Parker County Today PCT January 2019 | Page 88

know about you? JW: I can ride a unicycle and I can do the splits. I have never lost a dance competition and I am the Texas State iced tea drinking cham- pion. all the code knowledge you want but the invaluable skill, is experience. If you are new, you will have to listen to a lot of people who have been there a long time, so surround your- self with people with experience. PCT: What would you most like to be remembered for? JW: I would like to be remembered maybe for being loyal and good char- acter and an incredible dancer. Two of my go to songs are: “Yeah” by Usher and Kesha’s “Tic Toc” song. PCT: What is the coolest thing you have ever done? JW: Coming back to Weatherford and always admiring Mary Martin’s house from afar, never thought I would have an opportunity to buy it. My wife has a Mary Martin birthday party every year. Full blown Mary Martin. PCT: What is your favorite way to pay it forward? JW: I donate to Saint Jude Hospital because my friend’s daughter had cancer. The other day I was at the gas station and an elderly gentleman was trying to figure out the outside credit card machine. I asked if he needed help. When I noticed he was putting the card in upside down, I went ahead and paid for his gas and pumped it for him. PCT: If you could have lunch with anyone, living or deceased, who would it be? JW: My wife’s mother came down with cancer when Jamie was preg- nant with our first child, and she was looking forward to being a grandmother, but she never made it. She died when my wife was seven months pregnant. I often think it would be so great for her to be able to spend a little time here, maybe just once. She got robbed and I think she deserved to be a grandmother. 86 PCT: If you weren’t doing the job you are doing now, you would be.... JW: Filling propane bottles on the side of the road, and smoke barbecue in-between. Just something easy and no stress just…out in the middle of the hill country where people would have to drive out to get your barbe- cue. That’s when you know you have good barbecue when they drive 50 miles to come eat your barbecue. PCT: What advice would you give to someone wanting to do what you do? JW: The winter hours are long and the summer is hot and you can have Joe Lane Joe is the owner of Fish Creek in Willow Park law school, but always had an affinity for cooking from my mom. After leav- ing Razoo’s, I met my longtime friend Brent Johnson, owner of Rio Mambo, and was hired and worked there for a while. By the time I was 27, I started looking for my own place, which we all know as Fish Creek. PCT: What is your favorite novel? JL: “The Art Of War” by Sun Tzu. PCT: What is something that people don’t know about you? JL: Maybe that I have two personas. When I go to work, I am one way and at home I am more of a wear my heart on my sleeve kind of guy. I go duck hunting with three of my friends; we named our group “Duck Sausage”. Within the group, we’ve got Primitive Sausage, Harry Sausage, Missing Sausage, and then they named me Sensitive Sausage. PCT: What would you most like to be remembered for? JL: My philanthropy work. Parker County Today: How did you get into your occupation? JL: It was an accident. When I gradu- ated collage, my dad was really sick, he was on dialysis and I went home to help care for him. I needed a job for income, but I couldn’t do some- thing full time, so looked for some- thing part time to bring in cash. Then, my school librarian Ms. Parkman, found a dog and when she found its owner, it happened to belong to one of the founding owners of Razoo’s. When the man offered a reward, she declined but said that she knew a nice young man who needed a job. That’s how I went on to meet Brad Warren, the acting manager at Razoo’s. I quickly excelled as a waiter and after a couple of years spoke to my dad about the restaurant business. My dad thought I had lost my mind, but told me if I was serious, I needed to go back and ask them to make me a dishwasher. My dad said I needed to know how to work every aspect of the business and he ended up being right. I had already taken the LSAT and was preparing to attend PCT: What is your favorite way to pay it forward? JL: Take care of others first. Be an ear and not to be selfish. I teach my daughter that as well. PCT: If you could have lunch with anyone, deceased or living, who would it be? JL: My dad is my favorite celebrity. PCT: If you weren’t doing the job you are doing now, you would be.... JL: As far a career path, an attorney, but personally I am getting more involved in politics. PCT: What is your definition of your best day ever? JL: The day my daughter was born. PCT: What is the coolest thing you have ever done? JL: Being a father. PCT: What are the best words of wisdom to live by? JL: Remember who you wanted to be, and be that. My daughter, Maddy, says “Faith, Hope, and Love.”