaker:We'd be going back to go to bed-
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Packed! Packed!
Speaker:- Packed!
Speaker:And that's like their appetizer, the tapas bars.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:"Are they gonna go and have another meal after this?"
Speaker:They're like, "Oh yeah."
Speaker:Wow!
Speaker:- Yeah, you start lunch at two.
Speaker:- Yeah!
Speaker:- Lunchtime is two o'clock.
Speaker:Two to five.
Speaker:- Yeah, two to five.
Speaker:- Two to five.
Speaker:- That's a big lunch hour.
Speaker:- So, you're gonna eat, go home, pass out,
Speaker:go back to work at five.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right!
Speaker:- Yeah, then you could go to work until nine or eight,
Speaker:whatever, three more hours, boom, boom!
Speaker:And then, go home.
Speaker:And then, you have dinner at like 10, 12 o'clock at night.
Speaker:- Then, you don't start until 10 o'clock in the morning.
Speaker:- And you don't start working until 10 o'clock
Speaker:in the morning.
Speaker:I'm telling you.
Speaker:That's life.
Speaker:I love it!
Speaker:I mean, I love Spain.
Speaker:Spain is great.
Speaker:Italy, oh my God!
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Italy?
Speaker:- Oh, that's where I'm gonna move.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah?
Speaker:- I'm gonna retire in Florence.
Speaker:That's my goal.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I love it!
Speaker:- I love Florence.
Speaker:- What do you like so much about Italy?
Speaker:- The people are great.
Speaker:I just love the wine.
Speaker:I love the cheese, and they're just like so happy,
Speaker:and so loving and stuff like that.
Speaker:You just meet an Italian on the streets and like,
Speaker:"Hey!"
Speaker:He's like, "Here's a cigar."
Speaker:"Oh! Grazie!"
Speaker:They're like, "Oh, come here!"
Speaker:Oh, come to my house!"
Speaker:They open the door like,
Speaker:"Hey!"
Speaker:And like, feed you.
Speaker:I'm like, "Oh my God!
Speaker:I just gave you a cigar."
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I don't even know you and I just met you!
Speaker:- I just met you, like you're friends for life.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Right.
Speaker:- Every person I met in Italy, we're friends for life.
Speaker:I'm like, "Call me up."
Speaker:They'd send me texts, "Hey! You don't call me.
Speaker:You don't love me."
Speaker:I'm like, "I just met you."
Speaker:That's how they get.
Speaker:They're very clingy.
Speaker:They're just friendly, you know?
Speaker:You don't get that here.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] I love that!
Speaker:- You know?
Speaker:I lived in our apartment in New York and then like,
Speaker:I barely saw my neighbors.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah!
Speaker:- You go, you see each other.
Speaker:"Hey, good morning."
Speaker:- Yeah, who are you?
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Who are you?
Speaker:- "I live in the same building as you, sir."
Speaker:"Oh, wow."
Speaker:- No, you don't do that.
Speaker:You go to Italy, these cobblestone streets in Florence.
Speaker:You see those little bars and like the apartments and stuff.
Speaker:All the neighbors will get together, like sit in front.
Speaker:It's like Spanish Harlem with all the Dominicans and stuff.
Speaker:It's like very close to my culture.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah!
Speaker:- And I like it.
Speaker:They're all sitting together.
Speaker:You're smoking cigarettes or whatever.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:Drinking little beers
Speaker:and all of the whole neighborhood is right there.
Speaker:And I like that!
Speaker:You know, and space, same way feel like that.
Speaker:So, I just like that culture.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah!
Speaker:- I just love Florence.
Speaker:For me, Florence is the #!*%.
Speaker:I just love it.
Speaker:- Abe will be in Florence, Italy, by the time he's retired.
Speaker:- [Abe Flores] Yes.
Speaker:- I love it.
Speaker:Or maybe before.
Speaker:Maybe before.
Speaker:- I'll be there soon, but I gotta go-
Speaker:- There you go.
Speaker:- Do some events, so.
Speaker:- Awesome!
Speaker:Anything that we should be looking for from PDR
Speaker:or is it, basically, just look for the consistency
Speaker:in our blends and try the next one that comes across?
Speaker:- Try the next PDR.
Speaker:If you haven't tried PDR, try it again, revisit a PDR.
Speaker:It's gonna be a whole different profile.
Speaker:It's not the PDR that you used to smoke 15 years ago.
Speaker:So, it's a different PDR.
Speaker:We're all different now.
Speaker:- It definitely is.
Speaker:It's a different PDR, and I love it.
Speaker:And I appreciate you telling the story
Speaker:and having been a little vulnerable on the maturity
Speaker:that you've gone through.
Speaker:All of us go through it.
Speaker:We all go through it.
Speaker:Maturity and life.
Speaker:I think you don't really become really who you are
Speaker:until you're between twenties and forties.
Speaker:It's such a pivotal time for you to start shaping
Speaker:who you are and picking up things that you want to change
Speaker:about yourself.
Speaker:Make yourself better.
Speaker:- Take some.
Speaker:- So, 20 years in the business already.
Speaker:- Yes.
Speaker:- Or 20 plus.
Speaker:- About eighteen, now.
Speaker:- Eighteen?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- So, you still got some life in you
Speaker:to create some great cigars for us.
Speaker:- Yeah, I still got life!
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Hell yeah!
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:If God wills it, we'll see.
Speaker:- Pick up a PDR cigar.
Speaker:If they wanna know more about your blends,
Speaker:is it pdrcigars.com?
Speaker:- Yes, it is.
Speaker:- Pdrcigars.com.
Speaker:Ask your local retailer.
Speaker:They're probably in there.
Speaker:You just glanced over them
Speaker:or you need to revisit it.
Speaker:Because you had an old PDR, and now it's all different.
Speaker:So Abe, I appreciate you coming,
Speaker:sitting down, talking with me, telling me your story;
Speaker:And just having a good time,
Speaker:smoking a cigar and telling stories.
Speaker:- Thank you very much for having me, my friend.
Speaker:- [Rob Gagner] Yeah, man.
Speaker:- I hope you all learned a little bit
Speaker:because Abe has a lot of wisdom to share.
Speaker:And as always, protect your cigars with Boveda.
Speaker:There's no better way to just simply smoke cigars,
Speaker:enjoy cigars, and forget about maintaining them.
Speaker:Go to bovedainc.com if you need anything, pdrcigars.com.
Speaker:This is wrapping up another great episode.