"The Catalyst Sessions" w/ Bill DeYoung: Tom White

Season 1, Episode 3999,   Oct 01, 2020, 06:17 PM

Episode image
Air Force pilot Tom White purchased Skipper’s Smokehouse in 1980, and under his watch it became a premier live music spot for the entire Tampa Bay area. With an outdoor stage (the “Skipperdome”) under the oaks and a reputation for casual, laid-back music-making and an oyster bar well-stocked with cold beer, Skipper’s had a funky vibe that suited lovers of reggae, blues and world music well.

It was also a destination restaurant, with indoor seating, if one preferred, away from the drums and the amplifiers.

White shut the North Tampa icon down this week and put it on the market.

“Forty years is a long time,” White said Wednesday on The Catalyst Sessions. “And I think, pretty much enough for someone to be in one business.”

The pandemic, he admitted, was a key factor in his decision to let the place go. “We looked at it from many different angles. We tried to survive once we fought the banks for our PPP, once they got through paying the big boys.”

Closing, back in the spring, was rough. “My employees were all hurting then,” White said. “Our whole focus was trying to let everybody survive and put food on the table, and put roofs over the heads. That was very important.”

Skipper’s briefly re-opened at limited capacity, and with outside al fresco dining only, but fear of the virus and a noticeable slowdown in business made White close again after just five weeks. There were no bands. And the PPP money ran out.

At the end of the day, he said, those factors, and a mosquito swarm of small creditors like music “administrators” ASCAP and BMI tying to get “blood from a turnip,” made keeping the business going into an uncertain future simply too frustrating. #stpetecatalyst #skipperssmokehouse #Tampabay #radio