Orlando Weekly July 31, 2019

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FREE | JULY 31-AUG. 6, 2019

Florida Group Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor in Chief Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Staff Writer Jenna Lyons Music Editor Matthew Moyer Digital Content Editor Dave Plotkin Calendar and Film Editor Thaddeus McCollum Contributors Peg Aloi, Rob Bartlett, Jen Cray, Jason Ferguson, Maisie Haney, Liv Jonse, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Seth Kubersky, Bao Le-Huu, Anthony Mauss, Cameron Meier, Richard Reep, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Madeleine Scott, Nicolette Shurba Editorial Interns Christian Casale, Clarissa Moon, Annabelle Sikes Advertising Director of Sales Jeff Kruse Senior Multimedia Account Execs Dan Winkler, Matt Whiting Multimedia Account Exec Scotty Spar Classified and Legal Rep Jerrica Schwartz Sales Department Administrator Rachel Gold Marketing and Events Senior Marketing and Events Manager Jessica Pawli Events & Promotions Coordinator Kelsey Stidham Marketing and Sales Coordinator Nathaniel Frecks Creative Services Art Director Melissa McHenry Production Manager Daniel Rodriguez Graphic Designer Justin “SKIP” Skipper Business Director of Operations Hollie Mahadeo Business Specialist Allysha Willison Circulation Circulation Manager Collin Modeste Euclid Media Group Chief Executive Officer Andrew Zelman Chief Operating Officers Chris Keating, Michael Wagner VP of Digital Services Stacy Volhein Director of Digital Strategy Colin Wolf Regional Digital Director Fran DiCarlo Senior Marketing and Events Director Cassandra Yardeni Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon Controller Kristy Dotson euclidmediagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, vmgadvertising.com

Cover photo, photo above by Jen Cray: Hissy Fit: Grace (vocals), Lily (bass), Harmony (guitar), Tristyn (drums) at the Girls Rock Camp Orlando showcase at Will’s Pub

NEWS + FEATURES 7 Your Words + “This Modern World” Readers react, plus Tom Tomorrow

10 News Gov. DeSantis plans Spanish-language ballots for 2020 election, Democrats gear up for a Florida fight, and the state is hoping to benefit from Trump’s Space Force plans

15 Informed Dissent How can Democrats call Trump an existential threat but not do anything about it?

17 Triple bind Florida’s new ‘anti-sanctuary city’ law requires local jails to honor ICE detainers, but local law enforcement officials say they do not enforce immigration laws

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DRINK

27 Local boy makes good

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27 FOOD +

ARTS + CULTURE

20 A loud, celebratory and formidable movement Girls Rock Camps in Central Florida amplify female voices, both literally and metaphorically

23 Un-fun house Ashley Taylor’s eye-popping, jaw-dropping prints seethe with nervous energy

25 Live Active Cultures Orlando singer-songwriter Marc With a C transforms his stage show from a musical performance into a theatrical production this weekend

MUSIC

Orlando native and master sommelier George Miliotes’ temple to terroir, Wine Bar George, is a must for any oenophile

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35 Deke dive

28 Tip Jar Another wave of poke hits the city, big moves for the Dexter’s chain of restaurants, plus more in local foodie news

Rockabilly zealot Deke Dickerson keeps the fire alive with passion and humor

35 Picks This Week Great live music rattles Orlando every night

29 Recently Reviewed Short takes on restaurants we’ve reviewed recently

37 This Little Underground Orlando music community loses Bobby Clock; Peelander-Yellow leads a night of Asian revelation and insanity

FILM

CALENDAR

31 Grandma party Lulu Wang’s autobiographical The Farewell translates beautifully

38 Selections 40 The Week 41 Down the Road

31 Film Listings Cinema-oriented events to go see this week

Back Pages

33 On Screens in Orlando Movies playing this week: Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw and more

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46 Savage Love 46 Gimme Shelter 47 Classifieds

JULY 31-AUG. 6, 2019

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Readers react to stories from last week. On July 25, we reported that charging stations for electric vehicles will be available at all Florida Turnpike service plazas by the end of the year, paid for with the settlement from Volkswagen over falsified emissions reports. @Connie Osborne Pribish A fantastic way to punish VW. Hope the chargers are for non-Tesla electric cars! @Jay Brethouwer I’d like to see more in the city. On July 24, Jenna Lyons reported on data that showed 10 percent of the self-identified schoolteachers on SeekingArrangement.com, a “sugar daddy” website, are from Florida. @Katy Tanner How else are they supposed to afford to buy your kids’ school supplies? @Patricia Pellor That pay average of $48K includes higher salaries of the administration pay averaged in. If you’re a new teacher in Florida, you’ll most likely be

teaching at a charter for less than $35,000, and you’ll also most likely quit in under five years having gotten no raise and no opportunity for advancement. This is a statewide disgrace. @Kara Renee Williams I don’t know where they get this average salary from. I don’t make anywhere near that. Our July 24 cover story, “Ready or not,” concerned the impending opening of the University of Central Florida-Valencia College downtown campus. Descending upon the downtown core will be 7,700 students, along with university faculty and staff, on Aug. 26, and construction looks to be in an up-to-the-last-minute race to completion. Most readers’ concerns, however, turned on the additional traffic. @Debra Finney I would stay away on the 19th of August. That’s when they plan on letting students pick up IDs and parking permits. All 7,000 of them … @Virginia Cisn So what you’re telling me is … downtown traffic is going to be worse? @Steven Childress SunRail, bicycle, jetpack.

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NEWS DESANTIS PLANS SPANISH-LANGUAGE BALLOTS FOR 2020 ELECTION BY DARA KA M, N EWS SERV I C E OF

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oters throughout the state will have access to Spanish-language ballots in time for next year’s presidential election, under regulations Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration is advancing. DeSantis in April said he wanted to make Spanish-language ballots available statewide, noting that Florida “has a significant Spanish-speaking population and our state is home to many Puerto Ricans who moved here after … Hurricane María.” Secretary of State Laurel Lee’s office will hold a second workshop on the issue Aug. 9 in Tallahassee, according to a notice published last week. The notice referred to “the state’s Puerto Rican American population” and a lack of statewide uniformity for Spanish-language ballots. The issue also has been the subject of a federal lawsuit filed last August, three months before the 2018 general election, by groups representing Spanish-speaking Floridians. The case focuses on Puerto Rican voters and part of the federal Voting Rights Act aimed at people who were educated in schools where the predominant language was not English. Last September, U.S. District Judge Mark Walker issued an order requiring elections supervisors in 32 counties to provide Spanish-language sample ballots but did not require Spanish-language ballots to be made available for the November elections, saying there wasn’t enough time for supervisors to comply. In May, Walker required supervisors to provide Spanishlanguage ballots and other assistance to Spanish-speaking voters in Florida’s March 2020 presidential primary election. Lawyers for Lee’s office, which began the rulemaking process to address Spanish-language ballots in April, wrote in a court filing that “Puerto Ricans are unique among American citizens” because the primary language of instruction in schools on the island is Spanish. “Making available Spanish-language materials for these American citizens edu-

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But in written comments following a May workshop, lawyers for the plaintiffs in the federal lawsuit wrote that the proposed rule does not go far enough because it does not require bilingual ballots. “Bilingual official ballots are necessary to protect the secrecy of Spanish-language voters’ ballots, to avoid potential intimidation of Spanish-language voters, to avoid mistakes and misunderstandings by poll workers about the proper provision of F LOR I DA Spanish-language ballots, to avoid the possibility that not enough unilingual balcated in Spanish is simply the right thing lots are created or made available at each to do,” the state’s lawyers wrote, echoing precinct, and to ensure that the voting process is fully inclusive of and effective for DeSantis’ sentiment. While it’s unclear exactly how many Spanish-language voters,” the plaintiffs’ voters relocated to the state following lawyers wrote. María, plaintiffs in the case referred to news reports that said more than 168,000 people from Puerto Rico arrived in Florida DEMOCRATS GEAR UP within two months after the hurricane rav- FOR FLORIDA FIGHT aged the island in September 2017 and at least another 100,000 more were expected riorities USA, a major Democratic to arrive. super PAC, formally declared Florida In the strongly worded May order, one of the battlegrounds for the 2020 elecWalker wrote that, while Lee and the tion, which means digital campaign ads governor “should be lauded for initiating are coming soon and won’t ease up until rulemaking designed to bring the state after a president is picked. into compliance” with the federal Voting Florida, along with Wisconsin, Rights Act, the rules may not be finalized Pennsylvania and Michigan, will be floodbefore Florida’s March primary elections. ed with digital ads in the ramp-up to the The judge noted that his order “is not election that will pit Republican President a bolt out of the blue,” since the Voting Donald Trump against the eventual Rights Act “has been the law of the land Democratic nominee, Guy Cecil, chairman since 1965 and supervisors of elections of Priorities USA, said during a conference should have been complying with the law call with reporters last week. for more than 50 years,” even without the “Those four states will be critical in court’s intervention. terms of developing a path to 270 (elec“It’s simple. The best way to avoid liti- toral votes). It will be places that we invest gation and stay out (of ) the courts is to in early, aggressively and through the end follow the law,” Walker wrote. of next year,” Cecil said. The rule published by Lee’s office last Within the next couple of weeks, the week would require elections officials in spending in the four states will be between each of the state’s 67 counties to pro- $300,000 and $450,000 a week, and evenvide Spanish-language ballots to voters, tually the outreach will go into television a requirement that goes further than the ads and ground operations, Cecil said. 32 counties sought by plaintiffs in the fedFlorida even has its own Priorities eral lawsuit. The rule also would require Florida, which will be gathering personsupervisors to translate ballots into other alized stories that will be converted into languages, when required by law or court ads focusing on the economy, health costs, order. climate change, immigration and foreign The proposed rule “does not prohibit relations. a supervisor of elections from including “We know that more and more people one or more other languages as he or she are moving online,” Cecil said. “We know determines is necessary to accommodate the cost of Florida advertising gets more the respective electorate,” the proposal expensive every year. And so our program said. will begin online.” “Ballots may include more than one In announcing the Florida focus, language,” but the English version must Priorities USA also released a survey that appear first on the ballot, under the pro- showed Latino voters predominantly favor posed rule. Democrats in Florida over Trump. But

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that advantage is “somewhat soft,” in part because of the strong economy. The initial ads are intended to showcase how working families haven’t benefited under the economy during the Trump administration. Cecil said Priorities USA projects that if the election was held now, the Democrat nominee would secure 278 electoral votes to 260 for Trump, but those numbers can easily swing depending on how certain demographics turn out. Trump won 304 electoral votes in 2016, including carrying Florida, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. “We know there is a motivated group on both sides. In our projections of the Electoral College, we are projecting a higher turnout of both Democrats and Republicans,” Cecil said. “We think it is a mistake, and I think we saw that in some respects in Florida in 2018, to assume that conservatives on the Republican side will stay relatively static and only Democrats will increase their turnout.” — News Service of Florida

STILL SEEKING SPACE

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lorida still wants to land the command for Trump’s Space Force. Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nunez was in Washington, D.C., last week for spacerelated chats, including a sit-down Tuesday at the Pentagon with Lt. Gen. David Thompson, the vice commander of the U.S. Air Force Space Command, and a congressional roundtable on Florida’s space industry a day later. “This morning, I shared how Florida is focused and uniquely equipped to expand our aerospace industry with a bipartisan group of members of Congress,” Nunez tweeted last week. Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Space Force dreams are not shared by the U.S. Air Force, which doesn’t have a Florida location on its list of potential sites for the command, which for now will remain within the Air Force. Thompson, whose résumé includes two years as commander of the 45th Operations Group at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, is responsible for all Air Force space missions and space-related activities. Nunez, who also serves as chairwoman of Space Florida, the state’s aerospace arm, met with officials of private aerospace manufacturer SpaceX last Tuesday. — News Service of Florida



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ILLUSTRATION BY CLAY JONES

SUBSTANCE, OPTICS & GAMES How can Democrats call Trump an existential threat but not do anything about it? BY JE FFREY C. BILL M A N

By my count, Robert Mueller’s testi-

mony before the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees last Wednesday produced six significant headlines. 1. He confirmed that he had not exonerated President Trump. 2. He said that Trump asked his staff to falsify records. 3. He suggested there were “currently” FBI investigations into whether people in Trump’s orbit were compromised. 4. He agreed that Trump’s written answers to his questions were not “always truthful.” 5. He admitted (more or less) that Trump had met the three elements of obstruction of justice. 6. And, though he tried to walk it back, he let slip that, had Department of Justice policy not prohibited him from doing so, he would have indicted Donald Trump. But this being Washington, those six headlines were muddled in the kind of second-rate political theater only Congress can deliver: backbenchers desperate for a moment in the spotlight; Democrats eager for the kill; Republicans slobbering for the president’s affection; and,

most significantly, a halting, underwhelming and reluctant star witness. The Beltway media mainly judged it on those terms – the spectacle. For a prime example of the genre, see NBC’s Chuck Todd, who offered this trenchant analysis on Twitter: “On substance, Democrats got what they wanted: that Mueller didn’t charge Pres. Trump because of the [DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel] guidance, that he could be indicted after he leaves office, among other things. But on optics, this was a disaster.” It says a lot about this moment – about the failures of the media, about the perils of polarization, about the frailty of our democratic norms – that a special counsel could tell Congress under oath that the president had committed crimes, and, because of the 74-year-old’s lack of verve, this is considered a win for the president. But it also speaks to how thoroughly Democrats have botched this whole affair. This spectacle, after all, was unnecessary. Mueller had already said what he needed to say. He’d laid out a report – 448 pages – that all but begged Congress to do what he could not: hold Donald Trump accountable. I wrote after the Mueller report became public that House Democrats should begin impeachment hearings

even though there was no chance the Senate would convict Trump and even though such a course could prove politically treacherous. It was, I argued, their constitutional obligation. They’ve obviously not done so. Speaker Nancy Pelosi – though she talks of “crimes that were committed against our Constitution” and Trump’s “existential threat to our democracy” – wants to go slow, waiting until they have the “strongest possible hand.” She’s deemed impeachment too risky, especially for her caucus’ freshmen, many of whom come from moderate suburban districts. She’s also worried that voters don’t understand how impeachment works, and that the base will ultimately be disappointed when the Senate shrugs aside the House’s indictment and Trump declares vindication. These aren’t unreasonable arguments. But they miss the point. It’s the same point missed by those who caution against focusing on Trump’s racism. Talking about his attacks on U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, or his border concentration camps, or his embrace of white nationalists, they say, could detract from “kitchen table” issues that matter to voters: health care, the environment, education, jobs. To the degree it matters, Democrats should, of course, offer an agenda. But the dirty secret of American elections is that big policy proposals don’t matter all that much. In our polarized electorate, people are more motivated to vote against the other side than for their own. The 2018 blue wave, for instance, didn’t happen because suburbanites fell in love with the Democrats’ plans; rather, they were fed up with Trump’s antics, pissed off that the GOP tried to gut the Affordable Care Act, and wanted some adult supervision in Washington. Another thing: If you’re closely attuned to policy decisions, you probably see an administration that stumbles between dangerously inept and actively malevolent on most issues. If you’re not, however – and most people aren’t – you see an economy doing pretty well. And for any other president, absent a recession in the next year, that would probably be enough to win re-election. But Donald Trump isn’t any other president. He’s not a normal president. And treating him like one could prove self-defeating. Consider this: On the one hand, Democrats are telling Americans that Trump is, in Pelosi’s words, an “existential threat to our democracy”: a corrupt, racist liar who has obstructed justice, violated campaign finance laws, welcomed foreign interference into elections, is defying congressional subpoenas and might be a sexual predator. On the other hand, they’re not going to do anything about it – at least not yet. Eventually, perhaps. How does that not signal that this is all a game? This is the worst kind of mixed messaging, the kind that muddies any sense of moral clarity. And it’s the kind that could give Trump a second term. Of course, Donald Trump shouldn’t be impeached because it’s good politics. Donald Trump should be impeached because he is uniquely unfit to be president, because he’s a criminal, because impeaching him is the right thing to do. If Trump truly poses a threat to our democracy, should we be talking about anything else?

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NEWS

TRIPLE BIND

Florida’s new ‘anti-sanctuary city’ law requires local jails to honor ICE detainers. ICE says they have detainer agreements with at least 57 of Florida’s 67 counties. Local law enforcement officials say they do not enforce immigration laws. Who’s telling the truth? Does anyone even know? BY JENNA LYONS

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t started in January 2018, and it’s been called a “deportation machine” by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Basic ordering agreements, a new collaboration between Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Florida sheriffs, began with 17 recruits throughout Florida. As of July 23, there are now 57 county jails involved, according to ICE documents. The agreements, known as BOAs, offer $50 a day per inmate detained up to 48 hours in county custody after their cases are resolved to wait for ICE to serve a warrant. The rise in BOAs seems to be the latest indicator of the increased immigration crackdown in the state, alongside the passage of the “anti-sanctuary city” bill this month, which promptly led to a lawsuit filed by the Southern Poverty Law Center and a number of immigrant activist groups. Last week, Sen. Linda Stewart, D-Orlando, even urged Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings, to join the suit. The bill, SB 168, requires sheriffs to enter into a cost reimbursement agreement with “a federal immigration agency,” and specifically names BOAs as a “compliant agreement.” News of the latest BOA numbers came as a shock to Southern Poverty Law Center. Staff there say they’ve been stalled in attempts to obtain the most current data. “That is a huge, huge number,” says Viviana Bonilla López, legal fellow at the center. “Probably a lot of counties who maybe wouldn’t have signed one feel like they have to comply with the law.” Yet from a legal standpoint, Bonilla López alleges, BOAs are just as unconstitutional as the bill. AJ Hernandez Anderson, a staff attorney at the Southern Poverty Law Center, agrees. “What it’s doing is requesting immigrants the same way ICE would request supplies. It’s modifying people,” Hernandez Anderson says. “The second

problem is local law enforcement seems to think that the BOAs are a form of protection from lawsuits when in reality it’s not, and it’s not going to relieve them of any constitutional violations.” In December 2018, the Southern Poverty Law Center announced it was suing Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay over the BOA Ramsay signed, citing a Fourth Amendment violation. The suit is still pending, center officials say. ICE officials hold that the agency acts within federal laws. “ICE does not comment on pending litigation,” the agency said in a statement. “That said, absence of comment should in no way be construed as agreement with any of the allegations. ICE conducts activities in compliance with federal law and agency policy.” Only 10 county jails in Florida have not officially signed a BOA agreement,

but they’re still in compliance. Instead, they operate using an older arrangement known as an IGA or internal government agreement, ICE officials said. This type of agreement is negotiated through the U.S. Marshals, with ICE attached as a rider. In these cases, inmates are detained at the county facilities but technically under ICE custody. In Orange County, inmates can remain at the facility (but in ICE custody) up to 72 hours, says Michael Meade, acting director of enforcement and removal operations for Florida, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The IGSA, or internal government service agreement, is similar, but it’s a contract negotiated directly with ICE. There’s no clear way to determine which agreement takes a “stronger” stance on immigration. “As far as ICE is concerned, either a

Basic ordering agreements offer county jails $50 per day to detain inmates after their cases are resolved, so ICE can serve them with warrants.

” but some are pending, while others use a different agreement, according to immigration officials. Orange County Jail, for instance, doesn’t officially have one signed,

BOA or IGSA – either one of those work for us,” Meade says. “They’re different things, but at the end of the day we can work with either one.” orlandoweekly.com

In most cases, Meade says, places with IGAs or IGSAs get paid more per day than those with BOAs. Regardless of the agreements Florida sheriffs are making, immigration officials said “pretty much everybody is compliant in one way or another.” But the Florida Sheriff’s Association says the new law won’t impact any of these agreements. “There are no additional costs associated with honoring ICE detainers,” Nanette Schimpf, spokesperson for the Florida Sheriffs Association, wrote in an email. “All jail personnel perform the function as a collateral responsibility. There are no personnel dedicated to the function and SB 168 has no impact on BOA, IGA or IGSA.” But the passage of SB 168, dubbed an “anti-sanctuary city” bill, gives further incentive not to stray. The law, which went into effect July 1, requires municipal governments to comply with ICE detainers, contacting federal immigration authorities before an inmate’s release. If they don’t? They could be sued by the state attorney general. At the same time, the bill states that it “does not authorize” law enforcement to detain an undocumented immigrant “solely because the alien witnessed or reported a crime or was a victim of a criminal offense.” Still, immigrant rights groups across the state say people remain scared. Antonio Tovar-Aguilar, interim executive director for Farmworkers Association of Florida, says the majority of people simply won’t be aware of the exception. “For many police institutions it has actually put them in a very bad situation, because after building some trust with the community, that trust is going to evaporate with a law like this,” Tovar-Aguilar says. “It is not going to contribute to making the community safer like the law pretends to. It’s actually going to make cities more at risk.” Local law enforcement officials stressed they do not enforce immigration laws. While Orlando police are re-evaluating policies under SB 168, Orange County Sheriff ’s officials said functions won’t change for them. “We believe the city and OPD policies and practices are consistent with SB 168. However, we are reviewing our policies to ensure they comply with the technicalities of the bill,” says an emailed statement from Orlando Police. “The Orlando Police Department is committed to working

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NEWS alongside our residents to keep our community safe and does not enforce immigration laws.” Orange County Sheriff’s Office said they’ll cooperate with federal law enforcement, but that the law will have little effect on practices, stating that “detention based on immigration detainers is primarily the responsibility of jails.” “The Orange County Sheriff’s Office is not authorized to enforce federal immigration law. The passage of SB 168 does not change the functions of our deputies,” the office said in a statement. “Additionally, immigration status rarely

tution outlawing unreasonable seizure because of the sanctioned detention for already resolved cases, according to the SPLC. “Deportations are part of civil federal law and local law enforcement is only authorized to enforce state criminal law, so there’s an issue there, and it violates the Fourth Amendment because they’re holding someone without belief that the person has committed a crime,” Bonilla López says. “They can’t enforce federal immigration law. This creates a legal problem.” Raid announcements from the Trump

The raids really got people scared. And the overall climate of Trump saying disgusting crap all the time obviously doesn’t help.

” has any relevance to what our deputies do. Constitutionally, deputies are prohibited from discriminating against anyone based on their immigration status. OCSO deputies are empowered to enforce Florida state law and Orange County ordinances.” Officials with Orange County jail, officially known as the Orange County Corrections Department, provided a brief overview of how the agency works with ICE, but did not elaborate on the nature of their current agreement with federal immigration officials. “All individuals booked at the Orange County Jail are fingerprinted, with the results of all screenings provided to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE),” Tracy Zampaglione, jail spokeswoman, wrote in an email. “In some cases, ICE will file a written detainer with respect to an inmate of interest within the jail, and request to be alerted once the conditions of the inmate’s release have been satisfied. This detainer gives ICE the opportunity to take custody of the inmate, or allow for his or her release from custody.” Yet the Southern Poverty Law Center, when announcing their suit against SB 168, says that cooperation with federal authorities will lead to “costly litigation” from lawsuits. The bill violates the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. consti-

administration, the passage of SB 168 and the overall climate around illegal immigration has created a perfect storm, bringing in a high number of calls from worried undocumented immigrants, according to staff at the Farm Workers Association of Florida and the Florida Immigrant Coalition. “It’s a combination of the new law – because we definitely saw an uptick right when the law passed – and then the raids really got people scared, so I think it’s a combination of those two things,” says Thomas Kennedy, political director for the Florida Immigrant Coalition. “And the overall climate of Trump saying disgusting crap all the time obviously doesn’t help.” Call volume averaged about 280 calls a week for the past month, says Kennedy, which he says is “triple” their usual amounts. Similarly, the Farm Workers Association is getting more in-person visitors. They’re gone from averaging 200 to 250 at all five offices across the state to around 300, Tovar-Aguilar says. The attitude is the same, he says. People aim to stay as long as they can. “It’s a rollercoaster. People don’t know what to expect. They are afraid,” he says. “For many of them, returning to their home countries [means to] either live in poverty or die in violence.” jlyons@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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Jam Factory, a band formed this summer at Girls Rock Camp, performed at the Girls Rock Camp Orlando showcase at Will’s Pub, July 27 PHOTOS BY JEN CRAY

‘A LOUD, CELEBRATORY AND FORMIDABLE MOVEMENT’

Girls Rock Camps in Central Florida amplify female voices, both literally and metaphorically

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BY E MMA WITMER

hen Zaryn Kluytman started high school four years ago, she trained herself to be a “hallway ninja,” narrowing her shoulders, crouching and dodging the jostling backpacks and strong shoulders of her peers. She did her best to take up no space at all. When Kluytman returned for her second year, something had changed. She looked around and, for the first time, saw that the halls were full of ninjas just like her. This time, she decided she would stand up straight and walk with purpose. Despite being nearly knocked to the ground between every class, Kluytman decided to take up as much space as she was meant to fill. Kluytman, now 18, attended the flagship Girls Rock

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Camp in St. Petersburg during the summer between those years. There, Kluytman says, she learned what it meant to take up space, not just in the hallways, but also by sharing her thoughts and passions without fear of judgement. Though she is too old to return as a camper this July, the lessons learned at GRC and the impact of the staff inspired Kluytman to return as a counselor. “I don’t think you will find another camp anywhere that so beautifully defines the difference between caring about other people and caring about what other people think about you,” Kluytman says. That philosophy is the mission of the Girls Rock Camp Alliance, a network encompassing more than 90 youth

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organizations around the world. Their mission is “to build a strong movement for collective liberation.” “Our work is a direct attempt to amplify voices that have otherwise been told to be silent,” reads the About page at girlsrockcampalliance.org. “We believe that joy is a revolutionary force.” Monique Smith is the director of the Orlando chapter of Girls Rock Camp. “A lot of our volunteers say that Orlando Girls Rock Camp is like a womb, like a female empowerment womb, like a little incubator,” Smith laughs. “We load them up with positive energy and affirmation and empowerment. When we put them back out into the world, we want them to carry that with them, the sense of self-confidence and believing in themselves and knowing that they’re capable of doing something freaking awesome, because they did.” Vice-chair for Girls Rock Camp Orlando Mary Bucaro led the charge to bring a branch of this international alliance of head-banging and female empowerment to Orlando back in 2018, after the camp’s original incarnation, “Rock’n’Roll Camp For Girls Central Florida” lost its pace in 2014. Last year, Orlando’s Girls Rock Camp attracted seven campers aged 8 to 17. This year that number rose to 17. In its second year, Girls Rock Camp Orlando is back to empower the next generation through music and to teach the values of self-confidence and mutual respect. The camp itself is structured around learning and performing original music. On the first day of GRCO, each camper is assigned to an instrument that they have likely never tried before and then grouped into bands


Blue Carolina: Indiana (vocals), Taibtha (bass), Angelina (guitar), Yoyo (drums)

Audience at the Girls Rock Camp Orlando showcase at Will’s Pub, July 27

with campers they may be meeting for the first time. Throughout the week, these new bands not only learn how to play instruments, but work collaboratively to write an original song. In addition to three or more hours of band practice every day, the volunteers for GRCO lead a variety of workshops that extend beyond the musical realm. Many of these workshops explore topics that impact the campers everyday lives like body positivity and consent, while others explore activities like zine-making and roller derby. Others still teach DIY skills such as logo design, screenprinting and button-making so the campers have merchandise for the showcase. “That DIY aspect is really important because it’s good to show the campers that Systematic: Carter (bass) at the Girls Rock Camp Orlando showcase this is what real musicians do, especially when they’re starting out,” Smith says. “You’re carrying your own gear, you’re plugging in your is great, so it’s fantastic to see just how welcoming and own amp, you’re writing and performing your own songs, accepting everybody is of everybody’s differences. It’s a and you’re making your own merch. You’re also selling really safe place.” At GRC St. Pete, co-director Jesse Miller explains, a your own merch most of the time.” At GRCO, music is a means to build community and strict “no throwing shade” policy helps set the tone by confidence among both young girls and LGBTQ youth. deconstructing negative stereotypes about young girls (Again, from girlsrockcampalliance.org: “Music, art and and replacing them with pride, mutual support and creative expression are our tools in building a loud, respect. “A lot of women my age now, we all talk about how this celebratory and formidable movement. We do not use these tools by accident; we use them because music and was the camp that we needed,” Miller says. “There is that age that starts to happen where girls start to turn against creative expression are accessible, community-based, each other, and [we teach] how to actually communicate collaborative and political.”) Smith says that, living in a city with such a vibrant with each other … but also politically, with what’s been queer community, it is important to teach that striving happening in the world, I think that there is a definite for female empowerment should not be an exclusive need for women to feel ownership of their bodies and to feel powerful in their own voice and to find a collective endeavor. energy.” “We have campers that identify as they/them, we In addition to music, this camp is dedicated to eduhave campers that identify as androgynous, we have campers that identify as lesbians, so it’s really cool to cating and empowering the next generation of young see our camp just open up our arms even bigger,” GRCO women through classes based on the camp’s five pillars: volunteer Kristin Howard says. “We have a child who is “herstory,” social justice, self-defense, body image, envion the spectrum who is rocking the bass this year, which ronmental sustainability. The all-female-identifying staff

work together with the campers to come up with ground rules for the week that range from basic tenets like “respect the space” to a ban on the word “sorry.” The Saturday after the last day of Girls Rock Camp Orlando, family members, friends, local musicians and supporters from the community packed into Will’s Pub, where each band performed its original song. Playing live on stage for the first time can be incredibly intimidating, Howard says, so the Girls Rock staffers went out of their way to make sure each of the campers feel like rock stars. Before the show began, the new bands hit the stage for a quick soundcheck then were whisked away by local volunteers who coiffed their hair, applied makeup and did their nails to get them stage-ready. After pizza, a pep talk and a bit of mingling among the crowd, the show was on. “Last year’s performance was our very first camp after the reboot, and we had two bands, so we had the luxury of also having them perform covers,” Smith says. “One of our campers who has been playing guitar since she was 8 learned a couple extra songs on the acoustic, and a couple of our vocalists sang a cover of ‘Wise’ by Marina and the Diamonds and ‘Skinny Love’ by Bon Iver. Those were some pretty goose-bumpy moments.” In the future, Smith says that she hopes to expand Girls Rock’s resources so that the campers can have their songs professionally recorded during the week. “My dream is to be able to go and pay money to go see them, to help put out their records,” Howard says. “Girls Rock Camp solves, over the course of a few days, what is probably one of the biggest issues for women in society today, which is safety, and I don’t just mean physically but emotionally and in terms of the judgment of our decisions,” GRC camper-turned-counselor Kluytman says. “After five days of this kind of constant support, approval and positivity, you understand that you never really needed it in the first place.”

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[ arts + culture ]

UN-FUN

HOUSE

Ashley Taylor’s eye-popping, jaw-dropping prints seethe with nervous energy BY JESSI CA B RYCE YO UNG

W

“Shout Louder: Heavy Heart” | art by Ashley Taylor SORE LOSER: NEW WORKS BY ASHLEY TAYLOR opens 6:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 2 Mills Gallery, 1650 N. Mills Ave. facebook.com/millsgallery.orlando free

hen local arts impresario Kyle Eagle sent word of his latest exhibition, our interest was piqued. All you have to do to get our attention is present Jacoub Reyes, Chuck Stewart, Adam Lavigne and Anna Cruz within a six-month period, apparently. But comparing your latest artist to Taylor McKimens, R. Crumb and James Gillray will really open our ears. Sore Loser: New Works by Ashley Taylor opens at the Mills Gallery Friday, Aug. 2, and fans of any of the above artists would do themselves a great service to attend. Seeing Taylor’s work on a screen, whether desktop or mobile, doesn’t do it justice. Her intricate, cartoony prints bubble and seethe with frantic hilarity and nervous tension, that kind of laughter that’s balanced on a knife edge between screaming or tears. In an essay titled “What’s So Funny About Contemporary Art?,” art critic Linda Yablonsky writes, “Funny art comes so loaded with piercing ironies, sudden surrealities, and deadpan expressions of horror or grief that we cannot be sure if it is even OK to laugh. … The funniest-looking figures, however, are less Popeye than R. Crumb’s bearded Mr. Natural, fraught with anxiety, swearing, sweating, and questioning every feeling and thought.” That description of Mr. Natural fits Taylor’s dripping, shouting homunculi to a T. Taylor’s earlier work embodies the same funhouse aesthetic, but with a somewhat sour edge. Her 2015 show Fool’s Paradise took on the American culture of “consumerism, voyeurism, narcissism and human morality through the establishment of a satirical amusement park” – one which may have sailed right over the heads of any earnest optimists in attendance. In Sore Loser, Taylor is still commenting on what irks her, but rather than trying to force the viewer to acknowledge the absurdities of life, this time she’s just flipping it the bird. Taylor discussed the show with us via text, saying the show is partially “a commentary on ego and power plays in the painful theater of social life.” But it’s also a reflection on a special moment in her life. “I’ve always let others’ opinions of me shape my worth. I cut ties with that and came to terms with myself. In this transition, there was pain and I could’ve fallen into the trap of bitterness and become the sore loser. But I didn’t. It was up to me and once I decided that, I was free.” jyoung@orlandoweekly.com

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were getting lost, so it needed to find that right balance. Little bits have been added that will hopefully introduce me to those who are not familiar with what I do. What has the transition from musical performer to stage actor been like? I didn’t have to change as much as one would think, because my name is Marc Sirdoreus, and I portray an act named Marc With a C, so I’ve been acting for nearly 20 years. The trouble for me was being able to memorize lines, specific things that must be said a certain way while I look at a certain point in the room. That didn’t come so naturally to me. As Marc With a C, I write things to a point, and memorize it up to that point, but I never finish it until I’m about to premiere it live. … A lot of The Obscurity Show is memorizing a script so that I can spit it out the exact same way. I don’t have nearly the room to improv that I normally do, and that MARC WITH A C | PHOTO BY VIKKA LEONI is brand-new to me. I’m not sure that it’s something I’d recommend to anyone based Over the past two decades, Orlando Weekly: What exactly is The in improv: to unlearn that, and then going back to doing it the same way you do at singer-songwriter Marc Sirdoreus has Obscurity Show? evolved from a cult-favorite fixture Marc Sirdoreus: It’s a one-man show, but every other show. of Orlando’s nerd rock scene to an it’s a little bit further than that: It’s an accomplished independent artist with a experiment in DIY theatrical minimalism. What were your biggest challenges music video that was in the running for a People might try to pigeonhole me as a adapting to the theater? 2018 Grammy nomination, with a string singer, or a songwriter, or a storyteller, or Not being able to push up my glasses of No. 1 releases on Bandcamp’s vinyl pop maybe even a comedian on some bad days. whenever I feel the need to, because I’m charts. Now, on the eve of his musical I can be all of those, depending on what you trying to make a statement. Not being able alter ego’s 20th anniversary, Sirdoreus is see. The same goes for The Obscurity Show. to run over and grab a towel or take a drink taking his “Marc With a C” stage persona This is sort of to take obscurity out of of water because I’m thirsty. These are all somewhere brand new: the theater. what I do, but also leave you with a few things that one can do at a rock concert, but The last time I devoted this column to more questions. audiences don’t seem to be too thrilled if Marc With a C, back in January 2018, he was you do that and call it theater. on the verge of releasing the final installment How has The Obscurity Show changed in his Obscurity trilogy, and was talking since its workshop in 2018? How do you hope audiences will about turning the albums into a theatrical A good portion of the show has been respond to The Obscurity Show? production. Personal circumstances rewritten. I took some of the original ideas, This is Marc With a C’s DIY minimalist temporarily stalled the project, but on and using a recording of that night, I wrote version of theater. You’re free to hate it; I Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 3 and 4, The out what I did longhand. Then I said, well, hope you won’t. I’m incredibly motivated Obscurity Show makes its official debut OK, this didn’t work, and took that away. creatively and feeling very positive about at the Downtown Arts Collective. (Visit Tightened up other things. There were a future that we can have, and I want to marcwithac.com for tickets.) I interviewed some songs that I had actually shortened share that. I want people to walk away Sirdoreus ahead of opening night to learn and skipped verses, and I said no, I can play feeling inspired themselves to do anything about this new chapter for Marc With a C, the whole song. Sometimes it was going on that their own anxiety has told them “no.” and where it will take him next. too long with talking; the ideas in the songs I hope that someone, anyone, leaves that

orlandoweekly.com

BY SETH KUBERSKY

Orlando singersongwriter Marc With a C transforms his stage show from a musical performance into a theatrical production this weekend

show going, “I can try again tomorrow.” But mostly I don’t want you to have a bum night out. What comes next for The Obscurity Show and Marc With a C? I don’t really know where the show is going to go. If people really like it and want me to stage it in places I’m open to that conversation, but it turned into a pretty Herculean task to put this on. I don’t often look back at myself, so for the next year, to celebrate my 20th anniversary, I’m going to spend 365 days looking back at what I’ve done over a 20-year period. That’s going to have a three-LP best-of set that comes out on Dec. 6. We also hope to have a memoir that I’ve been writing over many years out by December. That’s the one chance you get to look back with me. After that, I’ve got to find out who I am, who we are, and what it is now when I put pick to string and come up with new ideas for the future. Once I’m done looking back, I will be heavily informed by my past, but no longer bound by it, and that is really exciting. skubersky@orlandoweekly.com

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[ food + drink ]

PHOTOS BY ROB BARTLETT

LOCAL BOY MAKES GOOD

Orlando native and master sommelier George Miliotes’ temple to terroir is a must for any oenophile BY HOLLY V. KAPHERR

I

recently returned from my dream road trip down the A6 highway from Paris to Lyon, through the endless terraced vineyards of Burgundy. We followed the tree-lined Route des Grands Crus – the winding road through charming French towns home to the biggest of big wine producers: Puligny-Montrachet, Mersault, Pommard. Since then, I haven’t stopped thinking about it, wishing I could bottle that feeling. But I realized, sitting at Wine Bar George, that it’s already, literally, been bottled. No need to return to France; those feelings all came flooding back to me as I tasted the ruby-red 2016 Vincent Girardin Burgundy our server recommended. “You have to taste this,” I said to my husband, who’d accompanied me on our road trip, along with three other friends. “It’s our vacation.” George Miliotes is one of the 140 wine professionals in the U.S. known as Master Sommelier, and he’s the one who showed us to our table. He’s also an Orlando native, which makes his omnipresence under-

standable – most other celeb chefs who’ve opened at Disney only occasionally make appearances. As he guided us upstairs to our seats, I told him we’d just returned from Burgundy. He asked me if there was a particular highlight. “The cave of Montrachet,” I said. The Master Sommelier responded, “Well, that certainly doesn’t suck.” This kind of elegance-meets-earthiness that Miliotes personifies is what you’ll find at his restaurant and wine bar. It’s baked into the architecture, the service and the menu offerings, both in what you’ll sip and what you’ll savor. The restaurant feels like the caveaux we visited in France – cozy and cool, both in temperature and in vibe. There’s no mistaking that wine is the star here. The entire first floor is occupied by a few high-top tables, but overtaken by the gigantic rectangular bar. Most of the eating takes place upstairs, in two dining rooms and a New Orleans-style terrace with some four-top tables. If you want one of the best views at

the Springs, request a table out there. You’ll want to spend some time with the wine list, but you’d do just as well to let your server guide you through it. They’re all well-versed in the language of the grape, and are happy to figure out exactly what you should be sipping. I asked about a varietal I’d never heard of – a $9 French white from the “on-tap” list – and our server threw out buzzwords like “minerality,” “herbaceous,” and then said, “it’s like a Pinot Grigio without the boring.” Sold. There are plenty of wines offered by the glass – Miliotes wants you to taste as much as possible – and there are lots of bottles within budget, starting at about $60. There’s also an “Outstanding by the Ounce” section, which highlights the best-of-the-best bottles from all over the world in 1-, 3- and 6-ounce pours, plus bottle prices. Dying to try a 1996 Chateau Margeaux, but the $2,400 bottle price tag is a bit out of reach? George lets you taste the epic vintage for $100 per ounce. OK, that’s still steep, but there are plenty of excellent wines on the list to try for a song. The food menu features the same kind of approachability. Small plates come out in a flash. The house-made meatballs ($14) are downright pillowy, gently plopped in a pool of bright tomato sauce on a bed of three-cheese polenta so cheesy, it sets up almost immediately upon hitting your cool side plate. The fork-tender porchettaspiced pork cheeks were dreamy, too, in the way that a perfect pot roast soothes the burdened soul. The menu listed an orange gremolata on top, but we didn’t catch any of that on our plate. We didn’t really miss it. My favorite small plate was the grilled octopus salad ($18), which is presented more like a ceviche than anything else: julienned octopus studded with diced celery, green olives and red bell peppers. On the first bite, I immediately imagined myself sitting on the promenade in Valencia overlooking the Med. Necks craned from other tables when our entrée appeared: the family-style wine-braised chicken ($59), an entire, purple-hued chicken served in a large castiron-style casserole with mushrooms, pearl onions, Yukon potato hash, asparagus and its own braising liquid perfectly transformed into sauce. We didn’t need the serrated knives on orlandoweekly.com

WINE BAR GEORGE 1610 E. Buena Vista Drive, Lake Buena Vista 407-490-1800 winebargeorge.com $$$$

offer. That chicken was a pièce de no résistance. The diners at the table to our left even came over after they’d paid their check to ask us what we were eating. The order envy was palpable. To finish, we indulged in – what else? – more wine, with the Chocolate Experience dessert. I’m no white chocolate devotee, but paired with a Spanish muscat, I’m a convert. The milk chocolate came paired with port, and the dark chocolate with a heady, aromatic merlot. We also ordered olive oil cake ($7) with candied kalamata olives and lemon mascarpone. I asked our server for a pairing, and he surprised me with a Madeira, brimming with raisin and a briny finish that complemented the olives. The very first time we visited Wine Bar George after it opened, we sat out on the terrace and noted a young couple who sat down at their table, took a brief look at the menu (and likely at the prices) and surreptitiously got up and left. This isn’t turkey legs and Butterbeer. But it is an ideal way to escape the theme park atmosphere and sit down to what will likely be a perfect meal, or at the very least, a perfect glass of wine. dining@orlandoweekly.com

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tip jar BY FAIYAZ KARA

OPENINGS F&D Woodfired Italian Kitchen will open a second location at 104 E. First St. in historic downtown Sanford in mid-November. Look for another F&D to open next spring in Longwood … Mai Thai Asian Fusion, from the folks behind the local Chai Thai chain of restaurants, has opened in the old Artisan’s Table space on East Pine Street … Poke Hana, which we favorably reviewed back in June, will open its second location in a 1,000-square-foot space in Windermere Village in February … More poke news: Pokéworks, with a menu designed by Top Chef alumnus Sheldon Simeon, will open downtown on the ground floor of the Morgan & Morgan building this November … LemonShark Poke is expected to open its second location inside the Florida Mall this weekend … The Ravenous Pig Brewing Co., situated next door to the Ravenous Pig on West Fairbanks Avenue, will release its first batch of brews in August. A beer garden in between the restaurant and brewery will open in time for next year’s Super Bowl … The 6 Cafe & Lounge will move into the stand-alone building that once housed the Sam Seltzer Steakhouse and most recently Panda Hibachi Buffet at 800 E. Altamonte Drive in Altamonte Springs. Drake is behind the venture. (No, no – he’s not.)

CLOSINGS Dexter’s in Windermere has closed. Also, Dexter’s in Winter Park will relocate to the old TR Fire Grill space in the Ravaudage complex this fall … After an eight-year run, Kathleen and William Blake have sold their interest in the Rusty Spoon to Dutch restaurateur Michele Lagerweij, who will rename the restaurant Elize. Lagerweij owns a café of the same name in Utrecht, the Netherlands … Norman’s inside the Ritz-Carlton Grande Lakes will serve its last meal Aug. 31, after which the new owners will convert the space into a steakhouse. Fear not, Norman Van Aken and his partners will announce a new location for Norman’s very soon.

EVENTS Jinya Ramen Bar in Thornton Park celebrates its one-year anniversary Thursday, Aug. 8, with spicy chicken ramen and tonkotsu black ramen for $8.08, plus BOGO alcoholic drinks. Got restaurant dish? Send tips to dining@orlandoweekly.com

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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

$$$$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$$

$10 OR LESS

The price range generally reflects the average cost of one dinner entree. Bakeries, ice cream shops, etc. reflect $15-$25 relative cost for one person. Search hundreds more $25 OR MORE reviews at orlandoweekly.com

$10-$15

NIC & LUC SCRATCH KITCHEN Longwood breakfast and lunch spot goes beyond scrambles and omelets with remarkably fresh plant-based bowls, toasts and handhelds. Early risers will shine after sampling the “Everything Hummus” toast or “Buddha Bowl” with roasted beets and raw sweet potato, while a lunchtime patty melt is the stuff diner dreams are made of. Don’t leave without trying a buttery homemade cookie. Closed Saturday and Sunday. 851 E. State Road 434, Longwood, 321-972-6415; $

F&D WOODFIRED ITALIAN KITCHEN Sister restaurant to Lake Mary’s F&D Kitchen & Bar and F&D Cantina, F&D Woodfired Italian Kitchen serves a menu of Neapolitan-style pizza and hearty pastas (using local noodle maestros Trevi) to the delight of residents in the Hourglass District. Notable dishes: yielding meatballs of Italian sausage and pangrattato; thinribboned cacio e pepe with Italian pork; and a wild mushroom pappardelle in a lovely porcini cream sauce. Vegans, take note: There’s also a vegan pizza menu. Open daily. 2420 Curry Ford Road, 407751-5697; $$

POKE HANA Cool Mills 50 spot does poke right for purists and nonconformists alike, but there’s more than ruby cubes of fish to be had here. Crackly rice-shell tacos filled with everything from pulled pork to spicy salmon to grilled chicken are worth a look, as is musubi – be it Spam or vegan fried tofu. Açai bowls are also offered, but for an ending Hawaiian-style, a serving of Dole whip is as rad as it gets. Open daily. 1225A E. Colonial Drive, 407-601-0283; $

SETTE This Italian concept by Se7en Bites owners Va and Trina Gregory-Propst offers plenty of rustic bites and comfort, from housemade pastas like one-noodle lasagna and mushroom pappardelle to addictive arancini and “pot roast” risotto. Desserts, as expected, are of the epic variety. 1407 N. Orange Ave., 407-704-7771; $$$ n

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[ film + tv ] FILM LISTINGS An Evening With Sick ’n’ Wrong Stephen Stull, creator of the Sick ’n’ Wrong Film Festival, presents a selection of short films from previous years of the event. Thursday, 7 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free; facebook.com/ thenookonrobinson. The Farewell A Chinese family discovers their grandmother has only a short while left to live and decide to keep her in the dark, scheduling a wedding so they can gather before she dies. Ongoing; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $12; 407-6290054; enzian.org. I Love Lucy: A Colorized Celebration Presentation of five uncut, fulllength colorized episodes of the groundbreaking TV comedy. Tuesday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com.

GRANDMA PARTY Lulu Wang’s autobiographical The Farewell translates beautifully BY T HADDEUS MCCOL LU M

W

hen Billi (Awkwafina), a Chinese-American returning to Changchun for the first time since childhood, checks into her hotel, the bellhop wants to know which she likes better, China or America. “It’s just different,” she responds to the overeager hotel worker. That cultural difference – and how ultimately narrow that difference really is – is at the heart of The Farewell, a mostly autobiographical film from writer-director Lulu Wang. Billi’s grandmother, Nai Nai (Shuzhen Zhao), has been diagnosed with Stage 4 lung cancer, but, as Billi’s mother, Jian (Diana Lin), tells her, “Chinese people have a saying: When people get cancer, they die.” She’s not talking about the disease itself, but rather the belief that the burden of knowing that one is terminally ill removes the joy from what time they might have left. So Billi’s family decides to return home to see Nai Nai under the pretense of a wedding between Billi’s cousin, Hao Hao, and his Japanese girlfriend (of three months), Aiko (the wonderfully awkward Han Chen and Aoi Mizuhara).

Billi struggles with the nondisclosure policy of the family, particularly since she and Nai Nai are very close. But as her father, Haiyan (Tzi Ma), and uncle, Haibin (Yongbo Jiang), stress to her, this is just how things are done in China. Rather than burden the terminally ill with the awareness that they’re dying, the family shares the burden for them. That burden drives her father and uncle to drink heavily – something that it’s implied has been a problem for Haiyan in the past, though that plotline remains mostly unexplored. A lot of buzz has been circulating around the performance of Awkwafina (neé Nora Lum) as Billi, and it’s deserved. She rose to notoriety as a humorous rapper before branching out into acting (most notably in supporting roles in Ocean’s 8 and Crazy Rich Asians), and she’s been viewed as primarily a comic actress. In The Farewell, her performance as Billi is much more nuanced. She’s already going through a rough patch when she gets the news about Nai Nai, and she struggles to make sense of the situation while being forced to hide her real emotions. She’s funny, but it’s a

PHOTO COURTESY A24

THE FAREWELL Now playing Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland enzian.org $12

HHHHH natural kind of humor instead of being overly jokey. Wang goes for a very understated and naturalistic tone throughout most the film, but not a scene is squandered. From the big welcome-home dinner when the family arrives in Changchun to Nai Nai teaching Billi tai chi – or a hilarious visit by the family to the memorial of Nai Nai’s deceased husband – every moment gives us a clearer view of these characters and how they operate as a family. And despite the big ethical question looming over the family, how they act is the same as any other family. There are squabbles, white lies, jokes, frustrations and rivalries. But the love the family has for each other shines through it all, and it’s likely you’ll find yourself comparing them to your own family. Now go call your grandma. She’d love to hear from you. tmccollum@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

Kathy Griffin: A Hell of a Story A film chronicling the unprecedented and historic story of an iconic American comedian overcoming a political and media takedown following the release of a controversial photo. Wednesday, 8 pm; multiple locations; $15; fathomevents.com. Kiki’s Delivery Service Hayao Miyazaki’s animated film about a young witch who leaves home to start a delivery service on her broom. Wednesday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com. Kill Bill, Vol. 1 Watch Party Free screening of the Quentin Tarantino revenge epic with a themed cocktail menu and complimentary popcorn. Tuesday, 5 pm; Southern Craft, 2405 E. South St.; free; 407-412-5039; facebook. com/southerncraftbar. Movie Monday: The Goonies Free screening of the ’80s adventurecomedy. Monday, 8:15 pm; À La Cart, 609 Irvington Ave.; free; 407-776-4693; alacartorlando.com. Movie Night at Leu Gardens: Mission: Impossible – Fallout Outdoor screening of the Tom Cruise action film. Friday, 8:30 pm; Harry P. Leu Gardens, 1920 N. Forest Ave.; $6; 407-246-2620; leugardens.org.

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ON SCREENS IN ORLANDO

Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham in Hobbs & Shaw PHOTO COURTESY OF UNIVERSAL PICTURES

BY STEVE SCHNEIDER

OPENING THIS WEEK: Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw In the life of every entertainment property, there comes a turning point. It’s a moment at which the public gets to decide if it loves the property enough to embrace anything sold to it under that name. Will the years of built-up goodwill translate into commercial viability for a spinoff that is by nature humbler and more limited in scope than the parent that spawned it? There’s somewhere in America where that question is paramount this weekend. And I think you know where I’m talking about: Mike Pence’s house. But it’s also a key issue in the executive suites of Universal Pictures, which is hoping that eight internationally successful Fast & Furious pictures have laid sufficient groundwork for an offshoot starring two of their main characters. Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham return as Hobbs and Shaw, continuing their fractious relationship into a story of international intrigue and jeopardy. This time, the heroes are on the trail of a global terrorist whose body has been scientifically enhanced nigh unto invincibility, and who covets a bioweapon that could eradicate all life on Earth. Hey, you know how the Marvel movies are always getting pilloried for telling ultimate-stakes stories over and over? Remember, this is a SMALLER Fast & Furious picture. As the villain in question, we have Idris Elba, who in real life is currently smarting from learning that he can’t be James Bond because he’s the right race but the wrong gender. Although his Hobbs & Shaw

character happens to be an MI6 agent gone rogue, which seems to mean that Elba, having lost out on playing 007, instead gets to revisit Javier Bardem’s part from Skyfall. A black Anton Chigurh is what I want to see. Supporting players include Helen Mirren, making her second appearance on American screens this summer after the flop that was Anna. Remember that one? Its creator, Luc Besson, is now facing not only the threatened collapse of his company but multiple allegations of sexual assault and harassment. Meanwhile, the Fast & Furious gang are hoping for a rosier future, with the ninth entry in the main series being prepped for release in 2020. At press time, a stuntman on that project was in a coma due to an on-set accident, proving there’s nothing some people won’t do to keep a franchise going. Just ask Mike Pence. (PG-13)

ALSO PLAYING: Sea of Shadows This year’s Sundance audience awarded Best Documentary honors to Sea of Shadows, which exposes the calamitous effects of criminal poaching. Not one but two species of marine life are threatened by humans’ pursuit of the swim bladder of the totoaba, an organ so soughtafter that it’s known as “the cocaine of the sea.” (Interestingly, among fish, cocaine is known as “the totoaba bladder of Miami.”) Filmmaker Richard Ladkani had to curtail part of his shoot to prevent his crew from being murdered by a Mexican cartel. Why can’t this ever happen to Morgan Spurlock? (PG-13; playing at Regal Winter Park Village & RPX) orlandoweekly.com

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[ concert preview ]

DEKE DIVE

GREAT LIVE MUSIC RATTLES ORLANDO EVERY NIGHT CanVas Local metallers play as part of a bill

Rockabilly zealot Deke Dickerson keeps the fire alive with passion and humor

taking in indie-rock and pop-punk sounds too. Hear something(s) new. 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 31, at Uncle Lou’s, $5

CHEW

BY NICK MCGREGOR

C

ontrary to popular belief, it is possible to be more than just a jack of all trades – and rockabilly master Deke Dickerson is living proof. A Missouri native who caught the bug as a teenager, Dickerson moved to Los Angeles in 1991 and started beefing up his overstuffed resume. From guitar wizard to antiques collector, record producer to label owner, anthropologist to biographer, and quick-witted columnist to excitable collaborator, Dickerson wears countless hats. picker and songwriter More impressively, he juggles them with ease Merle Travis. “I’ve gone – perhaps because all of his pursuits roll up to the down the rabbit hole common goal of performing, preserving and promot- studying the origins ing American roots music. “I just remember growing of [Travis’] thumbup hating music that was popular,” Dickerson tells style guitar playing,” Orlando Weekly. “When I first heard Chuck Berry, Dickerson says. “It’s Jerry Lee Lewis and Bill Haley, it just clicked with a really interesting trip me. I started playing guitar in my first rockabilly band into how music was played and passed when I was 13, and here I am now [at 51].” down over 100 years ago between So what keeps a diehard like Dickerson so commit- white and black cultures, hillbilly and ted? “Mostly it’s the bag of half-eaten Doritos in the blues, with lots of interesting different green room,” he laughs. “Seriously though, I still love regional styles.” performing, I still love this music and I love turning Dickerson believes such work is people on to this music.” Lately, that fun has taken a pivotal and, earlier this year, he was number of forms. His longtime work with Ecco-Fonic named Musician of the Year at the Records and Ecco-Fonic Studios allows Dickerson to Ameripolitan Awards because of it. “A keep his hands close to the source of countrified rock lot of people don’t realize just how & roll, early R&B and jump much history blues. An avid accumulator of and knowledge DEKE DICKERSON weird records and even weirdgets lost when with the Woolly Bushmen, er instruments, he’s famous for somebody dies,” Little Sheba & the Shamans trotting out double-, triple- and Dickerson says. 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 2 even quadruple-necked guitars “In the course Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. at shows and then ripping on of doing this willspub.org them. A passion for uncovering Merle Travis $10-$12 lost artifacts and untold stories book, I’ve interled Dickerson to start pursuing viewed six music journalism in tandem people in their with his recording and performing. (“I always joke 90s, and three of them have died since that I picked the one side career that pays less than I interviewed them. Think of the stoplaying music,” he guffaws.) But his subjects cut deep ries that would have been lost if I into the heart of America’s complicated rock & roll. hadn’t talked to them!” A 2018 piece about Link Wray’s glaring omisLooking forward, Dickerson is sion from the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the thrilled about his mid-summer run short shrift paid by that supposedly hallowed institu- through Florida. The adventure starts tion toward musicians of color still reverberates to in Tampa, where Dickerson will link this day. Lately, Dickerson has poured that feather- up with a band he’s dubbed the “Uh ruffling energy into a biography of Kentucky-born Oh-Fonics” because their first show

Atlanta psych-rock trio sets the controls for the heart of Mills Avenue. Also make sure to arrive early to catch Dearest! 9 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 1, at Will’s Pub, $7

DJ Seinfeld Best name in the pop business, hands PHOTO BY SUSIE DELANEY

down. But Seinfeld’s frenetic take on house is definitely not about “nothing.”

is at the Rockabilly Battle Royale, which requires participating musicians to play tunes they’ve never tackled before on unknown instruments. “Don’t worry, though,” Dickerson laughs, “when we hit Orlando, we’re all going to be playing the right instruments!” Dickerson says he looks forward to hell-raising adventures in Florida with friends and like-minded musicians. “I’ve had some wild times there,” he says. “It’s one of those places that lends itself to crazy times – and that’s all I’m gonna say about that.” Pressed for details, he relates a winter trip to do the Outlaw Country Cruise, when Greg Laxton took Dickerson to meet Billy “The Kid” Emerson in Tarpon Springs. “Billy is the oldest living Sun Recording artist,” Dickerson says. “He’s 95 and still kicking! He was ornery as could be and refuses to play his old songs from the 1950s because he only performs gospel now. But he did sign my Sun 45s I brought along. That was amazing.” Equally exciting, Dickerson says, are the three European runs he’s done in the last two months, covering England, Spain, France, Italy and Germany. “It’s a whirlwind but I’m having a blast,” Dickerson says. “I always said, when it’s not fun anymore, I’ll stop doing it … and I’m still having fun.” music@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

10 p.m. Friday, Aug. 2, at Henao Contemporary Center, $15

GG Cat Funky covers of video game themes are promised at this show, and it’s free so what do you have to lose? 9 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3, at the Nook on Robinson, free

Helena Adventurous young vocal quintet lands at Timucua with a promised bill of Americana goodness. 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 4, at Timucua Art Foundation, donations encouraged

The Red Pears Ugly Orange brings this superlative, swaggering West Coast indie-garage outfit to Will’s. 8 p.m. Monday, Aug. 5, at Will’s Pub, $10

The Volts The Volts continue their free late-night Indies residency with one Layla Brisbois sitting in! 10 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 6, at Lil Indies, free

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BY B AO L E - H U U PEELANDER-YELLOW | PHOTO BY JEN CRAY

Tragically, the Orlando music

community just lost one of its own in Bobby Clock of the Soda Pops. I didn’t know him well, but from my personal experience with him both on and off stage, he was a kind soul and an infinitely colorful character. And I’m glad my last encounter with him back in March at Iron Cow entailed not just seeing him play but sharing a drink with him. R.I.P., Bobby. This week, an obscure Asian rock showcase yields revelation and insanity.

YELLOW NITE FEVER TOUR WITH PEELANDER-YELLOW, LIL INDIES, JULY 21

The Asian sense of duty is so real it’s famous. So, as a card-carrying member, a trifecta involving (1) something called the Yellow Nite Fever Tour featuring (2) Japanese artists with (3) Peelander-Yellow as the headliner pretty much obligates me. But read on and you’ll see this tour – brought to Orlando by OYG Presents – is an imperative for anyone into interesting music and experience. When you’ve got one of the founding members of comic-book-sprung-to-life band Peelander-Z in the mix, anything is possible and none of it will be boring. And the Yellow Nite Fever Tour is a fling out to the fringes of live performance. Opening the showcase was Musuki Aruvavo Lee. He played both acoustic and electric guitar, and did so in intriguing ways from freak-folk picking to noisy rock heroics. What he is most, however, is a left-field master of voice. In melodically traditional passages, his singing was

Like a full-throttle Pied Piper, PeelanderYellow led the audience all around the room, out the door, onto a parked van and into the bathroom kaleidoscopic and arresting. But in his moments of post-linguistic vocalization, he was otherworldly. Across mews, trills and caterwauls, his startling live brilliance was a fantastical vocal menagerie unto itself. And his performance was an avantgarde wonder of as much beauty as oddity. Next up was one-man band Fabulous Johnk Wray, who oozed slick pulp with fringed leather jacket, Wayfarer shades and tall pompadour wig – all black. Attach every single one of his limbs to either a guitar or a drum kit and you’ve got the picture of one cool motherfucker. Once he started, all of it was validated. With hot vintage licks, this Rising Sun greaser wielded his guitar like a swashbuckling rifle across a set of cranked blues and early rock & roll fire. And, naturally, there was a Link Wray cover. If you’ve been to a Peelander-Z concert – which you absolutely must do at least once in your life – then you know these guys are next-level showmen. But even if you expect a solo show by bandleader Peelander-Yellow to be something extraordinary, it’s still astonishing to see

in person what he’s capable of. Similar to what his band is famous for, Peelander-Yellow does the kind of all-out live performance that doesn’t just remove the fourth wall but demolishes any concept of walls whatsoever. Instead of a stage, his platform was the entire room and beyond. And instead of a band, he had the whole crowd following him. Like a full-throttle Pied Piper, Peelander-Yellow led the audience all around the room, onto the bar, out the door, out into the middle of Mills Avenue, onto a parked van and into the bathroom. The insanity worked its way into every situation and corner of the room. There were no casual onlookers here. Everyone was involved, no one was spared. Pretty sure a few dates were ruined. Even I couldn’t avoid being sucked into the infectious whirlwind, and I’m better for it. I’ve only seen this kind of live phenomenon at shows by the legendary interactive likes of Terror Pigeon, Monotonix and Michael Parallax. But that’s the live genius of PeelanderYellow. He was the one performing but we became part of the show. Wait, I haven’t even mentioned the music yet, have I? That’s because there wasn’t much of it played amid the breathless procession of crowd antics. And it didn’t even matter. The event may not have been much of a concert per se, but it was maximum show. And though it didn’t include much playing, it was total orchestration. Who needs a band when you can work a room like a madcap, yellow-dressed puppet master? baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com

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Thursday, Aug. 1

An Evening With Sick ’n’ Wrong FILM

The Sick ’n’ Wrong Film Festival – returning to CityArts Aug. 9-11 this year – is devoted to films that make you squirm. Whether it’s features, shorts, music videos, documentaries or animation, as long as it makes the audience cringe, it’s fair game. As a special preview, festival founder Stephen Stull stops into the Nook this week to present a selection of shorts from previous years. Expect awkward social situations, gallons of fake blood, and maybe even a misplaced farm animal in the ensuing program. If it floats your boat, tickets for this year’s festival are still available. – Thaddeus McCollum 7 p.m. | The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St. | sick-n-wrong.com | free

Saturday-Sunday, Aug. 3-4

Marc With a C: The Obscurity Show MUSIC

PHOTO BY EMMIT DOBBYN

Local outsider musician Marc With a C – think of him as a hybrid of They Might Be Giants and Weird Al Yankovic’s more outre album cuts – is an Orlando treasure, a fearless experimenter, a sharp songwriter and a conceptual tinkerer who’s been moving effortlessly between genres and subcultures for nearly 20 years. This weekend’s two-night stand at the Downtown Arts Collective gallery space is a hybrid of all these different facets of the man. Intended as an “experiment in extremely minimal DIY theater,” Marc will be looking back, forward and around his periphery with songs and stories that look at human connection in the modern world through his own lived experience. Two nights, two different acts. Limited seating, so if you want the whole story, grab your tickets early. – Matthew Moyer 7 p.m. | Downtown Arts Collective, 643 Lexington Ave. | 407-454-7926 | downtownartscollective.com | $10-$12

Saturday, Aug. 3

Noncompliant MUSIC

OUR PICKS FOR THE BEST EVENTS THIS WEEK

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We first stumbled on to the work of Indianapolis techno producer/DJ Noncompliant (fka Shiva) via her stellar remix of Cute Heels’ synthy “State of Mind” for the flawless Dark Entries label, and we’ve been in her thrall ever since. Fresh off stints at this year’s crucial techno gathering Movement Detroit and Germany’s Whole United Queer Festival, she’s landing in the City Beautiful to headline the La Femme en Noir club night at Henao. Noncompliant’s sets are take-no-prisoners exercises in relentless, innovative groove, honed over two decades of filling big-name dancefloors (watch her unbelievable Vague Output set from 2017 on YouTube, pretty please) and releasing a steady stream of original tracks and remixes. She’s one of the more vital voices in modern techno. Saturday night’s all right. – MM 11 p.m. | Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive | 407-272-0317 | henaocenter.com | $10-$15

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Sunday, Aug. 4

Planet Booty MUSIC

They may wear their love of sex and comedy proudly on their shoulders, but Planet Booty loves getting a crowd moving and sweating even more. The trio from Oakland, California, have a slew of ridiculously oversexed YouTube music videos for tracks like “Das Booty” and “Junk in the Trunk” that show a love for everything from 2 Live Crew sex raps, Miami bass, New Orleans bounce and Peter Frampton-esque talkboxes to straight-up disco. It’s a combination that’s nigh-irresistible on the dancefloor, but paired with openers like the raunch queen Luscious Lisa and rappers Bleubird and Rickolus’ Hurricane Party project, this becomes one of the hottest parties of the summer. Get naked. – TM with Hurricane Party, Luscious Lisa | Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Orange Ave. | willspub.org | $12-$15

Monday, Aug. 5

Katya

THEATER

Yekaterina Petrovna Zamolodchikova, known to her legion of fans as simply Katya, rose to fame as RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 7’s Miss Congeniality and then a finalist on Drag Race All-Stars Season 2. She took that torch and ran with it, teaming up with the fabulous Trixie Mattel for the web series UNHhhh and then Viceland’s The Trixie & Katya Show. Now the drag legend is bringing her solo “Help Me I’m Dying” comedy tour to the City Beautiful. “Help Me I’m Dying” promises to be a “multi-media, multi-character, multifaceted live stage show.” Katya even makes ticket levels comical, offering the “Trish’s Dumpster Special” for lower price levels, the “Suspicious Rich Person” for VIP meet and greets, and more. Comedy, drag and theater fans alike can expect to be wowed by the self-proclaimed “Sweatiest Woman in Show Business,” as she shows off her incredibly funny personas and characters including “Trish,” the fan-favorite dumpster-dwelling hairdresser. – Annabelle Sikes 8 p.m. | The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave. | 407-228-1220 | plazaliveorlando.org | $25-$150

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THEWEEK

Submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com at least 12 days before print to have them included

WEDNESDAY, JULY 31-TUESDAY, AUG. 6 COMPILED BY THADDEUS MCCOLLUM

MUSIC WEDNESDAY, JULY 31 Alceu Valença 8 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $35-$65; 407-934-2583. Bengali 600, Frankmatik 8 pm; Iron Cow, 2438 E. Robinson St.; $5. Bill Allred Presents: 50 Years of Trombone With the Dave Sheffield Trio 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Kill Paris 10 pm; The Patio, 14 W. Washington St.; $10; 407-354-1577. Layla Brisbois Band, Raising Cadence, Shay Butter Band, Manakins 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $8-$10. Nø Handøuts, CanVas, Paradise Tree, Deadhead Rabbit 7 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $5; 407-270-9104.

CHEW Thursday at Will’s Pub

THURSDAY, AUG. 1 August Burns Red, Silverstein, Silent Planet 5:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $27.50; 407-934-2583. Auras, Red Handed Denial, D/V/S/ ONS, Years Off My Life 7 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $13-$15. CHEW, Dearest, Jupiter Groove 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $7. Zach Deputy 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$17; 407-246-1419.

FRIDAY, AUG. 2 The Cover Up 8 pm; McGinnty’s Irish Pub, 5406 Hansel Ave.; free. Darell 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $20-$60; 407-504-7699. Deke Dickerson, the Woolly Bushmen, Little Sheba & the Shamans 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12. DJ Madd 10 pm; Iron Cow, 2438 E. Robinson St.; $20. DJ Seinfeld 10 pm; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $15-$20. 40

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JULY 31-AUG. 6, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

Electro Fridays: DJ Lavidicus & DJ Stefan first Friday of every month, 11 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $5.

ChocQuibTown 10 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $60-$80; 407-228-1220.

Getting Away With It: The Sixties Edition 9 pm; Remix, 1217 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-801-5300.

Cocodrills 10 pm; Elixir, 9 W. Washington St.; $10.

Jeffrey Sutorius 9 pm; Celine Orlando, 22 S. Magnolia Ave.; $20. Justin Symbol, DJ Swamp, Angel Nightmare, Requiem Rust, Buddy Danger 9:30 pm; Stonewall Bar Orlando, 741 W. Church St.; $8; 407-373-0888. The Petty Hearts (Tom Petty Tribute) 7:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $9.75-$49.75; 407-934-2583. Subliminal Doubt 8 pm; The Tin Roof, 8371 International Drive; $7. Sunstrife, Backstabber, Photo Fire, Captain Colossal 7 pm; Castle Church Brewing, 6820 Hoffner Ave.; free. Velvet Sessions: Bret Michaels 6:30 pm; Hard Rock Hotel, Universal Orlando; $69.23; 407-503-7625.

SATURDAY, AUG. 3 Blank281 – Tribute to Blink-182 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12; 407-898-5070.

GG Cat 9 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free. I Prevail, Issues, Justin Stone 6:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $33-$125; 407-934-2583. Joyryde 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $15; 407-504-7699. Marc With a C: The Obscurity Show 7 pm; Downtown Arts Collective, 643 Lexington Ave.; $10; 407-454-7926. Melrose in the Mix: Meka Nism 3:30 pm; The Dorothy Lumley Melrose Center, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323. Noncompliant 11 pm; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $15. Ozone Hip-Hop Fest: Wrekonize 3 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $14-$20. Robbie Rivera 10 pm; Celine Orlando, 22 S. Magnolia Ave.; contact for price.


Post Apocalypse Party Velvet Sessions: Bret Michaels Former Poison frontman Bret Michaels’ career has lasted longer than anyone expected for a guy who wrote his biggest hit, “Every Rose Has Its Thorn,” about a failed relationship with a girl who was 16 when they first started dating. His late second act as a reality television star boosted his reputation enough to give his music career a shot in the arm, and this week he’s playing songs new and old in the Hard Rock Hotel for their lauded Velvet Sessions series. Every night has its dawn? 6:30 p.m. Friday; Hard Rock Hotel, 5800 Universal Blvd.; $69.23; velvetsessions.tix.com.

The Chainsmokers

Post Apocalypse Party Get a head start on surviving the inevitable apocalypse this weekend at the Nook’s Post Apocalypse Party. The Nook gets turned into “the Nuke,” while partygoers are encouraged to come up with their own takes on apocalyptic couture. If you’re stuck for ideas, just dress like a rich person: They’re the only ones who are going to get through the impending environmental collapse – unless we do something about it. (Wink, wink.) 9 p.m. Friday; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free; facebook.com/thenookon robinson.

DJ Seinfeld Armand Jakobsson, better known as DJ Seinfeld, has been making waves in the electronic scene with tracks that recall classic tech-house sensibilities and heart-on-sleeve emotion. His first hit, “U,” featured a melancholy beat interspersed with samples of Bob Geldof talking emotionally about his divorce. This weekend, he forgoes bigger clubs to play at the Henao Center on his DJ-Kicks tour, celebrating his release for the internationally recognized series of mix albums. Electronic fans should definitely not sleep on this one. 10 p.m. Friday; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $15-$20; henaocenter.com.

Summer Tiki Luau The Ravenous Pig bids farewell to summer (at least the summer vacation part of it) with a tropical luau this weekend. Enjoy island dishes from a special menu that includes tuna poke, Spam sliders and banana leaf smoked pork. Quench your thirst with a special tiki menu that includes Planter’s Punch, Kamapua’s Punch and a Tiki-La. Supplies of all menu items are limited, so plan accordingly. 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday; The Ravenous Pig, 565 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; various menu prices; theravenouspig.com.

Oct. 26 at Amway Center Jonas Brothers, Aug. 9 at Amway Center

Alan Jackson, Sept. 20 at Amway Center

Alison Krauss, Oct. 19 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Thievery Corporation, Nov. 9 at House of Blues

Slash, Aug. 13 at Hard Rock Live

The Growlers, Sept. 21 at the Plaza Live

The Chainsmokers, Oct. 26 at Amway Center

Elvis Costello, Nov. 11 at the Hard Rock Live

UB40, Aug. 18 at House of Blues

Aesthetic Perfection, Sept. 21 at Will’s Pub

Backstreet Boys, Aug. 24 at Amway Center

Deep Purple, Sept. 26 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Alejandro Sanz, Sept. 5 at the Dr. Phillips Center Sonata Arctica, Sept. 7 at the Abbey Angels & Airwaves, Sept. 10 at House of Blues Jenny Lewis, Sept. 11 at the Beacham

Orville Peck, Sept. 26 at the Social Dane Cook, Sept. 27 at the Dr. Phillips Center Built to Spill, Oct. 10 at the Social Nahko & Medicine for the People, Oct. 10 at House of Blues

The Pietasters, Sept. 14 at Will’s Pub

Wayne Brady, Oct. 12 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Pup, Sept. 19 at the Beacham

Amigo the Devil, Oct. 16 at the Abbey

Juan Luis Guerra, Oct. 27 at Amway Center Foreign Dissent 6, Oct. 28 at Will’s Pub The Black Keys, Nov. 6 at Amway Center Stiff Little Fingers, Nov. 6 at the Plaza Live AJR, Nov. 8 at Hard Rock Live Miranda Lambert, Nov. 9 at Amway Center Sammy Hagar, Nov. 9 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Titus Andronicus, Nov. 13 at Will’s Pub Quintron & Miss Pussycat, Nov. 15 at Will’s Pub Jonathan Van Ness, Nov. 23 at the Dr. Phillips Center Sara Bareilles, Nov. 24 at Amway Center Ariana Grande, Nov. 25 at Amway Center Nick Offerman, Dec. 5 at Hard Rock Live John Prine, Dec. 6 at Bob Carr Theater Nile, Dec. 11 at Soundbar

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PHOTO BY MARK THOR

TUESDAY, AUG. 6

U.S. Open Cup Semifinal: Orlando City SC vs. Atlanta United FC S P O R TS

Since they’ve graduated to the MLS, Orlando City SC hasn’t had a playoff berth, they haven’t had a winning season, and they’ve had three different head coaches pacing the sideline. But Orlando’s hometown soccer team might have a chance to turn the franchise around when they host Atlanta United in the semifinal of the U.S. Open Cup – a national knock-out soccer tournament featuring both professional and semiprofessional soccer teams. This year, Orlando City is in the final four of 84 teams. Besides their great uniforms, Orlando City hasn’t made much noise in U.S. soccer since their adoption into the MLS. This semifinal against Atlanta, the defending MLS Cup champion, would do wonders to put Orlando on the soccer map. Going to an Orlando City game is also a huge thing to cross off your Orlando Bucket List. No other sport has the same live energy as soccer, and there may be no better excuse in the world to down a few beers and scream your head off with strangers on a weekday. – Christian Casale 7:30 p.m. | Exploria Stadium, 655 W. Church St. | 407-480-4702 | orlandocitysc.com | $15-$50

SUNDAY, AUG. 4 Blink 180True 7 pm; The Tin Roof, 8371 International Drive; $5; 407-270-7926. Helena 7 pm; Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; $10-$20 suggested donation; 321-234-3985.

The Grinns, the Red Pears, Tidepools 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10. Street Rat, Bacon Grease, Jonas Van Den Bossche, RIS 9 pm; The Manes Emporium of Doubt, 1318 E. Harding St.; $5.

THEATER AUG. 1-5:

John Summit 4 pm; Celine Orlando, 22 S. Magnolia Ave.; free. Marc With a C: The Obscurity Show 7 pm; Downtown Arts Collective, 643 Lexington Ave.; $10; 407-454-7926. Planet Booty, Luscious Lisa, Hurricane Party 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$15.

MONDAY, AUG. 5 The Bass Emporium: Crimson Child 11 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $5-$10. 42

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The Full Monty Six unemployed steelworkers in Buffalo, New York, set out to make some quick cash showing off their “real man” bodies by becoming a team of male strippers. 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $20$40; 407-704-6261; abbeyorlando.com. AUG. 1-4:

The Producers Mel Brooks’ musical based on a Mel Brooks film about Broadway musicals. 7:30 pm; Athens Theatre, 124 N. Florida Ave., DeLand; $25-$29; 386-736-1500; athensdeland.com.


Twelve Angry Jurors Tense thriller about a jury deliberating a murder case, staged in the old Orange County courtroom. 7:30 pm; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; $20-$40; 407-937-1800; cfcarts.com. AUG. 2-3:

The Bodyguard: The Musical Musical adaptation of the hit film starring Whitney Houston and Kevin Costner. 7 pm; The Container Theatre, 6250 Edgewater Drive; contact for price; containertheatre.com. AUG. 2-4:

Daphne and Me: A Boy Meets Girl Story A one-(wo)man show about who you love, who you are and who you long to be. 8:30 pm; Breakthrough Theatre of Winter Park, 419A W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; $12; 407-920-4034; breakthroughtheatre.com. Legally Blonde: The Musical Musical adaptation of the hit 2001 film, performed by musical theater students. 7 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; SOLD OUT; drphillipscenter.org. AUG. 5:

Katya Zamolodchikova One-woman show from the RuPaul’s Drag Race fan-favorite. 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $25-$150; 407228-1220; plazaliveorlando.com.

COMEDY Big Tim & Friends Comedy Showcase Wednesday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $10-$40; 407480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Bull & Bush Open Mic Weekly stand-up comedy open mic. Wednesday, 8:30-10:30 pm; Bull and Bush, 2408 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-7546. D.L. Hughley Friday, 8 & 10:30 pm, Saturday, 7 & 9:45 pm, Sunday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $35; 407480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Free Daps Freestyle hip-hop meets improv comedy. Thursday, 9:30 pm; SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $10; 407-648-0001; sak.com. The Nook Stand-up Comedy Showcase Wednesday, 8:30 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free; facebook.com/thenookonrobinson. Shit Sandwich Probably the best comedy showcase in town. Show up early to grab a good seat. Saturday, 9 pm; Bull and Bush, 2408 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-7546.

THEWEEK The Show’s Upstairs Intimate biweekly comedy showcase. Tuesday, 9 pm; Magnolia, 13 S. Magnolia Ave.; free. Stand-up for Suicide Prevention A dark humor comedy fundraiser. Friday, 6:30 pm; Orlando Repertory Theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; $30-$50; 407-896-7365; orlandorep.com. Tim Allen Friday, 8 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $49.50-$110.50; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org.

DANCE Cherry Bomb Burlesque A powerhouse all-female cast bringing you a satirical, sophisticated Vegas-style burlesque show. Friday, 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $15; 407-901-5375; cherrybombburlesque.com. First Friday Salsa Dance to salsa, bachata, merengue and more after a complimentary dance lesson. Friday, 7:45 pm; The Balcony, 189 S. Orange Ave.; $10; 407-730-9547; facebook.com/salsadowntownorlando. The Ladies of the Peek-A-Boo Lounge: Solid Gold Burlesque showcase hosted by Blue Star. Friday, 7 pm; The Venue, 511 Virginia Drive; $15-$25; 407-412-6895; orlandoweeklytickets.com.

ART OPENINGS/EVENTS

BASE Orlando: Under the Big Top Body Art Show See professional body paint artists transform their models into living, breathing canvases before your eyes. Thursday, 7-11 pm; The Orange Studio, 1121 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$25; baseorlando.com. Endless Summer Group show exploring the summer season and all that it entails. Opens Saturday, 4-7 pm, through Sept. 1; Arts on Douglas, 123 Douglas St., New Smyrna Beach; free; 386-428-1133. Fantasia: A Dark and Elegant Art Show Featuring artwork from local artist Elizabeth Eleanor Davis of Black Abbey Studios. Opens Thursday, 6-8 pm, through Aug. 31; The Center, 946 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407228-8272; thecenterorlando.org. Sore Loser: Works by Ashley Taylor Artist Ashley Taylor addresses the swamps of social environments with a series of eyepopping, jaw-dropping, and chin-tapping images put to graphic print. Opens Friday, 6:30 pm; Mills Gallery, 1650 N. Mills Ave.; free; 855-336-3653; thegalleryatmillspark.com. orlandoweekly.com

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THEWEEK MUSEUM GUIDE

Albin Polasek Museum & Sculpture Gardens Precious Pollinators, through Aug. 25; 633 Osceola Ave., Winter Park; $10; 407-647-6294; polasek.org. Art & History Museums – Maitland Pressed Editions: Experimental Contemporary Prints, through Sept. 8; Etched in Time, through Sept. 8. 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; $6; 407-539-2181; artandhistory.org. Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art Earth Into Art: The Flowering of American Art Pottery, through Sept. 27, 2020; Charles Hosmer Morse’s Arts and Crafts Study at Osceola Lodge, through Jan. 7, 2021; Iridescence – A Celebration, ongoing; 445 N. Park Ave., Winter Park; $6; 407-645-5311; morsemuseum.org. Cornell Fine Arts Museum Mexican Modernity: 20th-Century Paintings from the Zapanta Collection; Mediated Reality: Cityscapes by Photorealists; Shifting Perspectives: Art by the Students of the Art Time Outreach Program, through Sept. 8; Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu.

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Mennello Museum of American Art Immersion Into Compounded Time and the Paintings of Firelei Báez, through Sept. 1. 900 E. Princeton St.; $5; 407-246-4278; mennellomuseum.org. Orlando Museum of Art Louis Dewis: A Belgian Post-Impressionist, through Oct. 30; The Florida Prize in Contemporary Art, through Aug. 18. 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231; omart.org.

EVENTS AdVintage Fair & Flea Market Recurring market with vintage finds and food. Saturday, 9 am-2 pm; Elks Lodge No. 1079, 12 N. Primrose Drive; free; 407-678-0943. Baldwin Park First Friday Festival & Art Stroll More than 60 local artisans display their art while guests shop and stroll through the heart of downtown Baldwin Park. Friday, 5:30-9:30 pm; Baldwin Park, New Broad Street and Jake Street; free; 407-443-6110; baldwinparkevents.com. Coffee With Pat Greene Coffee and conversation with the local arts guy. Saturday, 9 am; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; various menu prices; facebook.com/thenookonrobinson. Eatonville Crafts & Culture Market Enjoy local artists, unique vendors, food trucks and creative workshops. Sunday, 1 pm; Hungerford Prep Gym, 100 E. Kennedy Blvd., Eatonville; free; 407-622-8200; eatonvillechf.com.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JULY 31-AUG. 6, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

Enchanted Nature Walkabout Monthly educational walk to learn about trees, shrubs, fairies, gnomes, flowers and more. Sunday, 9 am; Mead Garden, 1300 S. Denning Drive, Winter Park; $10; 407-623-3342. Flavors of Florida Enjoy a slice of summer flavors with a selection of perfectly paired Florida dishes, cocktails and brews at Disney Springs restaurants. Through Sept. 2, 11 am-11 pm; Disney Springs, 1486 E. Buena Vista Drive, Lake Buena Vista; various menu prices; disneysprings.com. Florida Brewers Conference Provides brewery personnel and industry trades with a high quality educational experience, plus an opportunity to network and share delicious Florida craft beers during the trade show. Monday, 9 am, Tuesday, 8 am; Renaissance Orlando at SeaWorld, 6677 Sea Harbor Drive; $65-$285; 407-351-5555; floridabrewersguild.org. Jake’s Beer Dinner This special event celebrates a wide range of craft brews from Walking Tree Brewery, signature entrees and desserts, all created especially for you. Friday, 6:30 pm; Jake’s American Bar, Royal Pacific Resort at Universal Orlando; $58.58; 407-503-3000; jakesbeerdinner.tix.com. Jamaican Independence Day Jamaican food, drink specials and live entertainment all day. Sunday, 4 pm; Bob Marley - A

Tribute to Freedom, CityWalk at Universal Orlando; free-$7; 407-224-3663. Mutants, Freaks & Geeks Party Enjoy fun tunes, themed movies playing on the screens and cosplay cage-dancing performances. Dress in cosplay and receive a free shot or soda. Saturday, 5 pm; Vault 5421, 5421 International Drive; free; godmonsters.com. National IPA Day Enjoy $5 pints of IPAs all day long. Saturday, 11:30 am-11 pm; À La Cart, 609 Irvington Ave.; $5; 407776-4693; alacartorlando.com. Post Apocalypse Party The Nook turns into the Nuke for an end-of-days after party. Friday, 9 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free; facebook.com/thenookonrobinson. Pride in Business Awards Gala With awards presented by distinguished community leaders and business professionals during an incredible full course dinner, the gala also includes a silent auction, a special VIP pre-dinner reception and an epic after party in CityWalk. Saturday, 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $175; 407-351-5483; hardrock.com/orlando. Summer Tiki Luau Enjoy island dishes and tiki cocktails at RavPig’s annual luau. Saturday, 11:30 am-3 pm; The Ravenous Pig, 565 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; various menu prices; 407-628-2333; theravenouspig.com.


THEWEEK

DJ Seinfeld Friday at Henao Contemporary Center

CIVICS Hope Now Foundation Back 2 School Bash Volunteer to help disadvantaged kids receive dental care, haircuts, books, backpacks, school supplies and more. Saturday, 10 am-2 pm; Fashion Square Mall, 3201 E. Colonial Drive; free; 407-896-1131; hnow.org. State of the Milk Hear updates on everything happening in the Milk District and what plans are in store for the future. Wednesday, 6 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $10; 407-228-1220; themilkdistrict.org.

LITERARY Diverse Word Spoken word open mic. Tuesday, 8 pm; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free; 407-362-1864; dandelioncommunitea.com. Indie BookFest Orlando A weekend focused on both writing workshops and panels and reader interaction. Thursday-Sunday; Caribe Royale Resort Suites Hotel, 8101 World Center Drive; $50-$75; indiebookconvention.com. Loose Lips Local writers read works inspired by current events. Tuesday, 8 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org. Wednesday Open Words Poetry and spoken word open mic.

Wednesday, 8:30 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364; austinscoffee.com.

FAMILY Back to School Music Fest A free community event that featuring free resources, hair braiding, backpacks, school supplies and more to families in the community. Sunday, noon-5 pm; Barnett Park, 4801 W. Colonial Drive; free; back2schoolmusicfest.com.

SPORTS MLS All-Stars vs. Atletico Madrid Soccer. Wednesday, 7:30 pm; Exploria Stadium, 655 W. Church St.; $35-$305; 855-675-2489; orlandocitysc.com. Orlando City SC vs. FC Dallas MLS soccer. Saturday, 7:30 pm; Exploria Stadium, 655 W. Church St.; $20-$241; 855-675-2489; orlandocitysc.com. The Orlando Shuffle Free shuffleboard event. All ages and new players welcome. Saturday, 7-9 pm; Beardall Senior Center, 800 S. Delaney Ave.; free; 407-246-4440. US Open Cup Semifinals: Orlando City SC vs. Atlanta United FC Soccer. Tuesday, 7:30 pm; Exploria Stadium, 655 W. Church St.; $15-$60; 855-6752489; orlandocitysc.com. ■ orlandoweekly.com

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B Y DA N S AVAG E

I’m a woman who married young (21) and I’ve been with my husband for seven years. Within the last year, I’ve realized that my falling libido probably comes from the fact that I am not turned on by our boring vanilla sex routine. I get so little fulfillment that I’d rather not even do it. I’ve tried talking to him, but he says he prefers sex without foreplay or a lot of “complicated stuff.” I had some great casual sex before we met but it turns out I’m into BDSM, which I found out when I recently had a short affair. I’ve kept the secret and guilt to myself, but I have told my husband I’m into BDSM. He wants to make me happy but I can tell he isn’t turned on doing these things. He denies it, because he’s just happy to have sex at all, but a butt plug and a slap on the ass does not a Dom make. I’ve tried to ask him if we can open up our relationship so that I can live out my fantasies. I would like to go to a BDSM club and he isn’t interested at all. He was very upset and said he’s afraid of losing me if we go. He also felt like I was giving him an ultimatum. But I told him he was allowed to say no, and that I wouldn’t leave if he did. When I was younger I thought there was something wrong with me because everyone else wanted monogamy but it never seemed important to me. I’m not a jealous person and I wouldn’t mind if he had sex with other people. In fact, the thought of it turns me on but he says he isn’t interested. I know he loves me and I love him. At this point my only solution has been to suppress this urge to have BDSM sex, but I don’t know if it is a good long-term solution. What should I do? Keep my fantasies to myself? Have another affair or ask him to have an open relationship again? We have a 3-year-old daughter so I have to make our relationship work. Want The Hard Truth Two quick points before I bring out the big guns: First, marrying young is a bad idea. The younger two people are when they marry, according to a veritable mountain of research, the likelier they are to divorce. It makes intuitive sense: the rational part of the brain – the prefrontal cortex – isn’t fully formed until age 25. We shouldn’t be picking out wallpaper in our early 20s, WTHT, much less life partners. And second, basic sexual compatibility (BSC) is crucial to the success of sexually exclusive relationships and it’s a bad idea to scramble your DNA together with someone else’s before BSC has been established. And with that out of the way … “WTHT might be surprised to hear she is just a normal woman being a normal woman,” says Wednesday Martin, New York Times best-selling author, cultural critic and researcher. “Like a normal human woman, she is bored after seven years of monogamous sex that isn’t even her kind of sex.” You mentioned that you used to feel like 46

there was something wrong with you, WTHT, but just in case you have any lingering “what’s wrong with me!” feelings, you’re gonna want to read Untrue: Why Nearly Everything We Believe About Women, Lust, and Infidelity Is Wrong and How the New Science Can Set Us Free, Martin’s most recent book. “We know from recent longitudinal studies from Germany, Finland, the US, the U.K. and Canada that among women only, relationship duration and living together predict lower desire/boredom,” Martin says. “In fact, the Finnish study found that even when they had more/better orgasms, women in monogamous relationships of several years’ duration reported low desire.” A straight man’s desire for his long-term, live-in female partner also decreases over time, but nowhere near as drastically as a woman’s does. “Contrary to what we’ve been taught, monogamy kills it for women, in the aggregate, more than it does for men,” Martin says. So that’s what we know now – that’s what the research shows – but very few people in the sex-advice-industrial complex have wrestled with the implications. Most advice professionals, from the lowliest advice columnist to the most exalted daytime TV star, have chosen to ignore the research. They continue to tell unhappily sexless couples that they’re either doing something wrong or that they’re broken. If he would just do his fair share of the housework or if she would just have a glass of wine – or pop a “female Viagra,” if big pharma could come up with one that works, which (spoiler alert) they never will – they’d be fucking like they did the night they met. Not only isn’t this advice helpful, it’s harmful: He does more housework, she drinks more wine, nothing changes, and the couple feels like there’s something wrong with them. In reality, nothing’s wrong. It’s not about a more equitable division of housework (always good!) or drinking more wine (also but not always good!), it’s about the desire for novelty, variety and adventure. Zooming in for a second: The big issue is here is that you got bored. No foreplay? Nothing complicated? Even if you were 100 percent vanilla, that shit would get tedious after a few years. Or minutes. After risking your marriage to treat your boredom (the affair), you asked your husband to shake things up – to fight sexual boredom with you – by incorporating BDSM into your sex life, by going to BDSM clubs and by at least considering the possibility of opening up your marriage. (Ethically this time.) And while he’s made a small effort where BDSM is concerned (butt plugs, slapping your ass), your husband ruled out BDSM clubs and openness. But since he’s only going through the BDSM motions because he’s just “happy to have sex at all,” what he is doing isn’t working for you. And it’s probably not working for him, either. At bottom, WTHT, what you’re say-

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JULY 31-AUG. 6, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

“HARD TRUTHS”

ing – to me, if not to your husband – is that you’re gonna need to do BDSM with other people if your husband doesn’t get better at it, which is something he might learn to do at the BDSM club he refuses to go to. Which means he has it backwards: He risks losing you if he doesn’t go. “She once put her marriage at risk to get BDSM,” Martin says. “WTHT’s husband doesn’t need to know about the affair, in my view, and he doesn’t need to become the world’s best Dom. But he owes her acknowledgment that her desires matter. Get to that baseline, and other things tend to fall into place more easily. The discussion about monogamy becomes easier. The discussion about needing to be topped becomes easier. Working out a solution becomes easier.” I’m not suggesting that an open relationship is the solution for every bored couple, and neither is Martin. There are lots of legitimate reasons why two people might prefer for their relationship to be or remain monogamous. But two people who commit to being sexually exclusive for the rest of their lives and at the same time want to maintain a satisfying sex life – and, open or closed, couples with satisfying sex lives are likelier to stay together – need to recognize that boredom as their mortal enemy. And while the decision should be mutual, and while ultimatum is a scary word, in some instances, bringing in reinforcements isn’t just the best way to fight boredom, it’s the only way to save the relationship. Now a couple of weeks back, I told a frustrated husband that his cuckolding kink may have to be put on the back burner while his children are young. The same goes for you, WTHT. But at the very least your husband has to recognize the validity of your desires and put more effort into pleasing you. “In straight culture, people tend to define sex as intercourse, because intercourse is what gets men off, and we still privilege male pleasure,” Martin says. “But seen through a lens of parity, what WTHT wants is not ‘foreplay’ or ‘complicated stuff.’ It’s sex, and the sooner her husband lets go of this intercourse = sex fetish of his, and acknowledges that her pleasure matters as much as his does, the sooner he’ll be a real partner to his wife.” For the record: a relationship doesn’t have to be open to be exciting, BDSM doesn’t have to be crazy complicated to be satisfying, and date night doesn’t have to mean dinner and a movie. Date night can mean a visit to a BDSM club where your husband can learn, through observation alone (at least for now), how to be a better Dom. On the Lovecast – All Hail Satan! with Satanic Temple founder Lucien Greaves: savagelovecast.com. mail@savagelove.net ITMFA.org

Meet Everett (A433388)! This sweet boy is 6 years old, neutered and vaccinated and microchipped, and ready to go home to his fur-ever home the same day he is adopted! Everett came into our shelter as a stray earlier this month and has become another shelter favorite. He does very well with other dogs and is a gentle soul. He enjoys playing outside, and seeks attention from anyone who will toss the ball around with him and give him treats. Come into the shelter today and meet Everett along with his other pals available for adoption! For the month of August, we are featuring our Paw’ffice promotion. Adoption fees for dogs are $20 and cats are $10. Fees include sterilization, vaccinations and a microchip. Orange County Animal Services is located at 2769 Conroy Road in Orlando, near the Mall at Millenia. The shelter is open 10 a.m. through 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 1 p.m. through 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information, please call 407-836-3111 or visit ocnetpets.com.


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Real Estate ROOMS FOR RENT

$115-$150 per wk. OBT/23rd St. Call 347-419-6990

Legal, Public Notices AUCTION Extra Space Storage – Store 8841 9847 Curry Ford Road, Orlando, FL 32825 Extra Space Storage will hold a Public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location Indicated: 9847 Curry Ford Road, Orlando, FL 32825 (407) 4959612, July 16th, 2019 @ 11:00 AM: Maria Legarda – Garage items, Maria Legarda – Furniture, Electronics, Boxes, Ashley Salkey – Furniture. 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. AUCTION, Extra Space Storage – Store 8138, 100 Lee Rd. Orlando FL. 32810. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1001 Lee Rd. Orlando, FL. 32810 (407) 489-3742, August 21st, 2019 @ 4:00 PM: Ashlee Allison - Couch, Queen size bed, bed frame Watreka LiGon - Household Goods Norman Dunson - household item shoes Nekethia Ricks - Clothes, pictures, bedroom set, nighstand, shoes, pillows, sheets, ect. Peter Patrick - Seasonal items Derek Taylor - Household goods, misc art and musical instruments. Linnda Durre - Desk,Boxes, household goods. Joshua Houston - Two bikes and tote Kontisa Morris - couch, love seat, table, 2 chairs and some boxes Tiera Williams - Household Goods Czedra Graham Porter - couch, bed, toys Oni Duncan - household items Shonmethia Williams - bags of personal items and clothing Justin Keel – household Myriam Castor - household item Genesis Wright - House Hold Goods The auction will be listed and adver-

tised onwww.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. AUCTION: Extra Space Storage – Store 1336, 11971 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando, FL 32825. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 11971 Lake Underhill Road, Orlando, FL 32825 (407) 516-7913, August 20th, 2019 @ 4:00 PM: Jamarcus Lane- Clothes, Totes, Luggage, Baby tub, Air Mattress. Anita Richard-Couch, Mattress, Washer, Dryer, Doll House, Fridge. Anthony Carro- Chair, Mattress, Microwave, Boxes, Sports Equipment, Totes, Vacuum, Pictures, Suitcase, Microwave, Holiday Décor. Luis Santos- Chair, Table, Microwave, Refrigerator, Boxes, Files, Power Tools, Shelves, Restaurant Equipment, Cabinet. Tamicha VolcyBags, Boxes, Clothes, Totes, Luggage. Ekue Tometi- Dryer, Washer, Ladder, Totes, Bedframe. Beverly Rodriguez- Mattress, Boxes, Files, Totes, Luggage, Jewelry Chest, Lamp, Picture Frames. Teresa Hill- Chair, Couch, Dresser, Boxes, Mirror, Home Décor, Lamps, Photos, Fake Plants. Andrea SeymourCouch, Mattress, DVD/VCR, Microwave, Bags, Boxes, Clothes, Totes, Bedding, Home Décor, Luggage, Paintings, Glass table top. Jonna Koblasz- Chair, Couch, Dresser, Table, Bags, Boxes, Totes, Power Tools, Tool Box, Head board, Ladder, Concrete mix, Cabinet. Eleanor SeymourChair, Couch, Table, Boxes, Head Board. Jonas Deronvil- Mattress, TV, Bags, Clothes, Totes, Rug, Bedding. Kaylee Holbrook- Couch. 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.

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Legal, Public Notices Auction: Notice is hereby given that Compass Self Storage Intents to sell the property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property under the Florida Self Storage Facility Act (Section 83-80-83.809). The owner will sell at public auction for CASH through competitive bidding on August 14, 2019 at 12:30 PM or thereafter At Compass Self Storage 800 Greenway Prof. Ct. Orlando Fl. 32824 (407)438-9334, Auctioneer Jerry Mahaffey License #AB2314, AU1139 will be on site with 15% BP. Unit 1101 Patti Van Dam, 1313 Sixto Santiago, 1438 Julio Casiano, 1656 Julie Lyden, 2432 Jose Gil. Contents on the above includes House goods, furniture, boxes. 7/24/19, 7/31/19. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1751 Fortune Rd Kissimmee FL 34744, 407-414-5303 on 8/13/19 @ 10:00am Hiram Javier Torres tires, Harold Garcia household goods, TV, guitar, Andrew Candelaria clothing, luggage, pictures, Jessica Hernandez household items, tires, rims, Wilson German Rivera Melendez totes, bags, ladder, Reneir Reyes bicycles, power washer, scooter, gardening tools, exercise equipment, Arlicia Manson pictures, computer, TV, household items, Barbara Ralston TV, household goods, boxes, Arlene Diaz household items, Jessica Giron stroller, toys, bags, Frederick Smith fridge, pictures, shredder, totes, boxes, 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. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 540 Cypress Parkway Kissimmee, FL 34759, on 08/13/19 @ 12:30PM, 863-240-0879 Ramona Urena TV, bins, boxes, Maline Baez baby Furniture, William Lamont Washington household items, Nadine Jasmine Joseph household items, Doret Jackson Household items, Doret Jackson Restaurant equipment, Doret Jackson Restaurant equipment, Jeff St. Louis household items, Andrew James Henry Household items, Daniel Ortiz Household items, Liz Marry Laro Rosa household items, Ciera Turner Boxes, Steven Perez

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Household Goods, Tod Dornberger 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. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1305 Crawford Ave St. Cloud, FL 34769, 407-504-0833 on 8/13/19 @ 1:00pm Glenda lee Munger tools and household items, Mariah Rider household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 20, 2019 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 4:00 PM Extra Space Storage 831 N. Park Avenue Apopka, FL 32712 (407) 450-0345 Marisha T Smithhousehold goods. Ivanmarquise E Sankey-household goods. Anthony Gardner- Queen Bed, households goods. Austin Winchell- furniture, tools, household. Courtney Desmond- Smith- mattress, dressers, homegoods. Sederia Long-Couch, at screen tv, kitchen utensils and clothes. Jameka L Ezell- household goods. Travis A Barker- 4 totes. Ebonie Stanley- household goods bed, dresser, table, 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. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 2728 W 25 TH St, Sanford, FL 32771 407-708-3327, August 19, 2019 @ 4:00 PM Chekasha Richardson- table w/4 chairs, deep freezer, queen bed, 2 twin beds, boxes, washer, dryer, dresser. Dekeria Wright- beds, dresser, night stand and boxes of household

items. Tiffany Hawley-Queen Bed set, 2 dressers, 2 tall stands and boxes. Cheri Thompson-Furniture, electronics and household items. Shenita Daniels- household goods. Deshunda Shuler- Rack of clothes, Boxes house hold items, end tables. Sierra Locascio- Crib, kids bed, toys, rugs, table. Charles Justin Odom Jr- Furniture. Kendra Hickmon- 5 dressers, 1 King bedroom set, 1 Queen bedroom set and boxes. Gina Perez-Household Goods. Niya Hawkins-Beds and household items. Wendy AdamsHousehold. William Callahan- Artist equipment. Jean Demps-Leather Sofa, Table and chairs. Temara Bush-Furniture & personal items. Jil Brown-Clark-Household items and appliances. Erica PetersonTv, Couch, Bed and bags of household items. Quinshia LovettAppliances, furniture, electronics and household items. Anthony Spagnolo- Household furniture and items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 4390 Pleasant Hill Rd Kissimmee Fl 34746, 407-429-8867 on 8/13/19 @ 11:00am Angelica Perezhousehold goods, Dorna NobleFurniture. Clara Figueroa- household items. Bruce Friedman -1994/ Ford. Alan Bacchiocchi- Furniture, plastic bins. Samuel Galarza -household goods, personal items. Erick E Herrera- Reyes- Household goods, personal items. Lunzy Sistrat- 5 sets of furniture, living room set, china set, sofa, love seat, tables, lamps. Jonathan Rodriguez- Household goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 19th, 2019 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 4:00 PM at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 610 Rinehart Rd, Lake Mary, FL 32746 407-333-4355: Kristina Izza- king size mattress, boxes, crib, night stand, Statelawn

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JULY 31-AUG 6, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

Sales LLC- Tanning Beds, Captiva MVP Restaurant Partners PDQ- catering items-coolers- hot boxes sign tables, Ronald & Anny Schmid- household goods, Anthony Laboy- Tools, LaShant Hawkins- household goods, Adam Boci- household goods, Marse Sapp- household goods, Ann Marie Mccarthy - household goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando FL 32839, 407-488-9093 on 8/21/19 @ 12:00p.m. Ebony Holt household goods, Robert Gwynn household items Cathy Parrish Furniture & household items Angel Briceno office furniture & desks Rita Wooden Furniture & Boxes Jeremy Timot household items, Avionne Bobo Furniture & clothes Giovanni Ramirez studio apartment Gale Hubbard boxes Jacquita Rainey mattress, boxes & totes Maurice Shepherd tv, clothes, boxes & toy Sara Olson boxes Jasman Keen House Hold Goods Altrese Johnson household items & furniture Saprina Snell clothes, tv, mattress & dresser. 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: 1420 North Orange Blossom Trail Orlando FL, 32804 (407) 312-8736, on 08/21/19 @ 4:00PM: Rick Danilowski office supplies, boxes, receipts, Michael Parker Household goods, Noah Darmata Garage equipment and shelving, pool toys, Jasmine Griffin house hold items, Sophia Bele household items, Connie Streible Household goods, Jan Gee clothes, bags, Daniell Butler clothes The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes posses-

sion 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: 5592 LB McLeod Rd, Orlando, Florida 32811, 407-720-2832 on 8/21/19 @ 10:30am Kassie Burke Household Goods, Michael Thames Clothes, boxes, Artrina Bell files, Kevin Smythe Household Goods, Rafael De Sousa Vaz household items, Chris Mack Household itmes, James Howe Tools/Tires, Nyeisha Shakeri Price Housegoods, Erin Larson Boxes, Christmas Decorations, Julio Becker Motorcycle, Boxes, Washington Souza Household Goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 342 Woodland Lake Drive Orlando FL 32828, August 20, 2019 at 4pm. Helen Siani, household items The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 20, 2019 at 04:00 pm at Extra Space Storage 11071 University Blvd. Orlando FL, 32817 (321)320- 4055. The personal goods stored therein by the following: Andrew Frederick - bedroom furniture, tv and household items, Trisha Marie Ferrer - Bags, boxes, Mattresses, Richard Rivera – Boxes, mattress and household items, Jacqulyn Clark – furniture, Maximo Castro - Sofa-bed, boxes, file cabinet, chair, kitchenware, crib, Janet Woodham – boxes and totes, Peter Hayes - Furniture and household items, Lizbeth Vega Velez - Couch, Tarah Dawn Chambers - boxes and household items The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse

any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 4601 S. Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32839, 407-6309395 on 08/21/2019 @ 11am Joseline Constant- boxes; Mary Amanau- house hold items; Joseline Constant- boxes; Duguet Pierre- boxes and clothes; Denny Lopez- boxes, bags, and furniture; Juma Ramadhani- clothes, bed, and boxes; Desir Verbeau- clothes and boxes; Karl Enns- boxes and art work; Jasmine McMillon - boxes and 2 dresser; Bernard Monette- Toyota Camry vin #TNXBR12E6YZ346079. 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: 3820 S Orange Ave Orlando FL 32806, 321-270-3440 on 8/21/19 @ 11:30am. Niasjah Mitchell boxes, Arthur Lonardo household goods, Rodney Jerome Moore household goods, Andrea Payne household goods, Tara Dunn couch, Kimberly Detreville household goods, Charlie Williams household goods, Vaneisha Hall household goods, Desiree McCarthy household goods, Raquel Bessent household goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 11261 Narcoossee Rd. Orlando, Fl 32832 407-280-7355 on 8/20/19 @12:00PM. Scotty Grantham -household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the


winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated 5603 Metrowest Blvd, Orlando FL 32811 on 08/21/2019 @9:30AM. eric jamison Clothes, books & shoes, Juan mercado bedroom set, Carolyn Rozier household goods, Letoya Marc Furniture and boxes, Jeanette Stafford Miscellaneous odd furniture, Donna Collie, Unit 9005, 1968, essel, Hin , wner Donna Lee Collie , Donna Collie, nit , , HMDE- Trailer, , wner Donna Lee Collie , Donna Collie misc household/ personal items, Devona Herring bins, boxes etc, Deborah Balamage clothes, shoes misc items, Eric Moore drum kit, speakers etc, Brynn Pomeroy apt furniture and items, Jerry Lazarre Household tems, furniture boxes, Patricia Davis Housegoods, Alexandria Ming Housegoods, Dana Bell Housegoods, Silvia Bermude Housegoods, Phyllis Gary Housegood. 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 EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION CASE NO. B18-DP-109 THE TEREST F A.P., a female child D B . S MM S A D T CE F ADS R HEAR G F R TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS, STATE F FL R DA. T Nicole Prusaczyk, ADDRESS K W . WHEREAS, 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 the Honorable Kenneth R. Lester on September , at a.m., at the Seminole County Juvenile Justice Center, at Eslinger Way, Sanford, Florida , for a TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS AD S R HEAR G. ou must appear on the date and times specified. FA L RE T PERS ALL APPEAR AT TH S AD S R HEAR G C ST T TES C SE T T THE TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS T TH S CH LD. F FA L T APPEAR THE DATE A D T ME SPEC F ED MA L SE ALL LEGAL R GHTS AS A PARE T T THE CH LD AMED TH S T CE. P RS -

A T T SECT S . d A D . g , FL R DA STAT TES, ARE HEREB F RMED F THE A A LAB LT F PR ATE PLACEME T W TH A AD PT E T T , AS DEF ED SECT . , FL R DA STAT TES W T ESS my hand as Clerk of said Court and the Seal thereof, this h day of July, . This summons has been issued at the request of Renete . Williams, Es uire Children s Legal Services, S. rlando Drive, Suite , Sanford, Florida , GRA T MAL , Clerk of The Circuit Court By s Deputy Clerk Court Seal . IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 03/ CRANER CASE NO: DP18-163, THE TEREST F Minor Children S. P. D B , A. P. D B , D. P. D B SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE F FL R DA. T Alexis Richmond Address nknown A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above referenced children. ou are hereby commanded to appear before Judge James Craner on ctober , at p.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, East Michigan Street, rlando, Florida , for a TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS AD S R HEAR G. ou must appear on the date and at the time specified. FA L RE T PERS ALL APPEAR AT TH S AD S R HEAR G C ST T TES C SE T T THE TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS T THESE CH LD RE . F FA L T APPEAR THE DATE A D T ME SPEC F ED MA L SE ALL LEGAL R GHTS AS A PARE T T THE CH LDRE AMED THE PET T ATTACHED T TH S T CE. MA BE HELD C TEMPT F C RT F FA L T APPEAR. W T ESS my hand and seal of this Court at rlando, range County, Florida this th day of July, . This summons has been issued at the re uest of Brittany esmith, Florida Bar o. , Senior Attorney for The Department of Children and Families, Brittany.nesmith my families. com CLERK F C RT By s Deputy Clerk. Court Seal IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 03/ CRANER CASE NO: DP18-163, THE TEREST F Minor Children S. P. D B , A. P. D B , D. P. D B

SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE F FL R DA. T Carlington Pinnock Address nknown A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above referenced children. ou are hereby commanded to appear before Judge James Craner on ctober , at p.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, East Michigan Street, rlando, Florida , for a TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS AD S R HEAR G. ou must appear on the date and at the time specified. FA L RE T PERS ALL APPEAR AT TH S AD S R HEAR G C ST T TES C SE T T THE TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS T THESE CH LD RE . F FA L T APPEAR THE DATE A D T ME SPEC F ED MA L SE ALL LEGAL R GHTS AS A PARE T T THE CH LDRE AMED THE PET T ATTACHED T TH S T CE. MA BE HELD C TEMPT F C RT F FA L T APPEAR. W TESS my hand and seal of this Court at rlando, range County, Florida this th day of July, . This summons has been issued at the re uest of Brittany esmith, Florida Bar o. , Senior Attorney for The Department of Children and Families, Brittany.nesmith my families. com CLERK F C RT By s Deputy Clerk. Court Seal IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. PROBATE DIVISION. CASE NO: 2019-CP000525-O. RE ESTATE F ESTEBA AP LE CA A, DECEASED. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. The administration of the estate of ESTEBA AP LE CA A, deceased, whose date of death was September , is pending in the Circuit Court for range County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is range County Clerk f Probate Court, . range Avenue, Suite , rlando, Florida . The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent s estate on whom a copy of this notice is re uired to be served must file their claims with this court W TH THE LATER F M THS AFTER THE T ME F THE F RST P BL CAT F TH S T CE R DA S AFTER THE DATE F SER CE F A C P F TH S T CE THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent s estate must file their claims with this court W TH THREE M THS AFTER THE

DATE F THE F RST P BL CAT F TH S T CE. ALL CLA MS T F LED W TH THE T ME PER DS SET F RTH SECT . F THE FL R DA PR BATE C DE W LL BE F RE ER BARRED. TW THSTA D G THE T ME PER DS SET F RTH AB E, A CLA M F LED TW EARS R M RE AFTER THE DECEDE T S DATE F DEATH S BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is . Attorney for Personal Representative s Eric . Tourian, Es ., FB , Kubicki Draper, P.A., S. range Ave, Ste , rlando, Florida , Phone , Facsimile . Personal Representative s Deborah L. Garcia, Home Grove Drive, Winter Garden, Florida . IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. DIVISION: 07 CASE NO.: DP16-75 n the nterest of minor child, A.K. D B . S MM S A D T CE F AD S R HEAR G F R TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS. STATE F FL R DA To ANDRIA KEY, Address Unknown. A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this Court regarding the abovereferenced child, you are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Patricia Doherty on August , , at a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, East Michigan Street, rlando, Florida , for a TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS AD S R HEAR G. ou must appear on the date and at the time specified. FA L RE T PERS ALL APPEAR AT TH S AD S R HEAR G C ST T TES C SE T T THE TERM AT F PARE TAL R GHTS T TH S CH LD. F FA L T APPEAR THE DATE A D T ME SPEC F ED, MA L SE ALL LEGAL R GHTS AS A PARE T T THE CH LD AMED THE PET T ATTACHED T TH S T CE. f you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact Court Administration, at . range Avenue, rlando, Florida , telephone at least days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than days if you are hearing or voice impaired, call . W T ESS my hand and seal of this court at rlando, range County, Florida this th day of July, . This summons has been issued at the re uest of Jennifer Ware, Es uire, Florida Bar o. . Senior Attorney for Children s Legal Ser-

vices State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, S. Kirkman Road, Suite , rlando, Florida , , Jennifer.Ware my families.com. CLERK F THE C RC T C RT By s Deputy Clerk Court Seal IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF FORSYTH COUNTY, STATE OF GEORGIA. NICOLE B. TERUYA, PLAINTIFF, vs. JOEL R. TERUYA AND ZULIMA YOUNG CELIS DE TERUYA, DEFENDANTS. CIVIL ACTION FILE NUMBER 18-CV-0752-1. T CE F P BL CAT T THE AB E REFERE CED DEFE DA T, L MA G CEL S DE TER A By rder of the Court for service by publication dated May , , you are hereby notified that on April , , a Summons and Complaint for Divorce was filed against Joel R. Teruya, in the Superior Court of Forsyth County, State of Georgia, and Civil Action File umber -C - . ou may obtain a copy of this Summons and Complaint for Divorce from the Clerk of Superior Court in Forsyth County located at the Forsyth County Superior Court, East Courthouse, Cumming, GA , or from the undersigned attorney s office. ou are re uired to file your answer and objections to the Complaint with the Clerk of the Superior Court of Forsyth County. ou must also serve a copy of your answer upon Plaintiff s attorney, Teresa Tracy Crider, Stearns-Montgomery & Proctor, SE Alexander Street, Marietta, Georgia , . . . our answer must be made within sixty days of the rder Permitting Service by Publication. This st day of July, . s Deputy Clerk, Forsyth County Superior Court. Prepared and Presented by STEAR SM TG MER PR CT R S Teresa Tracy Crider, Teresa Tracy Crider, Georgia Bar o. , Attorneys for Plaintiff Notice Is Hereby Given that AssuredPartners of Florida, LLC, 200 Colonial Center Pkwy, Ste 140, Lake Mary, FL 32746, desiring to engage in business under the fi titious name of Rivard Insurance Agency, with its principal place of business in the State of Florida in the County of Seminole, has filed an Application for Registration of Fictitious ame with the Florida Department of State. Notice Is Hereby Given that Sam’s ast, In ., 0 inehart Rd, Sanford, FL 32771, desiring to engage in business under the fi titious name of Sam’s Club #10-4785, with its principal place of business in the State of Florida in the County of Seminole will file an Application for Registration of Fictitious ame with the

orlandoweekly.com

Florida Department of State. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, M MA PR PERT ES LLC, of Runner ak Street, Celebration, FL in the county of sceola, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name Drotar Vending t is the intent of the undersigned to register “Drotar Vending” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated Notice of Public Sale: Pursuant to F.S. . on August 23rd, 2019 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Services, LLC, 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; A A AC RA FD E FS DDB F RD FT E HA F RD FT S EA F RD FTR W KC F RD FT E M JKB F RD G D ST JF CHE R LET G H T SAT R AA E C SSA AL AP A issan S GP T L T TRA LER MFG C HGFB F DH H DA S DB S K AB AP AL SSA WR AJ AM LKSWAGE JGAB E A ME BE PE AF FH H DA P J J G S H TD K C S T TA GM A EG KA JM GJ F MA DA J H S J SSA K DJ A F KA SAJDA D GL JAG AR WA DG F A D.

JULY 31-AUG 6, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Legal, Public Notices

NOTICE OF ASSUMED NAME AND COMMON LAW COPYRIGHT, TRADEMARK 1. Business name: DEMETRIC LUVINGSTON POOLE 2. Date Filed :06/09/2019 3. File Number: 1088189000024 4. Minnesota Statues, Chapter 333 5. Name Holder(s) Poole, Demetric Luvingston 6. PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUISNESS: c/o 1719 Americana Blvd 28a Orlando Florida [32839] 7. Filed with the Minnesota Secretary of State 8. Status: ACTIVE/GOODSTANDING. 1. This constitutes actual and constructive notice of the copyright protections for the trade- name/trademark, “DEMETRIC LUVINGSTON POOLE”©, an original expression created on or about May, 24TH 1981, with all rights reserved, held by Demetric Luvingston Poole, for the Demetric Luvingston Poole Trust, Said common-law tradename/trademark may not be used, printed, duplicated, reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, neither in whole nor in part, nor in any manner whatsoever, without the prior, express, written consent and acknowledgement of the Trust, herein after “Secured Party. 2. “ With the intent of being contractually bound, any juristic person, as well as the agent of said juristic person, assents, consents, and agrees that neither said juristic person, nor the agent of said juristic person, shall display, nor otherwise use in any manner, the common-law trade-name/ trademark, nor the law copyright described herein, nor any derivative, variation, and/or spelling and printing of Demetric Luvingston Poole, including and not limited to all derivatives, variations in the spelling, abbreviating, upper/ lower case rendering and writing of said trade name/trade-mark. 3. Secured Party neither assents, nor consents. nor agrees with, nor grants, nor implies any authorization for, any unauthorized use of trade name• trade-mark, and all unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. 4. Mutual Assent Implied and Express Contract Executed by Unauthorized Use of Secured party Common Law Copyrighted Property; Self-Executing Security Agreement in Event of Unauthorized se of Secured Party s Common Law-Copyrighted Property: By these terms, both the person and the agent of said person engaging in unauthorized use of copyrighted property, hereinafter jointly referred to as the “Interloper” does assent, consent, and agree that any use of the trade name/trade-mark, except the authorized use as set above constitutes unauthorized use, unauthorized reproduction, copyright infringement, and counterfeiting, of Secured Party s commonlaw copyrighted property. 5. IS contractually binding upon said Third Party Interloper, securing an interest in said Interlopers assets,

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land, and personal property for equal consideration and not less than 1,000,000.00, in US Silver Dollar Coin convertible at the legal and lawful ratio prescribed by law of 24:1 of Silver Dollars to Federal Reserve Notes per usage per signatory, based on the estimated value of the secured trade-name/ trade- mark at the time of this notice. 6. Any person claiming an adverse interest challenging, or rebutting the rights of the Secured Party may write to the Trust in care of:1719, Americana Blvd 28A , Orlando, Florida [32839], non domestic/without the USA. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 21, 2019 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 4:00 PM Extra Space Storage 2631 E Semoran Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 (407) 408-7437 Jennifer Turner- Household items Clifton Norman- Tools, and boxes Darlene Randall- Household items, and tools Nivea Slaughter-Household items, and furniture Oscar Ramas- Household items Joshua Casul- Furniture. 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 OF 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: 1101 Marshall Farms Rd. Ocoee FL. 34761 (407) 516-7221, August 19th, 2019 @ 4:00 PM: Michele Crouse - van, 2007, Honda, Odyssey, VIN: 5FNRL387X7B050126, Huntington LT- van, 2007, Honda, Odyssey, VIN: 5FNRL387X7B050126, Huntington LT- van, 2007, Honda, Odyssey, VIN: 5FNRL387X7B050126, Louis Ernst - House hold Items, Gerald Carney - household goods, Gus Munoz - Household items, Lindsey Broccolo - School Supplies, Malika Robinson - Bins, Papers, hair dryer, Clothes, Donald Ray Whitt – Housegoods, Steven Kelly - Household Goods, Dionne Lewis - 2 bedroom apartment, Boxes, Rockey Lancaster - Tools, Welding Equipment, Wendy Lane – Housegoods, Hircanys Vicioso - Household Goods, Cody Crenshaw -Household Goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made

with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF 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: 5753 Hoffner Ave Orlando, FL 32822, 407-212-5890 on August 20, 2019 @ 11:30 am: Yahaira Ufret Household goods, Gardner April Household items, Sandra Ivelisse Rivera Rios Household items, Ashley Taber Household items, Frances Fernandez books, clothes, baby items and movies, Kevin Pruitt Household items, April Gardner Household items, Terry Shawtae Melendez Household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on 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 OF 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: On August 20th, 2019 12:30 PM location: 13125 S. John Young Parkway Orlando FL 32837 (407) 516-7005: Michael Rodriguezhome, Dezzarhe Baskin- home, Margarita Martinez -household, Taylor Johnson- household items, Janna C Ceasar- home items, Dasma Hopkins -home items, Rachel Cooper -home. 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: AATR ORLANDO gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 08/16/2019, 09:00 am at 9712 RECYCLE CENTER RD ORLANDO, FL 32824- 8146, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. AATR ORLANDO reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. 1FTYR10C0WUA07217 1998 FORD, 1HGCP26408A032341 2008 HONDA, 3N1AB6AP-

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JULY 31-AUG 6, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

4CL741226 2012 NISSAN, JNKCV61F99M350090 2009 INFINITI. 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. AUGUST 13, 2019 5YFBU4EE6DP122219 2013 TOYOTA AUGUST 15, 2019 2G1WT58K369235598 2006 CHEVROLET AUGUST 16, 2019 JS2RD41H635200479 2003 SUZUKI AUGUST 17, 2019 1G1JC12F347185167 2004 CHEVROLET 1HGEM22211L017265 2001 HONDA 1N4AL11D14C156108 2004 NISSAN AUGUST 18, 2019 1GNDU06E8WD138712 1998 CHEVROLET 3VWCM31Y54M318364 2004 VOLKSWAGEN NOTICE OF SALE The following vehicles will be auctioned off at A Reliable Towing, 2809 N Forsyth Rd, Winter Park FL 32792 on August 10th, 2019 at 9:00 am: 02 Honda vin: 1HGEM22002L043694; 99 Chevy 1GCCS1443X8138735. NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 2007 Kawasaki VIN# JKAZX4J157A066849 2015 Nissan VIN# 3N1AB7AP1FY329584 2003 Ford VIN# 1FAFP33PX3W146509 2002 Honda VIN# JH2MF06132K010021 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on August 14, 2019 at 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale. 2000 CHEVROLET VIN# 1GNEL19W5YB162756 To be sold at auction at 8:00AM on August 12th, 2019, at 2809 N FORSYTH RD., WINTER PARK FL 32792 Around The Clock Towing inc.

The following items are lost or abandoned property found in Orange County. Item, Mfr., Location Found I Pad, Acorn Ridge IPhone (2), Acorn Ridge IPhone, Dean Rd IPhone, Dwell Court IPhone, Rex Hill TRL Jewelry, Chicago Woods Cir Jewelry, Universal Blvd Jewelry, N. Orange Ave Jewelry, US HWY 1792 Panasonic TV, Rundle Rd Samsung Phone, Summit Creek Samsung Phone, Wendalees Ct Sound Bar Vizio, Westwood US Currency, 8th Street US Currency, Atlantic Ave US Currency, Bennett Rd US Currency, Hamlin Groves US Currency, South Apopka US Currency, Vineland Ave Property not claimed will be disposed of per Florida State Statutes Chapter 705. For more information call 407 317-7570 M-F 8am to 5:00pm. Valued patients of Ferncreek Healing Center and/or Chiropractor Dr. Jodi L. Rice, D.C. the o e is losin 0 / 0/ 0 9. Requests for records can be made to (407)228-8228 until that time. Requests after that date can be made to the record holder Drjodirice@gmail.com or PO Box 536812 Orlando Fl. 32853-6812 *The records will be held for a minimum of 5 years

Employment Administrative Assistant Anion HealthCare Services 6402529 Guest Service Trainer Areas USA 6399062 Sr. Adult CounselorHuman ra in Aspire Health Partners, Inc 6402676 Family Teaching Partners / Houseparents Boys Town 6398460

Hotel Housekeeper Caribe Royale Orlando 6400823

Hotel Sales Manager Carter Hospitality Group 6402606

Mattress Specialist $2,000 Sign-on Bonus City Furniture 6397709

Inventory Control Specialist City of Casselberry 6401480

Maintenance Worker II City of Clermont 6401366 Sta Assistant D City of Orlando 6402699

Senior Program Manager of Education & Mental Health Community Coordinated Care for Children, Inc 6401123

Digital Product Quality Engineer Cru 6402320 In House Sales Representative - Daytona Diamond Resorts - Sales & Marketing 6401224

Marketing Specialist Digital Brew 6399547

Education Research Analyst Early Learning Coalition of Orange County 6401184 Catering Sales Manager Embassy Suites Orlando Lake Buena Vista South 6400501 Residential Installers Energy Air, Inc. 6402608 Food Services Worker ESS.com 6399869


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JULY 31-AUG 6, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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