PODCAST · business
Best of Johnston County®
by Jonathan Breeden
Best of Johnston County" dives into the stories that make this North Carolina community unique. Brought to you by the trusted legal at Breeden Law Office and hosted by Jonathan Breeden, this podcast showcases all aspects of life in Johnston County. It features insights from business owners, political figures, community members, and even engages with significant subjects in the realm of family law. Amid the daily hustle and bustle, sometimes, we just take a step back to appreciate what lies at the heart of Johnston County.
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134
How Animation Is Creating New Possibilities in Johnston County
What if your business could stop people mid-scroll and make them pay attention? In this episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast, Jonathan Breeden sits down with Gabriel Smith, owner of AnimNation, to talk about the world of 3D animation, gaming, and digital storytelling. From working on a DreamWorks project to helping local businesses create memorable brand experiences, Gabriel shares how creativity and technology are changing the way businesses connect with people.
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133
From Fat and Tired to Fitness Leader
What happens when someone reaches a moment where enough is enough? For Amy Locklear, it started with being tired of feeling tired. Years later, that personal decision transformed into something much bigger, a fitness community helping people across Johnston County move more, live healthier lives, and build relationships that extend far beyond workouts.In this episode, Amy shares her journey into fitness, what makes CrossFit different, and why community may matter even more than exercise.
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132
The Family Farm Growing More Than Plants
What starts as a simple nursery can become something much bigger over time. In this episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast, Jonathan Breeden sits down with Chris Smith of Smith’s Nursery to talk about farming, family, and how a small Johnston County business grew into one of the community’s favorite destinations. From strawberries and hayrides to homemade ice cream and school field trips, this conversation explores why Smith’s Nursery has become a place families return to year after year.
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131
Ask Jonathan Anything: What Does Divorce Really Cost?
Divorce is emotional, but the financial side can be just as overwhelming. In this Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything episode, we break down how attorneys charge, what really drives costs up, and the practical decisions that can save you thousands. If you have ever wondered what divorce actually costs, this conversation brings clarity to a complicated process.
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130
Turning Coffee Into Connection
What happens when two Army veterans follow a calling, not just to build a business, but to build community? In this episode, Jim and Kim Fry share the story behind Coffee on Raiford, their leap into entrepreneurship, and how a simple cup of coffee can create real connection in a fast-moving world.
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129
Building More Than Homes: How Barry Woodard Helped Shape Johnston County’s Growth
What does it look like to grow up in a small town… and then help shape what it becomes? In this episode, Barry Woodard shares his journey from Clayton native to real estate leader, and what it really takes to balance growth, community, and identity in Johnston County.
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128
From Diplomatic Service to Southern Hospitality: Reimagining a Historic Inn in Clayton
What does it look like to trade global diplomacy for small-town hospitality? In this episode, Jordan Robinson shares her unexpected journey from Marine Corps embassy guard to owner of a historic boutique inn. This conversation explores reinvention, community connection, and what it really takes to turn a vision into something tangible.
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127
From K-9 Training to Leadership Transformation: The Habits That Change Everything
What if the way you train your dog could also transform how you lead your business, your family, and your life? In this episode, Michael Soler shares how discipline, psychology, and daily habits shaped his journey from Marine to entrepreneur—and how those same principles now help leaders grow with clarity and confidence.
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126
Ask Jonathan Anything: Adoption Isn’t Just Paperwork, It’s a Lifelong Promise
What does it really mean to adopt a child, beyond the legal forms and court filings? In this Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything episode, we break down stepparent, relative, and agency adoptions, and the life-changing responsibilities that come with them. If you’ve ever wondered how adoption works, or whether it’s right for your family, this conversation brings clarity to a deeply meaningful decision.
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125
The Shortcut to Trust: Finding the Right Pro Without the Guesswork
What if hiring the right contractor didn’t feel like a gamble?In this episode, Chet Hardaway shares how he’s turning years of hands-on experience into a smarter way to connect homeowners with trusted tradespeople. From appliance advice to avoiding costly mistakes, this conversation is packed with practical insights that can save you time, money, and frustration.
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124
Leadership, Growth, and the Roads That Connect North Carolina
What does a 35-year career at the North Carolina Department of Transportation look like when you start as a college intern and finish as Secretary?In this episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast, Jonathan Breeden sits down with recently retired transportation leader Joey Hopkins to talk about his journey from a small town in Rockingham County to leading one of the largest transportation systems in the country. Along the way, they discuss the future of Johnston County’s roads, the challenges of rebuilding Western North Carolina after Hurricane Helene, and why the people of Johnston County make the community feel like home.
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123
Building Strength, Community, and Confidence
What does it look like to build a fitness community that goes beyond treadmills and weight machines? In this episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast, Jonathan Breeden sits down with James Woodall, founder of Woodall Fitness in Clayton.From training alongside future UFC legends in Las Vegas to creating a unique functional training gym in Johnston County, James shares the journey that shaped his approach to movement, health, and community impact.
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122
Ask Jonathan Anything: Think Before You Text: Digital Evidence in Custody Court
In this special Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast, Jonathan answers one of the most important modern family law questions: how does digital evidence impact custody and divorce cases?From text messages and Facebook posts to parenting apps and screenshots, what you send today could be read out loud in a courtroom tomorrow. Here is what you need to know before you hit “send.”
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121
Change, Collaboration, and the Future of District 7
What does it take to step back into public service after stepping away? In this episode, Keith Branch shares why he’s running for Johnston County Commissioner in District 7 and what he believes the county needs most right now: financial discipline, collaboration, and fresh perspective. From fund balance debates to school funding and growth management, this conversation dives into the future of Johnston County.
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120
Experience, Accessibility, and a Return to the Table
Why would someone step away from power… only to ask for it back?After serving eight years as County Commissioner, Chad Stewart resigned. Now he’s running again. Was it strategy? Service? Or unfinished business?In this episode, we unpack fund balances, tax debates, growth fears, and the pressure of public life in the internet age.When experience meets controversy… who do you trust to lead?
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119
A Calling, Not a Job with Sheriff Steve Bizzell
What does the sheriff actually do when the cameras are off?Behind the patrol cars and flashing lights is a role most people never see, managing a $32M operation, supporting deputies through trauma, making decisions the public may never agree with, and carrying the weight of every call that comes in. After nearly three decades in the job, Sheriff Steve Bizzell explains why he still believes this role isn’t a position. It’s a calling.
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118
A Conversation About Service, Perspective, and the Future of Johnston County
Why would someone run for sheriff after being hired by the same department three times?This episode isn’t about attacks or politics. It’s about perspective. I talk with Randall Ackley about what he’s seen on patrol, inside investigations, and from years of working in a rapidly growing county. When staffing can’t keep up, presence disappears. What does that mean for safety, trust, and the future of Johnston County?
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117
Talking Growth, Service, and Stewardship with Adam Caldwell
What happens when someone who’s seen government from the inside decides to run for local office — not for power, but to protect a way of life?Adam Caldwell isn’t a career politician. He’s a father of three, a former public servant, and now a candidate trying to balance growth, taxes, and heritage in Johnston County.Can one person help a fast-growing county stay grounded in its roots?
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116
Engineer. Neighbor. Vice Chair. Why Butch Lawter Wants Four More Years
What really decides a local election before Election Day? I sit down with Vice Chair Butch Lawter to ask the questions that shape your wallet and your weekend. Can a county actually build parks without piling on taxes? What fixes a strained school budget when enrollment barely moves? How do you plan water for peak days, not averages? And why does fund balance matter more than slogans? If you live in Johnston County, these answers touch your street, your bill, your vote.
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115
“Getting It Done”: Commissioner on Budgets and Growth
Why would a small town business owner take a pay cut to serve, hire extra staff to cover him, then ask voters for four more years? In this episode, Commissioner Mike Rose unpacks the revaluation year in plain numbers, the billion in building needs, and why the county set the rate it did. Are incentives giveaways, or a smarter way to win jobs? What happens when the state stalls and the courts still need staff? If you care about taxes, growth, and the future of Johnston County, lean in.
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114
A Harbor Close to Home Healing Safety and Community in Johnston County
What if domestic violence isn’t what you think it is? What if the most damaging scars are the ones you can’t see? In this episode, I sit down with Harbor’s Executive Director, Kay Johnson, to unpack the power and control behind abuse, why it often takes about seven attempts to leave, and how a simple plan can change everything. How do you know if it’s abuse when there’s no bruise? What does real help look like at 2 a.m.? And how can a community thrift shop fuel safety and healing? Listen in and decide what your next step could be.
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113
Keeping the Spirit of Relay for Life Alive in Johnston County
What keeps a community walking—year after year—for a cause that never sleeps? In Johnston County, Relay for Life has evolved from overnight laps around a track to a full-day festival of hope, remembrance, and resilience. In this episode, I sit down with two women who refused to let the mission fade after COVID. Why does Relay still matter? What drives people to keep showing up? And how does it change lives right here at home?
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112
Clayton on the Rise in Johnston County’s Growth
Clayton is growing, but what does that really mean behind the scenes? How does a town prepare for five new people every single day? What happens when land meant for jobs turns into rooftops instead? And why do water, sewer, and timing matter more than most people realize? In this conversation with Clayton’s Economic Development Director, Joe Stallings, we unpack what growth actually takes, what’s coming next, and how a community decides what kind of future it wants to build.
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111
Ask Jonathan Anything: Life After Divorce
What if the hardest part of divorce isn’t the divorce itself, but everything that quietly stays connected afterward?What if your will, your life insurance, your bank accounts, or even your car are still tying you to someone you thought you’d left behind?In this special Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything episode, I walk through the documents divorce does not change for you, the financial risks people overlook, and why divorce is not an ending. It’s a beginning that requires intention.
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110
Johnston County DA Shares His Vision for Law Enforcement and the Courts
What happens when the person responsible for public safety in Johnston County pulls back the curtain on the justice system? In this conversation, District Attorney Jason Waller reveals how cases really move, what keeps him up at night, and why his toughest decisions matter most. If you’ve ever wondered who protects your community—and how—they do it, this episode will change the way you see the courthouse.
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109
The Systems Behind the Scenes of Johnston County
How many people in Johnston County can’t get to work, the doctor, or even the grocery store… simply because they don’t have a car?I thought I understood what public services looked like here — until I sat down with Josh Jensen. From JCATS and Quick Ride to Meals on Wheels and senior housing, what he shared changed how I see this county.What happens when the systems we never notice disappear?
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108
Leadership, Access, and the Future of Health Care in Johnston County with Tom Williams
What happens when a hospital CEO is still thinking like a respiratory therapist?What decisions do you make when lives are on the line and no one has clear answers?And if the best cancer care is meant to be shared, not hoarded, why does competition still exist?In this conversation, I sit down with Tom Williams to explore leadership under pressure, healthcare access, and what it really means to care for a community.
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107
How Johnston County’s New Tourism Leader Plans to Celebrate Our Community
What happens when someone with a background in politics, crisis communications, and nationwide community storytelling steps into Johnston County for the first time? And what does he notice that many of us who live here every day might overlook? In this episode, I sit down with Aaron Mullins, our brand new tourism CEO, to ask how he sees Johnston County, what surprised him, and what stories he believes the world needs to hear about this place.
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106
What Every Blended Family Should Know About Stepparent Rights in North Carolina
What really happens when love meets the law in a blended family? In this episode, I sit down with Raena Burch to unpack one of the most emotional questions in family law: what rights do stepparents actually have? From adoption and custody battles to the quiet struggles inside second marriages, we explore what the law allows, where it stops—and how compassion, communication, and boundaries can make all the difference.
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105
From Family Roots to Community Revival
What happens when a family business built on a red telephone becomes the heartbeat of an entire town? In this episode, I sit down with Chandler Pernell, owner of Call Pernell Heating & Air, to uncover how a simple promise — always answer the phone — turned into a legacy of service, faith, and community pride. From the trades to transformation, and from local festivals to the soul of Selma itself, what can one small business teach us about keeping a hometown alive?
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104
A Local Leader with a Global Impact
What turns a kid from the tobacco fields near Bunn into the CEO of UNC Health Johnston? Why did one guidance counselor and a single day at WakeMed change everything? How do you go from Durham Tech to leading a health system by what he calls accident? In part one, Tom Williams shares the small choices that shaped a big career, the community that made him stay, and the expansion ahead, including a new patient tower in Clayton. If healthcare is local, what does growth really look like on the ground in Johnston County?
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103
From Brooklyn to Selma: The Heart and Hustle of Adele Walker
What makes someone trade a badge for a ballot?Adele Walker’s journey from NYPD family roots to Florida police officer to downtown Selma business owner is anything but ordinary. But what happens when the woman who “never wanted to be in politics” decides to step up and run for mayor? In this episode, we explore how frustration turned into purpose — and why Adele believes real change in small towns starts when ordinary people stop staying quiet.
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102
More Than Firefighting: How Cleveland’s Fire Department Keeps the Community Together
What if your local fire chief was the reason your community still felt like a community? What if the fire department wasn’t just answering 911 calls — but filling in where town halls, parades, and summer camps disappeared? In this episode, I sat down with Cleveland Fire Chief Chris Ellington, a man who quietly rebuilt the heart of a town that technically doesn’t exist. From saving lives to saving traditions… how far would you go for the place you call home?
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101
Building Community Through Service: The Woman’s Club of Clayton with President Trish Perna
What makes someone uproot their life, leave behind decades in Las Vegas, and start over in Johnston County? For Trish Perna, it wasn’t a career move or a change of pace—it was something far more personal. Now, as president of the Woman’s Club of Clayton, she’s leading projects that fund foster homes, support local kids, and even transform community spaces into holiday destinations. But here’s the real question: what does it take to build a club that isn’t about status or socializing, but about rolling up your sleeves and getting things done?
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100
Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything: Celebrating 100 Episodes
100 episodes. When we started this podcast, I wasn’t sure we’d even make it to 20. Now people stop me in town and say, “Aren’t you the podcast guy?” not “my lawyer.” Along the way, we’ve lost entire interviews, begged friends to come on, and met nonprofits, small business owners, and community leaders who completely reshaped how I see Johnston County.But here’s what I keep asking myself: which conversations truly changed me, and which ones might change you?
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99
Building Parks, Building Community: An Update from Johnston County’s Parks and Open Space Director
Everyone’s asking the same thing: why is Johnston County’s new regional park taking so long? We’ve heard promises of pickleball courts, fishing ponds, and walking trails—yet the site still looks untouched. Is it money? Politics? Or something as simple as… not enough clay in the ground? In this conversation with Parks Director Adrian O’Neal, I dig into the delays, the big plans, and whether we’ll actually see this park finished before my own grandchildren are grown.
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98
From Peer Pressure to Leadership: The Journey of Cleveland Fire Chief Chris Ellington
What makes someone run toward danger when everyone else runs away? 🚒Cleveland Fire Chief Chris Ellington didn’t dream of being a firefighter—it started as peer pressure from friends. Yet, within seven years, he was chief at just 28 years old. In our conversation, he opens up about learning firefighting “on the way to a call,” leading a department that grew from 230 calls a year to nearly 3,000, and what he believes truly sets firefighters apart.Would you ever step into a career where the training never ends and the stakes are life or death?
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97
Finding Light in Loss: Camp Courage and the SECU Hospice House
What if the only way through grief… was straight through it?This week, we sat down with April Barbour-Capps, the heart behind Johnston County’s SECU Hospice House and Camp Courage—a free program helping children navigate the unimaginable. How do you explain loss to a 6-year-old? How do you help families carry grief without being crushed by it?In this conversation we uncover why Camp Courage exists, how hospice care is evolving, and what it really means to face loss together as a community.
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96
Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything: What Happens to the House in a Divorce?
What really happens to the house when a marriage ends? Divorce doesn’t take your name off the mortgage. Courts almost never order a sale. And sometimes, years later, an ex can walk away with hundreds of thousands in equity they didn’t pay toward. In this episode, I ask: Who really owns the home after divorce—the one on the deed, the one on the mortgage, or the one still living there?
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95
Maureen McGuinness on Building Johnston County’s Future
What do cemeteries, pirates, and workforce housing have in common? They’re all part of the journey that brought Maureen McGuinness to lead the Triangle East Chamber of Commerce. From managing six cemeteries in New York to helping Johnston County tackle childcare deserts, housing shortages, and job growth, her story is anything but ordinary. Why did she choose North Carolina? What’s really keeping businesses up at night? And how is JoCo Works changing the way our kids see their future? This conversation made me rethink what a Chamber of Commerce can do.
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94
Building Roof Stepper Roofing: Houston Colson’s Journey from Laborer to Local Leader
What would make someone leave steady work to start a roofing company in one of the most competitive markets around? In this episode, I sit down with Houston Colson, founder of Roof Stepper Roofing, to uncover how a 12-year-old transplant to Johnston County built a business on consistency, trust, and doing what others in his industry often skip. From storm chasers to insurance battles—would you know the right first step if your roof was damaged?
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93
Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything: Legal Issues for Unmarried Couples
You lived together. Shared a home. Built a life. But you never got married.Now it’s over. What are you legally entitled to? Can you keep the house? The car? The dog? What if your name isn’t on anything?This episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast answers the questions no one asks—until it’s too late.Because when the breakup hits, love isn’t the law… paperwork is.
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92
One Blood, One Mission: How Coach Fred Is Rebuilding Lives Across Johnston County
What if the key to changing a community starts with just one person—and a pair of donated tennis shoes? Coach Fred went from feeding four families on Thanksgiving to mentoring hundreds of kids across Johnston County. But what really happens inside those first two weeks of his program—when most kids say they don’t even like him? And why does he believe the biggest problem with today’s youth... is boredom? This isn’t just a story about mentoring. It’s about rebuilding lives before they break. Would you step in before it's too late?
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91
From Carburetors to Concealed Carry: How Kemp Treger Built Two Businesses by Doing Things Right
What do car repairs and concealed carry classes have in common? More than you’d think—especially when Kemp Treger is behind both. From rebuilding engines to teaching firearm safety, Kemp’s built two businesses around one principle: do it right, or don’t do it at all. But what makes women better shooters than men? Why are some luxury cars a mechanic’s worst nightmare? And how do you really make a car last 300,000 miles? This episode goes under the hood in more ways than one.
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90
Novo Nordisk in Johnston County: How a Danish Powerhouse is Transforming Local Lives and Futures
What if the best career of your life was waiting just down the road — and all it took to start was a $300 class? Novo Nordisk is quietly building one of the largest pharmaceutical campuses in the world… right here in Johnston County. I sat down with Stacy Beard to uncover how this global giant is changing lives, creating jobs, and proving you don’t have to leave home to do work that matters. Would you recognize the opportunity if it were in your own backyard?
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89
Homegrown Healing: How Natasha Armstrong Is Bringing Personalized Care to Johnston County
What if getting older didn’t have to mean losing your independence? What if care could come to you—on your terms, in your home, with someone you trust? I sat down with Natasha Armstrong, a registered nurse redefining home care and wellness in Johnston County. From IV drips that boost your energy to respite care that gives caregivers a break… she’s doing it differently. The question is: when your family needs help, will you know where to turn?
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88
Ask Jonathan Breeden Anything: Custody Across State Lines
What happens when your child lives in one state… and your custody order is in another?What if your ex moves across the country without telling you?And how far does a parent really have to go to stay present in their child’s life?In this episode, I unpack the messy, emotional, and legally complex world of multi-state custody—from emergency returns to cross-country visitations.Because when parenting crosses state lines, everything changes.
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87
The Wildlife Insider: How Robert Weaver Solves the Problems You Hope You Never Have
What do you do when thousands of bats are living in the ceiling of a medical building — and the law says you can’t touch them?Robert Weaver has the answer.From removing birds in big-box stores to tracking raccoons through crawlspaces, Robert built a thriving wildlife control company out of situations most of us never want to think about.In this episode, I sat down with the man behind Freedom Wildlife Solutions to ask:What’s really living inside our homes? How do we stop it? And what happens when we don’t?You won’t look at your attic the same way again.
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86
How a WRAL Reporter Became the Voice of Novo Nordisk—and What It Means for Johnston County
What happens when a TV reporter walks away from the camera and ends up inside one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies?Stacy Beard thought she’d be covering wars. Instead, her journalism career led her from the anchor desk to Town Hall—and eventually to Novo Nordisk, right here in Johnston County. In this conversation, we unpack the real reason she left WRAL, the burnout no one talks about, and what she’s learned about storytelling, leadership, and local impact along the way.This isn’t just a career pivot—it’s a masterclass in reinvention.
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85
The Eyes on Every Beam: How Randy Berry Is Raising the Bar in Johnston County
What if your dream home had a hidden flaw—and no one told you until it was too late?Randy Berry thought he was getting a clean bill of health on his new house... until he realized the inspection was too perfect. That moment launched a mission to fix what’s broken in the home inspection industry.Why do some builders welcome inspectors—and others dread them?What should you look for before you ever set foot inside a model home?And could a messy construction site predict how well your home is built?Let’s talk about what’s really behind the walls.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Best of Johnston County" dives into the stories that make this North Carolina community unique. Brought to you by the trusted legal at Breeden Law Office and hosted by Jonathan Breeden, this podcast showcases all aspects of life in Johnston County. It features insights from business owners, political figures, community members, and even engages with significant subjects in the realm of family law. Amid the daily hustle and bustle, sometimes, we just take a step back to appreciate what lies at the heart of Johnston County.
HOSTED BY
Jonathan Breeden
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