9/27 BEAT: 80’S KING CRIMSON WITH ADRIAN BELEW, TONY LEVIN, STEVE VAI & DANNY CAREY
10/05 DANIEL HABIF: ASCENDER WORLD TOUR 2024
10/06 BACILOS: US TOUR
10/11 LUIS FONSI: 25 AÑOS TOUR
10/15 TESTAMENT / KREATOR
10/25 FELIPE ESPARZA: AT MY LEISURE WORLD TOUR
10/29 CITY & COLOUR
11/01 DANNY OCEAN
11/02 GREEICY: YELIANA
11/05 BABYMETAL WITH SCENE QUEEN
11/06 DAVID KUSHNER
11/07 MANUEL MEDRANO: EL CONCIERTO 11/08 RUSSELL PETERS: RELAX WORLD TOUR
11/14 O.A.R: FLORIDA TOUR ‘24
11/15 WHITNEY CUMMINGS: BIG BABY TOUR
11/17 DAN & PHIL LIVE: TERRIBLE INFLUENCE
11/20 LUKE HEMMINGS: NOSTALGIA FOR A TIME THAT NEVER EXISTED PART 2
11/22 RENE VACA
11/23 GIGGLY SQUAD PODCAST LIVE: CLUB GIGGLY *2 SHOWS*
11/30 BLESSD & RYAN CASTRO: ¡AY BENDITO! GHETTO TOUR
12/07 LEWIS BLACK: GOODBYE YELLER BRICK ROAD, THE FINAL TOUR!
12/18 MATT FRASER: UNDENIABLE PROOF OF LIFE AFTER DEATH
1/10/25 SARAH SILVERMAN: POSTMORTEM
1/25/25 JESSICA KIRSON
2/01/25 KANSAS
3/08/25 AN EVENING WITH LARRY THE CABLE GUY 8/31 THE PSYCHEDELIC FURS
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“KITTY,” PORTRAIT OF QUE AND CICERO’S CAT SERENA BY VICTOR BOKAS
SATURDAY AUGUST 31ST
BUCKETHEAD DOORS @7PM | SHOW @8PM
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6TH
WAIT WAIT STAND-UP TOUR WAIT WAIT... DON’T TELL ME! DOORS @7PM | SHOW @8PM
TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 10TH
BILMURI W/408 DOORS @7PM | SHOW @8PM
WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 11TH WEEEKLY DOORS @7PM | SHOW @8PM
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 14TH MICRO TDH DOORS @8PM | SHOW @9PM
SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 15TH SUECO DOORS @6:30PM | SHOW @7:30PM
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 19TH 49 WINCHESTER W/MATT KOZIOL DOORS @7PM | SHOW @8PM
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THURSDAY OCTOBER 3RD THE PRINCE EXPERIENCE DOORS @7PM | SHOW @8PM
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LEPROUS W/MONUMENTS AND FIGHT THE FIGHT DOORS @6PM | SHOW @7PM
SATURDAY OCTOBER 5TH STRFKR DOORS @7PM | SHOW @8PM
FRIDAY OCTOBER 11TH
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WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 16TH
THERESA CAPUTO DOORS @6:30PM | SHOW @7:30PM
¶ Where to learn about the 11 judicial candidates on Orange County’s Aug. 20 ballot
To the editor:
Most local judges’ races will be decided in the Aug. 20 primary. For voters in Orange County, 11 candidates are running for five positions. You never know when you might have to stand before a judge, but you could find yourself in that situation one day. Best to know the candidates before you vote!
How to judge the judges? Here’s a great opportunity: You can view the July 10 Hot Topics forum sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Orange County at League of Women Voters Orange County on YouTube and decide for yourself. Also, visit Vote411.org.
Forum moderators and Circuit Judges Leticia Marques and Reginald Whitehead told us that a good temperament and a strong work ethic are the most important qualities for judges. Judges need to have patience, and they should be able to manage their dockets, they said. Why? Because the people who show up in their courtrooms are often scared. They’ve never been in that situation before. A good judge knows how to handle them and the caseload.
Be sure to cast your ballot Aug. 20 in person, in early voting or vote by mail. If recent history
tells us anything, it’s that judges are important. After all, today’s local judges could be tomorrow’s appellate judges.
— Diana Smith Co-chair, Hot Topics Committee League of Women Voters of Orange County
¶ This should go without saying: Don’t lock your pets in a car or a storage space
Dear Editor:
Thank goodness authorities arrived in time to save 10 dogs who were reportedly locked inside a filthy storage unit in Pompano Beach with no food or drinkable water.
It should go without saying, but animals suffer and can die if they are locked in a car, storage unit, or any other unventilated space, or if they are left outside without adequate shade and water in the heat of summer.
Please never put your dog in a situation where they can suffer a seizure, coma, brain damage, organ failure, or death. Heatstroke can happen quickly and can be fatal in under an hour. And if you see or hear someone else’s dog suffering, call the police at once.
— Melissa Rae Sanger The PETA Foundation
‘NUTTY JUDGES’
BY CLAY JONES
Trump expects Florida’s abortion measure to pass, Brightline Florida workers seek to unionize, and other news you may have missed.
BY MCKENNA SCHUELER AND THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA
» Brightline Florida attendants seek to unionize in historic organizing effort
Just over 100 on-board attendants for Brightline Florida, including workers in Orlando, have begun the process of unionizing with the Transport Workers Union, an international labor union that represents more than 155,000 workers across the airline, railroad, transit and related sectors in the United States. It’s a historic effort by the workers in a state that is generally considered hostile to labor unions, and where less than 5 percent of the private sector workforce has union representation. According to the Transport Workers Union, a majority of the lead attendants and on-board attendants for Brightline’s Orlando-Miami line have signed cards in support of unionization, submitted to the National Mediation Board. Union president John Samuelsen says workers first began organizing themselves, before reaching out to the TWU about joining the union. Samuelsen noted “a really high amount of enthusiasm,” but added that there are concerns about retaliation from Brightline.
» Florida state officials seek crackdown on university courses containing ‘antiIsrael’ material
State officials in charge of Florida’s state university system are seeking to crack down on “antisemitic material and/or anti-Israel bias” in certain university courses, according to an email from the State University System chancellor obtained by Orlando Weekly. In an email sent to state university presidents last Friday, Chancellor Ray Rodrigues, a former Republican state legislator, laid out two directives for the state’s 12 university presidents. The first directive, eligible for “immediate action,” is to create a faculty committee to review certain course materials — including textbooks, online materials, and test banks — ahead of the fall semester for “either antisemitic material and/ or anti-Israel bias.” The second calls on university leaders to come up with a process for faculty on the committee to attest that they have indeed reviewed courses for such content. Courses that the directive aims to target include “courses on terrorism, Middle Eastern studies, religion, and government,” according to the email, which was sent by Rodrigues to university heads with the subject line “Follow up from Monday’s Call.” Such courses, Rodrigues explained, will be identified by conducting a keyword search on course descriptions and syllabi, per the suggestion of the state university system’s faculty representative, whom Rodrigues consulted. Rodrigues serves as the primary liaison between the Florida Board of Governors, the state Legislature, the executive branch and other state departments and agencies. The state’s public university system, governed by the state Board of Governors, is made up of 12 state universities with an enrollment of more than 400,000 students.
» Primary ballots cast topped 823,000 last week
More than 823,000 Floridians have cast ballots in the Aug. 20 primary elections, with Republicans slightly outdistancing Democrats. Data posted last Thursday on the state Division of Elections website showed that 789,637 ballots had been cast by mail, including 333,040 by Republicans, 328,588 by Democrats, 116,919 by unaffiliated voters and 11,090 by third-party voters. Also, the data showed that 34,194 ballots had been cast at early-voting sites, including 20,237 by Republicans, 11,201 by Democrats, 2,511 by unaffiliated voters and 245 by third-party voters. Early voting started last Monday in some counties and went statewide Saturday.
» Trump expects Florida’s abortion measure to pass
Former President Donald Trump expects Florida voters to back a November ballot proposal that would put abortion rights in the state Constitution, but he didn’t say how he will vote. Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, said last week he’ll hold a future news conference to announce his position on what will appear on the ballot as Amendment 4. “Florida does have a vote coming up on that, and I think probably the vote will go in a little more liberal way than people thought,” Trump said during a news conference at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach. The U.S. Supreme Court in 2022 overturned the decades-old Roe v. Wade decision that ensured abortion access. The proposed Florida constitutional amendment would need support of 60 percent of voters to pass. A poll released last week by the University of North Florida’s Public Opinion Research Lab found 69 percent of likely voters favored the amendment. The Floridians Protecting Freedom political committee started the ballot initiative last year after the Republican-controlled Legislature and Gov. Ron DeSantis approved a law that prevents women from having abortions after six weeks of pregnancy.
Romance, Wine & Chocolate
SEPTEMBER 20, 7 P.M. CHICKASAW BRANCH
Tickets are $25, including one signed copy of The Cottage on Pelican Bay, complimentary wine, and chocolate. To purchase tickets, visit ocls.info/rwc.
‘WE JUST ENDED THIS FARCE’
Florida’s historic adjunct union movement collapses with the advent of DeSantis’ new anti-union law
BY MCKENNA SCHUELER
Less than one year after Florida’s sweeping anti-union law fully took effect, all eight adjunct faculty unions at public colleges and universities in Florida have officially been decertified, according to state records, affecting roughly 8,400 adjunct professors altogether.
The new law, described by critics as “union busting,” was over a decade in the making, and has already caused tens of thousands of public employees to lose their union representation and union contracts. The adjunct faculty unions, all represented by the faculty arm of the Service Employees International Union, were formally decertified in late July.
“We knew the decertification was coming,” Teresa Greene, a longtime adjunct professor for Valencia College and early supporter of the union, told Orlando Weekly over text. “What can we say?”
Greene, a former professor in the psychology department, was a veteran educator at Valencia who rolled with the punches for years. In April, however, she admitted to Orlando Weekly she was on her way out. Greene, a short, lithe woman in her late 70s, had worked as adjunct faculty — a precarious, technically part-time position — at Valencia College since 2006. She recently moved to Maryland to be closer to her family.
For her, it was time to go. Greene plans on helping out with the grandkids up north, but she’s also considering taking up a remote teaching position for a Maryland college, where the political landscape is less hostile and, as Greene emphasized, “where there’s a union.”
Adjunct faculty at Valencia College in Orlando, including Greene, voted to unionize with the Florida Public Services Union in 2021. Greene and her colleague Bonnie Osgood were early leaders in the campaign to organize adjuncts, after struggling to make headway with the administration directly.
This major — and to some, unexpected — victory for the union came after a years-long battle with the college administration, which aggressively opposed their unionization campaign.
Former union staff who assisted adjuncts’ organizing drive told Orlando Weekly that Valencia had put up a uniquely difficult fight, demonstrating more resistance than they’d seen in any prior adjunct organizing campaign in Florida.
Adjunct faculty make up a majority of the total faculty at Valencia College, and were galvanized by issues such as low wages, a lack of job security, and a general sense of disrespect from their employer. Despite being highly educated, some earned just a couple of thousand dollars per course, if that, affecting not only their financial stability but also their ability to give their full attention to students.
A 2022 survey from the American Federation of Teachers found that more than a quarter of adjuncts they surveyed reported earning less than $26,500 annually, often cobbling together multiple courses at one or more institutions.
Greene asserted, however, “It’s not all about us, and getting paid and so on,” three years after their victory. “It really is about, you know, making Valencia a better place for us as well as the students.”
The college administration, however, remained resistant to the union after their victory, denying the union’s call during contract talks for benefits like sick leave, compensation for courses that are abruptly canceled before the start of the semester, and office space (a luxury that adjuncts are not afforded).
The college, and their expensive labor relations lawyers, dug their heels in and agreed only to a meager 4 percent raise for adjuncts in a contract negotiated last year— a pittance not even high enough to keep up with inflation.
“They’re just biding their time,” Greene told Orlando Weekly in April. “Until, you know, we [the union] are no more. And I think that’s basically their game plan.”
Last year, Greene’s union — and Florida’s labor movement broadly — saw its most crushing attack in decades. Senate Bill 256, described by its critics as union busting, plain and simple, was a Republican-backed dagger to Florida’s labor movement, disguised as a union reform bill.
The bill, in part, created a 60 percent threshold for the number of dues-paying members that public sector unions have to maintain to remain certified, or essentially valid, in the state’s eyes.
At the same time, the bill also made it harder for them to reach that threshold, by banning the practice of paying dues through a paycheck deduction — the most convenient way for members to do so.
Under Florida’s “right to work” policy, enabled through pressure applied by Southern racists during the Jim Crow era, workers cannot be forced to pay union dues, anyway, even if their job is covered by — and thus receives the benefits of — union representation.
Senate Bill 256 was first brought to the state Legislature over a decade ago in 2011, modeled after policy templates drawn up by the rightwing American Legislative Exchange Council. But it failed to pass. Then, in 2023, the bill was championed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and his allies in the state Legislature, and praised by anti-union think tanks and “union avoidance” experts following its passage.
Ultimately, the new law posed a challenge for adjuncts at Valencia and other unionized institutions, where membership numbers were very low. As of April 23, just 19 out of 1,449 adjunct faculty at Valencia — or 1.3 percent — paid union dues, according to union membership information obtained by Orlando Weekly through a records request.
At other unionized colleges and universities, adjunct union membership ranged from below 1 percent at Miami-Dade College — which employs over 3,000 adjunct faculty — to 21 percent at Broward College, which has an adjunct workforce one-fifth the size.
Priscilla LaPuente, an adjunct professor at Valencia who teaches international relations and politics, had noted a lack of energy among adjuncts after the election — faculty who were fatigued and often isolated from one another due to the remote nature of the job. She attributed low union membership in part to that, as well as the recent ban on payroll dues deduction, among other factors.
“It’s hard to connect face to face,” said LaPuente, who’s been teaching at Valencia for about five years, mostly online.
Many adjuncts, including herself, are also working one or more other jobs for additional income or for benefits like healthcare. Brian Gibbons, a former organizer for SEIU who worked on the adjunct organizing campaigns, told Orlando Weekly he felt the “biggest challenge” in organizing at the time was just “the material reality of the workers’ situation.”
“They were not guaranteed a job past the next four months, and their pay was so horrible that their situations were consistently
interrupted and consistently fluctuated,” said Gibbons, who today works as a civil rights attorney for CAIR (and emphasizes that his comments reflect his own personal beliefs, not that of his employer).
Greene, who sat with LaPuente on the union’s worker-led bargaining committee, also pointed to the college’s demoralizing treatment of adjuncts — a problem she said has done little to inspire a sense of camaraderie, amid faculty turnover and overall fatigue.
Some of the older faculty like herself, who receive income through Social Security and have access to Medicare for health insurance, can “afford to be there,” she said of the college, which boasts itself as an “affordable” option for its predominately Hispanic and Black student population. “Whereas, [with] some of the younger ones, they come and go, because they get discouraged.”
The fact that their union had such low membership — devastatingly below the 60 percent threshold now required — placed them at risk for state intervention. And the ramifications of that are now coming to light.
Altogether, over 80 public sector unions in Florida have been dissolved as a result of the new law so far, leaving over 63,000 public sector workers without union representation, and with union contracts their employers are no longer legally obligated to honor.
Under the new law, the dissolution of low-membership unions isn’t automatic. Unions that report below 60 percent membership can petition the state for a union election to recertify within 30 days of reporting membership numbers to the state, so long as they can gather signed cards from at least 30 percent of workers in support.
Dozens of unions across the state have already done so, including unions representing K-12 teachers and full-time higher-ed faculty and graduate assistants. “We have not and we do not intend on losing any local unions in the Florida Education Association,” Andrew Spar, president of the FEA — a statewide teachers union — told In These Times earlier this year.
But at Valencia, and in the case of all other adjunct unions, this did not happen, thereby leading to decertification. Staff for their union, affiliated with SEIU, did not respond to Orlando Weekly’s request for comment on the decertifications. LaPuente, one of the adjuncts, said she hasn’t heard from the union in recent days either.
So far, SEIU has filed petitions to recertify two dozen other unions they represent in the state — including unions representing city of Orlando employees, and even three unions of non-instructional employees at Hillsborough Community College, according to records. All so far are still waiting for election dates. Until then, workers are left in limbo as they
[continued on page 13]
[continued from page 11]
await their unions’ fate. Of the elections that have already occurred for other unions, workers in all so far have voted to keep their union intact, with only one exception.
“I think that’s the truly devastating part of the law, is that it puts every union, every union serving public employees in the state, into a fight for survival, instead of trying to fight to grow and build the movement,” said Gibbons, the former union organizer.
“Under those conditions, the best they can hope for is to survive.”
Not everyone’s been forced into survival mode. Police and firefighter unions, as in other states with similar policies on the books, were notably exempted from the new regulations, and have lobbied the state for other changes to make their members’ lives easier. Public safety unions are reliable supporters of the GOP, and thus often earn their political favor.
Some other non-exempted unions have sued the state over this exemption, arguing it’s discriminatory. But attempts to block the law through the courts have so far been unsuccessful.
With this latest blow to Florida’s labor movement, an inspiring wave of organizing that took off among adjunct faculty nearly 10 years ago in 2016 has crashed into the rocks, leaving professors who started off with too little to lose with even less.
All eight of the adjunct unions — at Valencia College, St. Petersburg College, Hillsborough Community College, the University of South Florida, Broward College, Miami-Dade College, Seminole State College and Lake-Sumter State College — were represented by Faculty Forward, a higher education arm of the SEIU that represents tens of thousands of faculty across the country.
At St. Pete College, where adjuncts unionized in 2019, adjunct faculty won guarantees such as a course cancellation fee that offers compensation for the planning time that adjuncts invested ahead of the semester in courses that end up being canceled — a policy the college initially resisted.
They also won the right to academic freedom in their work — something that the Florida GOP has threatened through new laws that undermine faculty and teachers’ ability to teach freely about issues such as racism without fear of repercussion.
At Broward College, adjuncts also won class cancellation fees and secured a policy for fixed assignments, ensuring adjuncts have a guaranteed amount of work, thus increasing job stability and security.
All of these things, without a contractual guarantee from the colleges, however, are now gone, or otherwise unenforceable. St. Pete College did not respond to a request for comment on whether they plan to continue honoring the terms of
their faculty’s contract, while a spokesperson for Broward College shared that, at this time, “everything is status quo.”
“We have no plans to alter any of the terms related to our adjunct faculty,” they added.
At Valencia College, Greene feels that adjunct faculty are not only paid differently, but valued differently from full-time faculty.
“Valencia is an excellent educational institution, but it’s on the backs of the adjuncts,” added Osgood, Greene’s former colleague at Valencia.
Osgood, another longtime adjunct at Valencia, says their pay is comparable to your average retail job.
“You’re being taught by adjuncts who are getting the same thing a child makes working at Target,” Osgood told Orlando Weekly over coffee in April. “We make $15 an hour. That’s our average.”
Unlike full-time or tenured faculty, adjuncts aren’t paid for tasks done strictly outside of class time, like answering emails from students, grading student work, or even writing letters of recommendation for the ambitious ones who come to them for support.
paid upward of $250 an hour during the initial organizing drive; created an entire anti-union webpage on the college website; and fed outgoing college president Sandy Shugart an anti-union speech to read over video, presumably produced and funded by public money.
“Too often, the presence of a union creates adversarial ‘us’ versus ‘them’ relationships with all parties involved,” Shugart shared. “This election isn’t about us,” he continued, “It’s about them.”
A Valencia grad says learning about the college’s treatment of adjuncts was a shock.
‘I think, if I would have known how my college professors were being treated, how much they were being paid, you know … I would have been really concerned,’ she shares, her voice breaking.
For professors who genuinely care about their students’ success, Greene said it’s uncomfortable to have to ponder whether to write such a letter on their off time, to politely decline, or even try to explain the situation to the student. Most students, she said, don’t even know their professors are part-time instructors. Back before they unionized, some students, once made aware of their plight, even rallied alongside them in support.
The Valencia administration, however, remained combative with the union ever after their victorious election. This was disappointing to adjuncts like Greene, but not altogether surprising for an administration that: enlisted the services of “union avoidance” lawyers
percent raise, which was soundly rejected by the college, in addition to other proposals from the union, including greater job security, guaranteed access to college facilities (such as an office), guaranteed class minimums and language on academic freedom.
Shugart, like other anti-union employers, remained adamant about painting the union as a third party during adjuncts’ organizing drive. According to the Orlando Business Journal , Valencia was paying Shugart an annual salary of over $350,000 by the time he left.
In protest of the college’s efforts to stall their organizing, adjuncts even led a car caravan to the homes of Shugart and another college administrator back in 2020, with an aim of “empowering the workers and allowing them to build solidarity.”
That’s how state officials later described it, anyway, in an unfair labor practice complaint the college later filed against the union over the display.
The state’s Public Employees Relations Commission (led by DeSantis appointees) ultimately sided with the college (also governed by DeSantis appointees), forcing the union to post a sort of “shame on us” notice the next year.
The road after was tough. It took a year and a half for the two parties to hammer out an initial contract, offering a paltry raise that adjuncts nonetheless accepted, with disappointment.
“Four percent may sound like a lot, but it’s not much pay when you consider inflation,” said Greene.
The figure was significantly below the union’s initial, ambitious demand of a 19.5
“The first contract was, you know, spelling out a lot of the basics,” Greene admitted. “After that, when we did try to include other more substantive things, and in this last year, especially, it was just all, ‘No, no, no, no’ — literally, that’s the way the meeting went,” Greene recalled. Their last bargaining session with the college in April was similarly disappointing, as the administration refused to budge on an insulting offer of a 1.5 percent pay increase— after the union had pitched 6 percent.
“We just ended the farce by walking away, not dignifying their offer with our acceptance,” Greene recalled. “They and the state were just waiting things out.”
For LaPuente, a graduate of Valencia, learning about the college’s treatment of adjuncts as an instructor was a shock.
“I think, if I would have known how my college professors were being treated, how much they were being paid, you know, what they were being offered and not offered, I would have been really concerned,” she shared, her voice breaking as she spoke to Orlando Weekly over the phone.
LaPuente today also has a full-time job in hospitality, but teaching at Valencia was an aspiration.
“I went to teacher training after my Master’s [degree] so that I could get into Valencia,” she said. “And to see that they make it so hard for educators to have a dignified life. ... You’re having a lot of people who are leaving the state or leaving the profession.”
Greene, for her part, told Orlando Weekly in April that she and Osgood were too old to launch another organizing drive and were ready to hand over the baton, so to speak. “We’re both in our 70s and we’re leaving,” said Greene. “So we’re not going to do it again.”
A new organizing drive by adjuncts, she believes, would need the same kind of “grassroots” energy they had when they first organized years ago.
LaPuente, who plans to continue teaching at Valencia, agreed.“If the people want it enough, and they work hard enough, absolutely it’s possible,” she said.
Osgood, a fiery blonde with kind eyes, said she sees what she and other adjuncts had built, and have now lost, as “Phase 1” for adjunct professors.
They laid the infrastructure, she says, “for the next effort.”
Are you an adjunct professor affected by the state’s decertification of adjunct unions? Contact reporter McKenna Schueler to share your thoughts.
mschueler@orlandoweekly.com
HEARTS ON FIRE
Maitland Art Center presents A Bright Light From the Embers, documenting the legendary partnership of two Orlando creatives
BY RICHARD REEP
Atribute to the colorful lives and work of Qurentia Throm and Cicero Greathouse is on display at the Maitland Art Center. Theirs is a story of art, of artists, of the Maitland Art Center itself, and of Central Florida. They’re both gone now, and this show is a chance for you to get to know them a little bit, too.
While our times seem dominated by bombast and spectacle, these two artists worked quietly to transform everything they touched and saw, which
was a lot. Seeking neither limelight nor headlines, both Throm and Greathouse quietly lived, loved and created with a large moving crowd of friends, artists and admirers in a kind of natural cyclone of creative energy.
Greathouse and Throm managed an exuberance that was large, but wasn’t filled with spit or braggadocio. Being in Que and Cicero’s circle meant you had to be ready to travel fast and far. Close friends of theirs shared a little bit of the
A BRIGHT LIGHT FROM THE EMBERS: A STORY OF LOVE, ART, AND PLACE
Through Sept. 29
Maitland Art Center
231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland 407-539-2181
artandhistory.org
$6
Maitland Art Center gallery, their joy interlacing with their story. Timelines, starting with their school photos, are interspersed with iridescent robes and exotic jewelry from their collections. Que’s art selected for this show seems to glow with life and spirit, while Greathouse’s large abstract paintings shimmer with purples and oranges.
Perhaps the best way to remember the couple is a portrait by artist Barbara Tiffany in the last gallery. Que’s eyes shine as they did in real life, while Cicero’s dark pupils look out at the viewer with a kind of impish intensity. “They were both really busy and sat separately, or I never could have finished them,” recalled Tiffany. “Que was particular about her eyes, and Cicero, well, he said to do whatever I wanted.”
That portrait overlooks a display of their travel photos and a vignette with some of their collections of furniture and textiles. On a table are fascinating travel journals — intense, hand-drawn stories in their own right. Gorgeous sketches and watercolors are interspersed with random entries such as: “April 8: Quit smoking.” Leafing through the journals gives one a deeper sense of who the artists were and what each saw when looking at the world.
Que and Cicero married in 1999. Nancy Jay, who taught at Valencia with Que Throm before she retired, gave them art as a wedding present. It hangs on the gallery wall, a deliciously hot pink, yellow and red geometric painting inscribed with “To Que and Cicero on the Creation of Their Marriage.” Jay shared that Cicero was one of her first students, teaching at Valencia College (then Valencia Community College) way back in 1970.
“He enrolled in a drawing class I taught,” she recalled. “Campus [yes, there was only one] was small back then — about a thousand students.” She remained friends with him after the class and throughout his career.
energy the couple both had. “I can’t remember if I went to Mexico with them two times or three,’” laughed Jane Oatway, one of Que’s close friends. “I think three.” She went on to recall art scouting with them for the Acquisition Trust, home construction visits, and a particularly wild escape from a midnight pool party. Back in Orlando, a free, salon-like atmosphere pervaded the couple’s home, with Que’s famous wind chimes keeping time.
Audio tracks of the chimes’ music echo in the
One of their bases of operations was their residence in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. At first living in a house that they purchased, they proceeded to move to another house that they renovated. Finally, using that house as their staging area, Cicero designed a third house and the couple built it across a year or two of extended visits, with many friends and artists coming and going during construction. Cicero died before the house was completed, and Que used it once or twice afterward, but the fire had gone out of Mexico without him.
The Research Studio at the Maitland Art Center was another of the couple’s bases of operation,
Que Throm and Cicero Greathouse in a portrait by their friend Barbara Tiffany | Photo courtesy Art & History Museums — Maitland
with parties that started there and went elsewhere, or that started at their home and ended up there. Both artists were astonishingly strong advocates of the Art Center, teaching and volunteering their time, and they bequeathed an endowment large enough to build a new wing.
The Art Center gave Cicero an artist-in-residency fellowship in 2014, and he proceeded to make phenomenal experiments using cardboard boxes. Some of this work, and a bolder, more abstract continuation of these early experiments, make up his part of Bright Light From the Embers
Their story is also the story of Central Florida’s creative community and its peculiar ties to Walt Disney World. Cicero, who worked as an Imagineer, was art director for many projects including Animal Kingdom, one of his proudest
achievements. Steve Grant, fellow Imagineer alumnus, recalls, “We worked so hard together side by side for several years on that project, and he was always delightful and upbeat. We remained close friends long after we both left.”
The Cicero and Que era was one of unity: Their world was one, encompassing Disney and the Art Center and Mexico and Orlando, and it was a big one full of people they loved and cared about. The galleries in this exhibit vibrate with their energy in a way that somehow harmonizes with the Art Center’s architecture, and the soft chimes give the galleries a kind of mischievous, ethereal calm. If the rich story of Central Florida’s art scene ever gets properly told, Que and Cicero will have a chapter or two all by themselves.
arts@orlandoweekly.com
“Untitled (Gold Heart)” by Que Throm | Photo courtesy Art & History Museums — Maitland
THE PLEASURE OF PANE
Ocoee sandwich shop delights with its crispy Italian flatbread
BY MICHAEL MURPHY
There is little I won’t do for good bread. A (penciled) line has been drawn at murder, but humiliation isn’t out of the question, and inconvenience a given. My grandfather made it clear: The choice to be at his favorite Philly donut shop at 6 a.m. was no choice. Narrowing the window between oven and mouth, a do-what-you-must imperative. Good bread, especially in the States, still requires a similar degree of sacrifice, and I’m willing to twist my life into balloon shapes for a perfect crust and crumb — even brave the trek to the westernmost reaches of Orlando. To Orlando that is not Orlando.
Ocoee — I’m told it has its charm. I’m told this by my dining companion. By the grinning lobotomite on a billboard. Debatable. Input shelved for pondering. What Ocoee does have, and of this I’m certain, is a sandwich shop worth going out of your way for — a sandwich shop named Ispirazione.
They call it tigelle. And by “they,” I mean generations upon generations of Italian bakers in Emilia-Romagna. I now also call it tigelle — tea-jelly, teege-jeleh. Similar to piadina, and also known as crescentine, it’s a small round flatbread from the Apennines often sliced and
stuffed with cheese, meats or sweets. It’s also the belle of the ball at Ispirazione, where it’s made fresh daily and crisped to order.
The small, independent storefront is the vision-made-real of co-owners Daria Lytvynenko and Claudiu Gabriel Iordache, who created what they could not find — a stateside source for the tigelle sandwiches they love. Its menu features a range of riffs on said lovable, as well as desserts and espresso-based coffees. There are salads, yes, but don’t be the buzzkill that orders salmon at the steakhouse.
Options. So many options. When asked, Claudiu touted the Tigella Delicioza ($7.80) as his personal and people’s fave. Done. And quickly done. A classic combo of prosciutto, burrata, pesto, arugula and tomato made for a bite that is more than aptly named. I also opted for the Picante ($7.20), an entirely different type of wow — soppressata, mozzarella and arugula livened with spicy olive oil and mellowed with green olive cream. A meat-free Dolce Verde ($7.20) was well-enjoyed by my vegetarian in tow, buoyed by creamy stracchino and the sweet tang of sun-dried tomato.
The sandwiches are human-sized, which means most Americans will think they’re small.
The adjacent table tripped over themselves to giddily order seconds.
We were smart. We ordered seconds first. To be clear, one is enough — you just won’t want to stop there. Sandwich fillings are high-quality; the various creams, from pesto to pistachio, serve as beautiful binder; and the bread — the bread. Putting teeth into tigelle is the eater’s equivalent of popping bubble wrap — thin and lovely and crunch and fluff and yes and another please.
There were desserts — siren-singing, housemade desserts. We paired a delicious caramel, peanut and Snickers tiramisu ($7.80) and a well-made but muted Nutella cannoli ($6.80) with espresso macchiatos. A sweet and sparky way to holler finito. Despite being a savvy carbophile who’s spent significant time in the boot, I’ll admit to this being my first bite of tigelle. Granted, it’s hard to eat a sandwich with a glass of Brunello in each hand. It was a good first bite. There will be second and third bites. Umpteenths. And these bites will undoubtedly be bitten at Ispirazione, the best and only tigelle game in town, where the startup passion and commitment to quality are genuinely inspiring. Yes, yes — Ispirazione is inspiration. It is also testament to the fact that a simple thing done well is well worth seeking out. Even if it means driving to Ocoee. dining@orlandoweekly.com
OPENINGS, CLOSINGS & MOVES:
Turci Pasta, the College Park restaurant known for its handmade pasta, will open a second location this fall inside Maitland City Centre in the former MidiCi Neapolitan Pizza location. Owners Vinicius Turci and Nathalia Kalil have also taken over Braccia, the Brazilian-style Italian restaurant on East Morse Boulevard in Winter Park. They plan on keeping the name for now, but will “make changes to product quality” … Look for The Winery and Tasting Room by Brewlando to open in the old Istanbul Lounge space at Icon Park later this summer. The 1,400-square-foot space will target wine and cider lovers, and feature seven exclusive Brewlando craft beers on tap … Graze Craze, a charcuterie concept specializing in grazing boards and boxes, has opened a location at 843 S. Orlando Ave. in the Hollieanna Shopping Center in Winter Park. In addition to spreads with cured meats and cheeses, they offer vegetarian and dessert boards … Before It Melts, an ice cream concept by the folks at the Tavistock Restaurant Collection, has opened a stand-alone location at 6941 Lake Nona Blvd. next to Park Pizza & Brewing Co. … Upstairs at East End Market, Danilo’s Pasta Bar, the second concept to open under Domu Lab’s chef incubator program after Camille, will close Aug. 31. Restaurateurs Johnny and Jimmy Tung are seeking a permanent space to house chef DJ Tagalin’s Filipino-Italian pasta bar. The Neighbors will begin serving farm-fresh shareables highlighting local ingredients from the second-floor kitchen with Mid Drive Dive’s Leah Cordova at the helm, complementing their creative cocktails … Pho Huong Lan, the Mills 50 mainstay, will open a second location in the former Sanshi Noodle House space at 5600 W. Colonial Drive. An opening date hasn’t been announced … Mochibae, offering Japanese mochi donuts and Korean hot dogs, has opened a second location at 2100 E. Colonial Drive in the Super Oriental Market plaza … Look for Las Carretas Mexican Restaurant to expand into the Shaka Shaka Tea House space next door at at 4030 N. Goldenrod Road in Winter Park.
NEWS & EVENTS:
Zymarium Meadery celebrates its one-year anniversary Saturday, Aug. 17, with an event featuring food trucks (The Pass, Ceylon Hut), an anniversary ube cookie from Phat Ash Bakes, and 10 new meads as well as a couple of bottle releases. A special VIP hour from noon to 1 p.m. is also being offered. Cost is $76. Visit zymarium. com for details … Kaya chef Lo Lalicon and Reyes Mezcaleria’s Wendy Lopez will collaborate on a multicourse tasting menu Aug. 21 at Kaya. The meal will showcase the connections between Mexican and Filipino cuisine. Cost is $150. Visit exploretock.com/kaya for reservations.
‘Tigelle is the eater’s equivalent of popping bubble wrap … thin and lovely and crunch and fluff’ | Photo by Rob Bartlett
COUCHSURFING
Streaming premieres you won’t want to miss this week.
BY STEVE SCHNEIDER
Premieres Wednesday:
American Murder: Laci Peterson — Six days before her (ahem!) surviving spouse gets to plead his case on Peacock, here’s a three-episode reexamination of pregnant wife Laci’s 2002 disappearance, with commentary from her mother, and her childhood friends and … well, basically, “all the loved ones who didn’t kill her.” (Netflix)
Daughters — Girls whose fathers are in prison prepare for a big Daddy-Daughter Dance that’s been set up to help them preserve some semblance of a normal family structure. It’s actually a good deal less creepy than a purity ball, because by the time the first number starts playing, Pop is already married to some guy named Butch. (Netflix)
Worst Ex Ever — This offshoot series from Worst Roommate Ever focuses on relationships gone shockingly awry, in ways that go all the way up to murder. Listen, at this point, if they even try to change the way my toilet paper hangs, I call the cops. (Netflix)
Premieres Thursday:
Bel-Air — Will is entering his first summer as a transplant to tony L.A. as the dramatic reboot of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air begins its third season. Meanwhile, America still hasn’t gotten that true-crime version of Living Single it’s been dying for. (Peacock)
recovery program to rid him of his addiction to his cell phone. I understand that in cases where cold turkey seems too risky, they wean you off the habit by switching you to an Android. (Netflix)
RuPaul’s Drag Race Global All Stars — The title of “Queen of the Mothertucking World” is up for grabs as 12 international drag experts meet in a contest of moxie and theatrical femininity. So basically, it’s like the Olympics all over again. (Paramount+)
The Union — Mark Wahlberg, Halle Berry and J.K. Simmons star in an action comedy about a blue-collar New Jerseyan who gets caught up in the U.S. espionage game thanks to his high-school sweetheart. See, this is why you should automatically block anyone from your hometown on Facebook. (Netflix)
Premieres Tuesday:
Face to Face With Scott Peterson — In his first on-camera interview in 21 years, the convicted murderer tries to poke holes in the case against him. Just a thought: We probably need to reexamine the Son of Sam law now that just about every one of these guys is getting his own soapbox on streaming. I really don’t want to see Mark David Chapman become the arbiter of what is and isn’t cake. (Peacock)
Emily in Paris — Emily’s travels take her from France to Italy in Part 1 of Season 4, and of course the prospect of a new romance is dangling temptingly in her face. Or that could just be just some Italian pedestrian’s creepy way of saying hello, because I hear guys get away with murder over there. (Netflix)
Hop — As Season 1 continues, Hop the frog is still helping preschoolers navigate the challenges they face in the 21st century. You know, like which med school to pre-apply to. Hop to it, kids! (Max)
Kengan Ashura Season 2 Part 2 — The manga-turned-anime series reaches its end as the Kengan Annihilation Tournament awards victory to the best underground fighter … and death to everyone else. Don’t you love trickle-down unarmed combat? (Netflix)
Premieres Friday:
Dancing Village: The Curse Begins — The latest from Indonesian horror director Kimo Stamboel takes us to the island of Java, where an unlucky young woman is threatened by a hex that forces you to dance for the rest of your life. Sounds like we may have just figured out why Madonna is still at it. (Shudder)
I Can’t Live Without You — In order to save his marriage, a high-strung Argentinian enters a
Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry — The actor/ comic takes to the stage of Chicago’s Green Mill for his latest stand-up special. Direction is by his pal John Mulaney, whose recent Everybody’s in LA livestream benefited from Kerman’s writing and performing skills. But wait: If everybody’s in LA, who was filling those seats in Chicago? Skrulls? (Netflix)
Muslim Matchmaker — Professional matchmakers Hoda Abrahim and Yasmin Elhady help Muslim-Americans find spouses in a way that conforms to their faith and upbringing. I understand there’s going to be a similar show for Southern Baptists, and that it’s going to be set entirely at a shooting range. (Hulu)
Terror Tuesday: Extreme — An eight-episode Thai anthology dramatizes real-life tales of the supernatural that were originally shared on the radio show of the same name. And if it was on the radio, it HAS to be true. Ask any crisis actor! (Netflix)
Untold: The Murder of Air McNair — NFL quarterback Steve McNair took the Tennessee Titans to their only Super Bowl, only to be shot dead by his mistress — allegedly because she suspected him of being involved in a second extramarital affair with someone else. This documentary retrospective of his life and career will leave you with no doubt that LGBT players are ruining the moral integrity of the game. (Netflix)
Emily in Paris goes to, well, Italy in the first part of Season 4 | Photo courtesy of Netflix
BLOOD ON THE TRACKS
Buzzy young band Sincere Engineer tours with heroes New Found Glory
BY IDA V. ESKAMANI
“Hey baby! I’m calling you from a landline. Hey baby! I’m not having a good time.”
The opening lyrics from Sincere Engineer’s ”Landline,” off their 2023 record Cheap Grills, captures the Chicago band’s sonic spirit well: wholeheartedly earnest and tragically honest, blending nostalgia with modernity, to a backdrop of infectious riffs and full-throated execution.
If you were to distill these qualities into a human, you would end up with Deanna Belos, the band’s founder, leader and frontperson. Belos spoke to Orlando Weekly from somewhere in the suburbs of Chicago. She quit her job and moved back in with her parents to dedicate herself fully to her art. “I moved back in with them to do the thing, you know,” she says, “trying to keep the dream alive as long as I can.”
Though that leap of faith isn’t paying all the bills yet, it’s opening up opportunities and making Belos’ wildest dreams come true — such as her band kicking off a tour next week in Orlando with Florida’s own New Found Glory.
Twenty years ago, a 12-year-old Belos bought her first CD. It was New Found Glory’s fourth album, Catalyst. It’s that album’s double-decade anniversary this tour is marking.
“I think Chad [Gilbert, lead guitarist of New Found Glory] found us and is a fan, and we got asked,” says Belos. “And I don’t think they knew, but they were my first favorite band. And there’s a picture of me like when I was like 12 in the Catalyst New Found Glory shirt.”
Belos posted that photo when the band announced the tour. “I didn’t even pick up a guitar at that point yet,” shares Belos. “They were
like, the first band that got me into music even … it’s a full circle moment for me.”
Belos never thought she would be doing this. That 12-year-old two decades ago thought she was going to grow up to be a dentist. Belos tried taking music lessons in her early teens but it didn’t really stick; ultimately she taught herself how to play guitar by learning songs by favorite bands.
Belos started writing songs in her 20s, adopting the Lawrence Arms-inspired moniker “Sincere Engineer” and playing every gig she could. Sincere Engineer released their debut record Rhombithian in 2017.
Drawing inspiration from her hometown and the bands that she loved growing up, Belos has created her own unique sound and consistently turns out bangers.
SINCERE ENGINEER with New Found Glory
6:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 16 House of Blues Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista houseofblues.com
$35-$90
She would say she’s late to the game, but based on the momentum behind Sincere Engineer, maybe Belos was right on time. Sincere Engineer is not a new band, but new fans keep coming. To hear them is to need to hear more of them.
Of Florida, Belos has many touring memories, recalling oppressive humidity, roaming chickens and — with laughter — tree climbing.“When we played Fest it was my tree-climbing year,” says Belos. “I got a bunch of pictures of me climbing trees and watching bands from trees.”
We all need a tree-climbing year, clearly. Belos is also scheming new heights with Sincere Engineer. “I’m gonna try to get back to Europe next year,” says Belos. “I would love to see if we can try to tour Japan and Australia at some point. Those are big, loose goals. And I assume a new record next year or the year after?”
Orlando, you should catch Sincere Engineer while you can. And leave a message at the beep. music@orlandoweekly.com
Young Chicago band Sincere Engineer is wholeheartedly earnest and tragically honest | Photo courtesy Hopeless Records
LOCAL RELEASES
With a career that’s been a long, winding and deeply psychedelic odyssey of reliably unorthodox music, “expect the unexpected” is the rule when approaching the work of Orlando outsider pioneer Matt Kamm. Even so, when reviewing last year’s Crown of Horns EP, released under his longtime vehicle Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord, I thought that describing that work as “house music” would probably be the most outlandish thing I’d ever have to write about him. I should’ve known better.
In his latest chameleonic twist, one that finds him inching even closer to becoming Orlando’s own Beck, Matt Kamm has now gone country. Anyone familiar with his work will know that this is way weirder than even Beyoncé or Diplo doing it. While Kamm’s shown lots of freaky folk tendencies, the new Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord double single — “Spite the Moon” b/w “Fast Asleep on the Forest Floor” — is a total plunge into country music.
Over the past several years, Kamm’s been quietly studying country instruments like banjo, mandolin, lap steel and pedal steel. More specifically, he says, “I’ve had an obsession with pedal steel since childhood probably stemming from Santo & Johnny or Dylan’s ‘Lay Lady Lay’ but for whatever reason the instrument always seemed unattainable both from a technical standpoint and entry-level price point.”
Earlier this year, Kamm finally landed one. Ever since, he’s gone in on it headfirst to indulge a lifelong fantasy. The results are fascinating.
To those who know Kamm’s work, this new release will almost certainly be his most
Bad news? No TLU next week. Uhhh-mazing news? That’s because it’ll be our annual blockbuster Best of Orlando issue. Are you even ready for this?
surprising material to date. After all, probably the strangest thing an eccentric can do is something deeply traditional. These two songs are the most postmodern looks from Kamm ever, without even an ounce of indie abstraction. “After my last synthesizer jaunt, I felt like I needed to return to the basics of songwriting — start with a great song on guitar then see where it leads me,” he says.
“Spite the Moon” ambles and twangs through a twilight ride in an easy cowboy trot with some of Kamm’s most forthright and wistful crooning yet.“Fall Asleep on the Forest Floor,” on the other hand, is a lovely rural instrumental that’s a perfect campfire lullaby. While Kamm showcases his fluency on the full range of roots instruments here, he works them all into evocative and stylistically faithful settings for his budding pedal steel work. (Side note: Pedal steel players have always been in short supply in the local music community, so area Americana players, take note.)
While the new Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord songs now stream everywhere, they’ll also be
released as a limited-edition cassette through Orlando’s Godless America Records at Kamm’s performance this weekend at Moxie Booking’s Modern Moog 2 showcase (7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 18, Will’s Pub, $13-$18).
CONCERT PICKS THIS WEEK
Skywatching, Gillian Carter, Midhouse: While you likely haven’t yet heard of brand-new Charleston band Skywatching, you may know post-hardcore band To Forget, the group from which they recently sprung. At any rate, definitely seize this chance to know Skywatching because they’re ones to watch with dense, dimensional rock that merges slowcore gravity with heavy sonics. Beautiful, moving and majestic, it’s a crushing tide that’ll sweep you up into a slo-mo swoon. Orlando openers will be young indie rockers Midhouse and the always stunning post-hardcore adventurism of Gillian Carter. (7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 15, Stardust Video & Coffee, $10)
Mold!, Holyfield, Wells, Soap Box Derby: I don’t know about the name, but Miami band Mold! definitely earn that exclamation point with their bright, splashy sound, which works in a vivid palette of fuzz, power and dynamics with equal parts originality and virtuosity. Their music is a Technicolor rock explosion of sonic daring and joy. Opening will be an all-local contingent of young bands that includes new screamo band Wells and shoegazers Holyfield and Soap Box Derby. (8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 16, Will’s Pub, $15) baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com
Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord | Courtesy photo
of the
SATURDAY, AUG. 17
Play in a Day
Live performances and stress tend to go hand in hand. But the Play in a Day performers might be in special need of heart-rate monitors. These local artists will have 24 hours to create short plays with a theme only handed to them the day prior. They’ll present their efforts off-book at the
Imagine Performing Arts Center at the Oviedo Mall this weekend. A silent auction featuring gift cards, theme park tickets and original art will take place before the performances. All proceeds will go toward the LGBTQ+ Center of Orlando. VIP tickets include reserved seating and a couple of raffle tickets. 6:30 p.m., Imagine Performing Arts Center, 1220 Oviedo Mall Blvd., Oviedo, $10-$25.
— Zoey Thomas
SATURDAY, AUG. 17
“Wavelength”
Join the Creative City Project for a unique experience featuring a slew of musical masterminds and a dazzling light show, conjuring up a feast for the eyes and ears. “Wavelength” presents cutting-edge lasers, lights and projections, melded with a musical show pairing a rock band, 12 orchestral musicians and 20 professional singers. Creative City Project put together this show as the latest of their immersive light and sound experiments, following up 2022’s “The Seasons” and “The Carnival” from 2023. Steinmetz itself is even getting in on the act; the hall will be extensively decorated with 200 light pillars, so no matter where you’re seated, you’ll be up close to the action. 5:30 p.m. & 8 p.m., Steinmetz Hall, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave., drphillipscenter.org, $45-$80. — Houda Eletr
SUNDAY, AUG. 18
Alyssa Edwards: Glitz and Giggles
The House of Blues hosts royalty this week: the queen Alyssa Edwards will be in town as part of her “Glitz and Giggles” tour. Edwards’ set will combine her gag-worthy comedic talents, storytelling chops and fashionable flair on the stage. Edwards rocketed to fame quickly after giving her all on the fifth season of RuPaul’s Drag Race in 2012. She then returned on the second season of Drag Race All-Stars, placing fifth. By then, Edwards-mania was inevitable. The Dallas drag queen has her own Netflix original series, Dancing Queen, taking the audience through the life of Edwards in and out of drag. Opening the evening are Shuga Cain from California and iconic local Axel Andrews. 7 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista, houseofblues.com, $40-$65. — HE
SUNDAY, AUG. 18
Local Author Festival
Swapping stories about stories? It’s a book lover’s dream. The Orange County Library System is hosting a gathering and meet-and-greet for local authors to share their books and experiences with Central Florida readers. The library is still keeping the community in the dark about just which authors will attend — but it promised they’ll come from a wide variety of genres. Plus, each will have books available for attendees to buy and get signed. People falling behind on their Goodreads goal [guilty!] won’t want to miss it. 2 p.m. Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd., ocls.info, free. — ZT
SUNDAY AUG. 18
Joey Belladonna: Tribute to Dio, Sabbath and Rainbow
The iron-lunged Anthrax vocalist Joey Belladonna always stood out among his thrash peers both for his impressive range and the unerring commitment to melody in his power-metal inspired vocals. Belladonna is currently out on the road solo, playing tribute sets to legendary belter Ronnie James Dio. The much-missed Dio was a singular force in metal, with seminal stints in Rainbow, Black Sabbath, and solo [“Holy diivaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhh!”]. The evening will see Belladonna and wife Krista leading a crack tribute band through his best-known numbers on this four-date Florida run. Promised are “Holy Diver” and “Rainbow in the Dark” and “Neon Knights” and “Man on the Silver Mountain” and “Long,” among other anthems that would frighten parents and clergy. Get those devil-horns ready. 6 p.m., Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park, conduitfl.com, $25. — Matthew Moyer
Sunday: Leo Kottke at Steinmetz Hall
PHOTO BY AMY KERWIN
SUNDAY, AUG. 18
Leo Kottke
A disciple of godly American Primitive guitarist John Fahey, a young Leo Kottke released his album of instrumental pieces 6- and 12-String Guitar in 1969, which became an unlikely hit and made Kottke a star. (Sales of the album also kept Fahey’s label Takoma in the black for years, likely to Fahey’s faint annoyance.) The student maybe surpassed the master, with Kottke going on to craft 40 solo and ensemble albums over the years that have expanded kaleidoscopically on his deft and joyous merger of jazz, folk and roots sounds picked intricately on acoustic guitars. Guitar Player mag, which loves a good shred, offered the corollary that Jimi is to the electric as Kottke is to the acoustic — and we see no lie there. The 76-year-old axeman is still alive and kicking, fingers still nimble and in rude creative form — so Steinmetz will soon ring with his cascades of notes and chords. (Might just be glorious.) The similarly — but differently! — adventurous Julian Lage opens. 7:30 p.m., Steinmetz Hall, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave., drphillipscenter.org, $35$65. — MM
MONDAY, AUG. 19
Still Woozy
Bedroom-pop artist Still Woozy is bringing his latest clutch of alternative psychedelic sounds to Orlando this week. Still Woozy is the solo project of Portland-based singer-songwriter-producer Sven Gamsky, who’s been delivering a mix of homespun sounds since his first single, “Vacation,” in 2017. His latest album, Loveseat, released earlier this year, falls in line with the artist’s unique brand of sonic psychedelia. Michelle opens the show. 7 p.m., Orlando Amphitheater, 4603 W. Colonial Drive, orlandoamphitheater. com, $49-$150. — Chloe Greenberg
Donzii: Aug. 22, Will’s Pub
March Violets, Rosegarden Funeral Party: Aug. 25, Conduit
Pylon Reenactment Society: Aug. 30, Will’s Pub
Buckethead: Aug. 31, Hard Rock Live
Amorphis, Dark Tranquillity, Fires in the Distance: Sept. 7, Conduit
Twenty One Pilots: Sept. 11, Kia Center
Cigarettes After Sex: Sept. 13, Kia Center
Herbie Hancock: Sept. 14, Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts
Punk in the Park: Sept. 14, Orlando Amphitheater.
Jelly Roll, Warren Zeiders: Sept. 17, Kia Center
Weezer, The Flaming Lips, Dinosaur Jr.: Sept. 20, Kia Center
Squeeze, Boy George: Sept. 22, Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts
Donzii: Aug. 22, Will’s Pub
Sum 41: Sept. 24, Orlando Amphitheater
Violent Femmes: Sept. 26, House of Blues
STRFKR: Oct. 5, Plaza Live
Xiu Xiu: Oct. 5, Conduit
Charli XCX and Troye Sivan: Oct. 6, Kia Center
Kreator: Oct. 15, Hard Rock Live
Cuco: Oct. 17, Beacham
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark: Oct. 19, Plaza Live
Rainbow Kitten Surprise: Oct. 22, Hard Rock Live
Sabrina Carpenter: Oct. 24, Kia Center
Mannequin Pussy: Oct. 25, Beacham
Pig: Oct. 30, Conduit
Nitzer Ebb: Nov. 1, The Abbey
Babymetal: Nov. 5, Hard Rock Live
EDC: Nov. 8-10, Tinker Field
Justin Timberlake: Nov. 9, Kia Center
O.A.R.: Nov. 14, Hard Rock Live
P!nk: Nov. 18, Camping World Stadium
Amy Grant: Nov. 21, Plaza Live
Kacey Musgraves: Dec. 2, Kia Center
Creed: Dec. 5, Kia Center
PHOTO BY ROBERT BADILLO
CONCERTS
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14
Candlelight: A Tribute to ABBA 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $40; 402-249-2445.
Oak Hill Drifters 7 & 9 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $20-$35.
Turnstiles: The Ultimate Tribute to the Music of Billy Joel 7:30 pm; Ritz Theater at the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, 201 S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford; $30.50$37.50; 407-321-8111.
THURSDAY, AUG. 15
Candlelight: Ed Sheeran Meets Coldplay 9 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $39.50; 402-249-2445.
Full Circle Boys 8 pm; Alexis and Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $9.69.
New Found Glory, Sincere Engineer 6:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $35$90; 407-934-2583.
Smells Like Nirvana, Dead Original 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $18-$20; 407-704-6261.
Soul Pop: Summer of Soul 6:45 pm; Fringe ArtSpace, 54 W. Church St.; $20; 407-436-7800.
Summer of Grunge: Nothing’s Shocking (Jane’s Addiction Tribute), In A Nutshell (Alice in Chains Tribute), Black Ledbetter (Pearl Jam Tribute) 7 pm; Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-673-2712.
Blue Bamboo Summer Concert Series: Easy Living: The Music of Paul Desmond and Jim Hall 3 pm; Casselberry Arts Center, 137 Quail Pond Circle, Casselberry; $35; 407-636-9951.
Joey Belladonna (of Anthrax): Tribute to Dio, Sabbath, Rainbow 6 pm; Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $25; 407-673-2712.
K92.3 All Star Jam: Jordan Davis, Lee Brice, Carly Pearce, Corey Kent, Tucker Wetmore, Anne Wilson, Zach Top, The Frontmen 6 pm; Addition Financial Arena, 12777 N. Gemini Blvd.; $45-$125; 407-823-6006.
Latin Brunch: Dimas Sanchez Afro Latin Jazz Project 11:30 am & 2:30 pm; Judson’s Live, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $95.
Leo Kottke and Julian Lage 7:30 pm; Steinmetz Hall, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $35-$65; 407-358-6603.
Safety Fluid, Greasy Bitches, KT Kink, Earthfault ; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; 407-270-9104.
Soul Pop: Summer of Soul 12:45 pm; Fringe ArtSpace, 54 W. Church St.; $20; 407-436-7800.
MONDAY, AUG. 19
Still Woozy, Michelle 7 pm; Orlando Amphitheater, 4603 W. Colonial Drive; $49-$150; 407-295-3247.
TUESDAY, AUG. 20
Gable Price and Friends 7:30 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; 407-704-6261.
King 810, The Last 10 Seconds Of Life, Extortionist, GoonLord 7 pm; West End Trading Co., 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $25; 407-322-7475.
MJ Lives: The Ultimate Michael Jackson Tribute 7:30 pm; Ritz Theater at the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, 201 S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford; $30.50$37.50; 407-321-8111.
That Girl Lay Lay 7 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $29.50-$184.42; 844-513-2014.
EVENTS
Alyssa Edwards, Shuga Cain, Axel Andrews 7 pm Sunday; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $40-$65; 407-934-2583; houseofblues.com.
Art After Dark Soiree for young professionals includes interactive art experiences, live music, and a few surprise performances throughout the night. There will also be meet-and-greet opportunities with special guest artists, photo opportunities, a raffle, whiskey and beer tastings, and light bites. 7 pm Saturday; CityArts, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.;
$40-$150; downtownartsdistrict.com.
Faire of the Dog: Night Market Makers, vintage lovers, plant collectors, food trucks. 7 pm Wednesday; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; instagram.com/ faireofthedog.
“Gilded Age Hotels at Florida’s Mineral Springs” Travel back to the Gilded Age and join author Rick Kilby as he explores the Victorian-era resorts at Florida’s springs where America’s elite ventured to “take the waters.” 5:30 pm Thursday; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-836-8500; thehistorycenter.org.
Haus of Maus: A Steampunk and Oddities Expo The darker side of the kingdom. Oddities, steampunk, bizarre. 10 am Saturday; Oviedo Mall, 1700 Oviedo Marketplace Blvd., Oviedo; free; 407-542-5046; lunattix.com/ haus-of-maus.
Julia Child’s 112th Birthday Dinner
A culinary journey inspired by Julia Child’s cherished recipes, complemented perfectly with carefully selected wine pairings. 6:30 pm Wednesday and 6:30 pm Thursday; Bites and Bubbles, 1618 N. Mills Ave.; $149; 407270-5085; bitesbubbles.com/events.
Local Author Festival Meet and greet local authors at the library’s Local Authors Festival. Authors from a variety of genres will share their experiences and books. Each author will have books available for purchase and signing. 2 pm Sunday; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info.
DRAWN BY KIERAN CASTAÑO
BY ROB BREZSNY
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The coming weeks will be a wonderful time to waste time on the internet. If you are properly aligned with cosmic rhythms, you will spend long hours watching silly videos, interacting with friends and strangers on social media, and shopping for products you don’t really need. JUST KIDDING!! Everything I just said was a dirty lie. It was designed to test your power to resist distracting influences and mediocre advice. Here’s my authentic counsel, Leo. The coming weeks will be a fantastic phase to waste as little time as possible as you intensify your focus on the few things that matter to you most.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Scientific research suggests that brushing and flossing your teeth not only boosts the health of your gums, but also protects your heart’s health. Other studies show that if you maintain robust microbiota in your gut, you’re more likely to avoid anxiety and depression as you nurture your mental health. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to focus on big-picture thoughts like these, Virgo. You will be wise to meditate on how each part of your life affects every other part. You will generate good fortune as you become more vividly aware and appreciative of the intimate interconnectedness that underlies all you do.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The official term for the shape of a single piece of M&M candy is “oblate spheroid.” It’s rounded but not perfectly round. It looks like a partially squashed sphere. An Iraqi man named Ibrahim Sadeq decided to try the difficult task of arranging as many M&Ms as possible in a vertical stack. He is now the world’s record holder in that art, with seven M&Ms. I am imagining that sometime soon, Libra, you could achieve a comparable feat in your own domain. What’s challenging but not impossible?
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I’ve heard many people brag about their hangovers. The stories they tell are often entertaining and humorous. One of my best laughs emerged in response to two friends describing the time they jumped on the roof of a parked Mercedes-Benz at 3 a.m. and sang songs from Verdi’s opera Falstaff until the cops came and threw them in a jail cell with nothing to eat or drink for 10 hours. In accordance with astrological omens, Scorpio, I ask you to not get a hangover in the coming weeks, even an amusing one. Instead, I encourage you to studiously pursue extreme amounts of pleasurable experiences that have only good side effects.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Sleep deprivation is widespread. I see it as a pandemic. According to some studies, over half the people in the world suffer from insomnia, don’t get enough sleep, or have trouble falling asleep or staying asleep. Most research on this subject doesn’t mention an equally important problem: that many people aren’t dreaming enough. And the fact is that dreaming is key to our psychological well-being. I bring this to your attention, Capricorn, because the coming weeks will be a favorable time to enhance your relationship with sleep and dreams. I encourage you to learn all you can and do all you can to make your time in bed deeply rejuvenating.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Only 47 people live on the volcanic Pitcairn Islands, which are located in the middle of nowhere in the South Pacific Ocean. Pollution is virtually nonexistent, which is why the honey made by local bees is the purest on the planet. In accordance with astrological omens, I’d love for you to get honey like that in the coming weeks. I hope you will also seek the best and purest of everything. More than ever, you need to associate with influences that are potent, clear, genuine, raw, vibrant, natural and full-strength.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Many Indigenous people in North America picked and ate wild cranberries. But farm-grown cranberries available for commercial use didn’t appear until 1816. Here’s how it happened. In Cape Cod, Massachusetts, a farmer discovered a secret about the wild cranberry bog on his land. Whenever big storms dumped sand on the bog, the fruit grew with more lush vigor. He tinkered with this revelation from nature and figured out how to cultivate cranberries. I recommend this as a teaching story, Pisces. Your assignment is to harness the power and wisdom provided by a metaphorical storm or disturbance. Use it to generate a practical innovation in your life.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Years ago, when I worked as a postal delivery person in Santa Cruz, California, I mastered my route quickly. The time allotted to complete it was six hours,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Most famous musicians demand that their dressing rooms be furnished with specific amenities. Beyoncé needs rose-scented candles. Rihanna expects her preparatory sanctuary to have dark blue or black drapes topped with icy blue chiffon. Eminem insists on a set of 25-pound dumbbells, and the hip-hop duo Rae Sremmurd wants Super Soaker water guns. Since the coming weeks may be as close to a rock-star phase of your cycle as you’ve ever had, I recommend you create a list of your required luxuries. This imaginative exercise will hopefully get you in the mood to ask for exactly what you need everywhere you go.
but I could easily finish in four. Soon I began to goof off two hours a day, six days a week. Many great works of literature and music entertained me during that time. I joined a softball team and was able to play an entire game each Saturday while officially on the job. Was what I did unethical? I don’t think so, since I always did my work thoroughly and precisely. Is there any comparable possibility in your life, Aries? An ethical loophole? A workaround that has full integrity? An escape clause that causes no harm?
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): From an astronomer’s perspective, Uranus is huge. Sixty-three Earths could fit inside of it. It’s also weirdly unique because it rotates sideways compared to the other planets. From an astrologer’s point of view, Uranus symbolizes the talents and gifts we possess that can be beneficial to others. If we fully develop these potentials, they will express our unique genius and be useful to our fellow humans. It so happens that Uranus has been cruising through Taurus since 2018 and will mostly continue there until 2026. I regard these years as your best chance in this lifetime to fulfill the opportunities I described. The coming weeks will be especially pregnant with possibilities.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Mountaineer Edmund Hillary is renowned as the first person to climb to the summit of Mount Everest. It happened in 1953. Less famous was his companion in the ascent, Gemini mountaineer Tenzing Norgay. Why did Hillary get more acclaim than Norgay, even though they were equal partners in the monumental accomplishment? Was it because one was a white New Zealander and the other a brown Nepalese? In any case, I’m happy to speculate that if there’s a situation in your life that resembles Norgay’s, you will get remediation in the coming months. You will receive more of the credit you deserve. You will garner the acknowledgment and recognition that had previously been unavailable. And it all starts soon.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): As an American, I’m embarrassed by the fact that my fellow citizens and I comprise just 4 percent of the world’s population but generate 20 percent of its garbage. How is that possible? In any case, I vow that during the next five weeks, I will decrease the volume of trash I produce and increase the amount of dross I recycle. I encourage you, my fellow Cancerians, to make a similar promise. In ways that may not be immediately imaginable, attending to these matters will improve your mental health and maybe even inspire you to generate an array of fresh insights about how to live your life with flair and joy.
Mama (A524364) is just over a year old and very shy, but she warms up quickly. Mama has puppy energy and sweetness, and loves to run around the yard, jump for treats, learn new things and be rewarded for them. As soon as staff approach her kennel, Mama’s entire body is wiggling, her tail is helicoptering, and she is ready for some time outside. Mama is young and fun, and the shelter environment in no way dampens her mood. She is timid with people she doesn’t know, but that lasts about five minutes and then she’s ready to snuggle and give her heart. Mama shares her kennel with another dog, but during playgroups, she prefers to be close to people. She also loves to give and get hugs and kisses, and if you massage her paws, she is yours forever.
Orange County Animal Services is celebrating the Summer Olympics and back-to-school with two adoption promotions for the entire month of August: Gold Medal Favorites and Teacher’s Pet. Pets who have been in the shelter’s care for four weeks or longer will qualify as a “Gold Medal Favorite,” and will have a reduced adoption fee of $10. OCAS will also celebrate the people who dedicate their careers to our local schools and children with the “Teacher’s Pet” promotion. The shelter will waive adoption fees for any school district employee (with proper school district identification) who decides to adopt a pet. Each adopted pet is spayed or neutered, vaccinated, and microchipped before going to their new home.
OCAS is located at 2769 Conroy Road in Orlando, near the Mall at Millenia. The shelter is open 10 a.m.-6 p.m. every day except Wednesday, when it’s open 2-6 p.m. For more information, please call 407-836-3111 or visit ocnetpets.com.
Meet Mama!
where kindness is our culture and education is our commitment!
At Theory Salon our mission is to empower others by making them look and feel beautiful. The way you are treated, our uplifting environment and high standards are what sets us apart as a salon. Our team is trained to perform at the highest level in the industry by committing to constant growth, monthly education and accountability for each guest’s experience in the chair. We commit to providing you with luxury services, the best salon products and a positive and peaceful salon environment.
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WANTED - All motorhomes, fifth wheels and travel trailers. Cars, vans and trucks any condition. Cash paid on the spot. Call 954-595-0093.
Legal, Public Notices
ALL ABOARD STORAGE NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Personal property of the following tenants will be sold at public sale to the highest bidder to satisfy a rental lien in accordance with Florida Statutes, Sections: 83.801 - 83.809. All units areassumed to contain general household goods unless otherwise indicated. Viewing of photos will be available on www.lockerfox.com, up to 5 days prior to each scheduled sale. The owners or their agents reserve the right to bid on any unit and also to refuse any bid. All items or units may not be available on the day of sale. The Public Sale will take place via www.lockerfox.com on: Wednesday, August 28th, 2024 1:30 p.m., or thereafter, at: SANFORD DEPOT 2728
W 25th St, Sanford, FL 32771 407-305-3388 Abigail Glasgow 1191, Summer Brown 1351, Jessica Betourd 1626, Kellie Moore 1647, Natalie Brzeski 1099, Catherine Adams-Eflin 1644, Autumn Horne 1192. The above Tenants have been given proper notice, fourteen days prior to the first publication of this Notice of Sale, that the Owner will enforce a statutory lien on the property located in their respective unit of the above-mentioned self-storage facilities. Publication Dates: August 7 and 14, 2024.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 23rd, 2024. at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 11920 W Colonial Dr Ste 10, Ocoee FL 34761, 407-794-6970. Gustavo Aragon- household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 23, 2024 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 1101 Marshall farms rd., Ocoee FL 34761, 407-516-7221 Eric Meeks - Furniture, Oneil Mason-Home goods, Deidre Marshall -House items, Tricia Maier-house goods, Rose Cherryhouse goods, Debra Romaine-Household items, Randall Pinette-houseware. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning
bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 2631 E Semoran Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 (407) 408-7437 on August 23rd, 2024 12:00PM Eric saxon-Household items, Robert Lake-Household items, Shanay Lilly-Household items, Ettiene Toh-Household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 23rd, 2024 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00 PM Extra Space Storage 831 N. Park Avenue Apopka, FL 32712 (407) 4500345 Michael Stewart - boxes, trophies. Paul Abbaleo - Household item. Joshua Black - clothing. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to comlete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Extra Space Storage 6035 Sand Lake Vista Drive, Orlando, FL 32819 August 23rd, 2024, 11:00AM Barbara Bayless- Furniture clothes Jennifer Smith- Full mattress and box spring; boxes of household goods Candice Gausmann- Boxes, furniture, clothes, household goods Torran Watterson- Bikes odd & ends Gladys Torres- 2 twin beds, 1 queen bedroom set, bed frame, 4 chair dinning table, boxes, TVs Hannah Onorato- boxes, suitcase, safe Javier Lozano- tools, exercise equipment, table Jeannick Duquela- Household furniture, 3 bedroom Sandra Hall- Household items, boxes and personal items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 8235 N Orange Blossom Trl, Orlando FL., 32810, 727.428.6564 on August 23, 2024 @ 12:00PM Jonathan Aldana-Household Goods/Furniture Benny Daniel-Household
furniture, jackets, tools, boxes Jack Pinnock-Freezer, Refrigerator, Stove, Household goods Chelena Johnson-Dresser, Bins, Boxes, Household Fabiola Lim-Shelves, Bins, Kitchen Items Shereece Strachan-Twin size bedroom set, Mattress’ & box springs, totes, books, dressers. Enosch Fils-Bed, Music equipment, furniture Dontavius Howard-Vending machines, tires, boxes Alexandra Pietrzykowski-Chairs, bed, table, microwave Joanne Langton-Household Goods/ Furniture Stephenson Seebran-awn mower, weed eater, boxes Teresa Whitman-Chairs, Bins, Cushions, Bed, Wall art Fredricka Williams-Bed, Dresser, Chairs, boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility inorder to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: September 5, 2024, at the times and locations listed below: The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage, 11971 Lake Underhill Rd Orlando, FL 32825 4075167913 Christopher Hanna homegoods, Candice Hazel homegoods The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage, 11071 University Blvd Orlando, FL 32817, 3213204055 Otis Schmakel personal items. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:00 AM Life Storage 11583 University Blvd Orlando FL 32817 4077772278: Von Marie Figueroa: Household Goods/Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances, Office Furn/ Machines/Equip The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:00AM Life Storage, 9001 Eastmar Commons Blvd, Orlando, FL 32825, 4079016180: Danielle Flowers: dresser, household goods, tables, totes, boxes. Andres Zuniga: mattress, freezer, clothing, tools. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 12280 East Colonial Drive, Orlando FL 32826, 3212867324: Sampson Leonard Campbell: end tables, clothing, mattress, boxes, lamps, furniture, stereo; Ilia Cox: mattress, electronics, kitchenware, household goods; Adrian Fernandez: box, Black Honda Rebel motorcycle*(not included sale); Evelyn G Perez: clothing, household, boxes, pressure washer; Tiffany Wallace: Gray Hyundai Veracruz; Rikianne Patterson: boxes, totes, clothes, wall art, shoes; Jessicalee Rodriguez: totes, toys, rims, shelving, sneakers The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 14916 Old Cheney Hwy, Orlando FL 32826, 4079179151: Victoria Bramlett: wheelchair, furniture, boxes, fishing poles. Elias Walker: clothes, boxes, computers, monitors, TV. Stephen Harris: lamps, toys, tools, art, boxes, mirrors, furniture.The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 3364 W State Rd 426 Oviedo, FL 32765, 4079304293: Darlene Santiago: Household Goods, Boxes, Shelving, Electronics, Totes. Mini Fridge. Jason Birkett: Household Goods, Mattress, Mini Fridge, Electronics, Outdoor Equipment, Totes. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage,
1010 Lockwood Blvd Oviedo, FL 32765, 4079304370: Michelle Williams: Household Goods, Toys , Bins , Plastic Bags.T he personal goods stored therein by the following: 10:00AM Life Storage, 6068 Wooden Pine Drive. Orlando, Florida 32829 407.974.5165: Moises Michel- king size bed, boxes, safe, pressure washer, walker, gazebo, luggage, totes. Saba Cleaners LLC- Boxes, mannequins, clothing racks, totes, packing/shipping supplies, baby seat, beauty supplies, clothes hangers, filing cabinet, office supplies, 2 Dell monitors. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 1:30PM Extra Space Storage, 10959 Lake Underhill Rd Orlando FL 32825, 4075020120: Monique Girace: bed, dresser, TV, Christmas decor, clothes, boxes, bags, toys, totes, arts and crafts; Swain Flowers: bags, boxes, toolbox, fan, grill, vacuum; Troy Jones: guitar, clothes, kid bike, scooter, monitor, bags, boxes, toys. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:15AM Extra Space Storage, 1305 Crawford Ave. St. Cloud FL 34769, 4075040833: S & L Nursery INC. Tent, Folding Tables, Totes: Charles Gerwig, Totes, Luggage: Michelle Roberts, Dresser, Fridge, Mattresses The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:30PM Extra Space Storage, 14800 Narcoossee Rd. Orlando, FL 32832 407.987.4115: Carlos Cepeda- Totes, boxes, chair The personal goods stored Therein by the following: 9:52AM Extra space storage, 12709 E. Colonial Drive, Orlando, Fl 32826, 4076343990: Ryan Maddox, boxes, furniture, appliances; Rafael C Serra Torres The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage, 12915 Narcoossee Rd. Orlando, FL 32832 407.501.5799: Elizabeth Joseph: Mattress & bedding, books, electronics, boxes, computers, cat cage. The personal goods stored therein by the following (8840) The personal goods stored therein by the following: 1:15PM Extra Space Storage, 11261 Narcoossee Rd. Orlando FL 32832, 4072807355: Imran Tariq- Shelf, Books, Boxes; Ricky keys Household items, Holiday Decorations, Furniture. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:45 PM Extra Space Storage, 9847 Curry Ford Rd Orlando, FL 32825, 4074959612: Robert Jen Rosambert-Business, Mattress; Carlos M Blount Office Stuff; Tatiana Lopez-Crafting items, medical equipment. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property
Extra Space Storage/ Life Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: Store 3057 4066 Silver Star Rd, Orlando, FL 32808 (407) 734-1959 on August 23rd, 2024 12:00PM Erica Kindred-Totes, Bags, Couch, Mattress and Bedding, Boxes Jayvian Travis-Appliances, Lamps, Baby Items, Furniture, Personal Effects, Boxes Harold Brisbane-Chairs, Totes, Sports Equipment Bags, Memorabilia, Boxes Michael Parks-Sitting Chair, Personal Effects, Furniture, Household Items, Boxes Tiffany Flowers-Personal Effects, Boxes, Bags, Suitcases Dasha McGriff-Personal Items Jerrod Ford-Coolers, Car Parts, Mattress and Bedding, Furniture Latoya AndersonToys and Games, Mattress and Bedding,
Furniture, Boxes, Sports Equipment, Deep Freezer, Bags. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF GIBSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE. CLINTONISHA MOORE, PLAINTIFF, VS. JOEL JEROME ROGER, DEFENDANT, DOCKET NO. 25136. PUBLICATION NOTICE TO: JOEL JEROME ROGER In this Cause, it appearing from the Complaint which is sworn to, that the whereabouts of the Defendant, JOEL JEROME ROGER, is unknown and cannot be ascertained by the diligent search and inquiry made to that end. JOEL JEROME ROGER is therefore, hereby, required to appear and Answer the Complaint filed in this Cause in the Chancery Court of GIBSON COUNTY, Tennessee, within thirty days of the last publication of this Notice and serve a copy of said Answer on Howard F. Douglass, P.O. Box 39, Lexington, Tn., 38351, Attorney for Plaintiff, within said time. If you fail to do so judgment by default will be taken against you for relief demanded in the Complaint and this matter will be presented to the Court without further Notice. It is further Ordered that this Notice be published for four consecutive weeks in The Orlando Weekly. This the 24th day of June, 2024. /s/ CLERK & MASTER.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY IN THE INTEREST OF: Y.R.J. DOB: 9/24/2022, MINOR CHILD / CASE NO. DP22-492 NOTICE OF ACTION TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO: ARIEL HOWELL Address Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child for adoption: Y.R.J. born on September 24, 2022. You are hereby commanded to appear on September 17, 2024, at 9:30 A.M. before the Honorable Greg A. Tynan, at the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street Courtroom 5 Orlando, FL 32806, for an ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD OR CHILDREN NAMED IN THIS NOTICE. If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator, Human Resources, Orange County Courthouse, 425 N. Orange Avenue, Suite 510, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 836-2303, at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. WITNESS, my hand as Clerk of said Court and the Seal thereof, this 22nd day of July, 2024. Clerk of Court By: /s/ As Deputy Clerk.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY IN THE INTEREST OF: C.D.D. DOB: 3/14/2014, MINOR CHILD / CASE NO. DP23-082 NOTICE OF ACTION TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO: CHRISTOPHER DAY Address Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child for adoption: C.D.D. born on March 14, 2014. You are hereby commanded to appear on September 4, 2024, at 10 A.M. before the Honorable Greg A. Tynan, at the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street Courtroom 5 Orlando, FL 32806, for an ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD OR CHILDREN NAMED IN THIS NOTICE. If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator, Human Resources, Orange County Courthouse, 425 N. Orange Avenue, Suite 510, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 836-2303, at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. WITNESS, my hand as Clerk of said Court and the Seal thereof, this 17th day of July, 2024. Clerk of Court By: /s/ As Deputy Clerk.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR OSCEOLA COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 41 CASE NO.: 2022-DP-48. IN THE INTEREST OF: J. M. DOB: 12/29/2021, Minor child. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS. TO: Gabriel Montanez, Unknown Address. A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child; you are to appear before Judge Laura Shaffer, on September 30, 2024, at 11:00am at the Osceola County Courthouse at 2 Courthouse Square, Courtroom 4C, Kissimmee, FL 34741, for an ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD WHOSE INITIALS APPEAR ABOVE. “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand as the Clerk of said Court and the Seal, this 25th day of July, 2024. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT (Court Seal) By: /s/ Kevin Soto, Deputy Clerk.
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Legal, Public Notices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY IN THE INTEREST OF: E.D.
DOB: 1/20/2008, MINOR CHILD / CASE NO.DP21-156 NOTICE OF ACTION
TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS
TO: IBRAHIMA DOUKANSE, Address
Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child for adoption: E.D. born on January 20, 2008. You are hereby commanded to appear on October 16, 2024, at 10:00 AM before the Honorable Greg A. Tynan, at the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street Courtroom 5 Orlando, FL 32806, for an ADVISORY HEARING.
FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES
CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD OR CHILDREN
NAMED IN THIS NOTICE. If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator, Human Resources, Orange County Courthouse, 425 N. Orange Avenue, Suite 510, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 836-2303, at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. WITNESS, my hand as Clerk of said Court and the Seal thereof, this 6th day of August, 2024. Clerk of Court By: /s/ As Deputy Clerk.
Life Storage/Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 7244 Overland Rd Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 794-7457 on August 23rd, 2024 12:00PM Pierrot Dupalis-Boxes, Tools, Ladders, Clarissa Woodside-Personal/cloths couch, bed; Esther Juste-Household Goods/ Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools/ Appliances, Office Furn/Machines/Equip; Eric Vargas-Furniture, Bedding, clothes, electronics, TV.The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Life Storage/Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Life Storage/Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23rd, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 8439: 1420 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando FL, 32804 407.312.8736 @ 12:00PM: Christina Kang: king bed, toys, vanity dining table w/ chairs, tv/stand, playhouses, dryer, boxes; Saundra Jones: Home goods; Mariah Herron: clothing, racks
from business; Fredrick Johnson: 2 queen size beds, home furniture, 2 dressers , nightstand, 2 dining tables, 2 living room sets. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Life Storage/Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Life Storage/Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 2650 N Powers Dr. Orlando, FL 32818 (407) 982-1032 on August 23rd, 2024 at 1:00PM Janita Williams-Household Goods, Walter Tyler-personal and business items, Ursula Harris-Household Goods, Jamaal Davis-Cooking appliances, Marlos Jenkins-Household Goods, Charmen Mais-Johnson-Household Goods, Jameica Flavien-Household goodsThe auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Life Storage/ Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Notice Is Hereby Given that Destination Pet, LLC, 8822 S. Ridgeline Blvd, #260, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name of Oviedo Pet Resort, with its principal place of business in the State of Florida in the County of Seminole, intends to file an Application for Registration of Fictitious Name with the Florida Department of State.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23rd, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 1334: 5603 Metrowest Blvd Orlando FL, 32811 407.516.7751 @ 12:00PM: Aurelia Brown: household items; Brandee Pendleton: Furniture; Cheri Swier: Photo albums, Christmas decorations, clothes, shoes; Jamila Wade: air fry totes; Josef P Powell: Business books, records etc furniture; Lenford Grandison: Stand up mirror, Boxes,clothes; Lloyd Rawlings: couch set, 2 beds, boxes; Mark Key: Bed, Boxes, furniture; Meronais Exavier: household goods; Natisha Cuellar: Appliance boxes tv clothes; Sharron Wilcox: household goods; Yzeaminda Parker: Boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space
Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23rd, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 7590: 7360 Sandlake Rd Orlando, FL 32819, 407.634.4449 @ 11:45
AM: Wislande Ovilma- vending mahcine, boxes, shelves. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space
Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23rd 12:00pm at the location indicated: Store 8138: 1001 Lee rd, Orlando, FL 32810 407.489.3742 Migel Gonzalez-boxes, bikes, totes; Doris Roperfurniture, boxes; Delray Herring-clothes, boxes, furniture; Vina Chetri-totes, clothing; Ryan Rege- boxes, blankets; Kendrick DeShay-boxes, totes, clothes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space
Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 7420: 800 Beard Rd Winter Garden, FL 34787, 407.551.6985 @ 12:00 PM: William Mclean- furniture: Marvin Kemp- household items: Tiffani Galvan- furniture, household items: Robert Moraga-household products and boxes: Vanessa Angle- Tv’s, fridge, washer, dryer, tv stand, desk, king size mattress: Mike Johns- 2 boxes, 1 crate: Marie J Piard- boxes, totes, kids items and sport equipment, one bed, one bicycle, kitchen utensils, etc. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space
Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 1317: 5592 LB McLeod Rd Orlando, FL 32811, 407.720.2832 @ 2:00 PM: Roland Wilson-household goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23,2024 at the location indicated: Store
3502: 1236 Vineland Rd, Winter Garden Fl, 34787, 407.794.6460 @12:00 PM: Jayron Kearse-Household Goods/Furniture, TV/ Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances; Christian Duprey-Boxes, Household Goods, Tools; Timothy Hilliard-Household Goods/Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Office Furn/Machines/Equip; Renee Fiscus-Household Goods/Furniture, TV/ Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances; Glenmuir/Maria Murray-Acct. Records/ Sales Samples. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 30, 2024 at the location indicated: Store 8460: 4390 Pleasant Hill Rd Kissimmee FL 34746 407.429.8867 @12:15 PM: Hector Garciabags, clothes; Charmaine Byrd- Furniture Store 8753: 540 Cypress Pky, Poinciana, FL 34759 863.240.0879 @ 12:45 PM: Michelle Simons- Household Items; Tnia CookHousehold Items; Zachary Hill- Household Items; Delia Brown- Household Items; Hector Roman- Household Items; Bernard Turner- Couch, Boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space Storage, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage, or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on August 23, 2024, at the locations indicated: Store 1333: 13125 S. John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL 32837, 407.516.7005 @ 10:00 AM: William Lamont Washington - home items, Tonya Williams - home items. Store 1631: 5753 Hoffner Ave, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 212-5890 @ 10:15 AM: Christopher Jordan - microwave, couch, luggage, totes, ladders; Jorge L Mojica - box spring, totes, fish tank, decoration, nightstand, couch, rug, backpacks. Store 7057: 13597 S. Orange Ave, Orlando, FL 32824, 407.910.2087 @ 10:30 AM: Maverick Matos - household goods. Store 7107: 6174 S Goldenrod, Orlando, FL 32822, 407.955.4137 @ 10:45 AM: German Colon-Robles - mattress, barber seat, tools; Pamela Hinkfoth - misc household goods; Gabrielle Rochefort - boxes of clothing, kitchen items. Store 3024: 11955 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32837, 407.734.1315 @ 11:00 AM: Ralbin Yararo Duarte Ramirez - tools, totes, pet cage, boxes; Sedric A Williams - luggage, bags, weights, cooler, popcorn machine. Store 8931: 3280 Vineland Rd, Kissimmee, FL 34746, 407.720.7424 @ 11:30 AM: Yaqeen Chowdhury - boxes, kitchen items; Briana Davis - household items; Jessica Bellard - household items; Vanessa Benitez Cotto - household items. Store 3519: 4020 Curry Ford Rd, Orlando, FL 32806, 407.480.2931 @ 11:45 AM: Erica Masse - couch, tables, stand; Jeanette Wilcox - household
goods/furniture, bins, boxes; Becky Lotton - nightstands, clothing, shelving, bedding; Brock Daley - boxes, mostly, and a car seat; Diane Vankirk - household goods & furniture. Store 8136: 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32839, 407.488.9093 @ 12:00 PM: Thomas Bieger - grills, household appliances, furniture; Antonella Arias - household goods, kitchen appliances; Janice Sandershousehold appliances, bed, televisions; Timothy Williams - clothes, shoes, bags, boxes; Angelica McGill - household appliances, boxes, totes, shoes. Store 7306: 408 N Primrose Dr, Orlando, FL 32803, (321) 285-5021 @ 12:15 PM: Xavier Hill - household and event items; Meghan McNash - boxes, bins, clothes, shoes; Lemar Ramirez - bed frame, boxes, dresser, tables, TV stand, patio furniture; Pedro Gonzalez - three-bedroom home furniture and household items. Store 8612: 1150 Brand Ln, Kissimmee, FL 34744, 407.414.5303 @ 12:30 PM: Anthony Thompson - TV, clothes, furniture; Diego Avonce - household goods; Larelle McClendon - speaker, boxes, car engine; Daniel Oddo - furniture, electronics, personal keepsakes. Store 3526: 4650 S. Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, 407.823.7734 @ 12:45 PM: John Gonzalez/John Hernandez - ladder, metal pieces, bag, tools, sleeping bag, air-bag pump, wood door, bulbs; Kevin Watson - cabinets/shelves, toys, clothing/shoes, bedding items, personal effects, wall art, books, household goods, furniture, supplies; Kristin Alvarado - toys, bedding items, electronics, household goods, furniture, boxes; Mayelin Gonzalez - shelves, health items, clothing/shoes, mattress, personal effects, books, household goods, electronics, furniture, boxes, supplies. Store 8778: 3820 S Orange Ave, Orlando, FL 32806, 321.270.3440 @ 1:00
PM: Ayannah Noisette - boxes, clothes, luggage, product; Joan Telfer - household items; Steven Kenny La Roche - personal stuff, work shoes; Luz Gonzalez - boxes.
Store 4107: 9080 W. Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy, Kissimmee, FL 34747, 407.238.1799 @ 1:15 PM: Luis Gonzalez - toddler car, baby walker, bikes, dry erase board; Michael Peterkin - furniture dolly, guitar, boxes; Matthew Wilfries - generator, air compressor, fold-up tables, bike; Vanessa Perez Malave - household goods, furniture, boxes. Store 4109: 13450 Landstar Blvd, Orlando, FL 32824, 407.601.4169 @ 1:30
PM: Lakesha Jones - fully furnished 1 bed; Enos Brown - household goods/furniture. Store 4217: 5698 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32839, 754.551.4774 @ 1:45
PM: Terri Carey - boxes, bins, household goods; Ariel Samuel - household goods/ furniture, TV/stereo equipment. Store 4227: 2334 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, 407.930.4541 @ 2:00 PM: Shanequa Brown - boxes, bags, refrigerator, small entertainment center. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above-referenced facility to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
right to accept or reject any and/or all bids.
1UYVS25337G143820 2007 UT
NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates at 8:00AM. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 08/22/2024
SHSRD68434U205544 HOND 2004
09/06/2024
1J8FF48W58D594994 JEEP 2008
1GDJ7C1356F900789 GMC 2006
1GBJG31R521148967 CHEV 2002
ZACCJABH0FPB94311 JEEP 2015
Overtime Towing and Recovery, 11337 Rocket Blvd., Orlando, FL 32824
NOTICE OF SALE
ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property under The Florida Self Storage Facility Act. Bidding takes place on lockerfox.com and concludes Wednesday the 28th day of August, 2024 at 10:00 AM with payment at the facility. Store Space Millenia, 4912 S. John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL, 32839. Kiara Holmes ; Israel Sanchez ; Israel Sanchez ; Anthony Montalvo ; Cynthia Holmes ; Jacinta Gerardin ; Kiana Cooper ; Aidan Jacobs ; Monica Thomas ; Irish Wimbush ; Lysandra Soares ; SHEENA ROSE FONTAINE ; Maribel vasquez ; Taylor Gill ; James Coleman ; Travis Davis ; Brian Samuel ; Woodson Vixama ; Latresia Brown ; Bobbie Gray ; Jasen White ; Jasmine Downer ; Camirra cavanaugh ; Vincent Forbes ; Jamie Mince ; Lisa Lieberman ; Yanelys Mateo ; Tiffany Cook ; Terrence Pew ; Tajuanna Stiger ; Waylan Peters ; Molly Inglemon ; Jannette Garcia Sanchez ; Redie Cobb ; Vincent Anderson ; Aaliyah Liftherd ; Guadelupe Izaguivve ; Juan Carlos Lopez Diaz ; Peterson Auguste ; Store Space Sanford - Storage, 3980 E. Lake Mary Blvd., Sanford, FL, 32773. Vernia Jackson ; Nytheria Perdue ; Samantha Sheets ; Tyrone Henderson ; Sonya Brantley ; Maria Negron ; Marshal L Taylor ; Melana Prescott ; Christina Brown ; Tyrone Henderson ; Regina Mitchell ; Brandon Camille ; Fashana Alexander ; Alvin Vicioso ; Shawn Johnson ; Alexis Weaver ; Terry Manley ; Javelle Britten ; Richard Fate ; jose Gonzales.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:
ADAM AYED ENTERPRISES LLC gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 8/30/2024, 09:00 am at 9712 RECYCLE CENTER RD ORLANDO, FL 32824- 8146, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. ADAM AYED ENTERPRISES LLC reserves the
Legal, Public Notices
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Retail Sales, LLC will sell at public lien sale on August 23, 2024, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 09:30 AM and continue until all units are sold. The lien sale is to be held at the online auction website, www. storagetreasures.com, where indicated. For online lien sales, bids will be accepted until 2 hours after the time of the sale specified. PUBLIC STORAGE # 07030, 360 State Road 434 East, Longwood, FL 32750, (407) 392-1525 Time: 09:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 1127 - Michalski, Joseph; 1313 - Ellington, Jaronte; 1819 - Hughes, Frances; 2401 - Williams, Melissa; 2503 - Newsome, Christy; 2613 - Smith, Ardeanna; 2707 - Marin, Luis; 3114 - Stack, Karola; 3116sheets, gregory; 3404 - Smith, Ardeanna; 3510 - Mcdonald, Nicole; 3623 - Stram, Melissa; 3706 - Smith, Ardeanna PUBLIC STORAGE # 23118, 141 W State Road 434, Winter Springs, FL 32708, (407) 512-0425
Time: 09:45 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A037 - Jennings, Raymond; C101 - Callaghan, Michael; C107 - Williams, Brittany L; E175 - Smith, Terry; F183 - Alexander, Laila; G194Burns, Sharita; I258 - Lallharry, Barinzah; J289 - Waters, Cedric; J301 - Melendez, Eric; J318 - Cartagena, Luis; L481Fromme, Steve; M512 - fRANCE, jUSTIN; R553 - Davis, Lorenzo; S590 - Borger, Monika PUBLIC STORAGE # 24326, 570 N US Highway 17 92, Longwood, FL 32750, (407) 505-7649 Time: 10:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com
A128 - cotto, nilmary; C352 - Ogaz, Robert; D406 - Reale, Jason; E056 - Wiggins, Starshawn; E092 - Hall, Emily; F627 - Ho, Eddy; F639 - Trent, Talon; F667 - Stokes, Lawrence; F687 - Holman, Brian; G016jordan, Tiffane; G026 - Evans, Janet; G039 - iServ Ice, LLC Busch, Phil; G060 - Torres, Carlos; G104 - white’s repair services inc White, Christopher; H834 - buchanan, Jeffrey PUBLIC STORAGE # 24328, 7190 S US Highway 17/92, Fern Park, FL 32730, (407) 258-3060 Time: 10:15 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com
I014 - Malcolm, Louise; I017 - Stephens, Brittney; J605 - perdue, Brandon; J607Mesadieu, Tessa; J707 - Correa, Anthony; P051 - Louis, Monchiney; P102 - Defreitas, Jose PUBLIC STORAGE # 25455, 8226 S US Highway 17/92, Fern Park, FL 32730, (407) 258-3062 Time: 10:45 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. B232 - Mather, Garth; B236 - Czaja, Michael; B282 - Stone, Jamie; C340 - Moody, James; C386 - Andujar, Laurinda; D475 - McCalla, Lloyd; D476 - Haley, Austin; E523 - Roman, Angel; E542 - mclain, dillon; E552 - Patsavos, Tracie; E561 - Lopez, Mateo; E584 - Roundtree, Ernest; F659 - Lopes, Alessandra; F662 - sorensen, John; H832 - goff, alexis; H842 - Clarkson, George; P019 - Marshall, Orville PUBLIC STORAGE # 25842, 51 Spring Vista Dr, Debary, FL 32713, (386) 202-2956 Time: 11:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 00203 - Blekicki, Kim; 00238 - Ritter, Cynthia; 00305 - Wallace, Robert; 00310 - pena, margie; 00415Cerullo, Louis; 00416 - Richard, Jeremy; 00425 - Richard, Jeremy; 00524 - Huber, Glenna; 00535 - campbell, Essence; 00594 - Bryant, Ronald; 00619 - Osborne, Mary; 00626 - Arroyo, John; 00713 - Coppola, Erica; 00770 - Ripoll, Daniel; 00790 - ward, Sammie PUBLIC STORAGE # 25893, 3725 W Lake Mary Blvd, Lake Mary, FL 32746, (407) 495-1274 Time: 11:15 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 1134 - Wynn, Patrice; 2084 - Robbins, DC; 2145 - Levigne, Austin; 3040 - Schlawiedt, BrittAny; 3047 - Michel, Ashley; 3056 - Maldonado, Adriel; 3074 - Savage, Adam; 4014 - Tucker, Kayla; 5015 - Ramos, Jazmine; 5035 - Williams, Georgette; 5071 - Weekes, Trevor; 5077 - Brown-Samuels, Gabrielle; 6102 - Campbell, Tanya; 7011 - Lyng, Heather; 8004 - Maldonado, Adriel PUBLIC STORAGE # 22127, 4051 W 1st St FL 46, Sanford, FL 32771, (407) 915-6887 Time: 11:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1020Philips, Kimberly; 1024 - Martin, Jaron; 1031 - Brooks, Khadjiah; 1033 - SULLIVAN, EARL GORDON; 1051 - Maille, Jason; 1066 - Anderson, Jennifer; 1162 - Overton, Jazmyne; 1169 - Lorts, Kayla; 1195 - Elkins, Kristy; 2001 - Cardell, Ronald; 2030 - thomas, kirk; 2036 - Spencer, Se Vonne; 2037 - Whittaker, Rickkia J; 2038 - CRUMITY, RITA LOUISE; 2040 - Jackson, Larry; 2087 - Baker, Keianna; 2094 - Pearon, Ellen; 215051 - Surin, Max; 2160 - fettinger, Heather; 3022 - castle, Mariam; 3055Anderson, Randy; 3093 - Neal, Shemeka; 3111 - Wells, Shaleah; 3135 - Bruno, Vincent; 3146 - CAMPBELL, SONJA; 4001 - MENEFEE, ERICK; 4004 - Hagood, Allen; 4013 - campbell, Kareem; 4049 - Sutton, Princess; 4061 - Lozada, Tairalee; 4078Wood, Dominique Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Retail Sales, LLC, 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Retail Sales, LLC will sell at public lien sale on August 22, 2024, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 09:30 AM and continue until all units are
sold. The lien sale is to be held at the online auction website, www. storagetreasures.com, where indicated. For online lien sales, bids will be accepted until 2 hours after the time of the sale specified. PUBLIC STORAGE #08711, 3145 N Alafaya Trail, Orlando, FL 32826, (407) 613-2984 Time: 09:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1123 - Thomas, Danielle; 1180 - Meyer, Catherine; 1189 - Edmond, Breon; 2033Clarke, Shania; 2042 - Anderson, Sean; 2049 - Malone, Justin; 2106 - Connelly, Sofia; 2193 - Quiles, Jorge R; 2279 - Gonzalez, Edith; 2283 - Clayton, Earl; 2307Bray, Sergio; 2342 - Gonzalez, Edith; 2371 - Inglis, Kacy P; 2391 - Alberts, Kristin; 3008 - Hobbs, Evelyn; 3012 - Matos, Keyshla; 4024 - Lee, Toni; 4148 - Halle, Lisa; 4154 - Meyer, Wade; 4181 - Florence, Jermine; 4183 - Harley, Jacquelyn; 4200 - Rivera, Roberto; 4216 - Vaughn, Thomas; 5026 - Burke, Brennain; 5034 - Morales, Derrick; 5052 - Hobbs, Evelyn PUBLIC STORAGE #08720, 1400 Alafaya Trail, Oviedo, FL 32765, (407) 487-4695 Time: 09:40 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0138 - Portorreal, Tania; 0356 - Calendrillo, Lauren; 0357 - Alexander, Loretta; 1024 - Giguere, Jason; 2023 - Suarez, Maria; 4003 - Hanzely, Carolyn; 5032 - Gonzalez Berrios, Carlos; 7077 - Figueroa, Alexis; 8025 - Prenn, Derrick PUBLIC STORAGE #08726, 4801 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 392-4546 Time: 09:50 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0145 - Eady, Kimberly; 0150 - Larribeau, Annelle; 0176 - Mathis, Carla; 0251 - Rivera, Anamilena; 0257 - Howell, Jennifer; 0259 - Perez, Roswitha; 0267 - Wilson, Kayla; 0271 - Rodrigo, Juan; 1009 - Morrison, Alex; 1026 - Straford, Tavares; 3013 - Atkins, Renita; 3025 - Soto, Jennifer; 3037Santiago, Leslie; 3043 - Alers, Ruben; 3059 - Lewis, Heather; 4011 - Burgos Cespedes, Jonnathan; 7003 - Rojas, Valeria; 7082 - Dussuau, Stephane; 7108 - Almestica, Edwin; 7117 - Gibilisco, Alan; 7138 - Peguero, Juan; 8003 - Walker, Rashard; 8006 - Moore, Brandon; 8021 - Gregory, Jennifer G; 8027 - Sierra, Annie; 8038 - Gregory, Jennifer G; 8094 - Williams, Twyla; 8147 - Casilla, Maximo; 8167 - Santana, Rosa PUBLIC STORAGE #08729, 5215 Red Bug Lake Road, Winter Springs, FL 32708, (407) 495-2108 Time: 10:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com 0126 - Bradley, Deserie; 0532 - Nicol, Cheri; 0539 - Vazquez, Michelle; 0568 - Ingalls, Stephen; 1018 - Grann, Steven; 1028 - Bonita Energy Solutions, Taylor, Thomas; 2042 - Grandt, Julia; 2064 - Cuyler, LaVerne; 3006 - Sheppard, Joseph; 3010 - Pierson, Lawrence; 4030 - Waters, Stephanie; 5009 - Republic National Distributing Company, Wingfield, Willie PUBLIC STORAGE #08765, 1851 N Alafaya Trail, Orlando, FL 32826, (407) 513-4445 Time: 10:10 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0023 - Brown, Eric; 0035 - Cooper, Bricenda; 0074 - Cherry, Chad; 0079 - Vanarsdale, Matthew; 0175 - Brown, Alvin; 1004 - Roman, Xiomara; 1014 - Acevedo, Yarimel; 1019 - Clarke, Shania; 2080 - Deshler, John; 2098 - Thorpe, Jamacia; 2141 - Alcinord, John; 4048 - Joyner, Tyrone; 5003 - Whipple, Erin; 5004 - Merced, Cristal; 5013 - Abidine, Yassine; 5035 - Eaton, Travis; 5040 - Seifert, Alexander; 5078 - Harwood, Kellyanne; 5163 - Miller, Gary; 7007 - Kanyok, Gerald; 7030 - Wyatt, Vanessa; 8010 - Cherry, Chad; 9002 - Kanyok, Jerry; 9027 - Johnson, Richard; 9051 - Flood, Miguel PUBLIC STORAGE #20179, 903 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 392-1549
(407) 901-7489 Time: 11:10 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A027 - Neal, Vallan; A045 - Berchen, Evan; A075 - Alvarez, Natividad; A081 - Ozuna, Celeste; A082 - Fraser, Henrietta; A083 - Jones, Tynia; A114 - Lureano, Geneveive; A138 - Hostos, Zovema; A154 - Augustave, Desiree; A160 - Fenelus, Ashley; A182 - Linzy-Richardson, Jaelyn; A198 - Lozada, Maria; A247 - Orero, Rosalind; A259 - Augustave, Desiree; B323 - LaMarca, Joseph; B341 - Whiley, Krystle; C365 - Serrano, Justin; C386 - Albarran, Travis; D423 - Nelson, Jumal; D433 - powe, willie; D467 - Joseph, Dehotie; D473 - Brasil, Christopher; D495 - Dugazn, Skeet; E502rotundo, Brittany; E505 - eckard, Rachael; E521 - Parker, William; E530 - Cordero, Carmen PUBLIC STORAGE # 25974, 1931 W State Rd 426, Oviedo, FL 32765, (407) 901-7497 Time: 11:20 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. C067 - Dampier, Tyrese; C128 - Hester, Callie; D332 - Diaz, Calvert; D458 - Burnsed, Leah; D496A - Dial, Shelia; E528 - Erickson, Kenny PUBLIC STORAGE # 28084, 2275 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 545-2547 Time: 11:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. B103 - Mejia, Luis; B143 - Blake, Antonio; B145 - Daniels, Jeff; B168 - Davis, Brooke; B189 - Feliciano, Liannette; B191 - Whitner, Antonio; B197 - Hipp, Donna; C106 - Kessler, Cheryl; C132 - Jimenez, Maribel; C161 - Maragh, Tracey; C189 - Trawick, Dwayne; C195C - black nibble Hendry, Tehri; C199F - Dillet, Krystal; C202 - Perez, Adolfo; C209 - Chavez, Jessica; C227G - Rivera, yvette; C227H - Wheatley, Mitchell. Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Retail Sales, LLC, 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Management, LLC #0695 - 4554 Hoffner Ave Orlando, FL 32812 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 3, 2024 at approx. 10:30am at www.storagetreasures.com: Latori Franklin, Tiffany Jordan, Dasha Rosado NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner CubeSmart # 5341 – 2310 W Carroll St, Kissimmee, FL 34741 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 3, 2024 at approx. 11:00am at www. storagetreasures.com: Marcel Welch, Simon Kenga Martin, Barbara Gonzalez De Vasallu, Antonio Santiago, Benjamin A Ball, Stevie McLeod, Samuel Gonzalez NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner CubeSmart # 6174 – 1004 North Hoagland Blvd. Kissimmee, Fl. 34741 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 3, 2024 at approx. 11:30am at www.storagetreasures.com: Trevon Bryant, Adolfo ivan Hernandez, Kymberly Smith, Mathieu Elbaz, Jorge M Gonzalez, Frances Perez, Diedra Shoultz,
Terrell Douglas, Jasmine Rodriguez
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner CubeSmart #6177 – 1830 E Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy. Kissimmee, Fl. 34744 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 3, 2024 at approx. 12:00pm at www.storagetreasures.com: Crystal Ann Elliott, Jorge Pena, Robert Mack, Daniela Jimenez, Lisa Parenti, Herbert Jerome Barber
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner
CubeSmart # 5695 – 1159 Tomyn Blvd Winter Garden, FL 34787 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 3, 2024 at approx. 1:00pm at www.storagetreasures.com: David Beacham NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Management, LLC #0671 – 100 Mercantile Ct. Ocoee, FL 34761 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 4, 2024 at approx. 10:30am at www.storagetreasures.com: William Marvin Langston Jr, Bibi Sabreena Ackbar, Mary Sanders / M Sanders, Jamaal Thomas Davis, Deontray Tyshaun Jones, Ralph Laurence Schmidheini NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Management, LLC #0693 - 1015 N. Apopka Vineland Rd. Orlando, FL 32818 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 4, 2024 at approx. 11:00am at www.storagetreasures. com: Shakenya Evans, SM Evans, Dona Barconey, Angelica Brown, James Watkins, Rasheda Saunders, RS, Nathalie Dessant, Evana Session NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Management, LLC # 0420 –5301 N. Pine Hills Road, Orlando Fl 32808 to satisfy a lien on at approx. SEPTEMBER 4, 2024 at approx. 11:30am at www.storagetreasures.com: Summer Lynne Robinson, Norman Marquise Gary, Jerald Denard Stringfield Jr, Omar Ali, Dream Hunter, Lilkeasha Williams, Eddie Scott, Malvin Ann Williams-Tyson , Oliver James Roberto / Oliver Robert, vincent king, Samantha Ford, KENNETH JONES, Jhiliah Latrelle Weatherspoon, Lundi Sharron Pinder Campbell, James Bradshaw, Brayann Torres, Olivia Mo Reeze , Leon Mays NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Management, LLC #430 - 7400 West Colonial Dr, Orlando Fl 32818 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 4, 2024 at approx. 12:00pm at www.storagetreasures.com: Joash Sukra, Replethia ANDREWS, repletha l andrews, Mark Lobin, Pamela Yelverton, Paulo Libonati, Desiray Tolliver, Desiree Tolliver, Ruther Ford Joassaint, Vonetta Brooks, Sharrice Abney, Jacqueline Torres, Jakayla Ryan, Jalisa London, Miguel Angel Camacho III
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner CubeSmart # 5868 – 4752 Conroy Storage Lane, Orlando, FL 32835 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 5, 2024 at approx. 10:30am at www.storagetreasures.com: Taylor Gill, Christine Taylor, Christine
Ducille Taylor, Sophia Hicks, James Junior Davis, Esai Smith, Nina Wolf, Tashira Renae Burgman, Amanda Singh, Ronald Stowers, Brittany Crumpton NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Management, LLC #351 - 10425 S. John Young Parkway, Orlando FL 32837 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 5, 2024 at approx. 11:00am at www.storagetreasures.com: Dally Irizarry NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner CubeSmart # 5962 – 49671 Hwy 27 Davenport, FL 33897 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 5, 2024 at approx. 11:30am at www.storagetreasures. com: Cortney Anderson, Alexus Capers, Michael Philon, Brian Mason, Luis Baez Zayas, Manuel A Quiros, Henry Stanley Wooley, Ojas Patel, Richard Ronald Sedlak, Orlando Meza, Daniel Macauley, Jessica Rocker, Omar Vargas NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner CubeSmart # 5961 – 1540 Sullivan Rd., Davenport, FL 33896 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 5, 2024 at approx. 12:00pm at www.storagetreasures.com: Eddie Pereira, Minelka Muniz, Dion Rashard Eddie, BELINDA VEGA ALMONTE, Darine Placido, Alyssa Carey, Nicholas Tiberio, Jamie Antonio Silva Luna, Charisa Rios. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Self-storage Cube contents of the following customers containing household and other goods will be sold for cash by CubeSmart Asset Management, LLC as Agent for Owner CubeSmart # 5694 – 7220 Osceola Polk Line Rd, Davenport, Fl 33896 to satisfy a lien on SEPTEMBER 5, 2024 at approx. 12:00pm at www.storagetreasures.com: Alec Gress.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE. To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Retail Sales, LLC will sell at public lien sale on August 22, 2024, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 01:00 PM and continue until all units are sold. The lien sale is to be held at the online auction website, www. storagetreasures.com, where indicated. For online lien sales, bids will be accepted until 2 hours after the time of the sale specified. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08714, 8149 Aircenter Court, Orlando, FL 32809, (407) 792-4965 Time: 01:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1130 - Perez, Melissa; 1192 - Mujica, Ernest; 2018 - Ultimate Party Orlando Bryant, Kendra; 2028 - Sanchez, Richard; 2043 - Litton, Lauren; 2061 - Lafontaine, Jaime; 2068 - Brown, William; 2145 - Daniel, Theresa; 2231 - Cancel, Jankarlos; 2239 - Romero, Tracy; 3025 - McCoy, Timothy; 3065 - Coughenour, Brent; 3093SwissLog/ TransCon Mech. Guerroro, Liliana; 4022 - Schmidt, Gerhart; 6016 - Rivera Ortiz, Shelly; 6122 - Pinchback, Khalieph; 6133 - Acevedo, Mario. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08717, 1800 Ten Point Lane, Orlando, FL 32837, (407) 545-4431 Time: 01:15 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0102 - Fontanez, Tania; 0104 - McNealy, Tanishia; 0121 - Restrepo, Marlon; 0144 - Jolly, Debbie; 0154
392-0854 Time: 04:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0324 - Bernabe, Raymundo; 0326 - Quintana, Juan; 0364 - Wilson, April; 0429 - Stevenson, Malcolm; 0475 - Richardson, Elizabeth; 0645 - Mcfarlane, Julius; 0707 - Marion, Robert; 0738 - Villegas, Genesis; 0740 - Thomas, Richard; 0777 - Miller, Donna; 0806 - Gibson, Susan; 0817 - Bradley, Bernadette; 0884 - Burton, Larea; 0918 - VanKeuren, Keith; 0921 - Bottiglieri, Chad. PUBLIC STORAGE # 28091, 2431 S Orange Blossom Trail, Apopka, FL 32703, (407) 279-3958 Time: 04:15 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1003 - Luciano, Joseph; 1018 - Toole, Gregory; 1053 - Williams, Clorisa; 1057 - Wade, Lily; 1068 - James, Davonta; 1069 - Rashid, Nadder; 1079 - Matthew, Chamara; 1109 - Ramos, Kimberly; 1117 - Davis, Lydell; 1147 - White, Latosha; 1176 - It’s Not About Us Ministries aboutusministries, Itsnot; 1185 - Williams, Mekia; 1225 - Thompson, Laura; 1229 - Thompson, Laura; 1237 - Thompson, Laura; 1259 - Hermanns, Veronique; 1261 - Rousseau, Alexandra Cooper; 1267 - Wynn, Jacoby; 1316 - Cintron, Carlos; 1325 - Smith, Heather; 1327 - Ordesi, SunRa; 1380Cross, Logan; B009 - Trent, Steven; B037 - Bernhagen, Marlisa; B043 - Muniz, Maria; C035 - Baldwin, Shirley; C037Grayson, Kinyatta; D006 - Jackson, Detrice; D008 - Mack, Markia; D034 - McCree, Richard; D050 - Williams, Stephanie; E020 - Henderson, Erica S; F021 - Brooks, Tyrone; G001 - Berry, Kourtnie; G002 - Tanner, Shameka Johnson; G009 - Gomez, Christian E; H001 - Roddy, Emma; H008 - Pierson, Jennifer; H033 - White, Latosha; H039 - Barello, Kyle; H046Spencer, James; H053 - Blodgett, Stephanie Lee; NB05 - Burks, Aspen; NB10 - Haynes, Cody; NC11 - Metayer, Regis; S010 - Shorter, Khan; T016 - Cancel, Keila; T016 - Abdiel Charbonier; U007Springer, Raymond; U032 - Vasquez, Gabriel; V013 - Lowman, Dasha; X012Tom, Sylvia; X018 - Kimbell, Queen. Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card - no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original resale certificates for each space purchased are required. By PS Retail Sales, LLC, 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080.
concrete, steel bridges with Open Bridge Designer, SAP 2000, RAM Elements, RAM Struc Sys, ETABS and Mathcad. Dev 3D models, plans, construc docs. Perf construc admin tasks: site visits, RFIs, shop drawing rev. Prep tech studies and rpts. Perf. struc inspec and eval of bridges. Master’s in Civ Eng req’d. Send resume to Ms. Barbero-Buffa, Base Consultants, 1214 East Concord St., Orlando, FL 32803.
Bus. Dev. Analyst needed for US Ifaj Inc., Oakland, FL: to cond. mrkt resrch. to obtn. info about convn. store retl. admin. Prvd. compt. anlys. reg. trgt. mrtk. Frml. intrp. & implmt. oprt. prcts. Exect. on mrkt. plans, dsgn spcl. promo. camps & ens. timely implmnt. of dig. & offline actvt. Bus. anlys. for mrkt. expns. on prod. new loc. & cost anlys. Req. Bachelor’s in admin. or bus. or similar fld. FT, mail resume to 16131 W Colonial Dr. Oakland, FL 34787.
Emerging Markets Research Analyst Winter Park, FL. Stock research for product equity portfolio and ESG risk analysis. Req. Master’s in Finance or MBA with Financial Modeling or Security Analysis Coursework. Send Resume: DePrince, Race, & Zollo, Inc., Attn: Human Resources, 250 S. Park Ave. Ste. 250, Winter Park, FL 32789 or hr@drz-inc.com
REAL ESTATE
CONSULTANTS NEEDED – Your Own Real Estate Business $2000/wk/ptnl; No Selling; No RE-License/No Exp. Req; WFH PT/FT–Start Immediately; Call: 703-776-9929
Senior Software Technical Lead: Orlando, FL & various unanticipated locations thru/ out US: Rspnsble for tech proj mgmt, incl prtcptng planng, dsgn, sol bldg, tsing, rev mtngs, & stkhldr mgmt. Gather rqmts from cust for proj & trnslte to sw rqmt specs. Anlyz user needs, dsgn sw sol, prvd tech assistance, & fix prblms. Provide supp during new releases & deploy. May travel & relocate to various unanticipated locations thru/out U.S. Skills req’d: IBM Integration Bus, IBM API Connect, IBM WebSphere MQ, IBM DataPower, Java, XML, JSON, MySQL, Docker, Kubernates, SOAP UI, Jenkins, & Git. Master’s degree in Sci, Tech, Engg (any), or rltd, or foreign equiv, plus 2 yrs of exp in job offr’d or rltd occu is req’d. Send resume to HR, Prolifics, Inc., 111 N. Magnolia Ave., Ste 1550, Orlando, FL, 32801
Structural Engineer - Orlando, FL. Anlyze/ design reinforced and prestressed