Bucky shows up. Sometimes scheduled. Sometimes a surprise. Mariners on every screen, fans in every seat, and a former big-leaguer holding court at the rail.
Drops are announced on social and to the RBI Club mailing list first. Surprise stops won't be announced at all — you'll just have to be in the right place at the right time.
Larry "Bucky" Jacobsen is a former Seattle Mariner and the morning host on 93.3 KJR-FM — Seattle's biggest sports talk station. He lives in North Bend with his wife and two kids.
He started RBI Club for a simple reason: Mariners fans are loyal, hungry, and underserved on game nights. Bars need traffic. And Bucky knows how to throw a party where baseball is the point.
So he picks a bar. He shows up. The fans follow. The bar wins. The night becomes the kind of thing people tell stories about the next morning — which, conveniently, is when Bucky is on the air.
Zero appearance fee. Zero guarantees required. RBI Club runs on a revenue share against incremental F&B lift, measured against your normal baseline for that night.
Bucky only wins when the bar wins. Aligned incentives. Simple math. No fine print written to confuse.
Scheduled stops get full pre-promo across Bucky's channels. Surprise drops stay quiet — fans on the list check the app, then they check the bar.
Reserved section, game audio on a main screen, staff coverage. Bucky brings the appearance, the promo, the swag, the giveaways, and the fans.
RBI Club is being built one bar at a time. These are the venues on the roster — confirmed hosts, charter partners getting in early, and open slots for bars that want a spot before the season heats up.
You'll know first when Bucky's showing up. Surprise stops, ticket giveaways, swag drops. No spam — just the next bar.
Pick a Mariners game. We pick the night. Bucky shows up with the fans. Zero risk, all upside — see the house rules.