Orlando Weekly - December 6, 2023

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Florida Group Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor in Chief Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Managing Editor Matthew Moyer Staff Writer McKenna Schueler Digital Editor Chloe Greenberg Calendar Coordinator Kristin Anne Intern Grayson Keglovic Contributors Gianna Aceto, Rob Bartlett, Melissa Perez Carrillo, J.D. Casto, Ida V. Eskamani, Jacquelin Goldberg, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Seth Kubersky, Jim Leatherman, Matt Keller Lehman, Bao Le-Huu, Gabby Macogay, Anthony Mauss, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Nicolette Shurba, Eric Tegethoff Advertising Director of New Business Jeff Kruse Agency Director Kelsey Molina Agency Coordinator Briaunna Jenkins Multimedia Account Exec Dan Winkler Classified Sales & Multimedia Account Manager Jerrica Schwartz Sales Department Administrator Rachel Gold Creative Services Graphic Designer Pedro Macias Events and Marketing Events & Promo Manager Miranda Stevens Circulation Circulation Manager Collin Modeste Chava Communications Group Founder, Chief Executive Officer Michael Wagner Co-Founder, Chief Marketing Officer Cassandra Yardeni Vice President of Operations Hollie Mahadeo Managing Agency Director Mindi Overman Social Media Director Meradith Garcia Director of Digital Content Strategy Colin Wolf Art Director David Loyola Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon chavagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, vmgadvertising.com Orlando Weekly Inc. Phone 407-377-0400 Fax 407-377-0420 Orlando Weekly is published every week by Chava Communications Group Orlando Distribution Orlando Weekly is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Copyright notice: The entire contents of Orlando Weekly are copyright 2023 by Chava Group LLC. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Publisher does not assume any liability for unsolicited manuscripts, materials, or other content. Any submission must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All editorial, advertising, and business correspondence should be mailed to the address listed above. Subscriptions: Six-month domestic subscriptions may be purchased for $150; one-year subscriptions for $240. Periodical Postage Pending at Orlando, FL

Cover and inside illustrations by Anson Stevens-Bollen

NEWS+ VIEWS 6 Project Censored

Ignored by the mainstream media: Corporate abuse and environmental harm dominate Project Censored’s Top 10 stories this year. By Paul Rosenberg, Anson Stevens-Bollen and Random Lengths News

Circulation Verification Council 12166 Old Big Bend Road, Suite 210 St. Louis, MO 63122 www.cvcaudit.com Auditor’s Certification:

ARTS+ CULTURE Hanukkah goodies and shows at the theme parks, a cabaret celebrating Jewish-penned Christmas songs, and more local Festival of Lights offerings for MOTs and their pals

After losing a friend to gun violence, Gerald Law II was in search of a way to cope. What resulted is the new Love Speaks (Live) compilation

FILM+ MUSIC 15 Joker’s riled

Joaquin Phoenix and Ridley Scott turn Napoleon into a violent epic starring a petty brat

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What’s new this week on Netflix, Hulu, Apple TV+ and the other streamers

19 Shadow dance

13 Live Active Cultures Approved auditor info as required for public notices per section 50.011(1)(e), F.S.

17 Couchsurfing

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com

Darkwavers Urban Heat are on the rise and en route to Orlando

19 It came from the basement

Community radio station WPRK turns 71 this week and is still essential listening

21 This Little Underground

BACK PAGES 22 The Week

Our picks of the best things to do this week, plus plenty of event listings

27 Astrology

Horoscopes to plan your week around

29 Classified advertisements


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[ news + views ]

IGNORED BY THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA: Corporate abuse and environmental harm dominate Project Censored’s Top 10 stories this year

BY PAU L R OS ENBERG , WIT H IL LU ST RAT IO N S BY A N S ON ST E V E N S - BOL L E N

“W

e have made the planet inhospitable to human life.” That’s what the lead researcher in Project Censored’s No. 1 story this year said. He wasn’t talking about the climate catastrophe. He was talking about so-called “forever chemicals,” per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), linked to prostate, kidney and testicular cancer and additional health risks, and the study he led found unsafe levels in rainwater worldwide. Even though this story received some corporate media attention — in USA Today and on 6

the Discovery Channel — the starkly shocking bottom line clearly didn’t come through to the general public. Have you heard it before? Has it been the subject of any conversation you’ve had? No? Well, that, my friend, is the very essence of what Project Censored’s signature “top 10” list is all about exposing the suppression (active or passive) of vitally important information from the public, which renders the public unable to act in the way that a healthy democratic public is supposed to. They’ve been doing it since Carl Jensen began it with a single

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com

college class in 1976, inspired in part by the way the Watergate story got this same sort of treatment until well after the election cycle it was part of. But there’s a second story intertwined with the “forever chemicals” pervasive presence: the revelation that companies responsible for them have known about their dangers for decades, but kept those dangers hidden — just like fossil fuel companies and climate catastrophe. The intersection of environmental/public health and corporate criminality is typical of how certain

long-standing patterns of censored news weave together across the years, even decades, and how the spotlight Project Censored shines on them helps to make sense of much more than the individual stories it highlights, as vitally important as they are in themselves. In previous years, I’ve highlighted the multiplicity of patterns of censorship that can be seen. In their introduction to the larger 25-story list in their annual book, The State of the Free Press, Andy Lee Roth and Steve Macek describe these patterns at two levels. First, invoking the metaphor that “exemplary reporting is praised for ‘shining light’ on a subject or ‘bringing to light’ crucial facts and original perspectives,” they say: The news reports featured in this chapter are rays of light shining through a heavily slatted window. Each of these independent news reports highlights a social issue that has otherwise been dimly lit or altogether obscured by corporate news outlets. The shading slats are built from the corporate media’s concentrated ownership, reliance on advertising, relationship to political power, and narrow definitions of who and what count as “newsworthy.” Censorship, whether overt or subtle, establishes the angle of the slats, admitting more or less light from outside. But in addition, they say, it’s important to see the “list as the latest installment in an ongoing effort to identify systemic gaps in so-called ‘mainstream’ (i.e., corporate) news coverage.” They go on to say, “Examining public issues that independent journalists and outlets have reported but which fall outside the scope of corporate news coverage makes it possible to document in specific detail how corporate news media leave the public in the dark by marginalizing or blockading crucial issues, limiting political debate, and promoting corporate views and interests.” On the one hand, all that is as true as it’s ever been. But on the other hand, the two-story themes in the No. 1 story — environmental harm and corporate abuse — so dominate the Top 10 story list that they send another message as well, a message about the fundamental mismatch between our needs as a species living on a finite planet and a rapacious economic system conceived in ignorance of that fact. The climate catastrophe is just the most extreme symptom of this mismatch — but it’s far from the only one. Corporate abuse figures into every story in the list — though sometimes deep in the background, as with their decades-long efforts to destroy unions in story number six. Environmental harms “only” show up in seven of the 10 stories. There are still other patterns here, to be sure — and I encourage you to look for them yourself because seeing those patterns enriches your understanding of the world as it is, and as it’s being hidden from you. But this dominant pattern touches us all. The evidence is right there, in the stories themselves. Paul Rosenberg is a Los Angeles-based writer, senior editor for Random Lengths News, and a columnist for Salon and Al Jazeera English.


[ news + views ] threats to human health and the environment.” There’s been some limited corporate media coverage that rainwater isn’t safe to drink — specifically from USA Today, the Discovery Channel and Medical News Today. But the general public clearly hasn’t heard the news. However, there’s been more coverage of the series of lawsuits developing in response to PFAS. But the big-picture story surrounding them remains shockingly missing.

1. “Forever chemicals” in rainwater a global threat to human health

Rainwater is “no longer safe to drink anywhere on Earth,” Morgan McFall-Johnsen reported on Insider in August 2022, summing up the results of a global study of so-called “forever chemicals,” polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology. Researchers from Stockholm University and the Institute of Biogeochemistry and Pollutant Dynamics at ETH Zurich concluded that “in many areas inhabited by humans,” PFAS contamination levels in rainwater, surface water and soil “often greatly exceed” the strictest international guidelines for acceptable levels of perfluoroalkyl acids. They’re called “forever chemicals” because they take so long to break down, “allowing them to build up in people, animals and environments,” Insider reported. Project Censored notes,“Prior research has linked these chemicals to prostate, kidney and testicular cancer and additional health risks, including developmental delays in children, decreased fertility in women and men, reduced vaccine efficacy and high cholesterol.” “PFAS were now ‘so persistent’and ubiquitous that they will never disappear from the planet,” lead researcher Ian Cousins told Agence FrancePresse. “We have made the planet inhospitable to human life by irreversibly contaminating it now so that nothing is clean anymore, and to the point that it’s not clean enough to be safe,” he said, adding that “we have crossed a planetary boundary,” a paradigm for evaluating Earth’s capacity to absorb harmful impacts of human activity. The “good news” is that PFAS levels aren’t increasing in the environment.“What’s changed is the guidelines,” he said. “They’ve gone down millions of times since the early 2000s, because we’ve learned more about the toxicity of these substances.” All the more reason the second strand of this story is important: “The same month,” Project Censored writes, “researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, published a study in the Annals of Global Health using internal industry documents to show that the companies responsible for ‘forever chemicals’ have known for decades that these substances pose significant

2. Hiring of former CIA employees and ex-Israeli agents “blurs line” between Big Tech and Big Brother

“Google — one of the largest and most influential organizations in the modern world — is filled with ex-CIA agents,” Alan MacLeod reported for MintPress News in July 2022. “An inordinate number of these recruits work in highly politically sensitive fields, wielding considerable control over how its products work and what the world sees on its screens and in its search results.” “Chief amongst these is the trust and safety department, whose staff, in the words of the Google trust and safety vice president Kristie Canegallo, ‘[d]ecide what content is allowed on our platform’ — in other words, setting the rules of the internet, determining what billions see and what they do not see.” And more broadly, “a former CIA employee is working in almost every department at Google,” Project Censored noted. But Google isn’t alone. Nor is the CIA.“Former employees of U.S. and Israeli intelligence agencies now hold senior positions at Google, Meta, Microsoft and other tech giants,” Project Censored wrote. A second report focused on employees from Israel’s Unit 8200, its equivalent of the CIA, which is “infamous for surveilling the indigenous Palestinian population,” MacLeod wrote. Using LinkedIn, he identified hundreds of such individuals from both agencies, providing specific information about dozens of them. “The problem with former CIA agents becoming the arbiters of what is true and what is false and what should be promoted and what should be deleted is that they cut their teeth at a notorious organization whose job it was to inject lies and false information into the public discourse

to further the goals of the national security state,” MacLeod wrote, citing the 1983 testimony of former CIA task force head John Stockwell, author of In Search of Enemies, in which he described the dissemination of propaganda as a “major function” of the agency. “I had propagandists all over the world,” Stockwell wrote, adding: “We pumped dozens of stories about Cuban atrocities, Cuban rapists [to the media]… We ran [faked] photographs that made almost every newspaper in the country … We didn’t know of one single atrocity committed by the Cubans. It was pure, raw, false propaganda to create an illusion of communists eating babies for breakfast.” “None of this means that all or even any of the individuals are moles — or even anything but model employees today,” MacLeod noted later. But the sheer number of them “certainly causes concern.” Reinforcing that concern is Big Tech’s history. “As journalist Nafeez Ahmed’s investigation found, the CIA and the NSA were bankrolling Stanford Ph.D. student Sergey Brin’s research — work that would later produce Google,” MacLeod wrote. “Not only that but, in Ahmed’s words, ‘senior U.S. intelligence representatives, including a CIA official, oversaw the evolution of Google in this pre-launch phase, all the way until the company was ready to be officially founded.’” This fits neatly within the larger framework of Silicon Valley’s origin as a supplier of defense department technology. “A May 2022 review found no major newspaper coverage of Big Tech companies hiring former U.S. or Israeli intelligence officers as employees,” Project Censored noted. “The most prominent U.S. newspapers have not covered Google, Meta, Microsoft and other Big Tech companies hiring former U.S. and Israeli intelligence officers.” Individual cases may make the news. But the overall systemic pattern remains a story censored by mainstream silence.

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over a period of decades, according to reporters Neil Bedi, Sharon Lerner and Kathleen McGrory. A headline example: Asbestos, one of the most widely recognized toxic substances, is still legal in the U.S., more than 30 years after the EPA tried to have it banned. “Through interviews with environmental experts and analysis of a half century’s worth of legislation, lawsuits, EPA documents, oral histories, chemical databases and regulatory records, ProPublica uncovered the longstanding institutional failure to protect Americans from toxic chemicals,” Project Censored reported. ProPublica identified five main reasons for failure: I. The chemical industry helped write the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).

A top EPA official “joked the law was ‘written by industry’ and should have been named after the DuPont executive who went over the text line by line,” ProPublica reported. The law “allowed more than 60,000 chemicals to stay on the market without a review of their health risks” and required the EPA to always choose the “least burdensome” regulations. “These two words would doom American chemical regulation for decades.” II. Following early failures, the EPA lost its resolve. In 1989, after 10 years of work, the EPA

was banning asbestos. But companies that used asbestos sued and won in 1991, based on a court ruling they’d failed to prove it was the “least burdensome” option. However, “the judge did provide a road map for future bans, which would require the agency to do an analysis of other regulatory options … to prove they wouldn’t be adequate,” but rather than follow through, the EPA simply gave up. III. Chemicals are considered innocent until proven guilty. For decades, the U.S. and EU used

a “risk-based” approach to regulation, requiring the government to prove a chemical poses unreasonable health risks before restricting it — which can take years. In 2007, the EU switched to a “hazard-based” approach, putting the burden on companies when there’s evidence of significant harm. As a result, ProPublica explained, “the EU has successfully banned or restricted more than a thousand chemicals.” A similar approach was proposed in the U.S. in 2005 by New Jersey Sen. Frank Lautenberg, but it was soundly defeated. IV. The EPA mostly regulates chemicals one by one. In 2016, a new law amended the

3. Toxic chemicals continue to go unregulated in the United States

The United States is “a global laggard in chemical regulation,” ProPublica reported in December 2022, a result of chemical industry influence and acquiescence by the

TSCA to cut the “least burdensome” language and created a schedule “where a small list of high-priority chemicals would be reviewed every few years; in 2016, the first 10 were selected, including asbestos,” ProPublica reported. “The EPA would then have about three years to assess the chemicals and another two years to finalize regulations on them.” But six years later, “the agency is behind on all such rules. So far, it has only proposed one ban, on asbestos, and the agency told ProPublica it would still be almost a year before that is finalized.” Industry fights the process at every step. “Meanwhile, the EU has

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[ news + views ] authored a new plan to regulate chemicals even faster by targeting large groups of dangerous substances,” which “would lead to bans of another 5,000 chemicals by 2030.” V. The EPA employs industry-friendly scientists as regulators. “The EPA has a long

history of hiring scientists and top officials from the companies they are supposed to regulate, allowing industry to sway the agency’s science from the inside,” ProPublica wrote. A prime example is Todd Stedeford. “A lawyer and toxicologist, Stedeford has been hired by the EPA on three separate occasions,” ProPublica noted. “During his two most recent periods of employment at the agency — from 2011 to 2017 and from 2019 to 2021 — he was hired by corporate employers who use or manufacture chemicals the EPA regulates.” “A handful of corporate outlets have reported on the EPA’s slowness to regulate certain toxic chemicals,”Project Censored noted, citing stories in the Washington Post and the New York Times. “However, none have highlighted the systemic failures wrought by the EPA and the chemical industry.”

4. Stalkerware could be used to incriminate people violating abortion bans

Stalkerware — consisting of up to 200 surveillance apps and services that provide secret access to people’s phones for a monthly fee — “could become a significant legal threat to people seeking abortions, according to a pair of articles published in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the constitutional right to abortion,” Project Censored reports. “Abortion medication is safe. But now that Roe is overturned, your data isn’t,” Rae Hodge wrote for the tech news site CNET just two days after the Dobbs decision. “Already, the digital trails of abortion seekers can become criminal evidence against them in some states where abortion[s] were previously prosecuted. And the legal dangers may extend to abortion seekers in even more states.” The next month, writing for Slate, University of Virginia law professor Danielle Keats Citron warned that “surveillance accomplished by individual privacy invaders will be a gold mine for 8

prosecutors targeting both medical workers and pregnant people seeking abortions.” Invaders only need a few minutes to access phones and passwords. “Once installed, cyberstalking apps silently record and upload phones’ activities to their servers,” Citron explained. “They enable privacy invaders to see our photos, videos, texts, calls, voice mails, searches, social media activities, locations — nothing is out of reach. From anywhere, individuals can activate a phone’s mic to listen to conversations within 15 feet of the phone,” even “conversations that pregnant people have with their health care providers — nurses, doctors and insurance company employees,” she warned. As a result, Hodge cautioned, “Those who aid abortion seekers could be charged as accomplices in some cases,” under some state laws. It’s not just abortion, she explained. “Your phone’s data, your social media accounts, your browsing and geolocation history, and your ISP’s detailed records of your internet activity may all be used as evidence if you face state criminal or civil charges for a miscarriage.” “Often marketed as a tool to monitor children’s online safety or as device trackers, stalkerware is technically illegal to sell for the purpose of monitoring adults,” Project Censored noted, but that’s hardly a deterrent. “Stalkerware and other forms of electronic surveillance have been closely associated with domestic violence and sexual assault, according to the National Network to End Domestic Violence,” Citron noted. In addition, Hodge explained, “third-party data brokers sell sensitive geolocation data — culled through a vast web of personal tracking tech found in apps, browsers and devices — to law enforcement without oversight.” And “abortion bounty hunter” provisions adopted by states like Texas and Oklahoma add a financial incentive.“Given the inexpensive cost of readily available stores of personal data and how easily they can be de-anonymized, savvy informants could use the information to identify abortion seekers and turn a profit,” she noted. “The law’s response to intimate privacy violations is inadequate, lacking a clear conception of what intimate privacy is, why its violation is wrongful, and how it inflicts serious harm upon individuals, groups and society,” Citron explained. “Until federal regulations and legislation establish a set of digital privacy laws, abortion seekers are caught in the position of having to create their own patchwork of digital defenses, from often complicated and expensive privacy tools,” Hodge warned. While the bipartisan American Data Privacy and Protection Act is still “slowly inching through Congress,” it “is widely thought toothless,” she wrote. The Joe Biden administration has proposed a new rule protecting “certain health data from being used to prosecute both clinicians and patients,” STAT reported in May 2023, but the current draft only applies “in states where abortion is legal.”

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“Corporate news outlets have paid some attention to the use of digital data in abortion-related prosecutions,” Project Censored reports. While there have been stories about post-Roe digital privacy, “none have focused specifically on how stalkerware could potentially be used in criminal investigations of suspected abortions.”

5. Certified rainforest carbon offsets mostly “worthless”

“The forest carbon offsets approved by the world’s leading certifier and used by Disney, Shell, Gucci and other big corporations are largely worthless and could make global heating worse, according to a new investigation,” the Guardian reported on Jan. 23, as part of a joint nine-month reporting project with SourceMaterial and Die Zeit.“The analysis raises questions over the credits bought by a number of internationally renowned companies — some of them have labeled their products ‘carbon neutral’, or have told their consumers they can fly, buy new clothes or eat certain foods without making the climate crisis worse.” “About 90% of rainforest carbon offsets certified by Verra, the world’s largest offset certifier, do not reflect real reductions in emissions,” Project Censored summed up. Verra “has issued more than 1 billion metric tons worth of carbon offsets, [and] certifies three-fourths of all voluntary carbon offsets.” While “Verra claimed to have certified 94.9 million credits,” the actual benefits “amounted to a much more modest 5.5 million credits.” This was based on an analysis of “the only three scientific studies to use robust, scientifically sound methods to assess the impact of carbon offsets on deforestation,” Project Censored explained. “The journalists also consulted with indigenous communities, industry insiders and scientists.” “The studies used different methods and time periods, looked at different ranges of projects, and the researchers said no modeling approach is ever perfect,” the Guardian wrote. “However, the data showed broad agreement on the lack of effectiveness of the projects compared with the Verra-approved predictions.” Specifically, “The investigation of 29 Verra rainforest offset projects found that 21 had no climate benefit, seven had significantly less climate benefit than claimed (by margins of 52 to 98% less benefit than claimed), while one project yielded 80% more climate benefit than claimed.

Overall, the study concluded that 94% of the credits approved by these projects were ‘worthless’ and never should have been approved.” “Another study conducted by a team of scientists at the University of Cambridge found that in 32 of the 40 forest offset projects investigated, the claims concerning forest protection and emission reductions were overstated by an average of 400%,” Project Censored reported. “Despite claims that these 32 projects together protected an area of rainforest the size of Italy, they only protected an area the size of Venice.” While Verra criticized the studies’ methods and conclusions, an outside expert, Oxford ecoscience professor Yadvinder Singh Malhi, had two Ph.D. students check for errors, and they found none. “I wish it were otherwise, but this report is pretty compelling,”he told the Guardian. “Rainforest protection credits are the most common type on the market at the moment. And it’s exploding, so these findings really matter,” said Barbara Haya, director of the Berkeley Carbon Trading Project, who’s researched carbon credits for 20 years. “But these problems are not just limited to this credit type. These problems exist with nearly every kind of credit,” she told the Guardian. “We need an alternative process. The offset market is broken.” “There is simply nobody in the market who has a genuine interest to say when something goes wrong,” Lambert Schneider, a researcher at the Öko-Institut in Berlin, told SourceMaterial. “The investigations by the Guardian, Die Zeit and SourceMaterial appear to have made a difference. In March 2023, Verra announced that it would phase out its flawed rainforest offset program by mid-2025,” Project Censored reported. But they could only find one brief mention of the joint investigation in major U.S. newspapers, a Chicago Tribune op-ed.

6. Unions won more than 70% of their elections in 2022, and their victories are being driven by workers of color

Unions won more than 70% of their certification elections in 2022, according to reporting by NPR and The Conversation, and workers of color were responsible for 100% of union growth, according to an analysis by the Economic Policy Institute reported by Payday Report and The


[ news + views ] New Republic. There were 2,510 petitions for union representation filed with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in fiscal year 2022 (Oct. 1, 2021-Sept. 30, 2022), up 53% from FY 2021. There were 1,249 certification elections held, with 72% voting to certify a union as their collective bargaining agent. “The entire increase in unionization in 2022 was among workers of color — workers of color saw an increase of 231,000, while white workers saw a decrease of 31,000,” EPI wrote in a Feb. 2023 press release. EPI also noted that “survey data show that nearly half of nonunion workers (48%) would vote to unionize their workplace if they could. That means that more than 60 million workers wanted to join a union, but couldn’t. The Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act and the Public Service Freedom to Negotiate Act provide crucial reforms that would strengthen workers’ rights to form a union and engage in collective bargaining.” It passed the House in 2020 and 2021 but died in the Senate, where it needed 60 votes to pass because of the filibuster. “Seventy-one percent of Americans now support unions, according to Gallup — a level of support not seen since 1965,” Project Censored noted. “Dismantling existing barriers to union organizing and collective bargaining is crucial to generating a more prosperous, equitable economy,” EPI concluded. More than a quarter of 2022 union elections, 354, were held at Starbucks, Marick Masters explained in his January 2023 article for The Conversation. “Workers at Starbucks prevailed in four out of every five elections. Workers at Chipotle, Trader Joe’s and Apple unionized for the first time, while workers at Microsoft and Wells Fargo also had wins,” Project Censored reported. Union activity spikes during times of social unrest, Masters reported. Unionization rose from 7.6% to 19.2% from 1934 to 1939, during the Great Depression, and from 20% to 27% between 1941 and 1945, during World War II. “Masters described the current wave of union activity as driven by record levels of economic inequality and continued mobilization of workers in ‘essential industries,’ such as healthcare, food and public safety, who were thrust into harm’s way during the global pandemic,” Project Censored noted. “Whereas Republican and Democratic politicians often separate concerns over working conditions and pay from issues of identity, these data demonstrate how identity and workers’ rights are closely connected,” Project Censored added. “Unionization and labor struggles are direct mechanisms to better accomplish racial and social equality; the ability for people to afford to live happy and dignified lives is inherently tied to their ability to enjoy fundamental social and civil rights within those lives, too,” Prem Thakker noted at The New Republic. Despite these gains, “the power of organized labor is nowhere close to what it once was,” Project Censored wrote. “As Masters pointed

out, more than a third of workers were unionized in the 1950s, whereas only a tenth were in 2021. Before the 1980s, there were typically more than 5,000 union elections in any given year, and as recently as 1980, there were 200 major work stoppages [over 1,000 workers],” compared to just 20 in 2022, which was still 25% above the average over the past 16 years. “Corporate media coverage of the labor resurgence of 2022 was highly selective and, in some ways, misleading,” Project Censored reported. There’ve been hundreds of articles on union organizing at Starbucks and Amazon and among graduate students, and “Yahoo republished Masters’ The Conversation article about union success in elections, and Vox, Bloomberg Law and the Washington Post all remarked on organized labor’s recent string of certification vote victories,” they noted. “Yet corporate coverage of current labor organizing often fails to address the outsized role played by workers of color in union growth.” Nor has it placed recent union successes in the historical context of prolonged decline, largely due to private employers’ heavy-handed efforts to undermine organizing campaigns and labor laws that strongly favor employers.

7. Fossil fuel investors sue governments to block climate regulations

“Litigation terrorism.” That’s what Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz called the practice of fossil fuel companies and investors suing governments in secretive private tribunals to thwart climate change policies. Litigants claim climate change laws undermine their profits, and thus they must be compensated under what’s known as “investor-state dispute settlement”(ISDS) legal actions, Rishika Pardikar reported for The Lever in June 2022, following a paper in the journal Science by lead author Kyla Tienhaara the month before. It found that “global action on climate change could generate upward of $340 billion in legal claims from oil and gas investors,”which “is more than the total level of public climate finance globally in 2020 ($321 billion).”

A good portion threatens the global south. “The five countries with the greatest potential losses from ISDS are Mozambique ($7-$31 billion), Guyana ($5-$21 billion), Venezuela ($3-$21 billion), Russia ($2-$16 billion) and the United Kingdom ($3-$14 billion),” Tienhaara reported. What’s more, “If countries decide to also cancel oil and gas projects that are currently under development, this could introduce substantial additional financial losses from ISDS claims.” “Such [litigation] moves could have a chilling effect on countries’ ability to take climate action because of the fear and uncertainty they cause,” Pardikar noted. “New Zealand, for example, recently said that it could not join the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance, an international consortium of governments working to phase out fossil fuels, because doing so ‘would have run afoul of investor-state settlements,’” Lois Parshley reported for Grist in January 2023. Project Censored also cited Lea Di Salvatore’s December 2021 report that fossil fuel “investors succeeded in 72% of all cases,” winning an average over $600 million, “almost five times the amount awarded in non-fossil fuel cases.” In addition, secrecy is the rule. “Fifty-four percent of the concluded fossil fuel cases are confidential — while their existence is known, no case-related documents, such as awards or decisions, have been made public.” Although the tribunals may sound like courts, they aren’t. “Because ISDS systems are written into thousands of different treaties, each with different wording, there’s also no system of precedence,” Parshley wrote, after noting the practice of “double batting,” in which one individual may act as arbitrator, legal counsel, expert witness and tribunal secretary, either sequentially or even concurrently. Most come from “an elite group of approximately 50 arbitrators who are regularly appointed” to most cases, researcher Silvia Steininger told Pardikar. Conflicts of interest “are viewed as commonplace in international investment arbitration and considered an inherent part of the system,” the Law Review article Parshley references said. What’s more, “Just because arbitrators decide something in one case doesn’t mean that logic has to be applied to another. Proceedings can be kept confidential, and there is no way to appeal a tribunal’s decision,” Parshley noted. Tienhaara’s paper ended with a section titled “An Abolitionist Approach,” in which she warned, “Reformist approaches would be time-consuming and likely ineffectual, based on the experience of previous efforts.” Abolitionist examples include “terminating all bilateral investment treaties” in order to “prevent existing leaseholders from accessing ISDS,” as South Africa and others have done “without any resulting reductions in foreign investment.” Negotiating the “removal of ISDS clauses from trade agreements, as the United States did with Canada in the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement,” is also possible. “Another option is for states to withdraw consent to ISDS in cases involving fossil fuel investments, emulating the approach

taken by Singapore and others to remove the threat of ISDS claims from the tobacco industry.” But abolitionists face two problems: “sunset clauses” that extend treaty protections “for 10 to 20 years for investments commenced prior to termination,” though they can be nullified, and resistance “from states with powerful fossil fuel lobbies.” Parshley noted that the Energy Charter Treaty, “ratified by over 50 primarily European countries,” is the largest international agreement protecting fossil fuel companies. After six countries announced their withdrawal and a modification effort failed, “the European Parliament called for a coordinated European Union departure from the treaty altogether,” but they still face sunset clause threats. While the Independent also reported on ISDS lawsuits, “it only briefly touched on the concern that these lawsuits could prevent climate action,” Project Censored noted. “Beyond this handful of reports, the topic has received little coverage from major news outlets.”

8. Proximity to oil and gas extraction sites linked to maternal health risks and childhood leukemia

“Two epidemiological studies, from 2021 and 2022, provide new evidence that living near oil and gas extraction sites is hazardous to human health,” Project Censored reports,“especially for pregnant mothers and children, as reported by Nick Cunningham for DeSmog and Tom Perkins for the Guardian.” Based on 1996-2009 data for more than 2.8 million pregnant women in Texas, researchers from Oregon State University (OSU) found that “for those pregnant women within one kilometer of drilling there’s about a 5% increase in odds of gestational hypertension, and a 26% increase in odds of eclampsia,” researcher Mary Willis told DeSmog.“So, it’s this really close range where we are seeing a potential impact right on women’s health.” Eclampsia is a rare but serious condition where high blood pressure results in seizures during pregnancy. “Notably, the data in the OSU study predate the widespread development of ‘fracking,’ or hydraulic fracturing, the process of extracting gas and oil from shale beds by injecting fluids at high pressure,” Project Censored pointed

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[ news + views ] out, going on to note “previous coverage by Project Censored, including Rayne Madison et al., ‘Fracking Our Food Supply,’ story No. 18, and Lyndsey Casey and Peter Phillips, ‘Pennsylvania Law Gags Doctors to Protect Big Oil’s “Proprietary Secrets,”’ story No. 22, from 2012-2013; and Carolina de Mello et al., ‘Oil Industry Illegally Dumps Fracking Wastewater,’ story No. 2 from 2014-2015.” The second study, from Yale, did study fracking. It found that “young children living near fracking wells at birth [less than two kilometers, approximately 1.2 miles] are up to three times more likely to later develop leukemia,” according to an August 2022 Guardian story. “Hundreds of chemicals linked to cancer and other health issues may be used in the [fracking] process, including heavy metals, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, volatile organic compounds, benzene and radioactive material,”they explained. The study, based on 2009-2017 data from Pennsylvania, compared 405 children aged 2 to 7 years diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia with an additional 2,080 children, matched on birth year, who didn’t have leukemia. The findings aligned with others, as DeSmog discussed. “One consistent takeaway from so many health studies related to fracking is that proximity is key,” they reported. “The allowable setback in Pennsylvania, where our study was conducted, is 500 feet,”Yale researcher Cassandra Clark told them.“Our findings … in conjunction with evidence from numerous other studies, suggest that existing setback distances are insufficiently protective of children’s health.” State and local governments have tried to create health buffer zones, but “the oil industry has consistently fought hard to block setback distance requirements,” DeSmog reported. For example,“In 2018, the oil industry spent upwards of $40 million to defeat a Colorado ballot measure that would have imposed 2,500-foot setback requirements for drillers.” Regulations are so weak that “in Texas, drilling sites can be as close as 45 meters from residences,” Willis told them. “Last year, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced new proposed rules that would require 3,200-foot setbacks on new oil and gas drilling, which would be the strongest in the nation and aligns with the distance where Willis’ studies find the most serious risks for pregnancies,” DeSmog reported. “But those rules would not affect existing wells.” No major U.S. newspapers appear to have covered either the OSU or the Yale study at the time of Project Censored’s publication, although “Smithsonian magazine, The Hill and WHYY, an NPR affiliate serving the Philadelphia region, covered the fracking study.”

9. Deadly decade for environmental activists

At least 1,733 environmental activists were murdered between 2012 and 2021 — nearly one every two days across 10 years — according to the Global Witness study Decade of Defiance. They were “killed by hitmen, organised crime

groups and their own governments,” Patrick Greenfield reported for the Guardian, “with Brazil, Colombia, the Philippines, Mexico and Honduras the deadliest countries,” with half the attacks taking place in the first three countries, each reporting around 300 killings. “This has been going on for decades,” scientist, activist and author Vandana Shiva wrote in a foreword to the report. “The report shows Brazil has been the deadliest country for environmental defenders, with 342 lethal attacks reported since 2012 with over 85% of killings within the Brazilian Amazon,” Stuti Mishra reported for the Independent. “Mexico and Honduras witnessed over 100 killings while Guatemala and India saw 80 and 79 respectively, remaining among the most dangerous countries. The report also reports 12 mass killings, including three in India and four in Mexico.” “The killing of environmental activists has been concentrated in the global south,” and “indigenous land defenders are disproportionately impacted,” Project Censored warned. “The Guardian reported that 39% of those killed were from Indigenous communities, despite that group constituting only 5% of the global population.” “This is about land inequality, in that defenders are fighting for their land, and in this increasing race to get more land to acquire and exploit resources, the victims are indigenous communities, local communities, whose voices are being suppressed,” the BBC summed up. “Threats to environmental activists are not limited to killing,” Project Censored noted. “Environmental activists also face beatings, arbitrary arrests and detentions, strategic lawsuits against public participation (SLAPPs) brought by companies, sexual violence and surveillance. A separate April 2022 report from the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, as reported by Grist, documented more than 3,800 attacks on human rights defenders — including not only killings and death threats but also beatings, arbitrary arrests and detentions, and lawsuits — between January 2015 and March 2021.”

But, “campaigners are hopeful that progress is being made,” the BBC reported, citing the sentencing of a former energy executive to 22 years in prison in Honduras for the murder of world-renowned activist Berta Cáceres in 2016, as well as promising international agreements. The Escazú agreement, the first environmental and human rights treaty for Latin America and the Caribbean, “commits countries to prevent and investigate attacks on environmental defenders,” and went into force in 2021. Mexico has ratified it, but “others, including Brazil and Colombia, have not” so far, the BBC said. There are also plans by the European Union to pass laws making companies responsible for human rights abuses in their supply chains. “These are game-changing decisions that could make a real positive impact for environmental defenders,” Shruti Suresh told the BBC. “We should be optimistic. But it is going to be a difficult and challenging road ahead.” There’s been scattered coverage of Global Witness’ report. A September 2022 New York Times article reported how Mexico was deemed the deadliest country for environmental activists; a short piece ran the next month in the New York Times’ climate newsletter “Climate Forward’’ about why Latin America is so dangerous for environmental activists; and on Feb. 26, 2023, the Los Angeles Times ran an op-ed about attacks on Mexican Indigenous communities fighting climate change. These all referenced Global Witness’ findings, but “otherwise, the corporate media have largely ignored the Global Witness study about the deadly wave of assaults on environmentalists during the past decade,” Project Censored noted, adding that it had previously covered the 2014 edition of Global Witness’ report “which was also significantly under-reported by establishment news outlets in the United States.”

10. Corporate profits hit record high as top 0.1% earnings and Wall Street bonuses skyrocket

“Corporate profits in the U.S. surged to an all-time record of $2 trillion in the second quarter of 2022 as companies continued jacking up prices, pushing inflation to a 40-year high

to the detriment of workers and consumers,” Jake Johnson reported for Common Dreams in August 2022. “Astronomical corporate profits confirm what corporate executives have been telling us on earning calls over and over again: They’re making a lot of money by charging people more, and they don’t plan on bringing prices down anytime soon,” the Groundwork Collaborative’s chief economist, Rakeen Mabud, commented. This followed Johnson’s reporting in March that the average bonus for Wall Street employees rose an astounding 1,743% between 1985 and 2021, according to an analysis by Inequality. org of New York State Comptroller data. Then, in December 2022, he reported that “earnings inequality in the United States has risen dramatically over the past four decades and continues to accelerate, with the top 0.1% seeing wage growth of 465% between 1979 and 2021 while the bottom 90% experienced just 29% growth during that same period,” according to research by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI). As a result, the average incomes of the top 0.1% rose from 20 times that of the bottom 90% in 1979 to more than 90 times as much in 2021. “The fossil fuel industry has enjoyed especially lavish profits,” Project Censored notes, citing Jessica Corbett’s July 2022 reporting for Common Dreams that the eight largest oil companies’ profits spiked a whopping 235% from the second quarter of 2021 to the second quarter of 2022, for a combined $52 billion profit, according to an analysis by Accountable.US. “Make no mistake; these profits mark a large transfer of wealth from working- and middle-class people to wealthy oil executives and shareholders,” Jordan Schreiber of Accountable.US told Corbett. “While many consumers were feeling the heavy burden of a life necessity suddenly doubling in price, oil executives were keeping prices high to maximize their profits.” “ExxonMobil profited $17.85 billion; Chevron, $11.62 billion; and Shell, $11.47 billion,” Project Censored notes. “Notably, in 2021-2022, the oil and gas industry spent more than $200 million lobbying Congress to oppose climate action.” Coverage of all this was scant. “The establishment media have reported intermittently on record corporate profits, but this coverage has tended to downplay corporate use of inflation as a pretext for hiking prices,” Project Censored sums up, citing examples from Bloomberg, ABC News and the New York Times where the role of greedflation was debated. “The Times quoted experts from EPI and Groundwork Collaborative but refused to draw any firm conclusions,” they note. In addition,“The EPI study on the accelerating incomes of the ultrarich was virtually ignored,” while the massive Wall Street bonuses got some coverage, they report: “Reuters ran a story on it, as did the New York Post. CNN Business noted that ‘high bonuses are also good news for Gotham’s tax coffers.’” feedback@orlandoweekly.com

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[ arts + culture ]

Hanukkah goodies and shows at the theme parks, a cabaret celebrating Jewishpenned Christmas songs, and more local Festival of Lights offerings for MOTs and their pals This is my 18th holiday season

covering arts and attractions for Orlando Weekly, and since 18 (or “chai”) is an important symbol in Hebrew numerology, I was inspired to look back at one of my earliest columns from 2006 about being, in the immortal words of Kyle Broflovski, a “lonely Jew on Christmas.” Although it brought a nostalgic tear to my eye rereading blurbs about much-missed Yuletide traditions like Theatre Downtown’s Christmas Carol and Disney’s Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights, my old musings about secular assimilation seem sadly naive in light of this past year’s events. For starters, the me of 2006 could never have imagined that literal Nazis would be regularly rallying against Jews — and for Florida’s governor — on Disney’s doorstep. As well, the horrific ongoing violence in Gaza has unleashed unprecedented online antisemitism, which affects even those of us who strongly believe that Netanyahu and his ultra-nationalist supporters have more in common with Hamas militants than either of them does with the moderate majority of Israelis and Palestinians who only want to live in peace. My Hanukkah wish would be that a great miracle would happen there, and (at the risk of enraging some of my Israeli relatives) that every single person from the river to the sea would receive security, justice and freedom. But because I realistically know that I’m much more likely to find socks and underwear beside my menorah this weekend, I’m going to attempt to set global politics aside, and instead unwrap some Festival of Lights offerings for fellow members of the tribe and their friends. The next couple of weeks, before Christmas crowds arrive, are an ideal time to visit Orlando’s

Hanukkah tchotchkes aplenty at Disney this year | Photo by Seth Kubersky

theme parks, thanks to shorter queues and cooler weather. You won’t find many Hanukkah acknowledgments inside Universal Orlando’s theme parks, but sunset menorah-lighting ceremonies are held at all the onsite Loews hotels. SeaWorld also lights a menorah in Sesame Street Land; I’m sure Mr. Hooper would have approved. On the other hand, Walt Disney World has outdone itself this year by stocking their theme park stores with an updated array of Hanukkah tchotchkes that had normally-frugal me reaching for the Merchandise Mobile checkout feature in Disney’s smartphone app. (It’s way quicker than waiting in line for an overwhelmed cashier.) In past years, Jewish Disney fans had to settle for some blue plates or napkins, but this Hanukkah there are more than enough options for eight nights, ranging from mouse ears and stuffed Mickeys with menorahs to trendy backpacks and T-shirts with Minnie and Daisy saying “I Love You a Latke.” Even the nosh has been upped a notch, with kosher Belgian truffles being sold alongside Disney-branded shortbread cookies and gelt (gold foil-wrapped chocolate coins). You’ll find these items for sale in the main gift shops near the front of all four Disney parks, including the Magic Kingdom, which recently unveiled the long-anticipated Hatbox Ghost animatronic inside the Haunted Mansion. (My hot take: The figure’s animation is amazing, but his position near the beginning at the “endless hallway”— instead of in the attic,where he belongs — is awkward.) But the best place at Disney to celebrate Hanukkah is EPCOT, thanks to the Hebraic micro-pavilion that’s been established for the International Festival of the Holidays on the boundary between Morocco and France. Sadly, they haven’t re-created the Jerusalem simulator ride from the short-lived Millennium Pavilion, but this area does offer the three things essential to any Hanukkah observance: a massive menorah, music, and most importantly, food.

This years “L’Chaim” holiday kitchen (previously the Food & Wine Festival’s Brazil booth) serves up fried potato latkes, with or without smoked salmon, as well as a warm pastrami on rye. I was given pause by the half-sandwich’s price until I realized it was still cheaper than TooJay’s, and the accompanying dill pickle was on point. The frosting on my black & white cookie was disappointingly gooey, so I drowned my sorrows in a frozen whiskey sour topped with Manischewitz wine, which is was definitely not its originally intended purpose. Make sure you grab your grub in time for a front-row view of “Zachary the Hanukkah Storyteller,” EPCOT’s solo mini-musical honoring the holiday. I was lucky enough to catch local actor Adam DelMedico — who fronted a Critics’ Choice Award-winning pop-punk musical at last May’s Fringe Festival — strumming his guitar to “Hava Nagila” with the same passion as if it were Green Day. I especially appreciate how this little production goes beyond playing the holiday’s greatest hits and includes lesser-known Sephardic traditions as well. Finally, if you’re looking for something to do after lighting the fourth candle this Sunday night, may I suggest Natalie Doliner’s “Oy to the World”cabaret at Savoy? “I just got to wondering why, with so many wonderful Jewish composers, there weren’t more (OK, any) good Hanukkah songs,” Doliner tells me.“I started doing research and fell down a rabbit hole. Maybe the reason is because they were busy writing ALL the good Christmas songs.” Alongside pianist Ned Wilkinson and secret guest stars, she’s singing some of the 75-plus classic Christmas tunes — from “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” to “Santa Baby” — that you probably never knew were written by Jewish songwriters. Whamageddon warning: George Michael was technically Jewish through his maternal grandmother! skubersky@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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[film review]

Joaquin Phoenix plays Napoleon like a gamer always on the edge of rage quitting | Photo courtesy Apple TV+

JOKER’S RILED

Joaquin Phoenix and Ridley Scott turn Napoleon into a violent epic starring a petty brat BY C RAIG D. LINDSEY

A

t one point in Ridley Scott’s new biopic overact their heads off. While some might’ve Napoleon, Napoleon Bonaparte yells thought that movie was a campy clusterfuck, I at someone, “You think you’re so smart was quite amused by how Scott refused to rein in these A-listers, letting them add more absurdity just because you have boats!” You wouldn’t expect something so bratty and to that insane story of ’80s-era greed and murder. When you think about it, it makes perfect sense petulant to come out of the mouth of the legendary French commander and leader. But you for Scott to link up again with Phoenix (who also would expect something so bratty and petulant served as a producer) to play Bonaparte. More to come out of the mouth of Joaquin Phoenix, than two decades ago, Scott had Phoenix play the power-mad regal antagonist in Gladiator. the guy who’s playing him in this film. The one-time “rapper” Having Phoenix, that went all in on making his prankish loose cannon NAPOLEON character a petty, pervy, (his Best Actor Oscar swole-in-the-chest tyrant win for playing the Joker Directed by Ridley Scott — you just couldn’t wait almost seems like it was in theaters now for Russell Crowe to prophesied), assume the coming soon to Apple TV+ slide his foot way up that role of Bonaparte feels emperor’s ass. like another one of Scott’s Phoenix is still a petty, pervy, swole-in-thecrazy casting moves, adding some chaos to an otherwise stodgy true story. Lest we forget, he chest tyrant in Napoleon. But this time, he injects brought Lady Gaga, Adam Driver, Al Pacino and his performance with empathy. Bonaparte a ridiculous-looking, cuckoo-bananas Jared Leto may be a stubborn son-of-a-bitch, engaging in (another scenery-chewing Oscar winner who bloody battle after bloody battle like a man once played Batman’s archnemesis) together a staging an intense, neverending game of chess couple years ago for House of Gucci and had them with his opponents. But he’s always a dedicated,

determined warrior, fighting even when things clearly aren’t gonna go his way. It is fascinating watching Phoenix play Bonaparte like he’s a gamer who’s constantly on the verge of rage quitting. While he’s surrounded by actors (Rupert Everett, Swimming Pool’s Ludivine Sagnier, A Prophet’s Tahar Rahim) who at least are acting like they’re living in the time the movie is set, there’s practically nothing French or noble about Phoenix’s Bonaparte. Even when he becomes emperor of France, he mostly acts like he’s in cosplay — a ComicCon king. As with most period piece biopics, this is really a love story. When dude isn’t in battle, he has quite the toxic relationship with his wife, Josephine (Vanessa Kirby). Napoleon is crazy about this gal, even when she’s creeping around with another guy while he’s abroad. (Napoleon also had side chicks, so she feels her creeping is justified.) Phoenix is at his nuttiest whenever he’s around Kirby and her icy-ass stare. Whether they’re engaging in bitter button-pushing or messy baby-making (Phoenix really makes Bonaparte look like a rabid dog in heat during

the love scenes), these are two broken people who are clearly made for each other, even when they have to divorce because she can’t give him a son. But enough about Phoenix and his wacky ass. Napoleon has Scott once again making an action epic — one that, incidentally, his old friend Stanley Kubrick wanted to make but never got around to — that is equal parts majestic and bombastic. As the movie focuses on six major battles that Bonaparte fought, the battle sequences are vast, unpredictable and gory as hell. Even horses aren’t safe from the limb-shattering madness. It’s almost like the 85-year-old Scott continues to make these vivid, violent, visually voluminous movies because no one else really does them anymore. (Scholars and historians be damned — he’s on his David Lean shit!) While most blockbusters look like they’ve been cobbled together on somebody’s iPad, the practical effects, sweeping locales (captured by veteran cinematographer Dariusz Wolski) and minimal CGI/VFX that Scott works with on Napoleon almost feels like a middle finger to this age of AI. Considering the movie will be shown on IMAX screens and in 70mm first (before it goes to streaming on Apple TV+, who bankrolled the picture), he really wants you to get up close and personal with the colossal carnage that goes down, whether it’s on the battlefield or in the bedroom. Basically, what Scott is saying with Napoleon is that, from the action to the acting, no computer program could ever come up with a movie this entertainingly batshit. feedback@orlandoweekly.com

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[ film + tv ] Pearson. The action this time is set in motion by Hilda’s discovery of a “fairy mound.” (I believe they used to have outfits that would help you hide such a thing, but Target got cold feet about carrying them.) (Netflix) I Hate Christmas — Italy’s Christmas gift to us this year is a romcom built on the novel premise that a woman has until the holidays to find a real significant other because she’s falsely told her family she already has one. Right, and remind me again why AI is the asshole. (Netflix) My Life With the Walter Boys — Ali Novak’s 2014 novel becomes a series that shows what happens when a recently orphaned New York teenager comes under the care of a Colorado family with 10 boys. I’m betting the answer is some sort of weird-beard cross between Long Island Medium and the Duggars. (Netflix)

Premieres Friday:

Massive cyberattack ruins vacation in Leave the World Behind | Photo courtesy of Netflix

COUCHSURFING

Streaming premieres you won’t want to miss this week. BY STEVE S CH N EIDER

Premieres Wednesday:

Blood Coast — A bunch of French police officers who don’t go by le book try to take down a drug dealer in a flick directed by Olivier Marchal, who is himself a former cop. I understand policemen can have trouble when they try to become filmmakers, because they keep forgetting to turn the camera on. (Netflix) Christmas as Usual — An Indian guy and his Norwegian fiancée are looking forward to a long and happy lifetime together, but only if they can survive Christmas at her parents’ place first. Shout-out to all the single folks whose biggest challenge this year is going to be surviving Whamageddon. (Netflix) Soundtrack #2 — Let’s all see if a South Korean guy and girl whose relationship didn’t survive college graduation can make another go of it four years later. In the two episodes that drop

this week, they’ll get the chance to catch up on everything that’s happened since. A surefire icebreaker: “Hey, what do you think ever happened to PSY?” (Disney+) We Live Here: The Midwest — Documentary cameras capture the struggles of families with LGBTQ members who are facing discrimination in their heartland towns. Hasn’t Kansas come around yet? Superman has a gay kid and everything now. (Hulu)

Premieres Thursday:

The Archies — Archie and his pals fight against urban development in a musical reimagining set in the India of the 1960s. Jughead, meet Jugdish. (Netflix) Hilda — The events of the 2021 feature film Hilda and the Mountain King set up this third and final season of the troll-happy animated series based on the graphic novels of Luke

Culprits — An unknown assailant preys on the participants in a recent high-stakes robbery in Season 1 of a series that’s meant to take up where most heist stories end. You mean there’s something to say after “Carbone is found in a meat truck but gets brought back to life as a character on The Simpsons?” (Hulu) Dating Santa — Embarrassing complications ensue when a young girl is led to believe her mother’s new boyfriend is Santa. Since this is a Spanish-language flick, I’m thinking the mom simply meant to say “He’s voting for DeSantis” and the kid got confused. (Prime Video) Leave the World Behind — Fresh from a limited theatrical run, this adaptation of the 2000 novel by Rumaan Alam casts Julia Roberts and Ethan Hawke as a married couple whose weekend vacation in a rental home is thrown into chaos by a massive cyberattack. Ah, the turn of the last century: when we thought we should be more afraid of a worldwide computer meltdown than by the prospect of being cooped up with Julia Roberts and Ethan Hawke. (Netflix) Merry Little Batman — Bruce Wayne’s incorrigible hellspawn, Damian, is left alone to defend Gotham City on Christmas Eve in the first of three animated Batman projects that had originally been earmarked for Max but were instead sold off to Prime. Remember, David Zaslav thought you’d be less interested in this than in Barnwood Builders. (Prime Video) The Sacrifice Game — The year 1971 is the timeframe for a shocker in which two girls stuck at their boarding school for the holidays have to deal with the unexpected arrival of a murderous cult. Listen, everything’s

negotiable as long as they promise not to sing “The Christmas Shoes.” (Shudder) Your Christmas or Mine 2 — Young couple Hayley and James have to deal with a major lodgings mix-up in a sequel to last year’s British-made holiday hit. Joining the cast this go-’round is noted English thesp … (checks notes) … Jane Krakowski. I guess Tiffany Haddish’s accent would have been too hard for the stateside audience to understand. (Prime Video)

Premieres Saturday:

Doctor Who: The Giggle — The last of the 60th-anniversary specials starring David Tennant and Catherine Tate is the scariest of the three, says showrunner Russell T. Davies. But can it be scarier to the fanbase than having to go from a female Doctor to a Black one with only three weeks’ worth of reassuring nostalgia in between? (Disney+) Maestra: Strings of Truth — A South Korean remake of the French series Philharmonia focuses on a female orchestra conductor who’s hiding a dark secret. And it isn’t that she’s a predatory lesbian, because that’s Lydia Tár’s schtick. (A lesbian, sure, but a predator? Never!) (Hulu)

Premieres Tuesday:

Born in Synanon — A docuseries crew charts the journey of a woman who grew up in the 1970s commune Synanon, which began as a rehab program and degenerated into a brutally repressive, militarized cult. Clever subtext to the audience: IF YOU WANT TO LIVE FREE, STAY ON THE DRUGS. (Paramount+) Kevin Hart & Chris Rock: Headliners Only — Intimate behind-the-scenes footage captures the comedy legends on their recent tandem tour of … New York and New Jersey. Geez, if that counts as being on tour, just taking the Holland Tunnel makes you the Grateful Dead. (Netflix) Los Farad Season 1 — A gym owner gets caught up in the arms-trafficking underworld of 1980s Spain. So that’s the meaning of that sign on the wall that reads “No arms on leg day.” (Prime Video) Single’s Inferno — The third season of the South Korean dating challenge promises a host of new rules. But unfortunately no improvement in punctuation. (Netflix) Under Pressure: The U.S. Women’s World Cup Team —Follow our highly accomplished ladies of the field down the long and difficult road to becoming “the most decorated team in soccer history.” And they’ll remain the most decorated until the Drag Race team shows up and starts throwing glitter around. (Netflix)

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[ local music ]

IT CAME FROM THE BASEMENT

WPRK turns 71 this week and is still essential listening BY A N T HON Y MAUSS

OW contributor Anthony Mauss has been a longtime late-night DJ for WPRK as the enigmatic Phantom Third Channel, embodying the best and weirdest of the station’s freeform mission. His show, “Bargain Bin Bonanza,”airs weekly Sunday nights/ Monday mornings at 1 a.m. on 91.5-FM.

I Urban Heat played Will’s over the summer | Photo by Matthew Moyer

SHADOW DANCE Darkwavers Urban Heat are on the rise BY MATTH EW MOYE R

“H

ave you ever got a second chance …” Austin darkwave trio Urban Heat play Will’s Pub this week as the only Florida stop on their current tour. But it’s not their first time here. The band — Jonathan Horstmann, Pax Foley and Kevin Naquin — played Orlando earlier this summer, also at Will’s, to a fairly rabid crowd of goths that seemingly materialized out of nowhere. However, as we are old and thus not good at the internet, we had no clue that Urban Heat had gone viral on TikTok with their song “Have You Ever?” in much the same way that fellow gothadjacent acts Vision Video and Molchat Doma had. Their dramatically raised profile has yielded two headlining tours, festival appearances and even a spot on Twin Tribes tour next year. (A big deal for vampires.) “The way that people interacted with [‘Have You Ever?’] kinda changed our lives,” Horstmann told British blog Soundsphere earlier this year. “That song, and the way that social media interacted with it, has made a lot of things possible for us.” Urban Heat live is a compelling watch — and listen — with bassist Foley and electronics overseer Naquin holding down a propulsive foundation for towering frontman Horstmann to pretty much just go off. It’s hard to take your

URBAN HEAT with Rare DM, Super Passive, DJ Amaryllis 8 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 12 Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. willspub.org $15

eyes off him as he sweats and broods, eventually stripping down to bondage gear. “We’ve experimented a lot,” said Horstmann to Soundsphere. “ I think it’s cool when the band has the era around the new album. You can remember a point where Depeche Mode had the bondage stuff and so I really jumped on to that.” Another thing we really like about Urban Heat is that it’s goddamned great to see people of color making compelling and powerful sounds within this oft lily-white genre (and we’re not talking about the makeup). Along with acts like Scary Black, Woven In, Light Asylum and Black Rose Burning, Urban Heat have the potential to be crucial crossover voices in darkwave and post-punk. Check ’em out for yourself. Live. Not on TikTok, for goth’s sake.

n a city as transient and ephemeral as Orlando, it can be difficult to think in terms of legacy. Sure, there are the expected “august” institutions of high culture, but you’d be foolish to overlook the importance of the freeform transmissions emanating from the Rollins College campus on WPRK 91.5-FM. With its inaugural broadcast announced by then President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower in December 1952, this is a station that has withstood the tests of time. While the station has seen many changes in format, broadcast range, music delivery and location, WPRK — “The Best in Basement Radio” — remains an important and integrated part of the larger Orlando community. It’s still a harmonious alliance of students and community DJs sharing new music that they love. I first heard WPRK on June 22, 1999. It was the first day of what would become my life here in Orlando. The immediately identifiable chiming tones of Johnny Marr’s guitar rang out from the radio as I unpacked my suitcases. And thus my concerns were calmed almost immediately about finding a place to belong here in the center of the Sunshine State. I was a devoted listener for five years before I found my way into the station as a volunteer for the 110-hour marathon attempt to break the world record for longest continuous broadcast undertaken by WPRK DJ [and former OW staffer] Dave Plotkin in 2005. Since then, I have been a volunteer, DJ, pollworker, fundraiser and fierce advocate. But I’m only one of many impacted deeply by working at the station. I reached out to longtime radio colleagues for more insight into the importance of WPRK in Orlando. “WPRK doesn’t just give Rollins students and the community a voice, it gives them an audience,” says Plotkin. “The community listens and provides a sense of expectation well beyond the scope of just the campus.” “From the first day I set foot in WPRK, it was clear that everyone there truly valued serving the whole community that resided in its broadcast range,” says former general manager Dan Seeger

WPRK 71ST BIRTHDAY BASH 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 8 Ten10 Brewing 1044 Virginia Drive facebook.com/wprkfm free

(2001-2007). “We constantly strove to represent not just the college but all of our neighbors in the Winter Park and greater Orlando area.” “Growing up as a teenager in Winter Park, WPRK offered a window into a kind of music fandom that was more diverse and idiosyncratic than that offered by commercial radio,” says Michael Constant, a veteran overnight DJ at WPRK. “I was unfamiliar with WPRK and college radio until a classmate invited me to a show he was hosting at the station. This was such an eye-opening experience,” remembers “Villains’ League Radio” host Kurt Isaacs. “It changed my perspective on the music and the greater Orlando community. I now host my own show and this experience inspired me to DJ locally in bars and cafés simply because I love seeing people enjoy the music.” Maggie Finley, a Rollins College alum and “Punk Rock in Your PJs” host since 1998, sees WPRK “as a place for everyone — artists of all kinds. I have heard more interviews, live in-studio music, and different perspectives on 91.5 FM than I have on any other local platforms. WPRK is an institution.” WPRK has been a devoted supporter of local musicians, venues and the arts in general, going back years. Brian Esser of Yip-Yip and Cabo Boing enthuses: “WPRK was the first radio station to play my music, and we played live on-air a few times too. ‘WPRK Comes Alive’ was huge for the local music community. Also, I met my wife Rachel there when she was a DJ.” DJs current and former, fans, friends and the general public can celebrate WPRK’s 71st Birthday Bash at Ten10 Brewing on Friday with an evening of live music, vendors, DJs and a custom drink just for the occasion. You don’t sound your age, WPRK. music@orlandoweekly.com

orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com


[ local music ] CONCERT PICKS THIS WEEK

Tripp St., Fowl Play, Ayyo Will, Protocolor: Tripp St. is one of electronic music’s hottest enigmas right now. The meteoric producer and DJ went from total obscurity to making a grand debut splash on CloZee’s label in 2021. Besides crafting some of the brightest modern bass sounds, his clever decision to remain masked this whole time has turned him into a dance-music icon and the subject of intense intrigue. Opening will be Orlando producers Fowl Play, Ayyo Will and Protocolor. (9 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 7, The Social, $15-$25)

Gerald Law II | Photo by Austin Warren

LOCAL RELEASES

The world, it seems, is swamped in the sewage of hate right now. Whether it’s by feeding into it or bouncing it right back, it’s the easiest thing to perpetuate. But eminent Orlando jazz and R&B musician Gerald Law II has chosen instead to counter it with love. After losing his close friend Abnerd Joseph to senseless gun violence on Sept. 14, Law was in search of a way to cope, to bring some balance back in both his soul and the world. What resulted is Love Speaks (Live), a newly released compilation of five songs he curated specifically for their messages of love. Averaging over an album per year over the past several years, Law has been on an impressive studio roll. But Love Speaks (Live) taps the live heart that propels Law and his band The Clutch on stage. Love Speaks (Live) is a crisp bottling of Law’s band fully in their live element. While his studio recordings highlight the composer and arranger in him, these sessions showcase Law as a bandleader, the nerve center who simultaneously sings and drums. Unlike the field conditions of typical concert recordings, this live performance was actually captured in a studio (Orlando’s Audio Don Studios). With no step down in sound quality,

After losing his friend Abnerd Joseph to senseless gun violence, Gerald Law II was in search of a way to cope. What resulted is Love Speaks (Live), a compilation of songs curated for their messages of love

the focus instead remains on the pulse of the performance. Like a good live set should, these recordings pop with extra electricity. Between the performative spark and the hi-def sound, everything here booms, baps and slaps just a little harder, like a reminder that love will not go unheard. Love Speaks (Live) is a special Bandcamponly release.

Orlando Gay Chorus holiday concert: Look, I get the popular allure of holiday music. But space, taste and conscience preclude me from devoting serious column space to TransSiberian Orchestra or Mannheim Steamroller. The Orlando Gay Chorus, however, is an entirely different matter. Besides being good in their own right, they celebrate the spirit with committed inclusivity. In their upcoming concert — fittingly and fabulously titled “Peace on Earth: Make the Yuletide GAY” — OGC will bring global flair to the holidays. In addition to honoring the traditions of Christmas, Hanukkah and Kwanzaa, the chorus will sing in English, Swahili, Korean, Zulu, Spanish, Hawaiian, Mandarin Chinese and German. And of course, expect some extra personality in numbers like “A Hand for Mrs. Claus,”“The Christmas Can-Can”and “Dear Santa (Bring Me a Man).” Orlando Gay Chorus will perform this show in both Orlando and Sanford over two weekends. (4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 10, Harriet Coleman Center for the Arts, $15-$30; 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16, Ritz Theater, $28-$35) Stress Positions, C0MPUTER, Problem Child, Trash World: There’s an obvious brain-drain problem each time any of our better artists moves away. While Chicago is a city that’s drawn a sizable chunk of the best away from Orlando’s heavy-music scene, the upside is that these particular expats have maintained their local ties and regularly return to showcase their new projects with a little extra hometown love. Despite forming in Chicago, relatively new punk quartet Stress Positions consists entirely of Orlando expats with a deep collective résumé that includes legendary local names like Khann, Republicorpse, Knife Hits, Great Deceivers and Waxed, among others. They’re coming to town to play just as their new album, Harsh Reality, hits the streets, so expect both warm local vibes and scorching hardcore fury. Supporting will be a Floridian murderer’s row that includes a long-awaited comeback from conceptual grind-punks C0MPUTER, unhinged noise-punks Problem Child and promising new hardcore band Trash World. (8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 11, Uncle Lou’s, $10) baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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of the motorcycles, tattooing opportunities, fundraising for military veterans and general good vibes. Whether you’re looking to live out your motorcycle gang fantasies, get some new ink or say hello to familiar faces both onstage and off, the Bikeriders Tour is the place to ride out to. 8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., willspub. org, $25 — Grayson Keglovic

The Nutcracker

Orlando Ballet’s traditional holiday treat, a production of Tchaikovsky’s holiday classic The Nutcracker, begins its 2023 run on Friday and this year, the dance company promises an all-new staging. Orlando Ballet has completely revamped every element of their Nutcracker, including new choreography, costumes, puppets, snow globes, set pieces, characters and “magical stage elements.” It was perhaps inevitable; last year, mainstay performer Daniel Benavides hung up his cloak on his longtime role as the magician Drosselmeyer, who sets the fantastical events of the story in motion. But OB artistic director Jorden Morris has been hard at work on this new vision for a couple of years now. “Having this special team of creative and enthusiastic experts share in revisioning all the tradition and charm of this classic in a new and innovative way is a choreographer’s dream,” Morris says. The production runs through Dec. 24. Various times, Steinmetz Hall, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave., drphilipscenter. org, $29-$290. — Matthew Moyer Friday: Phony Ppl at The Social COURTESY PHOTO

FRIDAY, DEC. 8

Bikeriders Tour

An outlaw-esque tour roars into Orlando this weekend, with a lineup that could make even Hell’s Angels cry. The “Bikeriders Tour” is at Will’s Pub on Friday, featuring Ben Nichols, Lulu and the Black Sheep, and Oliver Peck. The show is hosted by tattoo artist Oliver Peck, who is best known for his artful ink and his television appearances on Ink Master, with live performances from Ben Nichols and Lulu and the Black Sheep. Nichols

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is a singer-songwriter and frontman of Orlando faves Lucero, while Lulu and the Black Sheep is a country-time duo composed of Lulu VanTuckett and Allen Wayne Nichols. “In Orlando, a Lucero show continues to be like a big, packed family reunion,” says TLU’s Bao Le-Huu of Nichols’ stature in the City Beautiful. The Americana showcase was originally set to cruise into Orlando in August, but was postponed due to Hurricane Idalia. While the night’s music is sure to rock the roof off the pub [not a hurricane joke], the tour will also feature

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com

Phony Ppl

Phony Ppl make heavy anthems that emphasize the freedom inherent in the dancefloor, letting us know that sometimes, music isn’t meant to be overly intellectualized, just felt. The Brooklyn-based band brings their multigenre sound to the Social this week. The quintet of Elbie Thrie, Bari Bass, Aja Grant, Elijah Rwk, Matt Byas and Sheriff PJ are best known for their eclectic romps in songs like “Why iii Love The Moon,” “Fkn Around (feat. Megan Thee Stallion)” and “try. (feat. Jojo).” The band has also played alongside R&B legends like Erykah Badu and the Roots. The melodic grooves of Phony Ppl travel similar roads to those of other fluid artists like the Internet, Kaytranada and Thundercat. Last year, they released Euphonyus, which

perfectly embodied the group’s love for the music they make together and the fans that listen. Phony Ppl is a dream for anyone who strives to live in bold Technicolor, soundtracked by booming bass. 8 p.m., The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave., foundation-presents.com, $24. — GK SUNDAY, DEC. 10

Grandma Party

Grandma’s back and she wants you to visit her for the holidays. Stardust Video’s wondrously weird spin on the holiday market happens Sunday, and it’s a great option if you want to do some shopping for loved ones with a near-guarantee that there will be no “doubles,” giftwise. Local artists and artisans cram into the Stardust parking lot for a freewheeling day of shopping, drinking and live sound. Vendors this year include Plastik Factory, Wolfshop, Ancientella, Xine Hann and Becca Koopferstock. Will there be free and haphazard haircuts? No. Why do we keep bringing this up? Because we are old. [Jinx! Said it twice!] Live music comes courtesy of Soul Cheq, Wasting May, Earth Fault and, for a second year running, Someday River. Also, DJs Ben Down and Disco Volante will be a-spinnin’. 10 a.m., Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road, instagram.com/ grandma_party, free. — MM

Lou’s Karaoke Fundraiser

The frills might be few, but among Orlando music cognoscenti and civilians just popping their head in the door randomly, late-night karaoke sessions at Mills 50 venue Uncle Lou’s are a hit, especially after shows at nearby stages Will’s, Grumpy’s and (yes) Lou’s empty out. Perhaps even bar manager Lou will jump in for a song or two (a treat!). Sunday will see that tradition continue but for a good cause, because that night’s karaoke sesh is a fundraiser for Lou’s legal fund. In case you’ve forgotten, last year the venue was hit by a nuisance noise complaint lawsuit by a nearby neighbor and, well, lawyers ain’t cheap. Support your local dives, because Mills Avenue is becoming distinctly undivey. (For instance, Team Market Group has an upscale concept quite literally moving in next door.) “Weird songs welcome” trumpets the flyer for this event. That’s


WEEK a guarantee, cowboy. 8 p.m., Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave., 407898-0009, free-$2 per song. — MM

Nesto’s Jazz Trio 10 pm; Lil Indie’s, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.

ALW Reindeer Games

Upstart Space Coast indie Atomic Legacy Wrestling has been running regular events in Orlando for the better part of the year at Level 13, and things are going well enough for them to do their final show of 2023 once again in the City Beautiful. The fed is pulling out all the stops for this card, with a stacked lineup that has a little something for fans of all tastes. If you like some WWE nostalgia, the Headbangers are moshing in; classic ECW alum Tony DeVito is in the house; even Epico Colón of the storied Colón family (and half of Los Matadores in WWE) makes an appearance. To our perhaps untrained eyes, the biggest matches of the evening are ALW regulars Ryzin and Jay Sinn squaring off, former “Prince of Punk” Shannon Moore taking on Impact monster Steve Maclin and an absolutely ridiculous three-way dance between women’s stars Leva Bates, Renee Michelle and the unbelievably talented (and local) Impact star “The Virtuosa” Deonna Purrazzo. Sunday’s busy, but this is worth it. 4 p.m., Level 13 Event Center, 5043 Edgewater Drive, facebook.com/ atomiclegacywrestling, $30-$90. — MM

CONCERTS

THURSDAY, DEC. 7

Keegan Matthews, She Dreamed in Pixels 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12. Las Historias de Pedro Castillo en su Banda 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $70; 407-704-6261. Tripp St., Fowl Play, Ayyo Will, Protocolor 9 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$25; 407-246-1419.

WEDNESDAY–TUESDAY, DEC. 6-12, 2023 Submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com

Jacquees, Nick LaVelle 7 pm; Level 13 Event Center, 5043 Edgewater Drive; $35-$150; 407-717-5312. Linkin Park Tribute Band, Nirvanna: A Tribute to Nirvana 6 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $20; 407-648-8363. Oak Hill Drifters 7 pm; Rockpit Brewing, 10 W. Illiana St.; free. Orlando Big Band Christmas 7 pm; The Clermont Performing Arts Center, 3700 S. Highway 27, Clermont; $20 -$30; 352-394-4800. Phony PPL 6 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $24; 407-246-1419.

Underground Lounge, 1018 N. Mills Ave.; $5; 407-237-9180. G-Eazy 11 pm; Mango’s Tropical Cafe Orlando, 8126 International Drive; $50$275; 407-673-4422. Grrrls Night: Paperback Romance, Parks and Razz, Stoned Mary 5 pm; Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-673-2712.

Dead of Winter Fest: Ana Eclipse, Hollowbrook, Breathless, Cold Subject, Ease! 5 pm; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $15; 407-766-6264. El Alfa 8 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St; $35.99-$195.49; 800-745-3000.

Hip Hop 50 Block Party The Commission Beer Chamber, 2230 Curry Ford Road; 407-271-4028.

Lil Lotus, Makeout, Sace6, Eric Jafet 7 pm; Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $20-$25; 407-673-2712.

Jack Graham and Friends, Ka Malinalli 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $25; 407-636-9951.

Vivacity 2 pm; Trinity Preparatory School, 5700 Trinity Prep Lane, Winter Park; $30$60; 407-462-4133.

Luicidal, The Hajj, Terminally Ill 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $15.

We Are the Asteroid 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12.

FRIDAY, DEC. 8

Ben Nichols, Lulu and the Black Sheep, Oliver Peck 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $25. Cardiel 7 pm; West End Trading Co., 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $12; 407-322-7475. Celebration of Queerness: muthabitch, KT Kink, Haize, Ira Glass House 6:30 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-623-3393.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 6

Slander, Wavedash, Saka, Redline 10 pm; The Vanguard, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $29.99-$69.99; 570-592-0034. Tamar Braxton 7:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $35-$100; 407-934-2583. WPRK 71st Birthday Bash 7 pm; Ten10 Brewing, 1010 Virginia Drive; 407-930-8993.

SATURDAY, DEC. 9

Hillbilly Casino, Oak Hill Drifters 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$15.

Flagman, Traverser, Ben Katzman’s DeGreaser, Breathless 7 pm; Conduit, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $15-$20; 407-673-2712.

John Redfield Trio 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $25; 407-636-9951.

Jack Graham and Friends, Patrick Hagerman 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $25; 407-636-9951.

Biochemical Genocide, Throwin Up, Testament of Hate, Menstrual Moonshine, Illwill 7:30 pm; The Spot, 6633 E. Colonial Drive; $10. Boseby, PPS, KT Kink, DJ Warlock, Jaymond Creek 7 pm; Grumpy’s

Sirsy 8 pm; Wop’s Hops, 419 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-878-7819. Valentin Kovalev 7:30 pm; Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; $30; 407-595-2713. Vial + Jer, Penny Bored, Sistamatic 6 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $20; 407-246-1419.

MONDAY, DEC. 11

Stephen Sanchez 6:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $25-$75; 407-934-2583. Stress Positions, Computer, Problem Child, Trash World 8 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $10; 407-270-9104.

TUESDAY, DEC. 12 SUNDAY, DEC. 10

Central Florida Jazz Society Presents: Carol Stein and Friends 3 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $20$35; 407-636-9951.

La Goony Chonga 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; 407-246-1419. Urban Heat, Rare DM, Super Passive 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $15-$18.

orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com


[ free will astrology ] BY ROB BREZSNY

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Among our most

impressive superpowers is the potency to transform ourselves in alignment with our conscious intentions. For example, suppose you feel awkward because you made an insensitive comment to a friend. In that case, you can take action to assuage any hurt feelings you caused and thereby dissolve your awkwardness. Or let’s say you no longer want to be closely connected to people who believe their freedom is more important than everyone else’s freedom. With a clear vision and a bolt of willpower, you can do what it takes to create that shift. These are acts of true magic — as wizardly as any occult ritual. I believe you will have extra access to this superpower in the coming weeks. Homework: Identify three situations or feelings you will use your magic to change.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The eminent

Capricorn philosopher William James (1842– 1910) is referred to as the “Father of American Psychology.” He was a brilliant thinker who excelled in the arts of logic and reason. Yet he had a fundamental understanding that reason and logic were not the only valid kinds of intelligence. He wrote, “Rational consciousness is but one special type of consciousness, whilst all about it, parted from it by the filmiest of screens, there lie potential forms of consciousness entirely different.” This quote appears in his book The Varieties of Religious Experience. In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you to investigate those other types of consciousness in the coming months. You don’t need drugs to do so. Simply state your intention that you want to. Other spurs: dreamwork, soulful sex, dancing, meditation, nature walks, deep conversations.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Are people sometimes jealous or judgmental toward you for being so adept at multi-tasking? Are you weary of dawdlers urging you not to move, talk and mutate so quickly? Do you fantasize about having more cohorts who could join you in your darting, daring leaps of logic? If you answered yes to these questions, I expect you will soon experience an enjoyable pivot. Your quick-change skills will be appreciated and rewarded more than usual. You will thrive while invoking the spiritual power of unpredictability. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Romantic relationships

take work if you want them to remain vigorous and authentic. So do friendships. The factors that brought you together in the first place may not be enough to keep you bonded forever. Both of you change and grow, and there’s no guarantee your souls will continue to love being interwoven. If disappointment

creeps into your alliance, it’s usually wise to address the issues head-on as you try to reconfigure your connection. It’s not always feasible or desirable, though. I still feel sad about the friend I banished when I discovered he was racist and had hidden it from me. I hope these ruminations inspire you to give your friendships a lot of quality attention in 2024. It will be an excellent time to lift the best ones up to a higher octave.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): I will cheer you on

as you tenderly push yourself to be extra exploratory in the coming weeks. It’s exciting that you are contemplating adventures that might lead you to wild frontiers and halfforbidden zones. The chances are good that you will provoke uncanny inspirations and attract generous lessons. Go higher and deeper and further, dear Aries. Track down secret treasures and lyrical unpredictability. Experiment with the concept of holy rebellion.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In January, I will tempt you to be a spirited adventurer who undertakes smart risks. I will invite you to consider venturing into unknown territory and expanding the scope of your education. But right now, I advise you to address your precious needs for stability and security. I encourage you to take extra good care of your comfort zone and even add cozy new features to it. Here’s a suggestion: Grab a pen and paper, or open a new file on your favorite device, then compose a list of everything you can do to feel exceedingly safe and supported. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Booker T. Washington (1856–1915) was an American Black leader who advocated a gradual, incremental approach to fighting the effects of racism. Hard work and good education were the cornerstones of his policies. Then there was W.E.B. Dubois (1868– 1963). He was an American Black leader who encouraged a more aggressive plan of action. Protest, agitation, pressure and relentless demands for equal rights were core principles in his philosophy. In the coming months, I recommend a blend of these attitudes for you. You’ve got two big jobs: to improve the world you live in and to get all the benefits you need and deserve from it. CANCER (June 21-July 22): I periodically get a big jolt of feeling how much I don’t know. I am overwhelmed with the understanding of how meager my understanding of life really is. On the one hand, this is deflating to my ego. On the other hand, it’s wildly refreshing. I feel a liberating rush of relief to acknowledge that I am so far from being perfect and complete that there’s no need for me to worry about

trying to be perfect or complete. I heartily recommend this meditation to you, fellow Cancerian. From an astrological perspective, now is a favorable time to thrive on fertile emptiness.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Have you reached your full height? If there were ever a time during your adult life when you would literally get taller, it might be in the coming weeks. And that’s not the only kind of growth spurt that may occur. Your hair and fingernails may lengthen faster than usual. I wouldn’t be shocked if your breasts or penis got bigger. But even more importantly, I suspect your healthy brain cells will multiply at a brisk pace. Your ability to understand how the world really works will flourish. You will have an increased flair for thinking creatively.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): I like Virgo author Cheryl Strayed’s thoughts about genuine togetherness. She says, “True intimacy isn’t a clusterfuck or a psychodrama. It isn’t the highest highs and lowest lows. It’s a tiny bit of those things on occasion, with a whole lot of everything else in between. It’s communion and mellow compatibility. It’s friendship and mutual respect.” I also like Virgo author Sam Keen’s views on togetherness. He says, “At the heart of sex is something intrinsically spiritual, the desire for a union so primal it can be called divine.” Let’s make those two perspectives your guideposts in the coming weeks, Virgo. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): According to my

interpretation of your astrological prospects, you now have the capacity to accelerate quickly and slow down smoothly; to exult in idealistic visions and hunker down in pragmatic action; to balance exuberant generosity with careful discernment — and vice versa. In general, Libra, you have an extraordinary ability to shift moods and modes with graceful effectiveness — as well as a finely honed sense of when each mood and mode is exactly right for the situation you’re in. I won’t be surprised if you accomplish well-balanced miracles.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Dear Goddess: Thank

you a trillion times for never fulfilling those prayers I sent your way all those years ago. Remember? When I begged and pleaded with you to get me into a sexy love relationship with You Know Who? I am so lucky, so glad, that you rejected my prayers. Though I didn’t see it then, I now realize that being in an intimate weave with her would have turned out badly for both her and me. You were so wise to deny me that misguided quest for “pleasure.” Now, dear Goddess, I am asking you to perform a similar service for any Scorpio readers who may be beseeching you to provide them with experiences they will ultimately be better off without. orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com


RV Sales RV Repairs 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: A83.801 - 83.809. All units are assumed 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: Tuesday, December 19th, 2023, 2:00 p.m., or thereafter, at: Sanford Depot, All Aboard Storage 2728 W 25th Street, Sanford FL 32771 321-363-1902 #1146 Angela Thomas, #1178 Deandre Culmer, #1363 Jermaine McNeal, #1409 Ashley Atkins- Dellafield, #1531 Freddie Scott, #1684 Latoya Bryant. 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. Ad to run: November 29, 2023 & December 6, 2023. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on December 15th, 2023 at the location indicated:Store 1334: 5603 Metrowest Blvd Orlando FL, 32811 407.5167751 @ 12:00PM: Brynn Pomeroy: furniture & items; Carolyn Rozier: household goods; Celeste Unertl: household goods; Gabriel Maciel Hernandez: refrigerator, boxes,furniture; Jared Delile: 4-bedroom apartment, boxes; Jessie Baptiste: Bedroom set, couch, table, kitchen items; John Reilly: household goods; Katiuska Anlis Guzman: Home furniture; Kevin Reddick: household goods; Kevin Thomas: Couches, tv, stand, bed and boxes; Lyndon Lafond: household items; Natisha Cuellar: Appliance, boxes, TV, clothes; Palamechia Bloodsaw: washer/dryer, dinette, 4 chairs; Precious Mcnabb: Bed,boxes,tv,baby stuff, couches, clothes; Richard Legros: Boxes; Sabrina Rodrigues: household goods; Terry Jenkins: household items; Valerie Phillips: beds, chair, household items, boxes, 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. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: December 15, 2023. 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, 407794-6970. Raymond Adams- bags, shoes. Tina Jordan-Nelson- Furniture. Shukeema Woodard- seasonal, tv. Malinda A Jackson- furniture. George Taylor- TV, luggage. 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 CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/TYNAN CASE DP21-337 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: H.P. DOB: 07/26/2021, NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Amanda Clark (Address Unknown). A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable Judge Greg A. Tynan on January 3, 2024 at 10:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. The Hearing will be conducted in person. 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 MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 20th day of November, 2023. This summons has been issued at the request of: Stacy McDuffie, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 0056020 Senior Attorney for State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, Children’s Legal Services/DCF Stacy.McDuffie@myflfamilies.com By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk (Court Seal) NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, Michael Pabon, of 100 W Grant St. Apt. 3074, Orlando, FL 32806, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: MikeDevs It is the intent of the undersigned to register “MikeDevs” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 11/29/2023 NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8:00am and RUNS CONTINOUSLY. Auction will be

held online: www.storagetreasures.com U-Haul Ctr 508 N. Goldenrod Rd. Orlando Fl. 32807 12/12/2023: 543 Sofia Bernard, 1217 Benjamin Marchman, 327 Joel Jay Guerrero, 430 Perlita Ocampo, 629 Alexis Gomez Jimenez, 226 Tiffany Mac Donald, 643 Italia Regius. U-Hail Ctr 3500 S. Orange ave. Orlando Fl. 32807 12/12/2023: 1603 Terriana Bell, AB3880D Quiaurie Owens, AB1961F Bravo Cavaro, 1808 Suzan Guest, 1037 Erik Aquino. U-Haul Ctr 11815 E. Colonial Dr. Orlando Fl. 32826 12/12/2023: 1123 Veronica Stafford, 1243 Derrick Howard, 1133 Veronica Stafford. U-Haul Ctr 4001 E. Colonial Dr. Orlando Fl. 32803 12/12/2023: D212 Shamiya Mims, A105 Angelina Reyes, B196 Tiffany Frison, D152 Davina Fielder, D185 Jacky Calderon, A104 Hector Corujo, C115 Ivor St. Ange, U-Haul Ctr 2629 E. Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy. Kissimmee Fl. 34744 12/12/2023: 2096 David Burns. NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8:00am and RUNS CONTINOUSLY. Auction will be held online: www.storagetreasures.com U-Haul Ctr 3500 S. Orange ave. Orlando Fl. 32807 12/13/2023: 2301 Elizabeth Lebron, AA8021K David Whitty, AA4348P David Whitty. U-Haul Ctr 4001 E. Colonial Dr, Orlando Fl. 32803 12/13/2023: C117 Michelle Elms. Notice of Public Sale Notice is hereby given that Value Store It 27, will sell the contents of the storage units listed below at a public auction to satisfy a lien placed on the contents (pursuant to Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes). The sales will take place on Wednesday, December 20th, 2023. The sale will be conducted under the direction of Christopher Rosa (AU4167) on behalf of the facilities management. Units will be available for viewing prior to the sale on www.storagetreasures.com. Contents will be sold for cash only to the highest bidder. A 10% buyer’s premium will be charged as well as a $50 cleaning deposit per unit. All sales are final. Seller reserves the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale or to refuse any bids. No one under 16 years old is permitted to bid. The property to be sold is described as “General Household Items” “Personal Property” unless otherwise noted. Unit # – Name – Description. Value Store It 27 at 1700 Celebration Blvd, Celebration, FL. 34747 will list storage units on www.storagetreasures.com at 9:00 AM:1016-Kenneth Blakely;1070-John Santiago/John Joseph Santiago;2005-Raishawn Nicholson;3121-Christopher Johnson/Christopher Lyn Johnson;4066- Alfredo Gomez/Alfredo P Gomez;6117-Jennifer Paden/Jennifer June Goss Paden Notice of Public Sale Notice is hereby given that Value Store It 36 – Celebration 2, will sell the contents of the storage units listed below at a public auction to satisfy a lien placed on the contents (pursuant to Chapter 83 of the

Florida Statutes). The sales will take place on Tuesday, December 19th, 2023. The sale will be conducted under the direction of Christopher Rosa (AU4167) on behalf of the facilities management. Units will be available for viewing prior to the sale on www.storagetreasures.com. Contents will be sold for cash only to the highest bidder. A 10% buyer’s premium will be charged as well as a $50 cleaning deposit per unit. All sales are final. Seller reserves the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale or to refuse any bids. No one under 16 years old is permitted to bid. The property to be sold is described as “General Household Items” “Personal Property” unless otherwise noted. Unit # – Name – Description. Value Store It 36 at 1480 Celebration Blvd, Celebration, FL 34747 will list storage units on www. storagetreasures.com at 9:00AM: 1003 Christopher White/Christopher C White; 1031 - Valeska Alvarez; 1163 - Valeska Alvarez; 1107 - Erik Mosher; 1108 - Erik Mosher; 2035 - Ricardo M Rodriguez; 2098 - Shirley Mejia; 2203 - Juliana Bourland/ Juliana Marie Bourland; 2240 - Elizabeth Ann Logue; 2242 - Duranda Frasier/ Duranda Monet Frasier; 3018 - Abraham Werzberger; 3076 - Leylanie Diaz Diaz; 3122 - Taneshia Walker/Taneshia Saraha Walker 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 December 18, 2023 at the location indicated: Store 7143: 6035 Sand Lake Vista Dr, Orlando FL 32819, 407.337.6665 @ 11:00 AM: Bernard Tostanowski: Home Decor and Furniture; Catina Phillips: boxes, chairs; Craig Becton/ AXBN Construction: house products, furniture; Coralie Malebranche: luggage (6) & boxes; Natalie Barrera: totes, suitcase, clothes Store 7590: 7360 Sandlake Rd Orlando FL, 32819, 407.634.4449 @ 11:45AM: Yesenia Guzman- boxes, hangers, Christmas tree, hangers, shelves; Tammy Carder- bags, luggage, linens Store 1335: 1101 Marshall farms Rd Orlando, Fl 34761 407.516.7221@ 12:00pm: Earl Bethel-Water cooler, grill. LaJone Glass-household goods. Christopher White Popcorn machine, baby furniture, boxes. Gaven Smith-2 bikes, lumber. Martin Flowers-Pressure washer, charger ,totes. Store 3404: 2650 N Powers Dr Orlando, FL 32818, (407) 982-1032 @ 1:00 PM: Charmagne Porter: Household Goods, Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools, Appliances; Johanne Plymouth: Household Goods, Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools, Appliances; Johanne Plymouth: Household Goods, Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools, Appliances; Mario Pierre: Household Goods/Furniture; Yinner Dudley: Appliances; Youssef Khedr: Household Goods, Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools, Appliances Store 1317: 5592 L B McLeod Rd Orlando, FL 32811, 407.720.2832 @ 2:00 PM: Latarsha Frazier- Queen bed and bins TV; Jamarie Berthier- TV’s, tables, couch & kitchen appliances; Linsley Joseph- 2 couches, 2 bar stools, end tables, and middle table; SS International Distributors LLC- Madeline Silva-Pallets. 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 December 15, 2023 at the location indicated: Store 7420: 800 Beard Rd Winter Garden, FL 34787, 407.551.6985 @ 12:00 PM: Shawnnel Jewel Jefferson: 2 bedroom aptmt, beds, dressers, boxes, sofa- Dynasty Carter: Boxes- Taylor Hamby: box spring, dinning room table, 5 chairs, totes, decorationEloi Goncalves: Secretary’s, chairs, HHG garage 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. Notice of Public Sale​​Notice is hereby given that Value Store It 29 – Ocoee will sell the contents of the storage units listed below at a​​public auction to satisfy a lien placed on the contents (pursuant to Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes). The​s​ ales will take place on Tuesday, December 19th, 2023. The sale will be conducted under the direction of​​ Christopher Rosa (AU4167) on behalf of the facilities management. Units will be​​ available for viewing prior to​​the sale on www.storagetreasures.com. Contents will be sold for cash only to the highest bidder. A 10%​​buyer’s premium will be charged as well as a $50 cleaning deposit per unit. All sales are final. Seller reserves​​ the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale or to refuse any bids. No one under 16 years old​​is permitted to bid. The property to be sold is described as “General Household​​Items” “Personal Property”​​unless otherwise noted. Unit # – Name – Description.​V ​ alue Store It 29 at 1251 Fountains West Blvd, Ocoee, FL 34761 will list storage units on​​www. storagetreasures.com at 11:00 AM A010 Glenda Ferdinand;A011 Glenda Ferdinand;A105 William Adan Lee Holton;A115 Donel Richemond;C043B Tristen S Brown/ Tristen Shenise Brown;C099 Noemi Morales;C114 Thomas Armon Schrandt.

orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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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 December 21st, 2023, 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 12:00 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: 12:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1113 - Gomez, Eddie; 1118 - vega, Ann; 1130 - Perez, Melissa; 1138 - Steinfeld, Scott; 1151 - Padro, Arnel; 1187 - Layne, Jennifer; 2018 - Ultimate Party Orlando Bryant, Kendra; 2054 - Smith, Talina; 2061 - Lafontaine, Jaime; 2145 - daniel, Theresa; 2188 - Johnson, Eugene; 3006 - Rodriguez, Luis A; 3009 - Barrientos, Robinson; 3013 - SANTIAGO, JESUS; 3014 - williams, Camaya; 3059 - Williams, Latasha; 4027 - Roberts, Marik; 4040 - Hernandez, Hugo S; 4057 - Johnson, Eugene; 6014 - Buckley, Twanya; 6016 - Rivera Ortiz, Shelly; 6135 - Lopez, Gina PUBLIC STORAGE # 08717, 1800 Ten Point Lane, Orlando, FL 32837, (407) 545-4431 Time: 12:10 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0104 - Jean, Jalissa; 0169 - guerrero, josleidy a; 0216 WALLACE, JANEL; 0227 - Maldonado, Marlene; 0262 - Wardle, Gabrielle; 1010 - Lowe , Troy; 1017 - Redfin, Joseph; 1036 - lewis, Melissa; 2019 - Pagan, Axel; 3003 - Arango, Juan; 3011 - Guilliard, Gregory; 7020 - bakr, Abu; 7051 - Carroll, Victoria; 7061 - Guzman, Jeremy; 7073 - Miller, Cristina; 7082 - James, Janita Y; 7095 - Atkins, Ricky; 7110 - Wharton, Rolando; 7111 - Eugene, James; 7125 - Austin, Kenneth; 8009 - CARVALHO, CAIO VINICIUS CARREIRO; 8028 - Gomez, Edgar PUBLIC STORAGE # 20477, 5900 Lakehurst Drive, Orlando, FL 32819, (407) 409-7284 Time: 12:20 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A025 - Waitress, Walter; C146 - Jackson, Shardea; C147 - Trinidad, Jose Rodriguez; C159 - Preston, Latrice; D139 - Blankenship, Jacob; D163 - Ashby, Jack; D168 - Marzan, Jaime; D172 - Macahuachi, Luis; E232 - Chapin, Matthew; H070 - Waitress, Walter PUBLIC STORAGE # 20711, 1801 W Oak Ridge Road, Orlando, FL 32809, (407) 792-5808 Time: 12:30 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. B004 - Amill, Denise; B054 - Gonzalez, Elizabeth; C003 - Griffin, Franklin; C017 - Paige, Abram; C024 - Lee-Williams, Precious; D003 guerrier, Clebert; D004 - Samuels, Raechele; D012 - Martinez, Victor; D029 - Jacques, Ludner; D037 - Morris, Dawn J; D038 - Evans, Jade; D040 - Gilliam, Sade; D065 - Virtual Flight Academy Maguire, Larry; D070 - Kenney, Jefferey; E028 - Martinez, Katerine; F009 - Correa, Loida; F019 - Yeanue, Youngor; G005 - Mazzella Jr., Angelo; G009 - Cofer, Megan; G025 Gonzalez, Andres; H025 - Electrik pros Cuear, Brany; H031 - myrlande, cherislert; J017 - Hardnett, Shakaria; J021 - Hernandez, Mauricio; J030 - Resto, Jose; J035 Lane, Sean; J036 - Mcneil, Lamario; J047 - Huber, Justin; J063 - Herman, Mareah; J065 - Jean, Marie; J073 - Salazar, Rosemary; J083 - Rodriguez, Bernadette;

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J156 - saint rose, zatavia; J164 - Bellegarde, Darline; K018 - Merkley, David; K028 - Perez, Nettie; K039 - Lozada, Ariel; K077 - Hogan, Emanuel; K105 - Wesley, Navin; P002 - Jackson, Guy PUBLIC STORAGE # 24303, 1313 45th Street, Orlando, FL 32839, (407) 278-8737 Time: 12:40 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A107 - Daniel, Shelia; A118 - Cracchiolo, Toni; A121 - Wilson, Felicia; A125 - Jones, Wendy; A136 Bryant, Robert; A136 – Harding, J.; B202 Nash, Ernest; B205 - Santos, Lakesha; B207 - Nerlande Laurore, Marie; B221 - Rodriguez, Daniel; B224 - Huff, Jalil; B242 - Rose, Richard; B244 - Conquest, Kim; B248 - Fountain, Dieon; B262 - Saintfort, Milot; C310 - Cameron, Brandon; C328 - Ramirez, Nathalia; E505 - Antoine, Sedler; E541 - Wiltsey, Casey; E547 - Anderson, Ruby; F624 - Bridget, Rosa; F626 green, Khadejah; F630 - Simon, Karen Ingrid; F644 - Simmons, Sebrina; G720 - Warren, Eddie; J904 - Murray, Lionel PUBLIC STORAGE # 25454, 235 E Oak Ridge Road, Orlando, FL 32809, (407) 326-9069 Time: 12:50 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A140 - Collazo, William; A144 - Burden, David; B226 - Petty, James; C328 - BROE, ALYSSA; D415 - Gittens, Duane; E515 Ouazani, Jalil; E528 - Claude, Falene; F613 - Diaz, Rosendo; G724 - Collins, Willie; I906 - jr, Jeffrey baker; I913 - Escobar, Jose; I914 - Lee, Cynthia; I923 - Escobar, Jeremy; I929 - Sopon, Isui; J009 - Martinez, Lillybeth; K103 - Harris, Fefflyne; L215 - Maxie, Tyanna; L222 - Muniz, Glerisbeth; M311 - Person, Aaron; N413 - Sulyma, Richard; P015 - Mendez, Junior; P074 Ilestin, Antoinette PUBLIC STORAGE # 25782, 2783 N John Young Parkway, Kissimmee, FL 34741, (321) 422-2079 Time: 01:00 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 1014 - Trinidad, Mayra; 1020 - Gonzalez, Cristina; 1056 Esperanca BPC Vitalino, Samuel; 1064 Senquis, Rachel; 11001 - Cotto, Jose; 11105 - Morales, Clara; 1112 - Ocana, Ana; 1117 - Wiencko, Dale; 11307 - Osorio Morales, Jose Benjamin; 11408 - Torres, Desiree; 11412 - Levenson, Brian; 11420 - Garcia, Eliezer; 1156 - Perez, Raquel; 12051 - Coachman, Tamara; 1211 - Lonon, Ellen; 1214 - Nelson, Benjamin; 1216 - Graham, Howard Junior; 12410 - Medina, William; 1282 - Silvera, Juan; 302 - lamadrid, Yocelyn; 366 - Lara, Carlos; 392 Primrose, Shannon; 394 - mcdowald, Berkley; 465 - Gordon, Clive; 471 - Berrios, Kenny; 485 - Gonzalez Sanchez, Lisbeth Coromoto; 502 - Gonzales-Hoyes, Maria; 691 - Marshall, Gregory; 703 - Manuel, Roquanda; 709 - Joseph, Patrice; 794 Magic Balloon creation creations, Magic balloon; 883 - Quintana, Yarimar; 957 - Ballesteros, Amy PUBLIC STORAGE # 25806, 227 Simpson Rd, Kissimmee, FL 34744, (407) 258-3087 Time: 01:10 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 003 - Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Joivan; 023 Rodriguez Fernandez, Pedro Anibal; 086 - Medina, Teresa; 102 - Rand, Alexus; 130 - Biligual Therapy Services LLC Reyes Zayas, Vilma; 155 - Gonzalez, Naisha; 202 - Detten, Rachael; 213 - Wingster, Bictoria; 306 - Lammens, Regina; 336 - Lee, Kevin; 346 - Santana, Hector; 349 - Toyensojeda, Marcos; 446 - Illidge, Omar; 459 - kirkland, Simea; 505 - vidal Rivera, Victor; 506 - O Rourke, Carol; 507 - Ayala, Nestor; 555 Betancourt, Tony; 569 - Gonzalez, Angie; 574 - Garcia, Victor; 576 - Bash, Chanel; 612 - O’shea, Patricia; 824 - Sierra, Sandra; 850 – Mendez, Ceasar; 857 - Rodriguez, Yashmari; 888 - White, Monica; RV16 - Extreme Extraction And De TAAFFE, MICHAEL PUBLIC STORAGE # 25846, 1051

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com

Buenaventura Blvd, Kissimmee, FL 34743, (407) 258-3147 Time: 01:20 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 01103 - Reilly, James; 01113 - Salgado Rivera, Eduardo; 01131 - Velez Segui, 02121- Del Valle, Marcelo; Carlos; 02130 Gomez, Emily; 02156 - Perez, Joseph; 02201 - Toribio, Yeshlie; 02402 - Johns, Aaron; 02404 - Pinder, Megan; 02437 - Mitchell, Richard; 02511 - Taylor, Amy; 04104 - Roque, Luis; 04113 - Joseph, Danielle; 04308 - Cespedes, Lidia; 04322 - Gray, Matthew; 05123 - mercado, Mariano; 05136 - Murillo, Hernan; 05137 - Sanchez Ocampo, Julian; 05247 - Rodriguez, Liz; 05368 - Garcia Posso, Sebastian; 05430 - Izurieta, Carlos PUBLIC STORAGE # 25847, 951 S John Young Pkwy, Kissimmee, FL 34741, (321) 236-6712 Time: 01:30 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 1016 - Maxie II, Steven; 1225 - Delvalle, Michael; 1237 lopez, Melisza; 1402 - Mateo Rodriguez, Aida; 1506 - Frazao, Diquel; 1544 - Wiggins, Leslie; 1607 - Santiago, Noel; 2032 Tindell, Marvin; 2033 - Maddox, Constance; 2036 - Romani, Jeuvanni; 2055 - Fernandez, Monica; 2059 - Burke, Heather; 2077 - De Jesus, Luis; 2108 - German, Lizmarie; 2182 - Camacho, Kimberley; 2192D - lugo, Solay; 2197 JeanJacques, Smith; 2317 - jr, Radhames reyes; 2337 - Hardy, Brook; 2343 - Pires, Nelida; 2415 - Nolasco, Luis PUBLIC STORAGE # 25892, 1701 Dyer Blvd , Kissimmee , FL 34741, (407) 392-1169 Time: 01:40 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0023 - Snow, Heather; 0026 - Green, Tyler; 0057 - Willoughby, Yvonne; 0076 - Castro, Gabriel; 0114 - Arce, Melissa; 0130 - Howes, Margaret; 0157 - Lopez, Xiomara Diaz; 0160 - ortiz, Evelisse; 0165 - hernandez, Mariah; 0202 - Peterson, Kaluv; 0305 - Borrero, Maryangelie; 0326 - North America Security Agency Inc. Sanchez, Joseph; 1016 - Leal Ramos, Manuel; 1019 - Salone, Shanae; 1020 - Doyle, Troy; 1025 - escribano, Asbel; 1026 - Burgos, Evelyn; 1030 - Baloa, Jose; 2012 - Gomez, David; 2013 - Cummings, Tia; 2068 - Martinez, Barbie; 2071 - Nieves, Javier; 2088 - ibarra, lillian m; 3014 - ARAMCA APPLIANCE LLC Ruiz, Juan; 4010 - Northern, Eugene; 4020 - Buford, David; 6001 - Williams, Juanetta; 6035 - Redeondo, Jesus; 6036 - ELIGIO SEGUNDO, FALCON; 6087 Smith, Phyllis; 6097 - Merritt, Saraines; 6102 - Herrera, Yuli Andrea; 6124 - Carrillo, Israel; 6128 - Burge, Jeffrey; 6140 - Quinones, Gilbert; 6157 - Dion, Hedwin; 6159 - gonzalez, victor miranda; 6172 - Martinez, Juan; 6218 - Flores, Shadaylian; 8003 - Swinehart, Kurt; 8007 - Rodriguez, Ana Maria; 8024 - peterson, casandra; 8030 - Whittaker, Nicole PUBLIC STORAGE # 25896, 6040 Lakehurst Dr, Orlando, FL 32819, (407) 545-5699 Time: 01:50 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 00054 - Griffin, Winston; 0020 - Crouch, Christopher; 0080 - Naylor, Herman; 0086 - Petko, Susan; 0096 - kitaoka, Poubel; 0126 - Johnson, Jeff; 0220 - Quinta Camacho, Lourdes; 0343 - Poventud, Janaina; 0372 - Cedeno, Jason; 0374 Peach Tree Hotel Group Heaxt, Christopher; 1030 - Gadson, Harry; 1066 Jason Robert Peet Inc. Peet, Jason; 1134 - Tillman, Tory; 2023 - Melendez, Elizabeth; 2069 - Caraballo, Maria; 2072 - Richard, Cliff; 2130 - tilerin, cadeau PUBLIC STORAGE # 28075, 4729 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32839, (407) 986-4867 Time: 02:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0134 - Bienaise, Farah; 0146 - Mesidor, Silencieux; 0149 - Valdes, Cathlene; 0225 - Rucker, Tammy; 0229 - Melendez,

Darwin; 0238 - Brown, Lashawnda; 0311 - Moise, Benite; 0319 - Jones, Doretha; 0323 - Smith, Ernest; 0343 - Matin, Mehran; 0353 - Simpson, Rolanda; 0427 - Williams, Mary; 0432 - francis, Nadia; 0512 - Edwards, Akeme; 0524 - Leftridge, Rashid; 0603 - Diaz, Aneuey; 0608 - Rodrguez, Germania; 0615 - Octelus, Daniella; 0626 - Leverston, Kiana; 0726 - rivera, luis; 0728 - Augustin, Rosena; 0735 - Ramirez, Beverly; 0805 - turner, jamar; 0809 - Paul, Dianite; 0824 - Lund, Amanda; 09112 - Wilson, Syrus; 09122 - Whittled, Becky; 09124 - Herrera, Fanny; 0916 - Ortiz, Angelica; 0928 - Manning, Sherena; 0928 – Baten, Vicki; 0934 - Blanco, Angela; 0935 - Darby, Chanda; 0938 - Ozborn, Dana; 0983 - wiggins, Erika; 1030 - Grant, Tishan; 1047 Carey, Terri; 1053 - jeanLouis, Venante; 1105 - Gomer, Passionea; 1107 - Samual, Brian; 1120 - fleuridor, alibert; 1134 - Iglesias, Charles; 1135 - Belfort, Jean; 1137 - jr, David bishop; 1168 - Lavigne, Lawrence; 1220 - Vilma, Melistin; 1222 - francis, Nadia; 1224 - Patterson, Terrell; 1364 - Hagans, Michael; 1366 - carter, Alexis; 1367 - Nealy, Cassandra; 1370 - Joseph, Witza PUBLIC STORAGE # 22120, 7628 Narcoossee Rd, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 237-0496 Time: 02:10 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A112 - Jazmin, Vega; A136 - PERRY, JONATHAN; A221 - MAXIK, FRED S; A230 - Acevedo, Dalys; A262 - Sierra, Jeriel; A277 - Zarada, Elizabeth; A285 - Blake, Jakela; A301 - Rivera, Daniel; B112 - Manney, Glorimi; B132 - Martinez, Alexis; B141 - Cardenas Chica, Juan; B143 - Armstrong, Jessica; B180 - Nuñez, Michael; B190 - Segui, Mario; C401 - Piner, LaVonne; C405 - Lane, Malcolm; C437 Hufschmid, Deborah; C440 - Zakharenko, Olexandra; C507 - Santana, Jorge; C522 - ANTHONY, EDDY; C536 - Morales, Alberto; C552 - Williams, Latoya; C555 - Martinez, Elizabeth; C568 - Banks, Tierra; C594 - ALEXANDER, KEITH JACKSON; C597 - Guzman, Jeremy; D060 - Marin, Carlos PUBLIC STORAGE # 22129, 13151 Reams Rd, Windermere, FL 34786, (407) 395-2605 Time: 02:20 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1028 - Graves, Mathew; 1116 - Marburger, Alan; 1127 - Meyer, Wade; 1318 - Purple Elephant Animation Studios Meyer, Wade; 1331 - Graves, Marie; 1408 - Barefoot, Zane; 1414 - Meyer, Catherine; 1513 - Barrett, Jennifer; 2114 - Mascarenhas, Fernando; 2206 - Baez, Enid; 2237 - Mirabelli, Priscilla; 2303 - Kester, Matthew; 2400 - Maiorelle, Barbara; 3005 - Pontillo, Franco; 3105 – Hamachek, Anna; 3112 Simpson, Davinia; 3131 - Dupuis, Evan; 3307 - Machado, Renta; 3317 - Cashwell, Sheila; 3323 - DRAIN, DEE DEE DENISE 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 December 21st, 2023, 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. 1025 - Burke, Ryan; 1170 - Boyd, Sandra; 1180 - Meyer, Catherine; 2042 - Anderson, Sean; 2200 - Walcutt, Christopher; 2242 Clayton, Kalen; 2283 - Clayton, Earl; 2285 - Wood, Joshua; 2291 - Greene, Keshia; 2307 - Bray, Sergio; 2335 - Santiago, Alma N; 3008 - Hobbs, Evelyn; 4154 - Meyer, Wade; 4183 - Harley, Jacquelyn; 4204 - Ramassar, Tamera; 5009 - Kaya, Fikri; 5052 - Hobbs, Evelyn; 5134 - Battad, elizabeth; 5136 - Reid, Donna; 5153 - Pantazoglou, Alexus PUBLIC STORAGE # 08720, 1400 Alafaya Trail, Oviedo, FL 32765, (407) 487-4695 Time: 09:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0151 - Blake, Abarrane; 0165 - Pollock, Tara; 0244 - prather, shi; 0308 - Gump, Donna; 7023 - Thakur, Diana; 8005 - Floyd, Belinda; 8025 - Prenn, Derrick; 9012 Gholston, Jeremiah 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. 0105 - Jackson, James; 0148 - Parrilla Cruz, Marifel; 0151 - CLEVELAND, MELANIE; 0165 - zambrando, rosillo; 0176 - Mathis, Carla; 0245 - Marquez, Ruben; 0257 - Howell, Jennifer; 0267 - Wilson, Kayla; 1001 - White, Charie; 2019 - Johnson, Eugene; 3010 - Delgado Martinez, Aida; 3030 - Hale, Ferrell; 4009 - borjas, Majin orlando; 7024 - Martinez Torres, Luis; 7031 - Mustafa, Janay Grueiro; 7032 - Juergens, Courtney; 7046 - Reese, Marcus; 7127 - Houze, kim; 7131 - Tapia, Rochelle; 7132 - Morris, Kim; 7144 - Rodriguez, Daniel; 8023 - Colon, Jonathan; 8115 - Ahanotu, Longinus; 8130 - Lucret, Doris; 8156 - Alicea, Miguel; 8160 - Lucret, Doris; 8186 - Mathis, Carla 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; 0139 - Nelson, Timothy; 0373 - Myers, Linda; 0379 - Kosla, John; 2042 Grandt, Julia; 2052 - Hall, Lisa; 2061 - Holden, Bethany; 2070 - Cheney, Jenifer; 2090 - Walwyn, Tiseanna; 2125 - Richardson, Charles; 3006 - Sheppard, Joseph; 3017 - Jones, Gayle; 5014 - King, Tyrone 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. 0007 - Johnson, Carina; 0023 - Brown, Eric; 0035 - COOPER, BRICENDA; 0056 - Delgado, Andy; 0060 - Johnson, Letarius; 0076 - arnold, Lakia; 0082 - Vache, Kimberly; 0116 - Vinueza, Henry; 0175 - brown, alvin; 0232 - Myers, Genoveva; 1014 - Acevedo, Yarimel; 1026 - Smcclellandoyle@Gmail.Com, Sherri; 1033 - Mobley, Christian; 2066 - thomas, Khiana; 4001 - McCormick, Matthew; 4027 - Banks, Keith; 4063 - Falu, Yvonne; 5003 - Whipple, Erin; 5013 - Howard, Moesha; 5014 - Long, Timothy; 5034 - Reid, Micheal; 5035 - Eaton, Travis; 6007 - mcelhanon, Alex; 6023 - Lessin, Laurie; 6026 - thomas, Khiana; 6043 - Reid, Micheal; 9002 - guerra, richard; 9027 - Johnson, Richard; 9051 - Flood, Miguel PUBLIC STORAGE # 20179, 903 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 392-1549 Time: 10:20 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. B029 - Barker, Leigh; C004 - Medina, Tania; C019 - Bernstein, Jordan; C083 - Garrastazu, Luis; D002 - Johson, Adrian; D024 - Price, Taneice; D029 - Overstreet, Tory; D055


- Powell, Markeyth; D070 - Hall, Rickae; D106 - Cintron, Rayzamarie; D144 - Harrison, Amber; D166 - Cruzada, Joel; D172 Arguinzoni, Edilberto; D199 - Suarez, Pedro; D214 - Nash, Marie; D223 - ojeda, nelson; E002 - Felix, Rodney; E044 - Aguilar, Ivan; E071 - Yambo, Michael; E079 Furlow, Carlos PUBLIC STORAGE # 24105, 2275 N Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 545-2541 Time: 10:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1279 - goodwin, jacob; 2050 - Kline, Harmony; 2079 - Willis, Guy d.; 2214 - Pew Mortgage Research Lavalle, Aneurin; 2257 - Manning, Summer; 2270 - Bathjer, Casey; 2300 - HinoJosa, Jose; 2301 - Brown, MarkAnthony; 2327 - Hayes, Kari; 2345 Lopez-Devictoria, Erica; 2398 - Cruz, Mark; 2407 - Tigue, Corey; 2408 - Moore, Payton; 3067 - Goldsby, Caleb; 3102 - Theus, Wanisha; 3124 - Hill, William; 3209 - Stapleton, Francine; 3278 - Cochran, Jennifer; 3326 - Stringfield, Desere; 3360 - Dervil, Serena; 3386 - Nichols, Riahna; F360 - Lacroix, Karein; F366 - Hunt, Michael; F409 - Rogers, Teresa; F416 - Miller, Shaval; F419 - Thornton, Adornal; F425 - Soria, Carmen; F445 - Gillett, Brian; G452 - Nunez, Jose; G460 - Gerace, Madilyn; G511 - Molina, Angel; H540 - hendry, Quentin; H564 - Corasmin, Brandon; H566 - Hirtzig, Sierra; H572 - Stanley, DeAndre; I631 - King, Henry A; I634 - ruiz, michael; I639 - Commercial Condominium Association, Inc., Center For Health and Wellbeing; I642 - Commercial Condominium Association, Inc., Center For Health and Wellbeing; I651 - Simon, Lutes PUBLIC STORAGE # 25781, 155 S Goldenrod Rd, Orlando, FL 32807, (321) 247-6790 Time: 10:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1300 - Medina, Yanialbeliz; 1319 - Banner, Taquanna; 1325 - Jones, Derius; 1347 Finch, Nakori; 1359 - Brice, Jay; 1363 Finch, Nakori; 1372 - Titre, Diandra; 1375 - Dominguez, Nestor; 1387 - pena, Yoneidy; 1438 - morales, Adalberto; 1722 - Porro, Freddy; 1734 - Fouche, Vanessa; 1758 - Sepulveda Gonzague, Waleska; 1788 Buceta, Belinda; 2038 - Szczepanik, Paul; 2058 - Autry, Lamar; 2084 - DeCorbiac, Karen; 2245 - Colon, Melanie; 2417 - Mayo, Rebecca; 2419 - seymore, Erica; 2443 Horvath, Leslie; 2483 - Wesley, Catherine; 2605 - Navarra, John; 2611 - Betancourt, Leon Orpheus; 2616 - Rivera, Cherayna; 2618 - Holland, Angela PUBLIC STORAGE # 25897, 10053 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando, FL 32825, (407) 901-6126 Time: 10:50 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0118 - Burnett, Kimberly; 0133 - Salermo, Gabriel; 0137 - Valle, Ivanise; 0153 - Canty, Nicole; 0437 - Lozano alvarez, Dayma; 0441 - Ellis, Maleeka; 0452 - Mafeo-Lutman, Desiree; 0481 - Harris, Derrick; 0494 - Westerveld, Richard; 0517 - Cruz, Joaquim; 2018 - Petsinger, Jayson; 3053 - Melendez, Osvaldo; 3063 - Smith, Gage; 3074 - Domena, Angel; 3117 - Camacho, Chanys; 3120 - GUERRERO, LEONARDO; 3121 - paulino, Fidelio; 4050 - Rodriguez, Jerameel; 4059 - Starks, Sertrone; 6035 - Morales, Angelica; 6041 - GonzaleZ, Melissa; 7008 - Gonzalez, Denise PUBLIC STORAGE # 25973, 250 N Goldenrod Rd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 901-7489 Time: 11:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A011 - Ozuna, Celeste; A045 - Washington, Malik; A058 - Fabian, Ashley; A068 - Rose, Emily; A120 - Torres, Mildred; A133 - Mcarthur, Daniel; A154 - Augustave, Desiree; A164 - Dunn, Shar-Dai; A174 Martinez, Lisanette; A182 - Linzy- Richardson, Jaelyn; A198 - Lozada, Maria; A211 Desensi, Viva N; A216 - Pagan, Hilda; A222 - Summers, Melanie; A223 - Acevedo,

Sylvia; A244 - Marshall, David; A247 - Orero, Rosalind; B319 - Jr, William Shoaff; B339 - santos, Joelyce; D410 - Galarza, Ivys; D416 - Rachel, Lourietta; D454 - Berrios, Suehay; D470 - Day, Ebony; D489 - Cruz, Michelle; E509 - Baker, Shannon; E530 - Aguilar, Fidel; F565 - Molina, Eddie; F569 - Waleska, Ramos PUBLIC STORAGE # 25974, 1931 W State Rd 426, Oviedo, FL 32765, (407) 901-7497 Time: 11:10 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A035 - Collins, Katelyn; C113 - Mccutchen, Justin; C121 - Sofianos, Anthony; C177 - Coomes, Nathanial; C204 - Culver, Dawn; D365 Mendozzi, Joan; D496A - Dial, Shelia; E533 - Johnsten, Crystal; F543 - Pugh, Jaimie PUBLIC STORAGE # 28084, 2275 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32822, (407) 545-2547 Time: 11:20 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A121 - Blintsova, Vladyslava; A124 - Castillo, Ryan; B111 - Viering, Talisha; B116 - Nodarse, Elianni; B144 - Perez, Hans; B187 Rendon, Malaika; B191 - Whitner, Antonio; B230 - Negron, Samuel; C103 - Gil, Manuel; C195C - Masterhill, Jasmine; C195F - Koziara, Leora; C199E - Lajas, Christina; C209 - Chavez, Jessica; C212G - Schmidt, Angel; C227G - Rivera, yvette; C230H - St Fort, Moise PUBLIC STORAGE # 25851, 10280 E Colonial Dr, Orlando, FL 32817, (407) 901-2590 Time: 11:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1206 - United Global Outreach, ; 1212 Maldonado, Aracelis; 2018 - Baez, Maria; 2056 - Baez, Maria; 2243 - Hopkins, Greg; 2254 - Schaffner, Elizabeth R; 2261 - Jackson, Denise; 2296 - Rios, Nancy; 2320 Simmons, Anthony; 2340 - Concetcion, Jose; 2436 - Blacknall, Wabu; 2524 - Reed, Randi; 2529C - COOPER, BRICENDA; 2550 - Dejesus, Louie; 2563 - Brown, Nathan; 2566 - figueroa, Sarah; 2575 - Dunn, Cheyenne; 2582 - Martinez, Cecilia; 2664 - DeJesus, Efrain; 2677 - Hedglin, Myra; 2706C - Barbaro, Antonio; 2708 - Ayers, Ramon 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 December 22, 2023, 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 9:30AM 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 # 07001, 900 S Kirkman Road, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 986-7703 Time: 09:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1204 - Brown, Marquis; 1421 - Faustin, Franky; 1424 - Jenkins, Faith; 1503 White, Sheron; 1510 - Courtney, Alexis; 1612 - Dinkel, Barry; 2106 - Rodriguez, Nilmara; 2207 - Mcarthy, Travis; 2216 WHEELER, BRENDA; 2219 - smith, nettie; 2307 - Mitchell, Jayvon; 2408 - Williams, Yolanda Chambliss; 2416 - Love, Vincent; 2532 - KANGETHE, ALLAN; 2702 - Laseter,

Mary; 2707 - Williams, Ashaunti; 3210 WASHINGTON, La’Shawn; 3309 - Pittman, Latonya; 3512 - Mccaskill, Kelly; 3527 - Williams, Natasha; 3711 - Lewis, Alvin; 4107 - Engram, Jshone; 4115 - Arnette, Howard; 4202 - Fleming, Kiara; 4212 Manigat, Gregory; 4217 - Cygul, Rob; 4303 - Musaev, Victoria; 4320 - Garrett, Leshayla; 4409 - Musaev, Victoria; 4502 States, Ben; 5113 - Brown, VaNeeka; 6113 - ProCam Market, LLC White, Cameron; 7105 - JOHNSON, THOMAS; 7111 Greenlee, Shawn; 8114 - Johnson, Imoni; 8115 - Outing, Rosa; 8125 - Williams, Lakim D PUBLIC STORAGE # 07031, 1355 State Road 436, Casselberry, FL 32707, (407) 574-4516 Time: 09:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1213 - Rodriguez, Lourdes; 2218 - Puckett, Shirley; 2231 - Dees, Julie; 2313 - Carlo, Laiza; 2414 - Mckenna, Patricia; 2531 - Henderson, Christine; 2532 - boykins, tshwanda; 2610 - Mirsalim, Bibi; 2716 - Lobeck, Rebecca; 3103 - CROCKETT, BRITTNEY PUBLIC STORAGE # 08327, 5602 Raleigh St, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 930-4816 Time: 09:50 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0043 - Guerrero, Jose; 0062 - Mctavish, Shanique; 0075 - Babington, William; 0089 - Holmes Jr., Benjamin; 0098 - Gibson, Susan; 0114 - Garcia Da Silveira, Roney; 0132 - Francis, Joseph; 0179 Mosbey, Alesha; 0192 - Harris, Jonathan; 0207 - Ortiz, Hilari; 0217 - Santana, Lenin; 0224 - Carson, Jennifer; 0229 - Rucker, Jacqueline; 0240 - Miller, Andre; 0244 Perez Arevalo, Leonardo Aflonzo; 0258 - Jackson, Paige; 0263 - Pringle, Telario; 0290 - Franklin, Tyneshia; 0297 - Fountain, Elijah Daquan; 0299 - Gibson, Susan; 0335 - Orr, Hillary; 0344 - Chapman, Jamarr; 0423 - Clark, Tashianna; 0436 - Walker, Kyra; 0437 - Fisher, Amanda; 0445 - Brady, Addesha; 0459 - Logan, Christopher; 0500 Boone, Darryl; 0504 - Gaines, Shayla; 0510 - Nipaver, Jennifer; 0515 - Towns, Pamela; 0550 - Norman, R PUBLIC STORAGE # 08723, 1241 S Orlando Ave, Maitland, FL 32751, (407) 495-1863 Time: 10:00 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0518 - Muschett, Kahlil PUBLIC STORAGE # 08753, 4508 S Vineland Road, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 734-0681 Time: 10:10 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0114 - Jackson, Nicole; 0118 Williams, Leslie; 0322 - Jeanfrancois, Manoucheca; 0502 - Johnson, William; 0604 - Higgs, Shirley; 0616 - Padilla, Tabitha; 0802 - forgit, Timothy; 0832 - Grant, Lynese; 0840 - Hernandez, Emilce; 0844 - Clark, Ria; 0905 - Whitlock, Orestes; 0917 - braz, Carlos; 1005 - Hayes, Omega; 1110 Dubuisson, Samyre; 1114 - Woodard, Debra; 1117 - Samuel, Christopher; 1130 - Rawls-graham, Dequicia; 1215 - trabelsi, Tonica; 1220 - Harland, Emma; 1222 - Rawls-graham, Dequicia; 1316 - Hutchison, CoCintheane PUBLIC STORAGE # 08762, 1023 N Mills Ave, Orlando, FL 32803, (407) 505-7981 Time: 10:20 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1022 Fuller, Carson; 1049 - RICHARDSON JR., JAMES; 1102 - smith, Aneshai; 2074 - Murbe, Ali; 3015 - bullock, quintin; 3032 - Freeman, Cornelius; 3051 - Freeman, Cornelius; 3066 - Corrigan, Shannon; 3083 - Wittman, Matt; 4034 - Rivera, Alberto; 4103 - Largin, Jayden PUBLIC STORAGE # 08767, 1842 W Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park, FL 32789, (407) 494-2918 Time: 10:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1055 - Clemons, Jonathon; 2140 - Pontius, David; 3028 - Fuller, Sue; 3042 - Corriere, Cassandra; 3106 - Toussaint, Sara; 3197 - HCS healthcare Lindauer, Lily; 3212 Thomas, Chaundra; 4009 - Arthurs, Craig; 4012 - Gateway Property LLC Rausch, MGM, Yvonne PUBLIC STORAGE # 08769,

653 Maguire Blvd, Orlando, FL 32803, (407) 955-4627 Time: 10:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0612 Walker, Daniel; 2117 - Terry, Kathy; 3011 - Badawi Aviation, LLC Badawi, Monzer; 3136 - Mason, Taylor PUBLIC STORAGE # 20136, 3900 W Colonial Drive, Orlando, FL 32808, (407) 374-5979 Time: 10:50 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures. com. A046 - Johnson, Howard; B031 RUBALLO-KLINE, ARIEL; B035 - Jarrett, Lauriston; B044 - Warren, James; B072 Davis, Jacob; C001 - Whittaker, George; C008 - Lloyd, Monique; C011 - Rashford, Shanelle; C013 - JOHNSON, JACQUELINE; C062 - Samuels, Isiah; D009 - Lopez, Kevin; D027 - Cobb, Velma; D032 - nichoks, Darrin; D052 - Goodwin, Kelli; D087 - Hope, Cameron; D102 - Gaskill, Cade; D105 Ndiaye, Antoine; D137 - Key, Jacquese; E011 - Dinkel, Barry; E029 - Islam, Sumaia; F027 - Sparks, Jawanza; P003 - Timby, Peter; P010 - Johnson, Reggie PUBLIC STORAGE # 25850, 2525 E Michigan St, Orlando, FL 32806, (407) 604-0341 Time: 11:00 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 1004 - Jordan, Robert; 1009 - berardi, nicole; 2021 Maldonado, Marisol; 2024 - Berry, Skip; 2050 - Lopez, David; 4039 - Payne, Dawn; 5007 - Davila, Pedro; 5010 - Maschinot, Tyler; 5051 - Voltz, Carlton; 5054 - burrell, iasia; 5056 - Hamilton, Dorothy; 5063 Hinman, Stephen; 5212 - Smith, Sharon; 5303 - English, Michael; 5404 - Greenough, Kerry; 6110 - Hohmann, Daniel; 6308 Mcbride, Jeremy; 6449 - Nerette, Jean Emmanuel; 6552 - Sendra, Jonis; 6630 - kammermann, sean PUBLIC STORAGE # 27221, 1625 State Road 436, Winter Park, FL 32792, (407) 545-3653 Time: 11:10 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. B008 - Revette, Jennifer; B018 - Rodriguez, Orlando; B029 - Lewis, Nick; B051 - Muhammad, Malikah; C019 - Perez, Nivea; C026 - WILLIAMS-SHELTON, ELESTER; C049 - Samuel, Ivey-Lin; C050 - Reichard, Monika; D004 - Jr, Elbert Dunn; D015 - Fleury, Paul; D038 - Trendle, Josh; E016 - Herring, Jamie; E030 - Gomez, Wilfredo; E055 - STEPHENS, Brenda; E091 - Morris, Cecelle; E139 - Schmidt, Garrett; E144 - Martinez Jr, Angel; E171 - Housley, Johnta; E209 - cedeno, lilye; E217 - Royal Highness LLC Martinez, Zoraida; E219 Ashe, Cody PUBLIC STORAGE # 28076, 1131 State Road 436, Casselberry, FL 32707, (407) 505-6401 Time: 11:20 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures. com. A012 - BERRERO PAZ, ALBERT; C017 - Simmons, Kurtz; C037 - Cooke, Rasheed; C068 - Harris, Shakala; C101 - Gerard, Ashlie; D003 - Dieudonne, Cameron; D004 - Hayden, Jennifer; D012 - Belier, Bejanne; E070 - Ellerbe, Gregory; G028 - Ramirez, Luz PUBLIC STORAGE # 28331, 5401 LB McLeod Road, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 986-5749 Time: 11:30 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1101 - Silva, Rubens; 1153 - Solomon, India; 1160 - Armas, Serena; 2216 - MAXDESIGN HOME GROUP LLC Lemos Guimaraes, Arnold; 2233 - DeLaRosa, Rodrigo; 2253 - Williams, Yolanda Chambliss; 2255 - Tovpeko, Dennis; 2257 - sanchez, Kevin; 2264 - Cromes, Sondreka; 2265 Pacheco, Juan; 2279 - thornton, redesign; 2290 - Lang, Jazmin; 2297 - Machado, Eros; 2317 - Fils, Ronisha; 2340 - Chance, Destine PUBLIC STORAGE # 77690, 8550 Old Winter Garden Rd, Orlando, FL 32835, (321) 325-6576 Time: 11:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0004 - ADAMS, JAIRUS; 0007 - Salazar, Rafael; 0057 - Herrera, Fanny; 0096 - Shaffer, Mark; 0244 - Enfinger, Ross; 1052 - Walker, Gloria; 1068 - Rodriguez, Georgina; 2005 Edwards, Aaron; 2089 - Bryant, Rakeem;

2110 – Constance, Anastatha; 2186 - Myers, Shadricka ; 2189 - Johnsonn, Kwame; 3168 - lampkin, Keiona PUBLIC STORAGE # 22128, 12446 W Colonial Dr, Winter Garden, FL 34787, (407) 614-2842 Time: 11:50 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 1146 - Mitchell, Chrystal; 1177 - Palmer, Bobby; 2064 Fraser, Shakeim; 2126 - Ives, John; 2133 - Slaughter, Terrence; 3028 - Johnson-Allen, Denise; 3058 - HURD, Anthonette; 3103 - Gutowski, Candice; 3111 - Valencia Construction Crew Lutchman, Vishaan; 3120 - Young, Erica; 3127 - Roman, William; 3169 - Valencia Construction Crew Lutchman, Vishaan; D102 - Carter, Jordan; D127 - Coleman, Patricia 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: Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on December 15th, 2023 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Of Central Florida, INC, 630 E Landstreet Rd, Orlando, FL 32824, will sell the following vehicles and/or vessels. Seller reserves the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. Seller reserves the right to refuse any or all bids; 1FDUF4HT7BEC73766 2011 FORD 1FMFU17576LA89655 2006 FORD 1FTEF15Y8TNA00294 1996 FORD 1FTFX1CT3CFC17187 2012 FORD 1GCUDEET3NZ589991 2022 CHEV 1GYEK63N93R119900 2003 CADI 1JJV532W44L898544 2004 WABA 1XKYDP9X9LJ371211 2020 KW 2B3CA3CV4AH152655 2010 DODG 2T1BURHE6EC121954 2014 TOYT 3C4PDCGG7KT707495 2019 DODG 3N1CC11E39L444853 2009 NISS 4F4YR16V9XTM36962 1999 MAZD 4T1F11AK9PU800114 2023 TOYT 4V5PCBPF7VR734441 1997 VOLV 5E0AA14408G242102 2008 COIN 5TDKDRAH0PS010976 2023 TOYT JH2PC37034M104081 2004 HONDA JTKKU10468J023898 2008 TOYT

orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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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 December 22nd, 2023, 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. 1107 - Davis, Randolph; 1302 - Rodriguez, Desarea; 1313 - Ellington, Jaronte; 1411 Torres, Maranda; 1827 - Waters, Cheryl; 2110 - Mcneal, Miriam; 2401 - Williams, Melissa; 2503 - Newsome, Christy; 2510 - Harper, Amy; 2733 - Tucker, Aisha; 3116 - sheets, gregory; 3125 - Shannon, Alda; 3511 - Casella, Jaclyne; 3717 - Lasanta, Theresa; 3727 - sheets, gregory PUBLIC STORAGE # 23118, 141 W State Road 434, Winter Springs, FL 32708, (407) 512-0425 Time: 09:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A008 - Singletary, Destini; A028 - churchill, nicholas; B042 - Mason, Nefertiti; B043 - White, Caitlin; D134 - Delille, Danecee; D142 - Kough, Norma; G208 - Gonzalez, iburay; H247 - Montanez, William; J280 waters, Robin; J287 - Negron Jr, Alexis; J293 - Tritch, Thomas; J342 - Mompoint, Carla; J401 - Tellado, Rose; L476 - Welch, Beverly; M512 - fRANCE, jUSTIN; R546 Schwartz, Kimberley; S580 - Roseboro, Marilyn; S584 - Medeiros, Denise PUBLIC STORAGE # 24326, 570 N US Highway 17 92, Longwood, FL 32750, (407) 505-7649 Time: 09:50 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. C306 - Fowler, Anthony; C323 - ROBINSON, NATALIE; C357 - Francois, Jasmine; E012 - Jankay, John; E018 - Rumble, Gina; E029 - Miller, Walter; E031 - Reese, Jeff; E043 - Andrews, Lockett; E091 - Hodges, Satique; E102 - Martinez, Daniel; F619 - Impact Moving & Cleaning Services, LLC Anglin, Jazmin; F639 - Trent, Talon; F667 Stokes, Lawrence; F687 - Holman, Brian; G081 - Ahmed, Imtiaz; G090 - ROBINSON, NATALIE; H834 - buchanan, Jeffrey PUBLIC STORAGE # 24328, 7190 S US Highway 17/92, Fern Park, FL 32730, (407) 258-3060 Time: 10:00 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A110 - Mitchell, Tristan; A113 - Hoey, Christine; B203 Moore, Ernesto; B204 - Cowan, Tonya; B212 - Spencer, Trenton; B226 - Barnes, Keona; B229 - rozier, tyran; B238 - Ford, Valarie; C302 - Hancock, Chris; D404 Williams, Narcissus; D428 - Paul, Emerald; D445 - Myrick, Shaquana; D450 - Nelson, Jonathan; E514 - Edmund, Kenneth; F604 - All Womens Health Center Orlando INC Sagal, Stephanie; G751 - Richmond, Mark; G753 - Martinez, Viviana PUBLIC STORAGE # 25438, 2905 South Orlando Drive, Sanford, FL 32773, (407) 545-6715 Time: 10:10 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A042 - Wilcox, Vanessa; A043 - zolenski, Brandon; B008 - Marte, Jarlyn; B011 - Williams, Travis; C011 - Maya, Carlos; D026 - Smith, Katrina; D030 - Hillery, Chandra; D058 Poindexter, Michael; D099 - Hunt, Quentin; E008 - Suffering bastard Boothe, Arthur; E018 - grant, jessica; E019 - Ireland-Baker,

32

Jennifer; E022 - Foster, Roshonda; E029 Keating, Kelly; E035 - Rivera, Iliana; E049 - Simms, Vonetta; H003 - Keane, Michael; H032 - Edwards, Norma; I004 - Wansley, Lavar; I021 - Keane, Michael; J117 - Williams, Vickie; J213 - Russell, Jackie; J423 - Rodriguez, Ricardo; J507 - Townsend, Mary Jo; J518 - Lopez, Freddy; J616 MARENGO, DENISE; J801 - Peterson, Tinasha; P066 - Soto, Josue; P067 - Batton, Torreano; P072 - Osorio, Selena PUBLIC STORAGE # 25455, 8226 S US Highway 17/92, Fern Park, FL 32730, (407) 258-3062 Time: 10:20 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A108 - Mcduffie, Janet; A124 - Roux, Ronald; B232 - Mather, Garth; B234 - phillips, Tarez; B282 - Stone, Jamie; C309 - Parker, Tom; C368 - Logan Tax Express Joseph, Ribaine; D485 - Valdez, Ludwig; E510 - Shelton, Greggory; E516 - Clark, Helena; E527 Miranda, Antori; E542 - mclain, dillon; E552 - Patsavos, Tracie; E571 - Haywood, John; E580 - Provenzano, Diane; F618 - Martinez, Kira; F624 - Gilbert, Michael; F630 - Paris, Christopher; G702 - Nichols, Angela; G718 - Rojas, Carizma; G728 - Beharry, Michael; H832 - goff, alexis; H839 - Russell, Rachel PUBLIC STORAGE # 25842, 51 Spring Vista Dr, Debary, FL 32713, (386) 202-2956 Time: 10:30 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 00202 - Rush, Brenton R; 00211 - Jumfuoh, Jennifer; 00310 - foster, Alexandria; 00416 - Richard, Jeremy; 00421 - Casey, Nikita; 00425 Richard, Jeremy; 00453 - Sharma, Kiran; 00530 - Jones, Tiffaney; 00540 - McLaren, Robert; 00543 - Carter, Krystal; 00594 Bryant, Ronald; 00627 - Filabaum, Kaleigh; 00709 - Rodriguez, Ricardo; 00718 - Lewis, LaShunda; 00720 - Buchanan, Josie; 00748 - Kilponen, Dawn; 00749 - Kearns, Courtnee; 00784 - Osborne, Mary; 00905 Griffis, Joshua PUBLIC STORAGE # 25893, 3725 W Lake Mary Blvd, Lake Mary, FL 32746, (407) 495-1274 Time: 10:40 AM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1027 - Robbins, DC; 2139 - Hinton, Joseph; 2164 - Livingston, Latiaonia; 3047 - Michel, Ashley; 3067 - Russell, Jason; 4014 - Tucker, Kayla; 4020 - Green, John; 4031 - Ortiz, Violeta; 5001 - Invirogen LLC Nash, Israel; 5015 - Ramos, Jazmine; 5124 - Veltman, Christi; 7005 - Gardner, Ronald; 7012 Ebron, Sherita; 7019 - Leonard, Sean; 7031 - Moore, Eric; 9001 - Rivers, David PUBLIC STORAGE # 22127, 4051 W 1st St FL 46, Sanford, FL 32771, (407) 915-6887 Time: 10:50 AM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 1011 - Francis, Elijah; 1110 - Mottie, Ana Soto; 1114 - Ellis, Harry; 1121 - FITZGERALD, CHERISE MONIQUE; 1168 - Oliver, Felicia; 1175 Brown, Farenda; 2018 - Cohen, Timothy; 2021 - Lopez Torres, Nicole Raquel; 2028 - Easley, Julian; 2036 - Spencer, Se Vonne; 2037 - CreationEvents Peay, Martine; 2040 - Jackson, Larry; 2044 - Rodriguez, Jonathan; 2058 - Gonzalez Batista, Deborah; 2154 - Parks, Valda; 3003 - Lopez, Maria; 3027 - Cardinal, Shiela; 3051 - Riley, Lance; 3089 - Pagan, Jessica; 3096 - Waisanen, Tara; 3097 - Burkholder, Candice; 3104 TURNER, JOY; 3111 - Wells, Shaleah; 3121 - Hadley, Trenton; 4001 - MENEFEE, ERICK; 401213 - Smith, Jerome; 4018 - Thomas, Timeka; 4028 - TERRY, TIMOTHY; 4032 TERRY, TIMOTHY; 4034 - Morton, Kaylee; 4048 - DASHER, LONNIE; 4054 - Brown,Farenda; 4065 - Williams-mbugua, Alvivon. 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

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com

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 December 22nd, 2023, 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 12:00 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 # 07029, 3150 N Hiawassee Rd, Hiawassee, FL 32818, (407) 392-0863 Time: 12:00 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 1400 - McCalla, Khristoffe Dewight; 1602 - Britt, Stephen; 1603 - Johnson, Json; 1802 - Acosta, Carlos; 1816 - Owen, Tyler; 1817 - Giddens, Vicky; 1905 - Pope, Joy; 1917 - White, Carla; 1921 - Strawter, Brittany; 2209 Banks, Brittany; 2220 - Eloit, Olga Saint; 2402 - COLE, LILLIAN; 2428 - Ratcliff, Susan; 2520 - Cooper, Shearico; 2711 - Tillman, Rosemary; 2726 - williams, Jacqueline; 2730 - Porterfield, Morris; 2801 - Samuel, Natika PUBLIC STORAGE # 08326, 310 W Central Parkway, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714, (407) 487-4595 Time: 12:15 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0085 - Wilson, Briana; 0094 - Baker, Chatamara; 0135 - Bloser, Jayson; 0253 - Russell, Eustace; 0257 - Grimley, Devin N; 0258 - jones, christopher; 0313 - register, nataie; 0391 - Rush, Kimberly; 0405 - Cowans, Christoria; 0421 - Oquendo, Nalia; 0423 - Bellance, Diane; 0448 - Martin, Rose; 0449 - Williams, Deneise; 0477 - Cayemitte, John; 0488 - Guevara, Eduatdo; 1007 - tribeca roofing clavizzao, victor; 2015 Laguerre, Lamar; 2057 - Vazquez, Remy; 3009 - Brown, Shkeem; 3093 - Frias, Wendy; 4021 - Santiago, Keisha; 4022 - Plamann, John; 4025 - Turner, Tracy; 4050 - Simmons, Paige; 4054 - Charry, Andrea; 4067 - Robison, Mandy S; 5023 - Brugonone, Curtis; 5026 - Roberson, Isaih PUBLIC STORAGE # 08705, 455 S Hunt Club Blvd, Apopka, FL 32703, (407) 392-1542 Time: 12:30 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1006 - Thomas, Diane; 4002 - Thanos, Constantino; 5091 - Henderson, Sonjay; 5134 - DeBice, Derek; 5135 - CAMILO, LUIS; 6060 - Brown, Sean; 6160 - Bell, Newton; 6227 - Sabin, Page PUBLIC STORAGE # 08732, 521 S State Road 434, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714, (407) 487-4750 Time: 12:45 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1004 - Williams, Lecol; 1010 - Vazquez Rodriguez, Luis; 1018 - Brodie, Vincent; 3023 - Morris, Jason; 4009 - Brooks, Efrem; 4017 - Jumpp, Ronel; 5080 - Samuels, Knakeesha; 5138 - Fletcher, Malcolm; 6002 - Allen, James; 6033 - Baptiste, Pertrice; 6074 - Alonso, Maria; 6092 - Kirkland, Latrice; 6102 - Crowl, Jared; 6115 - Colbert, Eric; 6135 - Peters, Anissa; 7006 Dotson, Larry PUBLIC STORAGE # 20729, 1080 E Altamonte Dr, Altamonte Springs, FL 32701, (407) 326-6338 Time: 01:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. B001 - Lindsay, Trevor; B007 Austin, Jeffrey; B009 - Jerome, Maneka; B022 - Brown, Robert; B027 - Kennedy, Amber; B058 - Church, Luthrell; B065 - Saner, Amanda; B088 - Phillips, Dejuan; B171 - Franks, Marquise; B176 - Whitely,

Shenell; B191 - Borges, Kimberlee; C001 - cudjoe, Darwin; C009 - Willoughby, Kevin; C032 - Villegas, Genesis; C037 Cain, Danielle; C041 - Furnity llc De La Garza, Mauricio; C043 - Furnity llc De La Garza, Mauricio; C044 - miller, precious; C056 - Montgomery, Lashanda; C082 - Colbert, Rosa; D001 - Jean-Charles, Guetchine; D021 - Steiner, Richard; E014 - Galvan, Rodney PUBLIC STORAGE # 22130, 510 Douglas Ave, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714, (407) 865-7560 Time: 01:15 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. A1020 - Blake, Rashad; B1003 - Mccloud, Michelle; C1001 - Gosnay, Matthew; C1012 - Morris, Micheal; C1055 - James, Natasha; C1092 - De La Rosa, Katherine; C2021 - Morales, Keshia; C2029 - Smith, Monique; C2055 - Villamil, Crystal; D1002 - Harrington, Hieneka; D1029 - Upson, Taneshia; D1112 - Smith, Sharon; D1113 - Smith, Sharon; D1127 - Hamlett, Matthew; D2037 - Harris, Taneicia; D2099 - Elliotte, Terry; D2118 - Smith, Sharon; D2144 - Smith, Sharon; D2154 - Marshall, Cyara; D2157 - Clarke, Arielle; D2176 - Yant, Catherine; E1067 - Rodriguez, Mercedes; E1073 - FREEMAN, QUILLIS LEE; E1089 - Tybuszewski, Michelle; E1129 - Dolac, Joseph; E1133 - Torres, Angela; E1159 - Garrido, Rita; E1160 - Francisco, Anthony; Q0100 - Arroyo, Leonardo; Q0106 - Vasquez, Anselmo PUBLIC STORAGE # 24107, 4100 John Young Parkway, Orlando, FL 32804, (407) 930-4381 Time: 01:30 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A108 - Batey, Carla; A112 - Mack, Geresa; A113 - LASTER, TONYA; A130 - Atwell, Akina; B223 - Harvey, Willatrice; B242 - Thomas, Dwauntavia; B250 - McGee, Natasha; B255 - Rameriz, Elisa Torres; C304 - Anthony, Jamela; C326 - RIGDON, JONATHAN; C347 - CARINO, ROSA; C349 - Curtis, April; C355 - Dreamlife Center Johnson, Stephen; D420 - brazell, Harold; D421 - Providence, Jean; E001 - Eastwood, Camille; E005 - Mathis, Glenn; E011 - Escarment, Wilder; E016 - TAYLOR, SHERYL; E017 - Johnson, James; E027 - Phillips, Kenneth; E097 - Allen, Najee; E102 Mathis, Marcia; E107 - Williams, Dejah; E108 - Privat, Soraya; F601 - Mcghee, Karena; F613 - Francois, Francis; F616 Tooks, Courney; F654 - Johnson, Deborah; G704 - Boone, Natasha; G708 - Venue 126 party rentals & more haynes, DAMIEN; G715 - CACIQUE-PIERRE, Florine; G739 - Baker, Tonia; J914 - Dreamlife Center Johnson, Steve; J917 - Ashley, Brenda; J921 - Ramirez, Andres; P008 - MONROE, AARON; P010 - Wright, Jarick PUBLIC STORAGE # 25780, 8255 Silver Star Rd, Orlando, FL 32818, (321) 247-6799 Time: 01:45 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 1113 - RIOS, GERMAN; 1203 - Palin, Thomas; 1206 Bowe, Damichael; 1218 - Mitchell, Da Shawn; 1224 - Pierre Louis, Andieula; 1312 - De La Cruz, Manuel; 1323 - Richards, Nadia; 1327 - Patrick, Charles; 1340 Norelia, Aser; 1351 - Grace, Jermaine; 1357 - John-Lewis, Ferdy; 1448 - Larrier, Leslie; 1502 - Johnson, Ezra; 1503 John-Lewis, Ferdy; 1523 - Benson, Dynaia; 1600 - Jake of all trades Mckenna, Jake; 2029 - Peterson, Taurus; 2031 - Lemaine, Gemani; 2035 - Henry, Willie; 2107 Brooks, Michelle; 2109 - Gustinvil, Jean; 2132 - Todarmal, Hafeez; 2134 - Reed, Royce; 2166 - Cole, Alexia; 2200 - CINE, PIERRE; 2209 - Palomino, Jose; 2215 Rainge, Constance; 2232 - Pate, Nels; 2248 - Atkins, Tameka; 2265 - Faulk, Jessica; 2300 - Theophin, Exdra; 2303 - Latchman, Kamini; 2354 - Oneal, Jennifer; 2415 Lorde, Eldric; 2454 - Pierrissaint, Virgilet; 2466 - Clark, Tiffany; 2469 - Jefferson,

Greg; 2611 - Once N A Blue Moon Turner, Jackie PUBLIC STORAGE # 25813, 2308 N John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL 32804, (407) 603-0436 Time: 02:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. A007C - Christian, Precious; A008C - Pentecost, Matthew; B007B - Abraham, Jennifer; B019B - Lee, Michael; B025A Law, Lakeithia; B063 - Stewart, Alvin; B070A - EPPS, Santa; B083A - Lewis, stevenia; C046 - Evans, Norma; C070 Abraham, Jennifer; C085 - Jones, Taviers T; C106 - Stewart, Alvin; D038 - Howard, Rayard; D040 - Sunkett, Charles; D045 - Horton, Aaron; D061 - Griffin, Jennifer; D080 - Stanley, Marshella; D083 - Mcfadden, Shamekia; D093 - MARTIN, Ebony DAVIS; D095 - HART, DOREEN; D112 Hennc, Jamesa; D145 - sweet, brady; E020 - Mervilus, Chinita; E026 - Cason, Johnny; E056 - Vaught, Ashley; E058 - Lespierre, Edith; E080 - Jenkins, Autumn; E084 - Johnson, Bernard; F008 - Vixama, ghislaine; F013 - Mccree, A’bria; F024 - Rowland, Beverly; F032 - Silva, Azuguir; F037 - Rodriguez, Victor; F056 - Vazquez, Stephen; F062 - joseph, Wislyne; F067 - Fairconeture, Yolanda; F086 - Gambles, Justin; G001 - Merine, Leon; G008 - Warner, Jeffery; G020 - ANTHONY, CASSANDRA; G023 - Chambers, Valerie; O016 - Young, James; O031 - Jachin, Corporation Soiro, Kendrick PUBLIC STORAGE # 25814, 6770 Silver Star Rd, Orlando, FL 32818, (407) 545-2394 Time: 02:15 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0012 - Beazer, Arlington; 0019 - Baker, Sylvia; 0072 - Alvarado, Gisel; 0075 - Owens, Brenda; 0119 - Jean-Baptiste, Jack; 0124 - Lewis, Ja’zavier; 0135 - Bouie, Shantoria; 0150 - Akande, Adewale; 0191 - White, Deijah; 0198 - Harvey, Laverne; 0242 - Lopez, Susana; 0251 - Leriche, Jennifer; 0259 - Longstreet, Charleen; 0268 - Gilmore, Ernest; 0279 - Lamons, Shameeca; 0292 - Samuels, Dwayne; 0311 - Gorman, Charles; 0345 - Casper, Alexander; 0385 - Manuel, Rodrycka; 0394 - Joseph, Dullaine; 0406 - Perry, Lawrence; 0413 - Reach Out the New Generation Lebrun, Robenson; 0424 - Mcrae, Earline; 0429 Johnson, Sabrina; 0440 - Mathis, Myiesha; 0449 - johnson, Ramiya; 0463 - Alston, Brandon; 0467 - Gilles, Kenia; 0471 - Lafleur, Berry; 0484 - Mincy, Tiffany; 0485 Gaskins, Christina; 0486 - Garcia, Irene; 0504 - Fair, Vivian; 0514 - Jones, Tomesia; 0523 - Mcrae, Earline; 0524 - Van Rynsoever, Johannes; 0542 - orius, rony; 0545 Aristil, Brown; 0573 - byron, Chance; 0593 - Longstreet, Charleen; 0596 - Holmes, Ramona; 0603 - salmon, sylton; 0614 Jackson, Brian; 0637 - Duffie, Sandrika; 0642 - Canto, Bryan; 0646 - Van Rynsoever, Johannes; 0648 - Reach Out the New Generation Lebrun, Robenson; 0665 cabrales, Angelina; 0666 - Daley, Raymond; 0668 - Daley, Raymond; 0755 Allen, Ingrid; 0759 - Johnson, Kevin; 0760 - Monsegue, Marlon; 0782 - Jeanbaptiste, PAUL; 0803 - Milfort, Lorens; 0828 - Etheart, Roberta; 0833 - Myrthil, Frida; 0837 - Dugger, Antonio; 0842 - Sallis, Naomi; 0893 - miller, keira; 0925 - Hart, Scott PUBLIC STORAGE # 25891, 108 W Main St , Apopka , FL 32703, (407) 542-9698 Time: 02:30 PM Sale to be held at www. storagetreasures.com. 0209 - Neal, Joshua; 0222 - Barresi, Terri; 0305 - Fling, Vivian; 0314 - Robinson, Regean; 0318 - Daly, Amani; 0320 - Pitts, Avon; 0602 Heers, Brittney; 0603 - Castillo, Ashley; 0616 - Ruiz, Norma; 0623 - Ortiz, Victoria; 1104 - Gallon, Christopher; 1120 - Nubian Motorsport LLC fox, sergio; 1316 - Engel, Shayna; 1323 - Keys, Rodney; 1373 - Lamphere, Phillip; 1452 - Pinkerton, Allan; 1476


- Simpkins, Meggan; 1503 - Bobb, Jessika; 1715 - Chisholm, Marie; 1718 - Jones, Twanyetta; 1752 - Shuler, Florence; 1764 - Meeks, Michael PUBLIC STORAGE # 25895, 2800 W State Road 434 , Longwood , FL 32779, (407) 392-0854 Time: 02:45 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 0305 - Tanzer, Betty; 0326 Quintana, Juan; 0335 - Wilson, Keshaina; 0541 - Mora, Ada; 0554 - Broadbent, Robert; 0675 - Moreau, Melissa; 0705 - Perez, Efren; 0760 - Williams, Yolanda; 0766 - Holley, Antonio; 0777 - Miller, Donna; 0789 - Sprung, David; 0874 - Nurse, Treneice A PUBLIC STORAGE # 28091, 2431 S Orange Blossom Trail, Apopka, FL 32703, (407) 279-3958 Time: 03:00 PM Sale to be held at www.storagetreasures.com. 1028 - Adu, Elizabeth; 1030 - Cooks, Michelle; 1064 - Soto, Analise; 1115 - Lewis, Kelvondra; 1117 - Davis, Lydell; 1130 Miller, Arthur; 1163 - hogaboom, Jonathan; 1184 - Brown, Natasha; 1192 - Bhatti, Carlise; 1215 - Quates, Bryan; 1226 - Kind, Chanelle; 1234 - Ruiz, Sylvia; 1254 Chavez, Susan; 1261 - Rousseau, Alexandra Cooper; 1272 - Short, TIffany; 1292 - white, Phashia; 1297 - Jones, Willie; 1316 - Cintron, Carlos; 1331 - Delmont, Eddrina; 1352 - Robinson, Ivan; 1370 - DELANE, CATRESIA; 1388 - Jensen, Harrison; B017 - Thomas, Traci; B034 - Alvarado, Selyna; B037 - Bernhagen, Marlisa; C032 - Viola, Tammy; D005 - Silva, Cisa; D050 Williams, Stephanie; D085 - Joseph, Basten; E016 - GOHN, CARL; F001 - ALLEN, PAM; F021 - Brooks, Tyrone; G002 Tanner, Shameka Johnson; G004 - Cody, Jennifer; G019 - Wallace, Jenod; H004 McCoy, Lakisha; H026 - Martin, Ambra; NA03 - Rachel, Jeron; NA13 - Cerezo, Carolina; NA16 - Soares, Leonardo; NB03 - Moore, Luveaches; NB05 - Burks, Aspen; NB06 - Forrest, Tarvega; NB10 - Casper, Angel; S013 - Wall, Rhonda; S030 - Padilla, Javiel; T002 - Coates, Kristi; T018 - Griffin, Marcia; U032 - Vasquez, Gabriel; V007 - Kirkland, Shukaris; V009 - Polanco, Mayelin; W018 - Bracey, Elizabeth 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 Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on December 15, 2023 at the location indicated: Store 7143: 6035 Sand Lake Vista Dr, Orlando FL 32819, 407.337.6665 @ 11:00 AM: Stephannie Santos: Boxes; Emma Smith: Boxes and household items; Jennifer Smith: Full mattress and box spring; boxes of household goods; Shawn Shields: Boxes; Cesar Ayala: Boxes, Furniture; Eduardo Maldonado: household items; Lashawn Merritt: bed set, couch, boxes Store 7590: 7360 Sandlake Rd Orlando FL, 32819, 407.634.4449 @ 11:45AM: Andrew James- Totes, wallart, bags, boxes, shoes; Shan Berry- couch; Jessica LaGrecaboxes, totes, household items, cleaning supplies, chairs; Percy Jackson iv- totes, chairs, laundry basket, cassettes, dvd’s, playstation and xbox games; Michelle Walker- boxes, mattresses, boxsprings, décor, mirrors, drawers, luggage; Paul Contreras Chandler- books, papers,

clothes; Jesus Jimenez Alvarez- clothes, shoes, pans, luggage; Antonio Blakeneycouch, shoes, clothes, tires, jerseys, dresser, boxes Store 1335: 1101 Marshall farms Rd Orlando, Fl 34761 407.516.7221@ 12:00pm: Davendra Narine: Boxes; Eric Meeks: household goods; Luviaya Moore: 2 queen beds, desk, shoes and clothes; Michelle Van Pelt: Household Goods: Ron Valdivia: Wood Store 3404: 2650 N Powers Dr Orlando, FL 32818, (407) 982-1032 @ 1:00 PM: Abelle Alexis- Hand Tools, Power Tools, Compressors, Cabinets, Building Material; Jessica Santiago- Mattress & box Spring, Mini Refrigerator, Boxes, Totes, Hand Tools, Power Tools, Ladders, Fishing reels; Rashida Smithen- End Tables, Coffee Table, Small rolling shelf; Jones Legagneur- Computers, Boxes, Totes, Books, TV’s, Chairs, Motor Scooter, Car Jacks; Marie Lynda Edouard- Vase, Basket, Misc House Hold Items, Mattress, Table, Dresser, Couch; Errol Baker Pressure Washer, Welding Machine, Construction Material, Wood, Coolers, Power Tools, Tool Box. Store 3502: 1236 S Vineland Rd Winter Garden, FL 34787, (407) 794-6460 @1:15 PM: Tami BerryHousehold Goods/Furniture; Beatriz Oruna Gomez- Household Goods/Furniture Store 1317: 5592 L B McLeod Rd Orlando, FL 32811, 407.720.2832 @ 2:00 PM: Terel Newsome- Houseitems; Jaime CheeseHousehold items; Samuel Daniel- 2 bedroom; Norvella Watson- Household items; Dylan Novak- household items; Marco Ruiz- household items; Carlos MartinezVan. FORD 350. 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 December 15,2023 at the location indicated: Store 1333: 13125 S. John Young Pkwy, Orlando FL. 32837, 407.516.7005 @ 10:00 AM: Genesis Luciano-Boxes, Jose David Pirela Pointiers-Carpentering tools, Alfredo Serrano-Home items, parts, Bianca Dieguez-Home items Store 4107: 9080 W. Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy , Kissimmee Fl 34747, 407.238.1799 @ 10:15 AM: Sylvette Karamoko -Household Goods/Furniture,TV/Stereo Equipment; Kyra Cardwell - sectional, queen bed, 2 tv’s; Ashley Mathieu - Household Goods/ Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools/ Appliances, Office Furn/Machines/Equip, Acct.; Joe Scanlon - Household Goods/ Furniture; Alice Acosta - Household Goods/Furniture, TV/Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances, Acct. Records/Sales Samples; Omayra Pardella flores – Luggages; Shannon Curtis - Household Goods/Furniture; Luis Flores - Household Goods/Furniture Store 7057: 13597 S. Orange Ave Orlando FL 32824, 407.910.2087 @ 10:30 AM: Jaissy Morales-Boxes, Totes; Christian Jose Arias-Bags, Boxes, Fishing Reels, Misc; Anthony Boyd-Furniture, Office Printers, Bags, Boxes, Misc; Cesar Hernandez-Furniture; Nelson Martinez-Bags, Totes, Boxes, Furniture, Shelves, Power Tools; Jesus Lopez-Furniture, Bags, Shoes, Clothes; Anthony Boyd-Furniture, Boxes, Office Printers;

Vimarie Cardona- Furniture, Boxes, Décor, Toys; Anthony Boyd-Propane tanks, bags, Appliances, Tires, Misc;Luz Maldonado- Cooler, Beach Items, Boxes, Totes Store 4109: 13450 Landstar Blvd Orlando, FL 32824, 407.601.41.69@ 10:45 AM: Nickeshia L Iles: Household goods Jose Cardozo Perez; Household goods/ Furniture/Tv/Stereo Equipment Olga De La Torre; Household goods/Furniture Anishka Thwaites; Household goods/ Furniture Tiffany Terrell; Household goods/Furniture Gina Marie Rodriguez; Household goods/Furniture Daniel Pirela Torres;Household goods/Furniture nasly paola Garcia;Household goods/Furniture Aliuska Reyes; Household goods/Furniture Malachi Troupe;Household goods/ Furniture Margie Kyle;Household goods/ Furniture Store 4217: 5698 S Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, Fl 32839, 754.551.4774 @ 11: 00AM: Lisa Rochelle -Furniture and household goods/ Hevin Brooks- 2 large couches, 2 beds, 2 dressers, TVs, dining room table, misc items/ Carliss Lee- Household Goods/Furniture, TV/ Stereo Equipment, Tools/Appliances/ Marilyn Osteen-Household Goods/Furniture Store 3024: 11955 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando FL 32837, 407.826.0024 @ 11:15 AM: Curtis Higgs Household Goods/ Furniture, Office Furn/Machines/Equip, Adam Clouchete Household Goods/ Furniture, Tools/Appliances, Jeune Muller Household Goods/Furniture, boxes Store 3378: 475 Celebration Pl, Celebration FL 34747, 321.939.3752 @ 11:30 AM: Marc Feldman Household Goods/Furniture, TV/ Stereo Equipment, Office Furn/Machines/ Equip, Acct. Records/Sales Samp, Tammy Barlow Household Goods/Furniture, Boxes Store 8136: 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando FL 32839, 407.488.9093 @ 12:00pm: Juliana Campbell-Hansen-Baby clothes Apt décor Holiday décor/Tony Stewart-Love seat Bed twin bed full a lot of boxes 2 Dressers/ Patricia Whitfield-All Furnitures Materials/Curtis Hamilton 2 Boxes of clothes 2 Speakers 2 Rugs A few large Pictures 6ft coffee Table small generator/Shaketa Henson-Clothes Appliances Dishes Store 8460: 4390 Pleasant Hill Rd Kissimmee FL 34746 (407) 429-8867 @12:15 PM: Franklin Paredes- large tv and boxes, clothes; Brenda Logan- Household items; Alexander Tapia- small sofa, bikes, bins, shelfs, bed; Martel Honors- Rims and clothes; Alexandra Paez- Personal belongings; Joshua Montero- tools 4 dirt bikes boxes table; Juan Arango Jimenez- household goods; Steven Langdale- furniture; Frank Owens- Household furniture; James Sperry- Household items; Kevin Gomez- Household Goods; Miriam Rivera Sepulveda- Household Goods; Bertram Hill- Household Goods; Kevin Garner-Furniture, boxes; Christopher stack- Boxes; Gerardo Rodriguez- Books, instrument, household items; Helena Perry- Household goods; Velande SeideBoxes Store 7306: 408 N Primrose Dr, Orlando, FL 32803, (321) 285-5021 @ 12:15 PM: Kimberline Arrington - Suitcases, Small Home Items, Rossana Lozano – Bins, Amelia Ulrych - Bedroom Furniture, Coffee Table, Bar Stool, Kitchen Stuff, Jonathon Garcia – Miscellaneous, Joseph Timm – Boxes, Misc Furniture Store 8612: 1150 Brand Ln Kissimmee FL 34744, 407.414.5303@ 12:30PM: Cheryl Lawrence- Household items and clothing; Matthew Martinez-Household Goods, Holiday Decorations; Melissa AbreuBoxes; Maria Sanchez-Boxes, furniture, and appliances; Tracy Pagett-Household Goods; Kimbelynne Cardenas-King Bed, 2 dressers, 2 nightstands, ~8 boxes; Edith Alli-household goods, personal items;

Patti Fildes-some personal belongings; Israel Figueroa-Appliances. Store 8753: 540 Cypress Pky, Poinciana, FL 34759, 863.240.0879 @ 12:45 PM: Vergison Internation Inenstments,Incorporated, school supplies Vergison Internation Inenstments Incorporated school supplies, Raheem Pontiflet Household items, Melicia McPherson- Williams Party items, Clothes, Debbie Ortega Household items, Jose Alvarado Household items, Ashania Soloman Household items, Evelyn Torres Household items, Careetha Chang Furniture, Luis Hernandez Household items, Tanisha Garcia household items, Janet Cintron Household items Store 8778: 3820 S Orange Ave Orlando FL 32806, 321.270.3440 @ 1:00 pm Kaesiona Brown camping and fishing gear/tent/bow n arrow/ Michael Anthony Jr Robinson personal items bags/ Robert Grant Furniture, boxes/ Mackenson Philippe 2 beds, small table misc items/ LaTonya Walker 2 bdrm apt/ Joan Telfer Household items/ Mary Losito household items boxes bins chairs table/ Nivea Long Household goods/ Kahlid Lamarre Washer, Bicycle/ Yvonne Seals bedroom items. Store 8931: 3280 Vineland Rd, Kissimmee FL 34746, 407.720.7424 @ 1:30 PM: Robert Spar Collectibles, Felice Hiller boxes & electronics, Charles Britton Household items, Gilberto Ventura Event planing Throne chairs & Tables, Maria del Carmen Franqui Ortiz Housegoods, Jasmine Walczak Personal items, Nicole Harmon Boxes, Miranda Lepich Boxes, Households & decorations, Bridgette Jordan Furniture, maribel santiago Household items, William Hendrickson 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: Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on December 22nd, 2023 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Of Central Florida, INC, 630 E Landstreet Rd, Orlando, FL 32824, will sell the following vehicles and/or vessels. Seller reserves the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. Seller reserves the right to refuse any or all bids; 1G1PE5SB4D7223434 2013 CHEV 1HGEM21682L098951 2002 HOND 1ZVBP8AMXD5228193 2013 FORD 2T3ZFREV0JW424144 2018 TOYT 4T1BB46K98U051418 2008 TOYT 5J6RM4H42GL014818 2016 HOND 5NPD84LFXLH506380 2020 HYUN KM8KNDAF5PU215781 2023 HYUN KMHTH6AB6KU013920 2019 HYUN NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates, 08:00 am at 10850 COSMONAUT BLVD ORLANDO, FL 32824, pursuant to

subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. DECEMBER 28, 2023 2C3CDXHG5GH204802 2016 DODG LL0TCKPG2NYS17888 2022 YNGF DECEMBER 30, 2023 KNDJN2A2XG7276673 2016 KIA ZACCJABT3GPE14918 2016 JEEP DECEMBER 31, 2023 1GKEK13T21J137503 2001 GMC 1HGCP26878A036423 2008 HOND NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates, 08:00 am at 2603 OLD DIXIE HIGHWAY KISSIMMEE, FL 34744, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. DECEMBER 21, 2023 JTHBK262972034197 2007 LEXS DECEMBER 23, 2023 NM0LS7E73F1183299 2015 FORD 1HGCS2B87AA002511 2010 HOND DECEMBER 25, 2023 3GNEK13T12G199500 2002 CHEV WDD5J4HB7LN061049 2020 MB DECEMBER 29, 2023 2C4GP44343R332684 2003 CHRY DECEMBER 30, 2023 4T4BF1FK0DR291170 2013 TOY DECEMBER 31, 2023 19XFB2F51FE106332 2015 HOND 3N1AB7AP1DL615252 2013 NISS Notice of Public Sale: Notice is hereby given that Storage King USA at 4601 S Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32839 will sell the contents of the storage units listed below at a public auction to satisfy a lien placed on the contents (pursuant to Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes). The sale will take place at the website StorageTreasures.com on December 20th, 2023, at 9:00 am. The sale will be conducted under the direction of Christopher Rosa (AU4167) and StorageTreasures.com on behalf of the facility’s management. Units will be available for viewing prior to the sale on StorageTreasures.com. Contents will be sold for cash only to the highest bidder. A 15% buyer’s premium will be charged as well as a $100 cleaning deposit per unit. All sales are final. Seller reserves the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale or to refuse any bids. The property to be sold is described as “general household items” unless otherwise noted. Michael Bradford - #0A017, Lamar Woolbright - #0B002, Ericka Fipps – #0E014, Adalberto Rodriguez - #0F003, Romeo Laurent - #0G036, Jean Pierre Williams - #0G038

orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Legal, Public Notices NOTICE OF SALE The following vehicles will be auctioned at A Reliable Towing 18730 E Colonial Dr, Orlando FL 32820 on December 10, 2023 at 9am: 11 BMW vin:WBAPH7C55BE675174, 06 HUMMER vin:5GRGN23U96H103226, 12 HYUNDAI vin:KMHTC6ADXCU021343, 20 NISSAN vin:3N1CN8FV9LL812892, 09 NISSAN vin:1N4AL21E89N557603, 15 MERCEDES vin: WDDSJ4EB6FN174356, 13 VW vin:3VW5P7AT1DM822244, 16 NISSAN vin:3N1AB7AP3GY245929, 06 VW vin:3VWRF71K86M780170, 12 FORD vin:1FAHP3F29CL434810, 07 DODGE vin:2B3KA43R77H730633, 14 VW vin:3VWD17AJ7EM360026, 18 KIA vin:KNDJN2A23J7618391, 07 MAZDA vin:JM1FE173370208790, 08 NISSAN vin:3N1AB61E18L690855, 07 MERCEDES vin:WDBUF56X67B105334

APRN ICU Parrish Medical Center 6587929 Fixed Asset Accounting Intern Lockheed Martin 6587904

Software Engineer I Electronic Arts (EA) 6587855

Employment Cost Estimator. $43,368/yr. Prepare estimation by gathering proposals, projects, and related documents. Identify and calculate labor, material and time requirements for projects. Prepare reports. Update and backup the cost database. Visit clients to check project specifications and documents. Bach degree in Civil Engineering req’d. Mail resume to DX Trim Enterprise LLC, Attn. Cimar Duarte. 803 E Donegan Ave, Kissimmee, FL, 34744. Hanover Land Company LLC in Orlando, FL is seek’g a Land Development Manager to anlyz, evaluate, & oversee permitting & entitlement process. Local trvl to proj sites; no overnight trvl. No telecomm. Send resumes to: bsnyder@hcpland.com Taekwondo Assist. Instr. needed for Legend Martial Arts, Windermere, Florida: To asst. the instr in trang. stud. for comp. evnt. or prog. Carry out prog schd, org, & conduct prac sessn; Asst. in teach clss., techs., & help w/ stud. motvnt; Prep clss. w/ matrls needed for each cls; Asst. stud in undrstd. ATA rules, asst w/ ATA schd; FT. Req 2 yrs of exp as Taekwondo athlete; (ATA) Black Belt; Mail resume to 13402 Summerport Village Prkwy, Ste 501, Windermere, FL 34786. We Show Up Services Inc is seeking a Management Analyst in Orlando, FL to Analyze and gather large amounts of data through multiple internal systems. Reqs: Any BS+2+ yrs of exp. in any logistics roles for companies in the transportation or logistics industry. Experience utilizing advanced analytical skills, including a thorough understanding of how to interpret business needs and translate them into analytical (and reporting) requirements. Proficiency in Tableau and Power BI preferred. Employer will accept any 3-yr and 3.5-yr post-secondary diploma. Send Resumes to Laila Sabri at 6900 Tavistock Lakes Blvd Suite 400, Orlando, FL 32827

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Staff Auditor, AML Charles Schwab & Co, Inc 6587056

Roads and Drainage.Asset Management Section Manager.284 Polk County Board of County Commissioners 6587829 Sr Consultant Enterprise Strategy Florida Blue 6587827 Commercial HVAC Chilled Water Pipe Mechanic (Orlando, Tampa, Daytona, Deltona, Flagler County) Energy Air Inc. 6587826 Faculty Game Development Bachelor’s Program Full Sail University 6587816 Referee/Official Adult Certified, Frank Deluca YMCA Family Center YMCA of Central Florida 6587810

Infrastructure Manager Orange County Clerk of Courts 6586999

GO TO ORLANDOJOBS.COM & ENTER THE JOB NUMBER IN KEYWORD FIELD TO LOCATE THIS POSTION Senior Claims Specialist I GreatInsuranceJobs.com 6587799

Post Doctoral Scholar University of Central Florida 6587726

Senior Technician, Accounts Payable (Must reside within 50 Miles of Orlando. FL) Florida Virtual School 6587789

Public Works Program Manager - Forecasting and Planning City of Orlando 6587714

Senior Compensation Analyst Orange County Sheriff’s Office 6587759 Reservations Coordinator Give Kids The World 6587754 Housekeeping - Houseperson - Embassy Suites by Hilton Orlando LBV South Embassy Suites Orlando - Lake Buena Vista South 6587735 Director, Portfolio Management Stax 6587729

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● orlandoweekly.com

Utilities Operator III City of Winter Garden 6587709 LOT ASSOCIATE Home Depot 6587683 Police Officer City of Casselberry 6587563 Quality Engineer Advantage Technical 6587512 Manager, Communications Darden Restaurants, Inc. 6587492

SEMINOLE COUNTY TAX COLLECTOR JOB OPPORTUNITIES Seminole County Sheriff’s Office 6587424

Sr Client Operations Support Specialist - Retirement Plans (Hybrid) 401k Generation 6586771

Interactive Media Coordinator Experience Kissimmee 6587341

People Operations Generalist Rifle Paper Co 6586590

HOST / HOSTESS - Terralina Crafted Italian Levy Restaurants 6587298

Call Center Sales Activation Rep - $20 per Hour Plus Incentives Spectrum / Charter Communications 6586582

Maintenance Dispatcher Greater Orlando Aviation Authority 6587295 Investment Consultant - Orlando, FL Fidelity Investments 6587231

Building Automation Systems Specialist Siemens 6587211

Group Housing Specialist Reunion Resort & Club 6586577 Line Cook SeaWorld Orlando 6586441

Accounting Assistant FAS Windows & Doors 6586436


orlandoweekly.com ● DEC. 6-12, 2023 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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