Episode Description
WEEK 4 1/25/2026
A gilded theater, a tenth-floor workshop, and the unmistakable scent of rouge—this Detroit story ties showbiz sparkle to the steady hands of a family craft. We revisit the Michigan Theater Building, where silent films once needed a Wurlitzer’s voice and rock bands later rattled the balconies, and connect that pulse to the choices that kept our jewelry business alive for nearly a century. From the Metropolitan Building to a move that felt more like a bet on energy than on novelty, we explore how location shapes legacy.
We share the legends that gave the place its glow—Sinatra, the Marx Brothers, Armstrong—and the cheeky memory of Bob Hope discovering he’d rank below Joe Mendy, a local celebrity chimp. Then the marquee changes: the 1970s Michigan Palace years, with Bowie, Kiss, Rush, and Bob Seger turning a palace of cinema into a cathedral of sound. Between those cultural shifts sits our own vantage point: the elevator operator’s nod, a window view of the Ambassador Bridge, and the ritual of polishing metal until light swims in its surface. If you’ve ever walked into a shop and known there’s a jeweler by the aroma alone, you’ll feel at home here.
This isn’t just nostalgia. It’s a practical guide to resilience. We talk candidly about why “location, location, location” still matters, how a storefront sandwiched between a grocery and a gym can outperform a dream address, and why businesses survive when they recognize what business they’re really in. The buggy whip parable lands the point: the winners weren’t selling whips; they were shaping leather. Our version is simple—beyond rings and settings, we trade in milestones, memory, and meaning. Buildings evolve, tastes turn, and tools modernize, but the craft endures when we follow the city’s current and keep our eyes on what customers value today.
If this journey through Detroit history and family entrepreneurship resonates, tap follow, share with a friend who loves a good origin story, and leave a quick review with your favorite moment—we read every word and it helps more listeners find the show.