Cool Hand Dross
TAKE 2 sorry about the double upload. first take was just not good :( Brooklyn in the early 2000s was still dangerous, electric, unfiltered, and alive. In this true tale from The Mason Jar, Col Hand Dross recounts one of the wildest painting jobs of his life: a luxury Brooklyn penthouse owned by a charming Colombian man named Pablo. He was surrounded by silent bodyguards, mysterious visitors, jazz records, Colombian breakfasts, and one forbidden room nobody talked about. What begins as a simple blue-collar painting contract slowly transforms into something far stranger. Over long days of labor, Colombian coffee, James Brown, and deep conversations about John Coltrane and A Love Supreme, CHD and his crew begin piecing together who Pablo really might be. Then, on the final day of the job, a door swings open for just a moment and everything changes. This episode explores: * Early 2000s Brooklyn before full gentrification * Blue-collar life and painting culture in NYC * Colombian culture, immigration, and survival * Jazz, spirituality, and working class artistry * Fear, intuition, masculinity, and risk * The strange intimacy of working inside other people’s lives * And the moment Cool Hand Dross realized he may have painted for a real-life narco If you enjoy long form storytelling, NYC tales, working-class memoirs, jazz culture, immigrant stories, and raw reflective podcasting, this episode is for you. Please follow, rate, and share the show. The digital love is much appreciated.
33 episodes
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