SPEAKER IDENTIFICATION
Speaker 1 - Alan Cook: host and primary speaker in the live portions of the episode.
Speaker 2 - Prerecorded Announcer / Promotional Voice: opening, commercial breaks, and closing announcement.
EDITORIAL NOTES
- This is a clean, publication-ready transcript. Accidental repeated words, stutters, false starts, and obvious speech-to-text errors have been removed while preserving the speaker's meaning and conversational tone.
- The realtor name sounds like 'Karen Rollings,' and the speaker spells the surname R-O-L-L-I-N-G-S. Confirm the business name before final publication.
- The employee name heard as 'June' and the scrap collector name heard as 'Kimmy' should be confirmed if exact identification matters.
- The transcript describes a Norman Rockwell Triple Self-Portrait figurine as approximately eight by six inches; the dimensions are inconsistent near the end of the raw transcript, so the clearest earlier description has been retained.
- Claims regarding company performance, nationwide affiliates, Groupon ratings, sale prices, scrap-metal pricing, travel costs, and show longevity are presented as statements by the host and have not been independently verified.
CORRECTED TRANSCRIPT
SPEAKER 2 - PRERECORDED ANNOUNCER / PROMOTIONAL VOICE
Welcome to the Junk Refund Show, hosted by Alan J. Cook, founder of 1-800-JUNK-REFUND. Have you ever paid an expensive junk removal company to take away some of your stuff, only to say to yourself as the truck drove away, “Some of that stuff wasn't junk”? Did they try to sell it for you and give you some money back? No. Well, now there is a company that can do just that.
Listen to our weekly Junk Refund Show on BBS Radio TV to learn how one lady spent $375 on junk removal and got $3,200 back. 1-800-JUNK-REFUND represents the next generation of junk removal. Learn how to save money on junk removal and how to get some money coming back. Plus, purchase one of our radio vouchers during the show to save even more on your junk removal.
Let's get the junk out of your home and out of your life. Now, here is your host, Alan J. Cook, Thursday afternoons at 3 p.m. Eastern.
SPEAKER 1 - ALAN COOK, HOST
I'm your host, Alan Cook. This is the world's longest-running junk removal radio show, and we're kind of proud of that. I think we're going into our fourth year now, or something like that, and it has been a lot of fun. Welcome to the show.
I just dropped a couple of guys off at the Metro station here in Gaithersburg. I'm heading to Wendy's now. I did last week's show from the parking lot of a different Wendy's, and I'm going to do the same thing again today because it is about three o'clock, I have not eaten lunch yet, and I'm hungry.
We have been cleaning out a home up in Damascus, Maryland, referred to us by the Karen Rollings team of realtors - R-O-L-L-I-N-G-S. If you are in the Montgomery County, Maryland, area, give these guys a call. Karen's daughter, Maggie, referred us for this job. The home belonged to Maggie's in-laws, who unfortunately passed away, and we are cleaning it out so Maggie can get it listed for sale and move forward.
I went up there with two guys who have worked with me for a long time, Warren and June. They did a bang-up job. About 80 percent of the contents are now out of the house and are either being recycled, offered for sale, or taken to the dump, depending on the smartest thing to do with each item. We have already worked through about half a truckload, and we now have another full truckload to deal with, some this afternoon and some tomorrow.
I had this thought while driving down here: I really hope other people have as much fun in their work as I do. As funny as it may sound to be a junk removal guy at age 68, I have an absolute blast doing this.
We found some jewelry during the cleanout. It looks like costume jewelry, which probably means it will not make us any money, but you never know. Hidden gems pop up in different rooms in these situations, and you never know what you are going to find. That makes junk removal something of a treasure hunt, especially in our business.
The company is 1-800-JUNK-REFUND. We take the better items that we think someone else might buy and put them up for sale. If they sell, the person who hired us gets some money back. That is why the word “refund” is in our name.
A lot of people see the word “refund” and assume we buy their items outright. We receive calls almost daily from people around the country who think we are going to come and pay them to haul away their junk. We are clear in our marketing: we do not buy your stuff. You pay us for junk removal, and when suitable items sell, you may receive money back.
We recently heard from a man in North Carolina. I cannot remember the name of his town, but it was a smaller city. He appears to have decades' worth of items on his property, including riding lawnmowers, a boat, a van, and perhaps other vehicles. He says he has titles for the vehicles, and he wants $1,100 for the lot. I told him that is not what we do.
That said, if you pick up a van and take it to a scrap-metal yard, the van might weigh approximately 4,000 to 5,000 pounds. If you have the title, a yard might pay around 11 cents per pound, which could mean roughly $400 to $500 for that vehicle. If there are several vehicles, perhaps there is enough value to justify paying something. But then you must travel to North Carolina, figure out where to take everything, and check local prices. It all adds up.
The point is that we get calls from around the country asking about our services and how the business works. Simply put, we are a junk removal business headquartered in the North Bethesda/Rockville, Maryland, area. We do jobs around the country, and we have 63 affiliates who can handle smaller jobs for us. If somebody calls from a city where we have not done a job, such as Bismarck, North Dakota, and it is not a large project, we can locate an affiliate and add that company to our list.
Customers pay us to haul away their belongings; we do not come and remove everything for free. Our rates are generally about 20 to 25 percent below some of the larger junk removal companies, such as 1-800-GOT-JUNK? or College HUNKS Hauling Junk & Moving. We intentionally price ourselves below those larger businesses.
We do four things with the contents: we dispose of the junk, recycle items such as metal and wire, donate appropriate items and obtain a donation receipt, and offer good items for sale. If an item sells for more than $20, the customer receives 35 percent of the sales price.
We have many stories about items we have sold that returned money to clients. One recent example was an 11-by-14-foot rug sold to people in West Virginia who currently live in a home built by George Washington's nephew - yes, that George Washington. It was a great story, and we shared it on Facebook. You can visit our Junk Refund Show Facebook page to see stories and photographs of what we have done.
As far as I know, we are the only junk removal company in the United States with this many stories about items we sold and money returned to the people who hired us. We are proud of that.
I began doing this roughly 20 years ago after suddenly losing my sales job. I had been with that company for nine years and was doing well, but within two hours I was out of a job. I had a spouse, three children, and a fourth child due in three months. I was also serving as the bishop of our congregation, which meant I had some responsibility for a congregation of around 350 people. That is not a paid position in our church; it is a calling that you serve in for a period of years.
There was a lot happening in my life, and I had not planned to start a business. But once I was unemployed, I thought about job security. I had spent nearly a decade with a company, was ahead of many salespeople in meeting my goals for the year, and still received only a one-month severance package when they let me go. That did not feel like much job security.
I had been a stockbroker before taking that sales job, but returning to brokerage would have meant starting over, finding clients, competing with other brokers for those clients, and earning commissions quickly enough to support a growing family. In my situation, I had one immediate asset: a pickup truck. I realized I could put that truck to work. I put my head down and decided to make it work, and it did.
Now, about 20 years later, we travel around the country doing this. According to Groupon, we have the highest customer-satisfaction rating of any junk removal company on its platform, at 97 percent. Groupon representatives have told me that a rating in the 90-percent range places a business among the best in its industry. We have performed hundreds, possibly thousands, of smaller jobs, such as sending a pickup truck to remove a couch through a Groupon call.
We began using Groupon because it handles the advertising. It costs me nothing upfront for the advertising, although we share a portion of the revenue from the job. It used to be 50 percent and is now 40 percent. In return, we gain customers, and Groupon can send offers to millions of people. We have had a lot of fun with that approach and still use it.
We advertise on Facebook and do a great deal of work with realtors. I have spoken at real estate office sales meetings, where you can speak to 30 realtors at once. Usually you bring doughnuts and bagels for breakfast, then explain what you do and what makes your company different. That has generated many stories about items we have sold over the years.
One time we sold a gun safe that we picked up in Maryland. It was so heavy that three of us went there with a pickup truck hoping we could load it. We ended up recruiting two more men from the parking lot to help. The safe was about six feet tall and perhaps three or four feet square. I do not know what it weighed, but it took five people just to tip it into the back of the pickup truck.
We offered the safe for sale, and a gentleman at a tanning salon in San Diego bought it. I think he paid around $900 for the safe and another $800 or $900 to ship it. It goes to show that in the modern age of technology, almost anything is possible if you have enough desire, confidence, and a little adrenaline to keep moving forward when things become difficult.
We also travel inexpensively around the country using the Frontier Airlines GoWild Pass. It allows me to travel domestically to many cities Frontier serves for approximately $30 or less. I can fly from Washington, D.C., to Atlanta for about $15, to Portland for about $25, and frequently to Salt Lake City for about $25 to $30 each way because I have family in Utah.
That allows us to travel around the country, rent a truck, locate a dump and a donation center, and complete jobs without charging a significant travel expense. Because of that, we believe we can compete nationally with local junk removal companies anywhere in the lower 48 states.
I am going to take a break for a minute. We will come back and talk more about what is happening in the world of junk removal. You are listening to the Junk Refund Show on the BBS Radio Network. I'm your host, Alan Cook. We will talk to you again in about a minute. Thanks.
SPEAKER 2 - PRERECORDED PROMOTIONAL VOICE
Have you ever hired one of those expensive junk removal companies, then wondered what they did with the stuff, especially the good stuff? At 1-800-JUNK-REFUND, we dispose of the junk, recycle items such as metal and wire, donate items and obtain receipts, and offer the good stuff for sale. If it sells, you get some money back.
Cynthia paid $375 for junk removal and got $3,200 back. Would you like to know how she did it? Tune in to the Junk Refund Show with your host, Alan J. Cook, every Thursday at 3 p.m. Eastern Time, to get the junk not only out of your home, but also out of your life.
SPEAKER 1 - ALAN COOK, HOST
Welcome back to the Junk Refund Show. I'm your host, Alan Cook, coming to you from a parking lot for the second consecutive week. I am in a Wendy's parking lot because I plan to grab lunch as soon as the show is over. Then I am heading around the corner to the scrap-metal yard to collect money for a load of metal on the back of my truck from the house we just cleaned out.
After that, I might pick up more scrap metal from people. We do that for free in the Montgomery County and Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. We place ads on Craigslist, and I have to sing the praises of Craigslist. People in business know that it is one of the older online advertising platforms, but an ad costs only five dollars and runs for a month.
We advertise free scrap-metal pickup because we are paid for the scrap metal. Some scrap jobs might make us $800 to $1,000, while many produce only $15, $20, $25, or $30. You can choose where to run your ad. We run ours throughout the D.C. metropolitan area, and we receive calls, text messages, and emails from people saying things such as, “My husband passed away. He was a welder, and we have a large shed in the backyard that needs to be cleaned out.” It keeps us busy.
It is even better when someone pays you to clean out a home and, as part of that job, asks you to remove metal items. That means you are paid to haul everything away, and then you are paid again when you unload the metal at the scrap yard. That is what will happen this afternoon with the items on my truck.
In the scrap-metal business, it is always wonderful to find copper. Let me give you a general price breakdown as I understand it in this area. Ordinary metal, such as old pipe or mixed steel, might bring about six cents per pound. To make $60 at that price, you need roughly 1,000 pounds. With a large truck and the right type of pickup, that is doable. I have hauled in 2,000 or 3,000 pounds of material before.
At a scrap-metal yard, you see many people in pickup trucks, some of which are barely held together. Tail lights may be damaged, windows may be covered with plastic, and the vehicles may be in rough condition. But bless their hearts: these are people trying to make a living and hustling to do it.
There is a man I had on my show several years ago named Kimmy. He goes out with a John Deere riding lawnmower pulling a small John Deere-sized trailer, the kind you might tow around a large backyard while mowing or collecting leaves. That is what Kimmy uses to earn money.
Kimmy lives in the Rockville, Maryland, area. He is probably around 60 years old, and he goes out to work every day. He drives his riding lawnmower along the sidewalks into the industrial area, where everyone knows him. He fills his small trailer with scrap, then drives down the sidewalk to the scrap-metal yard. Because his rig is small, he can maneuver around the other vehicles and get to the scale quickly.
When you watch Kimmy get off the tractor, you can see that it is difficult for him. He has hip problems and cannot simply swing his leg over the steering wheel and hop off. Even so, he is out there seven days a week for what I estimate is five, six, or seven hours a day, trying to make a living by collecting basic scrap metal with a riding lawnmower and a small trailer.
Your heart goes out to people like Kimmy. He is one of the hardest-working people I have ever seen. He seems to enjoy what he does, and he has a great work ethic and attitude. Imagine driving around town on sidewalks in a riding lawnmower, hauling a trailer that might carry only three bicycles at most, then unloading it at the scrap yard for perhaps $10, $15, or $20. He may make four or five trips a day and, on some days, earn only $10, $20, or $30 after hours of work.
Then there are people who arrive in pickup trucks, and people like me who arrive in a 16-foot stake-body truck. Another regular is a man named Marco, who probably knows as much about the scrap-metal business as anyone going there daily. Marco has an open-bed truck, roughly 12 feet long, and whenever you see it, it is filled with everything from tires and insulation to plastics, bicycles, metal, and copper.
The local scrap yard closes at five o'clock, and if you go there around 4:30 on almost any day, Marco will be there getting rid of his material before the place closes. Even after he unloads, the back of his truck still looks crowded and messy. We joke about whether he ever cleans it out fully. I do not think he does, and he does not have to; it is his truck.
That brings me to two young men I saw a couple of days ago at Rockville Metals. The yard is in an industrial area. You pull in from a busy street, immediately drive onto the scale for your initial weight, travel around the building, unload ordinary metal into a large pile, then return to the scale. The yard pays you according to how much metal you dropped off.
If you have higher-value material such as copper, which may bring approximately $4.20 per pound compared with around six cents per pound for ordinary metal, you take it to the back of the building. There, smaller scales weigh the material separately. They give you a ticket, and you scan the ticket at a machine near the front of the building. The machine dispenses your money like an ATM.
If you are looking for a way to earn extra money, consider where people may need to dispose of metal, aluminum, copper, brass, or steel. We run Craigslist ads and receive calls regularly. A man from Annapolis, Maryland, called us yesterday. He said he had several old cast-iron radiators from an older home. These are the large, heavy radiators that were once used to heat homes. They can be three feet tall and several feet long, and it takes more than one person to load them.
The good news is that cast iron may bring 10 or 11 cents per pound rather than the six cents per pound you might receive for ordinary metal. We also cut the cords off discarded vacuum cleaners and place them into a separate wire bucket, because sorted wire may bring more money than ordinary scrap.
As a general guide, ordinary metal might bring six cents per pound; cast iron might bring about 10 cents per pound; aluminum mixed with other metal might bring about 23 cents per pound; clean aluminum might bring about 46 cents per pound; extension cords and wire might bring around one dollar per pound; brass items, such as doorknobs, might bring approximately $1.40 or $1.50 per pound; and copper is the king, bringing around $4.00 to $4.20 per pound.
Yesterday, we were at the back of the scrap yard with a large bucket of wire. We had already weighed in and weighed out for our ordinary metal, and we were unloading the wire separately because it pays more when separated. Two young men in a small compact car came around the building in the wrong direction on what is supposed to be a one-way route.
They briefly blocked my exit and the vehicles behind me, but they were college-age guys full of energy. They hopped out, quickly grabbed a couple of bags of copper, ran them to the scale, received their ticket, turned the car around, and headed toward the front to collect their money. They probably received around $75.
When one of them was standing in line, I told him, “You remind me of myself when I was in college. You are energetic and trying to make a few extra dollars. You may have driven the wrong way, but you were quick, and you got out of there.” It was fun watching him show the money to his friend in the passenger seat. They looked as if they had made a million dollars. I salute that young, energetic, creative spirit of finding a way to make a few dollars.
The most money I have ever made during a single trip to a scrap yard was around $800 or $900. Someone asked me to go to a farm and remove metal that had accumulated under a shed over the years. Their son was turning seven, and they were hosting a party outside on the farm property. The owner did not want the pipe, copper, and other scrap visible under the shed, so we loaded it and took it away.
We have also hauled away airplanes. We have cut up single-engine airplanes and twin-engine airplanes. Those jobs are interesting because much of the fuselage is aluminum, and aluminum may bring about 23 cents per pound rather than six cents per pound for ordinary metal. Pulling into a scrap-metal yard with an airplane in the back of your truck gets people's attention. I have had people stop me and ask to take a picture.
Taking apart an airplane also makes you appreciate how it was built, particularly the strength of the cables running through the fuselage and connecting to the controls for the rudder and the ailerons. It is fascinating to discover how those systems work.
That is some of what we do in the scrap-metal business. It is enjoyable because, when you remove furniture, you may have to pay the local county dump to dispose of it. In our area, that might cost about $70 per ton. If the load is less than 500 pounds and you are a county resident, the county does not charge you, which is helpful.
But we do not take metal to the county dump because the dump does not pay us for it. We take metal to a scrap-metal yard and receive payment. If you are hauling furniture, you may have to pay to dispose of it. If you are hauling metal, you may be paid to dispose of it. In our business, the best situation is when someone hires us to clean out a house, pays us to load the contents, and the load includes metal that produces an additional payment at the scrap yard.
I am still sitting in the back corner of a Wendy's parking lot, watching people move through the drive-through. It is not busy right now, which is good, because in about 20 minutes I am going to go through the drive-through and grab something to eat. When I come back, I will tell you about the Wendy's diet I have created for myself, which seems to be working.
You are listening to the Junk Refund Show, where we tell you how to get the junk not only out of your homes and businesses, but also out of your lives. I am your host, Alan Cook, coming to you from Rockville, Maryland. We will be back in about a minute.
SPEAKER 2 - PRERECORDED PROMOTIONAL VOICE
Have you ever hired one of those expensive junk removal companies, then wondered what they did with the stuff, especially the good stuff? At 1-800-JUNK-REFUND, we dispose of the junk, recycle items such as metal and wire, donate items and obtain receipts, and offer the good stuff for sale. If it sells, you get some money back.
Cynthia paid $375 for junk removal and got $3,200 back. Would you like to know how she did it? Tune in to the Junk Refund Show with your host, Alan J. Cook, every Thursday at 3 p.m. Eastern Time, to get the junk not only out of your home, but also out of your life.
SPEAKER 1 - ALAN COOK, HOST
Welcome back to the Junk Refund Show. I just realized that I have a couple of interesting items on my dashboard from the house we cleaned out. Everybody knows who Norman Rockwell is, and one of his famous paintings is Triple Self-Portrait, in which he is painting himself on a canvas while looking to his left into a mirror so he can see his reflection.
In the house we just came from, there were two figurines on platforms depicting him sitting there, in remarkable detail, painting his self-portrait while looking into a mirror. One appears to be a limited edition. I think the edition number was around 25,000, and this particular one was numbered approximately 755. It is perhaps six inches tall and five inches wide. The detail is unbelievable.
When I saw them, I thought I needed to hang on to them because they were really interesting. Triple Self-Portrait is one of Norman Rockwell's most famous paintings, but these are not paintings; they are three-dimensional models of the scene, representing what it might have looked like while he was making the painting.
This is one of the situations where you can go on eBay, look an item up, and obtain an idea of what it may be worth, or at least what a comparable item recently sold for. I am going to do that right now because I am curious and have no idea whether these are valuable.
I am on the eBay app searching for “Norman Rockwell Triple Self-Portrait figurine.” I first see plates featuring the image, but those are not what I have. I have a three-dimensional collectible. Now I see a listing for a Triple Self-Portrait figurine, limited edition, pre-owned. It appears to be the same item.
The small figurine was reproduced or created in 1999 by Dave Grossman Creations or the Curtis Publishing Company. I have the small one and a larger one. The listing price for the small one is about $30, but the asking price is not the information you really need.
If you want to learn what an item is worth through eBay, you must go into the filters and choose completed items. The first price you see is often simply what a seller hopes to receive, and those asking prices can be inflated. Completed listings show what happened when the offering ended and, if it sold, what a buyer actually paid.
There are 28 completed listings in the recent results, most of them plates. The plates sold for amounts such as $2, $10, or $20. But on May 10, one of the smaller three-dimensional Triple Self-Portrait figurines sold for about $25, and the larger one, approximately eight inches by six inches, sold for $125.
That means the two figurines sitting in my truck may represent approximately $150 in resale value. They were sitting on someone's shelf an hour ago, and now they are in my truck. They are also beautiful items; the detail on these figurines is amazing.
A typical junk removal company might have a driver who says, “This is cool; I'll keep it,” or perhaps sells it personally. If that happens, the person who hired the company may never know what became of it. Often families do not realize what remains in a house after they have removed the belongings they already recognize as valuable.
We have gone into homes where a family removed what it wanted from the primary bedroom, then told us to take everything else. We went into that room and found jewelry that later sold for $1,600 - items the family could have sold, but apparently did not realize were still there.
The Norman Rockwell figurines are a live example of how quickly you can research an item using eBay. A decorative plate may sell for only five or ten dollars, while a three-dimensional model of the same subject may sell for $125. That begins to show how value can be found in the junk removal business.
We are paid to remove the contents of a home, such as this one where the homeowners have passed away. We can then use a phone to research unfamiliar items. I did not initially know what these figurines were worth; I simply recognized that I had not seen anything like them before during 20 years in this business. That caught my attention, and the completed listings suggest they have real value.
We also picked up a couple of boxes of jewelry at this home. It appears to be costume jewelry, but I hope I am wrong and there is gold or silver in the boxes. We enjoy taking jewelry to be evaluated. In about 30 minutes, a small quantity of genuine gold rings or sterling silver necklaces can be tested and weighed by a jeweler, using the current prices of gold and silver to establish a value.
We have taken sterling silver flatware sets from clients who said the set belonged to their mother. A jeweler has weighed a set, looked at me, and said, “Mr. Cook, this is worth $1,800.” I have responded, “Make out the check,” and then we returned 35 percent of that sales price to the homeowner.
Many homeowners do not want to run these items to a jewelry store themselves. They do not want the items thrown away, and they do not want a junk removal company simply to keep anything of value. They would like to receive money as well. We provide that service, do the work, and return 35 percent of the sales price on eligible sold items.
We have also heard from mechanics and businesses that saw our Craigslist ads and called to say they had a bay or outdoor storage area full of scrap metal, such as brake rotors, aluminum parts, engines, and similar material. Sometimes they ask whether we will take it away and split the proceeds fifty-fifty.
I tell them to consider what that means: they pay nothing, we do all the work, we pay the expenses, and they want the same amount of money that we receive. We tried that once to see how it worked, then decided it was not worthwhile. For free scrap-metal pickup jobs, we generally do not pay refunds because the scrap proceeds often barely cover our expenses. Occasionally you encounter a large quantity of copper, aluminum, or aircraft material and earn much more, but most loads are not like that.
Even so, it is enjoyable to have a side of the business where scrap metal, jewelry, collectibles, and other items can add value to a job. I am excited about these Norman Rockwell Triple Self-Portrait figurines. I now know what they are called, I found a recent comparable sale, and they are beautifully made objects. The larger one appears to be worth around $125, and I was paid to remove it. Welcome to my world; this is the kind of thing that happens in my business.
I may keep these figurines because they are so unusual. I have never seen anything like them in 20 years, and I love finding unique things that can become part of a small display in my home.
Another set of items that caught my attention this morning was a group of old metal advertising signs, perhaps 18 inches by 12 inches. They are the sort of signs that collectors, including the people you see on American Pickers, might want. I have not researched them yet, but once again, you can be paid to remove interesting items in this business.
Beyond the potential value of the objects, it is rewarding when clients tell us, “You are a godsend. I feel so much better now that my closet, bedroom, basement, or attic is cleaned out.” That gives you an idea of what life is like for a junk removal guy. It is a blast.
Check us out at 1-800-JUNK-REFUND.com. We are always posting new stories there. Wherever you are in the United States, call us if you need help, and we will figure out a way to make it work.
Thanks to Don Newsom and his brother Doug at the BBS Radio Network for all the great work they do. Thanks for listening to the Junk Refund Show. We have been making it up as we go from a Wendy's parking lot in Rockville, Maryland.
I told you I would describe my Wendy's diet. It is very simple: I get a Wendy's Cobb Salad for lunch and free ice water. I paid three dollars for their 2026 key tag, which means I receive a free child-sized chocolate or vanilla Frosty each time I buy food. I am living the dream on a Wendy's Cobb Salad, a lot of water instead of soda, and a small chocolate Frosty as my dessert for the day because I love chocolate Frostys.
It is a small treat that makes life enjoyable, and I am losing weight. I cannot tell you exactly how much because I have not measured it, but when I look at myself in the mirror, I can see the difference. It is working, it is fun, and hats off to Wendy's for its products.
All right, folks. We will talk to you next week at three o'clock Eastern on the Junk Refund Show. I hope this has been enlightening and entertaining. If you find a Norman Rockwell Triple Self-Portrait figurine that is roughly eight inches by six inches, you may have your hands on an item worth about $125. Have a great day, everybody. Thanks for listening.
SPEAKER 2 - PRERECORDED ANNOUNCER / CLOSING VOICE
Thank you for listening to the Junk Refund Show, the longest-running junk removal radio show on the air. Join us next week as we discuss innovative ways to declutter your home, your business, and your life using 20 years of junk removal experience.
Find out why we give free ice cream gift cards to our clients, too. In upcoming shows, we will explore how to get the junk out of your relationships, your spiritual life, your waistline, and even your travel life. Plus, call in with questions and situations you would like help with.
At 1-800-JUNK-REFUND, we are committed to bringing you the next generation of junk removal, because not all junk is junk. See you next week on the Junk Refund Show, every Thursday afternoon at 3 p.m. Eastern Time, right here on BBS Radio TV.