The I Love CVille Show With Jerry Miller! - American Skin Association Moving HQ To CVille; Is UVA Faculty Senate Trying To Bully UVA BOV?
Episode Date: December 16, 2025The I Love CVille Show headlines: American Skin Association Moving HQ To CVille Is UVA Faculty Senate Trying To Bully UVA BOV? Flock Cameras Out; Parking Garage Cameras In Kit Ashi Opens Another CVill...e Restaurant Mangosteen Asian Street Food Open On Elliewood Does Mangosteen Have The Best Logo In CVille? What Are The Best Logos In The CVille Area? If You Need CVille Office Space, Contact Jerry Miller Read Viewer & Listener Comments Live On-Air The I Love CVille Show airs live Monday – Friday from 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm on The I Love CVille Network. Watch and listen to The I Love CVille Show on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, iTunes, Apple Podcast, YouTube, Spotify, Fountain, Amazon Music, Audible, Rumble and iLoveCVille.com.
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Good Wednesday afternoon, actually Tuesday afternoon, and thank you kindly for joining us on the I Love Seville show, getting ahead of myself today.
Full week for us on the I Love Seville Network. Next week, a short week, although we will be on air for part of the week.
Christmas week. We say Merry Christmas in my household and happy holidays and happy Hanukkah.
What do you say at your house, Judah?
You say happy Kwanza.
He says happy Kwanza. There we go. Happy Kwanza at the Wickauer House.
Merry Christmas. That was what we say as well. John Blair, thank you for watching the program.
A lot we're going to cover on the broadcast. There's some news that did not make our rundown of
headlines, which you can find on screen. But the news that did make the rundown of our headlines,
we found to be the most compelling content
for you, the viewer, and listener,
as we try to put together
kind of an array of content,
a consortium, an assortment,
a cornucopia of content.
The American Skin Association,
you give us the who, what, when, where, why,
when that story comes up,
is moving its headquarters to Charlottesville.
Ladies and gentlemen,
the migration into Charlottesville
for big-time brands and big-time businesses
and noteworthy organization
organizations continues.
And now the American Skin Association
is hopping on board and ride in the train
that we call Charlottesville in this economy
that is just oozing and producing
and birthing and matriculating talent
of legendary proportions.
They are now going to call Charlottesville
its headquarters. We'll talk UVA faculty
Senate. You forgot a question mark and headline
two there, J-dubs. Is the UVA faculty
Senate trying to bully the
UVA B-OV? I would
add UVA in there as well to spread that
headline out with characters. We'll talk
that topic on today's show. I want to talk flock cameras out, basically cameras in the city of
Charlottesville that helped the police department catch bad guys. And if you don't think there's
bad guys in our community, think again. We're just lucky in that chief conscience in the police
department is catching them. There was a hole, was it last night that got shot up on, was it
Stewart Street, Judah, Stewart Circle, a house struck by gunfire early Monday morning. So
This is after the clock strikes midnight.
A shot, a house on Stewart's Circle is hit by gunfire.
There was also a road rage incident involving a knife.
There's bad guys in this community.
Flock was good, but Flock is out.
But very interestingly, ironically, oddly, parking garage cameras are in.
The whole hate array, the whole shade against the flock cameras
was the centralization of people's data and bad actors or have.
being able to pursue or capture our personal information.
However, there's new technology at downtown parking garage that is legitimately collecting
our personal information as a way to monetize parking in the garage is around the downtown
mall.
I mean, make it make sense.
We'll unpack that topic on today's show.
We'll talk Kit Ashy, friend of the program, Kid Ashy, client of the program,
Kid Ashy. Someone text message
Kit Ashy, tag Kid Ashy, let
her know we're giving her some props today on the I Love Seville
Show. She's absolutely fantastic.
The Charlottesville Restaurant Tour
has added another brand
to her portfolio. Kid Ashie,
who is known for Judah Wickhauer,
are you ready for me?
Ready for this?
Monsoon on Market Street.
Yeah.
Her flagship.
She has a monsoon in Madison,
Wisconsin. A second monsoon.
monsoon, that's two, Judah.
Yeah.
Okay?
So I'm going to try to keep track of these.
Goodness, she's got some restaurants.
Two monsoons.
A pineapples tied kitchen.
Pineapples, Judah.
Yeah.
She has a coconut tied kitchen in Crozee.
She has a maple pine, Judah on pantops?
Maple pine?
Yeah, I think that's on, what is that, 20?
By Darden Tau Park.
yeah i've been there she has two two coffee shops uh camellias one in the woodard owned building
that that graces you as you had downtown the old millie joes oh yes she has a camillias there
a coffee shop and bakery she is a camellias next to the old pelton station a beloved restaurant
and eatery of yours truly
where Mudhouse used to be on 10th Street.
Yeah.
Those Shannon Whorl's commercial real estate and residential real estate project.
And now Kit Ashy is launching Judah.
Say it for me?
Mangosteen.
Mangosteen on Ellywood Avenue, Asian Street Fair.
And the logo might be my most favorite logo in the Charlottesville,
Elmore County, and Central Virginia area,
except for a very iconic and memorable logo.
logo that we call the I Love Seville logo.
So that means Kid Ashy has one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight restaurants
Judah Wickhauer.
Eight restaurants for Kid Ashi.
Am I missing one?
I mean, help me out here.
Two camellias, two monsoons, that's four.
Oh, and Tangerine, I helped broker that deal for her on Avon Extended.
There's nine, I can't believe I forgot one of them that I helped broker.
Monsoon, monsoon, pine, pine, pine, camellias, chameleas, chameleas,
Mangosteen, we help broker that deal, and tangerine.
Nine restaurants for Kid Ashy in Charlottesville and in Madison, Wisconsin, and one in Crozay.
We'll unpack it and show you.
Give them a glimpse of the Mangosteen logo on Ellywood Avenue.
Let me know when that's on screen so I can tell the viewers and listeners to take a look at the screen.
I think this logo is one of the most iconic.
one of the most memorable logos in the greater Charlottesville area kit i hope you're hearing this
i sincerely sincerely mean this you have that logo on screen i'm going to give you a heads up to look
at the screen i look at the screen everybody this is asian street food on elliwood avenue in the old
kuma restaurant location keep it on screen look at the screen look at the screen i i love the logo
how do you characterize that logo judoakara i call it cartoony whimsical yeah memorable
cartoony, jovial, jolly.
I mean, it's, it's, it's awesome.
It's absolutely, it's an absolutely awesome logo.
I want to talk about some of the other memorable and significant logos in this area.
We've touched on this in the past iconic brands.
I think iconic logos is, is slightly different than iconic brands.
Although my wife is kind of chastising me right now and saying,
You've talked about this, Jerry.
Well, sweetheart, I love logos and brands.
We are in this business.
Speaking of a logo and brand that's iconic,
how about Charlesville Sanitary Supply?
Judea, how about John Vermillion and Andrew Vermillion?
61 consecutive years in business.
The Vermilions are located on East High Street.
Their family is five generations in Almaro County.
It's locally owned and operated.
They have an e-commerce website,
Charlesful Sanitary Supply.com,
that legitimately gets the product that you purchase to your doorstep the same day, in most cases, for free.
The big box brands cannot do that.
Charlottesville Sanitary Supply.com, and they have now launched a sister company,
Charlottesville Swimming Pool Company, Charlottesville Swimmingpool Company.com,
very proud to work alongside the Vermilions in launching this division.
They utilized their labor, their intellect, their know-how, their institutional memory,
the water testing lab at Charlottesville Sanitary Supply to vertically integrate into a new division
Charlottesville swimming pool company well they will offer consultation they will offer any kind of
guidance you need in the construction design management maintenance of your swimming pool
indoor or outdoor Charlottesville swimming pool company.com
Judah Wickhauer studio camera front of the program 16 going on 17 years at
the Miller organization, 17 of the best years of his life, he would not change a thing.
That smile says a thousand words right there.
Look at that.
The man just has, it's sunshines and rainbows and candy canes every single day working
alongside yours truly, who is even keeled, unemotional.
Wait, are you talking about me or you?
And the metronome of consistency with personality, mood, and temperament.
I'm talking to you, Judah.
In a lot of ways, I believe it or not, admire many of your talents and skill sets, your problem-solving ability.
I sincerely mean that.
We have a lot to cover on the program today.
Every day we look for content for the viewers and listeners.
A piece of tidbit, a tidbit of news that didn't make our rundown about Nelson County public schools.
The enrollment dropping 3.5% this year.
52 students. That's a lot for a school division that has 1,440-some students. It's dropped 3.5% full-time enrollment. Is that a sign to come, Nelson County Public School enrollment, dropping 3.5% this year of what's ahead? Is that foreshadowing for public schools in Albemarle County, Charlottesville, and Central Virginia? I would caution Albemarle County Board of Supervisors.
who are basically being shaken down by the Almore County School Board
to the tune of a quarter billion dollars
for a high school in the northern feeder pattern
to very carefully and cautiously model
and project enrollment numbers moving forward in Almore County.
Because you're seeing Nelson.
Now, Nelson is not in apples-to-apples comparison to Al-Morrow County.
Nelson is touristy,
not in apples-to-apples comparison to Al-Morrow County.
but its public school enrollment has now dropped three and a half percent this year and a lot of that funding judah for public schools comes from enrollment that to not make the rundown you want to pontificate or offer some perspective on that or do you want to get into what you find to be the most intriguing headline and why
hold off for now i'll have read a little more into that okay your most intriguing headlighted why william mcchesney welcome to the broadcast print radio and television welcome to the broadcast city hall
welcome to the broadcast. Elmore County Board of Supervisors, three of them, one city
counselor, one Nelson supervisor, and one Fluvanna supervisor. Welcome to the broadcast. We remind
the viewers and listeners this Friday at 10.15 a.m., Elmoral County supervisor, Ned Galloway,
will be on the I Love Seville Network, as will Fluvanna County Supervisor Tony O'Brien,
as will Nelson County Supervisor Jesse Rutherford, all three supervisors, 1015 a.m.
On this network, wherever you get your social media or podcasting platform,
There's no other media outlet that's going to aggregate that kind of governance in front of microphones and cameras except for this brand and logo.
One of the most iconic The I Love Seville Show.
Headline most intrigues you and why?
Well, I'm, I guess I'm not really surprised that the flock cameras are out, but I do find it fascinating.
And especially reading between the lines when you read, when you read police chief,
Koch's comments in the article. I think having having had him on the show, it's not too
difficult to read between the lines to see that he's a smart guy, very, very savvy when it comes
to when it comes to his job. And he knows that his job is at the behest of the Charlottesville
council and especially the Charlottesville city manager.
And I think what I read between the lines is that he's going with what they want.
And he knows that it's going to put a strain on those things that the flock cameras helped.
But what can you do?
Chatted with Chief Kachis yesterday.
said he's a bourbon guy, not a scotch guy.
When we get some bourbon at the bar, we've got to invite him over.
Off the clock.
Off the clock.
Most certainly off the clock.
We will do that, Chief Kachis.
We'll send you a ping.
Chief Kachis, very smart guy.
Cooler than the other side of the pillow, as the late great Stuart Scott used to say
of people of Chief Kachis' swagger and Geneseecois.
Flot cameras are out.
a camera system used to catch bad guys. Is that not the essence of the flock camera?
A camera system used to help the police in catching bad guys. Is that not in a nutshell?
Yeah, more or less. Track people's movements through the city.
So help me understand this. Flot cameras are out because activists, about 150 of them in this
300,000 person region, there's about 150 activists that are spooking and scaring a
region called Central Virginia, that's 300,000 people strong, Judah.
150 people have an issue with flock cameras because of the centralization of data
and the fact that data centralization is the brink of absolute power corrupting,
and the fact that centralized data could get in the hands of bad actors, right?
and because of that mom fear, that dad fear, that activists are pushing and selling and slinging,
the flat cameras had a shelf life of a, you know, a New York minute or a cup of coffee.
That's all happening at the same time that parking garages in downtown Charlottesville are now using a customer management system, a CMS that is tied to
tracking the same data of vehicles entering and exiting parking garages.
The news this week we broke on this show was the parking garages around the downtown mall
will start utilizing a new technology stack, and that tech stack is tied to tracking vehicles
and people and movements and license plates and makes and models and colors of cars as they go in and out of
parking garages to to help optimize a payment structure that is not tied to human labor,
right? It's basically what they're trying to do. So explain to me how flat cameras are out
and parking garage cameras are in when they do, in essence, the same thing.
I mean, do they really do the same thing?
Do we know where that information is held for those cameras?
Do we know if it's accessible by, you know, by government organizations?
I mean, those are the questions that I would ask.
I'd never used the parking garages.
so I'm not worried about them personally.
I wasn't worried about the flak hammers.
Yeah, I wasn't either.
99.9% of this community was not worried about the flock cameras.
If you're not doing bad things, you don't worry about the flock cameras.
And Chief Conscious did a great job of giving assurances
that they were not providing that information to anyone,
that it was a closed system that was only accessible by someone with the authority
here in the police department
to access the information
and I also believe that it was
there were some assurances
that all data was deleted after seven days.
You're more likely...
What I find
interesting, strange, sad,
it seems like this is all
you know,
get rid of something that's useful
because it could potentially be
misused in the future. Bingo.
Until it is, I have no
problem cutting the flock
program if it turns out that the government
is misusing the data and we have
proof of that.
But according to Snook
who says in the article, the concern is
always if you give that kind
of information to the government or make it
subpoenaable by the government
or in some cases simply the government
says, give us a back door into your data
and we'll use it in real time, that that's just giving the government too much power.
You know, I tend to agree with that, but it hasn't happened yet.
And is there a concern that we couldn't at some point shut it down if that became the obvious case?
They are throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
Throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
and explain to me how cameras that track people going in and out of parking garages,
literally tracking your license plates, your comings and goings,
the consistency of your entering and exiting of downtown Charlottesville,
is any different than these flat cameras?
If anything, the tracking, using of cameras to track the comings and goings of downtown Charlottesville
in these parking garages is more vulnerable data and content than the flat cameras themselves.
Because the parking garage cameras in and out are literally tracking people's regular routines.
The people who have the monthly parking passes that pay in these garages to park
or the people that come in and out visiting, they're tracking your schedule.
The flat cameras don't have that kind of consistency in data tracking.
I also, I'm going to add to this, and I'm going to catch some heat from this, the numpties, that's a deep throat word, the numpties that are running the parking garages, are much more likely to get hacked by Igor, the Russian hacker, than the flat cameras managed by Palantir, which I own a fair amount of stock in a publicly traded company.
I think the bigger concern was ice for a lot of these people.
Well, if you are here in Charlottesville and you're an illegal immigrant and you're not supposed to be here, don't park in the parking garages.
It's okay if you speed around town, around the Medians, around Preston Avenue, around Midtown, around West Main Street, down 10th and Page, West Main Street, Park Street, Rio Road.
It's okay if you speed around Barrett's Road and Emmett Street
because the flock cameras are gone, but goodness gracious,
don't pull your El Camino, don't pull your Honda Civic,
don't pull that white van with the sliding door.
That's kind of the kidnapping van and speed away
into any of the parking garages, because boy, oh boy,
they have your data, and Igor, the Russian spy, may get it.
The numpties of the parking garages now managing our data,
but Palantir publicly traded cannot assist the Charlottesville Police Department
and tracking bad guys.
Make it make sense, Charlottesville, Virginia.
Sadly, what we're losing is the reason why conscious advocated for the program in the first place.
As he says, there are inquiries for information the CPD either can't provide
or it's very labor-intensive to provide because there's currently no integrated data system.
The flock cameras caught that guy that put UVA grounds on lockdown.
Was it earlier this year, last year?
Remember when there was a guy, an active shooter?
Yeah.
Around grounds, running around the Lewis Mountain neighborhood.
Yeah.
Remember that?
Thank Flot Camera for helping with that.
Yeah.
Next headline, Judah Wickhauer, what do you got?
And make sure those lower thirds are on screen, my friend.
I've been told by so many people they're very important.
All right. Well, let's start with the first one. The American Skin Association is moving to Charlottesville. Not just moving to Charlottesville, moving its HQ to Charlottesville.
Okay, viewers and listeners that are watching this program that are local media, and I see print reporters, radio personnel, and God knows how many TV reporters, half a dozen TV folks. This should be in your new cycle in the next 24 hours. The American Skin Association has a
announced its relocation of its headquarters to Charlottesville.
The American Skin Association, ladies and gentlemen, is bringing its ASA headquarters to a major
research hub for dermatology, reinforcing the organization's longstanding commitment to advancing
skin health and sun safety throughout the country.
It's also the American Skin Association announcing the appointment of Lou Q. Lee, a Ph.D.
to its medical advisory committee.
He's going to be the Virginia Scientific Advisor.
Dr. Lee is a distinguished expert in cancer biology
and chair of the Department of Dermatology
at the University of Virginia.
Biotechnology, life sciences,
continues to drive economic vitality in Charlottesville.
Will the American Skin Association,
its headquarters now in the Charlottesville area,
have the same economic impact
as AstraZeneca that's investing
$4.5 billion with the
B into Northern Amar County,
a campus that's going to have
two really tall buildings and
600 employees earning on average
$125,000 per year,
also creating 3,000
indirect jobs?
No, this news will not have the same
economic impact. However,
it is an indication of the domino effect,
the ripple effect
of a biotechnology school and an anchor trophy champion headquarters Astrozenica
attracting additional talent and additional headquarters,
additional lines of work,
additional brands and businesses to the Charlottesville ecosystem.
You get a couple dozen American skin associations,
and before you know it,
you have the same impact of Astorzeneca's 600 people.
The new headquarters is in Charleston, American Skin Association.
They made that announcement with notification to our network minutes before the show started.
Judah Wickhauer.
And it's also just great that this is moving here.
I mean, ASA has championed efforts to combat melanoma, skin cancer, and other skin diseases.
That hits kind of close to home because my mom has had in the past skin cancer that was thankfully taken care of.
in the local health system
and I didn't even know
this was happening until last
Thursday. She had another
case that on
Thursday was removed.
Oh, praise God. Amen.
And so this is, you know,
I think
this is a great addition to our
area. Do you see what's happening
folks?
Now this has, is a double-edged sword
for the community.
It's a double-edged sword because it's without question.
for those that are real estate owners is going to drive value in your properties.
It's double-edged sword because those that are real estate owners,
it's going to increase the tax base of your properties.
But like you said about all the other stuff coming to our area,
it's not going to have the same effect as AstraZeneca or, what's the other one?
The Paul Manning-Bowtech Institute?
That.
Eli-Lilly?
Eli-Lilly.
Eli-Lillies, Goochland, a little further.
out. Still, I will consider
some of those Eli Lilly
executive choosing to live in this area
or maybe the west end of Richmond, maybe
short pump. I think Eli Lilly
is going to impact more Spring Creek
than I see it impacting Almaro County.
Maybe Eli Lilly impacts Kesewick in the
Glenmore area because Eli Lilly, ladies
and gentlemen, is
Guchland County. Okay? So I see
that west end, short pump, Spring Creek,
Glenmore, Caswick,
Barborsville. Where I
I see AstraZeneca, Ivy, Crozay, Forest Lakes, Hollymead, Earleysville.
But don't sleep on the American Skin Association moving its headquarters here,
because when the ASA moves its headquarters there,
it's going to get other organizations of this ilk or significance or magnitude saying,
hey, what's going on here?
Oh, it's because all this talent's coming from here, from this school, from this UVA.
Next headline, Judah Wickcaro, what do you got?
Next up we have UVA and whether or not they are bullying the B-O-V.
Set the stage on this, the American Faculty Senate.
The American Senate faculty, faculty Senate?
Which one is it?
UVA faculty senate.
Oh, UVA.
Sorry, the UVA faculty senate is flexing its muscle, basically threatening the UVA
B-O-V, if you elect a new president before Spamberger is in office, if you appoint a new president
before Spamberger is in office, we will not support that new president. In fact, we will revolt against
you. Yeah. When did the natives, what in the head start, well, in the henhouse?
When politics took over. Doesn't it appear in this UVA presidential search that there's
entirely too many chefs in the kitchen who's the gordon ramsie who's the bobby the bobby flea seriously
it doesn't appear to be the b o v anymore right and there's nothing i would want more as a content
creator than the b ov to name a president before spamburger is in office it would be the cherry on
the Sunday. Would it not? Yeah. The cinnamon on the white Russian. Get to see what happens when
Spanberger takes place. January 17th for Spanberger? Still multiple meetings ahead for the board of
visitors. Name a president, Sheridan. Name a president Porter Wilkinson. Name a president Paul
Manning. Name a president B.O.V. Do it. Love to see what would happen with there. The faculty,
UVA faculty Senate saying you better not do it because we're going to flex our muscles if you do, threatening the BOV.
But there is an opinion piece in the Cavalier Daily right now.
They're doing a great job.
It calls out the faculty senate, not to mention former president, Ryan, saying that what is all this politics?
You know, when Ryan refused to address the third-party legal review
concerning Darnell Jones' murder of the three university football players
for over a year and a half,
and then released a redacted version which revealed absolutely nothing.
There was no transparency.
Where was the letter calls out and asks,
where were the critiques of Ryan?
where was the critique of Ryan arbitrarily appointing Ian Bacom?
Now the president of Middlebury.
Yeah.
Without any input from the broader community.
Why didn't you care then?
And why do you care now?
Well, we know the answer of that, right?
Of course we know the answer to that.
And put it in a nutshell for the viewers and listeners.
It's politics.
Glenn Yonkin now has most of the board,
the board that he's been able to appoint.
Still five short.
Still five short because of politics.
And so the Faculty Senate does not like the political leaning, I guess.
Yeah, it's the ideology.
They don't like the politics of Yonkin's board.
And they're concerned that Yonkin's board is going to pick a like-minded president,
and that like-minded president will clash ideology-wise with the very left-leaning
University of Virginia faculty.
So now the very left-leaning UVA faculty,
which also magnetizes its ideology onto students,
pushes its ideology onto students,
is doing its best,
which is the power of perception,
the power of unification
to try to threaten the board, pressure the board,
and get them to pump the brakes
with two board of visitor meetings left before Spanberger
takes the governor's mansion on the 7th.
11th of January.
Yeah, but it is pointed out that with the faculty senate calling for the resignation of Sheridan and Wilkinson,
they actually don't have any power.
It says they can opine all they want, choosing a new president is simply not part of their mandate.
Per the faculty senate constitution and bylaws, the faculty senate may advise but not dictate to the board of visitors.
But I push back on that commentary and opinion piece.
Is that from Thomas Neal, Tom Neal?
Yeah.
Okay.
I push back on that saying if the UVA faculty Senate tells the faculty,
instructs the faculty almost union-like,
you're not going to teach students anymore unless they changed the president,
then UVA's got a big issue on their hands and a big problem on their hands.
It's like Charlottesville Public Schools Thanksgiving, 2024,
when they did a coordinated sickout,
and then the principal had to surprise parents in city,
the city school system saying we can't have school for the next couple days
because the teachers all mysteriously got a case of the bubonic plague
and there's not anyone in the classrooms because of scurvy to teach our children anymore
if the faculty said it mysteriously instructs the rest of the faculty at the
University of Virginia the TAs the GAs the associate professors the tenured professors
the deans the associate deans the assistant deans all these mumbo jumbos
hey get a case of scurvy in the bubonic plague for all of the upcoming spring semester
then UVA's got some explaining to do no doubt so they do have power so for Neil to say that
they don't have any power is is it's the case and it's not the case yeah I mean it you can't
just say that they did they do have power the point he's making is that they they have more power
than they realize. And I think they actually do realize it.
I apologize for interrupting you. Yeah.
Well, you're right. They do have power, but
it's not power bestowed
to them by the school. No. It's
the power of galvanization.
Yeah.
It's the power of stratadization and
organization and galvanization.
Politicization.
Any otherizations I can get in there?
Next topic. What do you got you to look out?
Kit
Ashton.
Kit is a rock star.
friend of the program
one time tenant
of the program
client of the firm
friend of the firm
one time
tenant of the firm
upstairs
in this building
and client of the firm
we've helped her purchase
now that the news is out we can talk about it
help her purchase
crowbies on Avon extended
a little while ago now it's
Tangerine Kitchen
helped her purchase
Kuma Restaurant on Ellywood Avenue
and now it's
Kuma Restaurant
Oh, you're talking about this thing.
The new one.
Put the logo on screen.
One of the best logos I've ever seen.
Kit Ashy, I sincerely mean this,
your brother.
One of the best logos I have ever seen, Kit.
This is awesome.
I love the whimsical nature.
I love the jovial nature,
the jovial nature, the jolly nature.
I love the cartoonish, the memorable.
This logo, look at the screen.
It is awesome.
Asian street food on Elleywood Avenue, when the students return from winter break,
this will be novel and fresh from them come second semester,
and this is going to stack paper, ladies and gentlemen.
Asian street food that can be enjoyed at the restaurant on Ellywood Avenue across from the Biltmore,
which is now Ellie's Country Club,
or where most of the revenue will be generated and take out,
Uber Eats Grubhub Capacity.
This is going to crush it.
Here's some food. He's showing food on screen.
Look at the food for this fabulous restaurant.
Look at the screen.
They just had their soft opening.
We can now talk about it.
I've been wanting to talk about this for months.
This deal brokered in the middle of the summer while I literally was walking around in
Southampton, New York, on a phone, my feet in the sand, as my wife
our two boys were had a little net in their hand fishing for tadpoles. I literally have my
earbuds in and my iPhone in my hand trying to negotiate this deal. 100% true story. It took
six days, seven days soup to nuts for this to go negotiation, letter of intent, sign letter
of intent, and get to the attorneys. Nice. Keith Woodard, not the Keith Woodard of Woodard
properties. Keith Woodard, Virginia Beach Woodard. A lot of people don't realize this.
There's two Keith Woodard's, different middle initial. Out-of-market Keith Woodard and very
close front of the program, Chris Cabash, the landlords of this piece of property on
Elie Wood Avenue. Done many deals with Chris Cabash. Three, four Chris? In the last 12 months
alone, I would say. He'll correct me on that. I think it's four. This being one of them.
literally a week this deal comes together you want to you want deal flow to happen go on vacation
and then next thing you know you're working on your vacation while your kids are tad pulling
and your wife is giving you the evil eye as you're on the phone pounding pounding sand
trying to make something happen this is going to crush do you agree or disagree just like all her
other restaurants monsoon crushes oh yeah market street downtown monsoon Madison Wisconsin
crushes, pineapples
next to
cartol haul crushes
coconuts and croze
Old Trail crushes, maple
pine, base of pantops
next to Darden towel crushes.
Camellias, the old Millie Joe's
crushes. Camilias
next to Guajeros
by Peloton Station
crushes. Magnosteen
is going to crush. Tangerine
down Avon Extended crushes.
She has identified a model of smaller footprint restaurants and dining room
that specialize in takeout and to-go and third-party delivery cuisine.
It is effing genius.
This is going to crush it on the UVA corner.
This will top line revenue, my prediction,
north of a million dollars, easy, peasy, Sunday, breezy,
with not a ton of labor.
Mark it down.
That's one, two, three, four, five, six,
seven, eight, nine brands in the Kadashi portfolio.
The American Dream comes here to work in the back of the house and then the front of the house,
every single job at Monsoon on Market Street, every single job she's had over there,
and now owns nine restaurants.
She is the American dream, and she's empowering family members and friends to run their own restaurants
while she maintains a piece of ownership at each location.
It is effing genius.
This is the most prolific restaurant tour in Charlottesville, Virginia, ladies and gentlemen.
For print, radio, and television that is watching this program, you should be DMing Kit Ashie, calling Kit Ashie and setting up interviews with Kit Ashie right now.
Pick up the phone and call her right now.
Do an interview with her right now.
In fact, media that's watching the program, you need to be reporting about the American Skin Association and this week's new cycle.
need to be reporting about Kit Ashy in this week's new cycle and media that's watching
this program, you should compare and contrast the parking garage cameras to the flock cameras.
Do that print-in radio and television right now. You're starving for content for your cycles.
Next headline, what do you got?
Well, on the topic of logos...
Is the Magnostein logo not going to be on the shortlist of one of the most memorable and
iconic locally? I guess it's... I understand it's novel.
rush, so we don't put it in that category yet, but it will eventually be. Do you agree? It's
memorable? Definitely memorable. If I had to ask, what are the five most iconic and significant
logos locally? The first one, we would say is the University of Virginia, obviously. The second
one, with confidence, conviction, I'm going to say the I Love Seville logo. Classic clean, a storefront
with 10,000 vehicles that drives by it every day. God knows how much prolific foot traffic
across all platforms, the largest social media following in the area
except for the University of Virginia,
I'll put us in the two-slot extremely humbly, as you can tell.
The three-slot, what do you put in the three-slot?
Is it the Bodos logo?
William McChesney is saying the Bodos logo.
Yeah, I guess you've got to go Bodos.
You go the Bodos logo?
Is the Bodos logo truly iconic?
I know the food is iconic.
Yeah, I don't know.
Deep throat, we'll get to your comments here in a matter of moments.
John Blair, we'll get to your, let's see,
John Blair, we'll get to your comment here a matter of moments.
Is the Bodo's logo truly, I'm talking just logo.
I'm not talking brand.
The brand encompasses the overall experience.
The logo is strictly the artwork of what you see.
What are the most iconic logos?
I don't even know if they've turned it into artwork.
I've always just seen the photo of their signs.
I don't know that anyone's actually done a logo of it.
It's interesting.
But, yeah, it's okay.
you're you're you're it's okay right okay most iconic logos citizen burger bar logo whoever
did that logo is a logo genius who did that logo juda uh i think it might have been me no it was
not i did put it together it was uh the the lady that i was dating at the time sketched out
on a napkin while we were sitting at another one of annie mcclure's restaurants we
thought about a cow brand. It was sketched down on a napkin. I was drinking beer. I believe
she was drinking beer. If I remember, there were like 20 sketches. The napkins came in,
and then we slowly put that logo together at this firm. I'd say the Citizen Burger Bar is on
that shortlist. What are other shortlist logo options that are iconic?
Roeback is relatively new to the market, but they're pretty iconic.
Robak's pretty significant. That branding, they get branding and logo.
what else
I like
I like front porch
it's simple
front porch iconic
the music venue
yeah
okay I'll give you
Market Street Wine also
Market Street Wine
I'm not throwing shade on Market Street Wine
I've been there forever
Caddy corner to us
Coops
What is the Coops logo
That's just a font
It's a chicken
Coops
Yeah
Coops
I'm looking at it
at it. It's on the top of their website.
Coops. It's on their wall.
What else? Pures and listeners. Most iconic logos.
UVA I Love Seaville Citizen.
What else? Most iconic logos. Coops.
Coops.
I mean, really, you could pick anything.
C&O? The C&O logo?
Been around forever.
It's iconic.
Sal's Cafe Italia? We design and develop that logo.
Yeah, that's a good one.
South's Cafe Italia?
That's got on the most iconic.
You throwing shade at our logo over there?
No.
We got paid to do that logo.
I'm just saying.
We can't call everything iconic just because it's on the downtown mall.
I'm not saying.
I'm saying Sal's has been around forever.
It's the second longest restaurant on the downtown mall.
So is iconic based on length of time around?
That's a fair question.
Maybe we have to take Roeback off.
That's a fair question.
They haven't been around long enough to be iconic.
I mean, Millers.
Millers, does Millers have a logo or a font?
I'm looking at it.
It's, I mean, they've got a logo.
Is there a logo just the name Miller spelled out?
I don't know that I'd say that's one of the most iconic in Charlottesville, though,
just because it's been around for a long time.
Comments coming in.
John Blair, his photo on screen, number two on the family.
He says, as a follow up on your question from yesterday about what food and beverage is missing from the Charlottesville area,
we do not have an Asian bakery like 98 degrees.
My wife and her friends are convinced that an Asian bakery would kill it in this area.
An Asian bakery would kill it in this area.
That's funny that he mentions what food is missing from the area.
We all know the recurring lament of when...
Not the Ethiopian restaurant.
Good Lord.
And here's the thing.
Somewhere the Charlottesville subreddit is about to hate on me.
I was doing last week's Seville Weekly crossword puzzle last night.
You were doing the Seville Weekly Crosswork puzzle last night?
And one of the questions had to do with a type of food that has a certain,
and it gave a couple different types of food that that, and it was Ethiopian.
And I thought that was an interesting, I don't know if that was a specific shout out.
No, the Seville Weekly Crossword puzzle is syndicated from a newswire,
the Associated Press. The reporters
at the Seville Weekly are not creating the Seville
Weekly Crosswall Puzzle. Am I wrong
on that? The stuff in the crossword puzzle, is it local to
Charlottesville? Not always.
Okay, so then it's a Newswire service providing that crossword
puzzle, and the Suduca is the same. You think
the $12 an hour
employee at the Seville Weekly is coming up with the crossword?
Seville Weekly now having to pass
the hat beg for money to keep its
lights on you notice that literally asking for donations to keep a for-profit business going make it
make sense donate for to our for-profit i'm going to start passing the hat uh give us tens of thousands
of dollars here to keep our for-profit business going donation it's not a write-off on your taxes
john blair says tubbies has a really good logo as well been around since what 1981 1982 the tubby's logo
they do have a memorable logo
the tubby's logo is fantastic
I'd say the Riverside Lunch logo
has got to be on there
yeah I mean it's okay
it's a flat burger flat out sold the best burger
you don't think that's an iconic logo
their logo is what
a spatula
A spatula
I know a flat thing
What's that flat is that a spatula
A grill top spatula squash and a burger
Yeah
I would say little Johns
But Stefan Freeman's run that into the ground
Neil Williamson says,
does Coca-Cola have a logo or a font?
I think Coca-Cola is a logo,
the president of the Free Enterprise Forum.
Don't you say, Judah?
Yeah, I think I would say that that's...
I mean, all logos that have the name
are going to have some type of font.
To Neil's point,
the Coca-Cola logo that I remember
is a red circle with the white Coca-Cola script font, right?
Isn't it...
Isn't it a wavy line like that?
It's a red circle, but that red circle is symbolic of a bottle cap to a glass bottle.
My two cents.
Deep throat.
Deep throat's comments, number one in the family.
He says, I think the only person who would take a presidency from this board of visitors
is a person who just figures he or she can collect whatever severance is in the contract.
he also adds deep throat to the point of the cavalier daily we should separate the question of whether jim ryan had to go versus who gets to appoint his replacement i stand by the idea that jim ryan's presidency had completely fallen apart and he richly deserved to be fired they should not have let him resign should have been fired for calls and run out of town but i tend to agree that you aren't going to get a good candidate or even a good result with a good candidate if a lame duck board of visitors extends the offer
He's basically saying in a nutshell, this board of visitors is walking the Pirates ship plank right now.
And Porter Wilkinson and Rachel Sheridan are at the very tip of the plank,
and the plank is rotted from being out to sea and having peg-leg men with hoop earrings,
trifold hats, and eye patches walking the plank for a generation.
The plank is flimsy, and Porter and Rachel are at the tip of the park.
plank about to fall into the salt water, shark-infested waters. I mean, if you're walking the
plank, I don't think you care whether the plank is a worm-bitten or not. I think the guy who's on
death road that's about to get the lethal injection cares if the lethal injection happens today or
happens 18 months from now. The person who's watching walking the plank most certainly cares
if the first step they take on the plank leads to their demise in shark-infested waters or if they
have an extra
Dave Matthews
two-step to the end
of the plank, my friend.
Okay.
Now, 18 months is a bit
of an exaggeration
walking the plank.
Anything you would add?
We've done a great job today.
Do we have any
logos from our
audience?
I thought Choze was really good.
Chose?
J.R. Hadley's
creation?
in the old McGrady spot.
I thought they had a good logo.
Chos had a great logo.
One-time client of our firm chose.
Now home to dairy market.
Three-notch.
I like Three-Notches logo.
Yep.
Three-Notches is a great logo.
The Three Notches and the historical significance of Three-Notch Road.
Everywhere on the feet, it's Jerry, the I Love Sebo logo is the most iconic.
I'm sure.
A little tugging cheek right there.
A great logo is Oak Valley Custom Hardscapes.
If you have a vision for a custom hardscape, Oak Valley Custom Hardscapes is who you call
hardscapes at your home or your place of business.
The value of a hardscape, a custom hardscape, is not just return on investment.
The value is return on experience, return on quality of life, return on memories.
There's one local firm you call for custom hardscapes.
They are the best of the best, and it's Oak Valley Custom Hardscape.
ladies and gentlemen judah wickower jerry miller the i love seville show mark your calendar for
friday at 1015 a m supervisors ned galloway jessie rutherford and tony o'brien on the isle of
seville network thank you for joining us so long
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
