Boca Raton Observer September 2014

Page 1

Talk Of The Town

Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie Takes A Hands-On Approach To Governing

the business & Wealth Issue

Surprises In Store

A Local Nonprofit Sets The Nation’s Shopping And Dining Trends

Mission Possible

Meet FBI Chief George Piro, The Man Who Broke Saddam Hussein

Channeling Success How Entrepreneur Laurie Silvers Followed A Hunch And Became A Media Mogul

He Builds, They Come

Pioneer Land Developer Richard Siemens Appraises Our city’s Past, Present And Future September 2014

Billionaire Mark Cuban On Business, Basketball, “Shark Tank” And His Boca Raton Connection


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FOUR CHAMPIONSHIP GOLF COURSES • AWARD-WINNING CLUBHOUSE • SPORTS AND AQUATICS CENTER WORLD-CLASS SPA AND TENNIS • FITNESS AND AEROBICS • SIX DINING VENUES ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE APPROXIMATE. PLANS, MATERIALS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE SUBJECT TO ARCHITECTURAL, STRUCTURAL AND OTHER REVISIONS AS THEY ARE DEEMED ADVISABLE BY THE DEVELOPER, BUILDER OR ARCHITECT, OR AS MAY BE REQUIRED BY LAW. BOCA WEST COUNTRY CLUB, INC. IS A PRIVATE CLUB. ALL PARTIES WHO INTEND TO PURCHASE REAL PROPERTY LOCATED WITHIN BOCA WEST MUST APPLY TO AND BE APPROVED BY THE CLUB TO OBTAIN A CLUB MEMBERSHIP. ALL PARTIES APPROVED AS AND WHO BECOME CLUB MEMBERS SHALL BE SUBJECT TO AND MUST COMPLY WITH THE CLUB’S ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION, BYLAWS AND RULES AND REGULATIONS.


VOLUME XI NUMBER 8

09.2014

contents THE BUSINESS & WEALTH ISSUE

POSSIBLE 58 MISSION New FBI Chief George Piro Talks Crime, Corruption And Cracking Saddam Hussein

60 SURPRISES IN STORE A Local Nonprofit Predicts —And Sets—The Nation’s Shopping And Dining Trends

OF 64 TALK THE TOWN Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie Takes A Hands-On Approach To Governing

BUILDS, 66 HE THEY COME Pioneer Land Developer Richard Siemens Appraises Boca Raton’s Past, Present And Future

70 CHANNELING SUCCESS Entrepreneur Laurie Silvers Followed A Hunch And Became A Media Mogul

50 THE

ORIGINAL

MAVERICK BILLIONAIRE MARK CUBAN CHATS ABOUT BUSINESS, BASKETBALL, “SHARK TANK” AND HIS BOCA RATON CONNECTION

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contents departments

19

19 observed HOT STUFF & THE PEOPLE WHO MAKE IT HAPPEN 19 The Buzz 24 Trends 26 La Vida Boca

29 media blitz THE QUINTESSENTIAL ARTS REPORT 29 On Screen 30 In Print 32 On Scene

24

41 that’s life A GUIDE TO PERSONAL GROWTH 41 Relations 44 Parents 48 Destinations

29

83 taste THE DISH ON FOOD, WINE & RESTAURANTS 83 Bites 84 Recipes 90 Review 92 Listings

48

105 happenings THE ESSENTIAL SOCIAL DIGEST 105 Around Town 115 Calendar 120 Flash

124 fyi LOCAL NOTABLES & REAL DEALS 124 Now & Noteworthy 126 At Home

84

128 giving back CHARITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE

TALK OF THE TOWN BOCA RATON MAYOR SUSAN HAYNIE TAKES A HANDS-ON APPROACH TO GOVERNING

115

THE BUSINESS & WEALTH ISSUE

SURPRISES IN STORE A LOCAL NONPROFIT SETS THE NATION’S SHOPPING AND DINING TRENDS

MISSION POSSIBLE MEET FBI CHIEF GEORGE PIRO, THE MAN WHO BROKE SADDAM HUSSEIN

VOLUME XI NUMBER 8

CHANNELING SUCCESS HOW ENTREPRENEUR LAURIE SILVERS FOLLOWED A HUNCH AND BECAME A MEDIA MOGUL

ON THE COVER: MARK CUBAN PHOTO COURTESY OF: ABC/BOB D’AMICO

HE BUILDS, THEY COME PIONEER LAND DEVELOPER RICHARD SIEMENS APPRAISES OUR CITY’S PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE SEPTEMBER 2014

6

BILLIONAIRE MARK CUBAN ON BUSINESS, BASKETBALL, “SHARK TANK” AND HIS BOCA RATON CONNECTION

Volume X1, Number 8, The Boca Raton Observer, (USPS 024758, ISSN 1940-4239) is published monthly except for July by A&A Publishing Corp. Executive Offices: 950 Peninsula Corporate Circle, Suite 1020, Boca Raton, FL 33487. Periodical Postage Paid at Boca Raton, FL and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Boca Raton Observer, 950 Peninsula Corporate Circle, Suite 1020, Boca Raton, FL 33487.

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THE BOCA RATON

CELEBRATING A DECADE OF COMMUNITY

Look better. Feel better.

Live better!

publisher & ceo Linda L. Behmoiras chief operating officer Ralph Behmoiras EDITORIAL editor Felicia S. Levine editorial intern Chris Maiorana ART art director Scott Deal PRODUCTION production director Candi Montaperto

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ADVERTISING director of account development Nicole Ruth nicole@bocaratonobserver.com account manager Ronnie Kaufman ronnie@bocaratonobserver.com

CORRECTION In our August 2014 issue, we mistakenly left out writer Dianna Smith’s byline from the story “Shelter From The Storm” on page 65. We regret the error.

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The Boca Raton Observer is published 11 times a year by A&A Publishing Corp. and is direct mailed to affluent homes in Boca Raton and Delray Beach. The Boca Raton Observer accepts no responsibility for the return of unsolicited manuscripts and/or photographs and assumes no liability for products or services advertised herein. Opinions expressed by the writers are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Publisher. The Boca Raton Observer reserves the right to edit, rewrite or refuse material. Publisher is not responsible for typographical or production errors or accuracy of information provided by its advertisers. The Boca Raton Observer reserves the right to refuse any advertiser. Copyright © 2014 A&A Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. No portion of The Boca Raton Observer may be used or reproduced without the express written permission of the Publisher.


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RO AL PALM PLACE TM

Your Style For Life

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THE BOCA RATON

CELEBRATING A DECADE OF COMMUNITY

CONTRIBUTORS writers Lynn Allison

Bill Bowen Linda Haase Leslie Kraft Burke Susan R. Miller Emily J. Minor Andrea G. Rollin Dianna Smith Richard Westlund

photographers Carlos Aristizabal

Janis Bucher Philip Castleton Bob D’Amico Patty Daniels Craig Denis Jason Lee Omar Vega

NOW OPEN

COMING SOON OCTOBER •

THE FOOD & WINE ISSUE Culinary trends, top chefs and great restaurants Yamato Rd

NOVEMBER

Glades Rd

*expires 9/30/2014

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Turnpike

Lyons Rd

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in Boca Greens Plaza

441/SR7

THE GIVING ISSUE Posh parties, lavish luncheons and charitable acts

DECEMBER •

THE HOLIDAY ISSUE Festive events, fun gifts and tasty cocktails


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THE BOCA RATON

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CELEBRATING A DECADE OF COMMUNITY

The Boca Raton Observer is an entertaining and informative award-winning magazine dedicated to the sophisticated, unique and experienced readers living and working in South Palm Beach County. Committed to a comprehensive focus on the community, The Boca Raton Observer celebrates the people, their homes and businesses, charity and cultural organizations and the schools and leisure activities that comprise the essential Boca Raton lifestyle. Join the more than 175,000 readers that have chosen us as the city’s favorite magazine. The Boca Raton Observer is one of South Florida’s most award-winning magazines and is a recent recipient of the prestigious Charlie (First Place) Awards for “Best Overall Magazine” and “Best Special Theme/Show Issue” from the Florida Magazine Association, as well as numerous other awards from the FMA and the Society of Professional Journalists. For general inquiries, please contact us via:

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950 Peninsula Corporate Circle, Suite 1020 Boca Raton, FL 33487 Phone: 561-982-8960 Fax: 561-994-8509 E-mail: info@bocaratonobserver.com Web: bocaratonobserver.com Facebook: boca raton observer magazine editorial Your input and comments are welcome and appreciated. Submissions should be sent to our corporate address listed above. Email messages may be directed to the following addresses: felicia@bocaratonobserver.com linda@bocaratonobserver.com

news, photos & events Releases and calendar items must be delivered in text format for consideration. In addition, only photographs in jpeg format with 300 dpi resolution

TALK OF THE TOWN BOCA RATON MAYOR SUSAN HAYNIE TAKES A HANDS-ON APPROACH TO GOVERNING

THE BUSINESS & WEALTH ISSUE

SURPRISES IN STORE

» READ THE MAGAZINE » RECEIVE VIP INVITATIONS AND SPECIAL OFFERS

A LOCAL NONPROFIT SETS THE NATION’S SHOPPING AND DINING TRENDS

MISSION POSSIBLE

or better that are accompanied with complete captions will be considered. Send information via email to news@bocaratonobserver.com.

advertising Advertising information can be obtained by calling

MEET FBI CHIEF GEORGE PIRO, THE MAN WHO BROKE SADDAM HUSSEIN

561-982-8960 or by emailing sales@bocaratonob-

CHANNELING SUCCESS HOW ENTREPRENEUR LAURIE SILVERS FOLLOWED A HUNCH AND BECAME A MEDIA MOGUL

server.com. Promote your business in the local life-

HE BUILDS, THEY COME

style magazine with the largest circulation in Palm

PIONEER LAND DEVELOPER RICHARD SIEMENS APPRAISES BOCA RATON’S PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE SEPTEMBER 2014

Beach County – 40,000 copies per month. CirculaBILLIONAIRE MARK CUBAN ON BUSINESS, BASKETBALL, “SHARK TANK” AND HIS BOCA RATON CONNECTION

tion is verified by the Alliance For Audited Media (The New Audit Bureau of Circulations).

on the web Visit bocaratonobserver.com to view past issues in their entirety.

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from the publisher 09.2014

S Linda L. Behmoiras linda@bocaratonobserver.com

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ince business and commerce are at the heart of what makes our fair city tick and excel, we always enjoy presenting our annual Business & Wealth Issue. We begin with our cover story about Mark Cuban, outspoken owner of the Dallas Mavericks and star of ABC’s “Shark Tank.” Cuban, who has business interests in Boca Raton, spoke with us candidly about basketball, media and his business philosophy. Get to know him in “The Original Maverick” (page 50). Next in this issue, we go one-on-one with new FBI Special Agent in Charge of the Miami Division (from Fort Pierce to Key West), George Piro, who was responsible for breaking Saddam Hussein. This man is a true hero, and you can read all about him in “Mission Possible” (page 58). Also in this issue, we introduce you to several fascinating personalities doing amazing things to better our community, including Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie (“Talk of the Town,” page 64); land developer and founder of the Siemens Group, Richard Siemens (“He Builds, They Come,” page 66) and media mogul and philanthropist Laurie Silvers (“Channeling Success,” page 70). And finally, we speak with the locally based group Association for Retail Environments (A.R.E.), which sets the trends for national retailers and restaurateurs—from lighting and music, to ambiance and scents—in “Surprises in Store” (page 60). If you enjoy shopping or dining out— and who doesn’t?—you’ll want to check it out. Being the founder, publisher and CEO of The Boca Raton Observer is something I am always

very proud of, and this summer I was especially proud because my publication and team received many well-deserved awards. While logic dictates that we’re not the only magazine in Boca Raton, it’s a proven fact that we are the favorite, most well-read, largest-circulated periodical in South Palm Beach County. As one of South Florida’s most award-winning publications, we recently received accolades at the Florida Magazine Association’s Charlie Awards, including: First Place for Best Cover, Silver Award for Best Feature, Bronze Award for Best Feature Headlines, Bronze Award for Best Feature Design, Bronze Award for Best Overall Design and Bronze Award for Best Department. It’s hard to believe that a business I started years ago is about to enter its 11th year of publishing. We thank our readers, advertisers and the entire community for embracing our publication in such a warm and welcoming way. We would like to welcome our new readers as we continue to grow our circulation and distribute to 150 condominiums and communities in our area. In a little over a decade, we’ve become one of the leading publications in South Florida. For that I am not only humbled and proud, but very thankful. We look forward to a wonderful year ahead and to many more years of publishing and doing good business. Best,

Photo by Carlos Aristizabal

GOOD BUSINESS


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from the editor 09.2014

AT YOUR DISSERVICE S Felicia S. Levine felicia@bocaratonobserver.com

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T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

o I was at a Super Target the other morning buying coffee creamer before heading to the office. There was one cash register open and oh, about 3,000 people standing in front of me (OK, there were nine, but at 8:30 a.m. when you’re rushing to get to work—nine ...19... 3,000— there’s really no difference). Even more frustrating, the register had a glitch and the line wasn’t moving. As some shoppers grumbled under their breath—one woman just gave up and, with an exasperated sigh, abandoned her full cart—I spotted a manager several feet away and politely asked if she could open another register. A reasonable request, I figured. She walked straight toward me—and then right past me. Rude! I think she smirked, too. Bad customer service makes me want to scream! During and after college I worked in retail and restaurants, and while I was far from a model employee, I tried hard and was never intentionally impolite or inconsiderate. Not everyone does. There are flippant waiters (that’s alright, I didn’t want that beverage I ordered anyway) and dismissive flight attendants (thanks for never bringing the blanket); careless hair stylists (what part of my instruction to “trim the ends” made you think I said “experiment with bangs”?) and distracted store clerks (just keep checking your iPhone there, sweetheart—I’ll wait)…

It’s a wonder any of us can summon the patience to leave home. Agoraphobia, anyone? Actually, you needn’t leave home to experience the angst. Just ask Aaron Spain, the poor sap who made headlines after trying unsuccessfully for a month to have Comcast fix his cable TV, finally deciding to cancel it, and then making the call only to be placed on hold. For three hours. Even after Comcast closed for the day, forelorn Aaron was still holding. Guess he never got the memo explaining that Comcast is only reachable (or so I hear) when there’s a new service to sell or you’ve missed a bill. Not only is bad customer service maddening, it’s also costly—to you, me and businesses in general. According to a Harris Poll conducted on behalf of ClickSoftware, a workforce management company, U.S. industry loses about $108 billion a year, or $900 annually per employee, because of the time these workers spend on hold waiting for customer service responses. People like Aaron, who wasn’t even on the job— but for all we know, is still holding for Comcast.



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the buzz

24

trends

26

la vida boca

HOT STUFF & THE PEOPLE WHO MAKE IT HAPPEN HE’S GOT GAME: Alan Koolik (Below Left) Koolik with “Jeopardy!” host Alex Trebek

[PROFILE]

NICELY PLAYED “The battles of Shiloh and Collierville were fought in this state.” That was the query posed to Boca Raton resident Alan Koolik and his opponent, Jeff Xie of Edison, N.J., during a rare nail-biting tiebreaker on the popular “Jeopardy!” Teen Tournament. Koolik and Xie, both 17, each had a whopping $54,200 after matching scores during the final category. So when the suddendeath question was presented, viewers held their breath as Xie quickly buzzed in the correct response (“What is Tennessee”), nabbing the $75,000 grand prize. Still, Koolik says he’s thrilled to have made it so far on the program known as the Harvard of game shows. “It was a fantastic experience and I was surprised to meet so many bright and great people,” says the senior at Pine Crest School in Fort Lauderdale, who will apply his winnings toward studying engineering in college. “Everyone was so supportive, including host Alex Trebek, who made us feel at home. He really loves the Teen Tournament and it shows.” Parents Tania, 46, a psychologist and Gary, 49, a real estate developer, are still beaming. His mother says her son’s been watching “Jeopardy!”

for as long as she can remember. “He’s extremely well-read but he’s also naturally smart and witty,” she says. “I was amazed to see how poised and confident he was on camera. We are incredibly proud of how well he did.”

I was like an insane person and definitely went for overkill in my preparations.

Koolik, who has two younger brothers, Sammy, 14 and Joshua, 12, was one of tens of thousands of teenagers who took the online test last September to quality for the show. Then he went to New York in November for an audition that included a written test, a mock game to determine how well he handled the all-important buzzer, and an interview to see how he’d come across on television.

He made the cut and in March became one of just 15 teens nationwide to compete at the Culver City, Calif. studio. He says he trained like a prize fighter, watching every episode of “Jeopardy!” that season and plowing through almanacs and other reference books, paying special attention to categories he knew the least. “My weaknesses are definitely sports and pop culture,” he admits, adding that math is his favorite subject. “I was

The Buzz by Felicia S. Levine Got a tip? Email the Editor at Felicia@bocaratonobserver.com

like an insane person and definitely went for overkill in my preparations.” He credits his parents for providing the examples of discipline and steadfastness that propelled his endeavor. “They’ve always taught us to be the best we can be,” he says humbly. Koolik says the most amazing part about his experience was the contestants’ camaraderie. “Everyone was friendly and there wasn’t an air of competition in the group, although we were all fierce competitors,” he says. “I still talk to them every day.” He remains a huge fan of the show. Don’t be surprised, he says, if you see him on a future adult “Jeopardy!” tournament. – By Lynn Allison

SEPTEMBER 2014

19


observed buzz

[RETAIL]

GOING BUY-BUY If you’re addicted to Coca-Cola, you’re not alone. About two out of every eight people drink the stuff, making it the top-selling product in the world, according to Financesonline.com. Here’s their list of the Top 10 best-sellers.

COCA-COLA 1.8 billion servings consumed daily (About 94 percent of the world’s population report recognizing the brand.)

LAY’S POTATO CHIPS 633 million bags sold a year in the United States alone

CONFERENCE[ ] OF WANNA-BEES ODDBALL

(That’s heavier than the weight of an aircraft carrier.)

344 million consoles sold since 1995

section (wink, wink). The Florida State Palm Beach Beekeepers Association will host its 94th annual conference on October 2-4 at the Embassy Suites Hotel in West Palm Beach. About 250 novice and professional beekeepers from across the country are expected to attend the event, which will feature presentations by nationally recognized industry experts, authors, scientists and educators. Guests can also expect honey judging, panel discussions, live bee demonstrations (yikes) and a vendor and exhibitor area with the latest beekeeping equipment and accessories. Sound interesting? For more information, visit beekeepingconference.com.

(Combined that’s the weight of two Golden Gate bridges.)

IPAD 211 tablets sold since 2010 (If tablets were end to end, they’d circle the earth once.)

TOYOTA COROLLA 40.7 million sold since 1966 (If these cars were bumper to bumper, the length would be the equivalent of driving back and forth from Los Angeles to New York City 48 times.)

[OVERHEARD]

This is not work for the faint of heart. You are the noble soldiers. This is the civil rights issue of the 21st century.

– Frank Biden, president of the charter Mavericks High School and director of the Florida Charter School Alliance, who was a guest speaker at a Charter Schools USA event at the Palm Beach County Convention Center Source: The Palm Beach Post

[STATS]

No.2 FORGET SILICON VALLEY. WHEN IT COMES TO CREATING tech jobs, Florida is where it’s at. According to the Tampa Bay Business Journal, our state in the first half of 2014 has created almost as many tech jobs as it had in all of 2013. Texas came in first place.

Source: Floridatrend.com

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}

PLAY STATIONS

We’d be remiss not to include this event in our buzz

HARRY POTTER BOOKS 450 million copies sold since 1997 (That’s like 90 percent of all books sold worldwide in 2013.)

X35

RUBIK’S CUBE 350 million sold since 1980

(This is 35 times the population of Hungary, where it was created.)

ANGRY BIRDS

THRILLER ALBUM

2 billion downloads

70 million sold since 1982

(That’s like one download per 29 percent of the world’s population.)

IPHONE 516 million sold since 2007 (The approximate population of the European Union.)

(That’s 15 times the sales of One Direction’s first album.)



observed buzz

APP HAPPY

XE Currency

Doing Business In The Digital Domain BY CHRIS MAIORANA Smart apps work hard, helping us to be more productive and efficient (and who doesn’t like that?) in our professions. We’ve sifted through the marketplace to find 10 great options for doing business: From apps that can turn your iPad into a cash register, track your flights and field job offers, or create impressive presentations, transform your device into a surveillance camera and track currency exchange rates. If you can imagine it, there’s an app for it.

JetSmarter WHAT IT DOES: Boasting near-uncanny capabilities (there’s a 0.2 percent chance of it not delivering) JetSmarter erases the middle man when you need to charter a private jet. Developed by a 25-year-old IT whiz with experience in the aviation industry, this app lets you “jet smarter” with virtually no thought at all. WHY WE CHOSE IT: A slick user interface with solid technology developed by Boca Raton-based entrepreneur Sergey Petrossov. PLATFORMS: Android, iOS COST: Free

FlightTrack For business travelers who frequently fly commercial, FlightTrack simplifies an often-chaotic experience. It displays your flight status at a glance, keeps you apprised of cancellations or delays, and has the capability of sharing your flight data with business associates down to the minute of your arrival. WHY WE CHOSE IT: Because anything that makes flying commercial easier is a winner in our book. PLATFORM: iOS COST: $4.99 WHAT IT DOES:

Presence Do you have an old smartphone or tablet lying around? Presence lets you take that old device and turn it into a surveillance camera. Using your device’s onboard camera, WHAT IT DOES:

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the app sets up a monitoring system in your home office or business, letting you discreetly keep an eye on things when you’re not there. Connection to cloud services allows Presence to record video for reviewing later. WHY WE CHOSE IT: It’s good to recycle, and this allows you to make good use of old devices. PLATFORMS: Android, iOS COST: Free, with an available subscription service for advanced features

Camcard WHAT IT DOES: Takes a picture of a business card, extracts the important data and shuffles it off into your contact list automatically. This is an invaluable tool for professionals of every field and trade who constantly meet new contacts and don’t want to get bogged down with stacks of business cards. WHY WE CHOSE IT: Camcard is stylish, intuitive and smart, and we like it when apps take care of the little details for us. PLATFORM: Android, iOS COST: Free; offers in-app purchases

Air Display Air Display offers you much-needed desk space by turning your iPad into a second display screen. It also offers multiple capabilities to artistic professionals who enjoy keeping brushes and tools on a separate monitor, and business professionals who work with several bookkeeping and account management apps at once. WHY WE CHOSE IT: Because you don’t

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

WHAT IT DOES:

need any extra wires lying around. PLATFORM: iOS COST: $9.99

The Ladders WHAT IT DOES: This job search app indexes only $40K-plus positions and can help connect you with top recruiters. When you first open this app you’ll be prompted to enter your desired career course and area. It does the rest, searching within a 50-mile radius for available positions. It also plugs in your data so prospective employers can find you. WHY WE CHOSE IT: Because matching your abilities with the right company could be the best career move you ever make. PLATFORMS: Android, iOS COST: Free, with available subscription service for advanced features

Square Register It turns your smart device into a POS (point of sale) system, so you can accept credit cards. Square Register provides a free credit card reader with sign-up, and users can also accept payments with just credit card numbers. Simply log onto your online account and manage all your business needs on the app’s website. WHY WE CHOSE IT: We like to see local merchants using technology to help grow their businesses. PLATFORMS: Android, iOS COST: Free, with surcharges per payment WHAT IT DOES:

WHAT IT DOES: Keeps

investors and entrepreneurs who do work overseas updated about currency exchange rates. The app offers a stylish currency calculator which lets users monitor exchange rates for 10 or more different currencies. WHY WE CHOSE IT: The stylish interface is slick, functional and very user-friendly. PLATFORMS: Android, iOS COST: Free

Roambi Flow WHAT IT DOES: Turns flow charts, graphs, diagrams and business presentations into works of art by putting impressive formatting tools in your hands. According to Roambi, standard “PDFs are dead.” This makes them make them interactive. The app can import static PDFs and animate them for touchscreen devices like iPads, creating something that your customers or associates can get their hands on. WHY WE CHOSE IT: Roambi’s powerful formatting tools are fun to use and can create beautiful documents. PLATFORM: iOS COST: Undisclosed; includes a 30day free trial

Evernote This popular note-taking app offers multiple functions for a variety of business needs. Utilizing a hierarchy of notebooks, Evernote can keep texts, capture images and scan documents (with your device’s onboard camera), and save it all in one of your custom notebooks. This is a great way to keep myriad documents and associated minutiae in one convenient location and sync it with Cloud technology. WHY WE CHOSE IT: Because attention to detail is important. PLATFORMS: Android, iOS COST: Free O WHAT IT DOES:


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EXERCISE IN PRODUCTIVITY Workout At Work—Without Ever Leaving Your Desk BY FELICIA S. LEVINE 1. DESK BICYCLE is a lightweight unit that features a “desk” with room for a book or laptop, a removable cover for washing and a comfortable spot for your elbows. Both the seat and resistance are adjustable and the bike can be folded away for storage. Available at theinsidertrainer.com 2. LIFESPAN BIKE DESK is great for cycling enthusiasts, allowing you to work comfortably while pedaling at your chosen level of resistance. It can be slid under the desk when you’re done, making it a convenient space saver. Available at lifespanfitness.com

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3. FITBALL SEATING DISK mimics an exercise ball and helps improve balance, core strength and flexibility. It’s filled with air and super comfortable. All you need to do is sit—fitness doesn’t get much easier than that. Available at brookstone.com

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4. FOLDAWAY ARMOIRE GYM is a selfcontained unit with two 30-pound weight stacks, a kayak bar and grip for anaerobic use, and an exercise bicycle for aerobic workouts. The best part: The whole thing fits in an attractive armoire when not in use. Available at hammacher.com 5. HAND FITNESS TRAINER fits like a glove with elastic bands that provide resistance to strengthen muscles in your hands, wrists and elbows. It’s also good for reducing symptoms of arthritis, carpal tunnel, tennis elbow and tendonitis. Available at theinsidertrainer.com

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observed trends 6

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6. ELLIPTICAL MACHINE OFFICE DESK moves slowly enough for users to remain productive while still burning about 4,000 calories a work week. The desk’s height is adjustable, the machine’s seat is comfortably padded and a monitor displays distance, time and more. Available at hammacher.com

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7. BALL CHAIR helps improve core strength and posture through “active sitting” that engages the muscles and improves balance. Not only is it ergonomic, but you can also remove the stability ball from the chair base and exercise with it. Available at theinsidertrainer.com 8. IMPEX FITNESS MARCY MINI-STEPPER WITH BANDS provides an upper- and lowerbody workout with nonslip pedals that keep you in place while stepping and stretching resistance cables. An electronic display features strides per minute, a timer and calories burned. Available at brookstone.com 9. ISOMETRIC RESISTANCE UPPER-BODY STRENGTHENER works the upper body without putting pressure on your joints. Simply pulling or pushing on the static handlebars creates the same strengthenhancing resistance as free weights. Available at hammacher.com

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10. LIFESPAN TREADMILL DESK lets you get physical at the office without ever breaking a sweat or losing your breath. Its slow pace allows you to complete tasks as though you were seated. Available at lifespanfitness.com 11. THE DESKCYCLE is compact and designed specifically for office use, with silent pedals, magnetic resistance that prevents the jarring of joints and a display that gauges time, miles pedaled and calories burned. Available at theinsidertrainer.com

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observed la vida boca PEACE OF THE ACTION: Ron VanTassell

NOT GOING TO POT After The Feds Shut Things Down, A New Mr. Nice Guy Drinks To The Future BY EMILY J. MINOR on VanTassell’s moment of sudden discovery—that is, his aha moment—came about a year ago at a convenience store. He walked in for a gallon of water and came out with a business plan. VanTassell is president of the Boynton Beach company, Mr. Nice Guy LLC, which today manufactures and distributes a dietary supplement called Mr. Nice Guy. It’s a berry-flavored drink laced with all sorts of FDA-approved supplements that are supposed to make you chill out. What’s in it? Chamomile flower extract, valerian root extract, melatonin and L-theanine, also found in green tea.

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I could have switched gears and gone serious. But I went with what felt right. – Ron VanTassell, president, Mr. Nice Guy

Indeed, the Mr. Nice Guy company slogan is: “Drink and Relax.” “I drink just one at night and it makes me feel great,” says VanTassell, 38, who says the company’s 2014 first-quarter revenues were $920,000 gross. But to truly appreciate this success story, you should know: Mr. Nice Guy has a not-so-nice past. The company’s original product wasn’t a drink at all, but “herbal incense” sold in packets at gas stations, corner stores and smoke shops. And in July 2012—as federal investigators across the country cracked down on these so-called “synthetic marijuana” sales—Mr. Nice Guy co-founder, Dylan Harrison of Lantana, and business partner John Shealey of Royal Palm Beach, were arrested and eventually sentenced to federal prison. (Harrison for a day and a year; Shealey for 18 months.) The two men are still in prison and forbidden to have input CAPTION: Siggy Flicker in present business matters. 26

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

Enter VanTassell. VanTassell had known Harrison for years, mainly through operating nightclubs together. “He’s my closest friend,” says VanTassell, who wasn’t involved in the first company but had been helping his friend pick up the pieces and prepare for an October report date to federal prison. Then, running that errand at the convenience store, he saw a can of “anti-energy” drink called “Marley’s Mellow Mood” on the shelf above his gallon of water. Bingo. “I said, ‘You know what. There’s this whole hippy, ’70s vibe going on again and we can do this,’” VanTassell remembers. “And we can do it better.”

Today, after months of legal work and lab tests, the “berrylicious” drink (30 calories; 9 carbs; about $3.75 a can) is sold in 600 gas stations in Palm Beach County, plus stores in Georgia, Colorado and New York City, VanTassell says. They’re advertising on TV and on local billboards. And they’ve embraced the controversy so much they’ve proclaimed “Felony-Free Fridays” for an upcoming national sales blitz that will extend into fall. There will be free Mr. Nice Guy all around—as long as nobody with the company gets arrested heading into the weekend. “I could have switched gears and gone serious,” VanTassell says. “But I went with what felt right.” O




[on screen in print on scene]

THE QUINTESSENTIAL ARTS REPORT

GUNS AND POSES Stallone And “Expendables 3” Cohorts Shoot For Box Office Success BY BILL BOWEN t was a good idea Sylvester Stallone had, like most of his ideas, to assemble a roster of 1980s action heroes and mount a geriatric military assault, just like old times. It would be one of those class reunions where you barely recognize your old friends until they pick up an uzi.

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These movies are not so much about stories as they are about mounting a flimsy rationale for blowing away as many people as possible and then doing just that. The first two installments netted $274 million and $310 million respectively, though equally shallow of plot. Thus was born “The Expendables” and, like many of Stallone’s enterprises, it’s turned into a franchise whose latest installment, “Expendables 3,” directed by Patrick Hughes, is currently stoking that nostalgia for widespread carnage. Stallone, 68, who writes most of his movies and directs some of them, is no longer Rocky (which he portrayed six times) or Rambo (four) but is now Barney Ross—for the third time. For that matter, Arnold Schwarzenegger, 67, is no longer Conan (twice), The Terminator (three times) or the Governor of California (twice). Schwarzenegger plays Trench Mauser, a former mem-

ber of the mercenary team that Ross leads on missions of national security deemed too sensitive to send actual government employees. So these guys work incognito in the hazy netherworld that seems to be ruled by the CIA, but nobody is quite sure, and Ross gets his orders from a mysterious suit named Max Drummer (Harrison Ford). But don’t get too hung up on the plot. These movies are not so much about stories as they are about mounting a flimsy rationale for blowing away as many people as possible and then doing just that. The first two installments netted $274 million and $310 million respec-

tively, though equally shallow of plot. So to rate Stallone’s idea as “good” is subjective, though many ticket buyers do. And what a star-studded lineup. Barney’s usual team of mercenaries—along with a few new faces— includes knife expert Lee Christmas (Jason Statham), martial arts expert Yin Yang (Jet Li), demolitions expert Toll Road (Randy Couture), volatile big guy Gunner Jensen (Dolph Lundgren), barrel weapons expert Hale Caesar (Terry Crews) and former medic Doctor Death (Wesley Snipes). Early in the film, they capture evil-genius arms dealer Conrad Stonebanks (Mel Gibson) by mowing down about 100 people, but they fail at incarcerating him and Ross decides to go out and recruit a younger team with help from Bonaparte (Kelsey Grammer), a retired adventurer (this seems a transparent bid by Stallone to attract younger viewers).

They round up former Navy Seal John Smilee (Kellan Lutz, 29), beautiful barroom bouncer Luna (Ronda Rousey, 27), computer genius Thorn (Glen Powell, 25) and sharpshooter Mars (Victor Ortiz, 27). And somehow, they pick up motor-mouth Spaniard Galgo (Antonio Banderas) in the bargain. That’s pretty much it. The rest is gunplay. Dripping with machine guns, pistols, grenades and knives, the team decimates several divisions of the Romanian army, tanks and all, without taking any casualties themselves. Shooting for box office success, indeed. O RATED PG-13: Contains violence with intense sustained gun battles, fight scenes and language RUNNING TIME: 2 hours, 6 minutes

SEPTEMBER 2014

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media in print

READ ’EM AND REAP These Social Media Bios Provide A Wealth Of Knowledge BY LINDA HAASE Apple. Google. Amazon. These omnipresent companies are on the tips of our tongues—and all over our credit card receipts. Just how did these billion-dollar companies get this way? To find out, The Boca Raton Observer ferreted out books that provide insider information about

Top companies such as Apple don’t rocket their way to stardom without a few secrets, strategies and systems known only to insiders. But according to Adam Lashinsky, things at Apple are so far from the norm the corporate culture defies all business logic.

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these and other successful social media companies and how they manage to stay on top. Whether you’re a CEO or just starting up, these books contain a wealth of knowledge.

Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal By Nick Bilton Twitter has made a phenomenal impact in just seven short years, becoming an indispensable tool for social networkers, a must-have for execs and celebs, and a behind-thescenes real-time commentator during live events. Among its devoted users are Oprah Winfrey, President Barack Obama—even The Pope. But Twitter has its own engrossing story and New York Times col-

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

umnist and reporter Nick Bilton serves it up in this engrossing, fast-paced tell-all. Readers will be amazed and perhaps even appalled when they discover the real deal about its four eclectic founders who fought for—and then lost—control of this powerful company. Bilton leaves nothing to the imagination in his no-holds-barred account. “He does an excellent job of depicting the emotional atmosphere at West Coast start-ups,” noted The Washington Post. “A cycle of exhilaration and hopelessness shadowed by the persistent fear of missing out.”


media in print

Brad Stone peels away story layers like an onion, revealing Amazon’s visionary founder Jeff Bezos’ quirks, intelligence, fervor and relentless ambition. Notes the author: “It’s the tale of how one gifted child grew into an extraordinarily driven and versatile CEO.”

Without Their Permission: How the 21st Century Will Be Made, Not Managed

The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon

By Alexis Ohanian

By Brad Stone

Alexis Ohanian was a millionaire by the age of 24. So he has plenty of sage advice to offer others looking to emulate his success. In this best-seller, which he wrote while listening to Jay-Z and Metallica, Ohanian divulges his experience creating the start-up reddit.com, now one of the 50 most popular websites in the world. He shares

One-click giant Amazon is the convenience store of the technological world delivering instant gratification to millions around the world (including its new Amazon Fire smartphone). But what goes on behind closed doors at the massive company that began as a small enterprise that simply delivered books through

Inside Apple: How America’s Most Admired—and Secretive—Company Really Works

How Google Works By Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg

By Adam Lashinsky Top companies such as Apple don’t rocket their way to stardom without a few secrets, strategies and systems known only to insiders. But according to Adam Lashinsky, things at Apple are so far from the norm the corporate culture defies all business logic. Apple, contends Lashinsky, behaves differently in almost every way than other businesses. He provides readers with a fascinating rundown of its unique leadership and innovation, dispensing information about its suppliers, investors, employees and competitors—and of course, founder Steve Jobs who “loomed larger than life.” The author, who spent more than a year gathering info for this tell-all, leaves readers wondering: Is Apple on to something the rest of the world should be emulating? Publisher’s Weekly sums it up best: “Readers, especially entrepreneurs, technophiles, and businesspeople seeking a peek at the world’s most valuable company, will find Lashinsky’s investigation enthralling and enlightening.”

his ideas, tips and philosophy for aspiring entrepreneurs who want to make their mark in the world (he admits that he would have become an immigration lawyer without a simple twist of fate on his first day at the University of Virginia.) “I’ll break it all down so you can do it too,” he promises. Because, as Ohanian warns readers, “the ruthless, fickle and particular users of the World Wide Web have created the most competitive marketplace of ideas the world has ever seen. Either you make something people want or people move on.”

Eric Schmidt, Google executive chairman and ex-CEO and Jonathan Rosenberg, former senior vice president of products, teamed up for this book to share lessons they learned while pushing Google to the max. They explain how technology has shifted power from companies to consumers, and how the one way to succeed is to create superior products and attract multifaceted employees whom they dub “smart creatives.” Their book covers everything from corporate culture, hiring practices and product development, to strategy, decision making and dealing with disruption. They also keep it interesting via insider anecdotes from Google’s illustrious history. There’s plenty to take away from this read, making it a good option for others who’d like to make their way to the pinnacle in the business world. The book contains a condensed, two-page strategy checklist that serves as a blueprint for managers. The lessons—of which there are many—are sure to resonate with anyone who’s used Google and wished they’d thought of it first.

the mail? Brad Stone peels away story layers like an onion, revealing visionary founder Jeff Bezos’ quirks, intelligence, fervor and relentless ambition. “It’s the tale of how one gifted child grew into an extraordinarily driven and versatile CEO,” notes the author, who in his tome sets out to “chronicle the extraordinary rise of an innovative, disruptive and often polarizing technological powerhouse.” Along the way he brings to life the man he calls a “micromanager with limitless springs of new ideas and a cheery public persona that belies his acerbic outbursts.” O SEPTEMBER 2014

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media on scene

SINGING HER SONGS

she suffered from bipolar disorder. “I’m not gonna lie,” she told Seventeen magazine. “I was doing things like drinking and using, like a lot of teens do to numb their pain. [But now] I don’t drink, I don’t do drugs, I don’t throw up after my meals, I don’t starve myself. There’s nothing that I do that I feel ashamed of.” These days, the performer pours her energy into music and charity. She helped create The Lovato Treatment Scholarship Program, which helps people struggling with mental health and/or addiction issues, and celebrated her 21st birthday in Kenya by helping to build a new school. “Even if I were to never have money or fame again, I’d still have my soul,” she writes on her website, “because I know that I can have an affect on someone else’s life.” O

Demi Lovato Pours Her Heart Out At AmericanAirlines Arena BY LINDA HAASE inger Demi Lovato’s fans are diehard and no doubt already preparing to attend her “World Tour” concert, which will take place at 7 p.m. on September 14 at AmericanAirlines Arena. Lovato is expected to perform her early hits, as well as newer songs including “Really Don’t Care” and “Heart Attack” off her fourth and most recent album, Demi. There’s a reason the 22-year-old performer is so popular: Not only is she a vocalist, songwriter, piano player and guitarist, but a bestselling author (“Staying Strong: 365 Days a Year”) and TV star (she’s been on “The X Factor,” “Glee” and more). Recently, she was named the People’s Choice Awards’ Favorite

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Female Artist. She got her start in show business early as a regular on the children’s show “Barney & Friends,” followed by roles in the Disney Channel hits “Sonny With A Chance” and “As The Bell Rings.” She also appeared in the film “Camp Rock,” and recorded three songs with the Jonas Brothers for the soundtrack. But life wasn’t always easy for Lovato. She was bullied as a teen (she opted to be homeschooled after kids in her public school started a petition called “We all hate Demi Lovato”); checked into a medical center in 2010 to receive treatment for an eating disorder and publicly announced the following year that

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media on scene

DOES COUNTRY PROUD Rascal Flatts And Sheryl Crow Team Up At Cruzan Amphitheatre BY LINDA HAASE hat do you get when you pair Rascal Flatts and Sheryl Crow? A country-inspired musical extravaganza, that’s what. The two popular acts are currently making their way across the United States as part of their “Rewind Tour,” which will stop at Cruzan Amphitheatre for a 7:30 p.m. show on September 13. The guys from Rascal Flatts aree no strangers to thee road, often performming country hits like ke “Still Feels Good,” d,” “Bless the Broken ken Road,” “What Hurts The Most” and “My Wish,” which have sold more than 22.5 million albums since their musical debut in 2000.

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And Gary LeVox (lead vocals), Jay DeMarcus (bass guitar, keyboard, piano, vocals) and Joe Don Rooney (lead guitar, vocals) aren’t slowing down. As a for their new album, Rewind? “It’s got meat, potatoes, vegetables—all of it,” LeVox writes on his website. “It’s fun, it’s poignant,

and we think the hard work that went into it has really paid off.” Sheryl Crow can certainly hold her own on stage. Known as a triple threat for her skills as a singer, songwriter and musician, she’s sold more than 17 million albums in the United States and more than 50 million worldwide. She’s also won nine Grammys and has worked with

everyone from The Rolling Stones, Stevie Nicks and Eric Clapton, to Luciano Pavarotti, Willie Nelson and B.B. King. Critics approve of the tour, which also features the band Gloriana, so far. “Crow was masterful in her 10song set, mostly a catalog of hits such as ‘My Favorite Mistake,’ ‘A Change Would Do You Good’ and ‘If It Makes You Happy,’” noted The St. Louis Dispatch. “If you’ve forgotten what a good musician the Missouri native is, Crow reminded you by playing guitar and keyboard in addition to the harmonica. Coupled with her pure, clean voice, Crow could not have sounded better.” Praise for Rascal Flatts was just as enthusiastic. “I defy you to sit through a Rascal Flatts concert unmoved by the sheer giddiness of the fans around you,” challenged the Dallas News. O For more information, call 561-7958883 or visit cruzanampitheatre.net.

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WILD AND CRAZY GUYS Steve Martin And Martin Short Bring Big Laughs To Hard Rock Live BY LINDA HAASE teve Martin and Martin Short invite you to watch them engage in “A Very Stupid Conversation” during their tour of the same name, scheduled for a stop at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino’s Hard Rock Live on September 6 at 8 p.m. Fans can expect musical numbers, film clips, chats about their show business experiences and, of course, hilarious stand-up comedy from two of the best in the biz. The diversified Steve Martin—he’s an actor, comedian, author, playwright, producer and musician—is best-known for his laugh-out-loud roles in “The Jerk,” “Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid,” “Three Amigos,” “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels,” the “Father of the Bride” films and more. The four-time Grammy winner has hosted the Oscars three times and

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Saturday Night Live more than anyone in the show’s history. In his spare time, he collects art, plays the banjo (he won a Grammy for Best Country Instrumental Performance) and has penned more than 10 books, including best-sellers “The Pleasure of My Company,” and “Shopgirl: A Novella.” His first original play, the comedy-drama “Picasso at the Lapin Agile” received rave reviews. The 69-year-old Mensa member studied philosophy at California State University at Long Beach, and once considered becoming a professor (fans are glad he stuck with comedy). Fellow comedian and “Saturday Night Live” alumni Martin Short teamed up with Martin in “Three Amigos,” as well as in “Father of the Bride” and “Father of the Bride Part II,” in which he played Franck Egg-

elhoffer, the quirky wedding planner. Short won Tony and Outer Critics Circle awards for his role in the revival of “Little Me” and co-wrote and starred in “Fame Becomes Me.” The New w York Times is a fan, having deescribed him as “a natural for live ve musicals, a limber berr singer and dancer nceer who exudes a fier fiery ry energy that makes akkes you want to reach eaach for your sunglasses.” His TV show, The Martin Short Show, garnered him seven Emmy nominations. O For more information, call 954-797-5555 or visit hardrocklivehollywoodfl.com.

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ROCK ROYALTY

Steve Winwood Joins Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers At Cruzan Amphitheatre BY LINDA HAASE he fact that two of classic rock’s legendary acts are touring together is music to our ears. The double billing of Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers and Steve Winwood is pure genius, and will surely be a crowd pleaser when they hit the Cruzan Amphitheatre stage at 7:30 p.m. on September 20. Tom Petty’s music spans generations, with dozens of Top 40 hits and nearly 80 million records sold worldwide. Petty, known for his hypnotic vocals, gifted guitar playing and harmonica harmonies, has had a legendary career, including a stint teaming up with Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Jeff Lynne and Roy Orbison with the much-touted band The

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Traveling Wilburys. But he’s best-known for performing with his Heartbreakers band, which formed in thee 1970s and was at the forefrontt of the heartland rock moveement, alongside artists such as Bruce Springsteen and Bob Seger. er. Their catchy tunes, such as “Don’t on’t Do Me Like That,” “Free Falling” ng” and “Mary Jane’s Last Dance” have stood the test of time and today still get ample airplay. Their latest album, Hypnotic Eye—the first in four years—is edgier than past recordings and ingrained with the blues and has garnered impressive reviews. Steve Winwood, a two-time Grammy winner, burst onto the

music scene in 1963 at age 15 join joining the Spencer Davis Group, which garnered international success with classics such as “Keep On Running,” “Gimme Some Lovin’” and “I’m A Man.” He left the group in 1967 and co-founded Traffic, with whom he recorded landmark albums Mr. Fantasy and John Barleycorn Must

Die. He later joined Blind Faith with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker, and recorded hits including “Can’t Find My Way Home.” He eventually decided to front his own band. During his five decades in the music business, Winwood has recorded in almost every genre, from rock and pop to jazz and soul. His solo hits include “Back In The High Life,” “When You See A Chance,” “Valerie,” “Higher Love” and “Roll With It.” O For more information, call 561-7958883 or visit cruzanampitheatre.net.

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[relations parents destinations]

A GUIDE TO PERSONAL GROWTH

RUN FROM OFFICE

In A Hostile Workplace, You Have To Take The Bully By The Horns BY EMILY J. MINOR he horror stories usually flow most easily during happy hour, when colleagues meet up to find solace at the bar around the corner. “He’s always in my cubicle, reading over my shoulder,” one might say. “He excludes me on all the email threads, even though I’m the project manager,” says another. “He’s a bully!” says a third, throwing back her second beer and hitting the nail on the head. Bullying—that is, using strength or influence to intimidate someone into behaving the way you want them to—has gotten some serious attention in recent years. Of course, the proverbial school-yard bully has been around since the dawn of public education. But today’s bullying has grown to fit our complicated 21st century society, extending far beyond a playground punch and stolen lunch money. Today we find bullies on condo boards and in volunteer associations. There might be that one woman in your church group who has to have it done her way, or else. In today’s virtual age, online bullying is a serious problem, especially with teenagers and young adults, and one that’s often veiled in anonymity. And one of the biggest breeding grounds for bullies these days? The workplace. Take today’s unemployment rate, the economic instability of some major industries, and the

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threat of job outsourcing and you have a veritable stew of neurotic dysfunction among America’s estimated 150 million workers. “It can be very subtle,” says Liz McGarr, a former human resources executive who retired to West Palm Beach after 20 years of managing

doesn’t have a hard, fast definition. Yelling. Cold stares. Arrogance. Stealing ideas. Sexual harassment. Constant (unnecessary) supervision. Backstabbing. Spreading gossip. Exclusion. Threatening unwarranted termination.

Bullying, I found, takes many forms. But it’s always about trying to make someone feel very small.

– Liz McGarr, former human resources executive, West Palm Beach

the personnel department for a 10,000-employee Canadian brokerage firm. “Bullying, I found, takes many forms,” she says. “But it’s always about trying to make someone feel very small.” According to a study by the Washington-based Workplace Bullying Institute, nearly 37 percent of America’s workers—or about 55 million people—have been subjected to bullying at the office. Just what is workplace bullying? That’s part of the problem. Bullying SEPTEMBER 2014

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The boss who tells you, repeatedly, that lots of other people want your job and that he’d hate for you to lose it, but being his assistant means staying until 8 p.m. every night. And sorry, there’s no overtime in the budget. Bullying!

that might be perceived as a misstep and trying to get through the day without disappointing the boss. Then they come home at night and they’re a wreck.” That kind of work environment wreaks havoc on personal relationships, he says, which is usually

There are many workers out there who go to work every day in fear and whose obsession all day is paying attention to the boss to make sure they don’t displease him or her… Then they come home at night and they’re a wreck. – David Ransen, psychologist, Delray Beach

These are all forms of intimidation and control, says psychologist David Ransen, a former clinical researcher who now sees patients at his downtown Delray Beach office. “There are many workers out there who go to work every day in fear and whose obsession all day is paying attention to the boss to make sure they don’t displease him or her,” Ransen says. “They’re always trying to anticipate anything 42

when couples or individuals turn to him. “It’s not just manageremployee,” McGarr adds. “It’s a co-worker thing, too.” Whether it’s a boss who always makes you stay late or a colleague who tries to dismantle your ideas and pass them off as her own, what do you do when you’re the victim of bullying? How do you approach it? If you want to keep your job, must you live in misery?

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According to another study, this one out of the State University of New York, Buffalo, and published in the Journal of Managerial Psychology, about half of those employees who feel bullied choose to do nothing because they feel “an angered bully is a more dangerous bully. Many people don’t even want to talk about it,” McGarr says. The State University study also noted another unsettling component—researchers found that “many bullies receive positive evaluations from their supervisors and achieve high levels of career success.” That is, sometimes the bully gets the big promotion. “I’ve worked in cubicle farms and I’ve seen that,” says Ransen. But not always—sometimes karma creeps in. Experts and researchers recommend stepping forward if you’re being subjected to troubling behavior. Some tips include documenting specific examples of the bullying (“He enters my cubicle all the time when I’m on the phone and I feel

like he’s eavesdropping”); telling the bully how this affects you (“I get distracted and angry, and can’t do my work”) and providing a solution (“In the future, please don’t come in my cubicle unless I ask you”). If the behavior continues, the folks at the Workplace Bullying Institute say human resources should be the next stop. “You have to teach people how to act, how to behave, so you really have to put words in their mouths,” McGarr says. “I would say, ‘Let’s see how much of this you can resolve on your own.’” Of course, speaking up against a powerful bully can seem daunting, particularly from a financial standpoint. What if you lose the job? In that case, Ransen suggests a couple of things: Keep copious notes. Seek the help of a therapist to guide you through. And if it becomes unbearable, finding another job has to become a serious option. Says Ransen: “I just sort of remind them that there are some things that you may find more important than work.” O


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life parents

CAN’T BUY ME LOVE Teach Your Kids Lessons They Can Bank On In The Future BY DIANNA SMITH oes the saying, “money doesn’t grow on trees” ring a bell? It’s one of those phrases my mother said to me as a child, and her mother said it to her. It’s typically used when someone thinks money is easy to obtain and it’s meant to let that person know that’s just not the case. Maybe it’s something you swore you’d never say once you had kids of your own. But then, you actually became a parent and your child screamed for an expensive toy, or your teen whined for the latest, greatest gadget—and all bets were off. But what if instead of using the tree analogy, you provided the op-

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National Endowment for Financial Education, because parents are the biggest influence on their children’s financial habits. Lead kids in the right direction and teach them how to save and spend

What I see that happens later in life is that (people) live beyond their means. If they get a dollar, they spend a dollar. And I’m talking about extremely well-educated people like doctors and lawyers. In a world of immediate self-gratification, there’s a price to be paid later on.

– Anthony Caruso, accountant, Caruso and Company, PA, Deerfield Beach

portunity to let your kids learn its lesson? Why not tell them they can have the toy or iPad if they earn the money to pay for it? This could be an invaluable opportunity to teach them the importance of earning and saving money. It’s a good idea, according to the 44

wisely, and maybe they won’t end up needing to work into their retirement years, as many adults are forced to do today. What kids learn and experience financially in their childhood definitely transcends into adulthood, says Anthony Caruso, an accoun-

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tant for more than 30 years and president of Caruso and Company, PA, in Deerfield Beach. And that experience can be positive or negative.

“What I see that happens later in life is that (people) live beyond their means. If they get a dollar, they spend a dollar. And I’m talking about extremely well-educated people like doctors and lawyers,” says Caruso. “In a world of immediate self-gratification, there’s a price to be paid later on.” Caruso says that teaching kids about financial responsibility not only helps prepare them for the future, but helps them learn patience and the value of things. He also suggests that parents stop spoiling their children. A survey of 2,174 parents released this summer by vouchercloud.net revealed that on average, children under age 10 receive $1,360 each year from their mothers and fathers. Two out of three parents said they give their kids


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life parents that parents compete with one another by buying their kids big-ticket items such as electronics. She suggests that instead of always buying pricey presents, parents spend more time with their children. Time is free and the memories made can be priceless. “Sit down and play with them for 10 minutes a day. Or if you have a teenager, talk to them for a few minutes,” she says. “Kids really feel loved when they have one-on-one time with their parents. You could buy them a ton of toys and they feel neglected because you never spend quality time with them.” And when your children are able to pocket some money—whether it comes from chores or birthday gifts—make sure they know how to spend it. If their phone charger breaks, for example, encourage them to shop around for the best deal. If they want an expensive shirt, ask them how often they’ll wear it or if it will just sit in the closet.

Kids really feel loved when they have one-on-one time with their parents. You could buy them a ton of toys and they feel neglected because you never spend quality time with them.

– Margie Mader, licensed marriage and family therapist and mother of three, Fort Lauderdale

money because they don’t want to disappoint them and 17 percent admit to doing it simply because their children like expensive things. It’s difficult not to give in, Caruso acknowledges, admitting that he too was awfully generous with his sons when they were younger. But, he warns, spoiling our children can turn them into greedy, lazy adults years later. “We are in a world where we have this entitlement persona mentality going on with the kids,” he says. “It’s created a generation that lacks a work ethic and it’s not what you want for your kids.” Margie Mader, a licensed marriage and family therapist in Fort 46

Lauderdale and mother of twin 12-year-old girls and a 6-year-old daughter, agrees. So she’s already warned her twins that they’ll need to get part-time jobs when they’re old enough to work. “I want them to experience what it’s like to be of service to other people and what it’s like to have a job and manage their money,” she says. “It creates responsibility. At 14, I asked my parents if I could work and I loved it. I opened a bank account. It helped with my self-esteem and made me feel like a little adult.” Savings and checking accounts can be introduced to children who are about age 10, explains Caruso,

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and parents can start teaching their kids about money when they’re as young as 3. Giving little ones money to pay for something at the grocery store helps, he says, because it teaches toddlers that most things aren’t free. Mader says a problem today is

And most importantly, Mader suggests, teach them that money really doesn’t grow on trees. It’s something that’s earned and that not everyone has. So when they have it, they’ll cherish it, save it and spend it well. Just like my mother taught me. O



life destinations Just about every guest room here offers a spectacular mountain or resort view. Many have fireplaces, balconies or both. All feature giant soaking tubs and heavenly scented bath salts. There are 55 suites at 900 square feet with separate living rooms and sleeper sofas (great if you’re bringing the kids and want a little quiet adult time). For a truly decadent experience, book

center where classes are offered in step aerobics, body sculpting, kickboxing, yoga and Pilates. When it’s time for winter skiing, guests here can avoid the hassle of driving in the snow (a daunting task for South Floridians). Rather, a highspeed ski lift is just steps from your back door, where more than 1,800 acres of ski and snowboard terrain awaits. Never skied before? No prob-

In summer, the resort is surrounded by lush green trees, appearing like a scene straight from “The Sound of Music.” During winter, snow-covered mountains provide a breathtaking backdrop to the picturesque resort, which features a rustic lobby and an enormous stone fireplace—perfect for warming your tootsies after a day on the slopes.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN HIGH The Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch In Colorado Offers Year-Round Bliss SUSAN R. MILLER here’s really never a bad time to visit Colorado. It’s a great place to cool down when the South Florida summers turn intensely hot and muggy. In the winter you can spend days indulging in outdoor tubing, skiing, snowshoeing, snowboarding, ice skating, dog sledding—or just relax beside a roaring fire with a hot toddy. You’ll find all this and more at The Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch, an exclusive ski-in/ski-out mountain resort located on Beaver Creek Mountain. This family-friendly 180-room resort is truly one of the area’s signature places to see and be seen. In summer, it’s surrounded by lush

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green trees, appearing like a scene straight from “The Sound of Music.” (You almost expect Julie Andrews to come out singing “the hills are alive.”) During winter, snow-covered mountains provide a breathtaking backdrop to the picturesque resort, which features a rustic lobby and an enormous stone fireplace—perfect for warming your tootsies after a day on the slopes.

contact The Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch is located at 0130 Daybreak Ridge, Avon, Colo. For more information, call 970-748-6200 or visit ritzcarlton.com/BachelorGulch.

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the 1,800-square-foot Ritz-Carlton Suite, which includes a doublesided fireplace, dining room that seats 10 people and a living room that accommodates eight guests comfortably. There’s also a butler’s kitchen with a separate service entrance for entertaining, and the master bedroom and bath have their own fireplace and balcony overlooking the mountains. This majestic destination thinks of everything: even the family dog. The pooch-friendly resort provides dog bowls and overstuffed beds for Fido, along with swag bags filled with goodies such as bandanas, dog treats, fetch toys and pewter wine-barrel collar charms in honor of Bachelor, the resident Saint Bernard. (There’s a pet fee, of which a portion is donated to the ASPCA.) Oh, and did we mention the inroom doggie massages, care of the Bachelor Gulch Spa? Speaking of which, the immaculate 21,000-square-foot spa features 19 treatment rooms surrounding a rock-lined grotto and lazy river hot tub. Because cold, dry weather can wreak havoc on the skin, myriad treatment options are designed to restore and rejuvenate. There’s also a fully equipped fitness

lem. There’s a ski school for adults and kids, as well as a snowboard school. If you’re traveling during summer, there are many special outdoor events that take advantage of the refreshing climate, including Bravo! Vail, a music festival, the Vail Jazz Festival, the Wine and Spirits Festival and the USA Pro Cycling Challenge. There’s also hiking, fly fishing, guided nature walks, yearround ice skating, gondola rides, gallery strolls and more. Golf is big here from May through October, with a par-72 Tom Fazio course and a par-72 Greg Norman course located just 15 minutes from the resort. A convenient Beaver Creek Shuttle connects the three villages of Beaver Creek, Bachelor Gulch and Arrowhead and operates yearround from 7 a.m. until midnight. You’ll want to stick around the resort for its spectacular dining options. From Wolfgang Puck’s signature salmon pizza at his flagship restaurant Spago, to the American cuisine featuring seasonal ingredients from regional farms at Buffalos, the options are enticing. Cap off your day with a sweet snack by the poolside fire pit, where complimentary s’mores are served. It will be the perfect ending to what is sure to be a perfect stay. O


life destinations

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THE ORIGINAL MAVERIC BY EMILY J. MINOR

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here’s nothing vanilla about our September man of the hour, Mark Cuban. Cuban, 56, is the owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, the guy who’s usually sitting behind the bench in a T-shirt and jeans, making his opinions very well-known to the referees. Cuban gets fined by the NBA—a lot. And when he does, he always matches the fines

with a donation to charity. Yeah, he likes being a nice guy. Cuban’s married with three kids and still hangs around with the same group of guys from high school, even though he’s worth an estimated $2.6 billion. His office is comfortably chic, but it’s also rather messy. “I tend not to be as organized as I should be,” he says. His solution? “I realized this early on and tried to partner or hire people who complemented me.” These days, America knows and loves him as the no-nonsense guy on “Shark Tank,” the ABC reality show that allows successful businesspeople like Cuban to endorse entrepreneurs, giving new kids on the block opportuni-

LEFT: “Shark Tank” cast Mark Cuban, Steve Tisch, Daymond John, Lori Greiner and Kevin O’Leary

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ties of a lifetime. Not one to shy from a challenge, he competed on the fifth season of “Dancing with the Stars” with professional ballroom dancer Kym Johnson. Showing his true grit, he took the dance floor just weeks after hip surgery and still made it to the sixth week. Cuban struck dot-com gold in 1999 when he and business partner Todd Wagner sold audio and video portal Broadcast.com to Yahoo! for $5.7 billion. He and Wagner have since joined forces, with ventures including cable station AXS TV (formerly HDNet), Landmark Theatres and movie maker Magnolia Pictures. And, right now, Cuban’s backing LinguaSys, a Boca Raton company that can translate online data into multiple languages. Yeah, he loves the thrill of a win. Never one to hold back, he recently spoke with us about business, family, basketball and more.

“Shark Tank” photo courtesy of ABC

BILLIONAIRE MARK CUBAN CHATS ABOUT BUSINESS, BASKETBALL, “SHARK TANK” AND HIS BOCA RATON CONNECTION


Photo by courtesy of NBAE via Getty Images

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“I’ve always tried to look up and smile and find the positives, no matter how much I had in the bank. And for much of my life, that was nothing.” BRO: “You grew up in a middleclass suburb of Pittsburgh, Pa. Tell us about being a kid in your family. Were you spoiled? Wellbehaved? Did they inspire your business sense? Force you to go to temple every week?” MARK CUBAN: “I was your typical kid. Loved sports, did OK in school and had a great group of buddies that are still my friends. I just happened to be wired to be an entrepreneur. I don’t know that it came from anyone in my family, but maybe my granddads. Both had small businesses. “My dad’s dad owned a grocery store in New Jersey. It was burned to the ground in 1938 during an uprising against the local Jews. He then became a handyman and was not all that successful. They moved to Pittsburgh and lived in the Hill District, which was not the best part of town. I never really got to know him. He died when I was 8. “My mom’s dad was a schmata (clothing) salesperson who carried a briefcase full of samples and walked

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BRO: “In terms of business acumen, you’ve accomplished amazing things at the age of 56. You’re a billionaire with a reputation as being brilliantly successful—yet approachable and fun loving. What’s the one part of your personality that has really led to your success?” MARK CUBAN: “I try to enjoy every minute of my life. It’s just so much easier to be nice to people and find the fun in life, rather than find the stress. If you reduce stress in the people around you, it’s a lot easier to be successful and attract success. If you induce stress, you tend to get stress back. “I’ve always tried to look up and smile and find the positives, no matter how much I had in the bank. And for much of my life, that was nothing.” BRO: “Your latest start-up is called Cyber Dust, an app that deletes a text message soon after it’s been read. You’re big on resisting a digital footprint. What plans do you have for Cyber Dust? Will it extend beyond text messages to things like Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram? And did something happen that planted this seed?” MARK CUBAN: “I think every day we all will learn more and more about the value of shrinking our digital footprint. Just as we have taught our kids that pictures posted on Facebook can come back to haunt them, we have to start realizing that our texts can have the same impact on each of us. “When you hit send for a text, you immediately lose ownership of that text. But you don’t lose responsibility. Whoever you send that text to can now save it and post it on social media. In the future, they’ll be able to forward it or post it on new mediums that currently don’t exist. A simple

Photo by Glenn James/NBAE via Getty Images

from auto dealer to auto dealer selling pants, shirts, etc. He had to do the math in his head, so he really pushed me to learn math. He would sit with me and a deck of cards, and make me add or subtract the numbers on the cards as he turned them, faster and faster.”

Photo by Tim Heitman/NBAE via Getty Images

THE BOCA RATON OBSERVER:

“You’re not afraid to take personal risks that could be embarrassing. You’ve appeared on TV’s ‘The Benefactor,’ ‘Dancing with the Stars,’ ‘Shark Tank,’ ‘Survivor’ and ‘WWE Raw.’ Which one of those was the most nerve-wracking? And which did you enjoy the most?” MARK CUBAN: “Doing something I wasn’t comfortable with in front of 20 million people was nerve-racking, so definitely ‘Dancing with the Stars.’ It made me sweat. But I loved it. It was a real challenge, particularly since I had my hip replaced just seven weeks prior. The rest of the things were all a blast, but not as nerve-racking.”


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Photo courtesy of ABC


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Photo by Glenn James/NBAE via Getty Images

“Nothing surprises me in the NBA and I never have expectations. I try to grind it out every day.”


Photo courtesy of ABC

text like ‘I love you’ that you sent to a friend for picking up your laundry? That can be forwarded and posted and create a problem for you. Or a business text that says ‘I’m not sure she is up to it’ could be discovered in a business lawsuit and put into play, even though it was totally unrelated. Cyber Dust solves all that. It’s an app that deletes your messages forever. They are not saved anywhere.” BRO: “You’re a big fan of the Ayn Rand book, “The Fountainhead.” How old were you when you discovered this book? What does it teach, and why do you think it’s important today?” MARK CUBAN: “I think I was 15. I love the idea of a person setting goals and going for it, no matter the obstacles. That’s a theme that resonated with me as a kid and it’s still with me today. I think we all have to be reminded that we are our own biggest obstacle. Anything that gets in our way is probably minor when compared with what we can do to ourselves.”

ABOVE: Mark Cuban and Daymond John on “Shark Tank” RIGHT: Brian Garr from LinguaSys

BRO: “Tell us about ‘Shark Tank.’ Is there acrimony behind the scenes? You seem to ride the line between good cop and bad cop. Is that deliberate? And why do you think it’s good for entrepreneurs?” MARK CUBAN: “We are like any other people who work side by side. If you are next to the same people for 12 hours a day, every day, you tend to get annoyed at their habits. So we all drive each other crazy. We like each other, but we can get on each others’ nerves. So what you see on camera, that’s for real. “The reason I do the show is that it sends the message to all the kids who watch the show, and to entrepreneurs that the American dream is alive and well.”

“Let’s talk South Florida. You’ve invested in LinguaSys, a BRO:

solution. It’s something great that every company, large and small, can benefit from.”

Boca Raton-based company owned by Brian Garr that analyzes online data and pours it into 17 languages. LinguaSys can also translate incoming data into as many languages. You must be a sought-after investor. What did you see in LinguaSys that made you come on board?” MARK CUBAN: “I love the ability to automate features and functions that every company needs for their digital content and processes. LinguaSys is absolutely that type of

BRO: “South Florida loves their Miami Heat team—even with LeBron James’ departure for Cleveland—but prices to see a game are way out of control. You did something interesting with the Dallas Mavericks. You started offering $2 tickets. Is this for real? And why do you think affordable tickets are so important?” MARK CUBAN: “The Mavs are not your typical business. We are part of the community. To me, it’s more important to be a part of as many families’ lives as we can and make our tickets affordable for anyone. That’s more important than maximizing profits in any given year. I have money. What makes me a lot happier is all of North Texas getting excited about the Mavs and wanting to come to games.” BRO: “Were you at all surprised that LeBron decided to leave South Florida and return to Ohio?”

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BRO: “What songs are burning up your iPod right now?” MARK CUBAN: “I like hip hop and dubstep (a genre of electronic music that debuted in London in the ’90s). Skrillex is probably who I listen to the most. From there, it’s whatever songs I happen to like at the moment.”

“(On ‘Shark Tank’) we are like any other people who work side by side. If you are next to the same people for 12 hours a day, every day, you tend to get annoyed at their habits. So we all drive each other crazy. We like each other, but we can get on each others’ nerves.” MARK CUBAN: “Nothing surprises me in the NBA and I never have expectations. I try to grind it out every day.” BRO: “You went to Indiana University, renowned for its college basketball program and their beloved Bobby Knight. Did you play basketball as a kid? Do you play today? And, if so, have you ever made a move around (Mavs forward) Dirk Nowitzki?”

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MARK CUBAN: “I played basketball. I loved it then and now, but I was never very good. I thought I could play, but I was shorter than most everyone else and overweight and I got cut twice from my high school team. I started to grow my junior year in high school and by the time I got to Indiana University, I was 6’2. “I did play Dirk one-on-one right when I bought the team. I had a quick

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first step and got by him and took a 2-0 lead. Then he got serious and dunked on me. I quit right then so I could say I’m undefeated against Dirk.” BRO: “How’d you meet your wife, Tiffany and does she go crazy when you go on these reality TV shows? Also, can you tell us about your kids? Do any of them have a good business mind?”

BRO: “What’s your workout schedule, if you have one? And what did you eat today?” MARK CUBAN: “I try to get to the gym five times a week. And today I had coffee and cookies from Alyssa’s Healthy Cookies. I live off the oatmeal cookies. They are lowcal, high in fiber, low (in) net carbs and taste amazing.” BRO: “You seem to run on frenetic energy—always on the go. How do you relax? What do you do in your down time?” MARK CUBAN: “To relax, I get on a basketball court and just shoot all by myself. There is nothing more soothing to me than the sound of the ball hitting nothing but net.” O

Photos courtesy of ABC

MARK CUBAN: “A basketball buddy of mine introduced me to the sister of a girl he was dating and it was Tiffany. We started dating and the rest is history. I think she’s learned to accept who I am. More importantly, she is super independent. She is less concerned about the details of what I do and more concerned about herself and our kids. I think what really made things work is that we both believe that if you can’t stand alone, then you can’t stand together with your spouse. I never have to worry about her and vice versa. We just try to support each other. “As far as my kids are concerned, all I can tell you is that they are everything to me. I’m like every parent. I want them to be healthy and happy. My biggest fear, after their health, is that they don’t grow up to be entitled. I want them to experience everything rather than have it handed to them. It won’t be easy, but my wife and I really try to make their lives as normal as possible.”


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n a Tuesday in the dog days of summer, George Piro strides into his office at FBI headquarters in North Miami. The new Special Agent in Charge of the bureau’s Miami Division—a criminally complex jurisdiction that starts in Fort Pierce and spreads south to Key West— looks trim, happy and friendly. But that friendly part? It might actually be his M.O. FBI guys are like that. Piro, who took over the Miami field office in March, is flanked by his point men and it’s clear from the getgo that time equals crime-fighting. Piro runs a team of 900 special agents and support staff who work cases on everything from public corruption to street gangs to identity theft. “The nice thing about this job is there is no typical workday,” Piro says. “Every day is different.” At 46, Piro has amassed an impressive and unusual curriculum vitae. In 15 years with the bureau, he’s won the National Intelligence Medal of Achievement, an award given by his fellow intelligence experts. He’s also won the FBI Director’s Award for Excellence and the FBI Medal for Meritorious Achievement—both well-coveted within the bureau. “You can still be a nice guy and be effective,” says Piro, who was born in Beirut, Lebanon and speaks Arabic. “The perception that you have to be scary to be effective is really false.” And who can argue, really? It worked with Saddam Hussein. (Yes, really.)

ART OF INTERROGATION Back in 2005 with just more than five years of FBI experience, Piro flew to Baghdad with critical orders: Crack Saddam Hussein before he’s killed. The assignment happened quickly. The government needed someone who spoke Arabic and he was their top guy. “I didn’t have a lot of time to get nervous,” he says now. After joining the bureau in 1999, Piro had worked intelligence at the agency’s Phoenix office and knew something even before walking into Hussein’s cell:

It was crucial that he create an air of importance about himself, leaving Hussein to believe that he was powerful and probably talking directly to former President George W. Bush. (He wasn’t.) For seven months, Piro made his daily visits to Hussein’s windowless block cell, skillfully guiding their seemingly idle conversation. He held all the cards. He dispensed the baby wipes that Hussein, a clean freak, liked to use to wipe his fruit. He held the pen and paper the former dictator needed to write his (“bad”) poetry. During these crucial months, “Mr. George” and “Mr. Saddam” would sometimes walk outdoors to a small patch of dirt where Hussein had planted flowers. (Piro had given him the seeds.) Inside the cell, Piro

ABOVE: George Piro in Baghdad with FBI Agent Todd Irinaga. Piro, who speaks Arabic, was the lead interrogator. Irinaga was part of the overall FBI team stationed in Iraq. RIGHT: Saddam Hussein

went to Washington, D.C., where he worked as director of an FBI international intelligence group overseen by the White House. Today, when peo-

middle child embraced his new life with caution and reserve. After high school—where he says he excelled at neither sports nor academics—Piro attended night school

MISSION:

E L B I S POS By Emily J. Minor

New FBI Chief George Piro Talks Crime, Corruption And Cracking Saddam Hussein

put his own back to the door and Hussein’s back to the wall. One man wore a watch during these visits, and it wasn’t Hussein. Piro controlled even the time. Of course, Hussein must have surmised that Piro had come for information about the Weapons of Mass Destruction, and it took almost six months for Piro to get his “in.” When it came, Hussein told Piro the WMDs had been surrendered to the international arms team. Hussein also said he’d planned to bring them back—but he never got the chance. Because on December 13, 2003— some 2½ years before Piro and Hussein would begin their daily meetings— Special Forces captured Hussein from an underground farmhouse bunker. He was hanged on December 30, 2006. After the Hussein assignment, Piro

ple ask him about his Hussein days, he obliges—no matter where he is. Dinner party. Family reunion. Work convention. “It’s not really my story,” he says. “It’s the FBI’s.” But the story of his childhood? That’s all his.

BORN IDENTITY Piro was 12 when his parents fled Lebanon with their three children during the civil conflicts of the late 1970s. There had been no special send-off. Indeed, it had been hasty and dangerous. Piro still idolizes his father for having had the gumption to leave. “We brought what we could carry and that was it,” says Piro. The family settled in southern California, where the curious

and then worked as a cop in the small town of Ceres, Calif. While with the force, one of his ranking officers had a habit of walking the department floor, talking to people, checking on them face-to-face. It’s a management technique Piro uses today at the Miami office he runs. Of course, all these spy assignments make him a super-private guy. He’s not one to divulge details about his home life, except to say it’s a good day if he pulls in the driveway by 7 p.m. He’s up early, and by early he means 4:15 a.m. Piro drives to the office, works out at the FBI gym, then showers and dresses for his day. He enjoys movies, mostly comedies. And don’t ask for his date of birth. “Can’t that lead to identity theft?” he says, smiling. Lucky for him, George Piro knows somebody at the FBI. O SEPTEMBER 2014

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Photo by Craig Denis

A.R.E. 2014 Design Award winner Audemars Piquet, a luxury watch retailer in the Bal Harbour Shops, designed by Merritt Colorado

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Surprises In Store BY DIANNA SMITH

A Local Nonprofit Predicts—And Sets— The Nation’s Shopping And Dining Trends

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hopping these days isn’t just for finding what you need and quickly exiting the store. It’s not even all about the product. It’s a whole experience, with sights, sounds and scents designed to entice and inspire. Because if you’re entertained, relaxed and impressed, retailers believe you’re more likely to linger and spend more. Charged with getting you to stick around are members of the Association for Retail Environments (A.R.E.), a national nonprofit trade association located off Sheridan Street in Hollywood, whose members are the crews who piece together retail stores and make them irresistible to shoppers. From the vibrant flooring and dynamic lighting to the stylishly dressed mannequins and even the companies that transport goods—A.R.E. members handle it all, and the organization promotes their work religiously to retailers across the country. There are more than 700 members in A.R.E., which has been operating for almost 60 years. And as shopping on the Web continues to gain popularity, their roles have become crucial for physical stores. “Everybody thinks brick-and-mortar stores will go away because of online retailing, but what it’s done is made the branding efforts all that much more important,” explains Todd Dittman, A.R.E.’s executive director. “It’s really helped bring technology and basically all of your senses into the store.” And, he says, about 93 percent of all shopping still happens in stores rather than from computers. A.R.E. is doing everything it can to keep it that way. SEPTEMBER 2014

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A.R.E. 2014 Design Award winner Teva, a shoe retailer in Orlando, designed by Huen

“Everybody thinks brick-and-mortar stores will go away because of online retailing, but what it’s done is made the branding efforts all that much more important. It’s really helped bring technology and basically all of your senses into the store.” OUTSIDE THE BOX A.R.E. is known for setting industry trends. First and foremost, members keep in mind that shopping should be a good time. “People get bored so easily nowadays,” says Jo Rossman, editor of A.R.E. Retail Environments magazine. “They need to be educated or entertained. People think of shopping as a fun, social activity.” It should also be convenient, which is why retailers such as Radio Shack now offer repair services so they can be thought of as an electronics one-stop shop, rather than just a place to buy gadgets. And why stores like JCPenney now offer mobile checkouts, where employees use iPads to cash out customers from anywhere in the store, thus avoiding long, crowded lines at cash registers. Weaving technology into the whole shopping and dining experience is all the rage. Dittman says the Pizza Hut chain is now considering adding tables with built-in electronic devices from which customers can order and play games. Some Aeropostale stores are letting customers vote on iPads for music they want to hear while shopping. And still other retailers, such as Macy’s in New York, offer in62

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Photos by Jason Lee

– Todd Dittman, executive director, A.R.E.


Photos by Philip Castleton

teractive screens that allow shoppers to see how they’d look in clothing without actually having to try it on. Ever feel like you’re being watched in your favorite store? You probably are. In order to determine what shoppers want, retailers have taken to placing tracking devices in mannequins so cameras can see where they gravitate. Restaurants such as McDonalds have followed similar paths, installing devices behind menu boards to track eye patterns for research. Businesses will begin smelling sweeter in the next few years as more incorporate signature scents to lure customers. Victoria’s Secret, for example, permeates a floral aroma in its stores, while Delta Airlines just came up with a trademark scent for its airport lounges. The scent, which was created by a team of researchers, was made to be distinctive and memorable, with a primary ingredient that evokes freshness and warmth. Retailers, Dittman points out, “are using all the senses that they can.” They’re also finding new ways to utilize their square footage—all of it. Some use vertical space to grab customers’ attention with marketing messages or to display product in creative ways. For example, a restaurant with an award-winning wine program may set up a wall of bottles that reaches the ceiling. Others are utilizing their space after hours, allowing customers to order items online and pick them up via lockers even once the store closes. Expect to see more pop-up stores in the future—where flash retailers set up temporary shops during a particu-

A.R.E. 2014 Design Award winner B.Spoke, a high-end men’s retailer in Toronto, designed by GH+A

lar season or to move specific merchandise (the myriad Halloween costume shops that crop up after summer is a good example). These shops are also a good way for retailers to wet their feet in a new market, Rossman explains. Another eye-catching trend features holograms and 3-D art. A hologram of a girl wearing lingerie can be seen running around one lingerie store in Paris, while a PUMA store in Japan uses its rooftop as a hologram concert venue that can be seen from miles around. Here in the United States, a Tampa bank displays a game on its window that allows people to pretend they’re catching money. These days, Rossman says, “You have to think outside of the box.” It’s the consumer that benefits—because as the holidays approach, shopping and dining are about to become even more fun. O

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alk T Of The

BOCA RATON MAYOR SUSAN HAYNIE TAKES A HANDS-ON APPROACH TO GOVERNING

BY EMILY J. MINOR

Town

a

Boca Raton girl through and through, Mayor Susan Haynie loves dispelling outsiders’ views of the city she loves. “The people who come here who think we’re Jerry Seinfeld’s Boca Raton, they’re mistaken,” she says, laughing, talking to us by mobile phone one Sunday afternoon while she’s out boating on Lake Boca Raton. “We may have 87,000 people, but we still have that smalltown charm.” And by small-town charm, the city’s new(ish) mayor means not

“We haven’t lost that.” Since she was first elected to the Boca Raton City Council 14 years ago, Haynie says she’s grown used to the ebb and flow of local politics. At the grocery store, people talk to her about potholes. After Sunday church service, she’s often taken aside to discuss the need for a traffic light on a constituent’s corner. Taking a walk, stopped at a red light,

“THE PEOPLE WHO COME HERE WHO THINK WE’RE JERRY SEINFELD’S BOCA RATON, THEY’RE MISTAKEN.” much gets past local watchdogs. You install a traffic circle, approve a new sign on U.S. 1, change the metered parking, people notice. “Things happen around town and everybody knows,” she says. 64

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walking into her City Hall office— her time is their time. And she loves it. “As opposed to partisan politics, this is more about people’s daily lives,” says Haynie, 58, a Fort Lauderdale native whose family moved out of state when she was Council Member Scott Singer, Deputy Mayor Constance Scott, Chief Dan Alexander, Mayor Susan Haynie and Council Member Robert Weinroth

young, then moved back to Boca Raton when she was still a teenager. “That’s the beauty of local government. We’re the closest branch of government to the people and we can make a change.” And—regardless of year or candidate—there are pretty much three things local voters are always interested in, she says. Traffic. Development. And public safety. “These are the issues any time anyone runs,” she says. “They don’t change.”

SHE CAN DO IT All her life, Haynie has been drawn to male professions. In 1972, again living in Florida with her family and not yet done with college, she started working for Boca Raton as an engineering analyst. “They didn’t really have a transportation division,” she says. “Engineering did everything.” It was, it turned out, Haynie’s first love affair with sociological data that examined things like “overflow traffic,” “average daily peak flow” and “network cluster.” She was hooked, never losing her interest in the minutiae of how a city really keeps things moving. Before she was through, Haynie would take classes at the former Marymount College, which today is Lynn University. She then went north to the Georgia Institute


RACE TO WIN Haynie had been on the city’s planning and zoning board for a few years when in 2000 all the stars aligned for her first run at elected office. Her two sons were teenagers by then. Term limits were kicking in, booting someone off the council for the first time.

“THAT’S THE BEAUTY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT. WE’RE THE CLOSEST BRANCH OF GOVERNMENT TO THE PEOPLE AND WE CAN MAKE A CHANGE.”

of Technology and Northwestern Center for Public Safety to earn certifications in traffic analysis, she says. After that, back to Boca she came. These turned into her family years, and she took hold of community work with a vengeance. “I like to serve,” she says. “I think of myself as having a servant’s heart.” Haynie got involved in her sons’ schools. She served on

the homeowners’ board of whatever neighborhood she was living in at the time. (There have been three: Lake Rogers, New Floresta and Camino Gardens, where she lives today.) For years, she was a volunteer board member at Boca Helping Hands, a nonprofit that helps the poor with food, mentoring and job searches. Those were some of her

favorite years, she says, because it helped her serve all sides of Boca. “This is a very diverse community,” she says. “Sure we have some extremely affluent individuals. But you go over to Boca Helping Hands at lunch any day of the week and you see people trying to feed their families.” As today’s mayor, she likes remembering that.

“I had considered running for office, but the timing had never been right for me,” she says. And then it was. Haynie glided into office like an old pro. Boca Raton city council seats are elected at-large and are nonpartisan, and she’s won reelection each time. In March, she beat city council colleague Anthony Majhess in a hotly contested mayoral race—the first even-slightly rancorous mayor’s election in the city’s recent history. “I’m hands on,” says Haynie, who makes $9,500 a year as mayor. “I’m out on the street talking to people.” Through her years, Haynie has earned a reputation for her logical and analytical approach. She chairs the county’s Metropolitan Transportation Planning Organization, and was just sworn in as chairman of its state counterpart. She’s also a past president of the Florida League of Cities, and still serves on the board. And the mayor is also a licensed general contractor. Yep, Mayor Susan Haynie never got the memo about women’s work. “I grew up with three brothers,” she says. “Nobody ever told me I couldn’t do something.” O SEPTEMBER 2014

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HE BUILDS, THEY COME BY SUSAN R. MILLER

PIONEER LAND DEVELOPER RICHARD SIEMENS APPRAISES BOCA RATON’S PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

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ichard Siemens has watched Boca Raton grow up before his very eyes. Since arriving in South Florida nearly 40 years ago, he’s watched our city transform from a sleepy little town to a bustling hub known for its expensive homes, wellmanicured lawns, and posh retailers and restaurants. In the beginning, “you couldn’t get a decent meal in Boca Raton,” says the now 79-year-old developer. And, “the nearest mall was the Pompano Fashion Center, which was hardly fashionable,” he adds with a chuckle. Considered a pioneer in the South Florida construction industry, Siemens got his start as a contractor up north when he was just 20 years old and at 29 began developing projects. In 1975, he moved from New York to South Florida. “Boca West was embryonic… there was nothing on Glades Road except for a bit of housing,” recalls Siemens, who in 1990 founded Siemens Group. Since then, he’s played a major role in South Palm Beach County’s overall growth. His company has developed or constructed myriad country club and senior living communities, hospital campuses, oceanfront condos, shopping centers, mixed-use commercial projects and more.

“We were the ones who originated the (certificate of need) for Delray Medical Center. Getting it approved and built was a major community improvement,” Siemens says. “We were also part of getting West Boca Medical Center built; those were significant projects. We developed the Polo Club and Harbour’s Edge (a senior living community in Delray Beach). Those are still prominent today and contribute to the economy of the South County area.” Much like a parent might beam about his children, Siemens says of his projects: “I don’t have any particular favorites, each one has its own characteristics; each had its function when it was done.” His real kids work with him as well. The company is a family affair with daughter Rebecca and her husband Jim working on the sales side, son Scott serving as executive vice president and son Rob working in marketing. Together, the team has built more than 15,000 homes in more than 20 communities.

“Nothing is more important than family, and when you’re fortunate to have your children wanting to participate in what you do that’s a good thing,” Siemens says. Deciding on which projects to build has a lot to do with timing and finding the right opportunities, he says. “When we do something we try to determine if there’s a demand for

“BOCA WEST WAS EMBRYONIC... THERE WAS NOTHING ON GLADES ROAD EXCEPT FOR A BIT OF HOUSING.”

that which we are contemplating. We’re always trying to find if there is a niche that isn’t being satisfied and try to step into that void and capture the market,” he says. That’s how his newest project, Akoya, came to be. Located in Boca West, Akoya will be the city’s first new large-scale residential project in 20 years, providing buyers with a luxury lifestyle within an existing awardSEPTEMBER 2014

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ABOVE: Rob Siemens, Richard Siemens, Rebecca Siemens Spooner and Jim Spooner

winning resort-style community. Plans are to break ground this fall on the nine-story, 120-unit project, which Siemens explains “will change the residential landscape” of the 1,400 acres that make up Boca West. “Akoya is another one of those cutting-edge deals where we are building, for the first time, a luxurymidrise condo project west of Federal Highway in the Boca Raton market,” he says.

“I AM NOT CONTEMPLATING

RETIREMENT. IF YOU ENJOY WHAT YOU’RE DOING AND THERE’S NOTHING IN PARTICULAR YOU WOULD RATHER DO,WHY GO?” The $185 million project will sit on nearly seven acres between two golf courses, and offer two- and three-bedroom units ranging 2,676 to 4,780 square feet. Residents will have their own elevators opening into private foyers, expansive outdoor terraces and floor-to-ceiling glass windows.Preconstruction prices range 68

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from $1.2 million to a little more than $2 million, but are expected to increase after groundbreaking. Completion is slated for the fall of 2015. Siemens expects that pent-up demand for new construction will drive up pricing even more. “Some of the product is 40 years old,” says Siemens, referring to existing condos in Boca West. “Everything built over the years is smaller and doesn’t have the amenities and services we are providing… We are coming here with modern architecture and 9-foot ceilings.” And as the availability of land continues to shrink in southern Palm Beach County, Siemens Group is pursuing new challenges. “We are looking at other opportunities. Not necessarily in this area, but we have other interests in other parts of the state,” says Siemens, whose company is currently working on developments in Fort Pierce, Ocala and Titusville. Like everyone else during the economic downturn, Siemens Group saw some challenges but managed to weather the storm.

“It was a struggle,” Siemens admits. “Fortunately we were not in the building mode at that time, we were in land and still own all of the land we owned 10 years ago. We didn’t lose anything to foreclosure. We made it through, but it took a toll on our assets and our cash reserves. It wasn’t easy.” Through it all, Siemens remained philanthropic, donating land to the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County which eventually became part of the 28-acre Richard & Carole Siemens campus. However, he shies away from discussing his efforts except to say, “We’re part of this community and we have had some good times. Philosophically we believe you have to give something back; you have to make it better than when you found it.” As he approaches his 80th birthday, Siemens shows no sign of slowing down. “I am not contemplating retirement,” he says. “If you enjoy what you’re doing and there’s nothing in particular you would rather do, why go?” O


“AKOYA IS ANOTHER ONE OF

THOSE CUTTING-EDGE DEALS WHERE WE ARE BUILDING, FOR THE FIRST TIME, A LUXURYMIDRISE CONDO PROJECT WEST OF FEDERAL HIGHWAY IN THE BOCA RATON MARKET.”

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CHANNELING

BY DIANNA SMITH

Success L

aurie Silvers’ resume reads like it belongs to the female protagonist of a hit TV show: She’s a lawyer, businesswoman and media mogul. Wife, mother of three and philanthropist. When not juggling family life in Boca Raton, the creator of TV’s popular SyFy channel owns and operates five radio stations on the Treasure Coast and oversees Hollywood.com, the longtime provider

ENTREPRENEUR LAURIE SILVERS FOLLOWED A HUNCH AND BECAME A MEDIA MOGUL of film, TV and celebrity news. She also oversees Home Town Cable, a telecommunications company in Port St. Lucie. During her rare downtime, she mentors at-risk high school girls through a local nonprofit. And she does it all looking perfectly coiffed and stylish. It leaves us mere mortals wondering: How did she become so successful? And how does she continue to pull it off?

For other women looking to make it in the business world she shares this insight: Don’t hesitate. If you aspire to try your hand at entrepreneurship—go for it. “If that’s your dream, focus on it and figure out a way to make it happen,” she says. “You only get one shot at this. It’s not a dress rehearsal. Do whatever you can.”

RISKS PAY OFF A graduate of the University of Miami Law School, Silvers first became intrigued with media while working as an attorney, when she would occasionally interact with

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waters and bought a small cable television system in the Midwest. The location was an easy decision for Silvers, since she was born in Springfield, Ill., where she lived until moving to Florida as a teenager. Taking the chance paid off. Silvers flourished as an entrepreneur and the station was a success. And after 10 years of practicing law, she gave it up to pursue business full time. She continued to thrive in her new work and enjoyed coming up with innovative ideas. Though she admits being an entrepreneur in the early days wasn’t always sunshine and roses. Still… “Often times the most valuable

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“IF THAT’S YOUR DREAM, FOCUS ON IT AND FIGURE OUT A WAY TO MAKE IT HAPPEN. YOU ONLY GET ONE SHOT AT THIS. IT’S NOT A DRESS REHEARSAL. DO WHATEVER YOU CAN.”

and represent professionals in the broadcasting and cable TV worlds. The more she learned about the business, the more interested she became. So much so that after a few years, while still practicing law, she decided to test the entrepreneurial

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lessons are learned by the things that don’t work out,” she says. Silvers eventually delved into programming and decided to create a cable channel devoted to science fiction (she wasn’t a fan of the genre back then, but her husband, Mitchell


Rubenstein was). She and Rubenstein spent the next four years turning that idea into a reality, searching for funding, acquiring programming and seeking trusted advisors like “Star Trek” creator Gene Rodenberry and renowned Sci-Fi author Isaac Asimov. Silvers traveled to science fiction conventions to convince fans they needed to tune in. The Sci-Fi channel was a hit and Silvers and Rubenstein in 1992 sold it to the USA Network. Renamed SyFy, today it’s owned by NBC Universal and airs a number of highly rated TV series, reality programs and original films including the instant cult classic “Sharknado” franchise.

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hopes of helping and inspiring others. She’s a volunteer at Women of Tomorrow, a South Florida nonprofit group that pairs professional women with young at-risk teenage girls to lend mentorship, support and inspiration. One of her mentees at Spanish River High School was accepted into Harvard, Princeton and Yale. She’s also a member of many prestigious boards across the region: Silvers is a board and executive committee member at the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts in West Palm Beach; is a board and executive committee member at the University of Miami; is chair of the board at WPBT-Channel 2 in Miami; and sits on the board

“I FEEL IN A SENSE THAT I’VE BEEN ABLE TO ALLOW WOMEN BEHIND ME AN EASIER PATH. ANYBODY CAN DO ANYTHING IF THEY HAVE THE PASSION, THE TENACITY AND A GOOD SUPPORT SYSTEM.”

“The science fiction channel changed the landscape forever,” Silvers says. “As an entrepreneur, that’s what drives me; finding a concept that will change things.”

BLAZING A TRAIL To be triumphant as an entrepreneur is exciting, but the fact that Silvers is a woman makes it even more impressive. While women have been making great strides, they haven’t smashed the glass ceiling—yet. “I feel in a sense that I’ve been able to allow women behind me an easier path,” Silvers says. “Anybody can do anything if they have the passion, the tenacity and a good support system.” Still, she acknowledges that challenges for women still exist, especially since they carry the added responsibilities of being considered caretakers of their families. “For women who are mothers, you have to have an incredible support system in place, whether it’s family or close friends,” she reiterates. “You should be in a situation where your dreams and your desires are respected and encouraged.” She often shares her message in

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for the United Way in the town of Palm Beach. She’s also active on the gala circuit, and last year co-chaired West Palm Beach-based MorseLife’s signature fundraiser. “There is so much you gain as a human being from giving of yourself like that and helping somebody,” Silvers says. “It’s one of the most enriching things in life.” What’s next for Silvers? “I don’t know,” she told palmbeachgalas.com. “But I’m always looking to the future. To me, as an entrepreneur, that’s what’s really exciting.” O

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CONGRATULATIONS 2014 SPIRIT OF HOME HONOREES

Outstanding Community Partner Broadspire Services

Outstanding Volunteer

Cindi Krost

Outstanding Individual

Marcy & Art Falcone

Outstanding Staff Kenrick Shirley

It truly takes a Village to raise a child. Each year, SOS Florida provides a secure home, happy childhood and hopeful future to hundreds of foster children. But we don’t do it alone. Our Village extends to many friends and neighbors who share their time and their hearts with our boys and girls - creating an amazing SOS “Spirit of Home.” Join us in honoring four of our outstanding supporters whose efforts have changed the lives of our children forever and celebrating the unique family that is SOS Children’s Villages - Florida.

2014 SOS Spirit of Home Awards Luncheon Friday, September 19, 2014, 11:00am Boca West Country Club Sponsored By: 4 Seminole Region Charity Golf Tournament

Learn more about SOS and Spirit of Home tickets and VSRQVRUVKLS RSSRUWXQLWLHV DW VRVÀRULGD FRP


PROFESSIONALLY SPEAKING Few things are more important than your legal rights and fiscal health. And while there is no shortage of attorneys and financial advisors in the local market, choosing the right ones could mean the difference between economic windfalls and freedom of choice—or bankruptcy and legal consequences. The following professionals know what it takes to get the job done, and done right.

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

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PROFESS PROFESSIONALLY SSIONALLY S SPEAKING PEAKING

MARITAL AND FAMILY LAW Partners At Brodie & Friedman, P.A. Bring Skills And Experience To Every Engagement WHEN IT COMES TO MARITAL AND

family law, Jason A. Brodie and Joshua K. Friedman provide clients with sound advice and

Joshua K. Friedman and Jason A. Brodie

We understand both the economics and the emotional issues in a case. We are always amenable to settling a case, but we are always prepared to litigate aggressively if necessary. personalized attention, making themselves available 24 hours a day, seven days a week if necessary. “We always follow the law and any changes to it,” says Brodie. The attorneys believe their clients depend on them for advice regarding what they may be entitled to and to know the ever-changing laws in the family law arena. “In divorce cases, issues like child custody and property division can be life-changing,” 74

says Brodie. “But in high-asset divorce cases, the stakes are especially high because the issues can be even more complex.” For example, high-asset couples might co-own businesses, numerous financial accounts and multiple properties that all have to be valued and distributed equitably. “We understand both the economics and the emotional issues in a case,” says Friedman, who is board certified in marital and family

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law by The Florida Bar. “We are always amenable to settling a case, but we are always prepared to litigate aggressively if necessary.” Along with providing professional guidance and support to their clients, Brodie and Friedman are active in the community. They serve on the professional advisory committee of the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County and contribute to area charitable organizations such

as Stand Among Friends. As Friedman says, “We want to give back to the community that supports us.” Brodie and Friedman have been featured on the “Today” show, MSNBC, FOX News and local area television stations. Brodie & Friedman’s areas of practice focus on divorce, child support, property distribution, alimony, time-sharing, enforcement, modification, relocation and pre- and postnuptial agreements.

BRODIE & FRIEDMAN, P.A. is located at 1675 North Military Trail, Suite 550, Boca Raton. For more information, call 561-392-5100 or visit BRODIEFRIEDMAN.COM.

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PROFESSIONALLY SPEAKING Peter L. Gladstone and Jeffrey A. Weissman

Founded in 1999, our boutique matrimonial firm is built upon treating our clients like family and fully understanding their needs.

ing our clients like family and fully understanding their needs,” says Peter L. Gladstone, partner and co-founder of the firm. “With this ‘whole picture approach,’ we’re able to counsel our clients to make the best decisions for themselves and their families that promote the opportunity for true happiness even in the face of separation and divorce.” Gladstone & Weissman, P.A.’s six marital and family law attorneys focus on the discreet handling of all matters related to divorce, parenting plans, equitable distribution, alimony, child support and other areas of family law. The firm works closely with experienced forensic accountants and busiGladstone & Weissman, P.A. Marital And ness valuation experts, as well Family Law Is Distinguished By Integrity as experts from other related disciplines and takes a team And Outstanding Client Service approach to tackling the often sensitive and critical issues WITH ITS OWN BRAND OF LAW complex marital and family law that divorce engenders. “We firm culture dedicated to firstmatters with the utmost integunderstand that our clients are class client service and legal rity and compassion. “Founded going through a very emotionanalysis, Gladstone & Weissin 1999, our boutique matrially and financially stressful man, P.A. represents clients in monial firm is built upon treat- time in their lives, so if a good settlement is preferable, we work to achieve that,” says Jeffrey A. Weissman, firm partner GLADSTONE & WEISSMAN, P.A.‘s main office and co-founder. is located at 101 North Federal Highway, Suite 702, Boca Raton. For more information, Serving clients from Miami to call 866-974-8960 or visit GWPA.COM. North Palm Beach County, Gladstone & Weissman, P.A.

COMPASSIONATE MARITAL AND FAMILY LAW

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has offices in Boca Raton and Fort Lauderdale. The firm represents only a select number of clients each year, reflecting its commitment to fully devoting the time and attention that each case deserves. Gladstone and Weissman, both board certified by The Florida Bar in Marital & Family Law, and listed in Best Lawyers® (Gladstone each year from 2005 through 2014 and Weissman each year from 2007 through 2014), are highly respected in the legal profession. A Past Chair of the Family Law Section of The Florida Bar and Fellow of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML), Gladstone recently chaired the Florida Chapter’s 36th Annual Institute in Tampa where Weissman lectured on the latest trends in marital agreements. Weissman was recently named the “2014 Family Law Lawyer of the Year” in the Miami Metropolitan area (Miami, Fort Lauderdale and Boca Raton) by The Best Lawyers in America®. A Florida Supreme Court-certified guardian ad litem, he is also a founding member of the West Palm Beach Family Law American Inns of Court. SEPTEMBER 2014

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PROFESS PROFESSIONALLY SSIONALLY S SPEAKING PEAKING Patrick Lawlor

MAKING IT PERSONAL Personal Injury Firm Lawlor | Zigler Helps Clients Pursue Justice

“WHEN I WAS A KID MY DAD

taught me to admit the obvious and debate the debatable,” says Patrick Lawlor. That philosophy has served the Boca Raton personal injury attorney well, as evidenced by his track record of successful trial verdicts and negotiated

best outcome,” says Lawlor, who is among just 3 percent of Florida attorneys who are board certified in Civil Trial by The Florida Bar. The firm, which Lawlor launched in 1999, handles a variety of personal injury cases including auto

Our clients know that we are not afraid to go to trial and that our goal is to obtain the most compensation and the best outcome. settlements. He has served as lead counsel in nearly 200 trials. While no one ever expects to become injured as a result of someone else’s negligence, having someone with Lawlor’s fierce dedication and 20-plus years of experience advocating for you is what every client can expect when they walk through the door of Lawlor | Zigler. “Our clients know that we are not afraid to go to trial and that our goal is to obtain the most compensation and the 76

accidents, slip and fall, wrongful death, construction accidents, maritime-related injuries, product liability, dog bites, nursing home abuse and negligence, and personal injury protection (PIP) cases. When he’s not representing clients in court, Lawlor serves as a sports agent representing athletes as President and CEO of Galaxy Sports Advisors, a full-service sports agency. “I would read about athletes who were hiring agents who

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ripped them off. I wanted to get these athletes on the right path at the beginning and help them throughout their professional career and even after they are done playing,” says Lawlor, whose clients have played for the Tennessee Titans, Arizona Cardinals and

New York Jets. The father of two also is very involved in the community. He was founder of the Young Professionals for Covenant House, chairman of the Broward County Sports Hall of Fame and secretary of The Florida Sports Foundation.

Most cases result in a lower recovery. It should not be assumed that your case will have as beneficial a result.

LAWLOR | ZIGLER is located at 1877 South Federal Highway, Suite 110, Boca Raton. For more information, call 561-372-3500 or 1-855-465-2889 or visit LAWLORZIGLER.COM.

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION


PROFESSIONALLY SPEAKING Jason M. Solodkin

Our clients have worked hard throughout their lives to make sure they won’t outlive their assets.

A LONGER LIFE NFP-FDR Financial Group Prepares Clients For Financial Longevity THANKS TO ADVANCEMENTS IN

healthcare, it’s no secret that people are living longer. Baby Boomers are reaching the age of 65 at a pace of 8,000 per day in this country (AARP). With the increase in average lifespan comes an increase in the need for proper financial planning.

For more than three decades, the highly skilled professionals of NFP-FDR Financial Group have been helping their clients prepare for a comfortable retirement. “Our clients have worked hard throughout their lives to make sure they won’t outlive their assets. They rely on our team

NFP-FDR FINANCIAL GROUP, INC. is located in Boca Raton and Hollywood. For more information, call 954-961-5333 or visit NFP-FDR.COM.

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

to provide the guidance they need to help protect, preserve and ultimately transfer their wealth,” says Jason M. Solodkin, a Certified Financial Planner with NFP-FDR Financial Group. In addition to creating wealth management strategies through the design of investment portfolios and the use of prudent financial instruments, Solodkin says one of the biggest areas of need for clients nearing or in retirement is to protect against the rising cost of long-term care. The numbers are staggering. At least 70 percent of all individuals over age 65 will need long-term care services at some point in their lives. “The cost of these services add up quickly,” says Solodkin. “It’s not uncommon to see someone spend $100,000 a year for care.” Despite an understanding of these figures, often times it is not enough to push somebody to make a plan. “It’s usually a personal experience that provides the motivation,” Solodkin says. “Watching a parent or relative who does not have insurance spend their last dollars on care takes an

emotional toll. It can be devastating both financially and emotionally, with a saddening loss of independence and dignity. Plus, there could be major disruption to an unsuspecting caretaker, especially an adult child who has a family of their own.” Having a well-designed plan for long-term care can help make the difference between living out a life of dignity, or becoming a burden to your family or even the government. Now, more than ever, you need an expert who can guide you through the many different options available. Newer, flexible policies can provide liquidity, money for long-term care and even a death benefit. “Business owners have certain benefits available to them. Other individuals may incorporate a policy into their Trust to help provide liquidity for estate tax. Even our most affluent clients recognize the value of a plan for long-term care to preserve their financial legacy for their loved ones.” One thing is for certain. The time to prepare is now.

Securities and Investment Advisory Services offered through NFP Securities, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC. FDR Financial Group is a member of PartnerFinancial, an affiliate of NFPSI. NFP Securities, Inc. and FDR Financial Group are subsidiaries of National Financial Partners Corp. (NFP). SEPTEMBER 2014

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PROFESS PROFESSIONALLY SSIONALLY S SPEAKING PEAKING Harvey Schneider

HIGH STANDARD OF SERVICE NP Law Brings Decades Of Experience To Business, Real Estate And Commercial Transactions WHETHER STRUCTURING A

business purchase or sale, closing a commercial real estate transaction or securing a financing source, attorney Harvey Schneider knows how to handle substantial and

buildings, shopping centers, luxury residential waterfront subdivisions, marinas, adult living facilities, complex ground leases and asset sales and acquisitions. Schneider recently closed

I have a particular passion for commercial law and am willing to work around the clock to get a deal closed.

complex transactions. “I have a particular passion for commercial law and am willing to work around the clock to get a deal closed,” says Schneider, who has 37 years of legal experience in all manner of business and real estate transactions. A sole practitioner at NP Law in Boca Raton, Schneider and his staff bring a high level of personal service to their clientele, working to conclude transactions as rapidly, efficiently and economically as possible. Throughout the years, Schneider has handled a variety of commercial transactions including office 78

a transaction on a new shopping center in Broward County. He’s proud to point out that while representing the purchaser in the deal, the seller complimented him for “setting the bar high” in his handling of the transaction. In another recent matter, Schneider handled the sale of a client’s multiple product lines and intellectual properties to a public company. Part of Schneider’s practice involves private lending. With his contacts in the industry he was recently able to secure an expedited loan commitment for a client interested in acquiring

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

a commercial project. In addition to his law practice, Schneider has a separate enterprise known as All Country Title Agency, Inc. (allcountrytitle.com) which he launched in 2010 to serve residential and commercial real estate professionals and their clients. Through perseverance and hard work the title company experienced

rapid growth, and now has multiple locations to service its expanding client base. Married for 40 years to his wife Barbara, who runs All Country Title, the Schneiders have three children and a grandchild. As Schneider puts it, “I am so fortunate to have a large, close-knit family and to truly enjoy doing what I do for a living.”

NP LAW is located at 1300 North Federal Highway, Suite 106, Boca Raton. For more information, call 561-391-9199 or visit NPLAWFLORIDA.COM.

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PROFESSIONALLY SPEAKING Warren Peebles and Lana Peebles

If you have been injured in an accident, you may be entitled to compensation. It’s very important to talk with an experienced attorney who can answer your questions.

A POWERFUL ADVOCATE When Insurance Companies Deny Claims, Peebles Law Group Helps Clients Achieve Justice

ATTORNEY WARREN PEEBLES IS

a powerful advocate for his clients. In handling personal injury and insurance disputes, he works tirelessly to dig out

the facts, build a solid case and help clients receive the compensation they deserve. “We are a trial-oriented firm that provides the highest level

PEEBLES LAW GROUP is located at 433 Plaza Real, Suite 275, Suite 702, Boca Raton. For more information, call 561-279-5951 or visit SOUTHFLATTORNEY.COM.

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of personal service to our clients,” says Peebles, who founded Peebles Law Group, PA. “We know that every case is different and every client is unique. By developing each case from the ground up, we give our clients the foundation they need to have a successful case.” Peebles and his wife Lana, who is also a trial attorney, represent plaintiffs in litigation, with a focus on insurance claims. In a recent case, he helped a Palm Beach County client who had a long-term disability insurance policy. “When the carrier denied her claim, she came to us,” Peebles says. “We were able to get her a lump sum settlement and have her benefits reinstated by the carrier.” Peebles earned a bachelor’s degree in political science at Truman State University in Missouri, and his law degree from The Stetson University College of Law, ranked the No. 1 trial school in the nation. Prior to founding the Peebles Law Group, he worked at a prestigious plaintiff trial law

firm in Palm Beach Gardens and a boutique personal injury firm in Fort Lauderdale. Warren and Lana Peebles met as law students at Stetson University, and now live in Boca Raton, where they enjoy outdoor activities such as camping, fishing and skiing. Active in the community, Lana is involved with Junior League, while Warren is a volunteer for Habitat for Humanity. He is also a member of the National Organization of Social Security Claimants Representatives (NOSSCR), the Broward County Bar Association, the Florida Bar, Emerge Broward County, Congregation B’nai Israel and Business Networking International. Peebles is dedicated to helping clients regardless of the severity of the injury or size of the claim. “If you have been injured in an accident, you may be entitled to compensation,” he says. “It’s very important to talk with an experienced attorney who can answer your questions.” SEPTEMBER 2014

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PROFESS PROFESSIONALLY SSIONALLY S SPEAKING PEAKING Richard Ehrlich

SUCCESSFUL SOLUTIONS Secure Wealth Planning Group Uses Low-Risk Strategies For Optimum Returns MARKET VOLATILITY IS A REALITY

that can be managed and leveraged in an effective financial plan that creates value, security and peace of mind, says Richard Ehrlich, a chartered financial consultant and founder of Secure Wealth Planning Group. An independent fiduciary with 20 years of experience in the

their context. “History has shown us that every five to six years since 1900, there is a major market correction—and that 80 percent of corrections to the market happen between June 1 and October 31,” says Ehrlich. “So we are in a critical time to make the most of a market upswing.”

One of the greatest blessings in life is a long and healthy retirement. To help clients make this happen in comfort, we work with them to create a lifetime financial plan that provides security for themselves and their families. financial services industry, Ehrlich is truly passionate about protecting his clients’ life savings from market volatility, creating family legacies, reducing income taxes and planning their income to help ensure they have a paycheck and a “playcheck” for life. Educating clients to make smart decisions regarding their money is important to Ehrlich, who uses accurate, reliable information based on facts in the process. In his role as an independent fiduciary he is ethically bound to prioritize strategies that are right for clients, and make sure they understand 80

Using low-risk and low-volatility strategies, Ehrlich has helped many of his clients not only retire, but remain financially independent throughout their golden years. “One of the greatest blessings in life is a long and healthy retirement,” he says. “To help clients make this happen in comfort, we work with them to create a lifetime financial plan that provides security for themselves and their families. Our motto is: Plan Once, Plan Right, Enjoy Your Life.” Working within his strongly held belief that we don’t have to lose money to make money,

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Ehrlich’s ultimate goal is to help you put your financial worries behind you, and provide you with a secure financial plan that gives you true peace of mind. Look for the book he is co-

authoring with Steve Forbes, entitled “SuccessOnomics,” due to be published this fall, and visit securewpg.com to see when Ehrlich will be teaching his next financial planning class.

Investment advice is offered by Horter Investment Management, LLC, a Registered Investment Adviser. Insurance and annuity products are sold separately through The Secure Wealth Planning Group, Inc. Securities transactions for Horter Investment Management clients are placed through Pershing Advisor Solutions, Trust Company of America, Jefferson National Monument Advisor, Fidelity, Security Benefit Life, FC Stone and Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.

SECURE WEALTH PLANNING GROUP is located at 7280 West Palmetto Park Road, Suite 201N, Boca Raton. For more information, call 561-340-2667 or visit SECUREWPG.COM.

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PROFESSIONALLY SPEAKING

VALUED PERSPECTIVE New Senior Partner Joins The Owens Group At Morgan Stanley

DAVID SCHATTEN, A 51-YEAR

veteran of the financial services sector, brings new ideas and a seasoned perspective to The Owens Group at Morgan Stanley in Boca Raton. “We develop investment strategies that focus on our client’s

Gary P. Owens Jr., David Schatten, Adriana P. Gomez and Gary W. Owens Sr.

financial advisor, and Adriana P. Gomez, senior client service associate. “With David as our third

We can help younger clients begin investing, guide professionals and executives who are approaching retirement and help retirees maintain a steady flow of income. individual needs with a strong focus on wealth preservation,” says Schatten, who joined the group recently as partner and senior vice president. Gary W. Owens, CIMA®, CRPS®, senior vice president and financial advisor, leads the team, which includes his son Gary P. Owens, partner and

partner, The Owens Group offers financial insights and viewpoints grounded in the experiences of three generations,” says Owens Sr., who founded the group 32 years ago. “We can help younger clients begin investing, guide professionals and executives who are approaching

THE OWENS GROUP AT MORGAN STANLEY is at 490 East Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton. For more information, call 800-326-5331 or visit MORGANSTANLEYFA.COM/THEOWENSGROUP.

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

retirement and help retirees maintain a steady flow of income.” Owens Jr., adds that preservation of capital is a priority for most clients in all age ranges. “No one wants to lose money in their investment portfolio,” he says. “Therefore, we watch the markets very carefully, look for the right opportunities, and are willing to sit on the sidelines during times of high

volatility.” A 33-year resident of Boca Raton, Schatten is a U.S. Army veteran, father, grandfather and dedicated golfer who contributes to veterans’ organizations and cancer research. “It’s a pleasure for me to join The Owens Group, because we share the same approach to investing,” he says.”For everyone on our team, the client always comes first.”

Gary W. Owens and Gary P. Owens, Financial Advisors of The Owens Group are with the Wealth Management division of Morgan Stanley in Boca Raton. The information contained in this article is not a solicitation to purchase or sell investments. Any information presented is general in nature and not intended to provide individually tailored investment advice. The strategies and/or investments referenced may not be suitable for all investors as the appropriateness of a particular investment or strategy will depend on an investor’s individual circumstances and objectives. Investing involves risks and there is always the potential of losing money when you invest. The views expressed herein are those of the author and may not necessarily reflect the views of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC, Member SIPC, or its affiliates. Investment Management Consultants Association, Inc. owns the marks CIMA®, Certified Investment Management AnalystSM (with graph element)®, and Certified Investment Management AnalystSM. SEPTEMBER 2014

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Pretzel pizza, vodka caviar, tasty tapas and more...

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THE DISH ON FOOD, WINE & RESTAURANTS

DOWN TO BRASS TAPS New Craft Beer Bar Opens In Boynton Beach With Plans For More heers to franchisees Michael and Stephanie Gilbert, married Boston transplants who came to South Florida for the sole purpose of creating a premier beer bar with a neighborhood feel in Boynton Beach. They opened The Brass Tap recently, and plan to open additional locations in Boca Raton, Delray Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, Miami and Fort Lauderdale. The upscale venue offers more than 100 imported and domestic beers on tap, 150 bottles and at least 30 local brews. This distinguishes the bar from other local nightlife establishments, as well as from its entire franchise, which typically includes just 60 or 70 taps per location, says Michael Gilbert. “[We’ve been] able to put in more taps,” he says. “It’s kind of an experiment.” The Brass Tap offers a rotating variety of beers for every taste. Prefer something fruity? Gilbert suggests a Belgian Lambic beer, which is sweeter and available in a variety of flavors. For those who enjoy the taste of hard liquor, he recommends a Kentucky Bourbon Barrel Ale, which is aged in a barrel to achieve the whiskey flavor reminiscent of the Bluegrass Region. With so many flavors, one could visit The Brass Tap every day for a year

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and still not be able to try every one, Gilbert insists. The bar also serves premium wines and an assortment of cigars to be enjoyed on an outdoor patio. There’s a full menu too, with soups, salads, entrees, pretzel pizzas and more. Popular starters include the Pepper Jack Mac (tender macaroni with a blend of pepper jack and cheddar cheeses topped with bacon) and Amsterdam Street Fries (twice-fried street fries served with balsamic ketchup and malt-vinegar aioli). Entrees include a French Onion Burger (a 1/2 pound of fresh Angus beef served on a butter brioche bun with brie cheese, grilled onions, lettuce, tomatoes and pickles served with fries) and Yuengling Beer-Battered Fish & Chips (beerbattered haddock served with fries and coleslaw). There’s also live entertainment and plenty of sporting events patrons can watch on one of several flat-screen TVs. O The Brass Tap is located at 950 North Congress Avenue, Ste. J100, Boynton Beach. For more information, call 561-413-3782 or visit brasstapbeerbar.com. – Chris Maiorana

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You Need A

HERO WHEN THERE’S NO TIME TO LOAF, SANDWICHES SAVE THE WORKDAY

You’re swamped and wolfing down a sandwich at your desk again. But it doesn’t have to be boring. We suggest forgoing your average tuna or bologna for more inspired, tasty options such as those featured in “101 Sandwiches” by Helen Graves. From a peanut butter, banana and bacon sammie inspired by Elvis Presley, to a meat-and-veggie-filled Dagwood, these concoctions prove that lunching while you work need not be dull.

“101 Sandwiches” is written by Helen Graves with photography by Stephen Conroy and Rob White. It’s published by Dog & Bone, Ryland Peters & Small and retails for $18.95. Find it at rylandandpeters.com or wherever books are sold.

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CAPRESE PANINO

INSTRUCTIONS

Named after Capri, Italy, the ingredients of tomato, mozzarella cheese and basil make a popular salad, but also work very well in a Panini made with ciabatta or a baguette that’s pressed and heated. (Makes 1)

Split the roll in half and brush the bottom half with olive oil, then layer on the tomato, basil leaves and mozzarella. Season with black pepper, add the top half of the roll and brush the outside with olive oil, which will make the top nice and crisp once toasted. Heat a Panini press and cook the sandwich until golden and the cheese is melted. If you do not have a Panini press, use a hot ridged griddle and weigh the sandwich down with a heavy pan while toasting, flipping the sandwich halfway through cooking. Serve immediately.

INGREDIENTS 1 ciabatta roll or a length of baguette Olive oil 1 small ripe tomato, sliced 4 fresh basil leaves Mozzarella cheese, sliced Black pepper, to taste

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OPPOSITE PAGE: Cinnamon Rolls LEFT: Snickerdoodles


THE ELVIS Elvis Presley was renowned for loving high-calorie snacks, especially those prepared by his mother. This sweet and salty combination of peanut butter, banana and sizzling bacon was one of his favorites. (Makes 1 sandwich) INGREDIENTS 3 slices bacon 2 slices white bread Smooth peanut butter (or crunchy if you prefer) 1 banana, sliced Butter, for frying A drizzle of honey, to serve (optional) INSTRUCTIONS

Grill bacon until crisp. Spread 1 slice of bread with peanut butter, then top with the banana slices and bacon, followed by the second slice of bread. Melt several tablespoons of butter in a frying pan or skillet and cook the sandwich until golden and crisp on both sides. Serve with a drizzle of honey, if you’d like.

Caprese Panino RIGHT: The Elvis

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The Dagwood BELOW RIGHT: Picnic Loaf

PICNIC LOAF When it comes to tasty veggie fillings, this sandwich delivers a big bang for your buck. And because it’s made with a sturdy Cob loaf, there’s no danger of it falling apart on your desk. (Serves 6) INGREDIENTS 2 zucchini, sliced lengthwise 1 eggplant, sliced lengthwise 1 red bell pepper, seeded and quartered 1 yellow bell pepper, seeded and quartered 1 garlic clove, crushed Olive oil Sea salt and black pepper, to taste 1 white Cob loaf A few tbsp. black olive tapenade or basil pesto Fresh basil leaves 10 slices salami 2 balls mozzarella cheese, drained, patted dry and sliced 8 semi-dried tomatoes, chopped INSTRUCTIONS

Mix the vegetables, crushed garlic and a slug of olive oil. Let marinate for about 30 minutes. Next, season the vegetables with salt and pepper, then cook in a griddle pan in batches until soft and nicely charred. Set aside to cool. Cut off the top third of the loaf to make a lid. Hollow out the bottom of the loaf, leaving a 1¼-inch crust around the outside. Spread the inside of the loaf with the tapenade or pesto; layer the rest of the ingredients. When the loaf is full, put the lid back and wrap the whole thing tightly in plastic wrap. Weigh the loaf down with something heavy and leave to press for several hours at room temperature. Cut the loaf into wedges to serve.

THE DAGWOOD Named after Dagwood Bumstead from the “Blondie” comic strip, this towering sandwich includes multiple layers of bread, meats, cheese and garnishes, all skewered with a stick topped with stuffed olives. (Makes 1 sandwich) INGREDIENTS 4 slices light rye bread Yellow mustard Mayonnaise 2 slices Swiss cheese 4 slices cooked ham

3 slices tomato 2 dill pickles, sliced lengthwise 1 scallion, thinly sliced 2 slices smoked or regular cheddar cheese 4 slices salami

3 slices pastrami 1 cold cooked chicken breast, sliced Iceberg lettuce, shredded 2 stuffed green olives, to garnish

INSTRUCTION

Lay out the 4 slices of bread and spread 2 with mustard and 2 with mayonnaise. Then start to layer: Start with a slice of Swiss cheese on a slice of bread, then ham, a slice of tomato, a dill pickle and some scallion, before adding the next slice of bread and then continuing with all the remaining fillings and bread slices until complete. Skewer the whole thing down through the middle, and crown the skewer with the stuffed olives. 86

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CORONATION CHICKEN Named for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953, this subtly fragrant, delicious sandwich features the perfect combination of convenience and exotic ingredients. (Makes 2 sandwiches) INGREDIENTS ½ small onion, finely chopped 1 tbsp. vegetable oil ½ tbsp. curry powder 3 tbsp. mayonnaise 3 tbsp. plain yogurt 1 tbsp. mango chutney 9 oz. cold roast chicken meat, chopped Small handful fresh cilantro leaves, chopped Small handful toasted slivered almonds (optional) Juice of ½ lime, or to taste Sea salt and black pepper,

FRITTATA SANDWICH

INSTRUCTIONS

Bell peppers and onions lend a delicious sweetness to this sandwich, which match well with a mixture of ketchup and hot chili sauce. Try it—you’ll like it. (Makes one frittata that serves 6)

Heat some vegetable oil in a large frying pan; gently cook the onion and bell peppers until softened and starting to color. Crack all the eggs into a bowl and beat lightly with the smoked paprika and chives, plus some salt and pepper. Pour into the pan, spreading the mixture around so it’s roughly even on top. Press the goat cheese on top and garnish with a little extra black pepper. Cook the frittata over a moderate heat until the edges have cooked; pop under the broiler for 4-5 minutes to finish cooking on top. Remove from heat and serve hot or cold in the bread of your choice along with a mix of ketchup and hot chili sauce.

INGREDIENTS Vegetable oil, for frying 1 large onion, sliced 1 red bell pepper, seeded and sliced 1 yellow bell pepper, seeded and sliced 6 eggs ½ tsp. smoked paprika 1 heaping tbsp. snipped fresh chives Sea salt and black pepper, to taste 7 oz. goat cheese, sliced Sliced bread of your choice Ketchup and hot chili sauce, to serve

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ABOVE: Coronation Chicken RIGHT: Frittata Sandwich

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to taste 4 slices soft white bread INSTRUCTIONS

In a small frying pan, gently cook the onion in vegetable oil until it starts to turn color. Add curry powder and cook for 2 minutes, stirring to prevent burning. Remove from heat; let cool. Mix together the mayonnaise and yogurt, then stir in mango chutney. When the onion mixture is cool, add that too. Mix sauce with the chicken meat. Stir in the cilantro and almonds, if using. Add lime juice to taste, and salt and pepper, to taste. Spread 2 slices of bread with the chicken mixture, then top with the remaining 2 slices of bread. Cut the sandwiches into triangles or squares and serve. O



taste review

INGREDIENTS FOR SUCCESS: (Clockwise from Above) Seafood Bouillabaisse; Sweet Potato-Crusted Grouper; Intracoastal view; the dining room

LUNCH THAT WORKS Prime Catch Delivers On Taste, Service And Ambiance BY LINDA HAASE ever mix business with pleasure. That is, unless you’re dining at Prime Catch, the quintessential spot for a productive, delectable working lunch. This Boynton Beach gem lures lawyers, bankers and other professionals who rely on its fresh food, efficient service, upscale ambiance and panoramic Intracoastal views to impress clients. Whether you’re power lunching, giving a presentation or conducting a job interview, Prime Catch offers a comfortable milieu in which to chat uninterrupted, be inspired or close that all-important deal. If you arrive early, you can take a few moments to collect

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your thoughts in the Zenlike courtyard. Various seating options include a casual bar area, outdoor patio and an intimate dining room. There’s also an upstairs space with water views that’s the perfect spot for holding conferences or workshops. And should the conversation grind to an uncomfortable halt, there’s plenty of fodder to jumpstart a discussion, from interesting artwork to passing boats. The staff here is friendly,

where

attentive and professional— even the busboys wear perfectly pressed pants and longsleeved, crisp white shirts. Executive Chef John Bonk, a Florida Culinary Institute graduate, has supervised the restaurant’s kitchen since its inception 10 years ago and is a gastronomic whiz who knows how to make food look as good as it tastes. We suggest starting with the Crab and Corn Chowder, or the Prime Catch Hot Dip (an addictive creamy blend of white cheddar mornay sauce, lobster, shrimp and blue crab). Entrees in-

Prime Catch is located at 700 East Woolbright Road, Boynton Beach. For more information, call 561-737-8822 or visit primecatchboynton.com.

clude salads, fish, steak and sandwiches. The Sweet Potato-Crusted Grouper and the Quiche of the Day (ours had lobster and vegetables) get rave reviews, as do innovative side offerings such as the blue cheese coleslaw. After you’ve signed on the dotted line, celebrate with one of the restaurant’s mouthwatering homemade desserts. Our favorite was the Prime Flourless Chocolate Layer Cake, light meltin-your-mouth layers of chocolate mousse and cake, topped with a Swiss chocolate ganache, whipped cream and chocolate shavings. It was delicious—just like everything we ordered at Prime Catch. O


The Office is a modern American gastropub that serves delicious, gourmet comfort food, in a setting reminiscent of a luxurious home office. Menu favorites include an array of juicy burgers, inventive salads, swell sandwiches, wonderful appetizers, mouthwatering seafood, chicken and beef entrees. • Lunch & Dinner Served Daily • Early & Late Happy Hour at Indoor & Outdoor Bars • Dine Indoors or on the Patio 290 E. Atlantic Ave. • Delray Beach • 561-278-9570 4520 PGA Blvd. • Palm Beach Gardens • 561-630-9899 vicandangelos.com

Vic & Angelo’s serves up delectable, rustic Italian cuisine, including soul-satisfying house-made pastas, crispy, thin-crust pizzas, refreshing salads, fresh fish and seafood, and enticing veal and chicken dishes, in a warm and welcoming setting. • Lunch & Dinner Served Daily • Early & Late Happy Hour at Indoor & Outdoor Bars • Brunch Served Saturday & Sunday • Indoor and Outdoor Dining 201 E. Atlantic Ave. • Delray Beach • 561-276-3600 theofficedelray.com


taste listings B I T E S/ THE GRILLE ON CONGRESS

AMERICAN/STEAKHOUSES

5101 Congress Ave. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.912.9800 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner Monday-Saturday.

ABE & LOUIE’S Glades Plaza

❘ 2200 W. Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.447.0024 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday,

Dinner nightly, Sunday Brunch.

HENRY’S The Shoppes at

ANGLE Eau Palm Beach Resort &

Addison Place ❘ 16850 Jog Rd. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.638.1949 ❘ Lunch Monday-Saturday, Dinner nightly.

Spa ❘ 100 South Ocean Boulevard ❘ Manalapan ❘ 561.540.4850 ❘ Dinner Wednesday-Sunday. Closed Saturday. ATLANTIC GRILLE Seagate Hotel & Spa ❘ 1000 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.665.4900 ❘ Dinner daily, Brunch Saturday-Sunday. BISTRO N Nordstrom at Town

Center at Boca Raton ❘ Second Floor ❘ 5820 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.620.3286 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Monday-Sunday. BISTRO 241 241 N.E. Second

Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.330.4080 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. Brunch Friday-Sunday. BOGART’S BAR & GRILLE

Cinemark Palace 20 ❘ 3200 Airport Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.544.3044 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. BONEFISH GRILL Shoppes at

Boca Grove ❘ 21065 Powerline Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.483.4949 ❘ Lunch Saturday-Sunday, Dinner nightly. BREWZZI Glades Plaza ❘

2222 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily. 561.392.2739

BURT & MAX’S Delray Market-

place ❘ 9089 W. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.638.6380 ❘ Brunch Saturday-Sunday, Dinner daily. BUTCHER BLOCK GRILL

Fountains Center ❘ 7000 West Camino Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.409.3035 ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner daily. THE CAPITAL GRILLE Town

Center ❘ 6000 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.368.1077 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. CHOPS LOBSTER BAR 101

Plaza Real South ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.395.2675 ❘ Dinner nightly. TWO GEORGES AT THE COVE MARINA 1754 S.E. Third Ct. ❘

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HOUSTON’S 1900 N.W.

Executive Center Circle ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.998.0550 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

Event committee members Deborah Morawski, Todd Bonlarron and Carrie Rentas

STIRRING THINGS UP South Florida Science Center And Aquarium Hosts Mouthwatering MolecuBar

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cience and cocktails will combine for a great time at MolecuBar, a flavorful taste experiment that starts at 6 p.m. on September 18 at the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium in West Palm Beach. “We love to stir things up,” says Lew Crampton, Science Center CEO. “I can assure you, suspensions, emulsions, dispersions and viscosity never tasted so good!” Indeed. Breathtaking demonstrations using molecular mixology will stimulate the senses with creations such as Merlot Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream and Vodka Caviar. Be sure not to miss the Sphered Mojito—served in jelly form on a spoon, it pops in your mouth as it releases the liquid within. There will also be plenty of “regular” light bites, libation tastings from Real McCoy Rum and Tito’s Handmade Vodka, live entertainment and a demonstration by the United States Bartenders’ Guild. The event will be hosted by the South Florida Science Center’s Young Professionals Organization and benefit college scholarship packages. The South Florida Science Center and Aquarium is located at 4801 Dreher Trail North, West Palm Beach. For more information, call 561-8321988 or visit sfsciencecenter.org. – C.M.

J. ALEXANDER’S University Commons ❘ 1400 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.347.9875 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. KEE GRILL 17940 N. Military Trail ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.995.5044 ❘ Dinner nightly. MARIPOSA Neiman Marcus

at Town Center ❘ 5860 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.544.2320 ❘ Lunch daily. MAX’S GRILLE Mizner Park ❘ 404 Plaza Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.368.0080 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Brunch Saturday-Sunday. MAX’S HARVEST 169 N.E.

Second Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ ❘ Dinner nightly, Brunch Saturday-Sunday. 561.381.9970

MEAT EATERY & TAPROOM

Cendyn Spaces ❘ 980 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Suite 115 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.419.2600 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner, Monday-Friday, Lunch and Dinner Saturday and Sunday. MORTON’S, THE STEAKHOUSE

The Shops at Boca Center ❘ 5050 Town Center Circle ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.7724 ❘ Dinner nightly.

Deerfield Beach ❘ 954.421.9272 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily; Brunch Saturday and Sunday.

NEW YORK PRIME 2350 N.W.

CUT 432 432 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘

FIFTH AVENUE GRILL 821

561.998.3881

Delray Beach ❘ 561.272.9898 ❘ Dinner nightly.

South Federal Hwy. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily; Brunch Saturday and Sunday.

DADA 52 North Swinton Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.330.3232 ❘ Dinner nightly. FARMER’S TABLE 1901 North

Military Trail ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.417.5836

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

561.265.0122

GRAND LUX CAFE Town

Center ❘ 6000 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.2141 ❘ Breakfast Saturday-Sunday. Lunch and Dinner daily.

Executive Center Dr. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ ❘ Dinner nightly.

OCEANS 234 234 N. Ocean Blvd. ❘ Deerfield Beach ❘ 954.428.2539 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Brunch Sunday. THE OFFICE 201 E. Atlantic

Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.276.3600 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.


taste listings

Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.265.5093 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

CAY DA VIETNAMESE 7400 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.998.0278 ❘ Lunch TuesdayFriday, Dinner Tuesday-Sunday.

THE PAVILION GRILLE 301 Yamato Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.912.0000 ❘ Lunch TuesdayFriday, Dinner Tuesday-Sunday.

EURO FUSION RESTAURANT AND BAR (KOSHER) Wharfside

PARK TAVERN 32 S.E. Second

RACKS DOWNTOWN EATERY & TAVERN Mizner Park ❘ 402

Plaza Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.395.1662 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. Brunch Saturday-Sunday. REBEL HOUSE 297 E. Palmetto

Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.353.5888 ❘ Dinner nightly. RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE

Mizner Park ❘ 225 N.E. Mizner Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.6746 ❘ Dinner nightly. SALT SEVEN 32 S.E. Second

Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.274.7258 ❘ Dinner nightly. SEASONS 52 2300 N.W. Executive Center Dr. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.998.9952 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. SIX TABLES 112 N.E. Second

St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.347.6260 ❘ Dinner Tuesday-Saturday by reservation. SUNDY HOUSE 106 S. Swinton

Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.272.5678 ❘ Lunch Tuesday-Saturday, Dinner Tuesday-Sunday, Brunch Sunday. 13 AMERICAN TABLE 451 E. Palmetto Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.409.2061 ❘ Dinner MondaySaturday.

ASIAN/SUSHI

❘ 6877 S.W. 18th St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ ❘ Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner daily. Closed Friday night.

7600 Camino Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner nightly except Friday and Saturday. 561.544.8100

BUDDHA SKY BAR 217 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.450.7557 ❘ Dinner nightly. BLUEFIN SUSHI THAI GRILL

861 Yamato Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.981.8986 ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner nightly.

TEMPURA HOUSE The Reserve ❘

University Commons ❘ 1400 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.393.3722 ❘ Lunch MondaySaturday, Dinner nightly.

9858 Clint Moore Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.883.6088 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

PINE GARDEN CHINESE RESTAURANT 1668 N. Federal

561.395.1109

Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.395.7534 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

FAH ASIAN BISTRO Boca Valley

RISE MODERN ASIAN CUISINE AND SUSHI 6060

Plaza ❘ 7461 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.241.0400 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. HOUSE OF SIAM 25 N.E. Second

S.W. 18th St., #108 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.8808 ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner nightly.

Ave., #116 ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.330.9191 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly.

SAITO’S JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE 8841 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca

JAPANGO Regency Court ❘

Raton ❘ 561.218.8788 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

3011 Yamato Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ Shoppes of Parkland ❘ 7367 N. State Road 7 ❘ Parkland ❘ 954.345.4268 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. Delray Marketplace ❘ 14811 Lyons Rd. ❘ #106 ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.638.9996 ❘ Lunch TuesdayFriday, Dinner Friday-Saturday. 561.999.1263 Riverstone

SHINJU BUFFET 7875 Glades

Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.488.4040 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

THE SEA SOUTH EAST ASIAN KITCHEN 16950 Jog Road #1015

❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.270.3569 ❘ Lunch and Dinner MondaySaturday, Dinner Sunday. UNCLE TAI’S The Shops at

Boca Center ❘ 5250 Town Center Circle ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.368.8806 ❘ Lunch Monday-Saturday, Dinner nightly. YAKITORI SAKE HOUSE 271 S.E.

Mizner Blvd., #41 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561. 544.0087 ❘ Lunch and Dinner nightly. YAMA JAPANESE RESTAURANT

200 N.E. Second Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.266.9929 ❘ Lunch Monday-Thursday, Dinner daily.

JIDAI KAITEN SUSHI & SAKE BAR Shoppes at Boca Grove ❘

21073 Powerline Road #41 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.852.5770 ❘ Lunch and dinner daily. KAO TONG 217 E. Palmetto Park

Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.2999 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Tuesday-Sunday. KAPOW! NOODLE BAR Mizner Park ❘ 431 Plaza Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.347.7322 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. LA TRE 249 E. Palmetto Park

Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.4568 ❘ Dinner nightly. LEMONGRASS ASIAN BISTRO

ASIA SUSHI/WOK/GRILL (KOSHER) The Fountains ❘

P.F. CHANG’S CHINA BISTRO

420 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.278.5050 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday Dinner nightly. 101 Plaza Real South ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.544.8181 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. MAI HIBACHI 4801 Linton Blvd.

❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.499.2766 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. PEI WEI Fifth Avenue Shops ❘ 1914 N.E. Fifth Ave. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561. 226.0290 7152 Beracasa Way ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.322.1001 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

Tapas from Sundy House

STIR CRAZY FRESH ASIAN GRILL

Town Center ❘ 6000 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.338.7500 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. SUSHIGO 477 N. Federal

YOKOHAMA 9168 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.451.1707 60 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.9328 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.347.7888 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner Thursday-Sunday.

BARBECUE

SUSHI RAY Shops at Boca Center ❘ 5250 Town Center Circle ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.394.9506 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly.

Yamato Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.997.9557 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

SUSHI THAI 100 N.E. Second St.

❘ Boca Raton 561.750.4448 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly.

LUCILLE’S BAD TO THE BONE BBQ Regency Court ❘ 3011

MISSISSIPPI SWEETS BBQ CO.

2399 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.394.6779 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Monday-Saturday, Dinner Sunday. SEPTEMBER 2014

93


taste listings

PA BBQ GRILL 1198 N. Dixie Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.416.7427 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. SHORTY’S BAR-B-Q The Reserve ❘ 9858 Clint Moore Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.487.0024 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

THE BOCA BEACH HOUSE 887 E. Palmetto Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.826.8850 ❘ Breakfast and Lunch daily. Closed Monday.

CARIBBEAN GRILL 1332 N.W.

Second Ave. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.362.0161 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily. ROCKSTEADY JAMAICAN BISTRO 2399 N. Federal Hwy. ❘

Boca Raton ❘ 561.465.3167 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily 1179 S. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.910.1562 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Monday-Saturday. Closed Sunday.

BOHEME BISTRO 1118 E.

Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.278.4899 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily. DORSIA RESTAURANT 5837 N.

Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.961.4156 ❘ Dinner daily. FLEMING’S BISTRO 6060 S.W. 18th St., #103 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.347.1117 ❘ Dinner Tuesday-Sunday. JOSEF’S TABLE Polo Shops ❘

5030 Champion Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.353.2700 ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner nightly. LA CIGALE 253 S.E. Fifth Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.265.0600 ❘ Dinner Monday-Saturday. LE RIVAGE 450 N.E. 20th St. ❘

Boca Raton ❘ 561.620.0033 ❘ Lunch Tuesday-Friday, Dinner nightly. OLIO BISTRO 42 S.E. Second

Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.278.6633 ❘ Dinner Thursday-Saturday. ST. TROPEZ 7860 Glades

Rd. Suite 130 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.368.4119 ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner nightly. TEA-LICIOUS TEAROOM & GIFTS

4997-B W. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.638.5155 ❘ Breakfast and Lunch, Monday-Saturday. 94

INDIAN

D’ANGELO PIZZA, WINE BAR AND TAPAS Addison Place ❘

SAPPHIRE INDIAN CUISINE

561.997.7472

Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ ❘ Dinner nightly.

Royal Palm Place ❘ 500 Via de Palma ❘ Suite 79 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.362.2299 ❘ Dinner nightly, Lunch Tuesday-Sunday.

FRENCH

ITALIAN

BISTRO PROVENCE 2399 N.

ANTHONY’S COAL FIRED PIZZA

Federal Hwy., #4 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.368.2340 ❘ Dinner nightly.

Shops at Boca Grove ❘ 21065 Powerline Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.218.6600 115 N.E. Sixth Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.278.7911 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

CARPE DIEM 110 E. Atlantic

Ave., #120 ❘ Delray Beach ❘ ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Brunch Sunday. 561.455.2140

CASIMIR BISTRO Royal Palm

CONTINENTAL

CASA D’ANGELO 171 E. Palmetto Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.996.1234 ❘ Dinner nightly.

FONDUE THE MELTING POT 5455 N.

CARIBBEAN

TAVERNA OPA 270 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.303.3602 ❘ Dinner nightly.

Place ❘ 416 Via De Palmas, #81 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.955.6001 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Monday-Saturday. Closed Sunday.

ARTURO’S 6750 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.997.7373 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. BRIO TUSCAN GRILLE The Shops

at Boca Center ❘ 5050 Town Center Circle #239 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.3777 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

16950 Jog Rd. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner Saturday-Sunday 561.381.0037

DAVITO’S 19635 State Road 7 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.482.2323 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. DOMINICS 8177 W. Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.487.3186 Westwinds of Boca ❘ 9834 W. Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.487.6325 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. FRANK & DINO’S 718 S. Federal Hwy. ❘ Deerfield Beach ❘ 954.427.4909 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. IL GIRASOLE RESTAURANT 1911 S. Federal Highway ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.272.3566 ❘ Dinner nightly

KATHY’S GAZEBO CAFÉ

Spanish River Center ❘ 4199 North Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.395.6033 ❘ Lunch MondayFriday. Dinner Monday-Saturday. Closed Sunday. LA NOUVELLE MAISON 5 Palms

Building ❘ 455 East Palmetto Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.338.3003 ❘ Dinner daily. MIMOSA Polo Shops ❘ 5030

Champion Blvd, #D3 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.997.0027 ❘ Lunch TuesdayFriday, Dinner Tuesday-Sunday.

GERMAN

Maggiano’s

BIERGARTEN Royal Palm Place ❘ 309 Via De Palmas #90 ❘ 561.395.7462 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

CAFFE LUNA ROSA 34 S. Ocean Blvd. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.274.9404 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily.

IL BACIO 29 S.E. Second Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.865.7785 ❘ Dinner nightly.

GREEK

CAFE MED BY BICE 2096 N.E.

JOSEPHINE’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT 5751 N. Federal

ESTIA TAVERNA & BAR Royal Palm Place ❘ 507 S.E. Mizner Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.245.8885 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. MILOS TAVERNA 1600 N. Federal

Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.750.6720 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. TAVERNA KYMA 6298 N. Federal

Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.994.2828 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly.

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

Second Ave. ❘ Deerfield Beach ❘ 954.596.5840 ❘ Lunch WednesdaySunday, Dinner daily, Brunch Sunday.

Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.988.0668 ❘ Dinner Wednesday-Monday.

CALIFORNIA PIZZA KITCHEN

LA STELLA'S RESTAURANT

Town Center ❘ 6000 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.368.2805 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

159 E. Palmetto Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561. 544.2081 ❘ Dinner Monday-Saturday.

CARRABBA’S ITALIAN GRILL

LA LUNA BISTRO The Polo Shoppes ❘ 5030 Champion Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.997.1165 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly.

Wharfside Plaza ❘ 6909 S.W. 18th St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.544.8838 ❘ Lunch Saturday-Sunday, Dinner nightly.


SIP & SAVOR The Balvenie and Monkey Shoulder... at the Scotch and Cigar Experience

The new Men’s Division of the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County is kicking off a full season of events with the Scotch and Cigar Experience, featuring renowned whiskey expert and Ambassador David Laird, from William Grant & Sons, representing scotch brands The Balvenie and Monkey Shoulder.

Monday, October 13, 2014 • 6 p.m. Prime Cigar Bar 2240 NW 19TH STREET #916, BOCA RATON Couvert: $36 per person No minimum gift is required to attend. Space is limited.

SAVE THE DATE FOR FUTURE EVENTS:

SPORTS NIGHT November 19, 2014 MISSION TO CUBA January 30, 2015

Men’s Division is generously sponsored by:

WE’RE RAISING THE BAR ON MEN’S EVENTS Whether it’s enjoying a great night with your peers, meeting a sports legend or getting an insider’s view on the Middle East, Federation is bringing together men of all ages and interests. At the heart of it all is building a stronger, brighter Jewish community together and improving lives locally, in Israel and around the world.

For additional information, contact Felice Naide at 561.852.6084 or felicen@bocafed.org

The event is generously sponsored by:

The event is generously Magazine Sponsor: underwritten by:

PRIME CIGAR BAR


CREDIBILITY

taste listings

96

IS HUGE WITH US. Because the Alliance for Audited Media audits the circulation of The Boca Raton Observer, advertisers know that our audited information is accurate.

LA VILLETTA RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 4351 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.362.8403 ❘ Dinner Tuesday-Sunday. MAGGIANO’S 21090 St. Andrews Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.361.8244 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. MARIO’S OSTERIA 1400 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.239.7000 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. MATTEO’S RESTAURANT 233 S. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.0773 ❘ Dinner nightly. MEATBALL ROOM Regency Court ❘ 3011 Yamato Road, Suite A19 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561-4094111 ❘ Dinner daily. NICK’S NEW HAVEN-STYLE PIZZERIA & BAR 2240 N.W. 19th St., Suite 904 ❘ Boca

Raton ❘ 561.368.2900 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. NINO'S Fifth Avenue Shops ❘ 1930 N.E. Fifth Ave. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.362.8990 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. PASTA FEVER 4251 N. Federal Hwy. ❘

Boca Raton ❘ 561.338.0012 ❘ Lunch TuesdayFriday, Dinner nightly. Closed Monday. PELLEGRINO'S RISTORANTE 3360 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.368.5520 ❘ Dinner Tuesday-Sunday. PICCOLINO RESTAURANT 78 S. Federal

Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.395.8858 ❘ Dinner Monday-Saturday. POSITANO 4400 N. Federal Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.544.2920 ❘ Dinner nightly. RENZO’S OF BOCA 5999 N. Federal

Hwy. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.994.3495 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. RISTORANTE SAPORI Royal Palm Place ❘ 99

Royal Palm Place ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.367.9779 ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. TABLE 42 KITCHEN & WINE BAR Royal

We’re proud to be a member of

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

Palm Place ❘ 399 S.E. Mizner Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.826.2625 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. TANZY iPic Theaters at Mizner Park ❘ 301

Plaza Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.922.6699 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. TERRA FIAMMA Delray Marketplace ❘ 9169

West Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.495.5570 ❘ Sunday-Saturday Lunch and Dinner, Monday Dinner only. TRAMONTI 119 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.272.1944 ❘ Lunch Monday-Saturday, Dinner nightly.


taste listings

CHEF FRANK ROSANO & WIFE ANTONELLA Exclusively at Villa Rosano

TRATTORIA ROMANA 499 E. Palmetto

Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.393.6715 ❘ Dinner nightly. TUCCI'S FIRE N COAL PIZZA 50 N.E.

First Ave. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.620.2930 ❘ Lunch Tuesday- Saturday, Dinner nightly.

Genuine Cuisine From The Homeland

VIC & ANGELO’S 290 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘

Delray Beach ❘ 561.278.9570 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Brunch Saturday-Sunday.

The Boca Raton Observer

Best Of Boca And Beyond 2009

VILLAGIO ITALIAN EATERY Mizner Park ❘

344 Plaza Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.447.2257 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

Boca Raton Magazine

VILLA ROSANO The Reserve ❘ 9858 Clint

Palm Beach Post-2010

One Of Those Fabulous Finds

Moore Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.470.0112 ❘ Lunch Monday-Saturday, Dinner nightly.

★★★1/2 Sun Sentinel-2010

VINO WINE BAR AND ITALIAN TAPAS

114 N.E. Second St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.869.0030 ❘ Dinner Tuesday-Saturday.

LATIN AZUCAR CUBAN CAFE Boca/Ray Plaza ❘ 4900 Linton Blvd. Suite 14 ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.495.4427 ❘ Lunch Tuesday-Friday, Dinner Tuesday-Sunday.

CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS ~ NOW ACCEPTING CALL AHEAD SEATING Monday-Saturday Lunch 11:30-2:30

Dinner Every Evening 5-10

V I S I T U S O N T H E W E B AT W W W. V I L L A R O S A N O. C O M

THE CUBAN CAFE Plumtree Centre ❘

3350 N.W. Boca Raton Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ ❘ Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner nightly. Closed Sunday. 561.750.8860

CABANA RESTAURANT 105 E. Atlantic

Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.274.9090 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. PADRINO’S Mission Bay Plaza ❘ 20455 State Road 7 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.451.1070 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

MEDITERRANEAN/TURKISH BOCA SKEWERS Mizner Plaza ❘130 N.E.

Second St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.347.9961 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Monday-Saturday. Closed Sunday. MOZART CAFE (KOSHER) The Fountains ❘ 7300 W. Camino Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.367.3412 ❘ Breakfast and Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner daily.

MEXICAN BAJA CAFE DOS 1310 S. Federal Hwy. ❘ Deerfield Beach ❘ 954.596.1304 ❘ Lunch MondaySaturday, Dinner nightly. ROCCO’S TACOS AND TEQUILA BAR

The Shops at Boca Center ❘ 5250 Town Center Circle ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.416.2131 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. SEPTEMBER 2014

97


? yet

reservations have you made your

98

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

once, you only live

so why not...

eat, drink & love the places you dine at & the cuisine you experience

taste listings

SEÑOR BURRITO 513 N.E. 20th St. ❘ Boca

Raton ❘ 561.347.6600 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. UNCLE JULIO’S Mizner Park ❘ 449 Plaza

Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.300.3530 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Brunch Saturday-Sunday.

ORGANIC APROPO KAFE 147 S.E. First Ave. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.393.1223 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Monday-Saturday. Closed Sunday. 4TH GENERATION ORGANIC MARKET

75 S.E. Third St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.338.9920 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily.

PUBS/SPORTS BARS BRICK YARD MICRO BREWERY The Garden

Shops ❘ 7050 W. Palmetto Park Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ ❘ Lunch Saturday, Dinner nightly.

561.544.0001

DUFFY’S SPORTS GRILL 21212 St. Andrews Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.869.0552 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. THE ENGLISH TAP & BEER GARDEN

5050 Town Center Circle, #247 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.544.8000 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Monday-Sunday. GLUTTONOUS GOAT 99 S.E. Mizner Blvd. ❘

Boca Raton ❘ 561.923.9457 ❘ Dinner nightly. HOLLOWAY'S PUB Royal Palm Place ❘ 504 Via De Palmas ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.361.8445 ❘ Dinner nightly. HOOTERS Boca Commons ❘ 2240 N.W. 19th St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.391.8903 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. HURRICANE GRILL & WINGS Mission Bay ❘ 10125 Glades Rd. ❘ 561.218.8848 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. MILLER’S ALE HOUSE Shoppes at Blue Lake ❘ 1200 Yamato Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.988.9142 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. Boca Lyons Plaza ❘ 9244 W. Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.487.2989 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. THE WISHING WELL IRISH PUB Royal

Palm Place ❘ 111 S.E. Mizner Blvd., #9 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.750.5208 ❘ Dinner nightly. YARD HOUSE Mizner Park ❘ 201 Plaza Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.417.6124 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily.

SANDWICHES/DELI BEN’S KOSHER DELICATESSEN RESTAURANT & CATERERS The Reserve ❘ 9942 Clint Moore

Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.470.9963 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily.


CORNER BAKERY CAFE Boca Commons ❘ 2240 N.W. 19th St. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.417.6060 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily. GRILL TIME (KOSHER) 8177 Glades Rd. ❘

Boca Raton ❘ 561.482.3699 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Sunday-Thursday. PITA ’N GO (KOSHER) 22767 State Road 7 ❘

Boca Raton ❘ 561.477.0633 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Sunday-Thursday, Lunch Friday. SHULA BURGER Delray Marketplace ❘

14917 Lyons Rd. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561. 404.1347. ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily. TOOJAY’S GOURMET DELI Polo Shops ❘ 5030

Champion Blvd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.241.5903

Boca Commons ❘ 2240 N.W. 19th St., #700 ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.392.4181 Regency Court ❘ 3013 Yamato Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.997.9911 ❘ Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner daily.

SEAFOOD BOSTON’S ON THE BEACH 40 S. Ocean

Blvd. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.278.3364 ❘ Breakfast Saturday-Sunday, Lunch and Dinner daily. CITY FISH MARKET 7940 Glades Rd. ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.487.1600 ❘ Lunch MondayFriday, Dinner daily. CITY OYSTER 213 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.272.0220 ❘ Lunch daily, Dinner nightly. DECK 84 840 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray

Beach ❘ 561.665.8484 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Brunch Saturday-Sunday. 50 OCEAN 40 S. Ocean Blvd. ❘ Delray

Beach ❘ 561.278.3364 ❘ Brunch Sunday, Lunch and Dinner daily. JB'S ON THE BEACH 300 N.E. 21st. Ave. ❘

Deerfield Beach ❘ 954.571.5220 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Breakfast Saturday and Sunday. J & J SEAFOOD BAR & GRILL 634 E.

Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.272.3390 ❘ Lunch and Dinner Tuesday-Saturday.

letshowus you the way

taste listings

&

introduce you to the best chefs, restaurateurs, owners & maitre d’s of our area’s most enticing restaurants

reserve your spot

today in the food & wine issue

coming

10.2014

RACKS FISH HOUSE + OYSTER BAR Five S.E. Second Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.450.6718 ❘ Lunch and Dinner daily, Brunch Saturday-Sunday. 32 EAST 32 E. Atlantic Ave. ❘ Delray Beach ❘ 561.276.7868

❘ Dinner nightly.

TRULUCK’S Mizner Park ❘ 351 Plaza Real ❘ Boca Raton ❘ 561.391.0755 ❘ Dinner nightly. O

For more information on our Dining Guide, please call 561.982.8960 or email sales@bocaratonobserver.com.

561.982.8960 sales@bocaratonobserver.com bocaratonobserver.com SEPTEMBER 2014

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spotlight

Promotional Advertisement

Gavin Robin

THE BUSINESS OF BRANDING dg Communications Group Boasts A New Address And New Attitude

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dvertising agency dg Communications Group is now bigger and more “Delrageous” than ever—with a new impressive office in the heart of downtown Delray Beach and an even more passionate philos-

downtown scene, and were fortunate enough to purchase our own building and design a very unique and different agency.” Robin explains that dg Communications Group, a full-service advertising agen-

Clients that are looking to do something different and stand out from the crowd are a perfect fit for our agency. We love to color outside the lines, and we do it in yellow.

ophy about brand marketing. “We’ve been in Delray 15 years and have grown as an agency, both size-wise and as far as the type and level of clients that we work with,” says Gavin Robin, president and CEO. “We’ve always wanted to be a part of the

cy, is about to embark on a whole lifestyle, social and arts campaign in downtown Delray—dubbed “Delrageous” by the agency. “It’s really all about creating an experiential brand,” says the South African-born advertising executive. “Our

whole approach is based upon how people interact with a brand. From their senses to social media, everything matters and makes the brand more personal. He continues: “In today’s marketing, brands are very transparent because people forge their own relationships with them. We perpetuate this by connecting with consumers on multiple levels through a variety of media channels, from traditional print and TV to new digital and social platforms.” The agency serves numerous clients in premium industries, including two financial companies in Dubai, and Warren Henry Automotive Group, a luxu-

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ry car brand in Miami. The agency has carefully elevated Warren Henry Automotive Group’s brand, broadening the company’s marketing programs, giving the brand personality and aligning the client as a lifestyle brand. “We built character into their brand, connecting them to lifestyle elements, such as including Chris Bosh (of the Miami Heat) as a brand spokesperson,” explains Robin. He and his long-serving staff of 12 also work with clients in the fashion, healthcare, construction and manufacturing industries, among others. The agency is also active in servicing not-forprofit organizations such

as the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County and Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens. “These are all different markets and all deserve their own individual approach,” Robin points out. “We’ve given them each their own significant brand and developed a custom-tailored strategy based upon the unique challenges of their particular markets.” The agency loves challenges and building strong, powerful brands. “Clients that are looking to do something different and stand out from the crowd are a perfect fit for our agency,” says Robin. “We love to color outside the lines, and we do it in yellow.” O

dg Communications Group is now located at 98 S.E. Sixth Avenue in Delray Beach. For more information, call 561-266-0127 or visit dgcg.us. 100

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amount of effort” will likely enjoy significantly improved results, often to the point of enhanced scholarships and college options. “Beyond that, I’ve designed a holistic approach into the curriculum that includes endurance-building peak performance strategies so that students feel great and think clearly for extended periods of time,” says Kirshenbaum, who started the company in

2001 out of frustration for how SATs and ACTs were being taught. “Developing logic and critical thinking muscles are paramount to maximizing scores for the SAT/ACT and way beyond.” SATPG coaches are selected using the strictest set of guidelines. “They represent us and our goodwill,” he points out. “All are taught from the same playbook and at the same time, they are

free to express their individual personalities. The system (for success) is simple and duplicable—we teach our coaches to coach.” First, Kirshenbaum explains, genuine rapport must be established. Second, student goals must be defined and carried out. Third, key information must flow to build and reinforce brain circuitry. Fourth, peak performance and critical thinking protocols must be disclosed and executed. And fifth, students are consistently encouraged for every im-

SAT Preparation Group is located in Coral Springs and Boynton Beach. For more information, call 877-672-8773 or visit satprepgroup.com. 102

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

provement, which typically leads to maximum results. “In the beginning of May, every year, I personally follow up with all of our previous students to congratulate them on their college choices and update their scores,” he says. “The final updated version now shows an average increase of 341.9 with a top 25 percent score of 532.3.” The numbers have climbed steadily since Kirshenbaum started tracking the statistics, proving that his system not only works, but continues to improve. O


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THE ESSENTIAL SOCIAL DIGEST

CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Councilman Robert Weinroth, Pamela Polani, Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie, Boca Raton Deputy Mayor Constance Scott and Rachel Lenner; Leslie Excell, Pamela Polani and Michele Bellisari; event committee members Amy Weishaus, Trine Anderson, Shaun Eldridge, Jennifer Graner, Jordan Gerber, Arye Corbett, Victoria Karasin, Pamela Polani, Rachel Lenner, Michelle Allen, Andrea Rubin, Cheryl Van Hare, Holly Van Hare, Barbara Shashoua, Hallie Brenis, Jessie Brooks and Elaine Cohen. Not pictured: Keri Caston, Ilene Becker, Barry Zeitlin, Barry Reiss, Angelo Gasparri and Michele Bellisari

SPREAD THE WORD

First Annual Boca Raton Walk To End Alzheimer’s Seeks Participants he Alzheimer’s Association of Southeast Florida Chapter is calling for residents of Parkland, Deerfield Beach and all of South Palm Beach County to participate in the First Annual Boca Raton Walk to End Alzheimer’s, a national family-friendly event to raise funds for care, research and support. The two-mile walk will take place on October 11, beginning and ending at Mizner Park Amphitheater. Free event registration begins at 6 a.m. and the walk will take place from 8-9 a.m.

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The goal of the event is not just to raise money, but to promote awareness. Alzheimer’s is one of the most least-understood diseases, yet one

diagnosed with the disease. In addition, women are twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s as breast cancer. “My sister Joyce triumphed and

“

My sister Joyce triumphed and built a life with Down syndrome. But as she marks her 70th birthday in a nursing home, her struggle with Alzheimer’s robs her of all the joy she deserves. – Amy Weishaus, local entrepreneur

of the leading causes of death in the United States. According to recent reports, one in six women and one in 11 men over the age of 65 will be

�

built a life with Down syndrome,� said Amy Weishaus, a local entrepreneur. “But as she marks her 70th birthday in a nursing home, her

struggle with Alzheimer’s robs her of all the joy she deserves.� According to the Alzheimer’s Association, 17 percent of Florida residents over age 65 suffer from the disease, the highest percentage in the country. In South Palm Beach County nearly 35 percent live with Alzheimer’s, which is much higher than the national average. The Alzheimer’s Association is leading the movement against this devastating disease. Want to help? They’re seeking walkers for their inaugural Boca Raton event, volunteers to help with the event and sponsors. O For more information, call Pamela Polani at 561-496-4222 or Riunite Carter at 561-967-0947, or visit alz.org/walk.

Around Town includes news about community and social events, parties, charities, fundraisers, special recognitions and more. Have something you’d like us to include? For consideration, please email no less than 500 words about the event, along with photos that include caption information, a phone number and a website address to editor@bocaratonobserver.com. Please write “Around Town� in the subject line, and note that submissions will be edited for clarity and length. Photos become the property of The Boca Raton Observer. SEPTEMBER 2014

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happenings around town

HAVING A BALL Chris Evert/Raymond James Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic Anniversary Event Set he Chris Evert/Raymond James Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic will celebrate its silver anniversary during this year’s starstudded annual event, scheduled to take place on November 21-23. The weekend will include a Tennis Pro-Am and Classic Cocktail Reception at the Boca Raton Resort & Club on Friday, followed by Pro-Celebrity Tennis sessions at the Delray Beach Stadium & Tennis Center on Saturday and Sunday. The annual Charity Gala will take place on Saturday night at the Boca Raton Resort & Club. This year will be particularly special as South Florida philanthropist Chris Evert enters her 25th anniversary hosting the event, which has raised $21 million to help children through Chris Evert Charities and

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the Ounce of Prevention Fund of Florida. The public-private partnership blends state and private dollars and invests them in innovative, community-based programs that give Florida children a chance to live free from the ravages of drug abuse and neglect. The charity has also funded

This year will be particularly special as South Florida philanthropist Chris Evert enters her 25th anniversary hosting the event, which has raised $21 million to help combat drug abuse and child neglect through Chris Evert Charities and the Ounce of Prevention Fund of Florida. 38 college scholarships. Longtime partners Raymond James Financial and Broward Health Chris Evert Children’s Hospital continue to support Evert’s charity through the tennis event.

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

Title sponsor Raymond James is a Florida-based financial services company, while the Children’s Hospital is a family-centered facility providing care for newborns, neonates, children and youth.

It’s always a glamorous affair, with Evert enlisting help from her celebrity friends. Last year’s headliners included “Scandal” actor Scott Foley, “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” actress Elisabeth Shue, comedian Jon Lovitz and musician Gavin Rossdale. Others have included Tennis Hall of Famer Martina Navratilova, President George H. W. Bush, Venus and Serena Williams, Joe Torre, Matt Lauer, Chevy Chase and Jimmy Fallon. Sponsors include Raymond James Financial, Broward Health Chris Evert Children’s Hospital, City of Delray Beach, Boca Raton Resort & Club, Shopify, All On Stage Productions, Mike Sipe Entertainment, Ruth’s Chris Steak House Boca Raton, Boca Raton Marriott, Rolex, Clear Channel Radio, The Seagate Hotel & Spa, Wyndham Hotel Boca Raton, The Boca Raton Observer and more. O For more information, call 561-3942400 or visit chrisevert.org.



happenings around town

ABSOLUTE MAKEOVER REFINISH YOUR OLD PATIO FURNITURE TRANSFORM YOUR OUTDOORS POWDER COATING • SANDBLASTING LARGE SELECTION OF METAL FINISHES CUSTOM FABRIC CUSHIONS SLINGING • STRAPPING

BEFORE

AFTER

GRAND PRIZE

Go Pink Luncheon To Auction Fashion Week Experience With Donna Karan And Saks Fifth Ave ocal fashionistas will not want to miss this year’s 11th Annual Go Pink Luncheon on October 24 at the Boca Raton Resort & Club. During the event, a live auction will offer a sensational prize: A once-in-a-lifetime New York Fashion Week experience with Donna Karan and Saks Fifth Avenue. The prize package includes an outfit of the winner’s choosing from the Donna Karan Resort 2014/2015 Collection; two tickets to Karan’s Fall 2015 Runway Show during February Fashion Week in New York; a pre-show lunch; makeovers at Saks Fifth Avenue and a meet-and-greet with Karan after the show. Also included: A private tour of Karan’s boutique on Madison Avenue; dinner for two at Tutto II Giorno in Tribeca, owned by Karan’s daughter, restaurateur Gabby Karan De Felice; a backstage VIP Tour of the Metropolitan Opera; two nights at the luxurious Surrey Hotel and more.

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The prize package includes an outfit of the winner’s choosing from the Donna Karan Resort 2014/2015 Collection, two tickets to Karan’s Fall 2015 Runway Show during February Fashion Week in New York, a pre-show lunch with makeovers at Saks Fifth Avenue and more. Donna Karan gown

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Fashion enthusiasts will also delight in hearing this year’s keynote speaker, style expert Stacy London. Passionate about helping women with cancer regain their confidence, London works with the American Cancer Society’s “Look Good Feel Better” program for breast cancer patients. She also supports the Triple Negative Breast Cancer Foundation, providing makeovers for double mastectomy survivors. The former host of TLC’s popular show “What Not to Wear” has decades of experience in fashion styling for Vogue and Mademoiselle, has worked with celebrities such as Katie Holmes and Kate Winslet, and has consulted for designers Vivienne Tam and Rebecca Taylor. Along with her role on the “Today” show, she’s appeared on “Access Hollywood” and CNN. Her latest book, “The Truth About Style” is a New York Times best-seller and she’s a contributor to People, The New York Times and other publications. The luncheon will also feature a Mercedes-Benz of Delray Pink Daisy Pick Raffle Wall with hundreds of amazing prizes. All proceeds from the event will benefit breast cancer programs at Boca Raton Regional Hospital’s Christine E. Lynn Women’s Health & Wellness Institute. O For more information, call 561-955-4142 or visit brrh.com.

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th

4 Annual In My

SHOES Luncheon benefiting the new

JAFCO Children’s Ability Center providing family enrichment resources and respite care to children with developmental disabilities

Friday, September 12, 2014 Boca West Country Club 20583 Boca West Drive, Boca Raton, FL 33434

9:30 am Boutique / 11:30 am Luncheon & Program Featuring Keynote Speaker: Steph Hammerman Co-Chairs Kim Fetterman ● Lori Konsker Stacey Austein ● Jenn Betesh Honorary Chair: Lori Solodkin

$75 per person Media Sponsor

For more information contact Gail Marlow, JAFCO Development Officer at 954-315-8698

Register online at www.jafco.org/events by August 28th Jewish Adoption and Family Care Options (JAFCO) is a non-profit organization, Federal I.D. # 45-4903635


happenings around town

STUDENTS HELPING STUDENTS Spanish River DECA Adopts Sandpiper Shores Elementary For Community Service Project he Spanish River Community High School chapter of DECA, an association of high school and college students interested in entrepreneurship, has adopted Sandpiper Shores Elementary School as this year’s primary community service project. Spanish River DECA’s commitment to Sandpiper Shores is multifaceted and last month included presenting teachers with care packages that contained reams of paper, dry erase markers, Post-it notes, and other school supplies. Additionally, members greeted students and teachers as they returned to the classroom as part of a “back to school is fun” project. This included free back-to-school haircuts, a uniform exchange, face painters, a school supply wheel with free prizes and more. The project featured generous contributions from Golden & Cowan, P.A., Sun Trust Bank, David A. Carter, P.A. and Statler Orthodontics. Spanish River DECA will continue to solicit contributions from the community to help the school. For example, Sandpiper Shores is

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planning to develop a dedicated ASD sensory room for students on the autism spectrum and DECA members will use the donations to decorate and supply the room with learning materials. Throughout the school year, Spanish River DECA students will provide more than 2,000 hours of after-school tutoring and mentoring on subjects such as financial literacy and entrepreneurship. They also will help students with homework to improve their reading and math skills. The Spanish River DECA Community Service Project is called “Sharing our Love for Learning,” and is chaired by students Lauren Rosenthal, Lauren Uzsinay and Bryanna Wilbor. Ultimately, their success will not be measured in dollars raised, school supplies collected or hours volunteered. Rather, success will come in the form of student appreciation and in presenting positive role models for the younger kids. Spanish River’s

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IN THE SPIRIT OF OBON

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Bryanna Wilbor, Dr. Jennifer Statler, Lauren Uzsinay and Lauren Rosenthal

DECA chapter is the third-largest in the world with a membership of 970; this includes 560 students and 410 professional and alumni members. Although Sandpiper Shores is its primary community service focus for the year, the chapter also will support many other local and national charities through canned food, toy and cash collections, and the donation of thousands of volunteer hours. O For more information, visit spanishriverdeca.com.


1811 NW 20th St., Miami


happenings around town

HAIR LOSS Alopecia Chemo/ Radiation Permanent Hair Loss Men, Women and Children

NON-SURGICAL HAIR REPLACEMENT SYSTEMS WIGS NOW OFFERING HAIR EXTENSIONS

HELP IS HERE In My Shoes Luncheon To Benefit JAFCO Children’s Ability Center

AFCO (Jewish Adoption and Foster Care Options) will host its fourth annual In My Shoes Luncheon on September 12 at Boca West Country Club. The luncheon honors devoted families raising children with developmental disabilities. All proceeds will benefit the new JAFCO Children’s Ability Center in Sunrise, which offers support, therapy, child enrichment and respite care to families and kids with developmental disabilities. The event’s chairs are Jenn Betesh, Stacey Austein, Lori Konsker and Kim Fetterman. They’ve been involved since the start, when JAFCO approached Betesh and Austein during a parent support group for kids with developmental disabilities. They created the event so that the community could understand what it was like to be “in the shoes” of someone raising these children. And so the luncheon became the fundraising mechanism for JAFCO Children’s Ability Center.

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We at JAFCO are amazed and inspired by the families who are raising children with special needs. We want to make sure they know they’re not alone and that we’re here to help them.

– Linda Sachs, developmental disabilities program coordinator

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Fast-forward four years and the (Bottom Row) Jill Kravitz, Laina Albert, new 43,000-square-foot facility is Lori Solodkin, Kim Fetterman, Lisa Pawliger and Jenn Betesh (Top Row) a reality. The JAFCO Children’s Stacey Austein, Susan Hyman, Jodi Bank, Ability Center accommodates hun- Leslie Greene, Nancy San Filippo and Kim Marie Salandra. Not pictured: Lori Konsker dreds of children per year, offering families a beautiful, clean, fun place where their kids can be safe and feel they belong. Services include assessment; enhanced case management and referral; day/weekend and extended respite care; social skills training; physical, occupational, speech and applied behavior analysis (ABA) therapy and music, pet and art therapy. Last week was Betesh’s first time at the new center with her son Ryan, who was diagnosed with autism at 3 years old. He’s now 8, and up to this point she’s never left him alone with anyone but his grandparents. The center will provide much-needed respite for the family. “We at JAFCO are amazed and inspired by the families who are raising children with special needs,” said Linda Sachs, developmental disabilities program coordinator. “We recognize this is an overwhelming and challenging journey they face. We want to make sure they know they’re not alone and that we’re here to help them.” O For more information, call 954-315-8698 or visit jafco.org.

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Season Kickoff AS WE KICK OFF SEASON IN BOCA, The Boca Raton Observer brings out the foodie in all of us. As part of our culinary celebration, our annual Food & Wine Issue will feature full-page profiles of restaurateurs, owners, maître d´s, managers and hosts of our area’s greatest restaurants. If you want to reach more than 175,000 readers by direct mail in the Boca Raton/ Delray Beach area, this is the place to showcase your restaurant. Simply call us for pricing, and a professional writer will contact you to arrange an interview and complete your advertorial – all you’ll need to do is provide a 6-by-9 photograph (300 dpi resolution) to be included in this exciting section! Call now for pricing and to reserve your space.

THE FOOD & WINE ISSUE COMING OCTOBER 2014

SPACE CLOSING: SEPTEMBER 3, 2014 For information, please contact Sales at 561.982.8960 or sales@bocaratonobserver.com FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK

JOIN THE “BOCA RATON OBSERVER MAGAZINE” PAGE


happenings

09.2014

calendar

[concerts

]

sporting events lectures art exhibits plays and so much more

SEPTEMBER 27 Country superstar Luke Bryan grew up humbly as the son of a peanut farmer in Leesburg, Ga. His parents noticed his musical talents early and when he was 14 bought him his first guitar. After high school Bryan’s plans for pursuing a Nashville career were sidelined when his brother died in a car accident. Instead, he stayed home to help with the family business, enrolled in Georgia Southern University and performed in local clubs. In September 2011, Bryan finally made it to Nashville. It took him just two months to land a songwriting deal, and eventually a recording contract with A&R Records. He’s since released five successful albums, including his two latest, Crash My Party and Spring Break 6…Like We Ain’t Ever. The married father of two this year won Billboard Magazine Awards’ Top Country Album and Top Country Artist honors. Check out his 7 p.m. show at Cruzan Amphitheatre, where Lee Brice and Cole Swindell will also perform.

SEPTEMBER 2014

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Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts of Miami-Dade County 1300 Biscayne Blvd., Miami, 305-949-6722; arshtcenter.org SEPTEMBER 20-21 “Siudy Between Worlds” Show times vary. SEPTEMBER 30 “I Love Lucy Live on Stage” Show begins at 8 p.m.

AmericanAirlines Arena 601 Biscayne Blvd., Miami, 786-777-1000; aaarena.com SEPTEMBER 14 Demi Lovato Show begins at 7 p.m. 116

CLASSIC ROCKERS: Foreigner performs at 8 p.m. on September 27 at Hard Rock Live BELOW: The “Beards ‘N Beck Tour” with ZZ Top and Jeff Beck plays Cruzan Amphitheatre on September 9 at 7 p.m.

AutoNation IMAX Theater

Coral Springs Center for the Arts

Museum of Discovery and Science, 401 S.W. Second St., Fort Lauderdale, 954-467-6637; mods.org

2855 Coral Springs Drive, Coral Springs, 954-3445999; coralspringscenterforthearts.com

SEPTEMBER 1-30 “Journey to the South Pacific”—An IMAX 3D Experience Show times vary.

SEPTEMBER 5 “The Wiggles! Ready, Steady, Wiggle Tour!” Show begins at 6:30 p.m.

BB&T Center

Cruzan Amphitheatre

One Panther Parkway, Sunrise, 954-835-7469; thebbtcenter.com

601-7 Sansbury’s Way, West Palm Beach; 561-795-8883; cruzanamphitheatre.net

SEPTEMBER 18-21 Disney on Ice: “Worlds of Fantasy” Show times vary.

SEPTEMBER 9 ZZ Top and Jeff Beck “Beards ‘N Beck Tour” Show begins at 7 p.m.

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

SEPTEMBER 13 Rascal Flatts, Sheryl Crow and Gloriana Show begins at 7:30 p.m. SEPTEMBER 20 Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers with Steve Winwood Show begins at 7:30 p.m. SEPTEMBER 27 Luke Bryan, Lee Brice and Cole Swindell Show begins at 7 p.m.

Hard Rock Live Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, One Seminole Way, Hollywood, 954-797-5555; hardrocklivehollywoodfl.com SEPTEMBER 6 Steve Martin and Martin Short Show begins at 8 p.m. SEPTEMBER 19 “Experience Hendrix Tour” Show begins at 8 p.m.


SEPTEMBER 27 Foreigner Show begins at 8 p.m.

happenings calendar

Miami Marlins Park 501 Marlins Way, Miami, 305-480-1300; marlins.com SEPTEMBER 1-3, 5-7, 18-21, 23-25 Marlins Baseball Game times vary.

Parker Playhouse 707 N.E. Eighth St., Fort Lauderdale, 954-462-0222; parkerplayhouse.com SEPTEMBER 20 Disney’s “Choo-Choo Soul with Genevieve!” Show begins at 2 p.m.

Sun Life Stadium 2269 N.W. 199th St., Miami Gardens, 305-943-8000;

sunlifestadium.com SEPTEMBER 7, 21 Miami Dolphins Football Game times vary.

The Broward Center for the Performing Arts 201 S.W. Fifth Ave., Fort Lauderdale, 954-462-0222; browardcenter.org SEPTEMBER 26-27 “The Orphan Train” Show begins at 8 p.m.

The Fillmore Miami Beach at The Jackie Gleason Theater 1700 Washington Ave., Miami Beach; 305-673-7300;

fillmoremb.com SEPTEMBER 9 Lily Allen Show begins at 8 p.m.

SWEET SOUND: Lily Allen performs at 8 p.m. on September 9 at The Fillmore Miami Beach at The Jackie Gleason Theater

SEPTEMBER 12 Erasure: “The Violet Flame Tour” Show begins at 8:30 p.m. SEPTEMBER 2014

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events SEPTEMBER 4 Dress Down. Meet Up. Stir Fry. Join this women’s networking event featuring fun, socializing and stir-fry cooking instruction presented by the Business & Professional Division of the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County. Takes place at Asia in Boca Raton. Starts at 6 p.m. For more information, call 561-852-3128 or visit jewishboca.org. SEPTEMBER 5 Parents’ Night Out This evening for kids ages 4-12 will include hands-on science experiments, crafts, exploration of the Science Center, a pizza dinner and planetarium show. Takes place at the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium in West Palm Beach. Starts at 6 p.m. For more information, call 561-832-2026 or visit sfsciencecenter.org. SEPTEMBER 6 Inaugural Countdown 2 Zero Adoption Event Save a life at this event held by local animal rescue organizations, where more than

600 dogs, cats, kittens, puppies, birds and furry companion animals will be available for adoption at discounted fees. Takes place at the Palm Beach County Convention Center in West Palm Beach. Starts at 10 a.m. For more information, call 561-685-2342. SEPTEMBER 8 Remembering 9/11: A NYC Firefighter’s Memoir Hear New York City firefighter Ron Parker discuss his book, “Chief, Pawns and Warriors,” which includes a recount of his unforgettable experience on September 11, 2001. Takes place at the Delray Beach Public Library. Starts at 2 p.m. For more information, call 561-266-9490 or visit delraylibrary.org. SEPTEMBER 11 “Human Trafficking: The Modern-Day Slave Trade” Check out a candid discussion with Katie Ford, founder of “Freedom for All” and former CEO of the Ford Modeling Agency. Presented by the Advisory Board of Florida Atlantic University’s Center for Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies. Takes place at City Fish Market in Boca Raton. Starts at 6:30

p.m. For more information, call 561-297-2337 or visit fau.edu. SEPTEMBER 11 The Masterpiece Event: “Butcher and Blues” The annual museum fundraiser will feature the works of photographer Clyde Butcher and pay homage to all things American in tribute to the September 11 tragedy. Takes place at Coral Springs Museum of Art. Starts at 6:30 p.m. For more information, call 954-3405000 or visit coralspringsmuseum.org. SEPTEMBER 12 Sushi & Stroll Take in the sound of taiko drums while strolling through tranquil gardens at sunset. Takes place at Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens in Delray Beach. Starts at 5:30 p.m. For more information, call 561-4950233 or visit morikami.org. SEPTEMBER 12 Glam-A-THON 2014 Lipstick Lounge Event Guests will be treated to cocktails, cosmetics, confections and couture during this fundraiser to benefit the Broward Health Foundation. Takes place at the Gallery of Amazing Things in Dania Beach. Starts at 8 p.m. For more information, call 954-299-5799 or visit glam-a-thon.com.

PURPLE HAZE: “Experience Hendrix Tour” comes to Hard Rock Live with an 8 p.m. show on September 19

SEPTEMBER 12 Fourth Annual JAFCO In My Shoes Luncheon This boutique and luncheon will benefit the JAFCO (Jewish Adoption and Foster Care Options) Children’s Ability Center and feature keynote speaker 118

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

Steph Hammerman. Takes place at Boca West Country Club in Boca Raton. Starts at 9:30 a.m. For more information, call 954-315-8698 or visit jafco.org.

Takes place at Gumbo Limbo Nature Center in Boca Raton. Starts at 8 a.m. For more information, call 561-544-8615 or visit gumbolimbo.org.

SEPTEMBER 14 PJ Library Kickoff Concert featuring Josh & The Jamtones Enjoy this family-friendly show which promises singing, dancing, clapping and fun for kids of all ages. Takes place at the Countess de Hoernle Theater at Spanish River High School in Boca Raton. Starts at 4 p.m. For more information, call 561-852-6080 or visit jewishboca.org.

SEPTEMBER 27 Fourth Annual Iron Chef Competition Attend a culinary reception, then join a team or simply watch as contestants compete for best table setting, centerpiece design, wine selection and four-course dinner. Presented by the Boca Raton Historical Society and Museum. Takes place at the Boca Raton Resort & Club. Starts at 6:30 p.m. For more information, call 561-395-6766 or visit brhs.auctionreg.org.

SEPTEMBER 16 Building Fantastic Futures Luncheon Chow down on good food for a great cause during this event presented by the Museum of Discovery and Science’s auxiliary organization, Friends of MODS, to benefit the museum’s internship programs. Takes place at the Sonesta Fort Lauderdale. Starts at 11:30 a.m. For more information, call 954-713-0904 or visit modsevents.org. SEPTEMBER 19 2014 SOS Spirit of Home Awards Luncheon Take part in this luncheon to honor four outstanding supporters of SOS Children’s Villages of Florida. Takes place at Boca West Country Club in Boca Raton. Starts at 11 a.m. For more information, call 954-420-5030 or visit sosflorida.com. SEPTEMBER 20 Gumbo Limbo Nature Center International Coastal Cleanup Help the environment and earn community service hours during this beach and mangrove clean-up effort.

SEPTEMBER 27 First Responder Team Challenge Event Watch local firefighters, police officers, military members and EMTs compete in a series of fitness challenges to raise awareness for Florida’s foster children. Benefits Place of Hope at the Haven. Takes place at CrossFit Dimensions in Delray Beach. Starts at 8 a.m. For more information, call 561-483-0962 or visit hopeatthehaven.org. SEPTEMBER 28 South Florida Bridal Show and Expo Meet deejays. photographers, makeup artists, florists and other wedding venders; shop for favors, tuxedos, gifts and accessories; check out an elegant bridal fashion show and sample delicious wedding cakes. Takes place at the Mt. Carmel Banquet Hall at St. Jude Catholic Church in Boca Raton. Starts at 1 p.m. For more information, call 561-3141052 or visit mtcarmelbanquethall.com. O


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SEPTEMBER 2014

119


happenings flash

MADISONS NEW YORK GRILL & BAR VIP TASTING Guests mixed and mingled, and enjoyed refreshments and light bites during a private VIP tasting at Madisons New York Grill & Bar in Boca Raton. The eatery, which plans to open a Pompano Beach location this year, specializes in homemade cuisine inspired by the Big Apple.

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1 George Andrianopoulos, Warren Ardoff and Steve Tsatas 2 Dr. Gregory & Laina Albert and Stu & Jill Seigel 3 Lora Tagliarina and Marc Schlossberg 4 Elliot Fisch and Eileen Fields 5 George Traber

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Visit Flash Zone at bocaratonobserver.com for more event photos



Photos by Janis Bucher

happenings flash

ROTARY CLUB HONOR YOUR DOCTOR LUNCHEON More than 240 guests attended the 16th annual luncheon at Broken Sound Club in Boca Raton, where nominated physicians were honored and Dr. Theodore Raptis was named the Doctor of Distinction. The event was presented by the Rotary Club of Downtown Boca Raton.

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1 Jerry Fedele, Mitch Feldman, Saul Epstein and Warren Orlando 2 Bradley Robinson, Joan Wargo, Pat Thomas and Steven Freeland 3 Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie, Dr. Ron Rubin, former Boca Raton Mayor Susan Whelchel and Robin Trompeter 4 Alan Kaye, Helen Babione, and Dr. Theodore Raptis 5 Alan Kaye, Bill Cappeller, Gloria Hosh, Dr. Ron Rubin, Robin Trompeter and Jon Kaye

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Visit Flash Zone at bocaratonobserver.com for more event photos


Photos by Omar Vega

happenings flash

10TH ANNUAL IRIE WEEKEND

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The stars were out for DJ Irie’s three-day party in Miami Beach, which included a youth workshop, celebrity golf and bowling tournaments, a barbecue and the host’s big birthday bash. The event benefited the Irie Foundation, which empowers South Florida’s at-risk youth. 1 Kevin Dillon 2 DJ Irie and Dwyane Wade 3 Kenny Hamilton, Cedric Gervais, DJ Irie and Terrence Jenkins 4 DJ Irie, Chuy Bravo and Chris Bosh 5 Ma$e, Dascha Polanco and DJ Irie 6 Jamie Foxx, DJ Irie and Dwyane Wade

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Visit Flash Zone at bocaratonobserver.com for more event photos

SEPTEMBER 2014

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happenings

now&noteworthy Boca Raton Regional Hospital Welcomes First Medical Residents Boca Raton Regional Hospital welcomed 30 medical residents in internal medicine from Florida Atlantic University’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine. BRRH is serving as the primary teaching site for the college’s internal medicine residency program and is part of a Graduate Medical Consortium supporting FAU residency programs. This residency is the first university-sponsored program for FAU’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine and the first post-graduate training program at BRRH. It completes the hospital’s transformation from a capable community facility into a tertiary academic medical center. “We are most proud to be playing such a substantive role in this development for Florida Atlantic University, the city of Boca Raton and our region,” said Charles Posternack, M.D., chief medical officer at BRRH and associate dean for Academic Affairs at the Schmidt College of Medicine. “It is also a long-awaited and important milestone in the history of our hospital.” Boca Raton Regional Hospital, 800 Meadows Road, Boca Raton, 561-955-3276; brrh.com.

Boca Fertility Open House Celebration Boca Fertility is celebrating their new office and state-of-the-art laboratory with an open house on September 16 at 5 p.m. Guests are welcome to tour their new center. “We are very excited to be showcasing our new office and our new laboratory to the surrounding community,” says Dr. Moshe R. Peress, Boca Fertility’s medical director. “We want people to know we’ve been offering effective treatments to countless people since 1982 and our advanced reproductive technology at Boca Fertility is second to none and has achieved great success.” Please RSVP to frontdesk@bocafertility.com or call the office. Boca Fertility, 875 Meadows Road, Suite 334, Boca Raton, 561368-5500; bocafertility.com.

Moshe R. Peress, M.D.

FAU’s new medical residents

Foot Rest Inc. Asian Foot Relaxation Is Now Open In Boca Greens Plaza Whether you’re young, old, male or female, you won’t want to miss out on the pure bliss a 30- to 60-minute foot relaxation session provides. Starting with a warm herbal foot bath, their tranquil environment will immediately put you at ease and leave you feeling completely refreshed and walking on air. Men, women and children are welcome. Foot Rest Inc., Boca Greens Plaza, 19635 State Road 7, Bay 35, Boca Raton, 561-923-9785.

International Premium Real Estate Firm Engel & Völkers Makes Delray Beach/ Boca Raton Debut Engel & Völkers announced the opening of its offices in Delray Beach and East and Central Boca Raton. The three offices will mark the luxury brand’s continued expansion throughout the United States and around the world. The designated broker is Claire Collins, a London native raised in the Principality of Monaco who has lived in Boca Raton since 1987. Collins joins Engel & Völkers after years of representing and marketing some of the finest new residential construction

developments in South Florida and selling many elegant residential properties. “Engel & Völkers brings the highest standards of real estate service to the most sought-after markets throughout the world,” said Anthony Hitt, CEO of Engel & Völkers North America. “We are excited to introduce our distinctive brand in Boca Raton and Delray Beach and to debut with the leadership of Rick Felberbaum, a seasoned real estate attorney and community leader.” Engel & Völkers, 900 East Atlantic Avenue, Delray Beach; 310 East Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton; 4855 Technology Way, Suite 550, Boca Raton, 561-699-3450; bocaratoncentral.evusa.com.

Claire Collins

Promotion


NOW YOU CAN BE PART OF

THE BOCA RATON OBSERVER!

We invite you to submit photography for FLASH ZONE, our online party central. Simply visit bocaratonobserver.com and click on the FLASHZONE icon to view thousands of society photographs. THE DETAILS: Send high-res images (300 dpi or larger in jpeg format) to FlashZone@bocaratonobserver.com. For large files we encourage the use of hightail.com. You can also submit via CD-Rom by mail to Flash Zone, The Boca Raton Observer, 950 Peninsula Corporate Circle, Suite 1020, Boca Raton, FL 33487.

Don’t forget to include a 50-word event description, including the name of the event, charity and venue, plus the date and photographer’s name.

SEPTEMBER 2014

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happenings at home

SUBDIVISION

ADDRESS

BUYER

SELLER

SALE PRICE

PRIOR SALE PRICE

PRIOR SALE DATE

09-DEC-11

200 EAST CONDOMINIUM

200 E PALMETTO PARK RD 416

EHLERS CAROLYN L

BLOOM DAVID

$1,357,000

$1,113,153

200 EAST CONDOMINIUM

200 E PALMETTO PARK RD 515

WOLKOFF EUGENE H

CLARK KATHLEEN M

$1,200,000

$950,000

200 EAST CONDOMINIUM

200 E PALMETTO PARK RD 803

KLINGHOFFER JASON A

KRAMER JOAN S INDIV TRUSTEE

ADDISON RESERVE

7396 SARIMENTO PL

WEILLER PETER J

IGIEL ROBERT E

ADDISON RESERVE

7865 PALENCIA WAY

SIRIANI DIANE A

BECKER BEVERLY A

AZURA

6360 BELLAMALFI ST

NARWANI ANAND V

TOLL FL X LIMITED PARTNERSHIP

AZURA

17326 PAVAROSO ST

SMITH NEIL A

TOLL FL X LIMITED PARTNERSHIP

$854,537

$5,100,000

05-FEB-10

BOCA BAY COLONY

789 NE 74TH ST

HILL JILL ROSENGARD

SALEM ADAM

$1,975,000

$1,221,102

30-MAR-09

BOCA FALLS

21624 MARIGOT DR

YUDELL SHERI

GAZERRO CARMINE M

$602,400

$321,900

01-APR-97

BOCA GOLF & TENNIS CLUB

3862 CANDLEWOOD CT

CREGAN CAROL S

CAMPANELLA CHARLES R

$449,000

$366,000

12-APR-04

BOCA POINTE CC - PALOMAR

22550 ESPLANADA DR

GIANNONE JANET M

SCOTTI JANET

$280,000

17-OCT-01

BOCA POINTE CC - VALENCIA

7619 MIRABELLA DR

MCDONALD SHANNON QUINN

WALDMAN BURTON

$468,000

14-JUN-05

BOCA RATON POR LA MAR

799 LAKE DR

DOWNES SEAN

GIACHETTI JULIE ANN INDIV TRUSTEE

$672,500

BOCA WEST CC - HAMLET

7499 BONDSBERRY CT

GLOVSKY C JOEL

LONDON PHILIP INDIV TRUSTEE

$377,000

BROKEN SOUND CC

2201 NW 57TH ST

MICALLEF SARAH

U S BANK NATIONAL ASSOC TRUSTEE

$467,500

$221,300

23-SEP-13

LEXINGTON ESTATES

22165 BRADDOCK PL

COSTA MARCO

FREEMAN LUKE

$417,000

$409,000

29-JUN-07

MIZNER COUNTRY CLUB

16041 BRIER CREEK DR

LIEBERMAN JOSEPH R

BRIJAKA HOLDINGS LLC

$530,000

$1,050,000

28-JUN-06

ROYAL PALM YACHT & COUNTRY CLUB

2295 E SILVER PALM RD

BUCHANAN HILARY

PEPOS PHILIPPE

$900,000

$830,000

ROYAL PALM YACHT & COUNTRY CLUB

484 S MAYA PALM DR

CACIOPPO JAMES

EHLERS CAROLYN L

ROYAL PALM YACHT & COUNTRY CLUB

1251 THATCH PALM DR

OCTAVIO KATHLEEN

YACONA MARY C INDIV TRUSTEE

$962,500 $1,050,000

07-MAY-10 31-MAR-12

$858,854

17-AUG-00

$825,000

$780,000

30-NOV-05

$1,141,423

$5,100,000

05-FEB-10

$505,000

18-DEC-12 22-APR-10

23-JAN-08

$4,700,000

01-MAY-94

$1,130,000

08-JUL-03

Source: Palm Beach County Property Appraiser

Claire, Coldwell Banker’s

Call

“It was a true pleasure working with Claire and her team to buy a home for my daughter and her children. They really went above and beyond to find us the right home at the right price. They are professional, organized and proactive. There is always someone to speak to and ready to help whenever needed. I will definitely use Claire and the Sheres Realty team for all of my real estate needs in the future.” Ray Mark, Clubside, Woodfield Country Club

“Claire Sheres is fabulous, in fact outstanding! She is professional & knows her stuff. She priced our home right, negotiated on our behalf and sold it quickly. This was the 2nd time I used Claire to sell a home & I recommend her to everyone! When I think real estate, I think Claire Sheres.” Michelle Hecht, Boca Raton

“Working with Claire Sheres and her team has been a wonderful experience. They were all very professional, courteous and responsive to any questions I had pertaining to the sale of my property. The transaction was unbelievably smooth. I highly recommend Claire Sheres and her excellent team for any of your real estate needs.”

Claire Sheres Arlene Callender, Lauderhill, FL

Realtor®, GRI, e-PRO, CNS International President’s Premier International Legends Society

561-414-4146 Claire@SheresRealty.com ClaireSheresRealtor.com


happenings at home

SUBDIVISION

ADDRESS

BUYER

SELLER

SALE PRICE

PRIOR SALE PRICE

$675,000

PRIOR SALE DATE

SEASONS OF BOCA RATON

3178 NW 61ST ST

SCHNIERER SCOTT R

OPLEV-PEDERSEN NIELS ARDEN

$745,000

SEASONS OF BOCA RATON

6582 NW 33RD AVE

CARTY DEVIN C

MCGUIRE DANIEL EISENMAN

$682,500

30-JUN-10

ST. ANDREWS COUNTRY CLUB

7115 AYRSHIRE LN

GOTTSEGEN GREGG

GRAFF STUART

$1,150,000

$1,100,000

01-SEP-86

ST. ANDREWS COUNTRY CLUB

7106 AYRSHIRE LN

FLORIDO HUGO JR

RAUTENBERG LEE

$1,370,000

$100

01-OCT-92

ST. ANDREWS COUNTRY CLUB

7256 BALLANTRAE CT

GORDON DAVID B

WEINBERG DANAE TRUSTEE

$700,000

23-JAN-12

STONEBRIDGE COUNTRY CLUB

17798 HEATHER RIDGE LN

ABEL JERRY

SIMS LOTTIE INDIV TRUSTEE

$350,000

01-MAR-92

THE ESTATES

727 CORDOVA DR

CROYLE ANDREA

SWIERCZEWSKI JOSEPH

$545,000

$176,000

01-JUN-87

THE ESTATES

783 MALAGA DR

DORSI PASQUALE J

FRATTA JOHN J

$730,000

$222,000

17-DEC-98

THE OAKS - FOX HILL ESTATES

17542 CIRCLE POND CT

HOFFMAN LEE

US BANK NATIONAL ASSOC TRUSTEE

$685,000

$551,300

18-JUN-13

THE SHORES - AMBER BAY

18927 RED CORAL WAY

KLEIN KEVIN S

DEAL INVESTMENTS LLC

$300,000

$215,000

30-SEP-13

THE VINEYARDS

9792 VINEYARD CT

DE BEER PETER

MCELWAIN MORGAN

$376,000

$365,650

10-DEC-08

THORNHILL ESTATES

7387 LONDON LN

MAYER DANIEL

ANTINE DAVID

$700,000

$395,000

21-JUN-04

TIMBERCREEK

2907 NW 24TH WAY

SAINT JAMES CORP

GARGANO RONALD A

$300,000

$250,000

17-MAY-01

TIMBERCREEK

2366 NW 32ND ST

LANFORD DEBORAH L

CORCORAN KAREN

$370,000

$360,000

10-SEP-04

TIMBERCREEK NORTH

3447 PINE HAVEN CIR

SCHELLHASE KATHERINE

NORTH WILLIAM KNOX

$491,000

$340,000

15-JAN-03

TIMBERCREEK NORTH

2298 NW 35TH ST

CARNEY JANEL R

ASTORIA FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOC

$435,000

$398,600

16-DEC-13

TOWNSEND PLACE CONDOMINIUM

500 SE MIZNER BLVD A907

ARCHER JAMES

SCARFONE MELISSA

TROPIC ISLE

960 GARDENIA DR

GRUNDHOEFER DAVA

OWCAR GARY J

$1,220,000

$775,000

15-MAY-00

WALKER’S ISLE

899 NE 78TH ST

ROTHMAN JODI S

RICE GARY H

$1,400,000

$1,300,000

01-DEC-86

WOODFIELD CC - PRINCETON ESTATES

3643 NW 52ND ST

TULIN STANLEY

LIPMAN KENNETH W

$4,700,000

$1,250,000

01-MAR-92

29-MAR-04

$650,000

20-JAN-03

Source: Palm Beach County Property Appraiser

Southeast Florida !

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E VIEWS LAK

Landings At Woodfield CC $1,348,888 Scan for New 1-click MLS search

EFRONT LAK

Carlton Place At Woodfield CC $2,995,000

AKE VIEWS LF/L GO

Landings At Woodfield CC $1,299,999

+ LIV SQ 8000

FT

Devon Place At Woodfield CC $2,749,900

E VIEW LAK

The Oaks At Boca Raton $1,199,999

E VIEWS LAK

The Oaks At Boca Raton $1,699,000

SS ACT GLA IMP

Azura $969,000

Claire Sheres

TWO NAMES YOU CAN TRUST LOCALLY KNOWN. GLOBALLY CONNECTED.

EFRONT LAK

The Oaks At Boca Raton $1,599,000

NER LOT COR

Hamptons At Woodfield CC $749,000


givingback

[charity never goes out of style]

BUSINESS CLASS Junior Achievement Prepares Kids For The Global Marketplace BY EMILY J. MINOR here are all kinds of satisfying jobs out there that involve giving back to the community and its children. But stay away from Anne Coughlin’s position as vice president of operations for the Junior Achieve-

T

Telephone & Telegraph.) Today, there are 122 chapters across the country, including two here. One is Coughlin’s chapter, which reaches from Boynton Beach to Fort Pierce. The other is the Junior Achievement of South Florida,

WORKING THE ROOM: JA volunteers work on a project with local elementary school students

ment of the Palm Beaches & Treasure Coast. After six years with JA, she’s smitten. “I always thought that to turn a child’s thinking around, it would take a lot of effort,” Coughlin says. “From what I’ve learned, sometimes it’s just the way you say something that sparks something in that child.” And sometimes that “something” is life-changing. Most of us have heard of Junior Achievement, maybe even from our high school days. But what is it? What do they do? And how have they managed to stay around for so long? The first chapter was started in 1919 by two businessmen and a politician. (One of the business guys was Theodore Vail, president of American 128

which is based in Coconut Creek and works with students in southern Palm Beach County. Junior Achievement works largely like this, regardless of home of-

of life, whether it’s saving for a new video game or a college education. To accomplish this, each JA volunteer is trained for a specific age group and lesson. After all, you don’t teach

I always thought that to turn a child’s thinking around, it would take a lot of effort. From what I’ve learned, sometimes it’s just the way you say something that sparks something in that child.

– Anne Coughlin, vice president of operations, Junior Achievement of the Palm Beaches & Treasure Coast

fice location: Trained JA volunteers work with school children ages kindergarten through high school “to inspire and prepare young people to succeed in a global economy.” In other words, they teach kids that managing money is a necessity

T H E B O C A R AT O N O B S E R V E R

fifth-graders how to manage a checking account. But you might show those students the complexities of running a business through play. “We have amazing volunteers and those volunteers demonstrate to these children that there are peo-

ple in their community who truly care,” Coughlin says. Indeed, the JA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that runs with the generosity of its volunteers and Coughlin admits they’re always looking for new devotees. Want to help? Volunteering is the best way to do that, she says. They also survive through grants and the generosity—be it expertise or time—from local businesses. Coughlin’s chapter reaches about 20,000 students a year. The South Florida chapter reaches about twice that many students. “I’ve seen first-hand how it can make an impact,” Coughlin says. “And sometimes it can help an entire family.” O For more information about Junior Achievement, call the Palm Beach & Treasure Coast chapter at 561-2429468, the South Florida chapter at 954-979-7100 or visit ja.org.



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www.JoeyAccardiSubaru.com


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