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Vera House Podcast

A creative dispatch with Richmond entrepreneurs, founders, and modern creatives shaping the future — one story, one project, one idea at a time. Recorded in Richmond, Virginia, Vera House is where conversation meets craft. From local legends to global movements, this is for makers, artists, creators, and doers.

  1. 52

    Richmond Doug, Dirt Tracks & Degenerates (Nickelodeon lore, NASCAR, Forest Hill Park, etc) — Unscripted #053

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a range of Richmond topics including Richmond Raceway, NASCAR history, Marshall Reservoir, Doug, Hell Block, Forest Hill Park, local infrastructure, and some of the strangest stories hidden throughout the city.We start with a behind-the-scenes look at Richmond Raceway, racing culture, and Richmond’s long history with motorsports before shifting into conversations around bad drivers, local chaos, and some of the wildest things people have managed to do with vehicles around the city.Later in the episode, we dive into the story of Marshall Reservoir and the surprising history connected to one small piece of Richmond land, including murder, smallpox victims, Klan rallies, and abandoned development plans. We also revisit Hell Block, Strange Matter, The Village, old VCU culture, and a version of Richmond that many longtime locals still remember.The second half of the episode focuses on Richmond nostalgia, including the connection between Richmond and the Nickelodeon cartoon Doug, before wrapping up with discussions around city infrastructure, sidewalk clearing laws, and a bizarre incident in Forest Hill Park.Topics include Richmond Raceway, NASCAR, Marshall Reservoir, Hell Block, Doug, Nickelodeon, VCU history, Forest Hill Park, Richmond infrastructure, Oregon Hill, Strange Matter, local racing culture, and Richmond history.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  2. 51

    The Art of Reinvention: Myke Metzger on Failure, Success & Starting Over #052

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereFollow Myke:https://instagram.com/mykemetzgerLearn more:https://mykemetzger.comGet the "Credibility Method":https://amzn.to/43xkYMVOver the last year, many of you have gotten to know Myke Metzger through Vera House — the conversations, the stories, the opinions, the occasional rant, and the perspective he brings to the table each week.But this episode is different.Today, we sit down to tell Myke’s story.From growing up between New York, Virginia and Florida, dealing with a rare skin condition, getting expelled from school, spending time in jail, and hitting rock bottom, to building multiple businesses, overcoming over $250K in tax debt, writing for Forbes, publishing a book, speaking on stages, growing an audience of hundreds of thousands, and ultimately launching Vera House — this is a conversation about reinvention.We talk about:Growing up as an outsiderMusic, art, and early creativityEntrepreneurship before he knew what it wasGetting fired, getting arrested, and hitting rock bottomThe books that changed everythingBuilding a nationally recognized marketing agencyWriting for Forbes and publishing a bookSuccess, ego, and the hidden cost of ambitionProject Resurgence and rebuilding after failurePersonal branding, credibility, and self-educationWhy Vera House existsWhat success means nowThis is a conversation about resilience, responsibility, second chances, and the reality that your life can change dramatically when you decide to change yourself.This is The Art of Reinvention.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  3. 50

    The Art of Becoming: Perri Young on Music, Media & Creative Identity #051

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereFollow Perri:instagram.com/planetperriinstagram.com/massfxmusicVera Creative Club Merch:https://veraclub.myshopify.comHire Perri:https://www.perriyoung.comLearn more about MassFX: https://massfxmusic.comOver the last year, many of you have gotten to know Perri through the Vera House Podcast — the conversations, the humor, the production, the music, the creative direction, and the personality behind of and in front of the camera.But this episode is different. Today, we sit down to properly ask about the story of Perri Young.From growing up in Richmond and navigating ADHD, to working jobs he hated, discovering nightlife and DJ culture, developing his creative lens, traveling through Japan, diving deep into media and technology, and ultimately helping build Vera House from the ground up — this is a conversation about creativity, curiosity, identity, and evolution.We talk about:Richmond nightlife and music cultureMassFX and DJ lifeADHD and Dyslexia growing upBartending and searching for directionFashion, aesthetics, and building tasteJapan and its creative influenceEntrepreneurship and freelance video workPodcasting, personal branding, and Vera HouseWhat it actually means to build a creative lifeQuick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  4. 49

    Richmond River Rats, Run Clubs & Red Flags (James River, Carytown Run Club, Eric Lannon, etc) — Unscripted #050

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereJoin Carytown Run Club every Saturday at 9AM  Instagram: @carytownrunclubA free community run for all experience levels focused on movement, connection, and meeting good people in Richmond.Vera Creative Club Merch:https://veraclub.myshopify.com---In this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a range of Richmond topics including free GRTC bus rides, Dock Street Park, public spaces, social isolation, Carytown Run Club, James River summer culture, Eric Lannon, and some of the stranger stories coming out of Virginia lately.We start with Richmond extending free GRTC rides and how public transportation, parks, trails, and gathering spaces all play a role in helping people feel more connected to the city and to each other. We also discuss Dock Street Park, Rockets Landing, Oregon Hill, neighborhood culture, and why Richmond still feels like a small town despite how much it continues to grow.Later in the episode, we get into modern social behavior, phones, headphones, and the strange reality that people barely acknowledge each other anymore in public spaces. We also talk about Carytown Run Club, summer in Richmond, boating culture, the Lily Pad, and ways people are trying to rebuild real-world community and connection.The second half of the episode shifts into Richmond internet lore and Virginia chaos, including the ongoing legend of Eric Lannon, scams, social manipulation, and one of the wildest stories currently coming out of Chesapeake.Topics include Richmond public transportation, GRTC, Dock Street Park, Carytown Run Club, Oregon Hill, James River culture, social isolation, Eric Lannon, Richmond lore, boating, Lily Pad, public spaces, and Richmond summer culture.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  5. 48

    Richmond Bears, Belle Isle & Burnout (Oregon Hill, sinkholes, Southside Speedway, etc) — Unscripted #049

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereJoin us at Carytown Run Club every Saturday at 9AM, info here: Instagram: ⁠https://instagram.com/carytownrunclub⁠A free community run for all experience levels focused on movement, connection, and getting outside with good people in Richmond.Vera Creative Club Merch: ⁠https://veraclub.myshopify.com⁠ In this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a range of Richmond topics including the black bear spotted near Oregon Hill, Belle Isle’s new Nature Zone, Richmond parks and public spaces, Southside Speedway, local motorsports culture, sinkholes, social media, and how technology is changing the way people connect. We start with the recent Richmond bear sighting and how quickly local chaos spreads across the city, before moving into a larger conversation around Belle Isle, outdoor culture, public gathering spaces, and Richmond’s relationship with nature and community. We also discuss Oregon Hill, changing neighborhoods, and the balance between preserving Richmond’s character while the city continues to grow. Later in the episode, we get into Instagram’s new “Blend” feature, algorithm-driven social behavior, content burnout, and the shift away from overly polished internet culture. We also talk about Apple’s ecosystem, AI workflows, MacBooks, and the increasing overlap between technology and everyday life. The second half of the episode focuses on Richmond and Virginia motorsports culture, including Destiny Spurlock, NASCAR, Southside Speedway reopening, and the history of racing culture around Richmond. We also touch on local infrastructure issues including the recent Henrico sinkhole and water main break. Topics include Richmond black bear sightings, Belle Isle, Oregon Hill, Carytown Run Club, Southside Speedway, NASCAR, Destiny Spurlock, Richmond parks, Instagram Blend, social media algorithms, Apple technology, Henrico sinkholes, and Richmond community culture.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  6. 47

    Richmond Serial Killers, Surveillance & Shopping (cameras, Bagel the Beagle, Briley Brothers, etc) — Unscripted #048

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereVera Creative Club Merch:https://veraclub.myshopify.comIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a wide range of Richmond topics including the Briley Brothers, surveillance cameras, local shopping culture, Richmond history, public infrastructure, and some of the city’s strangest stories and traditions.We start with Richmond being named one of the best cities in America for shopping local and talk about the city’s strong independent business culture, creative scene, markets, and community identity. We also discuss Rest Fest, Dogwood Dell, the Carillon, and the ongoing frustration around unfinished or poorly executed city projects.Later in the episode, we get into Richmond surveillance systems, red light cameras, automated traffic enforcement, privacy concerns, and broader conversations around data collection and “smart city” infrastructure. We also discuss Bagel the Beagle, Richmond internet nostalgia, and how certain local stories become part of the city’s identity.The second half of the episode shifts into Richmond true crime history, including a deep conversation around the Briley Brothers, violence, criminal psychology, death row escapes, and some of the darker stories connected to Richmond and Virginia history.Topics include Richmond shopping culture, local businesses, surveillance cameras, red light tickets, Dogwood Dell, the Carillon, Bagel the Beagle, the Briley Brothers, Richmond true crime, public infrastructure, privacy concerns, and Richmond history.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  7. 46

    Richmond Laws, Loopholes & Lies (city transparency, weird Virginia laws, Flock cameras, etc) — Unscripted #047

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereVera Creative Club Merch:https://veraclub.myshopify.com/Shop Blackbyrd Goods:https://blackbyrdgoods.comIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a range of Richmond topics including strange Virginia laws, government transparency, surveillance concerns, Carytown, and the growing tension between Richmond’s charm and its dysfunction.We start with some of the weirdest and most outdated laws still associated with Virginia, including long-running myths and bizarre legal history, before moving into conversations around jaywalking, aggressive crosswalk culture, and everyday behavior around the city.A major portion of the episode focuses on Richmond government transparency, including the city being named a “City of Darkness,” FOIA concerns, public records access, and broader conversations around accountability and trust in local institutions. We also discuss surveillance systems like Flock cameras, data retention, leaked communications, and the growing role of technology and AI in politics and public messaging.Later in the episode, we talk about Carytown, modernization, Richmond restaurant and nightlife laws, and what parts of the city could look like with better planning and vision moving forward.Topics include weird Virginia laws, Richmond government transparency, FOIA requests, City of Darkness, Flock cameras, surveillance concerns, Mayor Danny Avula, ChatGPT in politics, Carytown, Richmond nightlife laws, jaywalking culture, and Richmond city development.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  8. 45

    Richmond “City of Darkness”, Chaos & Coverups (FOIA concerns, traffic, growth, etc) — Unscripted #046

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereVera Creative Club Merch:https://veraclub.myshopify.com/In this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a range of Richmond topics including city growth, driving culture, government transparency, and local events. We start with how quickly Richmond is growing and how that’s showing up in everyday life, especially on the roads with more traffic, distracted driving, and increasingly unpredictable behavior.The conversation expands into broader observations about awareness, personal responsibility, and how small decisions from others can have real consequences. We talk about how modern distractions, especially phones, are impacting attention and behavior in public spaces.We also discuss Richmond being labeled the “City of Darkness” in relation to FOIA concerns, and what that means for government transparency, access to information, and overall trust in local systems. From there, we get into a wider conversation around power, influence, and how access and relationships often matter more than money.Throughout the episode, we also touch on Vera House’s involvement in the Richmond community, including events like the Monument Avenue 10K, Pyre Sauna, and Rest Fest, along with ideas for future community-driven experiences.Topics include Richmond growth, traffic and driving culture, distracted driving, public awareness, FOIA and government transparency, City of Darkness, power and influence, Richmond events, Monument Avenue 10K, Pyre Sauna, Rest Fest, and Richmond community culture.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  9. 44

    Richmond is Slowing Down: Inside Pyre’s Sauna & Cold Plunge Community #045

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereLearn more and book a session:https://pyresauna.comUse code VERAHOUSE for 15% offFollow Pyre on Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/pyre_saunaIn this episode, we sit down with Julien Robert and Wes McLaughlin, founders of Pyre Sauna — a new social wellness concept in Richmond, Virginia built around wood-fired sauna, cold plunge, and intentional community.Pyre is not a traditional gym or spa. It’s a tech-free space designed to help people slow down, disconnect, and reconnect — with themselves and with others.We talk about the rapid growth of Richmond, how modern life has made people more disconnected than ever, and why spaces like Pyre are starting to emerge as a response.Julien and Wes share the origin story behind Pyre, from a sauna experience in Charlottesville to traveling internationally and studying bathhouse culture across Europe. They explain how ancient sauna traditions are being adapted into a modern, community-driven experience here in Richmond.We also get into the real benefits of sauna and cold plunge — not just physical recovery, but mental clarity, emotional regulation, and what they call “capacity building.”This episode covers:Why Richmond is craving more intentional third spacesThe difference between social connection and being around peopleHow sauna and cold plunge impact dopamine, stress, and overall wellbeingWhy productivity culture is working against usThe role of breathwork and guided sessionsThe history of sauna and why this is not a trendHow Pyre is building a social wellness club in RichmondPyre is officially open including sauna sessions, cold plunges, guided classes, and social events.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  10. 43

    Richmond’s Thrift Culture, Sustainable Fashion & Community Impact: The Goodwill Challenge #044

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereFor Earth Day we want to share a reminder that a lot of what we own still has value — and small decisions like donating or shopping secondhand can have a real impact on our local Richmond community.Learn more about Goodwill of Central and Coastal Virginia:https://goodwillvirginia.orgVisit your local Goodwill location:https://goodwillvirginia.org/location-finder/We took on a challenge to reset our wardrobes using only Goodwill right here in Richmond — but what started as a simple experiment quickly turned into a deeper look at sustainability, secondhand fashion, and the real impact of donating and thrifting in our local community.After clearing out our closets and donating everything we no longer wear, we visited one of Goodwill’s largest locations in Central Virginia to see what actually happens behind the scenes. From intake and sorting to how items make it back onto the floor, we got a full look at the lifecycle of donated goods.We also sat down with Laura Faison, Chief Communications Officer for Goodwill of Central and Coastal Virginia, to talk about the bigger picture — including workforce development, job training programs, and how every donation and purchase directly supports individuals facing barriers to employment here in Richmond.Then we put it to the test.We went into the store with a plan to build complete outfits from scratch using only what we could find — challenging ourselves to be intentional, resourceful, and step outside of our usual habits.This episode covers:Thrifting in Richmond and the reality of secondhand shoppingThe environmental impact of clothing waste and overconsumptionHow Goodwill supports workforce development in Central VirginiaWhat actually happens after you donate your clothesWhether it’s possible to rebuild a wardrobe using only thrifted piecesQuick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  11. 42

    Richmond’s Wellness Movement, Rest Culture & Community Spaces: Inside RVA's Rest Fest #43

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereRSVP for Richmond's Rest Fest:https://www.rvarestfest.comIn today's episode we’re joined by Rick Plautz and Lindsay Hess, the team behind Rest Fest—a Richmond-based wellness festival bringing together yoga, breathwork, sound healing, and recovery-focused experiences into one open, community-driven environment.We talk through what Rest Fest actually is, why it operates on a pay-what-you-can model, the intention behind creating a sober space, and why more people are starting to look for experiences that offer something deeper than the typical social scene.This isn’t just about wellness.It’s about where the culture is heading—and what Richmond might be starting to need more of.In this episode:What Rest Fest is and how the event is structuredThe rise of wellness culture in RichmondWhy the festival is fully soberPay-what-you-can and making wellness more accessibleThe types of practitioners and experiences involvedWhy people struggle to slow down and restCreating social spaces that aren’t centered around alcoholThe role of community in building events like thisWhat’s next for Rest FestQuick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  12. 41

    Richmond Is Built to Move: How Sports Backers Shaped RVA's Active Lifestyle #042

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereThe Ukrop’s Monument Avenue 10k presented by Kroger is RVA’s favorite spring tradition! Since 2000, people from around the Richmond region and beyond have gathered to share in the journey of crossing the 10k finish line, sign up now:https://www.sportsbackers.org/event/ukrops-monument-avenue-10kLearn more about Sports Backers: https://www.sportsbackers.orgFollow on Social:https://www.instagram.com/sportsbackersRichmond is a city where being active isn’t something you have to think about — it’s just part of how we live.Between the river, the trails, the parks, and the constant flow of events happening across RVA, movement feels built into the culture here. But a lot of that didn’t happen by accident.In this episode, we sit down with the brand behind some of Richmond’s biggest and most recognizable events — Sports Backers.We chat with Will Dixon, Executive Director who’s been with the organization for nearly 20 years and now leads the vision of the organization into 2026 and beyond…And Nan Callahan, who leads PR and communications and helps bring all of these killer events and initiatives to life.If you’ve ever experienced the Richmond Marathon, River City Half, Dominion Riverrock, or the Monument Avenue 10K, you’ve already seen their impact. But what most people don’t realize is how much goes on behind the scenes — and how deeply their work has shaped the way this city moves, connects, and shows up for one another.We talk about why Richmond has become such an active city, how these events come together, and why they matter far beyond race day.In this episode, we cover:Why Richmond is such a uniquely active cityThe hidden mental and social benefits of movementWhat Sports Backers actually does beyond eventsHow major events like the Monument Avenue 10K come togetherThe rise of run clubs and community-driven fitness in RichmondMaking movement accessible for all experience levelsYouth programs, Fitness Warriors, and local impactThe role of volunteers in powering these eventsThe Fall Line Trail and the future of active living in RVAWhy you should run/walk the Monument 10K with your communityQuick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  13. 40

    Richmond Springtime, Nightlife & Chaos (allergies, clubs, mall fights, housing etc) — Unscripted #041

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereThis episode of Vera House is brought to you by SoBar Speakeasy:814 W Broad StRichmond, VA 23220(inside Alchemy Coffee)https://www.instagram.com/sober.speakeasyIf you’ve ever wanted somewhere to go at night in Richmond that doesn’t just completely revolve around alcohol and getting drunk, this is the place. More than ever, we need spaces like this — where you can slow down, reconnect with people, and reset.SoBar is an alcohol-free lounge located at 814 West Broad Street, right near VCU. During the day it’s known as Alchemy Coffee, and on Friday and Saturday nights it transforms into a low-lit, speakeasy-style 3rd space with frequent live music, conversation, and a curated menu of delicious hand crafted mocktails and simple snacks. Everything on the menu contains less than 5% alcohol.---In this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a range of Richmond topics including seasonal changes, nightlife, local culture, and recent events across the city. We start with Richmond’s springtime shift, including intense pollen, allergies, and how the change in seasons affects daily life.The conversation moves into Richmond nightlife, including the decline of clubs, changing social habits, and the loss of third spaces that once brought people together. We talk about how rising costs, regulations, and shifting culture have impacted going out, and why social connection feels different today.We also explore the role of alcohol in social settings, the rise of alternative spaces like sober lounges, and how modern social behavior has changed with increased screen time and digital interaction.Later in the episode, we discuss recent incidents like the Short Pump Mall takeover and other public altercations, and what they say about generational behavior, social media influence, and public spaces. We also touch on housing costs, renting vs owning, and how affordability continues to shape life in Richmond.Topics include Richmond spring weather, pollen and allergies, Richmond nightlife, third spaces, social connection, alcohol culture, sober lounges, Short Pump Mall incident, public behavior, housing costs, renting vs owning, and Richmond culture.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  14. 39

    Richmond Takeovers, Taxes & Tornados (Broad St chaos, missing money, extreme weather, etc) — Unscripted #040

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereSign up for the Monument Ave 10K and use code "VERAHOUSE" for $5 OFF:https://runsignup.com/Race/Register/RaceGroup-2046938?raceId=53948Anyone who joins our 10K team will get a limited-edition Vera House collaboration tank top, and an invite to hang out the morning of the race for coffee and bagels before we hit Monument Ave together.We will be guiding 2 groups — a comfortable run pace, and a walking group — so whether you want to push yourself a little or just come out, get active, and meet some new people, you’re officially invited and all are welcome and encouraged.In this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a range of Richmond topics including extreme weather, city infrastructure, local culture, and recent events across the city. We start with Richmond’s unpredictable weather, from warm temperatures to snow and ice within days, and how the city continues to struggle with winter road conditions and storm response.We also talk about growing awareness around local government and city spending, including questions about how tax dollars are being used and recent concerns around missing funds.A major portion of the episode focuses on the Broad Street street takeovers, including cars doing donuts, large crowds gathering at intersections, and how this behavior has become more visible across Richmond. We discuss the role of social media, the difference between past car culture and what’s happening now, and the risks for both participants and the public.We also cover increased enforcement, surveillance, and legal consequences tied to these events, along with Richmond nightlife, local DJ events, and the Monument Avenue 10K through Sports Backers.Topics include Richmond weather, winter storms, city infrastructure, government spending, Broad Street takeovers, Richmond car culture, surveillance, law enforcement response, nightlife, and community events.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  15. 38

    Richmond Legends, Labor & Local Government (Edna Frazier, tradespeople, Avula Reddit AMA, potholes) — Unscripted #039

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereSign up for the Monument Ave 10K and use code "VERAHOUSE" for $5 OFF:https://runsignup.com/Race/Register/RaceGroup-2046938?raceId=53948Anyone who joins our 10K team will get a limited-edition Vera House collaboration tank top, and an invite to hang out the morning of the race for coffee and bagels before we hit Monument Ave together.Anyone who joins our 10K team will get a limited-edition Vera House collaboration tank top, and an invite to hang out the morning of the race for coffee and bagels before we hit Monument Ave together.We will be guiding 2 groups — a comfortable run pace, and a walking group — so whether you want to push yourself a little or just come out, get active, and meet some new people, you’re officially invited and all are welcome and encouraged.In this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we talk through a range of Richmond topics including local events, city culture, housing, and government. We start with Richmond’s recent 2026 weather swings after the ice storm and water crisis earlier in the year, and the sudden shift into warmer spring temperatures.We discuss Richmond’s outdoor culture including running, cycling, and access to nearby nature destinations like Great Falls Park.The conversation also covers Richmond folklore through the story of Edna Frazier, a prank-call legend that circulated among local students before the internet. From there, we discuss historic Richmond housing prices using a 1925 housing advertisement from the Carillon neighborhood, and how housing costs and affordability have changed over time.Later in the episode we talk about the shortage of skilled trades, homeowner and contractor relationships, and the growth of consumer financing and payment plans. We close with a discussion about Richmond Mayor Danny Avula’s Reddit AMA, including topics like transit-oriented development, GRTC expansion, Main Street Station train service, and ongoing concerns about potholes and city infrastructure.Topics include Richmond weather, Monument Avenue 10K, Sports Backers, Great Falls hiking, Richmond folklore, Edna Frazier, historic Richmond housing prices, skilled trades shortages, contractor trust, consumer financing, Danny Avula Reddit AMA, Richmond transit planning, GRTC expansion, Main Street Station, and Richmond infrastructure.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  16. 37

    Richmond Power Bills, Surveillance, and Corruption (energy spikes, data centers, Flock cams, etc) — Unscripted #038

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereThis episode is sponsored by Chester Cannabis Co. Use code "VERA" for 15% off your purchase:https://chestercanna.coChester Cannabis Co. started with two friends and a dream. Today, their farm-grown hemp is the foundation of premium THC edibles crafted with care, delivering quality and consistency in every bite, from seed to success right here in Richmond, VA.In this episode we discuss rising power bills across Richmond and Virginia and why many residents are seeing large increases in their monthly electricity costs. We talk about Dominion Energy pricing, winter energy usage, and how the rapid growth of data centers across Virginia may be affecting regional electricity demand and infrastructure.We also discuss the unconstitutional expansion of Flock mass surveillance cameras and other technologies that are being installed in cities and neighborhoods across the United States, including Richmond. We talk about how these camera systems work, how law enforcement abuses them, and the ongoing debate around privacy, public safety, and transparency.The conversation also includes a discussion about government systems, unlawful taxes, and frustrations people often experience when navigating bureaucratic processes and over-regulation.Topics in this episode include Richmond power bills, Dominion Energy, Virginia data centers, electricity demand, Flock surveillance cameras, license plate readers, privacy and surveillance technology, government bureaucracy, cannabis legalization, THC edibles, and energy infrastructure in Virginia.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  17. 36

    Richmond Dirtwoman, Parks & Power Bills (RVA legend, energy costs, JRPS projects, etc) — Unscripted #037

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereFollow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperriIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we discuss a wide range of Richmond topics, beginning with seasonal shifts, Lunar New Year traditions, and Daylight Saving Time. We talk about how routine, cleaning, and home maintenance affect daily life, and how time changes and seasonal transitions impact energy levels and productivity.The conversation then moves into rising electricity costs in Virginia, questions around data centers and power usage, and how increasing infrastructure demands may be affecting local utility bills. We discuss HVAC use, household energy consumption, and broader concerns about long-term energy planning in the Richmond area.A major portion of the episode focuses on Richmond counterculture history and the legacy of Dirtwoman, (Donnie Corker) a well-known and controversial figure in the city’s underground scene. We talk about Dirtwoman’s reputation, local radio history, and how certain personalities become lasting parts of Richmond folklore.Later in the episode, we shift into Richmond parks and public space development, including the Richmond Inspire parks and recreation planning process, updates around Brown’s Island, Arthur Ashe Boulevard area improvements, and the James River Park System (JRPS). We discuss public input, city growth, and how outdoor spaces shape quality of life in Richmond.This episode covers Richmond Dirtwoman, rising power bills, Virginia data centers, Daylight Saving Time, Lunar New Year traditions, Richmond parks planning, Richmond Inspire, Brown’s Island updates, Arthur Ashe Boulevard development, and the James River Park System.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  18. 35

    Richmond Zoning, Squirrels & Stoners (pets, local code, modern homes, Tartaria, etc) — Unscripted #036

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we cover a wide range of Richmond topics, starting with local identity and nostalgia around the Richmond Flying Squirrels and how city branding shifts over time. We talk about what those changes represent and how people react when familiar symbols evolve.The conversation then moves into a deeper discussion about pets, intelligence, and consciousness, including how humans define awareness and what separates animal cognition from human thought. From there, we transition into Richmond’s ongoing zoning and code refresh debates, including public reactions to new development rules and modern home designs appearing in established neighborhoods. We discuss the tension between preservation and growth, architectural taste, and how civic engagement shapes the direction of the city.Later in the episode, we explore internet-driven historical theories such as Tartaria and old world maps, and how conspiracy culture intersects with modern curiosity. We close with discussion around a marijuana-themed sandwich chain expanding into Chesterfield, and what that says about shifting business trends and regional culture.This episode covers Richmond zoning, local development policy, Flying Squirrels nostalgia, modern architecture debates, Tartaria map theories, Chesterfield business news, and broader conversations about consciousness and culture.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  19. 34

    Richmond Saints, Sinners & Superstitions (Valentine’s Day, Friday the 13th, monks, witches, underground tunnels) — Unscripted #035

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we explore the origins of Valentine’s Day and how ancient Roman festivals like Lupercalia continue to shape modern traditions. We talk through the historical roots of Saint Valentine, Friday the 13th superstition, and how belief systems evolve over time.From there, the conversation shifts into Richmond-specific culture, including Friday the 13th tattoo traditions across the city and how local shops turn superstition into shared ritual. We also discuss recent sightings of Buddhist monks walking through Richmond, public reactions to visible faith practices, and how different belief systems coexist in modern urban spaces.We spend time unpacking Richmond stories, including long-standing rumors about underground tunnels beneath the Richmond Coliseum and surrounding downtown buildings. The episode also touches on local witchcraft communities, pagan symbolism, and how internet forums and Reddit threads fuel curiosity around occult culture in Richmond.Later in the episode, we move into broader conversations about authenticity, AI, and creator culture, including the development of Myke’s AI assistant and how technology intersects with storytelling, filmmaking, and personal branding. Throughout the discussion, we examine how mythology, religion, superstition, and modern media overlap in everyday life.This episode centers on Richmond history, Valentine’s Day lore, Friday the 13th tattoos, monks downtown, witches, urban legends, and the belief systems that shape how people interpret the world around them.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  20. 33

    Richmond Meets Ice: Blizzards, Skate Parks & Punks (viral storm moments, city infrastructure, rva nostalgia) #034

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereSubscribe to the audio podcast:https://verahouse.buzzsprout.comFollow us:https://instagram.com/verahouse.coIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we talk through what it was like navigating Richmond during the Winter Ice Storm Fern and how the city responded when weather exposes gaps in infrastructure and planning.We discuss the ice storm itself, untreated streets and sidewalks, and the viral moments that came out of the chaos. The conversation moves into city infrastructure, preparedness, and how public systems tend to break down in predictable ways when conditions get extreme. We also touch on skate culture as a way people physically and creatively adapt to the city, including the recent James City County skate park controversy and broader conversations around public design.Later in the episode, we shift into Richmond’s cultural identity, including punk and DIY history, the evolution of “RVA” as a nickname, and how nostalgia, subcultures, and generational shifts continue to shape how people relate to the city. Throughout the discussion, we reflect on how Richmond changes, what it holds onto, and what gets lost along the way.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  21. 32

    Richmond Is Relearning Connection: Aspen DeRosa on Photography, Sobriety & Community #033

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown: https://verahouse.co/point5⁠Attend the January 31st Event: https://celestefarms.com/product/point-5-field-spread-3/Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we sit down with Aspen DeRosa, a Richmond-based photographer, educator, and community builder.Follow Aspen:https://www.instagram.com/bevelcut_shawti/https://www.aspenderosa.comRiffs and Recovery:https://www.instagram.com/riffsandrecoveryWe talk about Aspen’s approach to photography as people-focused work, including how they help subjects feel comfortable, present, and confident in front of the camera. The conversation covers them teaching at the Visual Arts Center of Richmond, how education informs their creative practice, and what it means to balance multiple roles as a working creative.We also discuss sobriety within Richmond’s music and creative scenes, including the realities of navigating social spaces without alcohol and the work Aspen is doing through Riffs and Recovery to build intentional, sober-friendly community spaces. The episode touches on non-alcoholic culture, local collaborations, and how events and gatherings can be designed around presence and connection rather than drinking.Throughout the conversation, we explore photography, teaching, sobriety, and community building as practical, lived experiences, with a focus on how people show up for themselves and each other in creative spaces.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  22. 31

    Richmond Pathways, Public Spaces & Plastic Bags (river access, downtown development, surprise taxes, cone parade etc) — Unscripted #032

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown: https://verahouse.co/point5⁠Subscribe to the audio podcast:https://verahouse.buzzsprout.com/followFollow us:https://instagram.com/verahouse.coIn this episode of Vera House Unscripted, we talk through how people move through Richmond — physically, socially, and culturally — and how the city functions on a day-to-day level for the people who live here.We discuss public transportation ideas in Richmond, parks and trail access, and how shared spaces like the James River, North Bank Trail, Canal Walk, and downtown Main Street are actually used. We also address ongoing river safety concerns, recent drownings, and what’s missing when it comes to infrastructure, public amenities, and accessibility.The conversation moves into several recent and uniquely Richmond stories, including the Benedictine College Prep quarterback fire station incident, the Richmond cone parade, and reactions to the plastic bag fee and surprise charges at local grocery stores like Kroger. We also touch on downtown development, older buildings along Main Street, and how small policies and systems quietly shape daily life in the city.Throughout the episode, we share personal experiences, local observations, and commentary on what works, what doesn’t, and what Richmond still feels like it’s figuring out — blending practical concerns, civic frustration, and the kind of strange, specific stories that make the city what it is.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

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    Hometown Sound: Richmond’s Butcher Brown on Jazz as a Language, Tiny Desk, and RVA Roots #031

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown: https://verahouse.co/point5⁠Subscribe to the audio podcast:https://verahouse.buzzsprout.comFollow us:https://instagram.com/verahouse.coGet tickets + learn more about Butcher Brown:https://butcherbrown.com/Follow the band:https://www.instagram.com/butcherbrown/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH0R_9LEEUHwMhMe7sEVoywIn this featured episode - Tennishu, Corey, and Morgan of Butcher Brown join us to talk about how they work: jazz as a shared language, the role of trust and collaboration in a five-piece band, and why they design live sets with intention. We cover their path from Richmond venues to national placements (Tiny Desk, Monday Night Football), how front-of-house shapes what audiences actually hear, and their production approach to a genre-agnostic sound.Butcher Brown is a genre-bending quintet that’s been creating music together since 2009. Widely celebrated as one of Richmond’s premier creative music acts , this band brings together top-tier talent: Morgan Burrs (guitar), Corey Fonville (drums), and “Tennishu” (trumpet, saxophone & vocals) are 3 key parts of the magic. Their sound flows effortlessly from funk to jazz to soulful hip-hop. With 2 appearances on Tiny Desk - NPR even praised Butcher Brown for “scoffing at the limitations” of genres. They’ve repped RVA on the world stage when they covered Little Richard's classic “Rip It Up” for ESPN's Monday Night Football in 2020. With their musical innovation and hometown pride on full display, Butcher Brown embodies the soulful, creative spirit of Richmond, VirginiaWe also get into Richmond’s influence—the VCU pipeline, house-show history, and the city’s current rooms—plus the overlap between rap and jazz, streaming/label realities, audience shifts, and what’s next for the band. If you want a clear view of process, performance, and the scene that built them, this episode delivers.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  24. 29

    Richmond’s New Year, New Riverfront & Old Alligators (Carytown ball drop, Scott's Addition, Brown's Island 2026, etc) - Unscripted #030

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown: ⁠https://verahouse.co/point5⁠Subscribe to the audio podcast:https://verahouse.buzzsprout.comFollow us:https://instagram.com/verahouse.coNicotine research mentioned: https://app.iki.ai/space/15747/folder/443Richmond at midnight—past, present, next. We open with Carytown’s ball-drop nostalgia and the one-off Brown’s Island NYE event, then ask who should run a true public New Year’s party now. From there: the 2026 outlook for the riverfront and amphitheater, airport ambitions at RIC, and why a connected downtown matters more than bar crawls.Mid-episode, we taste non-alcoholic “bubbly” from Point 5 and talk simple ways to host without alcohol. We cover the coming vape crackdown (why most disposables are disappearing, what’s actually FDA-authorized), nicotine as a stimulant in low doses, and real health risks like diacetyl/popcorn lung. We close with Jefferson Hotel gator lore, a look back at the year that launched the studio, and what’s ahead for 2026—more interviews, voice notes, and live shows.Richmond VA, New Year’s Eve, Carytown ball drop, Brown’s Island 2026, riverfront, amphitheater, RIC airport, Scott’s Addition, vape crackdown, FDA authorization, nicotine risks, non-alcoholic bubbly, Point 5 Richmond, Jefferson Hotel alligators, Richmond events, 2026 plans.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  25. 28

    Richmond Bones, Artifacts & Dead Malls (VCU/MCV graverobbers, stolen artifacts, Chesterfield Town Center, insurance scams, etc) — Unscripted #029

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown: ⁠https://verahouse.co/point5⁠We cover a wild spread this week. From Richmond’s documented “Night Doctor” era—when grave robbing supplied cadavers to the Medical College of Virginia—to Chesterfield Town Center’s sale and what it signals for malls. We break down the scam of hospital pricing and insurance, a local USPS fiasco, and the VMFA’s return of Turkish antiquities. We also reflect on a year of hard lessons: paying down debt, leaving the 9-to-5, and treating entrepreneurship like personal development.Hosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:https://instagram.com/mykemetzgerhttps://instagram.com/planetperriLearn more about our studio:https://verahouse.coThis podcast is produced by ⁠Vera House⁠ — a creative club and media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion creative expression, elevate culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern brands in Richmond.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  26. 27

    Richmond’s Winter Lore: a Very Vera Christmas Special (Benedict's Invasion, Reindeer, Jamestown Day, Krampus, Sinterklaas, etc) — Unscripted #028

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here$200+ giveaway by Point 5: https://www.instagram.com/p/DSOCSAxDwm6/10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5Richmond in winter, past to present. We open with reindeer lore and RVA snow-day nostalgia, then move through local holiday markets and simple gift philosophy before an on-air exchange. Midway, we taste non-alcoholic holiday picks from Point 5 and talk how to host with zero-proof options. The back half dives into Virginia history and winter folklore—Jamestown Day, Washington’s Delaware crossing, Krampus, St. Nicholas/Sinterklaas, Yule and evergreens—then lands in Richmond with Benedict Arnold’s raid and why local history is endlessly fascinating.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  27. 26

    Richmond's 2026 Boardwalk and More Famous Critters (Drunk Raccoon, Browns Island, AI artwork, and more) #027

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5In this episode we unpack the Browns Island closure and the proposed 2026 riverfront “boardwalk,” what it could fix, and where projects tend to stall in RVA. We visit the recent viral drunk raccoon story and how it jumped to national outlets. The story of a raccoon busting his way into an Ashland/Hanover ABC store, ransacking its shelves and passing out drunk in its bathroom on Friday, Nov. 28 has garnered national attention. It’s inspired Virginia ABC advertisements, themed cocktail recipes, a mass scavenger hunt and even a pet election.Most of all, a limited-time merchandise campaign has raised over $200,000 for the Hanover County Animal Protection Shelter as of the time of reporting.Then: CoStar’s planned “digital skin” and the broader AI billboard debate in an arts town. We zoom out to connecting downtown districts, Shockoe street upgrades, and the tension between adaptive reuse and clashy infill (including the Fairfax addition fight). Then we take a nostalgic turn with Rewind Vintage (VHS, retro gaming) and a quick look at attention economics: why we still make long-form and how big shared moments fade. We close with the typical moon-landing debate :)Keywords: Richmond VA, Browns Island boardwalk, CoStar screen, AI billboard, Shockoe street improvements, Fairfax addition, non-alcoholic options, Point 5, Rewind Vintage, VHS, retro gaming, long-form podcasts, moon landing debate.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  28. 25

    Richmond Myths, Malls & Meat Juice (Black Friday, Valentine Museum, Witchcraft, 90s culture etc) - Unscripted #026

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5Richmond then and now: how Black Friday shifted from a one-morning scramble to month-long sales, what that did to malls, and why shared cultural moments faded (with Barbenheimer as a recent exception and GTA 6 on the horizon). The episode looks at Richmond’s growth vs. preservation—think Scott’s Addition then vs now—and why local brands should publish consistently if they want to matter.There’s a Richmond history detour into The Valentine museum and its Victorian-era remedy, Valentine’s Meat Juice, plus a practical segment on non-alcoholic holiday hosting (how to stock simple zero-proof options and why it reduces pressure, keeps mornings clean, and includes more guests). A late-night door-knock story leads to basic city safety and common-sense reads.Topics include: Black Friday history, dead/dying malls, event culture, 1990s nostalgia, Richmond growth and neighborhood change (Scott’s Addition), local media and publishing strategy, The Valentine museum, Valentine’s Meat Juice, natural vs. Western medicine, sober-curious hosting, and urban safety.Keywords: Richmond VA, Black Friday then vs now, dead malls, event culture, 90s nostalgia, Scott’s Addition, The Valentine museum, Valentine’s Meat Juice, sober curious, non-alcoholic holiday drinks, local media publishing, Richmond growth, city safety.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  29. 24

    Richmond Culture, Crime Follies, Dog-Poop Etiquette, and Better Roads - Unscripted #025

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5In this episode we talk about how the Vera show has grown into locally recognized media, then get into a weird story about nine burglars jumping out of a Hyundai Sonata in Warrenton, and what it says about choices and consequences. We cover dog-poop etiquette and why online shaming rarely changes behavior. There’s a quick comparison to Japan’s “carry your trash” norm and a lost-bag story that shows how culture shapes outcomes. We taste a non-alcoholic tequila from Point 5 and share sober-curious options for the holidays. We close with the Shockoe street projects — two-way conversions, cycle tracks, roundabouts—and why details like paving and finishes affect whether people actually want to walk, ride, and spend time in a place.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  30. 23

    Hometown Sound: Richmond's Conditions on Writing, Touring, and Reunion with Brandon Roundtree and Alex Howard #024

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5Follow Conditions:https://www.instagram.com/conditionsbandhttps://www.facebook.com/conditionsbandhttps://open.spotify.com/artist/5CdtIKatJJJuXXjjxRtT8Xhttps://music.apple.com/us/artist/conditions/275764015Richmond made them, the world loved them. In this episode, Brandon Roundtree and Alex Howard of Conditions; both veterans of Richmond’s vibrant music scene, take us from Canal Club nights and storage-unit rehearsals to national tours and records that still hit millions of streams every year — Fluorescent Youth and Full of War. We get into the writing that’s melodic on record but explosive in the room, the mechanics of a true breakout from RVA, and why coming back to Richmond for a reunion mattered more than anything else. Conditions absolutely dominated the mid-2000s and helped put Richmond on the national stage. This month we are all celebrating 15 years since their debut album Fluorescent Youth. To this very day, their music has a cult fan base, receives millions of streams, and their final reunion show coming up this weekend sold out almost instantly.Brandon is a father, a husband, and the insanely talented vocalist and core songwriter behind Conditions. He took his influence and experience from previous metalcore bands like Scarlet, and later when Conditions formed he became known for his melodic, emotion-driven songwriting and vocals.Alex has been the guitarist alongside him since the very beginning — one of the engines behind so much of the melodic, driving sound that defined the band. Today, he’s taken that same talent to an even bigger stage. Alex now plays bass guitar for Jelly Roll — a Grammy-nominated and award-winning country music artist currently selling out arenas and headlining festivals worldwide.Conditions were a huge part of the late-2000s, early-2010s pop punk wave. They signed with Good Fight Music, released 3 full length albums, 2 fan-favorite EPs, and spent years touring nonstop. From Warped Tour to SXSW — and sharing the stage with bands like Paramore, New Found Glory, Good Charlotte, and many many more - today they’re on the eve of their reunion show here in Richmond and they just dropped their brand new single, “Belong Forever”Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  31. 22

    How Richmond Decides "What To Do" with Paige & Kelsey of The Richmond Experience (rva hotlists, events, city guides, and more) #023

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereJoin RVAx – the Richmond fan club you didn’t know you needed to be a part of:https://www.therichmondexperience.comFollow RVAx:https://www.instagram.com/therichmondexperiencehttps://www.tiktok.com/@therichmondexperiencehttps://www.facebook.com/therichmondexperienceHow does Richmond decide where to go this week? Paige Poprocky and Kelsey Heintz pull back the curtain on ⁠The Richmond Experience⁠ — an independently owned, women-led, queer-owned local media brand that turns curation into what to eat, drink, see, and do in Richmond, Virginia. In this episode we have a fun chat about what it takes to run a lean, community-centric operation that locals deeply trust.Kelsey and Paige run one of the largest local media outlets in Central Virginia.We get into boundaries and burnout in entrepreneurship, evolving beyond basic content, how their paid vs. organic calendar actually works, and why their membership site stays member-first and ad-light. We talk neighborhood shifts from Scott’s Addition to Brookland Park, the Carytown chain debate, and how social media allows Richmonders to figure out what's happening around town.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  32. 21

    Adventure on the Edge of Time: Richmond's Hayden Mater on Building Watches for Real Life #022

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereRichmond entrepreneur Hayden Mater sits down with us to unpack the ethos behind Mater Made — a watch brand built for real life, not glass cases. Hayden Mater is a serial entrepreneur, father and husband, and an explorer making timepieces that inspire curiosity, endurance, and a life well-lived.Shop now at Mater Made:https://matermade.comFollow Mater Made:https://www.instagram.com/mater_madehttps://www.youtube.com/@MaterMadeofficialhttps://www.instagram.com/haydenmater/In this episode of Vera House we trace Hayden's arc from commodity trading and early door-to-door hustles to field-testing prototypes in harsh environments.By day, Hayden is a department head at an international commodity trading firm, where he focuses on market strategy and operational leadership. But beyond the desk, he’s a modern renaissance man — a designer, athlete, and storyteller who believes business is a sport and life is meant to be explored.What began as a fascination with functional design evolved into Mater Made, a brand that merges innovation, exploration, and well-roundedness — three principles that define both his watches and his worldview. Each Mater Made watch is more than a product; it’s a companion built for environments that test the limits of body and mind.From the middle of the desert, to the middle of the ocean, and even to the racetrack and beyond — Hayden has taken Mater Made around the world to prove one thing: time is only valuable when you’re truly living it.In this episode, Hayden lays out why he chose spec over status — movement choices that matter, materials where they count, and pricing designed to over-deliver. We dig into the idea of entrepreneurship as a sport (train the mind and body, compete daily), how to handle a launch that doesn’t sell out, and why documenting the adventure is part of the product and the journey. If you care about design that earns its keep — rugged × refined—this one’s for you.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  33. 20

    Richmond Folklore, Fights & Phones (boyfriend bootcamp, hidden pools, government boxing and best rooftops) - Unscripted #021

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5Less buzz, more clarity. We open with adaptogens over caffeine—Kin, L-theanine, lion’s mane—and why “awake” doesn’t have to mean jittery. Then we launch Boyfriend iPhone Bootcamp: turning a running joke into basics that actually matter—angles, light, distance, framing. From there, a tour through Richmond’s layers: 18th-Street throwbacks (Tiki Bob’s, Alley Cats, On The Rocks), the Altria/Mosque pool that used to exist, underground water and hidden rooms, and why rooftop pools never quite stuck here. We break down what works now—Black Olive’s tucked-in rooftop energy—then talk service as product with a candid Coalescence debrief. We close on resilience (doing the hard thing when the numbers pinch) and a real community moment: RPD vs RFD charity boxing at River City Roll, training at Vintage Boxing, and why shared rituals beat hot takes.Keywords: Richmond VA, adaptogens vs caffeine, Kin Euphorics, L-theanine, lion’s mane, Boyfriend iPhone Bootcamp, Richmond nightlife history, Altria Theater pool, rooftop pools RVA, Black Olive rooftop, Coalescence coffee, River City Roll boxing, Vintage Boxing.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  34. 19

    Richmond is Sober-Curious: How Jody Sidle Reimagined Drinking Culture with Point 5 #020

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereVisit Point 5 at 3435 West Cary St, Richmond, VApoint5rva.comIn this guest interview, we sit down with Jody Sidle — founder and driving force behind Point 5 in Carytown (Richmond, VA) — to talk about the sober-curious wave reshaping how Richmond goes out. 2 books we mentioned in conversation:• Drunk: How We Sipped, Danced, and Stumbled Our Way to Civilization: ⁠https://amzn.to/48XY5pU⁠• Alcohol Explained by William Porter: ⁠https://amzn.to/3JIHuMuPoint 5 is Richmond’s first non-alcoholic bottle shop located right here in Carytown. Driven by her own journey into an alcohol-free lifestyle, Jody launched Point 5 to create an inviting space for everyone: including those who are sober, sober-curious, or simply interested in discovering high-quality alternative and unique beverages. At Point 5, Jody and Lewis; Point 5’s Manager - curate a smart selection of non-alcoholic spirits, functional and nootropic drinks, canned beers and wines, as well as gluten-free and dairy-free options that reflect modern taste and lifestyle.  Their vision extends beyond retail: They believe that the ritual of gathering, pouring a drink, and being social doesn’t have to be defined by alcohol. Their mission with Point 5 is to normalize alternative drinking culture, encourage inclusivity, and support expanded choice within Richmond’s diverse community.Jody opens up about quitting alcohol and rebuilding the nighttime ritual without the hangover, then walks us through real NA options with bite and “mouthfeel” that still feel like an adult drink (Amethyst, Little Saints, reishi/lion’s mane, and nootropic/adaptogen–driven beverages, and more).    We get tactical: why bars and restaurants should stock serious NA programs (margins, tips, inclusivity), how this changes spend, and what’s happening inside corporate/events where mid-day “old fashioneds” are now zero-proof—and everyone can drive home.    Jody also previews Point 5’s growth: two franchises in New Jersey, Williamsburg on deck, and how she protects local radius so every franchise owner wins. We close with an open invitation to explore — not as an identity or lifetime pledge, but as a low-pressure experiment you can start today.And if you’re NA-curious, try asking for Amethyst or Little Saints next time you’re out — Richmond’s already making room at the bar.  Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  35. 18

    Richmond’s Haunted Secrets: a Very Vera Halloween Special (Ghosts, Skinwalkers, Cemeteries, and Werewolves) - Unscripted #019

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5Richmond’s haunted season, told by people who live here. We trade first-hand moments and local lore: a green, hologram-like “entity” outside the Poe Museum that refused to appear on camera; the Iron Dog of Hollywood Cemetery and the child it guards; late-night reports of voices at the Science Museum; and the suburban myth that won’t die—the Henrico werewolf. Between stories, we talk why superstitions travel faster than facts, what it means to curate experience (not just chase scares), and how sober social rituals keep the vibe without the fog.In this episode: Halloween costumes and masks as identity, horror vs. suspense, the Richmond Vampire and the Church Hill tunnel, a live NA espresso-martini taste test from Point5, a quick caffeine myth check and much much more.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  36. 17

    Richmond Gun Hole, Small Town RVA Video Game, Henry Box Brown, and the Windshield Manifesto - Unscripted #018

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5Richmond doesn’t need fiction; the lore writes itself. We start with the city’s running list of urban legends—the Addison Street “gun hole,” the Church Hill tunnel collapse, the Richmond Vampire, the tank down Broad, Francine the Lowe’s cat—and ask why these stories stick longer than headlines ever do.From there, the conversation pivots to “conductor” leadership: what it means to shape culture without playing every instrument. Think Rick Rubin and the Steve Jobs analogy—taste, curation, and ruthless editing over busywork. Even the internet’s favorite punchline, “Just Do It” Shia, becomes a lesson in reframing motivation.We also bring the city into 32-bit: a love-letter game called Small Town RVA (Pump House quests, Pokémon/Zelda energy) that turns local landmarks into a playable map. Then a whiplash detour into conspiracy culture via an 11-page “manifesto” dropped on Perri's windshield—meme politics, hoax lists, and why receipts matter in a post-truth feed.We loop back through the Richmond gun hole saga (sidewalk shrine, city fill-in, and the rescue of the concrete) before closing on Henry “Box” Brown’s audacious escape from Richmond—history as performance, and why clever shysters still fascinate us.What we cover:Richmond lore roll-call: gun hole, Church Hill tunnel, Richmond Vampire, tank down Broad, FrancineConductor vs. specialist: Rick Rubin, Steve Jobs, and the art of directing without “doing it all”Motivation reframed: the Shia “Just Do It” meme and why some jokes age into mantrasSmall Town RVA: a 32-bit game turning local history into playable questsThe 11-page “manifesto”: hoax lists, meme-era politics, and how stories get legsPoint Five (Carytown): NA/functional bev lineup & why third spaces matterThe Addison Street gun hole: sidewalk shrine, city response, concrete rescuedHenry Box Brown: the crate, the route, the showman after freedom—and modern echoesIf Richmond is a story, this chapter is about who gets to hold the pen—the mythmakers, the editors, and the people who turn our city into a weird genre of lore.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  37. 16

    Richmond Barbers Open the Door to Mental Health and Financial Wellness – Universal Health Chair Network #017

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereLearn more about the Universal Health Chair Network here: https://uhcnetwork.orghttps://www.instagram.com/universalhealthchairRichmond’s most trusted third space isn’t a clinic — it’s the chair. This episode sits with Abdul Winfield (AB), Ali Bey, and Sharita “Ri” Edwards, the trio behind the Universal Health Chair Network (UHCN), to break down a simple but radical move: bring mental, physical, and financial health into the places people already trust—barbershops and salons. From day one, the barbershop has been a space for sports, politics, and life; adding health is the conversation we’ve avoided and the one that matters most.Follow AB, Ali, and Ri:https://www.instagram.com/salon201.vahttps://www.instagram.com/riseuprvahttps://www.instagram.com/rheemodeThe model is practical and personal. Barbers are early liaisons—they hear things first and can connect youth to care before crisis hits (Virginia Voices for Children, General Assembly advocacy). UHCN frames “best self” across mental + physical + financial—because when one slips, the others follow. It’s community care with structure, borrowing a scientific-method mindset from medical partners to push through complacency and keep moving forward.We also tackle the coverage crunch—millions at risk of losing insurance or paying double premiums—and the noise of unregulated online money advice (why financial literacy is health). Sharita’s lane turns Fortune-level budgeting into everyday coaching you can actually use. Tap in via @UniversalHealthChair and @riseuprva; Sharita joins mid-episode with her story and the financial wellness playbook that rounds out the network.What we coverWhy barbershops/salons are the right venue for health (trust + access).UHCN’s mission: mental, physical, financial—the “best self” framework.Early intervention & youth: barbers as first listeners and liaisons.Scientific method as discipline (from medical partners) to beat complacency.The insurance/affordability cliff—and why community networks matter now.Financial wellness as health: fixing misinformation, coaching that sticks.How to connect: @UniversalHealthCare, @riseuprva, and UHCN site.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  38. 15

    Richmond Rules, Rituals, and Raids (VCU hazing, FBI Raids, NA bar scene, RVA Festivals, Bikes and more) - Unscripted #016

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text here10% OFF your next purchase at Point 5 in Carytown:https://verahouse.co/point5Richmond is a city of rules, rituals, and raids—and this episode threads them together. We start with Francine, the Lowe’s cat finally found, Reddit sleuthing turned street festival, and how a neighborhood inside joke becomes citywide folklore. From there, festival season takes over: Dogwood Dell’s free lineup and the way RVA gathers when tickets aren’t the gatekeeper.Then the tone shifts. We unpack FBI “Operation Summer Heat” and what 122 local arrests say (and don’t say) about safety and signal. On campus, the VCU hazing story opens a wider conversation about rites of passage, leadership, and when “tradition” turns coercive. In the streets, Vision Zero and new bike lanes (Belt Blvd to Warwick) collide with an education gap—how to build a cycling city people know how to use.We also talk third spaces and the sober wave—from the NA bar scene (Point Five in Carytown) to where community actually happens between shows and shifts. Add in venue/opening shifts (BOLO’s at the old Dogtown Brewery, Connex RVA in Carver, Outpost expansion) and you’ve got a snapshot of a city growing fast, with a lot of fine print.What we coverFrancine found: the folk-hero cat, Francine Fest, and why local lore mattersRVA festivals: Dogwood Dell’s free shows and public-space cultureFBI raids: what Operation Summer Heat means on the groundVCU hazing: rituals, power, and the line between belonging and harmBikes & Vision Zero: Belt Blvd lanes, rider education, and street etiquetteNA bar scene: Point Five, functional drinks, and gathering without alcoholOpenings & shifts: BOLO’s, Connex RVA, Outpost, neighborhood momentumKeywords: Richmond VA podcast, Francine Lowe’s cat, Dogwood Dell festival, Operation Summer Heat, VCU hazing, Vision Zero Richmond, Belt Blvd bike lanes, sober bar Richmond, Point Five Carytown, BOLO’s, Connex RVA, Outpost Richmond, RVA festivals.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  39. 14

    Richmond's Biggest Celebrity is a Cat (Where's Francine, Turnstile at Browns Island, Hadad's lake, walkable RVA, Carytown pedestrians, etc) - Unscripted #015

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereRichmond’s unofficial (maybe official now?) mascot went missing, and the city can’t stop talking about it. We open with Francine, the Lowe’s cat — security footage, petitions, interstate rumors—and what a community chooses to call “news.” From there, the episode ricochets through rideshare absurdity, a Monument Ave flip-and-selfie that went viral, and a night at the riverfront where Turnstile meets Browns Island policy: pepper-spray claims, capacity math, bag rules, chair rentals, and bathroom bottlenecks.We pull back to ask the real question: how do you grow a venue without losing a city’s vibe? That thread runs through Hadad’s Lake nostalgia (and what’s next on Osbourne Turnpike), post-COVID pool energy, and a wish list for a more walkable RVA — from Carytown’s pedestrian dream to a Northside retail comeback.It’s the culture and the fine print, side by side.What we cover:Francine the Lowe’s cat: search, sleuthing, and why it mattersRideshare chaos & the Monument Ave flip-and-selfie momentTurnstile at Browns Island: pit culture, pepper-spray reports, first-week venue rulesAmphitheater growing pains: bag policy, chair rentals, storage upsells, bathroom lines, soundHaddad’s Lake sold: injuries, nostalgia, and the space it leaves behindWalkable Richmond: should we make Carytown car-free? pedestrian plazas, Northside retail risingQuick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  40. 13

    Richmond's Creator Economy is Growing: How Melissa Eaton Grew Her Brand to 300K+ Followers #014

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereRichmond’s creator economy is growing fast. In this episode, our guest Melissa Eaton (Top Drawer RVA + Simplify Social) breaks down how she built an audience of 300K+ and turned it into real revenue—without chasing vanity metrics. We get into Facebook payouts vs. YouTube, pricing UGC so you’re paid even if you don’t post, and the content-bank system that lets one shoot fuel ten clips across platforms.We talk platform strategy (TikTok, Reels, Shorts), why video beats photos now, and the repurposing cadence that keeps your feed alive without burnout. Melissa shares practical plays any Richmond creative can use today: omnipresence over algorithm worship, SEO-minded captions, location tags that land local work, affiliates and ambassadorships, and the backdoor into brand budgets through UGC.If you’re a content creator, maker, designer, or DIY artist in RVA looking to make content pay, this one is your blueprint.Follow Melissa:https://www.instagram.com/thetopdrawerrvahttps://www.instagram.com/simplifysocialstrategyOther Richmond creator meet ups:https://www.instagram.com/vais4bloggersWhat you’ll learnFacebook vs. YouTube: where conversion and payouts really happenUGC 101: get paid to make ads for brands without posting to your feedThe content bank: batch, archive, and repurpose on a 90-day cycleSEO for creators: captions as mini-blogs, titles that rank, location tags that attract more eyeballsRevenue stack: platform payouts, affiliates, sponsorships, ambassadorships, coachingAbout our guestMelissa Eaton is the founder of Top Drawer RVA (bold, textured furniture makeovers) and Simplify Social, where she coaches creatives to build sustainable content businesses.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  41. 12

    Richmond is Keeping Secrets at City Hall, Carillon etc (SWAT raids, water crisis, FOIA requests, traffic surveillance, biceps 4 jesus) - Unscripted #013

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereRichmond might be keeping secrets — or trying to. We trace a week where public records stall at City Hall, deleted plant videos fuel citizen sleuthing, and new red-light cameras multiply in the name of safety. At dawn, a Nextdoor rumor sends us to the Carillon lawn, where we explore a free men’s workout?In this episodeFOIA, stonewalled: requests delayed, whistleblowing punished, and the cost of fighting for basic transparency.Water crisis, aftershocks: pipeline upgrades, pressure changes, and why public explanations matter as much as fixes.Surveillance vs. safety: Vision Zero, red-light rollout, and who pays when traffic enforcement becomes revenue.Ticket traps & poverty loops: how minor violations spiral into fees, suspensions, and warrants.Carillon lore & third spaces: the sunken lawn’s history, religious workouts, and why real community happens in parks—not feeds.Citizen leverage: mass-email tactics, paper trails, and how to push the system without giving your power back.Vape-shop raids: armored trucks, federal badges, and a city that explains last.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  42. 11

    Richmond Before the Rebrand (6th Street ghosts, RVA parties, Scott’s Addition, and broken elevators) - Unscripted #012

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereRichmond as home base, myth as mirror. We open with the so-called “Richmond curse”—the urban legend that no matter how far you go, you end up back here—and why distance (and a little travel) clarifies what the city actually offers now: a growing riverfront, an amphitheater era, and momentum that didn’t exist a decade ago.      Then the practical: free early-morning Uber rides to RIC via GRTC vouchers (4–6 a.m., one trip per day, pickup at GRTC stops). What sounds small is actually city design—access, connectivity, and who gets to move easily at impossible hours.    Nostalgia surfaces next—the DIY “say yes” energy that shaped RVA’s social muscle—before snapping into the present with the collapsing elevators saga that’s been rippling through local Reddit: stalls, sudden drops, and a reminder that growth has to be livable.    We close on justice and priorities: the Marvin Grimm exoneration and Richmond’s move toward a $5.8M payout after 45 years lost—an entry point into the harder conversation about for-profit incarceration and what accountability looks like when a city admits harm.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  43. 10

    Oddities Beneath Richmond (hidden springs, buried trains, lost ballpark, dating apps, Short Pump, and more) - Unscripted #011

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereDid you know? The Byrd Theatre is owned and operated by a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.The Byrd Theatre Foundation depends on donations year-round to operate and care for the Theatre through an Annual Fund, which you can donate to here: https://form-renderer-app.donorperfect.io/give/byrd-theatre-foundation/annual-fund-eoy-2025Richmond keeps secrets. This episode pulls them up to the surface—starting with Mayo Island: once a downtown ballpark where legends supposedly launched homers into passing train cars, now a $15M city purchase slated to become public parkland. From there we trace riverfront moves to Browns Island’s amphitheater, then pivot to a photo of Monument Avenue as a tobacco field—proof that the city changes faster than our memories.We head into Broad Street nostalgia: the Sixth Street Marketplace catwalk and a reminder of when the Arts District felt like a future. Then to Carytown’s icon—the Byrd Theatre—where new seats meet an old myth: the active spring still running beneath the building.We talk about the origin story of Short Pump is actually called Short Pump, why “third spaces” matter more than dating apps, and how Richmond might rebuild its social muscle without the bar scene. Oddities, infrastructure, and the places we actually meet each other—it’s all under the surface.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  44. 9

    Richmond Vampire & Hidden Trains (VCU discoveries, Watermelon Festival, Texas Beach, RVA311, and more) - Unscripted #010

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereRichmond’s folklore runs deep — and in this episode we dig up a few of the city’s strangest myths and modern problems side by side. We start with the infamous Richmond Vampire and the buried train beneath Church Hill, exploring how urban legends take root when tragedy and mystery overlap.From there, the conversation shifts to science: the discovery of fossilized human teeth in Ethiopia, where VCU researchers are helping rewrite the story of human evolution. We talk Australopithecus, Neanderthals, diet, jaw development, and whether “aliens” might simply be future humans reshaped by posture, breath, and environment.But Richmond always pulls us back to earth. We dive into the reality of the city’s 311 app — from potholes and broken sidewalks to missing trash cans and green space neglect. Why does the city prioritize amphitheaters and meadows while neighborhoods struggle with basic infrastructure?No topic is too small or too strange: the Texas Beach bridge, Carytown’s Watermelon Festival that somehow forgot about watermelons, and the bigger cultural question of the 80% problem — when public projects and events miss the mark on the very thing they’re supposed to celebrate.It’s folklore, science, infrastructure, and identity all in one ride: from vampires and hidden trains to fossilized teeth and watermelonless festivals.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  45. 8

    Richmond’s Forgotten Mummy (government hostages, ADD brains, speedhumping chaos, rva cold cases) - Unscripted #009

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereWe open with the strange saga of Richmond’s forgotten mummy — a body left under bricks for nearly two decades before anyone thought to ask questions. From there, the conversation spirals into the absurd and the political: the story of Eric Morales Garcia, the man who locked government officials in a room as an act of protest, raising questions about rebellion, justice, and whether Richmond could use a little more chaos.But that’s only the start. We unpack the mystery of the single blue slip-on shoe, a symbol of the city’s 335 unsolved cold cases still haunting RVA. We question why bureaucracies bury stories while communities carry the weight of unanswered history.The episode veers into the everyday, where the DMV shocks us by being… pleasant? Libraries are suddenly making a comeback, while gyms start to feel like the new churches of modern life — complete with ritual, guilt, and the promise of redemption. And then there are Richmond’s speed humps, designed for safety but now launching cars into the air and sparking neighborhood outrage.Finally, we turn inward — tackling ADD, TikTok attention spans, and why the 8-hour workday is dead. From the 2 + 8 Method of daily productivity to the struggle of building consistency in a distracted world, we explore how creators, entrepreneurs, and anyone living in 2025 can rethink what focus really looks like.It’s a ride through the forgotten, the chaotic, and the strangely ordinary. From mummies to modern attention spans, Richmond proves once again that the line between history, culture, and daily life is thinner — and stranger — than we think.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  46. 7

    The Importance of Flow: Why Your Body Remembers What Your Mind Ignores | Lamha Cumasach #008

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereVeronica Jones never set out to be a massage therapist — she stumbled into it by accident. What began as a way to make money became a calling, a path to healing that combines bodywork, intuition, and holistic care. As the founder of Lahma Cumasach, Veronica now guides women and mothers through massage therapy, lymphatic detox, and doula services that focus on rest, restoration, and flow.In this episode, she shares:How being “tricked” into massage school led her to discover her giftThe moment a client's shoulder injury left them in tears of gratitude and shifted her entire view of the workWhy massage isn’t a luxury, but essential medicine for stress, trauma, and immune healthThe truth about toxins, breathwork, and why one hour of massage equals six hours of sleepHer philosophy on holding space, slowing down, and creating flow in everyday lifeOvercoming imposter syndrome while opening her own studio and businessWhat doula care really means, and why mothers need advocacy during childbirthThe personal birth experience that fuels her mission to help other womenThe origin story of the name Lahma Cumasach — “gifted, empowered hands”From energy, intuition, and trauma release to entrepreneurship, motherhood, and personal transformation, Veronica’s story is both practical and deeply human. This is an episode about rest, resilience, and the power of touch to restore what the modern world strips away.Learn more about Veronica and her services:LahmaCumasach.com Instagram @LahmaCumasachQuick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  47. 6

    Hot Boy Richmond Summer (Farmer's markets, Nascar, Jay walking, VCU, Cycling & Fake Wrestling) - Unscripted #007

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereWe kick off Richmond’s “Hot Boy Summer” with a debate over whether NASCAR’s raw chaos outshines F1’s polished precision, and why endurance athletes willingly subject themselves to cycling’s masochistic grind in the name of “Type II fun.” From there, we stumble into the absurdity of pedestrian planning — jaywalking tickets, newly raised curbs, and the question of whether Richmond is actually designing its streets for people or just pretending to.VCU’s presence looms large as we dissect the economic boost of move-in week against the reality of gridlock and sanitized public spaces. Carytown’s traffic, Main Street’s curb cuts, and the Boulevard roundabouts all become flashpoints in Richmond’s ongoing tug-of-war between growth and livability.But it’s not all infrastructure rants. We celebrate the culture that makes this city magnetic — Montana Gold bread worth driving across town for, farmers markets that feel like weekly festivals, and Browns Island’s promise of becoming Richmond’s true cultural stage. Even pro wrestling enters the conversation, as we argue whether WWE is “fake” or just the most brutal form of theater hiding in plain sight.It’s a ride through Richmond’s identity — half civic critique, half love letter — proving that the city’s summer heat isn’t just about the weather.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  48. 5

    The Art (and Grit) of Doing Kitchens Right in Richmond with Reno & Company #006

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereBradley Jones and Caleb Attalah left the comfort of a big-box retailer to build something better: Reno & Company.Learn more about Reno & Company:renoandcompany.com | Call 804-620-7366In this conversation, they share the pivotal lunch that sparked their business, the values that set them apart, and the lessons learned from years of creating kitchens that pair function with beauty.We talk about:The turning point that made them walk away from corporate lifeWhy they refuse to cut corners, even when it costs themThe role of transparency and communication in every projectHow they collaborate with clients to balance form and functionThe challenges of evolving from top employees to business ownersWhat’s next for their growing showroom and brandIf you’re a homeowner in Richmond — or anyone who values craftsmanship, integrity, and thoughtful design — this is a conversation worth hearing.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  49. 4

    From Keys to Care: Tehran Jones is Making Senior Transitions Easier for Families in Virginia #005

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereFrom growing up in Richmond, Virginia’s Jackson Ward and the projects of Gilpin Court, to breaking a cycle of incarceration, Tehran “Tye” Jones has lived a story of resilience, redemption, and relentless drive.In this powerful conversation, Myke sits down with Tye as he opens up about his father’s 28-year prison sentence, the moment fatherhood forced him to change course, and the values he’s instilled in his own children to ensure they never have to face the same hardships.He shares the pivotal day he became a homeowner — describing in vivid detail the feeling of putting the key into his own front door for the first time — and how that experience inspired him to help others achieve the same life-changing milestone. For Tye, real estate isn’t just about property; it’s about generational wealth, legacy, and creating a foundation for the future.But Tye’s story doesn’t stop there. He recounts the tragic loss of his father, who died choking on a sandwich in a nursing home without trained staff present to save him. This deeply personal event sparked Tye’s mission to advocate for seniors, protect them from exploitation, and ensure they receive the respect and care they deserve in their final years.https://[email protected]://instagram.com/tehranjonesrealtor(804) 930-2116Throughout the episode, we explore:How growing up without a present father shaped his approach to parenting.The temptation of the wrong hustle vs. the discipline of the right one.Why teaching boys to be men is more critical than ever.The emotional power of homeownership and its ripple effect on families.Hard truths about elder care — and what we can do about it.How Tye keeps himself strong mentally, physically, and spiritually to serve others.Tye speaks with the kind of conviction that comes from lived experience — equal parts motivational and challenging. He doesn’t sugarcoat the struggles, but he also doesn’t let them define him. Instead, he’s built a life and a mission rooted in faith, persistence, and service.Whether you’re a parent determined to break old patterns, someone chasing the dream of homeownership, or simply a human who cares about how we treat our elders, Tye’s story will leave you inspired.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

  50. 3

    Richmond Poop Water, Leo the Mobster, Ancient Pyramids, and Other Fun Tales - Unscripted #004

    Got thoughts? Throw them at us by sending a text hereWe start with Richmond's ambitious plan to fix the James River's decades-long sewage problem, but somehow end up exploring everything from naked beach regulars to ancient pyramid conspiracies. Our studio's wild past as Smitty's bar reveals a darker side of Richmond history involving Leo Joseph Coury, a restaurant mogul turned hitman-hiring fugitive who exploited the gay community in the 1970s.From there, we journey through America's rebellious origins with the "Mind Your Business" continental dollar designed by Benjamin Franklin, questioning everything we think we know about history and archaeology. Why do mainstream Egyptologists ignore evidence that pyramids align with ancient constellations? How did ancient civilizations like Gobekli Tepe challenge our understanding of human development thousands of years before we supposedly developed advanced societies?We balance the heavy topics with lighter Richmond culture, celebrating the city's thriving farmer's markets, hidden Maymont Park concerts, and the unique neighborhood vibes that make this river city special. Whether we're discussing Class IV rapids, maker markets, or Mass Effect video games, we keep coming back to how stories shape our understanding of truth. Sometimes the most logical explanation sounds like a conspiracy theory, and sometimes local history is stranger than fiction.Quick interjection to invite you to Vera House Studios. If you are a local Richmond business, entrepreneur, brand owner, or service provider—and you know you need to create better content to get your products and services in front of the right people—we can help.Support the showGet more info about our studio here.This podcast is produced by Vera House — a creative club and premium media studio based in Richmond, Virginia. Our studio exists to champion local brands, creative expression, rva culture, and produce high-impact content for founders, makers, and modern businesses.Follow the movement:instagram.com/verahouse.coyoutube.com/@verahousepodverahouse.coHosted by Myke Metzger & Perri Young:instagram.com/mykemetzgerinstagram.com/planetperri

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

A creative dispatch with Richmond entrepreneurs, founders, and modern creatives shaping the future — one story, one project, one idea at a time. Recorded in Richmond, Virginia, Vera House is where conversation meets craft. From local legends to global movements, this is for makers, artists, creators, and doers.

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Vera House Studios

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Vera House Podcast have?

Vera House Podcast currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Vera House Podcast about?

A creative dispatch with Richmond entrepreneurs, founders, and modern creatives shaping the future — one story, one project, one idea at a time. Recorded in Richmond, Virginia, Vera House is where conversation meets craft. From local legends to global movements, this is for makers, artists,...

How often does Vera House Podcast release new episodes?

Vera House Podcast has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Vera House Podcast?

You can listen to Vera House Podcast on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Vera House Podcast?

Vera House Podcast is created and hosted by Vera House Studios.
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