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Interview with YourHub

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DENVER, CO - AUGUST 24: Tim Bailey pours flavored syrup on a shaved ice as David Schow looks on at the Kona Shaved Ice truck in Denver, Colorado on August 24, 2016. Kona serves shaved ice and ice cream. (Photo by Seth McConnell/The Denver Post)
ENGLEWOOD, CO - AUGUST 18: Rick Lozano cuts Matt Deans' hair at Sam Hill's Barber Shop in Englewood, Colorado on August 18, 2016. Sam Hill's Barber Shop is the longest continuously operating business in Englewood. (Photo by Seth McConnell/The Denver Post)
CASTLE ROCK, CO - AUGUST 11: Noel Amend gives Kaia Masten, 12, tips on tying new pointe shoes at Assemble Dancewear on August 11, 2016, in Castle Rock, Colorado. Amend has been fitting pointe shoes since 1978. Amend, his wife, Ginger, and daughter, Kellie, opened the Castle Rock branch of Assemble Dancewear seven years ago. (Photo by Anya Semenoff/The Denver Post)
Raissa Wang checks out the selection of games at Board Game Republic in Denver, Colorado on July 28, 2016. Board Game Republic is a board game cafe and pub. (Photo by Seth McConnell/The Denver Post)
THORNTON, CO - JULY 13: Frank Long checks out a customer at Woodglen Liquors on July 13, 2016, in Thornton, Colorado. Long has operated Woodglen Liquors for the past nine years. (Photo by Anya Semenoff/The Denver Post)
AURORA, CO - JULY 14: Andrea Everingham poses for a photograph at Live Healthy 24 on July 14, 2016, in Aurora, Colorado. Everingham started Live Healthy 24 in 2012. She teaches piloxing classes Ñ a mix of pilates and boxing Ñ as well as educating her students on good nutrition practices. (Photo by Anya Semenoff/The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO - JULY 18: A bacon-wrapped meatloaf dish freshly made at Chop Shop Casual Urban Eatery on July 18, 2016, in Denver, Colorado. Chop Shop, a fast casual restaurant, opened in 2014. (Photo by Anya Semenoff/The Denver Post)
(XX)STGIVEGORDON_122007_CFW- Gordon Close, of Elite Sound, demonstrates a Harvest guitar he has designed, at his Englewood shop. Close is behind an effort to send these new acoustic guitars to servicemen in Iraq and Afghanistan who request them. For every hundred dollars donated to the program - Close sends 2 of the guitars which are worth $300 a piece. He's a Denver native who got into guitar in junior high, and feels that music is a way that servicemen and women can create community and a relaxing atmosphere amid the chaos of war. His next project it to get guitars to recovering men and women who are stranded by their injuries at Walter Reed. (The Denver Post/ Craig F. Walker)