RockyPointTony.com

What did Tony do with the money?


  • Total voters
    6
  • Poll closed .
Hey all my Puerto Penasco friends... remember the ad we did on Beach Bar Radio for Tony Kaufman and RockyPointTony. com? We even created a logo and T-Shirt to help promote his business. Tony started making promises about his November payment in late October, only to come up with some lame excuse why he did not have the money. Those promises continued while he was trying to get others to advertise on the station. Well worst case scenario came to light this week when Tony informed us that he was not going to pay his $200 bill for November.

The dude is likable enough but generally drunk by 9:00 AM on most days. Go figure, he drank our $200. It's not too much of a big deal, but certainly lets everyone know about his character.
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jerry

Guest
Sort of literary high sticking Steve over 200 bucks....but when you don't pay your bill that is what happens....except if you were a Rocky Point realtor selling North Beach property around 2006.you knew the towers were never going to be finished,took peoples money and ran for it..,payback may still be coming ..
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
I don't know Tony, so I have no dog in this fight at all. However, I have seen the Mexican Beach lifestyle take down a few friends over the years. It's too easy to drink wherever and whenever. A former poster here realized he was heading down that path and now is completely sober for that reason. I've seen the same happen with a charter fishing owner with booze. He actually left the business and returned stateside and cleaned himself up. At some point, it takes a physical and financial toll on you and you either pull yourself out of that hole, or simply succumb to it.
 

Roberto

Guest
Alcohol is a big part of the Mexican experience for visitors. Just start a thread on tequila and count the number of readers. Read the comments, 'Can't wait to get on the beach with a cold beer", And correct, those who move here frequently continue the party. The old Black Dog was populated with these old timers.
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
Alcohol is a big part of the Mexican experience for visitors. Just start a thread on tequila and count the number of readers. Read the comments, 'Can't wait to get on the beach with a cold beer", And correct, those who move here frequently continue the party. The old Black Dog was populated with these old timers.
Yep. And it was an American Legion Post as well! No drinking going on there...

Hey, I still down a few and a fishing trip wouldn't be complete without tossing back some cold Pacificos. And I've been known to indulge a good bit during visits. I can't do tequila anymore; very rare day for me. The difference is - when I leave and head home, my drinking habits return to normal/boring. If I lived there all the time, it's a party on the beach every day. You are right.
 
So true Stuart, and you drink more when you don't catch anything, I have a question for Roberto, back in the day at the Black Dog there was an older guy that frequent there, he was a retired DEA agent (nice fellow) Told many story's about chasing people around in planes. Last time I saw him he told me he was having a bout with cancer, do you know who I am talking about Roberto?
 

Roberto

Guest
So true Stuart, and you drink more when you don't catch anything, I have a question for Roberto, back in the day at the Black Dog there was an older guy that frequent there, he was a retired DEA agent (nice fellow) Told many story's about chasing people around in planes. Last time I saw him he told me he was having a bout with cancer, do you know who I am talking about Roberto?
Nope. I did not hang out there. Odds are if he was going around saying he was DEA, that he was NOT. Might have been a clerk, not a line guy as they do not talk about it. Like the ex-military guys who tell lots of stories. If yuo were in the trenches you don't wanna talk about it.
 
Hey...........

I think I resemble those remarks!

But:

1. I did not retire from the DEA.
2. I am a "nice" fellow.
3. It was Bell UH-1H Huey helicopters not planes.
4. I am ex-military: United States Army Aviation, and have loads of stories that are stranger than fiction.
4. I have never had cancer.
5. I lived with her.... but never married her.

JJ
 
Hey...........

I think I resemble those remarks!

But:

1. I did not retire from the DEA.
2. I am a "nice" fellow.
3. It was Bell UH-1H Huey helicopters not planes.
4. I am ex-military: United States Army Aviation, and have loads of stories that are stranger than fiction.
4. I have never had cancer.
5. I lived with her.... but never married her.

JJ
Were you one of those spraying paraquat all over Mexico?
 

Kenny

Guest
Sent to me by a friend.....Seaver, Charles Andersonpassed away at the Margaret T. Morris Center (a dementia and Alzheimer's care facility) in Prescott, Arizona, on Monday, December 24, 2012, at the age of 84. Chuck (also called Carlos) was born in Phoenix, AZ, July 12, 1928 - one of five children born to Archer W. and Lillian (Carlson ) Seaver. After graduating from Litchfield High School in 1946, he joined the U.S. Navy as an enlisted man and served two years on an aircraft carrier that was on an around-the-world cruise. Following his military service discharge in 1948, Chuck attended the University of Arizona in Tucson for a short time. Chuck then started his career with the Federal Government beginning with the Border Patrol, Customs and Immigration. He also served as one of the first Federal Air Marshalls when that program was started. Chuck then joined the Dept. of Justice Drug Enforcement Administration as a Special Agent when it was first established and lived on the U.S./Mexican border. Following his retirement from the DEA in 1978, he lived in Puerto Penasco (Rocky Point) Mexico, where he enjoyed fishing and socializing - he was everyone's friend! He was preceded in death by his parents in 1981 and 1991, and his brother Joseph H. Seaver in 1996. Chuck is survived by his brothers, Archer Seaver of Utah, and Edward Seaver of Prescott, sister, Marion Seaver of Phoenix, and daughter, Cindy Buterbaugh of Tennessee. In addition to numerous nieces and nephews, other children missing him are Anna Seaver-Martin, Jack Seaver, Toni Perez, Juliette Puccini, Kokin Leon, Hector Fernando, and Julio Cesar Cabrera of Arizona, California and Mexico. A memorial gathering will be held in Phoenix at a later date. Please visit heritagemortuary.com to sign Chuck's online guest book. Services entrusted to Heritage Memory Mortuary
 
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And.......

Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia and of course, Jamaica Mon!

The reason Black Dog is history is because the place was a pain-in-the-ass, literally! The worst wrought iron bar stools ever designed. I would take a beach towel from my truck to prevent a painful case of BD "waffle butt".

Anyone know what happened to "SUPER GROUPER" or "T-SHIRT BOB" ?

JJ
 
I knew Carlos....he was a great guy with a great laugh. It was sad to see him as the last of "the old timers" like T-
Shirt Bob, Super Grouper, Johnathon Lawson, Guapo and many others. A real cast of characters!
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
Though not Black Dog types, I'll throw in Jose from the Public Harbor and good ol' Crazy Charlie. Gone, but not forgotten.
 
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