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- The first time we met Litto-

- On the line.

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- I think it was at a cigar store,

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probably in the Midwest maybe.

Speaker:

Maybe the Chicago area.

Speaker:

Or whatever.

Speaker:

And I remember meeting Litto.

Speaker:

Tim and I were there.

Speaker:

Litto was there doing his thing

and introducing ourselves.

Speaker:

You're probably wondering,

"Who the hell are these guys?"

Speaker:

But we were just trying

to meet and get to know

Speaker:

an up-and-coming, really.

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He has really already arrived.

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Of course, we were brand new

in the industry at the time,

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but I just remember that conversation,

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just the respect that you gave us

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and the ability to, you know.

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We were probably wondering,

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these two are gonna be here

this year and gone next year

Speaker:

is probably what he was thinking.

Speaker:

But we were telling him about what we did

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and everything else.

Speaker:

And that was the first time.

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I wish I remembered the store.

Speaker:

I don't remember the store.

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- And you know what?

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There's few cases like that,

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that I have seen over the years.

Speaker:

And like Michael Frey, for example.

Speaker:

Okay?

- Yes.

Speaker:

- Michael Frey, he came into

the industry in a moment

Speaker:

in which there was no cigars for anybody.

Speaker:

You wanna open a store

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and there was no cigars for you, okay?

Speaker:

Because nobody, none of the cigar makers

Speaker:

had enough cigars for the

traditional customers.

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- Sure.

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- And Michael and Robert Frey,

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they were coming to every event

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of the industry and hanging out with us,

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with every cigar maker.

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They would be in every event.

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And they had the store.

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It was open already.

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- Yeah.

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- And they were with us all the time.

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And that's how they got cigars.

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I mean, these guys-

- Smart.

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Smart guys.

- They are in the industry

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and they come to every event.

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- They just built a relationship-

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- And they're nice.

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I compare you guys with Michael,

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and it's a couple of more cases

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in which these people are doing it right.

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I mean, they come to the industry

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and they're part of every event.

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And they meet and they

introduce themselves to,

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whether you're a supplier

or a possible customer,

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I've seen cases like that.

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And the people that have done that

Speaker:

were successful.

- Yeah.

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- That's half the battle

is being there, right?

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You gotta be there.

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You gotta be present.

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- Yeah, you become a part

of the family somehow.

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- You gotta be interwoven in the fabric

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of everything in order to-

- Exactly, exactly.

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- To be there.

- And for some reason,

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everybody liked you guys, you know?

Speaker:

- Yeah. (laughs)

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- Well, there's a difference

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between just wanting

to be in the business,

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to be in business as

opposed to having a passion

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and a real desire and

care for the industry.

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We're fans.

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So we're first and foremost,

Tim and I are cigar fans.

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We love the product.

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And we felt like we had a place

in the industry passionately

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to really solve problems that

really existed out there.

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So we come from that point of view

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with a deep level of care

and passion in the industry.

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And so when we meet you two,

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and for example, meet Litto, it's like,

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"Wow, this is an honor to

meet someone who's made it

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and who has a following

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and people covet their

cigars and all of that."

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- But also has the passion.

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I mean, what you've

done with your business

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has been significant.

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I mean, you went all in

and bought your own farm,

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started growing your own tobacco.

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Not everybody goes down that road.

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Some people just build brands

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and have other people make them for them.

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But you went all in.

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And that's a huge sacrifice.

- Yeah.

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- That's a passion play.

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- The first story that

you said that I remember

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that clicks in my mind was

when you were talking about

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the early days when you started.

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And it's a business

lesson that's really key.

Speaker:

And you were talking about those cigars,

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the thousands and thousands of cigars

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that didn't meet your qualities.

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I was thinking Ben Hogan when

he ripped up his golf clubs,

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when he didn't wanna put his name on them.

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But you tell that story when you were,

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just the quality standards

and the demand for excellence

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with your name on it, you know?

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- It is, and I'm gonna

go back to you guys.

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And they have this structure.

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Like every time this guy see you,

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they tell you something nice, right?

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- Yes.

- How elegant you look.

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They're programed to be successful.

Speaker:

- Oh, I love these guys.

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I feel like a million bucks.

- You never see them,

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you don't get a compliment

from them, okay?

Speaker:

Yeah.

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Yeah, you guys know your shit.

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- Litto always tells me,

you like the Boveda guys

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because they always laugh

at your stupid jokes.

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I said, "Fuck them."

(all laughing)

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- One of the funniest guys I know.

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- I know.

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- Fun to be around because, one of the,

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I mean, look at those three.

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These guys are creative.

Speaker:

You guys are seriously

very, very creative.

Speaker:

But you did a skit.

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When you guys were on

trying to reach the stuff

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and you couldn't reach the cigars,

Speaker:

but your dad, he could reach them.

Speaker:

You panned out and your dad was,

Speaker:

all that stuff is creatives.

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People need to look that one up

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if they haven't seen it.

- That's a great one.

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- Have you seen that Drew?

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- I have not.

- It's a skit.

Speaker:

Look at some of their skits.

Speaker:

These guys are brilliant and funny

Speaker:

on the skits that they put together.

Speaker:

Yeah, they're good.

Speaker:

You guys still do those?

Speaker:

- We haven't done one in a while.

Speaker:

We really-

- Gotta bring that back.

Speaker:

- I was thinking about that yesterday.

Speaker:

- I gotta put pen to paper

and come up with some.

Speaker:

We'll do some soon.

Speaker:

- And most of the stuff we've done

Speaker:

comes up like in a minute.

- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

- Tony come, or Litto come.

- Yeah, we do something.

Speaker:

- You do something, yeah.

Speaker:

- Something just come and

it just happens naturally.

Speaker:

Yeah.

- We gotta do it.

Speaker:

- Well, it's-

- So like-

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- Go ahead, go ahead.

- Oh, I was just gonna say,

Speaker:

it shows the fun that you're

having doing business, right?

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It's a way of life.

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It's a sport of business,

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and you just have to enjoy the journey

Speaker:

along the way every time,

because it's not easy every day.

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- And very different it makes.

Speaker:

Like, yeah, you're gonna

work for a paycheck, right?

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Happiness on Friday.

- Yeah.

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- But there's nothing in

your soul that attracts you

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other than that paycheck

you get on a Friday.

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How sad is that?

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- Yeah, very empty.

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- It's pretty empty.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- Because the check,

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the money from the check goes away.

Speaker:

And then you got nothing

in your soul, okay?

Speaker:

So unless you find something

that you're passionate about,

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you're gonna have a really boring life

Speaker:

for the rest of your life

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if you don't look for

something that you like,

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something that you love,

something that gets you out of bed

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like very quick in the morning.

Speaker:

And you wanna get to work in a rush

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because you wanna accomplish something.

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And then if you happen to accomplish it,

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that's what fills your soul.

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Everything that's material, okay?

Speaker:

You buy the car of your

dreams today, right?

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And you get on it and

you get out of the car

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and you look back at

the car and you love it.

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And then in the next five, six days,

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you keep turning back

after you leave the car

Speaker:

and you look at it,

"Man, that's beautiful."

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After a week, it's just a machine

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that takes you from point A to point B.

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There's nothing to it, right?

Speaker:

Now, the things that fill your soul

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because you accomplished something,

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okay, those are the

things that make you alive

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and make you happy and stay with you.

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So if you're happy with what

you accomplish every day,

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if you're happy with yourself,

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like that's what fills you up.

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There's nothing else.

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And I know every time, you know,

Speaker:

I give a diamond to my wife, right?

Speaker:

And she treats me like very

nice for three or four days.

Speaker:

After that, she treat me like shit again.

Speaker:

(all laughing)

Speaker:

One day, I gave her a

frame with a picture of us

Speaker:

on a really nice trip.

Speaker:

Man, that thing, she was

talking about that for a year.

Speaker:

- Let's just be conscious

Speaker:

of there's a guy that

just got engaged here.

Speaker:

- Yeah, that's right, let's not ruin

Speaker:

the sanctimony of marriage.

- I'm not only talking

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to them, I'm talking to you too, okay?

Speaker:

All right?

- I do have to write a book

Speaker:

one day of the advice from my father.

Speaker:

There's some doozies in there.

Speaker:

- Come on.

- The words of my father.

Speaker:

- Well, that's an interesting segue,

Speaker:

because what's it like to be his son?

Speaker:

- That's a loaded question.

- No, I'm just thinking

Speaker:

about the reputation in the

cigar industry, the story.

Speaker:

I'm very curious to

hear about how you felt

Speaker:

when you started in the business

Speaker:

and how your expectations have been met

Speaker:

or missed over the years.

Speaker:

But to come into the game as a son

Speaker:

and to have a guy who,

you won't like this,

Speaker:

but people treat him like a legend.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- So how's that?

Speaker:

I mean, just how is that?

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- I mean, first off, like

it's an absolute pleasure.

Speaker:

I think when I gave a speech the other day

Speaker:

at his birthday party, I touched on it,

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but just to watch this guy, it's awesome.

Speaker:

The way he makes things happen,

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he's got a certain way about him.

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And like I said, they don't

make him like him anymore.

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I've learned a lot of

incredible lessons from him.

Speaker:

I've also learned about a lot

of things not to do. (laughs)

Speaker:

But no, he's unbelievable

in like every facet of it.

Speaker:

He's an unbelievable person

Speaker:

in the way he accomplishes things,

Speaker:

the way he sets his head to a

goal and he makes it happen.

Speaker:

The guy's got no education.

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He didn't finish high school.

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He grew up on a dirt road.

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And he'll walk into Dominican Republic,

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he didn't know a single

thing about making cigars.

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And look at him 30 years later, you know?

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It doesn't make any sense.

Speaker:

He shouldn't have accomplished

that, but he did somehow.

Speaker:

So it's awesome.

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And it puts you interesting position,

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because everybody has

so much respect for him

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that it's gonna fall on me too.

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Everybody's nice to me just

because he's my father.

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But you have to deal with

that in a certain way

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because you want people to

respect you for you also.

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I don't want to just be respected

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because I'm Litto's son

for the rest of my life.

Speaker:

I wanna be Tony Gomez too.

Speaker:

So that's the kind of the

thing that's always there

Speaker:

in the back of your head,

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like you wanna accomplish

your own things too.

Speaker:

You wanna contribute.

Speaker:

- Look over your left shoulder.

Speaker:

- Yep.

Speaker:

- We didn't plan that.

Speaker:

We didn't plan that, but we got Litto's

Speaker:

For My Humidor poster is

looking over your left shoulder.

Speaker:

So the expectations from

when you were starting,

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when you took the chance

and your reflection on

Speaker:

how your life has either

met those or missed them.

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- Let me go back to the previous question.

Speaker:

I imagine that you come into an industry

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and there was somebody before

you that built something

Speaker:

and then you come into it.

Speaker:

And it's probably complicated.

Speaker:

It's probably not easy.

Speaker:

But you're building a name for yourself.

Speaker:

You have nothing to,

Speaker:

whatever your reputation is

has nothing to do with me.

Speaker:

And you became your own person.

Speaker:

You have your own style,

Speaker:

which is an accomplishment by itself.

Speaker:

- By itself.

- Okay?

Speaker:

It's just you, it doesn't

matter who your father is.

Speaker:

You are you,

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and you are loved and respected

Speaker:

because of the way you are.

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And you stayed with the way you are.

Speaker:

You never tried to be someone else.

Speaker:

And that, to me, it takes guts.

Speaker:

It takes security in your own self-esteem.

Speaker:

And it's something that is powerful to me.

Speaker:

And I admire that.

Speaker:

I admire the way you have conduct yourself

Speaker:

and the respect you got.

Speaker:

Learn not only with consumers

or within the industry.

Speaker:

- Thank you.

- You build your own name.

Speaker:

And that's hard to do

Speaker:

when you have somebody previous to you.

Speaker:

- I know, definitely.

- And that's a great thing

Speaker:

that has been going on.

Speaker:

And Litto seems like he's is gonna,

Speaker:

junior seems like he's gonna have,

Speaker:

he has his own personality.

- I mean, oh, yeah.

Speaker:

- It's kind of scary, but he

does have his personality.

Speaker:

Things I do, and you just

mentioned my education level.

Speaker:

Just because the way I

do things is orthodox

Speaker:

because I have no education,

Speaker:

I don't never follow a chain of command

Speaker:

by these people under me.

Speaker:

And I jump everybody else.

Speaker:

Like I go straight to the

people that are working,

Speaker:

and I sit down with

them and I talk to them.

Speaker:

And if the guy that's just

under me doesn't like it,

Speaker:

just get out of here.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- Okay?

Speaker:

I don't want filters.

Speaker:

Everybody has a filter.

Speaker:

Everybody protected us.

Speaker:

So I go directly to the people

Speaker:

that work for me at the lower end.

Speaker:

And I talk to them.

Speaker:

I talk about their families.

Speaker:

I talk how their life is

Speaker:

and what problems

they're having with work.

Speaker:

And I want that information unfiltered.

Speaker:

- Sure.

- And it doesn't look good.

Speaker:

When you're in a structure

and you get a size,

Speaker:

you got the structure.

Speaker:

One thing you have 10 employees,

Speaker:

but another thing's you have 350,

Speaker:

so now you have a structure, right?

Speaker:

Because you can't talk

to 350 people every day.

Speaker:

Like you gotta have a

structure of command.

Speaker:

But I don't really,

Speaker:

I do it because I have to do

it because I don't have time,

Speaker:

but to speak to everybody,

but I don't follow it.

Speaker:

- Sure.

- I'm very orthodox

Speaker:

in the things that I do every day.

Speaker:

- Well, it's a great trait of leadership

Speaker:

of connecting with your people

Speaker:

and having the interest in the care.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- Doesn't matter who they are,

Speaker:

but it can be on the personal level,

Speaker:

but also just how they're

doing within their job as well.

Speaker:

- About three weeks ago, I

met with a few in my office,

Speaker:

a few our employees in

the sorting department.

Speaker:

And I'm speaking to them.

Speaker:

And this woman is telling me,

Speaker:

"You know, Litto, you

are a business person.

Speaker:

And yet every time I go

across you and you say,

Speaker:

"Hi, how are you?"

Speaker:

And then I found out about her life.

Speaker:

I explain to them, listen.

Speaker:

And I told her about my life,

Speaker:

about my first job in

Canada when I immigrated,

Speaker:

that I got to walk a mile every

day from the last bus stop

Speaker:

to get to the factory in

the middle of the winter

Speaker:

with the shoes from Uruguay

Speaker:

that were not prepared for the weather.

Speaker:

And by the time I got to the

factory, my legs were frozen.

Speaker:

And it take more than half

hour to feel my legs again.

Speaker:

And I'm telling this, woman start crying.

Speaker:

I said, "This is where I come from.

Speaker:

You can't tell me about

having issues at home,

Speaker:

because in my house when I grew up,

Speaker:

we will eat when there was food.

Speaker:

So I grew up very poor.

Speaker:

So there's nothing that you're living

Speaker:

that I don't know how you feel about."

Speaker:

And I know exactly.

Speaker:

And this woman started crying.

Speaker:

And and she goes, "Litto, I have no idea

Speaker:

that you went through that in your life."

Speaker:

And you know what?

Speaker:

It's a great, great experience to,

Speaker:

that being able to communicate

with your people like that,

Speaker:

and that they get to

know who you are also,

Speaker:

because most people think,

Speaker:

this guy's from a wealthy

family or something.

Speaker:

You got everything on a silver platter.

Speaker:

And you know what?

Speaker:

It is a great level of

communication and feelings.

Speaker:

And every time I see those

women, after we had a talk,

Speaker:

and I feel different about them

Speaker:

and they feel different about me.

Speaker:

- Human connection was real.

- Exactly, yeah, exactly.

Speaker:

- There's something like

very unique about you

Speaker:

that I've noticed over the

years, which I think is really,

Speaker:

it's a cool thing, is that everybody

Speaker:

at the company loves him, obviously.

Speaker:

Like from the Miami office

staff to our sales force,

Speaker:

but even down to the cleaning

staff at the factory,

Speaker:

from top to bottom.

Speaker:

But the unique thing is,

Speaker:

even the people he's fired over the years

Speaker:

and perhaps fired brutally,

still fucking love him.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- They all do.

Speaker:

- Remember the guy that worked

at the printer upstairs?

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- Not the guy before,

the guy was in charge.

Speaker:

What's his name?

Speaker:

A cool guy with an earring.

- Hanley.

Speaker:

- The guy before Hanley

Speaker:

that was in charge in the cool guy.

Speaker:

Really cool guy, okay?

Speaker:

And that day, Jochy [Blanco]

and I went to cigar lounge

Speaker:

in Tamboril, okay?

Speaker:

The guy, a lovely guy,

Speaker:

the guy that owns a cigar lounge

Speaker:

and he was inviting us for a long time.

Speaker:

So Jochy and I got together and said,

Speaker:

"Let's go to his lounge."

Speaker:

And we show up there

and this guy was there.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- Okay?

Speaker:

And the owner of the lounge,

Speaker:

he called a saxophone guy

to come and play for us.

Speaker:

And then there was, you know,

Speaker:

women come, and former employees of us

Speaker:

that work at the factory.

Speaker:

And some of them were

working at the factory still.

Speaker:

And we are in a social environment

Speaker:

with the music playing and smoking cigars.

Speaker:

They're customers of the same place

Speaker:

that we have been customers, okay?

Speaker:

- Interesting.

Speaker:

- What an interesting mix that was.

Speaker:

- That's cool.

- And this guy was there,

Speaker:

the guy that I fired.

Speaker:

And then the conversation

started talking about the past

Speaker:

and how we started.

Speaker:

And Jochy helped me

tremendously when I started.

Speaker:

And we were telling the

owner of the lounge,

Speaker:

who happened to be the husband

Speaker:

of the country's general attorney,

Speaker:

a very powerful woman in the

country, in Dominican Republic.

Speaker:

She's the most powerful

woman after the president.

Speaker:

She can put anybody in jail.

Speaker:

A very powerful and very brilliant woman.

Speaker:

And the guy that owns the

lounge is the husband, okay?

Speaker:

And so we have this

interaction with, you know,

Speaker:

some of our employees,

Speaker:

some Jochy's former

employees now work for us.

Speaker:

And stories in the past, how we started,

Speaker:

and the story went back to our

childhood and our, you know.

Speaker:

And these people that

are either working for us

Speaker:

or former employees, they had no idea.

Speaker:

I mean, Jochy's story is amazing.

Speaker:

Like Jochy's story is amazing.

Speaker:

- He's been around the block, huh?

Speaker:

- Yeah, and even though he's

from a comfortable family,

Speaker:

okay, his father was a powerful

guy, very well-respected

Speaker:

and economically well off.

Speaker:

But when he heard his father died,

Speaker:

Jochy was not in a good

position economically.

Speaker:

And his father asked him to

protect his nine brothers,

Speaker:

and there was no money left

when this father died, okay?

Speaker:

So Tony, I mean, Jochy's

story is an amazing one.

Speaker:

These guys, our employees,

they're listening to all this.

Speaker:

- When you first went down to the D.R.,

Speaker:

you didn't know what you

were doing really for cigars,

Speaker:

but you picked that out.

Speaker:

And then did you approach Jochy first?

Speaker:

Because you've got a lot of mentors

Speaker:

that are within the industry

that had a lot of experience,

Speaker:

and what did they think

about you coming there raw

Speaker:

and they weren't intimidated

by the newcomer coming in

Speaker:

as a competitor, really.

Speaker:

But yet they were open to you to-

Speaker:

- He was a very strange bird down there

Speaker:

when he first showed up.

Speaker:

I don't think they'd ever

seen anybody quite like him.

Speaker:

These old pictures of him

that he'd be down there

Speaker:

with like Versace shirts

and like this kind of stuff.

Speaker:

Like, "Who the hell is this guy?

Speaker:

Who does he think he is?"

Speaker:

- Yeah. (laughs)

Speaker:

- I'm taking the flight to

Puerto Plata back in those days.

Speaker:

Not Santiago,

Speaker:

there was no airport like now-

- Sure.

Speaker:

- And there was few cigar

makers always in the cabin.

Speaker:

And there with this Gianni Versace

Speaker:

silk shirts would open up to here.

Speaker:

And gold chains and-

- Miami Vice.

Speaker:

- Yeah, Miami Vice.

Speaker:

And this guy, see, I

didn't fit the profile,

Speaker:

the profile these guys are making.

Speaker:

And this guys are looking at me and say,

Speaker:

"Who's this guy?"

Speaker:

- What is this?

Speaker:

Yeah, that's great.

Speaker:

- And so some were very reluctant.

Speaker:

Like some were like, "Yeah,

this is a mafia guy from Miami."

Speaker:

You know Daniel Núñez, right?-

Speaker:

- Yeah, oh yeah, yeah.

- Okay.

Speaker:

So happened that I went to buy

Speaker:

a Bello Connecticut Shade.

Speaker:

It was owned by General

back in those days.

Speaker:

And I meet Daniel.

Speaker:

And I went with one of my cigar rollers

Speaker:

and he looked at the wrapper,

Speaker:

and because I didn't

know shit from wrappers.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- And so he look at the wrapper

and said, "This is good."

Speaker:

So I said, "Okay, I'm gonna

take this Bello tobacco."

Speaker:

And then I paid him in

cash with $20 bills,

Speaker:

and I lived forever.

Speaker:

He thought I was a drug dealer

Speaker:

from Miami.

- 100%, 100%.

Speaker:

- He was a nice guy, Daniel Núñez.

Speaker:

- He's a gentleman, a gentleman.

Speaker:

- That's great.

Speaker:

You're sitting there going.

Speaker:

- And these guys are legit.

Speaker:

- Let me open my briefcase

- I can account for every bill.

Speaker:

- But some guys were very reluctant.

Speaker:

I understood why, okay?

Speaker:

I get it.

Speaker:

- Well, back in those days,

Speaker:

people didn't show up in open factories.

Speaker:

- It was unheard of, it was unheard of.

Speaker:

- If you weren't in for generations,

Speaker:

you didn't come into it, you know?

Speaker:

- Right.

- And so it didn't even make

Speaker:

any sense for you to be there.

Speaker:

- Right, so they were worried.

Speaker:

They were skeptical.

Speaker:

But some of the guys did.

Speaker:

They saw something in me, okay?

Speaker:

That made them trust me or

think that I have a future in.

Speaker:

And one of them was Jochy

[Blanco], Carlito [Fuente]

Speaker:

and my tobacco suppliers,

Speaker:

people that I love so much, so dearly,

Speaker:

because of the support they give me.

Speaker:

- Was it hard?

- And the trust.

Speaker:

I mean, I show up as a guy,

Speaker:

nobody knows who I am.

Speaker:

So my tobacco supplier,

Speaker:

I will go and pick up two

beds of tobacco for the week.

Speaker:

And when I finish those,

Speaker:

I go pick up the next

week, we go pick up more.

Speaker:

And this guy is giving me credit.

Speaker:

"Take it, you pay me when you can."

Speaker:

He doesn't know who I am, right?

Speaker:

And so they saw something,

Speaker:

which I don't know what it was back then,

Speaker:

because I didn't have much of a profile

Speaker:

of a successful cigar maker, okay?

Speaker:

But they did see something,

Speaker:

and they opened their hearts, their doors.

Speaker:

- And this was at a hard time, right?

Speaker:

Because you're talking the mid-90s,

Speaker:

which is the boom.

Speaker:

The boom is happening.

- Showed up

Speaker:

right before the boom, really.

Speaker:

- Yeah, it probably would've been tougher

Speaker:

if you would've waited three years.

Speaker:

- Oh my God, yeah.

Speaker:

Yeah, completely.

- You came in the perfect time

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- That's when you came in,

Speaker:

then 100 other people came in.

- Right.

Speaker:

I come in, and so this is the thing.

Speaker:

I'm trying to make cigars in Dominican,

Speaker:

and finally, we get it right.

Speaker:

And now we're packing and

putting the first cigar

Speaker:

in boxes, right?

Speaker:

So we have some cigars to sell.

Speaker:

So Ines [Lorenzo-Gomez]

and I have a booklet.

Speaker:

It was published by Cigar Aficionado

Speaker:

with a list of retail shops in the U.S.

Speaker:

Name of the shop, the

address, the phone number.

Speaker:

And so we started from the

beginning of that little booklet

Speaker:

and we started calling.

Speaker:

We called 25 people and 24 would say no.

Speaker:

And I introduced myself.

Speaker:

I said, my name is so and so.

Speaker:

We just opened a little cigar factory

Speaker:

in Dominican Republic.

Speaker:

We would like to send you some samples

Speaker:

to see if you like them.

Speaker:

And then we will give you a

call to see what you think.

Speaker:

And we'll send the samples,

Speaker:

and then few days later,

do a follow up call.

Speaker:

And out of 25 people, 24 would say no,

Speaker:

one would say yes, right?

Speaker:

And then a few months after

that, maybe a year after that,

Speaker:

the cigar boom comes.

Speaker:

It just exploded like so fast, right?

Speaker:

So now you call 10 cigar shops

Speaker:

and all 10 say yes.

- Yes.

Speaker:

It's a big difference.

Speaker:

- Right.

Speaker:

So what does it do for us?

Speaker:

It gives La Flor the

opportunity to be in the shops,

Speaker:

to be exposed in the

shelves of the stores.

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- Fast forward the next six months,

Speaker:

more than a hundred

cigar factories open up

Speaker:

in Dominican Republic only.

Speaker:

- I remember those days, yeah.

Speaker:

- So now, and those cigar makers,

Speaker:

they had the same opportunity.

Speaker:

They all went to the shops

Speaker:

because the traditional brands

were nowhere to be found.

Speaker:

- Sure.

Speaker:

- There was a much bigger

demand that they could supply.

Speaker:

So it opened the doors to

all these new brands, okay?

Speaker:

So now, we're in the middle of cigar boom,

Speaker:

but I had 12 rollers,

Speaker:

and I couldn't bring one more roller

Speaker:

because there was not one

extra pound of tobacco,

Speaker:

the good quality tobacco that I could use

Speaker:

because our suppliers, they

have no inventory anymore.

Speaker:

And they have to split, okay?

Speaker:

So much goes here.

Speaker:

My traditional customers, I mean,

Speaker:

the supplier's traditional customer

Speaker:

in our case was Fuente and La Flor.

Speaker:

- You were grouped, so they gave you

Speaker:

the pretty good credibility then on that.

Speaker:

- That was my supplier.

Speaker:

He was financed by Fuente

Speaker:

and he would supply Fuente and La Flor.

Speaker:

So that was lot tobacco for Fuente.

Speaker:

And Fuente didn't have cigars back then.

Speaker:

I mean, Fuente's shipments

would get to stores

Speaker:

and they will hide it.

Speaker:

Cigar shops will keep it

for the preferred customer.

Speaker:

You not see Fuentes in shops.

Speaker:

So this guy would have his tobacco,

Speaker:

but he didn't have inventory.

Speaker:

He couldn't give me one

more pound of tobacco,

Speaker:

additional to what he was giving me.

Speaker:

In fact, if Don Carlos Fuente

would've picked up the phone

Speaker:

and call this guy, "Hey, listen,

Speaker:

I know you're selling tobacco to Litto.

Speaker:

I need that shit."

Speaker:

I would've been out of

business immediately.

Speaker:

- Oh, sure.

Speaker:

- I needed that tobacco for real.

Speaker:

- Yeah, and they were selling everything.

Speaker:

Everyone was selling everything.

Speaker:

- Yeah, back in those days,

Speaker:

I mean, people would go to a store,

Speaker:

they ask for Fuente.

Speaker:

They didn't have it, they didn't smoke.

Speaker:

Like it was crazy.

Speaker:

- Must've been frustrating to one degree

Speaker:

because here, the demand was there,

Speaker:

but you just couldn't

turn on the cash machine.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

So I spent the whole cigar

boom with my 12 rollers.

Speaker:

no growth whatsoever.

- Wow, wow.

Speaker:

- Millions of cigars on back order.

Speaker:

We're producing 300,000 a year.

Speaker:

- Wow.

Speaker:

- And I needed money.

Speaker:

We needed money.

- Sure, oh yeah.

Speaker:

- It's not like we started

with a million dollars

Speaker:

or anything close to that, okay?

Speaker:

We set up a company like

less than $150,000, okay?

Speaker:

And even though I'm

struggling to meet payroll,

Speaker:

but I cannot make another

thousand cigars with tobacco

Speaker:

that didn't qualify for a blend.

Speaker:

I could not do that.

- Couldn't do it, yeah.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so we didn't grow

in the whole cigar boom.

Speaker:

We started growing in '98.

Speaker:

Got the boom tapered down.

Speaker:

And it was over,

Speaker:

and the supplier of the

traditional brands was coming in,

Speaker:

in plenty of supply, okay?

Speaker:

Plenty of quantities.

Speaker:

So at that point, that was a big question.

Speaker:

Who's gonna stay in the shop?

Speaker:

- Yeah, that's right.

- Yeah, that's right.

Speaker:

Well, you were able to,

it's all staying power

Speaker:

at that point.

- So Dominican Republic,

Speaker:

we are the only company that

wasn't there 35 years ago.

Speaker:

We're the only ones.

Speaker:

In Nicaragua, with maybe Rocky [Patel],

Abdel ["AJ" Fernandez],

Speaker:

couple of brands at the most.

Speaker:

- Sure.

- Okay?

Speaker:

All the other factories that

were open, they're gone.

Speaker:

- Yeah, yeah.

- Okay?

Speaker:

Everybody's gone.

Speaker:

And why is that?

Speaker:

Well, you know what?

Speaker:

We respected our blends,

Speaker:

and we respected the people

that are buying our blends

Speaker:

and didn't take tobacco, we

share cigars, we share tobacco

Speaker:

in order to sell a few more boxes.

Speaker:

That takes a lot of commitment,

Speaker:

because you're making cigar to make money,

Speaker:

or you're trying to build

your name and your brand.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

Yeah, you kept the integrity

Speaker:

of the brand.

- To become a cigar maker.

Speaker:

- Well, it's in it for the long haul,

Speaker:

not the short term.

- I earned a reputation.

Speaker:

- Yeah, yeah.

- Love you, baby. (laughs)

Speaker:

- Yeah, that's a great story.

Speaker:

That's a great lesson, yeah.

Speaker:

- That was what made the difference in us.

Speaker:

All those gone, and this

company's still here.

Speaker:

- Yeah, with sustained power

Speaker:

and what's the relationships

and the integrity.

Speaker:

- It was the respect for your name,

Speaker:

the respect for the consumer

that actually was buying,

Speaker:

choosing your cigar.

Speaker:

And Jorge [Padrón] and I was

talking last night, right?

Speaker:

These brands are coming to the market,

Speaker:

but there hasn't been a new

cigar maker in a long time.

Speaker:

- It's rare, it's rare.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- It's still the same.

- That's a different

Speaker:

level of commitment to

go open a factory and-

Speaker:

- Yeah, yes, when you say new cigar maker

Speaker:

opening their own factory,

a lot of brands have come

Speaker:

where people are contracting with,

Speaker:

but they don't have their own factory

Speaker:

vertically integrated like you guys.

Speaker:

- Exactly.

- That's a whole different animal.

Speaker:

- There's a lot of great

factories out there

Speaker:

that do private labels and all that.

Speaker:

So it's much easier today-

Speaker:

- To enter, yeah.

- To start a brand.

Speaker:

- But yeah, to open a factory,

Speaker:

that's a whole different beast.

Speaker:

- I'm happy this guy did

it, because I don't know

Speaker:

if I would've been able

to pull that one off.

Speaker:

- Yeah, it's amazing.

Speaker:

It takes a level of grit.

- Yeah, absolutely.

Speaker:

- Stick-to-itiveness just to stay with it.

Speaker:

But it's the long term

vision that you had and said,

Speaker:

"Hey, we're in it for the long haul,

Speaker:

not the short term" is everything.

Speaker:

- Yeah, exactly, yeah.

Speaker:

And I knew it was gonna take a long time.

Speaker:

It's hard, it's hard.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- I remember one day,

Speaker:

I went to a place in the Carolinas

Speaker:

to do a cigar dinner, right?

Speaker:

And I get on a plane,

Speaker:

I send cigars for the dinner,

Speaker:

get in a hotel for a couple of days

Speaker:

to do this dinner in this place,

Speaker:

and you do the dinner and

you speak to the people

Speaker:

that attend and everything.

Speaker:

At then at the end of the

night, they bring me the check,

Speaker:

they bring me the bill for my dinner.

Speaker:

- Wow.

Speaker:

- And wait, what do you do

Speaker:

with something like that happens, okay?

Speaker:

Well, you can either get upset to the guy

Speaker:

or think what I thought at the moment.

Speaker:

Man, I gotta work a lot harder. (laughs)

Speaker:

I gotta work.

Speaker:

I gotta fix this.

Speaker:

And the only way I'm gonna fix it

Speaker:

is just keep focusing and keep working.

Speaker:

- Sure.

Speaker:

- One day, it's not gonna happen.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- You know?

Speaker:

- So you took that as a

sign that I'm not there yet.

Speaker:

- Not there yet.

Speaker:

Keep working, bro.

Speaker:

- Yeah, that's right.

- Keep working.

Speaker:

- 30 years later, we have a birthday bash

Speaker:

for you last night.

Speaker:

And we have a hundred drinks,

Speaker:

and I have no idea who

the hell paid the tab.

Speaker:

We were trying to figure that out.

Speaker:

- Oh my God, yeah.

- Who paid for all that?

Speaker:

- I went to pay the bill last night

Speaker:

and it was taken care of.

Speaker:

I spent some time today

trying to figure out

Speaker:

who paid for that.

- Oh, that's awesome.

Speaker:

- Well, it wasn't us.

(all laughing)

Speaker:

- So that's a good comparison.

Speaker:

- That's amazing.

- You finally made it.

Speaker:

- Yeah, you finally made it.

Speaker:

- That is awesome.

- It's amazing.

Speaker:

Well, that person who did it

Speaker:

would never admit it anyway probably.

Speaker:

- Didn't do it for the recognition.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- The funny thing is,

Speaker:

I still think that I gotta keep working.

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- Because, and don't

let this ever trick you,

Speaker:

you are as good as your last cigar.

Speaker:

- That's right.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- Don't let any of that

thing go to your head,

Speaker:

because whatever it took

you to build something,

Speaker:

it goes to shit in one minute.

Speaker:

- You told me that.

Speaker:

It's one lesson I always

remember that you-

Speaker:

- That's good.

- Well, you know,

Speaker:

it's one of your stories about,

Speaker:

I think I forget which blend it was.

Speaker:

If it was the 2000 Series

or something, I don't know.

Speaker:

You released it and it

did really, really well,

Speaker:

and you were on a hot streak for a while,

Speaker:

and maybe you kind of

rested on your laurels

Speaker:

just a little bit.

Speaker:

And then it kind of started to crater.

Speaker:

And you're like, "What the hell happened?"

Speaker:

You realized I got comfortable.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

At first, I was finding reasons for like,

Speaker:

9/11, terrorism.

Speaker:

Now, just bullshitting myself, right?

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- So stock going down in the company.

Speaker:

And then one day, I was looking

at myself in the mirror,

Speaker:

I said, "What the fuck you doing?

Speaker:

You haven't done nothing in two years."

Speaker:

- In recently, yeah, yeah.

- Right.

Speaker:

What are you doing?

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- Wake up, go back to work.

Speaker:

Idiot.

(all laughing)

Speaker:

I'm in front of a mirror insulting myself.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

And went back to work.

Speaker:

Ligero come out, Double Ligero come out.

Speaker:

Boom.

Speaker:

- But I always remember,

Speaker:

every time we come out with a project

Speaker:

and no matter how successful it is,

Speaker:

it might have been hugely

successful, but whatever,

Speaker:

it's like a week you enjoy

it, but then, what's next man?

Speaker:

- Thinking about what's next.

- Back to the grind.

Speaker:

- Well, that was great self-critique,

Speaker:

which a lot of people don't

have the ability to do that.

Speaker:

But you've seen over the years,

Speaker:

you've seen some brands come in

Speaker:

that have gotten really hot,

but then they disappear.

Speaker:

And they have issues.

Speaker:

They have issues with draws.

Speaker:

They have issues with quality.

Speaker:

They change it from what it was.

Speaker:

They don't have the standards.

Speaker:

And you see them all the time.

Speaker:

I mean, I can think of one,

I'm not gonna name them,

Speaker:

but it's like, came in

and was a bright star

Speaker:

and just went out as fast as he came in.

Speaker:

But it got complacent.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- It is.

Speaker:

This is a continuous work.

Speaker:

And we cannot let our eyes

out of what's important,

Speaker:

which is the cigars we're making

Speaker:

on the day-to-day basis, right?

Speaker:

- We've always had

admiration for cigar makers,

Speaker:

because it's not easy because

it changes year to year.

Speaker:

I mean, you're relying

on a natural product

Speaker:

and you're trying to keep

consistency in that blend.

Speaker:

- Yeah, a lot of moving parts.

Speaker:

- Oh, there's a lot of moving parts.

Speaker:

And that's what the beauty of going down

Speaker:

and visiting the factories

is you have a whole new

Speaker:

appreciation for what

goes into making a cigar.

Speaker:

And it's amazing, okay.

Speaker:

They should cost $100 each

after you watch the process,

Speaker:

and the painstaking

investment that it takes

Speaker:

to get the tobacco and age it for years,

Speaker:

and then all the hands that touch it

Speaker:

and the packaging and everything.

Speaker:

- Yeah, you go to a cigar factory

Speaker:

and you start to realize how brilliant

Speaker:

the good factories are

and the good owners are,

Speaker:

how brilliant they are,

Speaker:

because it is not a simple operation.

Speaker:

- Is that the same cigar that

it was when you introduced it?

Speaker:

Hasn't changed?

Speaker:

- That's the same cigar

he is been smoking for,

Speaker:

I don't know how many years, but like-

Speaker:

- How many years has that been out?

Speaker:

- Yeah, when did you

come out with that one?

Speaker:

- '97.

- Oh, in '97.

Speaker:

- So the year that you guys got started.

Speaker:

- Yeah, it was our founding year, yeah.

Speaker:

- I swear to God, every now and then,

Speaker:

he lights up one of those cigars and like,

Speaker:

I'll just like catch a little whiff

Speaker:

and like I'm a little kid.

Speaker:

- It brings out the memory.

- I just remember

Speaker:

being a little kid and like,

Speaker:

because he is always smoked,

as far as I can remember.

Speaker:

- That consistency-

- It happens all the time.

Speaker:

It's so cool.

- The consistency

Speaker:

is incredible.

Speaker:

- Yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

- Well, that's one of the

cigars that, you know,

Speaker:

if anything goes wrong,

we know immediately.

Speaker:

- You know, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

You're smoking a lot of them.

Speaker:

- Do you have a backup to that?

Speaker:

If that's your main one,

do you have a second one?

Speaker:

- Well, anything that's Cameroon,

Speaker:

it will always be in my preference.

Speaker:

- Everything.

- Everything that's Cameroon.

Speaker:

- Love the Cameroon.

Speaker:

- Yeah, what a great wrapper.

- So good.

Speaker:

- So here we are, it's

2024, now called PCA.

Speaker:

What was your very first RTDA show?

Speaker:

Because it was called RTDA

Speaker:

for people that are

listening and watching.

Speaker:

The show association has changed.

Speaker:

But what was your first year

Speaker:

having a booth and going to the show?

Speaker:

- It was very interesting

because people go by your booth,

Speaker:

and they don't even look at it.

Speaker:

I mean, it was a little tiny booth,

Speaker:

like 8x10 or something like that.

Speaker:

And my wife and I, we hang the flag

Speaker:

with the name of our company

and we have a few boxes there.

Speaker:

And people would walk by, and obviously,

Speaker:

they don't even pay attention.

Speaker:

And I remember one day Diana-

Speaker:

- Silvius?

- Huh?

Speaker:

- Diana Silvius?

- Up Down [Cigar]?

Speaker:

- Somehow, you know?

Speaker:

- Yes.

- I was standing outside

Speaker:

the little table there,

Speaker:

and Diana comes by and looks at me.

Speaker:

"What do you do here?"

Speaker:

"See, our company in

Dominican is our brand."

Speaker:

"And who makes this for you?"

Speaker:

I said, "No, no, we make it

Speaker:

in our little factory in Dominican."

Speaker:

"You make it?

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

Show me what you got there."

Speaker:

She come by.

Speaker:

I give her my business card, right?

Speaker:

She's looking at me like,

Speaker:

I mean, she was busting

balls all the time,

Speaker:

especially if she knew you knew.

Speaker:

And she was busting balls,

Speaker:

and yeah, she light up this cigar.

Speaker:

Shoot.

Speaker:

"Why did you open your factory?

Speaker:

Why didn't you ask somebody

to make the cigars for you?"

Speaker:

"No, I don't like that.

Speaker:

But that's a lot easier.

Speaker:

I mean, you don't know how to make cigars.

Speaker:

I mean, you have family in the industry."

Speaker:

- What a stupid idea.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- While she's smoking the cigar,

Speaker:

she's puffing on the cigar,

Speaker:

and she goes, "Let me tell you, young man.

Speaker:

This cigar is fucking fantastic, okay?"

Speaker:

And she put another.

Speaker:

And then as she leaves the booth,

Speaker:

she's going around

telling everybody how good

Speaker:

La Flor cigar is.

- That's great.

Speaker:

- This is Diana.

- And people listening to her.

Speaker:

- She was legend at that time, oh yeah.

Speaker:

- She's a legend.

- There's certain people

Speaker:

here and there that you run into

Speaker:

that they kind of like early adopters

Speaker:

and visionaries that

see something, you know?

Speaker:

And that reminds me of like

Speaker:

when we first came out

with the NFTs, right?

Speaker:

You had a list of people that you thought

Speaker:

were gonna be the ones all over this.

Speaker:

A lot of the bigger retailers and whatnot.

Speaker:

And the first one goes to auction,

Speaker:

there's bidding war,

and it gets to the end.

Speaker:

At some point, it far surpassed

Speaker:

anything I expected these to go for.

Speaker:

It's in the 80,000 range.

Speaker:

And the guy I see aggressively bidding,

Speaker:

like a guy who seems like

he's not gonna be beat,

Speaker:

I have no idea who's bidding.

Speaker:

I have no idea who it is.

Speaker:

And this guy ends up

winning the first one.

Speaker:

And so immediately, I'm

talking to [Jonathan] Carney.

Speaker:

I'm like, "Carney, find

out who is this guy.

Speaker:

Find out who this is."

Speaker:

And it's this guy, Alex Martinez.

Speaker:

He owns a shop in New Jersey

called Mane Street Cigars.

Speaker:

And I'll be completely honest with you,

Speaker:

I had never heard of them.

Speaker:

I had no idea what this was.

Speaker:

And I look into it, you know?

Speaker:

It's a nice little shop,

Speaker:

blue collar shop in New Jersey.

Speaker:

It's nothing like tremendously

fancy or huge or anything.

Speaker:

And I'm like, "What the hell?

Speaker:

This is not what I was expecting at all."

Speaker:

And then the second one goes to auction,

Speaker:

and he's back in.

- He's back in.

Speaker:

- And he is, once again, will not be beat.

Speaker:

And this guy buys the second one.

Speaker:

And you gotta be fucking kidding me.

Speaker:

What's going on?

Speaker:

Who is this?

- Amazing.

Speaker:

- So unexpected.

Speaker:

And this guy just had,

Speaker:

he understood and he had this vision,

Speaker:

and he's making a killing

now with those cigars.

Speaker:

And some people just-

Speaker:

- They see it.

- There's visionaries

Speaker:

out there, they see something.

Speaker:

- That's right.

- They surprise you.

Speaker:

- That's amazing story.

Speaker:

And how many of those

lots did you do again?

Speaker:

- We made seven.

- Seven lots, it's been.

Speaker:

- He had the balls to

get the first two, man.

Speaker:

- Amazing.

Speaker:

- He would've gotten the third one too.

Speaker:

He was trying to go for a third one,

Speaker:

but he had like a price limit.

Speaker:

And then after the second one,

everything went above that,

Speaker:

that floor that he set.

- It went higher, yeah.

Speaker:

- That's amazing, the story.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- But that's it.

Speaker:

And then, I mean, getting

Diana's in Chicago,

Speaker:

I mean, it was like-

Speaker:

- She's a player.

- Right.

Speaker:

- That was the shop in the country

Speaker:

at that time is what I

remember, Up Down [Cigar].

Speaker:

- Yep, legendary, legendary.

Speaker:

- And then, you know,

Speaker:

people like Robbie [Levin].

Speaker:

That's by the second RPDA.

Speaker:

I mean, I already have a

friendship with Carlito [Fuente],

Speaker:

very close friendship.

Speaker:

And Carlito would send me customers.

Speaker:

Robbie will bring customers to our booth.

Speaker:

Buy this brand.

Speaker:

- Wow.

Speaker:

- Wayne Suarez, I don't

know if you remember Wayne.

Speaker:

- Yeah, of course I remember Wayne, yeah.

Speaker:

- Wayne will bring customers.

Speaker:

- Ah, then that's amazing.

Speaker:

Good story.

Speaker:

- They'll bring customers to us.

Speaker:

- You were obviously making good product.

Speaker:

because they understand

what good cigars are.

Speaker:

- Jorge Padrón would bring customers.

Speaker:

And I'm looking at Ines [Lorenzo-Gomez]

and I say, "You believe this?"

Speaker:

- Were you friends with

Robbie at that time?

Speaker:

Were you friends with

Jorge at that time too?

Speaker:

- I was not that, I mean,

Speaker:

we spent time together in

events like The Big Smoke.

Speaker:

People remember it was

seven, six Big Smoke.

Speaker:

- Yeah, I remember that.

- And we were in all of them.

Speaker:

And we would hang out

in all of them, okay?

Speaker:

I had this very close friendship

with Carlito in Dominican,

Speaker:

but we were hanging out together.

Speaker:

Robbie, Wayne.

- Wayne, yeah.

Speaker:

- They were very close with

Billy O'Hara and Joe Howe.

Speaker:

Joe Howe, the original owner,

not the original dealer,

Speaker:

before Billy that owns

Jack Schwartz in Chicago.

Speaker:

And it was a group that we

were hanging out together.

Speaker:

And I mean, these people were helping us.

Speaker:

They were building our company.

Speaker:

- Weird little industry, huh?

- Customers, man.

Speaker:

- It is, isn't it?

- It only happens here.

Speaker:

- I'm going through this

Speaker:

and I'm falling more and more in love

Speaker:

and respect more this industry

Speaker:

because of the kind of

people that are in it.

Speaker:

It continued like that for many years.

Speaker:

And there was a few cigar shops.

Speaker:

I can name like The Cigar

Merchant in Atlanta.

Speaker:

I mean, the guy that used

to own that, Todd Trahan.

Speaker:

That guy, he saw something

in us from the first year

Speaker:

and he purchased everything that,

Speaker:

every size that we had.

Speaker:

And he put two of the same

facings in one next to each other

Speaker:

and give us a lot of space in shop.

Speaker:

- And this is the most

important cigar shop in Atlanta.

Speaker:

And you walk in the door,

Speaker:

and the guy will take you

to the La Flor Dominicana.

Speaker:

- That's great.

Speaker:

You need ambassadors like that, right?

Speaker:

- Right.

Speaker:

What happens when such a

important store in the city

Speaker:

is doing that with your brand

Speaker:

is that he's building a number

of smokers of your brand,

Speaker:

which will go around to

the other shops in the city

Speaker:

and ask for the brand.

- And ask for it.

Speaker:

- So now, every shop in the

city have to have your brand.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- Okay?

Speaker:

I had a few guests in

this ProCigar Festival,

Speaker:

because we expanded the factory.

Speaker:

You saw the difference.

Speaker:

And there was a few people like that

Speaker:

that were key for us

at the very beginning,

Speaker:

that trusted us as a

brand that could succeed

Speaker:

and got behind and build our

brand in different cities.

Speaker:

Some of them are not even

in the business anymore,

Speaker:

but I invited them to come

because they're friends.

Speaker:

I still communicate with them.

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- I'm still in touch with them.

Speaker:

And they are out of the

business for more than 10 years.

Speaker:

And I keep in touch with them,

Speaker:

and they're so fucking special to me

Speaker:

that I wanted them to see what happened

Speaker:

with the little company that they trusted.

Speaker:

- That they trusted, yeah.

- 30 years ago.

Speaker:

And I invited them.

Speaker:

And it was a small group

and we had a great time.

Speaker:

I mean, they had a great time.

Speaker:

- That was the best ProCigar ever, man.

Speaker:

- That was a good ProCigar.

Speaker:

You guys did a nice job, very nice job.

Speaker:

- And these guys are

talking to each other.

Speaker:

I remember all times when

they were in the business,

Speaker:

some of them still in the business

Speaker:

and some of them are not.

Speaker:

This is not a move to sell more cigars.

Speaker:

This is something that I will never forget

Speaker:

those people.

- You wanna show

Speaker:

appreciation.

- As long as I live.

Speaker:

- Yes.

- As long as I'm alive.

Speaker:

And so I was so happy to have them

Speaker:

and show them what happened,

Speaker:

because they were so special to us.

Speaker:

Yeah, it was a great time, a great time.

Speaker:

- It was a beautiful festival.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

Well, that ProCigar was meaningful.

Speaker:

We were so thankful we

were on that particular day

Speaker:

in the tour when you surprised your dad

Speaker:

with all the separate rooms within-

Speaker:

- The museum tour.

- Yeah, the museum

Speaker:

within the barn, and that was really cool.

Speaker:

- Yeah, man.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- Most people don't know that journey

Speaker:

that you were on from Uruguay,

Speaker:

you touched on it when

you went to Toronto,

Speaker:

then back to Uruguay and then Miami

Speaker:

and the businesses there.

Speaker:

So you talked about passion earlier,

Speaker:

but you demonstrated that

in completely discreet

Speaker:

industries along the way,

Speaker:

from the restaurant business into-

Speaker:

- Jewelry.

- Nightclub

Speaker:

and jewelry and so on.

Speaker:

So it didn't matter what it

was for you at that moment,

Speaker:

it was, and you've said this,

Speaker:

be the best that you can be in the world.

Speaker:

And you put all your

energy behind each one

Speaker:

as a passionate thing for you

at that moment of your life.

Speaker:

And then the final one was the cigars

Speaker:

that kept for 30 years.

Speaker:

- It took him a while but-

- Ongoing, yeah.

Speaker:

- You found a good landing spot.

Speaker:

- I found it, yeah, I found it.

Speaker:

I found it, yeah.

Speaker:

And Tony, I mean, even

if you do nothing else

Speaker:

for the rest of your life,

you're cool with me, bro.

Speaker:

What you did there, like man.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- That was never, never, I mean,

Speaker:

I'm trying to think what

he's gonna do or something.

Speaker:

I know there's a surprise,

Speaker:

and I don't like to blow surprises.

Speaker:

I wanna be surprised,

Speaker:

and never, never imagined that-

Speaker:

- You were surprised?

Speaker:

- I was very surprised.

Speaker:

I was fucking moved.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- You deserved it, man.

- I was shaking.

Speaker:

I was shaking.

- You deserved it.

Speaker:

Yeah, it's tough.

Speaker:

What do I get this guy for his birthday?

Speaker:

What the hell can I get him?

Speaker:

There's very few things you

could really do. It's the 70th.

Speaker:

So I figured that's something right there.

Speaker:

- That you were able to pull it off,

Speaker:

knowing that you did

that the night before,

Speaker:

but you were working on this and curating

Speaker:

all those archives and things.

- Yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

- That's amazing.

Speaker:

- You had people helping you obviously.

Speaker:

- Of course, I could not-

- Put it together

Speaker:

and they had to keep it

a secret at the same time

Speaker:

and smuggle things into the

farm to set up in the barn.

Speaker:

I mean, and you did it the night before.

Speaker:

That's orchestrated.

Speaker:

That's like amazing that

you were able to do that.

Speaker:

The night before at ProCigar,

Speaker:

it's not like he had nothing else to do.

Speaker:

- Yeah, yeah, yeah.

- He had a little bit going.

Speaker:

- It's a tight week, right?

Speaker:

- It was the only way, or

else he would've seen it.

Speaker:

It had to be a surprise.

Speaker:

There's no other way.

- Yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

- No, it's special.

- We got him good.

Speaker:

- Yeah, you got him good.

Speaker:

That's what you kept saying.

Speaker:

"I got him, I got him good."

Speaker:

- I did, yeah.

Speaker:

Finding something that you just wanna give

Speaker:

the best you have, whatever

that is, may not be enough.

Speaker:

But at least you give it your best shot.

Speaker:

- Yeah, that's right.

- Best of your ability.

Speaker:

- Right, exactly, yeah.

Speaker:

That's what it is.

Speaker:

I met people in my life that they just,

Speaker:

they do shit that they like

Speaker:

and they do give it their best.

Speaker:

And that they find the place

Speaker:

which is their confidence, they find it.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

All that is put to the test-

- Your best, whatever it is,

Speaker:

whatever it reaches,

it can reach up there,

Speaker:

can reach here, but you give

it your best, you got no more.

Speaker:

- All that is put to the test

when you face extreme hardship

Speaker:

along the way and you didn't

quit in those moments,

Speaker:

you plowed through and persevered

Speaker:

beyond measure on all them.

Speaker:

And in the cigar, it's not like,

Speaker:

"Hey, it was boom, cigar boom.

Speaker:

Here we made it."

Speaker:

No, that presented challenge

in and of itself in a big way.

Speaker:

And then afterward, I

mean, all of it just shows

Speaker:

and demonstrates your resolve

Speaker:

and people respect that,

your employees respect that,

Speaker:

but the other people in the industry

Speaker:

really respect that now.

Speaker:

And you can feel it with all of the main,

Speaker:

everyone in this industry has

such an admiration and respect

Speaker:

because those are the people who know

Speaker:

and understand the commitment you had

Speaker:

through the tough time, early on.

Speaker:

- And people respect that a lot.

Speaker:

Like people do respect.

Speaker:

I remember, I mean, I

was calling suppliers

Speaker:

like the Olivas, the Perez,

Speaker:

the big suppliers.

- Sure.

Speaker:

- Very respected suppliers.

Speaker:

I dare to call them at the beginning.

Speaker:

They wouldn't pick up the call.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

- Yeah.

Speaker:

And then, okay, they

don't pick up the call.

Speaker:

Well, I gotta go to work,

I gotta keep working.

Speaker:

Don't get upset.

Speaker:

Just gotta keep working.

Speaker:

It was the same shit.

Speaker:

It was the same shit

like when they charged me

Speaker:

for the dinner.

Speaker:

You gotta keep working.

Speaker:

One day, they're gonna pick up the phone.

Speaker:

And eventually, your name

start to be mentioned

Speaker:

in a good way, and then

now they hear the name

Speaker:

and then one day, they pick up the phone.

Speaker:

And then you get access

Speaker:

to that beautiful materials

that everybody wants.

Speaker:

But it all had to happen when you earn it.

Speaker:

That's what it is.

- Yeah, you earn it, yeah.

Speaker:

- You earned it, and one day,

they'll pick up the phone.

Speaker:

And they'll do business with you.

Speaker:

Why?

Because now,

Speaker:

you put the work in.

Speaker:

And the name sounds in a good way

Speaker:

and they wanna do business with you.

Speaker:

And then one day they

tell you, "You know what?

Speaker:

Doing business with you

gives me a good name."

Speaker:

- The reverse happens, right?

Speaker:

- It's a beautiful thing.

- Sure.

Speaker:

- It's a beautiful thing,

Speaker:

because it'd give me a good name

Speaker:

if I buy tobacco from this guy.

Speaker:

And one day that guy tells you,

Speaker:

it gives me a good name

if I sell you tobacco.

Speaker:

And it's a beautiful thing

that is like a mutual feel.

Speaker:

And they can trust you in

telling you how they feel about.

Speaker:

So I mean, so many great

things have happened,

Speaker:

and it's all just because

you just stay with it.

Speaker:

Just do your work.

Speaker:

- Believe in it.

- Yeah, yeah.

Speaker:

- You ever have a cigar that

you don't want it to end?

Speaker:

- Oh, many times.

Speaker:

Yeah, many times.

Speaker:

- That's the way this interview feels.

Speaker:

This conversation feels that way.

Speaker:

- Uh-huh, okay.

Speaker:

Thanks for sharing that.

- I don't want it to end.

Speaker:

It's just a beautiful thing.

Speaker:

- Litto wants to control

every bit of quality so much

Speaker:

that now, the boxes that

you guys do and produce,

Speaker:

the ashtrays that you,

you know, all of these,

Speaker:

some of these stories that we heard

Speaker:

that weren't even part of the tour

Speaker:

about you mixing up stuff

in the kitchen at home

Speaker:

or something like that

Speaker:

for the ashtrays that you guys are doing,

Speaker:

- The guy's ridiculous.

Speaker:

The guy needed a vacuum chamber

Speaker:

to suck out all the air

bubbles from the resin.

Speaker:

And so he starts looking

online to like buy one,

Speaker:

they're pretty expensive.

Speaker:

And he says, the funny

thing to me is that,

Speaker:

which would never occur to me, but to him,

Speaker:

he just thinks, "Well,

I'll just make one myself."

Speaker:

Who just thinks I'm gonna

make a vacuum chamber?

Speaker:

Like build one, I don't know.

Speaker:

How do you do that?

Speaker:

He built one.

Speaker:

- Yeah, on top of all the

other things he's got going on.

Speaker:

But I'm gonna figure out how

to build a vacuum chamber.

Speaker:

- Nobody, not many.

Speaker:

- That's awesome.

Speaker:

- Let me tell you something.

Speaker:

In my life, I mean, I

learned there was no,

Speaker:

in my family, I watched my grandfather,

Speaker:

my grandmother and my

father and my mother.

Speaker:

And I never knew any

other way to make a living

Speaker:

than work your ass off.

Speaker:

I never understood any other way.

Speaker:

When I make a living, you go to work.

Speaker:

- Doesn't happen without you.

- In my family,

Speaker:

my mother, my father, our family,

Speaker:

nobody ever took a penny

from the government

Speaker:

since we immigrated to the United States.

Speaker:

From day one, even if you

don't speak the language,

Speaker:

whatever, you just go to work every day

Speaker:

and you make your money,

you make your living.

Speaker:

Never heard of any other way

Speaker:

of making a living than put your work in.

Speaker:

- Where he grew up in Uruguay, right?

Speaker:

Uruguay's like a very,

Speaker:

it's like a very socialist

mindset out there, right?

Speaker:

Uruguayans are not

extremely ambitious people.

Speaker:

It's totally opposite to the America,

Speaker:

the American mindset of like work

Speaker:

and do something, be successful.

Speaker:

You guys are very content.

Speaker:

They have enough to survive

and that's just how you are.

Speaker:

There's nothing wrong with that,

Speaker:

but that's the mindset there, you know?

Speaker:

And I remember, I was

there some years ago,

Speaker:

and I still have some family

there on my mom's side,

Speaker:

and they still live in the

same house where she grew up,

Speaker:

which was around the corner

from where you grew up.

Speaker:

And I remember speaking to the neighbors

Speaker:

and it's the same neighbors

that have been there

Speaker:

for 60 years or whatever.

- Been there forever.

Speaker:

- "Are you Litto's son?

Speaker:

Oh my God, wow, that's unbelievable.

Speaker:

Nice to meet you."

Speaker:

And people tell me stories about my dad.

Speaker:

They'd be like, "Your dad was so strange.

Speaker:

He used to tell everybody that someday,

Speaker:

he's gonna be really successful

Speaker:

and rich and all these things."

Speaker:

And everybody's like, "Nobody

talks about that here."

Speaker:

I don't know where did he get that from.

Speaker:

He was just so weird.

Speaker:

He would work and he'd save up

Speaker:

and he'd buy like one nice pair of pants,

Speaker:

like a really nice one.

Speaker:

He'd wear it every day.

Speaker:

Nobody did that there.

Speaker:

You just did what you could

and you got by and that's it.

Speaker:

And nobody had like big dreams like that.

Speaker:

And for some reason, you just did.

Speaker:

I don't know where it came

from, but he always did.

Speaker:

- 80% of the town work in

this one factory, right?

Speaker:

My father worked at that factory, right?

Speaker:

My father was a,

Speaker:

a good life guy in back in Spain.

Speaker:

His family had money.

Speaker:

He never worked in his life.

Speaker:

Very good looking guy.

Speaker:

His life was all about having fun, right?

Speaker:

And he met my mother.

Speaker:

My mother from a very

poor family, no education.

Speaker:

My father's family didn't

want my mother, right?

Speaker:

But my father got married anyways,

Speaker:

so he had three kids, right?

Speaker:

And so they were living in

my father's mother house.

Speaker:

And father.

Speaker:

It was not a good setup.

Speaker:

Like they hated my mother.

Speaker:

And my father has three

kids and never worked, okay?

Speaker:

So they were living from

my grandparents, right?

Speaker:

My mother hated that setup, right?

Speaker:

She wasn't happy.

Speaker:

My mother's parents were

already immigrated to Uruguay.

Speaker:

In South America, like many

Europeans back in those days

Speaker:

immigrated to South

America, Argentina, Uruguay.

Speaker:

And so my mother finally

convinced my father,

Speaker:

put pressure on my father to

immigrate to Uruguay, right?

Speaker:

So my father goes to his father

Speaker:

and asked him for a

loan to open a business

Speaker:

so he can support his family.

Speaker:

And my grandfather say no to my father.

Speaker:

So my father had to get on a

ship and immigrate to Uruguay

Speaker:

and start working for the

first time in his life

Speaker:

with three children.

- Wow.

Speaker:

- He started to work in a

factory in that town, right?

Speaker:

And then by the time I

was like eight years old,

Speaker:

he loses his right hand in an

accident at work up to here.

Speaker:

I watched him to learn how

to write with a left hand.

Speaker:

- Interesting.

Speaker:

- To tie his shoes with one hand,

Speaker:

on the left one.

Speaker:

Sometimes, he was really pissed off

Speaker:

and cursing and really pissed off.

Speaker:

And I go, "Dad, what's going on?

Speaker:

What's happening?"

Speaker:

Say, "I'm so stupid.

Speaker:

I can't learn fast enough."

Speaker:

That was his problem.

Speaker:

He was pissed at himself

Speaker:

because he was not learning fast enough.

Speaker:

He was not pissed at his

luck in life, at his faith.

Speaker:

He was pissed at himself, right?

Speaker:

And I saw him, he never

accepted a favor from anybody.

Speaker:

He never stopped working.

Speaker:

An American company,

the owner of the company

Speaker:

found a job for him that he could do,

Speaker:

kept him as an employee.

Speaker:

And he worked for the rest

of his life in the factory

Speaker:

and never missed a day of

work, never accepted favor,

Speaker:

never asked anybody for money.

Speaker:

He owned his own life.

Speaker:

So freaking proud of himself.

Speaker:

- Sure.

Speaker:

- Right, I never got money from my father,

Speaker:

but you know what?

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

You're from my generation.

Speaker:

The fathers in our generation

didn't hug you every day

Speaker:

and tell you they love you, right?

Speaker:

- That's right.

- You have to figure out

Speaker:

that they love you because

of little things they do.

Speaker:

They wouldn't tell you they

love you and hug you every day.

Speaker:

And it was a different

level of communication

Speaker:

between dad and the

son in that generation,

Speaker:

in those times.

Speaker:

So we had to figure it out.

Speaker:

And so communication

between my father and I

Speaker:

is not the same.

Speaker:

There's a lot of distance

between one and the other.

Speaker:

But what I got from him was,

Speaker:

just to watch him because it

was not a lot of teaching also,

Speaker:

but it was watching him

Speaker:

and take example of what

he does in his life,

Speaker:

of who he is and how do you fall

Speaker:

and get up and keep going.

Speaker:

And he was my hero.

Speaker:

Like if you wanna be

somebody's hero of a child,

Speaker:

you're gonna be his hero

no matter what you do.

Speaker:

You're gonna be his hero, right?

Speaker:

And my dad was my hero.

Speaker:

I learned a lot so much from him.

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Honesty, more than everything else.

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Just fucking brutal honesty.

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And those are things that

stay with you forever.

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I'm thrown in the world.

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I know I have to work,

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and I know I have to just work a lot

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and give it the best I have.

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And I started to talk

about this factory because

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80% of the town work

at the factory, right?

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So we hanging out with a

whole bunch of friends,

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little boys from the neighborhood

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and then the son of the

owner of the factory

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drives in through the

gate-is beautiful Ferrari.

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So now, I have all my friends.

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So I look at this motherfucker,

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the guy who drives, they're exploiting us,

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they pay us miserable salaries.

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Look at the motherfucker

driving this ride.

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And I'm not saying anything,

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but I'm looking at the

guy and I'm thinking,

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this is the coolest motherfucker

I've ever seen in my life.

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(all laughing)

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And I wanna be that motherfucker one day.

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I don't know how it's gonna happen.

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I wanna be him.

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- It's just a different mindset, right?

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- I don't hate.

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I've never been able to hate

anybody that was successful.

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I just fucking get so happy.

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I say, "God bless him."

- Yeah, yeah, amen.

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- There was no foundation whatsoever

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of how will I have a dream like that-ever.

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Nothing that could give me a

hint that I could get there.

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Nothing, just nothing.

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But the dream was there.

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- It wasn't your fate.

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You weren't supposed to.

- It never went away.

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Never went away.

- Wow.

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Well, it's the tale of two

different perspectives on life.

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And take your pick, I guess.

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One is, rather than looking out the window

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at everybody else who's

causing your situation,

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like you did, you looked in the

mirror at yourself and said,

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it's not about what's out the window

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at everybody else that's

causing this for me.

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You looked in the mirror

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and it's the difference between you

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and the kids that are around

there with that type of-

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- Mindset, yeah.

- Mindset, yeah.

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- A lot of things in life

are about perspective,

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and that changes everything.

- Totally.

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- Yeah, yeah, that's right.

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When things are good, look out the window

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at all the blessings that you have

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and the people that

helped you along the way.

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When things are bad, look

in the mirror and say,

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"It was me."

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It's me, and how do you fix that?

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And the opposite is the other way.

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When things are good, some will

look in the mirror and say,

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"Look at how great I am."

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And then when things are bad,

they look out the window.

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But it's really the flip flop

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that you've demonstrated in that story

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of that kind of perspective.

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- There you go.

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- Yeah.

- There you go.

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- Yeah, life is interesting.

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But at the end, I can tell you,

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with a little bit of luck and everything,

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I mean, I just feel blessed

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and I don't know that there was like,

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there was not a plan that I

had to structure to get there,

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because it was not a plan.

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There was not a path I

had to get with my machete

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and open my way through the jungle.

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But there was not a plan

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because it was not a road

that was set to success.

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So you have to build the road

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and see how you're gonna

get to the next step.

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And always being careful that in the way,

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you just make friends.

- That's right.

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- Yeah.

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- Treat people well.

- Yeah.

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- Respect others.

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And it does come around.

- Yeah, yeah.

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- Valentino [Siesto] is like friends,

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they're very close friends

with Nestor Miranda's grandson,

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with Jason's [Wood's] son,

Tatiana's [Miranda-Wood's] son.

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And you know what?

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I know Nestor.

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She was Chivas Regal rep in Miami

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when I owned a liquor store.

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- One of the best pictures you'll ever see

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is of him and Nestor in the liquor store.

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Both like these thick mustaches

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and like the chest hair,

the open shirts, the chains.

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- That was playing on-

- Miami Vice guys-

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- Last night, was it?

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- Yeah, that was on there.

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- Was that the loop picture last night?

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Yes.

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- My father loved Nestor.

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Nestor will sell anything to my father.

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I come to the liquor store and say,

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"Dad, what is all these

cases of this Scotch?

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Nobody knows.

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What's it doing here?"

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And dad said, "No, I

bought it from Miranda.

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He told me it's good, it was gonna sell."

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And then I stayed like one year

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with a fucking load of boxes in there.

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But my father loved Miranda so much.

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I mean, Miranda could sell

anything to my father.

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I sold the nightclub and liquor store

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and then I went to a different

industry-jewelry industry.

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And I didn't see Miranda for

like 12 years or so, right?

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So one day, we were at

The Big Smoke in New York,

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and at the end of The Big Smoke,

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we were looking for a trolley

to carry our shit out.

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And then I see Nestor

walking by and I call him.

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"Yo, yo, Nestor.

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What are you doing here?"

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I say, "What are you doing here?"

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"Yeah, I'm selling cigars."

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I say, "Yeah, we're selling cigars too."

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(both laughing)

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- Wow.

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Ah, gosh, this is so funny.

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- That is awesome.

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- Years go by and you keep your friendship

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and my daughter is just like close friends

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with Nestor Miranda's grandson.

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- That's cool, that's so cool.

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- That's amazing.

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- You have to be good to people always,

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and keep this good memories

and this friendship.

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Don't ever hurt anybody,

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unless it's accidental or

whatever, but you know.

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Just keep a good standing

with people around you,

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because you never know

when you're gonna find them

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in the future.

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So many stories about cases like that.

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It's amazing.

- For sure, yeah.

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- That you always find people

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and everything comes back to you.

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- It's amazing.

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That is pretty cool.

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I didn't know that.

- It's a small world.

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- It is, very small.

- It is very small world.

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Well, we're grateful for our friendship.

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- Thank you, we'll send

you a transcript of this

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and let us know what you

think so we can publish it.

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(all laughing)

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- Oh, man.

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- No, you guys have

always been so good to us,

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and it's always been a

fun relationship to have.

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- I just wanna say like,

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we love you guys.

- Thank you.

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- I think Boveda is

like to us family, man.

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We really fucking love you guys.

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You guys, I just wanna congratulate you

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on how successful you've

been and what you've created,

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because it's not just you guys,

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but like your entire company.

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Like I love everybody that works here,

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and like the culture that

you guys have built here

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is I think something very special.

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And it says a lot about you,

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because you have one of the best teams

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ever assembled in this business.

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- Thank you.

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Thank you very much.

- Congrats, man.

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You guys are awesome.

- Thank you.

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- And I still wanna get

invited to the sales meetings.

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(all laughing)

- Thank you.

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- As long as you keep

telling us that we look good,

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we will love you forever.

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(all laughing)

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- You guys also look

great too, by the way.

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Hope we say that enough.

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- Thank you.

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- Yeah, thank you so much.

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Really appreciate it.

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Tony, thanks.

- Thank you.

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Thank you.

- Thank you, my friend.

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- Thank you.

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(light music)