CHARLESTON, W.Va. Randy Moss walked behind the counter in a pinstripe suit with a red striped tie, traded his jacket for an apron, took off his sunglasses and went to work as the owner of a new fruit-juice store.
Making smoothies gave Moss another chance to smooth out a rift with his home state.
Hundreds of people turned out at the recent grand opening of the Inta Juice store in Charleston to get an autograph from the Oakland Raiders receiver and try the product he first tasted while he was with the Minnesota Vikings.
"Am I getting paid for doing this today?" Moss said, flashing a smile.
"Yeah, we've got minimum wage coming to you," replied Berkley Fuller, executive vice president and chief business development officer of the Fort Collins, Colo., based Inta Juice.
The first smoothie Moss made was bought by Joe Burgess of South Charleston for his wife, Carol, who returned a few minutes later to get Moss' autograph on her cup.
"I think it's a great thing that he's doing. It's beneficial for the community," Joe Burgess said. "He's putting his roots back down in West Virginia. Right now, Randy is trying to come back and pay back the community."
There are some who thought he needed to do that. Although he was a Heisman Trophy finalist at Marshall in 1997, the Rand native hasn't exactly been a hero in his home state.