We Got The Funk

PODCAST · education

We Got The Funk

"We Got The Funk" is a podcast based in Fort Worth, Texas. I discuss a wide variety of subjects that directly affect our city. Everything from the history of Funkytown to its future. Welcome to The Funk......

  1. 16

    Episode 13: I. M. Terrell: The Foundation of Fort Worth’s Black Education System (Part 1: The Who)

    In this episode of We Got The Funk Podcast, DonTheBarber takes a powerful look at the life and legacy of Isaiah Milligan Terrell, one of the most important architects of Black education in Fort Worth history.This is more than a history lesson. This is a story about vision, sacrifice, institution-building, and the foundation of opportunity for generations of Black families in Fort Worth.From his roots in post-slavery Texas to becoming the leader of Fort Worth’s Black school system, I. M. Terrell represents what it means to build something lasting in the face of exclusion. Don breaks down how Terrell helped create a path for Black students when no real system existed and why his story still matters today.In this episode, we cover:Who I. M. Terrell was and why his name mattersHis early life in Grimes County, TexasThe legacy of his father, Alexander Terrell, and the significance of freedom, work, and ownershipTerrell’s education at Straight University in New OrleansHow he became Fort Worth’s first major Black educational leaderThe church-based beginnings of Black education in Fort WorthThe founding of the East Ninth Street Colored SchoolHis partnership with his wife, Marcelite Landry TerrellHow he trained and multiplied Black educators across the cityHis rise from classroom teacher to superintendent of Fort Worth’s Black schoolsWhy his impact reached far beyond education into institution-building and community legacyThis episode reminds us that before there were modern opportunities, there were people who built systems from scratch so others could rise.Follow DonTheBarber:Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube: DonTheBarber_817Listen, share, and help keep these stories alive.If this episode taught you something, made you think, or made you proud, send it to somebody else. Our history deserves to be heard.#WeGotTheFunk #IMTerrell #FortWorthHistory #BlackHistory #BlackEducation #DonTheBarber #TexasHistory #CommunityLegacy #CulturalHistory #FortWorth

  2. 15

    Episode 12: Badge, Blood, and Cowtown: The Rise of Jim Courtright (Part 2)

    In Part 2, DonTheBarber breaks down the final chapter of Jim Courtright—one of Fort Worth’s most debated figures. From fugitive to legend, and ultimately to a shocking death, this episode explores how power, reputation, and reality collided in Cowtown.🎧 What You’ll HearThe ReturnAfter disappearing, Courtright resurfaces and walks back into Fort Worth like nothing happened—welcomed and even deputized again.Railroad ViolenceDuring a major strike, an ambush at Buttermilk Junction leads to chaos. Over 100 shots are fired, and Courtright survives—but his image takes a hit.Power MovesHe shifts into running a detective agency, but rumors of protection money and influence begin to blur the line between lawman and enforcer.Final ShowdownA confrontation with gambler Luke Short outside the White Elephant Saloon ends it all. Courtright is outdrawn and never fires a shot.LegacyHero or villain? Courtright’s story reflects a Fort Worth still figuring out its identity.🧠 Key ThemesMyth vs RealityPower & ControlLaw vs LawlessnessLegacy & Reputation📍 Featured LocationsWhite Elephant Saloon (Fort Worth)Buttermilk JunctionOakwood Cemetery (Fort Worth)💬 Quotable Moment“I would rather be in a pine coffin in Fort Worth… than be alive anywhere else.”📢 Call to ActionIf this episode made you think:👉 Share it with someone who loves real Texas history👉 Follow DonTheBarber_817 on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube🎧 About the PodcastWe Got The Funk Podcast brings Fort Worth history to life through real storytelling, culture, and community.“We don’t just tell stories… we restore legacy.” 🎙️

  3. 14

    Episode 11: Badge, Blood, and Cowtown — The Rise of Jim Courtright (Part 1)

    🔥 Was Fort Worth’s most famous lawman actually its first gangster?Before Fort Worth became the city we know today… it was wild, booming, and full of contradictions.And standing right in the middle of it all was Jim Courtright — a man who wore the badge… but may have controlled the chaos behind it.In this episode of We Got The Funk Podcast, we dive into the rise of one of Fort Worth’s most controversial figures — a man praised as a hero by some… and labeled a violent opportunist by others.This is Part 1 of a 2-part series — and it sets the stage for a story that feels more like a movie than real life.🎧 In This Episode, You’ll Discover:How Jim Courtright went from farmer to Fort Worth city marshalThe near-death shooting that helped build his reputationThe explosive growth of Fort Worth during the railroad boomThe truth about Hell’s Half Acre — the city’s vice districtHow law enforcement and vice may have worked hand-in-handWhy Courtright’s leadership style raised questions then… and nowThe shocking New Mexico incident that changed everythingHow a wanted man returned to Fort Worth and still held influenceThe unbelievable restaurant escape that turned him into legend🧠 Why This Story MattersThis isn’t just about one man.This is about how cities are built —through power, politics, compromise… and sometimes contradiction.Jim Courtright represents a deeper question:👉 Can someone enforce the law… and still benefit from breaking it?👉 And what happens when a city needs someone like that?🎙️ About the ShowWe Got The Funk Podcast explores the history, culture, and untold stories of Fort Worth, Texas — blending research, storytelling, and real conversation to connect the past with the present.🚨 Don’t Miss Part 2In the next episode, we break down:The escalation of Courtright’s conflictsThe reputation that followed himAnd the moment that led to one of the most famous deadly encounters in Western history📢 CALL TO ACTIONIf this episode made you think…👉 Share this episode with someone who loves Texas history, Western stories, or real-life legends.And if you’re rocking with the show:⭐ Leave a review on Buzzsprout or your favorite platform — it helps more people discover the podcast and keeps these stories alive.🔗 Connect With UsFollow We Got The Funk Podcast for more stories, clips, and behind-the-scenes content.🏷️ Keywords (SEO Boost)Fort Worth history, Jim Courtright, Hell’s Half Acre, Texas history podcast, Wild West lawmen, frontier justice, Fort Worth podcast, Western history stories, Texas Rangers era, true history podcast

  4. 13

    Episode 10: Why Fort Worth Has a Hulen Street: The Soldier, the Railroad Boss, and the Story Nobody Told You

    We Got The Funk Podcast – Episode 11Thousands of people drive down Hulen Street every day. It’s one of the busiest roads on the west side of Fort Worth. But very few people know the story behind the name.In Episode 11 of We Got The Funk Podcast, we explore the remarkable life of John Augustus Hulen, a man who helped shape both Texas military history and the railroad industry that powered the state’s growth.Hulen grew up in Gainesville, where he developed a strong interest in military service. He began his career with the Gainesville Rifles and quickly rose through the ranks. During the Spanish–American War, he served as a Major in the U.S. Volunteers. Soon after, he was deployed overseas during the Philippine–American War, where his leadership in combat earned national recognition and the Silver Star.But Hulen’s story doesn’t end with the military.When he wasn’t in uniform, he built a powerful career in railroads. He worked with major rail systems including the Trinity and Brazos Valley Railway, the Burlington–Rock Island Railroad, and the Fort Worth and Denver City Railway. At a time when railroads drove the American economy, Hulen helped guide struggling rail companies back to profitability and became one of the most influential railroad executives in Texas.When World War I began, Hulen returned to military service. He played a key role in organizing the 36th Infantry Division, whose soldiers trained at Camp Bowie before heading to Europe.The division later fought in major battles including the Meuse–Argonne Offensive, one of the largest and deadliest operations of the war. For his leadership, Hulen received multiple honors including the Distinguished Service Medal and two Croix de Guerre medals.In the early 1920s, Fort Worth honored his service by naming a street near Camp Bowie after him. What began as a short road eventually expanded into the eleven-mile corridor known today as Hulen Street.In this episode, we uncover the powerful story behind a name that thousands of Fort Worth residents see every day—but rarely stop to think about.The next time you drive down Hulen Street, you’ll know the history behind it.⏱ Episode Timeline0:00 – IntroductionWhy Hulen Street is one of Fort Worth’s most overlooked historical names.1:30 – Early Life in GainesvilleHow Hulen’s upbringing shaped his military ambitions.4:00 – Military Service BeginsFrom Texas volunteers to overseas combat.8:30 – Railroad Executive CareerBuilding and rebuilding major Texas railroads.12:00 – World War I and Camp BowieTraining the 36th Infantry Division for battle.16:30 – The Naming of Hulen StreetHow Fort Worth honored his legacy.18:30 – Final Years and LegacyIf you enjoy discovering the hidden history of Fort Worth, follow We Got The Funk Podcast for more stories about the people, places, and moments that shaped the city. 🎙️

  5. 12

    Episode 9: The Fort Worth Missing Trio: A Mystery That Still Haunts Cowtown

    On December 23, 1974, three girls left Seminary South Shopping Center in Fort Worth and were never seen again.Rachel Trlica (17), Renee Wilson (14), and Julie Moseley (9) disappeared just two days before Christmas while shopping for holiday gifts. Their car was later found abandoned in the mall parking lot, but the girls were gone.What happened next would become one of the most haunting unsolved cases in Texas history.In this episode of the We Got The Funk Podcast, we examine the timeline, the strange evidence, the mysterious letter mailed after the disappearance, and the theories that have kept investigators and families searching for answers for nearly 50 years.This case—often called The Fort Worth Missing Trio—remains unsolved to this day.If you have information, authorities encourage tips to be reported to the Fort Worth Police Department.🎙 Subscribe to the We Got The Funk Podcast wherever you get your podcasts for more stories about Fort Worth history, culture, and unsolved mysteries.Topics Covered in This Episode:• The events of December 23, 1974• Who were Rachel Trlica, Renee Wilson, and Julie Moseley• The Seminary South Shopping Center timeline• The mysterious letter sent after the disappearance• The investigation and theories• Why the case still matters todayKeywords:Fort Worth Missing Trio, Rachel Trlica, Renee Wilson, Julie Moseley, Fort Worth unsolved mystery, Texas cold cases, Seminary South Shopping Center, true crime Texas, missing persons Fort Worth

  6. 11

    Episode 8: 11:23 — The Minute That Changed Fort Worth

    Most history is remembered by big dates.But sometimes history changes in a single minute.For Fort Worth, that moment happened at 11:23 a.m. on July 19, 1876.In this episode of the We Got The Funk Podcast, we tell the incredible story of how a struggling frontier town—once mocked as a sleepy village where a panther could roam the streets—was transformed forever when the first railroad locomotive finally rolled into town.After years of delays, economic crashes, political drama, and a desperate race against time, Fort Worth’s future arrived on the rails.And the moment the locomotive’s whistle screamed into Cowtown…Everything changed.In This Episode You’ll Learn• Why Fort Worth desperately needed a railroad to survive• How the Panic of 1873 nearly killed the city’s growth• The rivalry between Fort Worth and Dallas• The incredible story of a state representative carried into the legislature on a cot to delay adjournment• How a frantic race to lay railroad track saved Fort Worth’s future• Why 11:23 a.m. on July 19, 1876 became one of the most important moments in the city’s historyWhy This Moment MattersBefore the railroad arrived, Fort Worth’s population had dropped to just a few hundred people.But once the railroad connected the city to the rest of the country, everything changed:• Population growth exploded• Cattle shipments increased• Businesses expanded• Fort Worth became a major economic hub of North TexasThat single minute helped turn a struggling frontier town into the Fort Worth we know today.Subscribe & FollowIf you love learning about Fort Worth history, culture, and untold stories, make sure you subscribe to the We Got The Funk Podcast.Listen on:• Apple Podcasts• Spotify• Or wherever you get your podcastsConnect With UsFollow We Got The Funk Podcast for more stories about Funky Town:YouTube https://youtube.com/@donthebarber817?si=wqoXTzZkdECZnbulInstagramhttps://www.instagram.com/donthebarber_817?igsh=dTNheTJxbmh5MTdk&utm_source=qrFacebookhttps://www.facebook.com/share/1ByVhbjpCN/?mibextid=wwXIfrTikTokhttps://www.tiktok.com/@donthebarber_817?_r=1&_t=ZP-94Zokm2IwXf⭐ If you enjoyed this episode, share it with someone who loves Fort Worth history and leave a review to help more people discover the show.

  7. 10

    Episode 7: Before Fort Worth Loved Us: Slavery, Fear, and the People Who Built the City

    🎙 Episode 1Fort Worth Before the Myth: Slavery, Power, and the City We InheritedPodcast: We Got The FunkEpisode Length: ~30 minutesFormat: Audio-only📄 Episode DescriptionBefore Fort Worth became “where the West begins,” it was a slaveholding frontier town built on forced labor, silence, and selective memory.In this opening episode, we strip away the mythology and examine slavery in Fort Worth as it actually existed — not as a footnote, but as a foundation.Using court records, census data, and firsthand accounts, this episode names names, tells real stories, and confronts slavery’s most uncomfortable truths — including sexual violence, mixed-race children, and the ways power protected itself long after emancipation.This is not a general history of slavery.This is Fort Worth’s story.🎧 What This Episode Covers      •The largest slaveholders in early Fort Worth,           including E.M. Daggett, Middleton Tate Johnson, Nathaniel Terry, and Charles TurnerWhere their names still appear today — in streets, buildings, and city memoryThe lynching of white minister Anthony Bewley, and how his wife later identified local elites as ringleaders“Slavery’s dirty secret”: sexual violence, coercion, and the creation of mixed-race childrenThe life of Jeff Daggett — from birth into slavery, through violence, law enforcement, and public scandal, to his deathHow slavery didn’t end cleanly in Fort Worth — it evolved🧠 Why This Episode MattersFort Worth did not accidentally forget its past.It curated it.Understanding who held power, how they used it, and who paid the price helps explain:Why inequality persisted after emancipationWhy certain families retained influenceWhy some stories were preserved — and others erasedThis episode sets the foundation for everything that follows in this series.📚 Sources & ResearchThis episode draws heavily from:A History of Fort Worth in Black & WhiteCensus records and slave schedulesCourt transcripts and newspaper accountsReconstruction-era documentationAdditional sources and visuals will be shared on social media.🔔 Subscribe, Support, ShareIf this episode gave you language, clarity, or discomfort — that’s the point.Follow or subscribe wherever you’re listeningRate & review the show to help others find itShare this episode with someone who loves Fort Worth — or needs to understand it betterTo support the research and production of this podcast, check the links below.

  8. 9

    Episode 6: Settlers Moving In — The Ones Who Refused to Let Fort Worth Disappear

    In 1849, the U.S. Army left Fort Worth.Most frontier settlements didn’t survive moments like that.  No soldiers meant no safety. No safety meant no future.Fort Worth was supposed to become a ghost town.Instead, a small group of people made a quiet, dangerous decision — they stayed.In Episode 6 of We Got The Funk, we uncover the real beginning of Fort Worth, long before cattle drives, railroads, or legends. This episode tells the story of the merchants, doctors, teachers, builders, and families who refused to abandon an empty military post and turned it into a living community.You’ll meet:- Press “Pressley” Farmer, the first civilian settler whose family proved Fort Worth could exist without soldiers  - Henry Clay Daggett and Archibald Leonard, the businessmen who organized trade before government arrived  - Ephraim Merrell Daggett, the strategist who fought — and won — power for Fort Worth  - Dr. Carroll Marion Peak, the frontier doctor who kept people alive long enough for the city to grow  - John Peter Smith, the educator and mayor who planned for generations  - Julian Feild, the industrial builder whose mill helped create Mansfield and expand North TexasThis episode breaks down a truth most history books skip:Fort Worth wasn’t saved by generals or politicians.  It was saved by ordinary people who believed in a future before there was proof.If you’ve ever wondered how a city survives after power leaves — this is that story.Welcome back to We Got The Funk.  This is Fort Worth’s foundation.

  9. 8

    Episode 5: The Treaty at Bird’s Fort: The Paperwork After the Smoke

    Before Fort Worth was a city, and before settlers moved in, there was violence, displacement, and an attempt to clean it all up with paperwork.In Episode 5 of We Got The Funk, DonTheBarber breaks down the Treaty at Bird’s Fort—the who, the what, the when, the where, and most importantly, the why behind one of the most overlooked moments in North Texas history.After the Battle of Village Creek in 1841, the Republic of Texas sought “peace” with Native nations through a treaty signed in the woods along the Trinity River. On paper, it promised peace and friendship forever. In reality, the frontier kept moving, the violence didn’t stop, and the treaty revealed more about power, fear, and expansion than reconciliation.This episode explores:Why the treaty happened after violence, not beforeHow slow communication shaped frontier decision-makingThe role of Edward H. Tarrant and other Republic officialsWhy Bird’s Fort mattered as a meeting placeHow treaties often managed consequences instead of preventing themWhy Fort Worth could only be built after Village Creek and Bird’s FortThis is not the textbook version.This is the barbershop version—context, consequences, and honesty.Episode 5 also sets up what comes next:When the Army abandoned Fort Worth in 1853, civilians stepped into the space left behind—and that’s where the real city begins.🎧 Subscribe to We Got The Funk on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, Amazon, or wherever you listen, and don’t miss Episode 6 as we dive into the settlers who built Fort Worth after the soldiers left.

  10. 7

    Episode 4: The Village Creek Throwdown — When Peace Broke in North Texas

    In this episode of We Got The Funk, DonTheBarber takes listeners to the moment peace collapsed in North Texas.Episode 4 explores the Village Creek Throwdown, a pivotal and often overlooked event that helped clear the land long before Fort Worth was ever built. After episodes focused on community, family life, and coexistence along the Trinity River and Village Creek, this chapter confronts the collision that changed everything.This episode breaks down:What Village Creek was before violence arrivedWhy settlers viewed organized Native communities as an obstacleThe role of Edward H. Tarrant and the Texas militiaHow families were displaced and villages erasedWhy this moment matters to the founding of Fort WorthThis is not simplified history or textbook storytelling. It is context, consequence, and truth told from the barbershop chair. Understanding Village Creek helps explain why the land was clear in 1849 and how Fort Worth became possible.If you want to understand Fort Worth beyond the Stockyards and surface-level stories, this is an episode you need to hear.🎙️ Subscribe to We Got The Funk and stay locked in as the series continues.

  11. 6

    Episode 1 Before the Fort: The First Footprints

    🪒 Episode OverviewBefore cowboys.Before cattle drives.Before the Stockyards.Fort Worth had a heartbeat.In the very first episode of We Got The Funk, DonTheBarber takes listeners back to a time long before Fort Worth had a name, when families lived, worked, raised children, and built community along the Trinity River.This episode sets the foundation for the entire series—challenging the myths, correcting the record, and honoring the people whose stories are too often skipped.Pulled straight from the barbershop chair, this is history told the way it was meant to be told: honest, grounded, and alive.📍 What We Cover in Episode 1🟫 The Trinity River Before Fort WorthWhy the Trinity River was prime real estate long before modern developmentHow water, soil, and wildlife supported permanent communitiesWhat city and archaeological records reveal about thousands of years of habitation🟫 The First People of the RegionThe Caddo world and Wichita-related peoplesOrganized villages, farming systems, and trade routesA cultural crossroads where Native communities lived, traded, and raised families🟫 Daily Life in Early VillagesFarming corn, beans, and squashHunting, fishing, family life, and spiritualityWhy this wasn’t “survival”—it was intentional living🟫 Why This History Still Matters TodayThe danger of starting Fort Worth’s story in 1849How erasing early peoples distorts the city’s identityWhy honoring the first residents is essential to loving the city today🧠 Key TakeawaysFort Worth did not begin with the Army or the StockyardsNative communities were settled, organized, and thrivingThe Trinity River was the original neighborhoodYou can’t build a future without telling the whole truth about the past📢 Call to ActionIf this episode made you think differently about Fort Worth:✅ Subscribe — Episodes 1, 2, and 3 drop together✅ Share — Especially with someone who only knows Stockyards Fort Worth✅ Review or Comment — Tell us what surprised you most✅ Reflect — Take a walk along the Trinity River and imagine the families who lived there first

  12. 5

    Episode 3 Before the Fort: The Rising Tensions

    Episodes one and two showed peace along the Trinity River and Village Creek — families thriving, land providing, life moving in rhythm.But in Episode 3, the energy changes.In “Rising Tension, Before the Smoke Hit the Air,” DonTheBarber breaks down how North Texas went from calm to conflict in the early 1800s. As settlers began moving into the region, misunderstandings grew, fear spread, rumors ran wild, and government power stepped in.This episode isn’t about one moment — it’s about how pressure builds, how neighbors become suspects, and how a place called home slowly turns into a battlefield.Before the smoke hit the air… the tension was already thick.🧠 What This Episode CoversWhy early Native communities at Village Creek were already rooted and organizedHow increased settler migration in the 1830s–1840s changed everythingThe role fear, rumors, and exaggerated reports played on the frontierHow Native families were blamed for violence they didn’t commitThe Republic of Texas government’s response to settler anxietyWho Edward H. Tarrant was — and why his name still matters todayHow tension shifted from social pressure to planned military actionWhy violence didn’t come out of nowhere — it was built step by step📍 Why This Story MattersFort Worth history doesn’t start with cowboys or forts.This episode shows how real families, real homes, and real communities were pushed into danger long before a single fort was built. Understanding how tension formed helps explain why the violence that followed was so devastating — and why the land still carries that history today.You can’t understand the explosion without studying the pressure.⸻▶️ What’s Coming NextEpisode 4: The Village Creek ThrowdownDropping January 9, 2026This is the moment it all erupts.Militia rides in.Families run.And the land is changed forever.You don’t want to miss it.⸻📢 Call to Action•Subscribe so you don’t miss Episode 4•Share this episode with someone who thinks Fort Worth started with cowboys•Leave a review or comment and tell us what moment made you think, “Yeah… trouble was coming”•If you’re near Village Creek, take a drive and look at that land with new eyes⸻Hosted by: DonTheBarberBe smooth. Be safe. And by all means — keep it Funky.

  13. 4

    Episode 2 Before the Fort: Life Along Village Creek

    🪒 Episode OverviewBefore Texas had a name…Before Fort Worth…Before 1849…There was Village Creek.In Episode 2 of We Got The Funk, DonTheBarber takes listeners inside one of the most important—yet overlooked—places in North Texas history. If the Trinity River was the main highway, Village Creek was the neighborhood where people stopped, stayed, and built real lives.This episode pulls you out of the textbook and drops you right inside the village, showing what daily life actually looked like for the Native communities who lived, farmed, fished, raised families, and called this land home long before settlers arrived.This isn’t theory.This isn’t myth.This is lived history.📍 What We Cover in Episode 2🟫 Why Village Creek Was Prime Real EstateFresh running water, fertile soil, timber, and protectionWhy Native communities chose this land intentionallyArchaeological evidence of long-term settlement🟫 Who Lived Along Village CreekCaddo-related peoples, Wichita, Tonkawa, and other bandsHow multi-tribal communities shared space, traded, and intermarriedWhy simplifying Native history erases real complexity🟫 A Day in the Life of the VillageMorning routines along the creekFarming corn, beans, and squashHunting, fishing, tool-making, family life, and community rhythmWhy these villages were organized—not temporary camps🟫 Why This Story Still MattersThe danger of starting Fort Worth’s story in 1849How erasing Village Creek erases real families and real homesWhy later conflict hit so hard—because this land was already loved🧠 Key TakeawaysVillage Creek was not empty land—it was homeNative communities were skilled, knowledgeable, and rootedFort Worth’s history didn’t begin with the ArmyUnderstanding Village Creek changes how we understand conflict, loss, and legacy📢 Call to ActionIf this episode opened your eyes:✅ Subscribe — Episode 3 is ready and the story only gets deeper✅ Share — Especially with someone from North Texas who never heard this history✅ Review or Comment — Tell us what you pictured during those Village Creek mornings✅ Reflect — Visit the Village Creek area and look at the land differently

  14. 3

    Trailer

    Fort Worth history ain’t what they told us in school.We Got The Funk is a barbershop-style podcast uncovering the real story of Fort Worth—before the cowboys, beyond the Stockyards, and deeper than the textbooks.Hosted by DonTheBarber, this podcast cuts into the past, present, and future of the city through culture, community, and conversation. From Indigenous roots and untold origins to neighborhood legends, leadership, trauma, pride, and resilience—if it shaped the Funk, we’re talking about it.This is history with honesty.Culture with context.And storytelling with heart.🎧 Subscribe now and take a seat in the chair.We Got The Funk — where the history is real and the fade is always clean.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

"We Got The Funk" is a podcast based in Fort Worth, Texas. I discuss a wide variety of subjects that directly affect our city. Everything from the history of Funkytown to its future. Welcome to The Funk......

HOSTED BY

DonTheBarber

URL copied to clipboard!