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Crude Conversations

EP 150 Furniture, basketball and family with Buddy Bailey

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 24 April 2024

⏱️ 76 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this one, Cody talks to Buddy Bailey. In the late 1990s, Buddy became the face of his dad’s furniture business, Bailey’s Furniture. He was 7 years old when he appeared in his first commercial — the crew filming it realized that the furniture itself didn’t have much character, so they suggested that Buddy get in front of the camera. He was a natural — his charisma and affability came easy. He’d chat about furniture and deals, and he’d even spin a basketball on his finger while he did it. As the years went on, he became a local child celebrity. He continued being in Bailey’s Furniture commercials, and he was becoming a rising basketball star. When he was 15 or 16 years old, he remembers the Anchorage Daily News came out with a list of the most recognizable faces in Alaska and Buddy was number two, right behind U.S. Senator Ted Stevens. He says the lessons he learned from working at Bailey’s Furniture helped him on the basketball court. In basketball, like in retail, you’re dealing with personalities and egos, but you’re not always worried about money. So, basketball was easy. All he had to do was focus on scoring points and winning. This mentality, as well as his skill on the court, brought him all the way to playing college ball. Today, he no longer works at Bailey’s Furniture, he quit in 2013 to pursue a career in finance and then in 2020 he founded a virtual lease-to-own business. He no longer plays ball semi-professionally either, but he does play recreationally. He says he’s probably a better shooter than he ever was and a better overall basketball player. He plays one-on-one almost every day at his local gym. He also coaches both of his kids’ basketball teams, teaching them that it’s not always about winning, it’s about learning life lessons and values — accountability, work ethic, the ability to fight for what you believe in, and how all of that will eventually filter over to your family.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the show. In this one I talked to Buddy Bailey. In the late

0:17.7

1990s Buddy became the face of his dad's furniture business, Bailey's Furniture. He was seven years old

0:26.0

when he appeared in his first commercial. The crew filming it realized that the

0:30.4

furniture itself didn't have much character so they suggested that buddy get in front of the camera

0:37.0

he was a natural his charisma and affability came easy

0:42.0

he'd chat about furniture and deals and he'd even spend a

0:45.9

basketball on his finger while he did it. As the years went on he became a

0:52.0

local child celebrity. He continued being in Bailey's

0:56.0

furniture commercials and he was becoming a rising basketball star. When he was 15 or

1:02.4

16 years old he remembers the Anchorage Daily News came out with a list of the most recognizable faces in Alaska.

1:10.0

And Buddy was number two, right behind US Senator Ted Stevens.

1:17.0

This podcast is made possible through the generous support of the Crude magazine

1:21.8

Patreon subscribers.

1:24.0

If you already subscribe to the crude magazine

1:26.0

Patreon, thank you.

1:28.2

For those listeners who aren't,

1:29.8

please consider subscribing at Patreon.com slash crude magazine.

1:35.0

That's Patreon.

1:38.0

dot com slash crude magazine

1:40.0

and pick the subscription tier that works for you.

1:43.0

I want to thank everyone subscribed at the company man tier.

1:47.0

These are the people who have subscribed to the crude Patreon for $50 or more.

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