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August 17, 2025 37 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good afternoon, and welcome to the first day the WIBC
Sunday Magazine show.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Guess what the date is?

Speaker 3 (00:08):
Seventeenth.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
It's the seventeenth. Very good, Denny Well, Oh, I saw
a math question.

Speaker 4 (00:14):
Wait.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
Oh, Matt Bear's here, Denny Smith's here, here are you?
Okay's here?

Speaker 5 (00:19):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (00:19):
This was good.

Speaker 6 (00:21):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
We have something special to announce. Today is Linda Ally's birthday.
Happy birthday, Linda birth She's a precious one. She did
what's cooking for years and years and years and she
and I are the same age. But I'm not supposed
to say that out loud, but happy birthday, Linda.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
Also a happy birthday.

Speaker 7 (00:40):
Well, kind of celebrate the Indiana's only US president with
his one hundred and ninety second birthday this week.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
Benjamin Harrison.

Speaker 4 (00:49):
Yeah, Benjamin Harrison, but.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
I never tell you the story about doing it.

Speaker 7 (00:52):
On Wednesday, August twentieth, ten am to three pm at
the Benjamin Harrison Presidential just now you're I.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
Took my yellow labrador out to Crown Hill and we
would walk, can walk and walk in It was back
when you were allowed to take your dog off the
leash because we had an electronic collar. So I couldn't
find Allie, couldn't find Eli. I went over and she
was pooping on Benjamin Harrison's grave. I was so embarrassed
and people were walking by. I'm sorry. I do have
a bag and I picked him. But any of the

(01:18):
wonder dog pooped on Benjamin Harrison's grave?

Speaker 8 (01:21):
Did you write the governor of letter?

Speaker 3 (01:22):
No, I didn't take up. I cleaned it up. I mean,
I'm a good citizen, but that dog fever. Have a
game today one pm, one pm.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
One pm. This is your die. This is a big one.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
Have you seen all the fans reactions to Sophie's Sophie
Cunningham's pool side picture in one piece from the suit.
So cool, she's a neat game.

Speaker 7 (01:43):
I love seeing her videos at the State Fair. Oh
my goodness, she ate the pickled having a great time.

Speaker 6 (01:51):
She is.

Speaker 3 (01:52):
She's just a good human being. If stardom is hers,
she's not letting it go to her head. And I
still like it when she thumped those two girls that
were coming out indent Caitlin Clark, I mean she was
a brawler.

Speaker 4 (02:03):
She is a brawl. See Barbie.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
She's pretty cool and she's really cute, and she's cute
she is so cute.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
She's the Barbie, right, don't think she's the one.

Speaker 3 (02:13):
Barbie six one? I think, yeah, that would be about
Ryan Kelly.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
Yeah, she has six foot one. When I was so
tall in high school, and I was always tall, always
very taller than everybody else, Oh the boys, everybody was
so tall, and I knew no one would ever really,
you know, fall in love with me because I was
so tall. But but if you are Sophie Cunningham and
she's six foot one, would you feel more?

Speaker 4 (02:36):
Would you be okay with being shorter with her? As
a male?

Speaker 3 (02:40):
I was so short in high school. I always stated
taller girls I didn't care.

Speaker 8 (02:44):
Well, this is a question that I think about a lot,
because I'm attracted to multiple tall women, women that are
a lot taller than me.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
So that's cool.

Speaker 8 (02:53):
That's not talking sixty one. We're talking to like six three,
six four. I mean, these would be might be considered giants.

Speaker 3 (02:59):
So you want to be a tree top lover? Is
that what you're telling me?

Speaker 8 (03:01):
That's exactly right.

Speaker 3 (03:03):
There.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
You go, oh gosh, you've just offended someone by calling
them a giant.

Speaker 8 (03:06):
Well no, no, no, I just mean I didn't mean, like,
you know, if I went.

Speaker 4 (03:14):
I kidding, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
All right.

Speaker 4 (03:16):
Now, we're going to take a break. We're going to
talk about something.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Everybody just settled down because we've got some serious stuff
to talk about. Young Listen, we focused so much on
boys school time, right back to school time. We focus
so much on the boys, and and they're they're you
know what their culture around boys in school and all
of that. But we're going to talk about girls for
for a few minutes with a true amazing individual that
you'll meet next right here on the first day ninety

(03:40):
three w ib C. Good afternoon, everybody. It's Terry Stacy
along with Matt Bear. Hello, Denny Smith, Hello, Kylon Tally Hello,
and we're going to spend some time talking a little
bit about something that is really important.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
A great organization, Kylin, please if you will.

Speaker 7 (03:58):
Absolutely, we love organizations that are making changes in the community,
making positive changes, and one of those organizations is Inner
Beauty Program, Inc. Crystal Hines. She's the president and CEO
making changes in the community. Crystal, thank you so much
for being here with us.

Speaker 6 (04:14):
Thank you so much for having me. I really appreciate it.

Speaker 7 (04:17):
You do events across the community to help students in school,
primarily girls, talk about one of the events that you
had this past week and what you're doing in schools
to help make it a better community for them.

Speaker 6 (04:30):
So inter Beauty we like to say that we're like
a full service salon for the inter makeover for young ladies.
So we try to provide everything that we think that
they need. And so with this being, you know, the
back to school season, we had a conversation with all
of our youth to start, and then we broke it
down by age group, and so from age six to eighteen,
we were talking about like some of the barriers and

(04:54):
the fears and anxieties of going back to school and
some of the things that the kids need. And so
they were talking about just like having positive supports and
talking about just you know, being ready with the correct mindset,
learning to be organized and on time. And then one
of the big things that started to come up was

(05:14):
just the violence inside of schools, and so we split
off into age groups so that we could look at
some of the videos circulating social media and to really
hone in on the purpose or why they think that
there are these violent behaviors in schools and kind of
what continues to like push them along the social media airways.

Speaker 1 (05:35):
I guess, what are the ages of the young ladies
you're working with.

Speaker 6 (05:40):
So we work with six to eighteen, but this particular
conversation was twelve enough.

Speaker 4 (05:45):
It was twelve and up. And I hate that.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
You know, the fears that I had when I was
going to school a million years ago are much different,
I'm sure, than what young ladies fear today, And so
you've kind of touched on some of those fears and
they're very real. But when you're talking about some of
those younger kids that are dealing with things that we
can never understand, help us to understand those and some
of the causes. Maybe is there some violence among young

(06:10):
ladies themselves. We focus so much on boys and what
they're going through, but for girls too.

Speaker 6 (06:16):
Oh absolutely, we I mean, I know, and we talk
about all the time, how they how it's in the
news that it's young men, and particularly black young men,
who are always victims of violence or perpetrators of violence.
And so we really had to stop and take a
microscope and look at the young ladies and their role

(06:37):
in violence. And so a lot of it, I would say,
just from talking to the youth because we're big on
youth voice, is that the social media piece and people becoming,
you know, social media famous for recording fights and violence
and wanting to be like the first up. I want
to be the first to show this or to say

(06:58):
I was there, so they're not even afraid to run
to the violence when you know, with their phones and
things like that, just to make sure that they could
be like front and center. And then there's a lot
of the music that just says, hey, this is how
you handle the conflict. You do you do X y Z,
you go hit them in the face, you shoot them
in the face, you do these things. And so our
girls are not mute to that. They hear all of

(07:20):
this and they you know, they mimic what they hear
and what they see. One of the videos we showed
was adults fighting at the Indiana State Fair and we said,
you know who who's leading the way? If these adults
are doing this, then it's you know, it becomes a
status quote for the youth to follow. And so we

(07:44):
talked about like some of the kids posting like where
they are, so the kids that they don't like what
they call their ops would meet them, you know, at
the state fair, or a in a park, or at
a party, so that they could fight and again for
social media fame.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
Crystal Crystal Hines joins us. She's the CEO of the
Inner Beauty Program. Crystal, I got to tell you you're very courageous.
I'm a grandfather. I've got a sixteen year old granddaughter.
I worry to death about her because of the lessons
that she's seeing that I can't see that. I know,
whether it's on social media or whatever it is. The

(08:20):
kids have different challenges, but it still comes down. I
want to be liked. And whether we were in seventh
grade in the fifties or seventh grade and now you
want to be liked. So how do you teach kids
to be virtuous, virtuous young women, virtuous young men? How
do you teach that?

Speaker 6 (08:37):
So we are that was our focus when we even
began the program almost twenty three years ago, was to
be focused on self esteem and character, poise and personality.
And we're really teaching our youth that they have to like.
It starts with loving yourself. And I know it sounds
cliche to tell someone, oh, you've got to love yourself first,

(08:58):
because it's really hard. In a world where they're trying
to make everybody look exactly the same, and the standards
have to be exactly the same for beauty and things
like that. And so we do a lot of activities
and programming that teaches you to love themselves, to bridle
their own talents, to really focus on what am I
good at?

Speaker 5 (09:17):
And what what makes me me?

Speaker 6 (09:20):
Without my friends, without my parents, without my family members,
What what am I?

Speaker 2 (09:25):
Who am I?

Speaker 7 (09:26):
What do I like to do?

Speaker 6 (09:27):
What can I do? And so we like to show
them how they are contributing to their households, to their community,
to the world at large, and themselves. And so that
that's our biggest focus for creating virtuous young women. Thank
you for that, is that we want them to love themselves.
And we do everything we can lots of mindfulness, lots

(09:48):
of mental health work with our youth so that they
can really learn the true meaning of who they are.

Speaker 8 (09:54):
Crystal Matt Bear here, good morning to you. Good morning
to Denny's point. And he's talking about peer pressure, and
I think of all those stupid things, and I know
I'm a guy, and this is different because we're talking
about girls and females.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
Wait, girls can be stupid too. We're stupid.

Speaker 8 (10:08):
But when news to me, with all the pure pressure
in high school, when I would really act out, it
was because of pure pressure and I would use drugs
and alcohol. Do you address, like, try to nip drugs
and alcohol the disease of addiction in the bud at
the age of twelve thirteen or is that something you

(10:29):
start talking about later in the high school experience?

Speaker 6 (10:33):
Oh no, we early intervention is key when you're talking
to kids who have already gotten to high school, They've
already probably experimented with these things with their friends and peers,
and so we have to catch them early. One of
the videos that circulating social media right now is a
video of young ladies at seven twenty in the morning
and they are passing around a bottle of alcohol in

(10:56):
the school bathroom and everybody is drinking from this bottle
alcohol at seven twenty in the morning. So we're asking
our kids what pains you were, what drives you to
get up, go to school, meet in the bathroom and
decide that you're going to drink alcohol and be drunk
before the school day start. Great point, and so a

(11:16):
lot of it is, you know, the root causes of
this pain, and so we deep, we deep dive into
you know, what's going on at home.

Speaker 5 (11:25):
What are the peer pressures?

Speaker 6 (11:26):
Is it just peer pressure, because why aren't you able
to walk away? There has to be something deeper inside
you that says I need to do this with this
group of girls. And so we do things here like
trauma yoga, and again, like I said, mindfulness, we have
different instructors that work on just how the brain functions
and things like that so that we can really get

(11:46):
the girls to see like there's a better way to
do things. And it seems like this is going to
take your mind off of it. It seems like this
is going to heal you or cure you for the moment,
but it's only a quick moment that it takes your
mind off, and then this spirals into alcoholism or drug addiction,
and we, you know, we really dive into that. Even
vaping right now, it's such a huge, huge deal and

(12:08):
our kids don't think that it's a big deal, that
it's like an epidemic in schools, and so we're talking
to them about the impact of vaping where they can't
see it now because you know, it's so new, but
we're showing them some of the scientific backings of the
impact that's having on their minds and their bodies and
their brains.

Speaker 7 (12:27):
We're we're talking with Crystal Hines, founder, CEO and president
of inter Beauty Program, Inc. And your partnering brother program
New Boy New Breed of Youth, that program you're founding
president Kareem Hines. He was on with us previously and
talked about how male behavior, how young boy's behavior revolves
around them just trying to get girls to like them,

(12:48):
and so it is this cycle. Talk about I guess
your conversations with young girls to be able to break
that cycle and hopefully correct some of that behavioral stuff
in the community.

Speaker 6 (13:00):
Yeah, so we definitely are talking about how they are
leaders and how they lead the way on it. And
it's not just male and female relationships, it's female to female,
male to male relationships as well. So we do talk
about healthy relationships and healthy boundaries. And one of the
very very disheartening things that we heard from our girls
as it pertains to like their relationships with their boyfriends,

(13:24):
is that they feel safer with young men that carry
guns because of what's going on in the community. And
that is heartbreaking. And so we were, you know, we
really had to talk to them about, you know, their
why what is happening in your community or what are
you doing or what are the behaviors of the young
people that you're hanging around that make you a target?
A lot of the violence that we see, it's not

(13:46):
something that is just by chance. A lot of the
violence is targeted, and so are you hanging out with
people who are targets for violence? And it shouldn't even
be that. I hate to even say it like that,
because when you lose a fifteen or sixteen year old person,
that means that we're considering like seven and eight years
old middle age. Seven and eight years old is not

(14:07):
middle age. And so we don't want kids to even
think that this is normal. So we talk to them about,
you know, their associations and just how to again lead
healthier relationships with the people around them so that they
are not targeted for violence.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
Some of those root causes you are talking about, which
is where you try to get to that root cause?
Is there a common thread that runs between those causes
that you know about.

Speaker 6 (14:34):
A lot of it is just a lack of parental involvement,
a lack of parental supervision. Unfortunately, the world that.

Speaker 5 (14:41):
We live in requires that.

Speaker 6 (14:43):
You know, parents are working two and three jobs and
very active out you know, in the workforce, and not
in the home where they're raising their kids. A lot
of these families are single mother, single grandmother, single foster mother, led.
There's not a lot of families that we serve that
have two parents, and there's a huge absence of fathers,

(15:04):
and a lot of our kids, unfortunately their fathers are
in jail, or they're just not involved, or many of
them have already been shot and killed through you know,
the violent tendencies of the communities that the kids live in.
So those are those pretty much have a lot to
do with root causes. They everybody wants to look like
what they see, you know, in the media, So everybody

(15:26):
wants designer everything, and so a lot of times when
these youth are involved, it's because they don't feel like
they're adequate, so they they'll go out and rob somebody
so they can have a designer built or a designer
pair of jeans, or a nice pair of shoes. And
I think that's much much different than when we were
growing up. You know, I know that, and I'm in
my forties and our big push was Jordan's. It didn't

(15:47):
matter what we had on. As long as we had.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
A pair of Jordan's, we were good.

Speaker 6 (15:51):
These kids Jordan's, that's like, oh, you got some regular Jordans.
They want Gucci shoes, they want you know, Balenciaga's and things.
I get that. So they a lot of that that
comes through robbing people, stealing cars and selling guns, which
also leads to a lot of the debts and violence
as well.

Speaker 8 (16:12):
Mar Yeah, thank you to Crystal. We've talked a lot
about the violence, you know, assault, in some of the
other things that could happen in a teen year. I
guess I want to know about non violent bullying. I
had that when I was in high school. I was bullying.
I reciprocated by bullying other people. And what would you

(16:32):
say to somebody, a female or even a male teenager
like me, You know, I've just been buying. When you're
in high school, everything's emotional, everything is worst case scenario.
What do you say to somebody to bring them back
up and to say, hey, this does get better.

Speaker 6 (16:48):
That kind of goes back to us talking about our
curriculum for just building self esteem and confidence. We do
lots of things to put our youth in the forefront
and put them on a stage in a pedestal, and
so some of those include we have a big inner
beauty pageant. That's kind of that's how our program started,
almostly three years ago, was doing an inter beauty pageant,
and we call it Inner Beauty Pageant because we're not

(17:09):
focused so much on the glitz and the glamour that
goes on on stage, although that is a you know,
that's a part of it. It's a pageant, but we
focus on the inside that counts again, those talents that
you have, the things that come to you naturally. What
can you contribute to the society that is just uniquely yours?
And so building that self esteem it kind of makes

(17:31):
it you kind of are you're building a barrier for
those bullies that okay, you could say that, but I'm
not that. And so we I mean, we do fashion shows,
do college tours, we do out of state historical tours,
and so just them knowing that I've got something to
look forward to. We took our kids, we took sixty
five kids to Disney World in July. They had something

(17:53):
to look forward to. They couldn't think about the bullying
because they had a goal and a focus.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
That's so cool.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
I remember Cream telling us, say, we're getting ready to
take some kids out out of state on a trip.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
That's so cool. Oh boys won. We had more times.

Speaker 7 (18:07):
Wonderful work that you do all over. It's with this
last minute. Can you share about how people can get involved,
where people can go for more information.

Speaker 6 (18:15):
So we are a community based service and so we're
open to anyone, honestly. Our website is IBNB, which is
Interbaudy New Boy ibnbmintor dot org, and you can go
to our website. You can register from our website. You
can see us on social media. We're under interviewed program
on Instagram and Facebook. You can google us. Have I

(18:38):
give out my personal phone number, And I know people
think this is crazy, but I do it and it
works every day. Three one seven eight three three five
eight one zero. Anyone can reach me and I can
show them how to register for the program. We're in
two locations, one on sixty seventh in Oakland and Road
inside of a church campus, and the other one is
on It's awful thirty eighth and Post Road inside the
neighborhood and we're in the spot. It was an old

(19:00):
IPS school and we're there. But we service all of
Marion County, so no one is off limits really to
come to the program age of six to eighteen.

Speaker 4 (19:09):
Thank you.

Speaker 7 (19:10):
Thank you for the work you're doing. Thank you for
bringing love back into the communities. Thank you for everything.
Crystal Hines, Founder, CEO and president of inter Beauty program Being.

Speaker 4 (19:18):
Thank you, Crystal, Thank.

Speaker 5 (19:20):
You all so much.

Speaker 6 (19:20):
Thanks for having me.

Speaker 4 (19:21):
The news is next ninety three WIBC.

Speaker 7 (19:25):
On this day in history, August seventeenth, nineteen seventy seven,
residents were flocking to stores to buy as many Elvis
Presley records as they could find, because this music icon
died the day before yesterday, August sixteenth.

Speaker 4 (19:40):
Oh, it was the debt that day. Yep, oh boy
it was. I didn't even think about how many years
ago that was.

Speaker 7 (19:45):
Nineteen seventy seven.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Last concert was where Mark right here, right here, Marcus
Squa Arena.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
I used to have something much and it was one
year old that year, and I remember when they announced it,
and course everybody was trying to figure out how he died.
And we didn't know for a long time.

Speaker 4 (20:02):
No, we didn't know for a long time.

Speaker 7 (20:03):
In Henry County, Indiana, where are you Horny's Music Store?
That morning, fifty people were waiting for the doors to open.
They were waiting in line. Someone bout ninety seven dollars
worth of Presley Records that day.

Speaker 3 (20:17):
That was a lot of seventies seven. That was a
lot of money.

Speaker 7 (20:21):
A little fun history as we go back in history.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
You know, he was only at the time when he died.
I thought, oh, well, he's had a good long life.

Speaker 3 (20:28):
No, no, but he was.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
Very young, right, I mean, was he in his forties
late forties, late forties when he died.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
But he looked like he was in his late sixties, right,
I thought he was road hard and put away.

Speaker 1 (20:39):
We yeah, okay, thank you for that memory, Kyland, little
one appreciated, Terry Stacy. That's Kylin Talley. Dinny Smith is
here also with us. For our YouTubers that are watching us.
It's Ethan Hatcher from Saturday Night on the Circle.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Hi foul, Hey, everybody, let's do it.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
Hey Show and tell with with you was so fun.
I thought i'd something for you to show this. This
is actually a mistake.

Speaker 4 (21:03):
That I already has something.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
This is the water that was given to us on
when we went to the State Fair. This is the
from an iceberg, from an iceberg, that iceberg water, Yeah,
iceberg water.

Speaker 4 (21:14):
And it was taken by the US s Indiana.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Actually it was from the North Pole.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
It was from the North Pole ice.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
Which US s Indiana, not the USS Indiana.

Speaker 4 (21:25):
The new one, the newer one, I should say.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
I didn't know they made it.

Speaker 4 (21:29):
Somebody brought this. Racier brought this for us to look at.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
I thought, I mean for a gift, but it was
really I think it really wasn't a gift.

Speaker 4 (21:37):
I think you sold the water to give it back.

Speaker 3 (21:40):
Sure, he wanted you to have that.

Speaker 4 (21:43):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
It's such a precious gift to me. But anyway, show
and tell if.

Speaker 3 (21:47):
Closed back and say you stole my water, you're going
to give it back.

Speaker 4 (21:49):
I'm going to give it back. He's he's precious. Sorry.

Speaker 7 (21:52):
I love your water, Terry. But I'm intrigued to hear
what Ethan has.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
I'm too, Ethan, what do you have? Okay, so we're
going to talk about Michigan Street and you.

Speaker 4 (22:00):
Oh my god, this is a positive, positive day. This
is the stupidest idea.

Speaker 9 (22:07):
I just haves a delivery truck that had to stop
clean in the middle of the road because they got
that stupid isolated bike lane that's eaten up half of
available parking.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
On New York Street.

Speaker 9 (22:17):
About that, and so you got to drive now into
the oncoming lane of traffics to get around these delivery
vehicles because of the way that they have concocted New
York and Michigan Street. This is a terrible idea. I
hate these snooty anti car activists and these bike and they're.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
Winning that they're winning with Let me tell you out
of going Washington Street either way, whoever is responsible and
to go, you're making everybody's life a nightmare. One of
the one adding this bus lane.

Speaker 9 (22:48):
Now, one of the great things about Indianapolis used to
be how easy it was to navigate.

Speaker 3 (22:53):
For getting around. You can't do that.

Speaker 9 (22:55):
You could get from one side of the city to
the other side of the city in twenty minutes.

Speaker 2 (22:59):
And that is so valuable for a city to have.

Speaker 9 (23:02):
And it's it's not that we have lost it, it's
that it is being engineered into the oblivion.

Speaker 4 (23:09):
Right say, I agree, I agree totally. That was one
of my ways home.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
Was you're always so bashful.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
I just don't know why they decided to do it.
Now you're behind buses.

Speaker 4 (23:19):
Stop. You're in a one laid going one way and
a one lane going the other.

Speaker 2 (23:22):
Well that that that's both roads. That's the design.

Speaker 9 (23:24):
That's what they call traffic calming, because now you've got
to stop every five feet.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
It's very calm.

Speaker 4 (23:30):
I'm so sorry. I brought it up at.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
Once you go to you.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
I'm sorry, Yes, Terry, I brought it up.

Speaker 9 (23:37):
Terry had asked me to bring in some educational related
items and these are to school, Yeah, back to school.

Speaker 2 (23:43):
These are a couple of local antiques.

Speaker 9 (23:45):
That I have. This was a pamphlet that was handed
out at Lily Laboratories to medical students and chemists who
were touring their factory. And this kind of just you know,
gave a little overview of what was going on. There's
lovely pictures in there of just everything, just truly.

Speaker 4 (24:02):
Maybe twenty five pages or so.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
It's as a little longer than that.

Speaker 4 (24:07):
Everything has yellowed a little bit. Why did you want that?

Speaker 9 (24:10):
I love local antiques and this is a relic of
roughly the nineteen forties, Denny. You can take a look
at that, and I'm going to show the audience, okay.

Speaker 7 (24:18):
If you're streaming with us on YouTube ninety three WIBC
Denny's got it held up to the camera showing some
of the pages.

Speaker 9 (24:25):
I mean, and you think about the value of Eli
Lilly as a corporation to Indianapolis, how they have shaped
the growth and development of this as an international destination
for manufacturing. I think they are still today the Indiana's
largest corporation. And they made so many important innovations. Like

(24:45):
one of the things that put them on the map
and really accelerated their growth as a company in the
nineteen twenties was the mass production of insulin. I'm sure
many diabetics are grateful for that. They manufactured sixty percent
of all of the polio vaccines that were being churned
out nineteen fifty five.

Speaker 4 (25:01):
Didn't know that, You did not know that?

Speaker 9 (25:03):
Yeah, So, I mean Eli Lily very important. Another advancement
that they made in medical technology was they were the
original people to invent the gelatin capsule and sugar pills.

Speaker 3 (25:14):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 9 (25:15):
And part of their legacy of sugarcoating pills. This is
my other antique from Eli Lily, and they would give
this taste tester badge.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
And then if you want Tony to the camera there,
mister Denny.

Speaker 4 (25:27):
That's really cool.

Speaker 9 (25:28):
Yeah, this taste tester or badge was given to the
children of employees who tasted the medicine, and then they
got to be a deputy taste tester, you know, like here, kid,
swallow this potentially poisonous coscinogenic medication and then we'll give
you this little little badge at the at the end
of it.

Speaker 3 (25:44):
Instead of money, did they pay these children or did
they just give them a.

Speaker 2 (25:48):
Bill that was the payment That was nineteen fifties.

Speaker 3 (25:51):
So they end up with six fingers and six toes
and yeah, got really cool.

Speaker 4 (25:56):
How old is this do you think?

Speaker 1 (25:57):
Then?

Speaker 9 (25:58):
There's about seventy five years old.

Speaker 6 (26:00):
I love it.

Speaker 9 (26:01):
At the time, at the time that this book was
made in the nineteen forties, Eli Lilly Is a corporation
had already been around for about sixty five years. They
were founded in eighteen seventy six when Colonel Eli Lilly
broke out on his own venture, and then the very
next year he signed his brother to be the salesman,
and then he sold the company to his son Josiah,

(26:22):
who really took charge of this in the nineteen thirties.
Like of all the corporations that you think were doing
poorly in the Great Depression, Eli Lily was doing just fine.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
They used to have a bronze plaque on South Meridian,
just north of the Ocean Air restaurant. It's a little
alcove and it says this is the former side of
Eli Levy on South Meridian.

Speaker 4 (26:40):
It be my question, where was the original bill.

Speaker 3 (26:42):
South Meridian right there? Okay, just north of Oceanarian.

Speaker 9 (26:47):
Yes, I do, just a small little brick building and
right outside of it, said Eli Lilly chemist Ethan.

Speaker 7 (26:53):
Do you think that pamphlet will get any value through
the years as it becomes even more of an antique,
it'll pick up.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Some modest value.

Speaker 9 (27:01):
I mean, again name recognition with Eli Lilly as as
a brand and as an.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
Important pharmaceutical corporation.

Speaker 9 (27:08):
But antiques like this, I just like local antiques, you know,
and and little little pieces of local history.

Speaker 7 (27:14):
It's our history. Yeah, exactly, there was.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
We have some things that made by the Indiana Brewery
when there was I mean, these are very old antiques
that are old that have been turned into lights, you know,
Lampleton things and I just love local.

Speaker 4 (27:27):
It is our history.

Speaker 1 (27:28):
The Eli Lilling For those of you that can't watch us,
the Eli Lilly taster badge is a blue looks like
a sheriff's badge, and it's just it's so And I
had no idea that there was.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
Taking that to first grade show, our sixth grade show.

Speaker 4 (27:46):
Cool all right, Ethan, really good stuff. Ethan.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
You hear him on Saturday nights on the Circle. He
will you stick around?

Speaker 4 (27:53):
We've got done. We're gonna ta come out. We're gonna
taste tests so much younger things.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
Okay, we have a listener wondering why you're not wearing
your hat.

Speaker 4 (27:59):
Okay, oh they know you. Twelve forty four. There you go,
twelve forty four. We'll be back ninety three WIBC. Good afternoon, everybody.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
Welcome back to the first day on ninety three WIBC.
Terry Stacy, Ethan Hatcher's hanging around with us and Denny
Smith and Kylon Tally.

Speaker 7 (28:17):
There are so many fun things happening in Indy India.
Day today on the Circle started at ten thirty. It's
running until two thirty if you want to pop by,
which brings me to say that some of the performances
if you came down and watched, will be performed again
with the Indie Fringe Fest, which I am actually a
part of a Bollywood dream. It's Indy Bollywood Wednesday at eight,

(28:37):
Saturday and Sunday at six thirty at the District Theater
over on massaf Come by and say hi, it's gonna
be a fun time time.

Speaker 4 (28:44):
Are you a dancer or a singer? What are you?

Speaker 7 (28:46):
I'm the narrator. I lead you through the history of
Bollywood dance and the evolution of it through the years.
There's lots of fun things to do with the Indie
Fringe Fest. There's free stuff as well, Like today from
now until six at the beer Garden at the at
there will be free performances, some activities, merch, street performers
all across mass app a fun time and also you

(29:07):
know what a fun time I had yesterday, I'm going
to talk to you about it during that's.

Speaker 4 (29:13):
Your cue, Terry find your boo.

Speaker 7 (29:15):
Oh, she has food in her mouth. She's starting early, Okay.
Yesterday was the grand opening of a new farm stand
on the West side of India. It's called Sable Suites
farm Stand and we're going to talk to the owner
of it, Ashley Renee Hi.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
Ashley, see, hello.

Speaker 7 (29:35):
We are so excited to talk to you about this
farm stand of yours because you've been working so hard
up to this point. Tell us about this farm stand
that's opened up. Describe it for our listeners.

Speaker 5 (29:46):
So it is just a farm stand. Me and my
fiance had this amazing idea about a week ago to
build a stand in front of his business on a
piece of concrete slab that has its own history. And
I am a baker. I make macarons and cookies and
sour dough breads and fresh herbs and tomatoes for my garden,

(30:08):
so it's okay with a lot to see. I love
it for our community.

Speaker 4 (30:12):
Yeah, I love that.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
You decided to do that. Did you say a week ago?

Speaker 5 (30:16):
Yes, yes, it was all my fiance's idea, and yeah,
it was about a week ago yesterday actually, and he
built it in two days.

Speaker 9 (30:27):
Oh my god.

Speaker 4 (30:27):
Right, I love that you have an idea. Boom you
go for it.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
What a handy guard?

Speaker 4 (30:31):
Yeah right, all right, yes, absolutely right Tyland.

Speaker 7 (30:35):
You had mentioned how you're bringing this to the community
and you're kind of addressing that area's food desert talk
about that and what you're doing for the community right there.

Speaker 5 (30:44):
So yeah, we are definitely in the middle of the desert.
I think the maybe closest grocery store to our community
is about ten fifteen minutes away, So dress bring in
something like those to our neighbors that's within walking this
if they can come down and get some fresh bread
and some fresh tomatoes and hallepenos and things like that

(31:07):
really means a lot.

Speaker 4 (31:08):
So yeah, how's it going so far?

Speaker 5 (31:11):
It is going really well. Yesterday was the opening. We
had a lot of our neighbors and their friends. They
just got the word out to co workers, so we
had a lot of people stop by. I'm actually doing
it again today and it's going really well. So yeah,
we're having fun. We're enjoining ourselves.

Speaker 7 (31:28):
How long are you open today?

Speaker 2 (31:30):
Just today?

Speaker 5 (31:31):
I will be out there till about two.

Speaker 3 (31:33):
Okay, do you expect to pick up any of the
commercial folks Lily, Well, the Lily Technology Center South is
just to the east of you there. Do you think
they'll be coming over?

Speaker 2 (31:44):
I hope so, I hope.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
So yeah, they.

Speaker 4 (31:46):
Should for this delicious food.

Speaker 3 (31:48):
Oh my gosh, yeah.

Speaker 5 (31:49):
Thank you, thank you. I hope that skips out to
Lily and more people just the more the merriers. So yeah,
that's the goal.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
This was really created by God, I mean also created
with the go fund me page, right, I mean people
supported you and helped you get this up and running.
You want to talk about that for a minute.

Speaker 5 (32:06):
Yeah, So we created a goal fund me, which I
was a little hesitant about my Stockholm syndrome. Came and
support a little bit, but we got a lot of
support from family, from friends who again spread the word
about my business, who believed in me, and we ended
up raising close to seven hundred dollars so in a

(32:27):
matter of a day. Honestly, so you are a long
we got it. Yeah, yeah, thank Yeah, I am. I'm
incredibly blessed.

Speaker 4 (32:35):
People have faith in you.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
If they didn't think you maybe could pull this off,
they probably would not have maybe maybe not have given
like they did. So they would have a lot of
faith in you. And you have big dreams about this.
You you want to go further and make this into
a full fledged farmer's market.

Speaker 5 (32:50):
Absolutely, yes, yes. The goal eventually is to bring in
more people in the area or just wherever wo grow
their own things or they have based goods and just
make a big, a big thing.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
The way the way the stand looks, it looks like
you're going to be standing a lot. They called him
a Stanfrey. Have you got a stool in there for you, sweetie?
Oh my golly, you know you do good, because I'm
thinking that you've got all the facilities of a kitchen
right below you there, But I'm thinking that lady needs
to sit down.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
Yeah, did it worries about us all? Oh my god,
he worries about us off. So he takes that foot
with He loves him, he loves he loves people.

Speaker 7 (33:32):
Your food is absolutely delicious. We have a little sample
platter here that I got yesterday at the grand opening.
We have the brown but brown butter chocolate chip cookie,
the Biscos dunk aouse, We've got some of your macarons.
Talk to us about Okay, the bisk Off Dunkaroo lean
that for us.

Speaker 5 (33:51):
So there's actually a lot of people who don't. Really
they're not familiar with the donku, which is surprising. I
am a nineties cage Sons very popular when I was
a child, and I just put my own creative spent
on it. So they're honestly just like little many cookies
and I make a butter cream to go with it,
and you just sip it in that and go.

Speaker 3 (34:14):
Do you wegth six? Actually? Do you must weth six pounds?

Speaker 4 (34:21):
Ask people how much they weigh?

Speaker 1 (34:22):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (34:22):
Okay, well totally this is sweet.

Speaker 2 (34:25):
So sorry.

Speaker 3 (34:28):
I know I know she is because I'm looking at
her picture here on the first day.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
Listen, thank you, thank you for the treats, and I
love what you're doing Kylin.

Speaker 4 (34:36):
Anything else before we let her go?

Speaker 7 (34:38):
I just want people to stay up to date with
you and all of the future goals that you are
going to be accomplishing. Where's the best place for people
to go.

Speaker 5 (34:45):
So you can actually follow me on all social media?
It's the same across the board, Sable Sweep, that's s
A B.

Speaker 3 (34:52):
L E.

Speaker 5 (34:53):
Sweeps. I will be at benefit Farmer's Market up until
the end of September on Saturdays, and then on my
off shoots Saturdays, I'll be at the Farmer's fan and
we's Daisy, so you can catch me there Saturdays and Sundays.

Speaker 3 (35:06):
Well, good luck to you. This is this is very
needed where you are and you're a class a young lady.
This is really cool.

Speaker 5 (35:14):
I really appreciate it.

Speaker 7 (35:16):
Go get some good treats. Eighteen oh one Howard Street, West, Indy.
Thank you Ashley Ashley Renee, owner of Sables.

Speaker 6 (35:28):
Day.

Speaker 4 (35:28):
She's awesome. If I win the Mega Millions jackpot, I'm
going to give her up. Oh my gosh, she would
deserve it. Get her Farmer's Market up and running.

Speaker 7 (35:36):
Other quick food news Devour Indy starts this week.

Speaker 4 (35:40):
How is it already?

Speaker 2 (35:41):
Times for it?

Speaker 7 (35:42):
I have no idea, but it starts tomorrow and runs
through next Sunday. So get your goodies while you can.
Lots of fun things happening around Indy and again last
day of the State Fair for you to go out
and try the taste of the fair winner the little cinnamon.

Speaker 4 (35:58):
Butter pretzel bite.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
Second place was the pizza, the delicious pickled pizza.

Speaker 4 (36:03):
Did you know Ethan's No.

Speaker 2 (36:05):
No, not down for a pickled pizza or a pickle beer.

Speaker 4 (36:09):
No, it wasn't bad. I really wasn't bad. Pickle fried Oreo.
Pickle fried Oreo was really good.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
This is your last chance to get the barbecue Macho's
that was placed number three.

Speaker 4 (36:19):
Those were awfully good. That's the macaroni and.

Speaker 1 (36:21):
Cheese and the pulled pork that she sauce of barbecue
sauce tortilla chips really really good.

Speaker 3 (36:27):
And trust me, Terry is eating every one of those, every.

Speaker 4 (36:32):
Every one of them. And I'm a sample bier.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
Uh. And listen, what else did I want to make
sure that you all knew? I guess that was really
about it to go fever today.

Speaker 4 (36:45):
Yeah, and Ethan, thanks.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
For letting me get that off my chest about New
York Strea and Michigan Street.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
My husband heard you last night. He said, Hey, guess
what you are?

Speaker 1 (36:57):
You are righting you and you and Ethan are riding
this same bus because we both are just very vocal.

Speaker 4 (37:03):
But not the bus. You're you're mad about the bus
I'm mad about. All Right, we gotta go.

Speaker 6 (37:09):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (37:10):
Today's top stories are coming up next. Thanks for joining
us today on the first day.

Speaker 1 (37:14):
See ya,
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