CityView Magazine

August/September 2009

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

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Fayetteville Online Publications Turn your website into a lead generating machine Your website has been built, NOW WHAT? Pay per click a powerful/cost effective tool for promoting your business. Advertisers pay their host only when their ad is clicked. Top Positions for your industry on Yellowpages.com Over 83% of On- line Yellowpage Users use Yellowpages.com. Search Engine Optimization makes web pages attractive to search en- gines, giving the page a higher raking in the search engine results. Powerful Local Directories Local directories area powerful and much needed tool to incorporate into your overall internet campaign. Fayetteville Online Publications is the only Local Internet Marketing firm that offers name specific niched sites such as ? FayettevillePhysicians.com. The sites are fully optimized for Fayetteville local residents to easily find your services when needed. Customer Reviews Highland OB/GYN “Not only did Fayetteville Online Publications build a quality website for our practice – they did it at a price that beat the com- petition.” Dr. David Schutzer, Owner Allstate Insurance - “Having my company logo as a banner on all of Fayetteville Online Publica- tions Local Directories has increased the number of hits that my website gets a month.” Donna Blake, Owner Directories FayettevilleDentists.com FayettevilleCarFinder.com FayettevilleMortgageCompanies.com FayettevilleInsuranceCompanies.com FayettevilleChiropractor.com FayettevilleRealEstateAgents.com FayettevilleLawyers.com FayettevillePlumbing.com FayettevilleNow.com FayettevilleStorages.com www.fayettevilleonlinepublications.com | 321 Arch St. Fayetteville, NC 28301| 910.476.1679 “We’re all 100 percent Southern,” Kitchen said and then he thought for a second. “Well, we have some Yankees in our group.” Several years ago, the Swamp Boys decided they wanted to do more. They organized fundraisers for needy families in the community. Then the group decided it could help even more people by partnering with St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. This year’s tournament, held in May, benefited St. Jude and was held in memory of Rufus Gray Bunce Jr., a tournament organizer who died unexpectedly just weeks before the event. 52|August/September • 2009 All of the Swamp Boys pitch in, but Kitchen is the one who throws himself into the tournament. For that weekend, Kitchen doesn’t sleep. He and a few others spend two nights at the expo center, taking turns catching cat naps and cracking open cans of Mountain Dew. And by Sunday, Kitchen is living off Monster energy drinks and sheer will. This year, he even vowed to shave his head if 100 teams entered the tournament. The turnout surpassed his expectations with 109 teams and $8,000 raised for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. The Swamp Boys are now busy planning the Summer Slam Supporters Catfish Tournament set for Aug. 14. Kitchen is a maintenance supervisor for a large Fayetteville apartment complex. On weekends, he announces races for the Lee County Mud Motorsports Complex. He used to drive a “big yellow jacked-up truck with Confederate flag stickers” and he still answers to the nickname “Rooster.” “Give 110 percent,” he likes to say, “or don’t show up.” So there he was on the last day, presiding over the finale of this entire tournament: the weigh-in. Families piled into the expo center to watch the big fish. They crowded close to a board where volunteers recorded the exact weights on a chart. Trucks lined up in the parking lot, waiting their turn. One by one, they pulled the boats into the expo center, and fishermen flipped open wells and coolers to pull out their catch. Kitchen good-naturedly ribbed the fishermen as they weighed in. “How many fish did you get?” he asked one man who had teamed up with his daughter. “Five? Well, how many fish did your daughter catch? All five? That’s what I thought.” Volunteers in camouflage overalls waited with laundry baskets to catch the squirming fish. Grown men wrestled to wrap their arms around the beasts. The fish fought and flopped until finally, the men threw them into a metal washtub for weighing and, much later, back into the cool waters of the Cape Fear for another day’s catch.CV

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