Episodes

  • Best of B Team: Bike Culture Economics: Why Out-of-Staters are Buying Bentonville
    Mar 26 2026

    Bentonville is changing so fast that even locals can miss the scale of what’s being built right in front of them. We sit down with a longtime Northwest Arkansas real estate leader who came to town in 1992 as a Walmart engineer, then quickly pivoted into the deal world when the company’s store growth went into overdrive. The result is part personal story, part behind-the-scenes look at how massive commercial growth actually gets executed.

    We get specific about the Walmart home office development and why it feels like a “new city” on hundreds of acres. You’ll hear how the project thinking evolved, why “activating” parking decks with liner shops matters, and what it takes to curate a tenant mix that serves associates during the day but still thrives evenings and weekends. If you care about Bentonville real estate, mixed-use development, place-making, and how corporate campuses reshape a market, you’ll leave with a clearer mental model.

    Then we zoom out to the forces pulling people into NWA: specialty medical growth, the job-multiplier effect, and the outdoor recreation engine that has turned mountain biking into a genuine regional identity. We also talk about the unsexy secret behind lasting success in a small market that’s gone national fast: relationships, reputation, and doing right by all parties even when it costs you in the short term.

    Subscribe for more conversations on Bentonville, business, and what’s next and if you enjoyed this one, share it with a friend and leave a review. What do you think is the biggest driver of Bentonville’s growth right now?

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    9 mins
  • Ep. 103 - Shark Tank Reality: Beyond the Handshake
    Mar 19 2026

    The Shark Tank edit makes it look smooth, but the real experience is quiet, intense, and a lot longer than you think. We talk with the founder of Foam Cooler, Chad Lee, the Bentonville-based product developer who walked into the Tank, ran his cooler over with a steamroller, and then had to negotiate for real while doing rapid-fire math on the spot. He explains what’s scripted, what absolutely isn’t, and how founders get coached to stay authentic when the questions are designed to provoke a reaction.

    Then we get hands-on with the product itself: a floating EVA foam cooler built for real life, not laboratory bragging rights. We dig into why ditching metal parts and hinges matters on boats and beaches, how the cube shape improves stability on the water, and why “day-use cold” lets them keep the walls thinner and the vibe lighter. If you’ve ever compared Yeti alternatives, wondered about cooler pricing, or wanted outdoor gear that feels fun instead of industrial, you’ll get practical details on capacity, packing tips, and what customers actually buy.

    The business lessons go deeper than product design. We talk retail strategy with real examples from REI, Walmart.com, and a Target test, plus the dangers of chasing “all stores” too early. The conversation gets honest about what happens when tariffs turn a $30,000 container into an $80,000 problem, and how a brutal personal year helped sharpen the brand mission. We also share what working with Daymond John is like after the deal and why he’s pushing hard on digital marketing and live social selling.

    If you like founder stories, Shark Tank behind-the-scenes, product development, and retail growth strategy, hit play, subscribe, and share this with someone building a physical product. After you listen, leave a review and tell us: what would you have asked the Sharks?

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    49 mins
  • Best of B Team: From Homebrew Naivety to Brewery Reality
    Mar 12 2026

    This week on The Best of B Team, we're throwing it back to our episode with Jeff, owner and founder of Bike Rack Brewing Co.

    Imagine the sun on your shoulders, a cold pint in hand, and a reason to show up, this conversation lives where small batches meet big community energy. We crack open a limited summer release designed for poolside afternoons and talk about why keeping it scarce pushes people off the couch and out to the farm to taste it fresh. From the first sip, the strategy is clear: let the beer be a moment, not just a product, and pair it with simple, smart marketing that moves people to gather.

    We share how a decade in craft beer turned our taproom into a home for local artists, funding albums, pressing vinyl, and turning Friday nights into rehearsal halls for a 90s cover band. Partnerships aren’t a slogan for us; they’re a map. When your front door lines up with a neighbor’s venue, you dream up VIP-only drops and collaborations that feel earned and close to the ground. That same “build with what’s near” mindset led us to a tight, fast food menu: wings done right and a giant pretzel that keeps tables happy without stealing space from tanks in a production brewery.

    There’s also the truth about the leap. Home brew praise is kind, but scaling demands process, fermentation control, and a willingness to rewrite plans that once felt perfect. We talk through the gap between optimism and execution, the risk of leaving safe jobs, and the grit it takes to keep learning. On the board, a balanced lineup leads the way: a West Coast IPA named after local trails, hazies for modern palates, and approachable ABVs that invite another round. Along the way, you’ll hear the laughter, the near-misses, and the simple rules we live by: make beers that fit your place, keep the menu sharp, and let community be the headline.

    If this story of small-batch creativity and hometown loyalty hits home, you need to see the full episode! Follow the show, share it with a friend who loves craft beer, and drop a review with your favorite taproom pairing, we’re taking notes for the next collab.

    Watch the Full Episode: https://www.bteampodcast.com/bike-rack-brewing-co-crafting-bentonvilles-beer-scene/

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    8 mins
  • Ep. 102 - Driving John Daly: Life as Limo Joe Pt. 2
    Mar 5 2026

    Ever wonder what celebrity travel really looks like from the driver’s seat? Welcome back to part 2 with Joe Washington! We're back with Limo Joe, the man stars call when they land in Northwest Arkansas, for a raw, funny, and surprisingly tender tour through bus bays, back roads, and packed clubhouses. From the first time he piloted John Daly’s bus, ending in a heart-stopping crunch in an Ohio parking lot, to threading through New York City’s low bridges with fans swarming at gas stations, Joe shows how fast glamour turns into logistics, and how quick thinking keeps everyone safe.

    What makes this ride special is the relationship at the center of it. Joe’s stories reveal John Daly as more than a legend with a monster drive: a dad who organizes trips around LJ’s schedule, a people’s champion who won’t leave until the last photo is taken, and a generous friend who helps turn a signed flag into $5,000 for a children’s auction. We talk about the art of setting boundaries without killing the vibe, the split-second choices a driver makes when the line forms at dinner, and why discretion beats any VIP pass. You’ll hear how small markets like Bentonville build big reputations through word-of-mouth, how a steady voice can calm a chaotic night, and why authenticity, on the course and in the car, beats polish every time.

    If you’re curious about sports culture, country music runs to Nashville, or the hidden craft behind luxury transportation, this is your map. We cover road safety for oversized rigs, reading crowds on the fly, and the ethics of having A-list contacts in your phone without turning relationships into currency.

    Come for the wild stories, stay for the playbook on trust, loyalty, and service that keeps the calls coming. Enjoy the conversation, share it with a friend who loves golf or great road tales, and tap follow, then leave a quick review telling us the wildest travel moment you’ve ever had.

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    19 mins
  • Ep. 101 - Inside NWA’s Most Exclusive Car with Joe Washington Pt. 1
    Feb 26 2026

    Power often rides in the backseat, and Joe Washington has spent years at the wheel. We kick off season three with the trusted driver behind Northwest Arkansas’s most intriguing routes, funded early by Don Tyson, introduced to Alice Walton as “my friend Joe,” and frequently answering calls that start with “President for Don Tyson.” Joe shares how a simple code, safety first, discretion always, turned an ordinary service into a career that spans yachts in Italy, private airport pickups, and late-night runs for A-list guests.

    We unpack the origin of NWA Transportation, the moment Don and attorney Kenneth Morton helped Joe get started, and the everyday discipline that made the relationship last for more than a decade. Joe takes us inside bucket-list drives down Don Tyson Parkway and across Walmart campus, then into surreal phone moments with Clinton, BB King, and other legends. He explains why he’s not “ride share,” how bookings from coastal agencies land in his inbox, and how a full-evening model beats point A to B when clients value privacy, flexibility, and calm.

    The conversation stretches into culture and craft, why a bottle of Creed becomes a calling card, how a sleek black Escalade branded with Team Direct and the emerging Platform identity turns heads without shouting, and what it takes to manage luxury logistics without breaking the trust that earns them. Golf fans will lean in at stories of John Daly, a polite pass on Augusta for its no-cart rule, and a respectful glimpse of Michael Jordan’s high-stakes club life.

    It’s a story about Bentonville’s gravity, Walmart’s orbit, and the quiet professionals who keep both moving. If you love behind-the-scenes business, service excellence, and the human side of power, you’ll feel right at home. Subscribe, share with a friend who geeks out on logistics and leadership, and leave a review to tell us which story surprised you most.

    Come back next week for more stories from Joe in part 2!

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    29 mins
  • Best of B Team: Writing "The Book": Jenny Marrs’ 5-Year Journey
    Feb 19 2026

    What turns a house into a story you can hold? In this recap episode, we look back at our episode with Jenny Marrs for a warm, funny, and honest look at how a five-year writing journey became a memoir stitched from rooms, rituals, and the small moments that define family. Instead of design rules and trends, Jenny frames each chapter around a lived memory; the living room on Christmas morning, the spaces that carry laughter, mess, and meaning, creating a keepsake her kids can open years from now.

    Pulling back the curtain on the other half of her year: filming a six-episode renovation in Italy. The postcard image cracked under real pressure, snow in Tuscany, twelve-hour days, and back-and-forth flights that turned a dream into a test of endurance. We trade stories about logistics gone sideways, including a rental car ticket that landed on the wrong desk, and laugh through the kind of travel chaos that becomes legend among friends.

    Threaded through the hustle is a reminder of why any of it matters. A bearded friend recognized at a gas station, a viewer’s daughter in a wheelchair who loves the show, and a quick decision to fly home early to surprise her. That small act reframes the entire season: work is the vehicle, people are the destination. If you’ve ever wondered how to capture your family’s history, balance ambition with presence, or turn everyday spaces into memory engines, this conversation will meet you where you live, literally.

    If the story moves you, subscribe, share this episode with someone who loves their home, and leave a review with your favorite room memory so we can feature it next time.

    And go back and watch the full episode: Ep. 4 - Heartbeats and Homecomings: Jenny Marrs on Weaving Memories into Design

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    7 mins
  • Ep. 100 - Business Leaders Supporting Local Teens With TASC
    Feb 12 2026

    Super Bowl energy meets real community impact as we crack open prop bets, swap bourbon notes, and rally behind TASC’s All-In casino night, our favorite way to turn a rowdy room into real support for teens in Northwest Arkansas. We start with light-hearted Jets nostalgia and a wager sheet that could cost us twenty bucks, then jump straight into why this event works: it’s joyful, it’s social, and every laugh helps fund counseling, after-school programs, and life skills for kids who need a steady hand.

    Hannah joins us to map out the night, from a VIP happy hour with first look at silent auction items to a main floor that hums with blackjack, craps, poker, a horse-race game, and a big central bar. We talk tickets, early-bird pricing, and how to proxy-bid if you’re out of town. If you’re hunting for auction gold, the lineup is stacked: Orphan Barrel age-statement unicorns, a Heaven Hill 17-year, plus an AMP concert package paired with a hotel stay and dinner. It’s the rare fundraiser where bourbon lovers, music fans, and first-time bidders all find a lane.

    Then we dig into the heart of TASC. This local nonprofit delivers sliding-scale mental health counseling, First Steps for pregnant and parenting teens, and hands-on life skills like budgeting, car maintenance, banking, scholarship prep, ACT strategy, and driver permits. Teens often arrive because they have to, then keep coming because they want to. Programs like Bucket List Summer get them off screens and into real adventures that fill up fast, proof that connection still beats the algorithm.

    If you’ve ever wished charity nights felt less stiff and more human, this is your night. Come for the blackjack stories and bingo redemption arcs, stay for the knowledge that your chips translate into therapy sessions, service hours, and second chances. Grab your tickets at tascnwa.org, invite a friend, and if you loved this conversation, subscribe, share the episode, and drop us a quick review so more neighbors can discover the cause.

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    38 mins
  • Best of B Team: Purple Bag Power, Building a Luxury Brand in Northwest Arkansas
    Feb 5 2026

    A jeweler launching his own Prosecco sounds unexpected, until you hear how celebration sits at the heart of both. We sit down with Ben from Blakeman’s to trace the path from showroom sparkle to $24 bubbles on local shelves, and why that choice wasn’t about chasing prestige but designing for real moments people share. From the first pop to the final sip, he shows how taste, value, and presentation combine into a brand experience that feels premium without feeling out of reach.

    We dig into the details that make a difference: thicker, hand‑carved Italian glass that telegraphs quality at a glance, and a simple chill ritual that ensures the pour matches the promise. Ben walks through the distribution map, Bentonville’s Guess Who, Angkor off Pleasant Grove, Liquor World in Fayetteville, plus Bordinos, Pinnacle Country Club, and Ermilio’s, to keep discovery close to where celebrations already happen. The strategy is intentional and local, giving Northwest Arkansas a sparkling option with the right balance of price and pride.

    Then comes the masterclass in branding: the purple bag. Instead of leaning into industry blues or neutral black, Blakeman’s chose a distinctive purple palette that turned packaging into anticipation. Families now look for the purple bag under the tree, on birthdays, and during Valentine’s Day, proof that when service, product, and presentation align, a simple color becomes a promise of joy. We share personal stories, a holiday prank with a surprise purple box, and the small traditions that turn customers into communities. If you care about brand building, retail strategy, or the psychology of gifting, you’ll find practical insight and a few smile‑worthy moments all the way through.

    Enjoy the conversation, share it with a friend who loves great branding and better bubbles, and don’t forget to follow, rate, and leave a quick review so more people can discover the show.

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    8 mins