Loading...
Loading...

Listen To The Full Ad Free Episodes and Support the Show on Patreon or Substack:
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MFTIC?fan_landing=true
Substack: https://myfamilythinksimcrazy.substack.com/
Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/myfamilythinksimcrazy
Red-Circle Direct: https://app.redcircle.com/shows/b6bbfc07-82fc-4cd1-b73c-0fdc550bfedc/donations
Help fund the show, I cannot do this without your support.
MERCH: https://myfamilythinksimcrazy.bigcartel.com/
Venmo: @MysticMark
Paypal: @mysticmark
BTC: 3MQBrF1sGKm17icjQZCxuW7Z3R19jLzTZb
Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/MFTIC
Without you this Podcast would not exist.
Nick Rochefort, Comedian, Car Salesman, Home Builder, and Antique expert joins me to discuss Jefferey's Farmhouse, and How Nick became an expert in Antiques, he regales stories of Brimfield's yesteryear and shares priceless advice for anyone interested in making a couple extra bucks with a new gay hobby, Love you! @nickrochefort on Instagram, and https://chamonixhouse.com/ for the antiques and very nice things.
Merch
https://myfamilythinksimcrazy.bigcartel.com/
S.E.E.E.N. #3 A.S.C.E.T.I.C. In Strange New Haven
https://ko-fi.com/s/0f1e2ff76f
New Sponsor!
https://goldmainstreet.com/ Promo Code: CRAZY
Sponsor Links!
Vibemedx.com for Shilajit, Use promo code CRAZY to save.
Use promo code CRAZY at checkout to save on your Above Phone now! https://abovephone.com/?above=161
https://mood.com/shop PROMO CODE: CRAZY
Check out Hims: https://hims.com/CRAZY
http://www.raoptics.com//CRAZYOPTICS PROMO CODE: CRAZYOPTICS
This Podcast is Sponsored by the Hit Kit! check out the Hit Kit Here https://www.hitkit.us/?sca_ref=6710299.Z2Ii2oksDByt6p PROMO CODE: CRAZY
Use Promo Code MFTIC when purchasing your AquaCure Today!
https://aquacure.life/
Get In Touch
LEAVE A VOICE MESSAGE FOR THE PODCAST HERE : https://t.me/myfamilythinksimcrazychat
Join us on Telegram
Leave me a message On Telegram!
For Exclusive My Family Thinks I'm Crazy Content: Only 5$ get 150+ Bonus Episodes, Sign up on our Patreon For Exclusive Episodes. Check out the S.E.E.E.N.
or on Rokfin
@myfamilythinksimcrazy on Instagram, Follow, Subscribe, Rate, and Review we appreciate you!
https://www.myfamilythinksimcrazy.com
-------------------------------------------------
MUSICAL CREDITS
Intro Theme
Intro:
Music: Ronin
By Neon Beach
Midroll/Outro
Music: Friends
By Luna Wave
All Music (excluding the intro) released under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License Thanks To Soundstripe or FMA CC4.0
There's something about spring that just feels like a reset, longer days, fresh energy,
and the motivation to try something new.
This spring, that's something new could be learning a new language.
That's where Rosetta Stone comes in.
They've been a leader in language learning for over 30 years, with an immersive method
that helps you learn naturally, connecting words, visuals, and meaning in context instead
of memorizing or translating.
With over 25 languages to choose from, like Spanish, French, German, even Japanese, Rosetta
Stone is a go-to tool for real language learning.
It's designed to help you think in your new language, so you learn actually sticks.
Plus, true accent gives real-time feedback on your pronunciation, so you sound more natural,
like having a personal coach.
And you can learn anytime, anywhere, whether you've got five minutes or a full hour.
Ready to start learning a new language this spring?
Visit RosettaStone.com slash today to explore Rosetta Stone and choose the language that's
right for you.
Go to RosettaStone.com slash today now and begin your language learning journey.
If you're a podcast host, listen up this once for you.
My name is Ali Jackson.
I'm the host of Finding Mr. Height, a dating and relationship podcast that I've been doing
for four years now, sharing my positive and practical approach to dating that's built
on my own life experience.
And I wanted to share another experience that I've had, my secret behind monetizing my
show.
It's called Red Circle.
And I was just telling my colleague about how much I love their platform.
With Red Circle, not only am I getting a seamless hosting experience, but I also love the
support I receive in AdSales.
It's not just typical AdSales either.
It's targeted opportunities based on my show and my life.
And the platform is super simple.
You just set your preferences and Red Circle matches you with sponsors that align with
your show.
You can vet every opportunity and their platform gives you great analytics.
More recently too, my Red Circle team has brought me opportunities outside of my podcast
on social media to really augment the podcast partnerships, bring them full circle.
I just can't recommend them enough.
If you want to give it a try, go to redcircle.com to get your free trial.
That's redcircle.com for a free trial.
It's fun, I mean, I like stuff, I like, like you said, you know, taking your mind off
the stuff.
It is, I think it's like valued materialism or it's materialistic shit, but understanding
craftsmanship, quality, origin, things where they're from, you know, researching it's just
as fun.
You get to like, you know, finger your own autism with the, the researching, you know,
and you get to curate and make, you know, you get to improve the condition of something
sometimes when it was furniture.
You just heard today's guest, comedian, writer, home builder, an antique expert who joins
me, Mystic Mark, here on the My Family Team, some crazy podcasts, thank you for tuning
in and enjoy this conversation with Nick Rochefort.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the My Family, I think some crazy podcast and
I am very excited to bring today's guest on to the show, someone who I've been a fan
of for quite a while, you may know him from a million dollar extreme, perfect guy life
and most recently scuffed realtor coming to a city near you, Nick Rochefort, welcome
to the show.
Thanks for joining me, bro.
How are you, man?
Good to see you.
Good to be here.
Yeah, likewise.
We, yes, we had John the Dirt with Curp a little while ago, and it's man of all the things
you do on scuffed realtor.
So I figured I'd have you on the show to talk, who knows what, but most recently, this
might be a good overlap, a researcher who's local to Connecticut dug up in the Jeffrey
Epstein emails, a property, a farm that Jeffrey Epstein owned in Bethlehem, Connecticut.
Have you heard about this at all yet?
No.
I was thinking we should go to, I don't know if there's a Zillow page for this property,
but it's at 325 Guilds Hollow Road in Connecticut.
I could share my screen and show you, I'll get through that, I'll do that.
The results for what in what context was it like, was he like, well, apparently this
farm has was sold in 1996.
So this is the, this is the house, you see my screen, and I just did a drive by earlier
today when I found out I was like, shit, I'm not that far from here.
Let me go drive by and see what's going on.
And I got a better angle on it.
But it says.
He was talking about he was there, he's digging a big hole.
He's got to be poking his head out of somewhere.
I honestly, I wouldn't be surprised.
And there's a small airport right nearby the Oxford airport that allegedly he had been
emailing people about, you know, who wanted to visit his farm, oh, you could just come
and fly in on this small private airport.
So it was last sold in 1996 as well, I mean, yeah, that's wild.
Now he did, he did some fucking infant fucking there was he, like, I wouldn't be surprised.
I think it said 60 acre property and it was a big property and there are multiple barns,
not just this one on the road.
There were multiple barns around this hill here, but this is a picture I took earlier today
if you can see that, you know, no, I'll hold up.
I mean, it looks like a Connecticut farm to me.
Yeah, I mean, it looks very, you know, that's, it looks like it's an old dairy farm, no?
Yeah.
Must be.
Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if, you know, he was renting it out to somebody.
This is me driving by it earlier today.
So I wouldn't be surprised if, yeah, he had people, you know, renting and farming is plenty
of people that do that.
Yeah.
I'm going to be to this weekend.
I have, you know, 49 year olds there.
I'm going to crush with center blocks with less wexner, so have you shit?
Is that the white, does that like the white colonial, like the 1830s colonial style house
that was with it?
Yeah, I think, I think it's all one property, but when you look at the Google maps, it
just points at that red building closest to the road.
But when I drove by, I mean, there were multiple barns in that same exact style down the road
on the same property.
Seems to me like it was all one and then they carved that out.
Maybe those people bought, you know, the home from him, but, but yeah, what are you thinking
about this?
I mean, I'm just so tired of getting like jerked off over them, like, you know, everybody's
mad.
All the conspiracy theorists are like throwing their hat on the ground.
All the good guys are like, you know, nothing, you know, nothing happens.
They get we're in a weirder, they're landing, like the emails are landing so on the nose
for a conspiracy theorist.
It's almost too perfect.
It's like, it's like, it's like an ass, it's, it's like they're right.
They're writing into emails now based on an acid trip you had 10 years ago and they're
like describing like, or like them saying, like, I feel like we're getting like fingered
in the deepest way right now.
And it's like, no, I'm starting to get pissed like it was the goi one for me.
That was like when he's like, oh, he calls them goi's.
Yeah.
How many goi are going to be at the party?
And I was like, you know, yeah, I was like, no, no, no, I'm going, no, I'm going,
I'm like off.
Like it's just too.
I was like, now I'm getting like, it's just so weird, I don't know, man.
I'm starting to get like a, sigh up shit again.
I'm starting to just think this is all like a fun landing pad for like a one and done.
Like, yeah, we're going to get it all in there.
Let's use like, like, like, clovicular and you know, modern things like anything you
want to be in there will be in there.
And it's just going to be like, yeah, pretty much solved it.
He did it all.
It was all there.
It was all him.
And all right.
Now we're going to move on.
Perfect.
Right.
And I don't know.
I don't know.
I feel like I'm getting jerked off a little bit.
Yeah.
There's a lot of, there's a lot of information that doesn't seem to be going anywhere at the
moment.
For sure.
I get the same sense.
It does also seem like if he is in fact dead, then he's a fall guy for this private
sector of human trafficking, mind control, I mean, one of the most compelling threads that
I found was the overlap between him and Project Monarch.
This is all coming out from a YouTube channel called Mind Unveiled.
They've gone through the emails at length.
And just based on the networks, he was sort of curating and the people he was funding.
It's easy to speculate that not only was he going further than just human trafficking
for for blackmail, but he might have had some sort of cloning or who knows, maybe even
organ donation or theft scheme, you know, something involving women, birthing babies, and
then those babies being used for God knows what.
And there's one victim who in a coded journal basically describe being used as an incubator.
And yeah, she didn't say doing that.
Don't we like know that pretty well?
Right.
And this is, this is the thing.
It's so much confirmation that at this point, it, I mean, it's a little bit of a exhausting
to see people talk about because it's like, yeah, this is what we've been seeing in conspiracy,
you know, area of research for a while, anybody who's seriously looking at this stuff has
come to this conclusion.
But now we have, I mean, some proof, I guess you could say proof in the form of these emails.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I, yeah, I just think to like, yeah, I guess the lack of any action is like, yeah,
it's just to defeat us.
We're all, we're all in the same boat, everybody's like, yeah, well, I want to see Anderson
Cooper eating a kid like an apple on New Year's Eve.
I wanted that far in my face to where like watch, you'll do nothing.
I'll eat like a fetus like a fucking like a piece of like a mango, you know, on, on
air.
I wouldn't be surprised.
And that property I just showed you, it's only 15 minutes away from where Anderson Cooper
has a property in Connecticut on a Phantom Lake out in a Phantom Connecticut.
So yeah, there's, there's definitely, you know, a tight circle here in New England.
And that's partly why enjoy having someone like yourself on the show because you got
Yale.
You got, you got Anderson Cooper, you got his brother, the redhead comedian, his brother
lady, what's his name?
Who's Anderson Cooper's brother, the lady, the comedian?
I'm not familiar with this.
Oh, yeah.
You've heard this one before.
Is he Vanderbilt or something?
Yeah, his name's Vanderbilt, but he had a twin, he had a younger brother that died,
or missed, disappeared when he was younger.
And it's, uh, who's the comedian who chopped Trump's head off and got, oh, Kathy Griffin.
Kathy Griffin's Anderson Cooper's brother.
Yes.
I remember playing around Connecticut and yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yale, Yale's, I mean, Yale's got a bunch of, they're not, I mean, George Bush, uh, W,
George Bush went there.
He was a cheerleader there.
He probably killed Greg Gerardo from making fun of him.
Um, Greg Gerardo nailed W, like I love the Greg Gerardo George W Bush from the late 2000.
He was like, he was a fucking cheerleader at Yale.
That's a fucking, that's gay and then fucking it was a, that's gay and then sucking a cock
or something.
It was something like so in the legal.
And I was like, I wonder if George Bush gave Greg Gerardo a hot batch for getting a
worse than anybody ever got him.
I, I would not put it past him and now he's just painting, uh, happy little paintings
in Texas somewhere.
Right.
Like, like, with all idiot paintings like that, we're supposed to believe these, he's
giving candies to Michelle Obama at funerals and they're having fun, little tongue-in-cheek
games and he's actually not a bad guy.
Even though he's a fucking, uh, war criminal and, uh, you know, no big deal.
Everybody's having fun.
They're all, we're all laughing and, um, yeah, I don't know, I, it's, it's probably been
the most disappointing, 2026, it's been a really rough year for, uh, tinfoil hag guys
and myself, yourself included, where we're like, wow, we've come to this, we're going
to let it out of the bag and no one gives this shit.
I feel like we're worse than ever.
I, I don't know for, maybe I'm just being defeatist, but I, I understand now why you're
taking a departure from, like, I get why you'd have to kind of be like, well, it's out
there.
It's pretty cut and dry.
So, you know, say, you know, we have to give it like an onboarding, uh, a little respect
for onboarding for the, the NPC people that are around our lives to be like, did you hear
there were eating children and you were like, I've been saying that for 10 and a half years,
like, uh, working with the party pal, you know, right.
And that, that's the, the cynicism that's sort of inlaid in conspiracy in general.
Just like a pathogen, Michael Hoffman describes it as not being, uh, you know, of substance
for anyone concerned with justice or, or truth, because it just pulls you deeper into the
ju, the degeneracy of it all, like this sort of, uh, conspiracy thrill.
You start accumulating information and eventually you just get burnt out on it.
And I think that might be a big part of it is, yeah, the, the NPCs, the people who just
don't, you know, question anything, uh, have sort of been given this, like download when
it really, it seems like it's, it's like a little bit too late, you know, like maybe
if we had this download in 2019, there would have been something, you know, substantial.
But this is part of why I don't think Epstein is even dead at all because we're getting
out of that.
I don't even think he's a real guy.
I mean, if a man named Jeffrey Epstein, I think that's a, uh, that's, I mean, there was
a guy like there, that's, that's a person.
I'm not saying his name is Jeffrey Epstein, but he definitely didn't die.
He's, uh, I just, I, it's a perfect, I mean, it's like WWE, man, it's like, it's a perfect
fall guy.
It's a, honestly, it's a pretty brilliant way to do it.
Uh, I'm really like, oh, yeah, that guy was a monster, paint him up.
Oh, yeah, like, fuck, we should do the, uh, we should do everything.
Every mystery in the world, he should have UFOs.
He should do any fixes in gambling.
He did the Pete Rose, uh, baseball gambling.
He did, you know, he was the Tom Brady deflate gate football.
He was, uh, you know, he was the Chad ballots from the, you know, everything should
be lumped on that guy's back.
Yeah, exactly.
Wow.
And I think honestly, that, that is why so much of it has kind of gone under the rug
because when people sort through it, they're like, this is too much.
You know, I had someone, uh, I was on a podcast the other day and they're like, I mean,
do you really think that he was involved with so many of these things?
Like, it seems like my new should to be involved with like micro transactions in
video games and I'm thinking, well, if the guy's attracted to children, he's going
to be interested in video game platforms.
I mean, that seems like it's market, you know, um, but yeah, either way, it, it's, it's
baffling to see all this information come out and nothing really substantial, uh,
being done about it.
I mean, you go to the Wikipedia page of Epstein associates now and see the, who's
who list of people who not only were, uh, you know, working with Epstein to some
capacity, but, you know, entertaining, you know, his parties and all this other
crap.
So, uh, two magicians, David Blaine and David Copperfield, I don't know what, uh, what
that says about magicians, but it definitely confirms a lot of my suspicions and most
people's suspicions about magicians in general, what, what, what, what do you think about
magicians?
You know, like a certain vibe that they put off, you know, this sort of, uh, what's the,
uh, pick up artists kind of vibe, you know, like that guy, what was that guy, mystery
or whatever?
Mystery, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I, I can see that, I mean, David Blaine's a fucking creep,
but, uh, and Copperfield's one of those, uh, man, I hope the amazing Jonathan wasn't involved
in all this, and he probably, you better go all right away, but I know, no, I, I could
totally see, uh, I would like to see that, that makes me think like, I like, my favorite
thing about David Blaine is him in the, uh, the 90s Dallas Cowboys locker room, just
like blowing their minds, and then he's like, hey, does anyone want to go fuck any kids
on an island with me after, maybe Michael Irvin, um, yeah, no, I mean, there's a lot, the,
who's your most fun find, uh, as far as an associate, I'll give you mine in it, or
I'll give you mine in it, though, after you, who's your favorite, uh, I don't know where,
I have to know where I'd have to review the list, honestly, uh, the, the magicians probably
were, were what, what, what, what, me most, why, what, who was yours?
I like, uh, Naomi Campbell, because I've known about that for years, uh, Naomi Campbell,
I remember hearing a story that Gouton punched her in the stomach and then threw it down
on a flight of stairs.
And then she owns a house that, if you've ever hung out with models, you know these vapid
pieces of shit and these like, his, his brain, you know, they're like, they're human mannequins.
And, uh, she lives in a Russian, like, architectural marvel, like, this house is like, better than
something you and I could draw on our best day.
Nevermind, pull off execute build.
And then to think that like Naomi Campbell, like, was like, oh, yeah, that's the one.
Like, okay.
And then I remember hearing just from crazy days and nights, died now, which is like a celebrity
gossip.
So I remember hearing that she got punched in the stomach by Putin and thrown down a flight
of stairs, um, which is now in hindsight, could have been like a, get this, this like
pre-bitch out of my party or something like that.
I didn't know you could get me in trouble for this type of behavior.
What are you doing here?
And then like, hush money was the house.
She's got a, like, a Russian czar's house given to her.
But, um, yeah, I don't know, I think I like thinking about that a lot and like, self-important
models sort of like inserting themselves into a human trafficking ring when it's just
sluts, slutting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It, I mean, it's sort of a degeneration of culture at large, um, it's, it's what people
want.
Now, uh, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is another interesting, uh, person to be associated with
Epstein.
Apparently went on two vacations with both just Lane and Jeffrey Epstein.
And then he went on the, he went down to the plane, right?
I think so.
Maybe that's how he got the, the throat cancer from, uh, from eating pussy on Epstein.
I went, you got it from the first kissing Michael Douglas, all that legal sex he was
having on, uh, with Michael Douglas.
Yeah.
Let me tell you about an oyster.
Have you ever seen an oyster in this big, you ever see that video of Michael Douglas
eating of the world's biggest oyster?
No.
Oh, my god.
It'll make you kill your size.
And anything you could ever find in the Epstein vials, like it's worse than the bones
of Zoro ranch, um, which is a weird thing because big oysters are not a flex.
Like that's a, like for a rich guy, it's like, they're small.
You know, we're from New England.
Like oysters are supposed to be small, deep water, fast moving currents, et cetera, cold
water, Canadian, et cetera.
And then like Michael's like, look at the size of this oyster.
It's like, I don't think that's a good thing, Mike.
I don't know.
You got throat cancer right now.
You should lay off anything risky.
It's wrong there for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, in this crazy world, like I was saying before we started recording, it's nice to
have things to take my mind off of all the conspiracy madness.
You know, I've been doing podcasting and working in association with other podcasts for a
couple of years now, um, but going to the Brimfield antique flea market last year was
like an introduction to a whole other world.
And I remember last year, you casually mentioning on scuff realtor that you were going to be
at the Brimfield antique market.
How did you get involved in all that?
How did you get interested in antiques and how did shamanics house begin?
Uh, I, um, I always went to auctions when I was a kid.
My father used to go use a car wholesaler, so my dad had like a small car dealership
where I would go to auctions.
And then there was a farm auction near me when I was a kid that I would go to.
And you would just get like over stock Chinese toys and shit and like weird box lots.
And you would like, so auctions were always like a great way to buy things, like super cheap.
And then when I was furnishing my, I bought a little like bodega and I turned it into
like a bachelor pad, 812 Douglas Avenue Providence.
I bought for during the O8 crash.
I bought it for like 22,000 bucks from my buddy who's a wholesaler.
And um, I flipped it with my mom basically.
And my mom and I like renovated the whole place and I fucking steal and stuff from Home Depot.
And I was on like the cheap, cheap and I was finding stuff all over like Craigslist, like
building materials, kind of like you're doing with the blue stone.
It's like running all over God's green earth and my fucking Toyota and just buying shit.
Um, a little truck and I was at a, I was with this girl I was dating and I was driving
by a field and there was like an off field auction.
It's called Glass Field Auction in Connecticut.
And I went to it.
I bought a desk.
I bought like a metal like street like a 1920s metal like drafting desk for like literally
a dollar.
And I was like, yeah, I got to buy that.
And um, I was having a pizza at like White El's pizza nearby after that.
And Guy Trudell and Guy Trudell senior his father and son come to me like, hey, I saw
that you have a, you were at the auction.
You should come to our auctions.
And then I started going to their auction and belling him mass of Trudell's and the kid
is, uh, I grew up with guy.
He's a little bit older than me.
Um, and he's really knowledgeable.
Like really going to a treat with going to an auction with Guy Trudell, junior.
He's a fucking tree because he's kind of like, I mean, he's almost a spitting image.
He looks the same.
I mean, like he's like probably two years or three years older than me.
But he is a for a guy who looks like he sells weed.
He knows more about antiques than anybody like he's in the top 1% and like everything from
like war, baseball cards, decorative arts, you know, a little bit of this, a little bit
of that.
Um, and you've sit in his auctions and you just, and I was like, all right, I'll go to
the auction.
And I started buying stuff.
Um, cheap, you know, auctions are a great place to buy, really, I mean, just, just cheap.
And then I would, um, to make money, I would have yard sales.
I would have yard sales from my aunts, my dead aunts house that I would clean out.
And I would advertise on Craigslist that I was cleaning out in a state.
And I would just have these yard sales on my lawn.
I lived on a main road, um, at the time.
And I would have these yard, and I would make like 500 bucks on a Sunday.
And I started doing that.
And I started doing flea markets and then the Rhode Island antiques mall opened up.
And I rented a booth.
And that's a pretty big, uh, pretty big, well-known, uh, well-curated antiques mall.
And I've had a booth in there.
And I filled my booth and I made like an extra, you know, a thousand or two a month, just
selling flea market and, uh, auction items there.
And, uh, so I'd work a flea market, I'd work a booth.
And I would sell on, uh, eBay and Etsy and shit.
And I, I was just the side hustle that I really loved a lot during selling cars.
It's just, it's just, it's just, I mean, you see, and then Brunefield is, then the years
went on.
I met my wife at the antiques booth.
That's where I, that's how I met my wife.
I was like, I'm a straight guy selling antiques furniture.
That's pretty rare.
It's a big, this is a big gay world out of here.
So, um, then the little lady found me a girlfriend who's known my wife.
Um, so, years went by.
I did the TV stuff and then when I came home from L.A., my wife and I always did antiques
when we were like, she was working.
She had a good job.
So, it's a good thing for, if you meet a chick, girls like girls like antiques, it's pretty,
it's pretty.
It's like, Hey, you want to see this cool gay hobby I have and girls like, Oh, my God.
Like, it's the works.
Yeah, I've, I've looked out pretty hard in that department.
It's fun.
I mean, I liked stuff.
Like, like you said, you know, taking your mind off this stuff and it is, it's, I think
it's like valued materialism and that or it's, it's materialistic shit, but understanding
craftsmanship, quality, origin, things where they're from, you know, researching it's just
as fun.
You get to like, you know, finger your own autism with the, uh, the research and, uh,
you know, and you get to curate and make, you know, you get to improve the condition of
something sometimes when it was furniture, uh, and then it kind of just slowly evolved.
Then when I came home from L.A., I opened a store.
It was always my dream, which is, I'm glad I know now what I know.
Uh, I opened a physical like 3000 square foot store in the middle of the woods.
This is my living room.
That's where I live.
But that's the woods and, uh, 15% of the people were like cool people and 85% of the
people that I opened were fucking losers.
And, uh, so it's like, I liked it.
I used to look in it too.
It's like thinking you like women and then opening a gynecology office.
And you're like, I didn't sign off for any of this because it would just be like, old
women like, I don't know what the stuff was.
I'm like, I don't give a fuck what you like.
Like you're, you stink.
You're like, who cares?
Like, I don't care about you.
Like, do you understand?
I hate you.
Yeah.
Your stuff sucks.
I'm a, I'm a piece of shit with like bad tattoos.
And I like 311 and my stuff is cooler than yours.
Like, it's, I have nicer furniture than you do.
Rich old lady, your stuff sucks.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's, uh, yeah, it's, it's a mixed bag for sure.
I, I agree with the 85%, uh, split, yeah.
It sucks.
A lot of it saw, I mean, and they're pushing, you know, they're pushing.
It's a pushy world.
So it's like broke academics is what it is.
Hmm, hmm, people who have, who have, who have a lot to say about what they know,
but not a lot to show for it in most cases.
Yeah, or really bad at logical value metrics.
Like I have a million dollars worth of stuff.
It's like, no, you don't.
You have, like, $8,500 worth of stuff.
Um, like I'm, I'm not delusional in any sense.
You know, I have like a retail number and I'm like, okay, I have a, a blah, blah, blah collection.
Like, yeah, it is what it is.
Take it to an auction.
You get fucking destroyed because I'm in the auction, keeping the bids down to $200 on your $10,000 thing.
Um, and I love getting lectured about like that.
It's really funny to see, especially an Eastern Connecticut, which is almost my favorite archetype of antique, uh,
antique curator is the rich bitch, like know it all with no money, telling you what's up.
Yeah, you know, where you're a brainiac autistic maniac.
You know, who's like running around getting like taking in data points at like 40 fold on them.
And they're like, you know, and they're about to tell you like a fact about the, the genre that you're like,
you, you knew in three weeks of our antique collecting.
And they think they're like giving you some, they think they're cooking, you know, like watch me school him.
Yeah, you know, you suck, you suck, you fucking bitch, um, but group yields great.
I mean, group field is go headphones and a pocket full of money is my death, death row request.
Yeah.
Hey, everybody, sign up for the Patreon patreon.com slash MFTIC to support this show and keep me out there.
Finding cool stuff, finding cool people to interview all the nine yards.
You know what's up.
Thank you all for being here.
I love you all.
I appreciate every single one of you.
And from the bottom of my heart, I hope you're having a great day and a great week.
And if you can afford to send some love, some good vibes, my way, sign up on the Patreon Patreon.com slash MFTIC,
because boy, could I use it this week?
Thanks.
Skincare experts and dermatologists have often touted the benefits of indoor humidity as essential for healthy glowing skin.
But did you know dry air can start to harm your skin in as little as 30 minutes?
For years, many people have relied on humidifiers for better skin, sleep and overall wellness,
but traditional models, bulky, mold prone and difficult to maintain.
That's where canopy humidifier comes in.
Recommended by leading dermatologists, canopy is a completely reimagined humidifier designed to elevate any space,
offering the ultimate in skin care and wellness benefits.
Canopy's clean moisture come that's dryness, dullness and fine lines,
while strengthening the skin's barrier and boosting the effectiveness of topical skincare products.
With its sleek design, canopy is the cleanest and easiest humidifier on the market.
With its unique technology, cleaning is as easy as popping it in the dishwasher.
Go to getcanopy.co to save $25 on your canopy humidifier purchase today with Canopy's filter subscription.
Even better, use code podcast to check out to save an additional 10% off your canopy purchase.
Your skin will thank you.
Skincare experts and dermatologists have often touted the benefits of indoor humidity as essential for healthy glowing skin.
But did you know dry air can start to harm your skin in as little as 30 minutes?
For years, many people have relied on humidifiers for better skin, sleep and overall wellness.
But traditional models, bulky, multi-prone and difficult to maintain.
That's where canopy humidifier comes in.
Recommended by leading dermatologists, Canopy is a completely reimagined humidifier designed to elevate any space,
offering the ultimate in skin care and wellness benefits.
Canopy's clean moisture come that's dryness, dullness and fine lines,
while strengthening the skin's barrier and boosting the effectiveness of topical skincare products.
With its sleek design, canopy is the cleanest and easiest humidifier on the market.
With its unique technology, cleaning is as easy as popping it in the dishwasher.
Go to getcanopy.co to save $25 on your canopy humidifier purchase today with Canopy's filter subscription.
Even better, use code podcast to check out to save an additional 10% off your canopy purchase.
Your skin will thank you.
I've always been a thrifty guy, you know, going to goodwill and savers and curbscraping and that kind of thing.
But some friends of mine, they make really high quality denim with all antique machines, right?
Antique sewing machines, the whole nine yards, it's in an antique factory building and all that.
So I went up there to help them do their thing and they have a big tent that they set up in front of the
brimfield barn. So it was cool to not be tied specifically to that place, like I was helping them,
but I didn't have to be there the whole time this year.
I'm going to have my own space.
So I'm going hard for brimfield this year.
May, Shelton's field.
Yeah, I don't know how we pulled that off, but I'm glad I did.
So yeah, I don't know, I got some good stuff that I'm going to put in there, some furniture.
And I know I've heard you say clothes is not your thing, but I'm noticing my generation,
like that's what they want to collect, right?
Like most people who are in my age or younger, they don't own a home.
They don't have a place that they can furnish.
So what are they collecting?
Are they throwing their money into?
Most, most.
Right.
Yeah, dude, it sucks.
And my best pal, Doug, from Polar, I am from Toshelf and just Doug and Annie,
I kind of like came up with him at brimfield.
I used to set up at, oh God, Jesus Christ, I'm slipping.
Basically, the first field on the right as coming in from the Boston side,
which is, I'm like sober in my brain slipping.
Not her tans, is it?
No, not her tans.
Her tans is slowly because her tans sold to a young, hit person.
And her tans is now a great field.
Her tans used to be kind of dusty.
Now it's good.
And then, uh, no, what the fuck, what's that?
It's, uh, Joanne is the name of the lady.
Obviously, they're going to kill me on this.
Oh, well, I was right on the road, though.
I had a killer spot on the road.
Pretty big tent.
I loved it, bro.
Stelling is so much fun.
You can tell people fuck you, which is great.
Like there's no HR department in antiques.
So people are like stealing.
You can like scream at them and stuff like that.
You can like yell.
You smoke weed all day.
You can get drunk if you want.
It's truly like, I mean, enjoy it.
You know, stay there.
Drink with the people at five o'clock.
You have money in your pocket.
You can go buy.
You can take a bike.
I was a bicycle is the killer.
You got to take a bike.
Yeah, bike is, that's like the, the hack for brim fields.
Turbo, turbo bike.
Yeah.
Like you're just killing everyone out of the, uh,
Tokyo buyers coming in on bicycles.
A lot of people.
I've made a lot of friends from, uh, Japan,
just by learning a few, uh,
few Japanese words.
You know, I'm not into that whole world of, of interesting stuff,
but, uh, it does have to know a few words
and what they're interested in buying.
And the word on the street is that they want clocks this year.
So I've been looking for like old antique clocks,
personally, um, if anybody's listening to show
has an old clock, they want to sell to me, email me.
But, uh, yeah, that's like, they're like, uh,
analog vintage or antique analog.
It was on, uh, um,
folk art is big right now.
Like, like, uh, American folk art,
folk art paintings, folk art jugs,
face jugs, eye jugs, uh,
a higher River Valley pottery, like, uh,
avant-garde ceramic, which has always kind of been cool.
But, uh, I'm early Americana.
Goofy is good, um,
as far as like 2026 information, um,
woven textiles, like, they're hanging on the back,
like hanging textiles on the wall now.
The Japanese denim people are,
that was like my buddy Doug.
He had like his Japanese meetings on Monday
when you're not supposed to sell.
And they show up.
And they're just like the cool Japanese guys
that do the dirty deals in the morning.
And they got more money than, you know, anyone.
Um, it's just like a posh thing.
It becomes like a thing.
Like, oh, you have the Japanese people coming.
I would like bust these balls.
We're like, do you Doug?
You got the Japanese meeting?
You know, it's like, okay.
Yeah.
But yeah, like we're all dirty footed
stoners selling trash in a field.
Like,
blow an eye grass, dude.
But like, so like, my buddy would come
and they shut the tent and they do like deals.
And, um, I mean, hey, you got to do, you got to do it.
I would do like, I would bring a lot of front,
front of your cells.
Front of your cells really well.
Uh, like I would take a 26-foot box truck
loaded to the, to the fucking hilt, um, every show.
And I would, I loved it, man.
I would do 10, 15,000 in a week.
Um,
and I thought it was the best week of my life.
Every, like every show, every time.
I had friend Christian and Jenny from seed to stem and Worcester.
I got pretty loaded up with them one night.
And we just used to sit and drink beers at the end of the day
and have like a great time.
Within he and Christian, I would go buy rugs and
and have a, it's just a really great, because you're kind of like down in it.
You know what I mean?
Like everybody's cool.
They cook meals, everybody.
I was smoking a lot weed and it was a craft beer and weed.
So, um,
but it's great.
I mean, what the fuck is better than drinking
fucking $20 craft beer and, uh, spending two grand on shit
that's the best in the world, you know?
Right.
And put it into perspective for people.
Like this is a, a flea market.
The size of an entire town.
Like it, it's really, I don't know how much it's grown
because I've only been there for one year.
I've only seen one year of it, but, uh, but I was blown away
by how much there was to see.
I mean, I was there for the whole week, basically.
And I, I mean, in, um, July and then in September as well.
And yeah, I don't think I've seen the whole scope of it.
Oh, yeah.
Being there for two weeks.
A bike will help.
A bike will get in your ass all the way
from one end to the other.
Yeah.
Uh, and I, I like, um,
it's a hundred thousand people show up, you know,
and you have like famous people and you've got, like, designers and, you know,
this fucking game shows are being shot there.
And I've had the game show people in my 10 before.
It's really fun.
Uh, it was really fun.
I had a, I had a flea market flip contestant buying something from me.
And then he started to annoy my customers
because he was like, uh, like a whimsical, like, gay New York guy.
But he started like, like, push my customers around a little bit.
Like, like, fuck my deals up.
I'm a car salesman.
So yeah, you spoke to not talk to people when you're, like,
if a mean you were doing a deal and I'm selling you something,
if someone else comes into the deal, that's a bad thing.
Like, that's, that's a problem.
It's distracting.
You forget about it and like, lightens the load.
It like stops the vortex.
And he was doing that to me.
Like, he did it to me three times.
And then I was like, get the fuck out of here.
You've had, like, I, like, I told, I was like,
now it's time for you to leave.
You've got to get out of here.
I don't like this anymore.
I don't want to be on the show anymore.
All right.
And he was like, what?
Excuse me.
And I was like, get out of here.
And I made it like really awkward.
I was being like a, like a fucktard with him.
And, um, Laura, whatever her name is.
She used to come in.
She's like, hey, you had a guy here.
That was going to be on the show.
I was like, yeah, I don't really care about selling him
something for a fucking dollar.
Well, he blows up like $900 worth of deals
because he's talking too much.
Right.
Like, get out of here.
I don't need any exposure on flea market flip.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's, it's a, it's a whole,
it's a whole ordeal now.
I think,
one of the porters went viral last year
for doing like a fire dance wrap
where they're like fire dancers in the back.
And I found this information out from someone else.
It just so happens to be a guy that I knew
from a night before
Tommy Turbo, this, you know, big, big shot porter guy.
And I don't know how much you dealt with the porters
while you were there, but they're, they're the scraggly bunch
of people.
And he wanted me to screen print his name
on a pair of jeans for him.
And the deal fell through.
Let's just say that.
But yeah, he, he got pretty famous
at last broom fields for doing a wrap
at the hertans field.
I can only imagine, I can only
probably imagine, uh, with wagon
and high vise, his high vise shirt.
Yeah, uh, they used to just yell at each other
because I would always pay a hundred bucks
to unload my
bar.
While I was, I'd basically pay a hundred bucks
when I got there to have porters unload my shit.
Unloading is pretty fast, like half an hour.
And um, it was just them screaming at each other.
Like, come on, what the fuck?
Like swearing mad loud and shit and be like,
nah, it's just like, I'm trying to fucking do good
and this kid just don't want to fucking work.
It's like, you gotta work to make money.
And it's like, holy shit, you can hear him from like 50 feet away.
So I would just leave and just go shop
and then come back and my shit would be like,
I like to like have it nice and, like,
I really, really enjoyed.
By like this 10th time that I did it,
I really enjoyed it.
Like, like, I like, I slept in my tent.
I pulled my sick, I had a Toyota Sequoia.
I would back my car into the tent.
I would sleep on an air mattress.
Um, and then I had a house nearby there.
I had a house on a 106 coal avenue in Southbridge
that was like this atomic concrete house
that I would air be and be out.
And when it didn't air be and be, I would just stay there.
So I had a house like really nearby.
And then when you go to Cedar Street Cafe after,
which is like this out of nowhere,
seemingly normal, like, restaurant,
that's really, really well done.
You should go there.
Um, they have like a cocktail program,
they have like no fast food.
So you get loaded up after,
it's just, it's, I don't know how to,
if you're an antiques person,
to be able to like sell two to seven grand a day
and then take the money and then go
re up your entire store with new cool shit
and then go get loaded with a bunch of like antique
stealers that are kind of in just other areas,
like Philadelphia and, you know,
Worcester and Vermont, New York, etc.
It's just, I don't know if it gets any better.
Like it's, it's truly the best day of my life.
So now I go, I was at J&J.
J&J Field sold a couple of years ago for pretty big money
and now they're really pushing.
So I park in the back of J&J now and I start there.
J&J Field's pretty, pretty dope.
Right on.
Yeah, check that out.
Now, this is hardcore, this is hardcore room feel talk right now.
This is like, we're down in, right now.
It's going to be, yeah, some inside
brim feel for people, but I'm telling you,
if, if the listeners out in, you know,
wherever in the country want to come and make a,
a week out of it, you're not going to be sorry.
You're going to appreciate this, uh,
this information we're giving you.
But for someone like myself who's relatively new,
you gave us a bunch of tips on what's hot right now.
But what would you recommend as far as like furniture?
I know mid-century modern is kind of in right now,
but like, you see some stuff that's really old
that you kind of just want to jump on.
But is there a market for certain things at a certain
probably like things age out of being interesting?
Have you noticed that in your time?
I used to be into like that, uh, let's see.
Like, I like leather furniture.
Like, uh, like, so that thing right there,
like, see that mid-century credenza.
That used to be like the shit, right?
Like that was, I'd always take two of those with me to sell
because I could sell them for like 800 to 2 grand,
depending on how nice it was.
You know, depending on the lines.
That's a pretty clean one.
Um, but this is aging out, I think.
And now it's getting into like this.
Hmm.
And this is like, this is a beat piece,
but this is like American hand painted 20s knockoff,
which is loaded with my kids furniture.
But it's got the cabriolay legs.
It's got the hand painted mustard paint
with a shell carving on it.
This is my kids fuck this up.
But I feel like it's getting there, um, more, more.
But I like, um, like, this is just my house,
but like leather club chairs always sell.
Leather furniture.
I have a pair of those.
Uh, I'm getting away from this crap.
This is like mod.
This is, if you can find this stuff,
this is just well made 2000s furniture stuff.
That's like signed and marked.
But I like, uh, I like this stuff.
These, these are hand painted Victorian mirrors.
Can you see that?
Yeah, it's beautiful.
Yeah, these things, these are cool.
They're like, uh, they're like 20s decorative.
Like, you could find them between like a hundred bucks
and like eight hundred bucks.
And I think they're about to be,
I think they're about to pop off.
Like, I feel like those are going to, um,
I don't really have anything else.
So that's, I always do,
I always buy a blue chip modern art,
which is like a list of 12 names,
15 names of like top-selling stuff.
And I try to buy like,
Rauschenberg and,
like,
blown and, like, there's like names,
like weird names,
just like, like this crap.
This mod, uh, this stuff always sells.
Wunderlicked.
That stuff always sold pretty well for me.
Um, little paintings,
big oil painting cell,
and that's like large canvas,
like, so you can see for scale.
Like, that's,
that's a Richard share,
which doesn't mean shit.
But, um,
large can, large scale canvases sell well.
Um, I think American oil paintings,
American still lifes
that are just decently done.
We'll sell, we're pretty well with gilded frames.
Um,
I like those a lot.
Every small, medium-sized landscape,
oil painting from, uh,
19th century oil painting,
for the most part,
is a $250 to $500 retail item.
So if you can see anything that's in pretty good shape,
or repairable shape,
or cleanable shape,
and it's two figures, like,
if it's like 75 bucks,
I'm buying every oil painting that looks like, uh,
you know, still life,
or fruits,
or landscapes,
or, you know,
never mind it.
And then there's also the lottery ticket of it,
of it being,
you know, a Hudson River Valley painting,
or something like that,
or some Barbazon school painting,
where it's like worth,
you know,
$100,000 bucks or something.
Um,
those sell pretty well.
Um,
and the silver platters are kind of back now,
uh, just silver plate or Nate silver plate,
which is nice.
Obviously the ones,
I don't learn, but now,
as far as, uh,
areas or regions to scope out,
I know what you mentioned coming out to the area
that I'm in.
Now,
I've heard a lot of good things about, like,
the New Hampshire,
antique area,
like, so there's a lot of good stuff up there.
Is there anything else in New England
that you would recommend people go and check out
for curbs?
Yeah, the antique,
antique alley in New Hampshire is really good.
Rue one in Maine is good.
Um,
there's, uh,
New Bedford to, like, I do runs.
So like, I'll go,
New Bedford all the way out to the cake.
And then I'll do antiques alley,
which starts in Manchester,
and then goes like through to Vermont.
I'm like a hoop.
Um, I'll do that run.
I'll do the one,
like a clover leaf.
The one that I've had a lot of success with recently is,
by you, like Collinsville.
Yeah.
I go to Collinsville to Great Barrington,
and then back.
I'm paying a lot of money though,
like that, that's been,
that's been getting like rich to me.
Like,
these dealers are rich.
I do the Hudson River,
Hudson up and down the Hudson River.
So I start in Troy.
I go all the way down to Newburg,
cross over the river,
and then go back up,
and I'll hit 40 or 50 in a day.
That's a wild run.
You don't want to antique with my wife,
and I like we are in and out of cars,
like it's very, very,
as fast as antique.
I'm driving 80 miles an hour.
I'm like wrapping,
I'm putting, I'm making offers,
I'm calling,
I mean, of crates.
I just, I love it.
I just, it's like watching like a,
like a, like a,
it's, it's like uncut gems.
It's like, it's like a gambling addict,
you know, it's truly,
it has, it has its gamble in it, you know,
it just does not,
it's not, I'm like, you know,
sports, it's on vases.
And I just felt like that.
Tangible, I find that way more compelling than, you know,
watching my buddy's yell at sports games and cry out,
lose money on draft kings.
So yeah, not a sponsor of the show.
But yeah, on the different,
no entirely mentioned Troy,
and that reminded me of something I wanted to ask you about.
I had a buddy who,
he's, you know,
very artsy, he's great painter.
And he tried his hand at renovating a house up in Troy.
I think it was an old,
an older home, maybe a Victorian.
I'm not sure the era,
but he gave up on it.
He said it was too much.
He couldn't, he couldn't swing it.
And he just, you know,
gave up on it.
But would you recommend that for a guy in, you know,
around my age, I'm 31,
you know, taking a house that's completely beat up
and just put and work into it
and renovating it as opposed to, you know,
going for a mortgage or renting or however,
I mean, I literally know nothing about buying a home.
I'm renting so,
but yeah, that,
that seems like something I would take a whack at
compared to other options.
I've explored.
I mean, there's a level of, like,
playing the game on hard mode is buying a Victorian house.
Buying a post in, like,
in a post industrial mill town,
like a Troy or an Albany or a Worcester or a Lowell,
or I grew up in a town like that.
So doing the Victoria's,
Victorians are expert level renovations.
Like, I, I could do one now.
I've done 12 houses.
I've done, I've built.
I've done like easy rentals,
houses that were built in the 80s,
you know, fresh enough,
just decorative ones,
full ground up level and whatnot.
The Victorians are the hardest one.
So what, what happened to your boy was he,
he didn't know he didn't like you,
you need a pile of money,
basically is what I'd get.
The mechanical systems are very difficult to work on
because the walls are made of horsehair,
metal laugh and, you know,
retrofitting modern mechanical systems
into old houses is really hard.
And if you're not doing it,
the guys who are doing it
are complaining,
it's harging you a fucking fortune.
You know,
giving you that like,
oh, this is going to be expensive,
like that type of shit.
And, you know, retrofitting the windows
and just basically you're,
you're working with well-made,
well-engineered buildings
that were made with quality materials
built to last 100 years.
And you're fitting them with newer things.
In the best case scenario,
he would know how to take them down
to original,
repair them and put them back.
But that's not no one, you know.
I mean, let's just be honest here.
I'm not talking to the 1% of people who are like,
I'm a craftsman.
Keep your fucking stories to yourself,
to your average person.
You know, the best
way to do it, in my opinion,
is to find a
1938 to 1968
well-built
home that's been well cared for
that needs perhaps a
maybe a light mechanical, electrical update
that's in good condition
where you can kind of work with what's there
that's in financeable,
bank approved, ready to go,
like a mid-century gem.
Maybe it can be a deco gem
or like an arts and crafts.
Those are pretty hot right now,
like the bungalows
and the American arts and crafts era home.
That's just been well done
or someone's already gone through it
and done the hard work
and the area hasn't picked up yet
where you have like an HVAC
guy own it or a friend of a technician
own it or a friend of an electrician
owned it
because those are the most expensive things.
The plumbing, the mechanical,
the electrical,
those are the ones that you can't
think.
So you can you can fake
paint and you know
some of the aspects.
I mean, you can't, but you can, you know.
So what people that that's what I always
suggested is just to jump into.
Your generation does not like a brown banana.
You guys like a finished product.
You like it all done.
But the gay guy,
me who did the house over
wants all the money for it.
That's a problem for you.
So it's like you've got to like
pick your battle and understand
where you're like level of that.
I in a dream world
and I want everybody to be able to
buy houses or not give up on it.
The best way to do would be to.
You know, look and find out where you want to live.
And buy something that you can improve.
You can understand and comprehend
the improvements that need to take place
in order for it to become a dope house.
Where you can look at and go,
this needs like a better yard.
It needs a landscaping.
The landscaping is old and tired.
And the roof is.
It's tired.
So I'll just replace the shingles.
You know, it's a shingle roof.
I can I can I can understand what this is.
But basically you can't buy
clapped out, you know,
shit boxes with rust in the frames.
You know, and that's the
in Troy and Albany.
And like these areas that are
linked to the market to
lead to the gentrification.
You're going to be buying some real
ratters.
You know, there's some real.
I bet your boy bought a fucking
nightmare.
Yeah. Yeah.
He he dropped out of that quick.
It was only a couple years.
Call it a COVID project
that went under.
And now he's doing much better.
I will say if Alex.
What are you doing with it?
I think he sold it.
I think he just
wants someone to take it on, you know.
But yeah, no, now he's working
for this big furniture reseller
in Brooklyn.
So he's doing much better now.
But yeah, yeah, good.
Yeah, I mean, it's a lot, man.
I just built one myself.
I was like my I built a barn on my property.
And I thought I could like build houses.
So I built like an existing structure.
I this is a barn.
This is like a like a 20-foot ceiling
barn that I live in.
Like a like a balloon-framed house.
And then I built a barn on the property.
So I thought I could build houses.
So I built this.
I built that with well, Kevin Farand built it.
Can you guys see that right there?
Yeah.
All right.
So I built that and that's like
a 2,500 square foot barn.
That's where my office is
and my antiques business and stuff
that runs out of there.
So I was like, all right, I'll build a house.
And that was the I'm like your friend right now.
I'm like, I'm like giving up.
I'm fine.
I'm done.
I'm moving into it in like a week.
But, uh, well, I just I thought things were going to be like
X dollars and it was X times two.
And I was just way off always.
Like, and I got my ass kicked
for 16 straight months, money-wise.
Just like, uh, I like I thought things would be like 8,000
and like 11,000 and they're like, well,
it's going to be 41,000 for that.
And I was like, what?
Yeah.
Like, how?
Yeah.
And it was like 14 line items like that.
Like where I was like, what are you talking about?
Like, how long is it going to take you?
And they were like three weeks.
And I was like, you want to make 10,000 a week.
Like you and that guy want me to pay you $10,000 a week to do your job.
Like, I'll quit and I'll just buy a fucking
tiling company.
Like, you know, like, this is crazy.
So that happened kind of a lot.
So I wouldn't build either.
And building new contractors are just rich.
But realistically, man, you want to find basically grandma's house
that's clean and in an area that has like, I love Collins.
I think you can make money in Collins Bill.
I think all that whole area, it's kind of dead.
No one's nothing's going on there.
It will be a gem soon, I think.
It's going to take 10 years.
But I really, I think Connecticut has a lot of potential up swing.
Yeah.
Yeah, this area is just east enough to not be convenient for New Yorkers to have kind of settled in.
But you saw a lot of that go on the past five or six years through
Lichfield County and Grange County.
A lot of New Yorkers moving out and Fairfield County rather
going into those areas.
And I've been seeing even people from California moving out this way, which is crazy to me.
But I was selling some chairs on Facebook marketplace.
And so many people gave me a hard time about these chairs.
And I think people were just shorter back in the day.
Yeah, yeah.
So they were smaller.
But I finally got someone who they couldn't say no.
And yeah, they were from California coming in and
re furnishing their new home with some antiques.
And I'm like, there you go.
Here's six shaker chose for you.
But yeah, definitely Connecticut in particular,
in light of the Epstein property, I'm going to be digging into seeing what else.
We might have been just neighbors with.
I mean, I know Henry Kissinger and some other big government types
like himself had homes in Connecticut.
So that fascinates me the idea that maybe one day I'll be, you know,
buying something off Facebook marketplace from one of those types is always intriguing.
But yeah, Jeffrey Epstein himself was selling like a Dyson vacuum or something like that.
It's just, it's just he's not even I like to feel that they'd be cocky and have to be like,
hey, yeah, just ask for Jeff when you get here.
Right.
I think she'd have just him.
I get it all the time.
I'm not.
I'm not that wild that he had a farm.
I mean, of course, of course, he had a farm in Connecticut, a dairy farm in Connecticut.
Yeah, I'm going to go ask around and see if anybody recognizes him.
I mean, it's been a while, but yeah, I mean,
apparently is still owned by whoever's owned it since 1996.
So that must be him.
I wonder if the farmer was like, I'm not giving you my fucking farm, man.
I know less Webster is going to give you that New York place, but I'm not.
I thought the Zoro Ranch was actually nice looking.
It was the other one was kind of a dump.
But the Zoro Ranch was well done.
Yeah, it was like, it had like a, it was the only one that was like nice looking.
Isn't that one with your sale right now?
I think it didn't they say they, yeah, I think it, I thought they had to like dig,
or they didn't dig the bones up or something like that.
It was bone, I don't know, I don't know.
So meant off the bunker doors first before they could get it ready for the next buyers.
Yeah, the first realtor that went through to give it a comfort of analysis,
just shot herself and shot herself in the pussy immediately after she was done speaking Latin
for 10 minutes. Yeah, yeah, the, the Dibbick got to her.
Yeah, the Dibbick, yeah, the, yeah, the whisper, the dust from the Dibbick, yeah.
Yeah, got into her brains.
Very easy. Well, Nick, I really appreciate the insider information on Broomfield.
I'm going to go back and relisten to some of that and keep all those tips in mind when I'm out buying.
Yeah, I'll run with you. I'll be there.
Yeah, yeah, for sure. Definitely, and definitely check out the Broomfield bar.
I know it's on the far end of Broomfield, but those are my buddies and they got a lot of great stuff
over there in the, in the barn and in front of the barn as well. But yeah, man,
this house is a place people can go to check out what you guys have for sale. A bunch of really
cool posters from Poland that I saw on there. I was looking through those. Those are really
interesting. Anything else you want to let the people know about? Obviously, they know you from
Scott Freelitzer, a million dollar extreme. Perfect.
Check PGL. We have MDE.TV, perfect guy life. We have a new, we just got to okay it for a new season
of extreme peace. It'll be season two or world peace season three. Harvey, want to look at it.
Shamanixhouse.com is an antique store that refills every Tuesday at 3 p.m.
Right now, and I am blowing, I just got a rug collection that I bought from Philadelphia from
a monster that are really good priced rugs. So you're going to be able to get like a room size rug
for short money, three, four hundred bucks room sized, real and woven wool.
Good stuff. And then I wanted to have it. So I worked my ass off on getting the coolest
shit I could get for the right price. I don't want to sell five thousand dollar rugs all the time.
I want to sell stuff that people just get this got to be value. You can't just be rich dickhead
guy selling, you know, 900 dollar Japanese jeans all the time. And sometimes prices points are
important and being able to find stuff that's cool is our job. That's our job as vendors to
is to find like good. If you're really good at Brimfield, you're really good at finding something
that you're happy and the customer's happy and like it didn't cost, you know, anybody can put dope
shit out and be like, yeah, that's a thousand bucks and be like, yeah, I'll take 750 bubble.
But like if you're really good at it, you can find something that's like 85 bucks and it's the
shit. Yeah, that's it. That's just Brimfield more Brimfield show. But um, and a lot of people
I think all that Brimfield, the younger guys are like, in the book, it's 300. It's like, I don't
give a shit what it is. I want to buy it for way less than that. I want to buy it for 60 bucks.
Yes, I know it's the box. I know what it is. I want it for 60. Yes. Yes. Yeah.
And I know. Thanks for having me, man. I'm around. If you guys ever around,
hit me up. I'll be there and I'll see you at Brimfield. I love it. That's the spirit, man. More
people need to be getting out and meeting with people in the real world. The Brimfield flea market
has been an antidote for that at least for me. So yeah, cool to share that with you here. And
I hope to see anybody listening there this May, July and September. But yeah, thanks again,
bro. Appreciate it. Anybody find some cool shit. I'll see you there.
Right on. Thank you all listening. And until next episode, immerse yourself in the moment wherever you are.
If you are a podcast host, listen up this once for you. My name is Ally Jackson. I'm the host of
Finding Mr. Height, a dating and relationship podcast that I've been doing for four years now,
sharing my positive and practical approach to dating that's built on my own life experience.
And I wanted to share another experience that I've had my secret behind monetizing my show.
It's called Red Circle. And I was just telling my colleague about how much I love their platform
with Red Circle, not only am I getting a seamless hosting experience, but I also love the support
I receive in AdSales. It's not just typical AdSales either. It's targeted opportunities based on
my show and my life. And the platform is super simple. You just set your preferences and Red Circle
matches you with sponsors that align with your show. You can vet every opportunity and their
platform gives you great analytics. More recently too, my Red Circle team has brought me opportunities
outside of my podcast on social media to really augment the podcast partnerships, bring them full
circle. I just can't recommend them enough. If you want to give it a try, go to redcircle.com to
get your free trial. That's redcircle.com for a free trial. Skincare experts and dermatologists have
often touted the benefits of indoor humidity as essential for healthy glowing skin. But did you
know dry air can start to harm your skin in as little as 30 minutes? For years, many people
have relied on humidifiers for better skin, sleep and overall wellness. But traditional models,
bulky, mold prone and difficult to maintain. That's where canopy humidifier comes in.
Recommended by leading dermatologists, canopy is a completely reimagined humidifier designed
to elevate any space, offering the ultimate in skincare and wellness benefits.
Cannabis clean moisture, combats dryness, dullness and fine lines while strengthening the skin's
barrier and boosting the effectiveness of topical skincare products. With its sleek design,
canopy is the cleanest and easiest humidifier on the market. With its unique technology,
cleaning is as easy as popping it in the dishwasher. Go to getcanopy.co to save $25
on your canopy humidifier purchase today with Cannabis filter subscription. Even better,
use code podcast to check out to save an additional 10% off your canopy purchase.
Your skin will thank you.

My Family Thinks I'm Crazy

My Family Thinks I'm Crazy

My Family Thinks I'm Crazy
