FREE | MARCH 15-21, 2017
LOOK BEYOND THE WORLD IS Y THE SHORT STACK! OUR BRUNCH BU FFET By Holly V. Kaphe rr, page 23 1
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Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Staff Writer Monivette Cordeiro Calendar Editor Thaddeus McCollum Music Editor Matthew Moyer Digital Content Editor Colin Wolf Contributors Rob Bartlett, Jen Cray, Hannah Glogower, Scott Horn, Liv Jonse, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Seth Kubersky, Bao Le-Huu, Marissa Mahoney, Cameron Meier, Richard Reep, Sierra Reese, Joey Roulette, Steve Schneider, Abby Stassen, Ken Storey Editorial Interns Deanna Ferrante, Rachel LeBar, Nick Wills Advertising Major Accounts Specialist Leslie Egan Senior Multimedia Account Executives Debbie Garcia, Lori Green, Dan Winkler Multimedia Account Executives Scott Navarro, Scott Spar Classified and Legal Rep Jerrica Schwartz Advertising Coordinator Abby Stassen Marketing and Events Events Director Zackary Rowe Events and Promotions Manager Brad Van De Bogert Marketing and Events Coordinator Rachel Hoyle
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Cover illustration by Chris Tobar Rodriguez
Creative Services Art Director Chris Tobar Rodriguez Production Lead Designer Melissa McHenry Business Operations Manager Hollie Mahadeo Business Assistant Allysha Willison Circulation Circulation Manager Collin Modeste Euclid Media Group Chief Executive Officer Andrew Zelman Chief Operating Officers Chris Keating, Michael Wagner Human Resources Director Lisa Beilstein Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon euclidmediagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, voicemediagroup.com Orlando Weekly Inc. 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, Florida 32801 orlandoweekly.com
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NEWS + FEATURES 7 Pulse: In Memoriam A profile of Pulse Nightclub shooting victim Enrique L. Rios Jr.
7 This Modern World 7 ICYMI News you need to know but may have missed in the past week
9 Informed Dissent The three things we learned from the first week of the Trumpcare debate
11 Arresting situations Untreated mental illness is rampant in Florida jails, while mental health funding is almost the lowest in the nation
FOOD + DRINK
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MUSIC 44 Picks This Week Great live music rattles Orlando every night
23 Continental breakfast
44 Loud and clear
Look beyond the short stack – the world is your brunch buffet
The Contact Music Festival aims to bring Orlando’s underground together under one roof
31 Fizzy lifting drinks
49 This Little Underground Dropkick Murphys prime Orlando for St. Patrick’s Day, Swearin’s Allison Crutchfield and newcomer Vagabon make roseate debuts
Some bar-raising mimosas to get you sophisti-sloshed
32 Tip Jar Pig Floyd’s travels to the Dark Side of the Airport to open a location in Lake Nona, Mesa21 to open soon in the former Gargi’s building, plus more in our weekly food roundup
33 Recently Reviewed Short takes on restaurants we’ve visited recently
Phone 407-377-0400 Fax 407-377-0420 Orlando Weekly is published every week by Euclid Media Group Orlando Distribution Orlando Weekly is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Copyright notice: The entire contents of Orlando Weekly are copyright 2017 by Euclid Media Group LLC. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Publisher does not assume any liability for unsolicited manuscripts, materials, or other content. Any submission must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All editorial, advertising, and business correspondence should be mailed to the address listed above. Subscriptions: Additional copies or back issues may be purchased at the Orlando Weekly offices for $1. Six-month domestic subscriptions may be purchased for $75; one-year subscriptions for $125. Periodical Postage Pending at Orlando, FL POSTMASTER: Send address changes to ORLANDO WEEKLY 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, FL 32801.
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ARTS + CULTURE
FILM
19 Holding action
40 Missed connection
Durational performance by Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz creates a space for radical empathy
21 Live Active Cultures Universal’s Race Through New York is a giant leap forward for crowd management, and a small step sideways for simulators
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CALENDAR
40 Film Listings
52 Selections
Cinema-oriented events to go see this week
56 The Week
Despite a strong start, Deidra & Laney Rob a Train veers off the rails
43 On Screens in Orlando Movies playing this week: Beauty and the Beast, Land of Mine and more
57 Down the Road Back Pages
68 Gimme Shelter 68 Savage Love 69 Classifieds
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IN MEMORIAM: THE ORLANDO 49 Every week between now and the one-year anniversary of the Pulse Nightclub shootings, Orlando Weekly will profile a person killed on June 12, 2016. This week: Enrique L. Rios Jr. Nia Garcia can’t help but laugh when she remembers the pranks she pulled with her cousin Enrique L. Rios Jr. The two grew up together, and one of their favorite activities was playing tricks on their family and friends. Garcia says she recalls one memorable joke when the pair tricked their grandmother into calling a restaurant that had the same name as one of their other cousins. As the conversation between restaurant hostess and grandmother continued, the elderly woman began to suspect it wasn’t her granddaughter she was speaking to. She hung up confused, turning to her grandson and asking, “Who did you have me call, Enrique?” Rios, 25, was always doing things like that,
bringing laughter to others. Garcia says he was definitely a clown, but also a good man raised in a devout Baptist family. “He really took on the role of just being there for everybody. … If you had a bad situation, he knew automatically, he had these instincts that would kick in, and he would do something.” Rios was on vacation in Orlando last June when he was shot and killed at Pulse. He lived in Brooklyn, New York, working as a coordinator at a home health care agency. Garcia says he loved to work with older people, supporting and caring for them. “He had this gift where he would see the good in people and knew how to encourage you with his words,” she says. “He really did have a way with words where he made you feel brand-new after hearing him.” When he wasn’t working, he loved to dance and cook, always wearing a smile that matched Garcia’s. “Everybody knew him for his smile,” she says. “Everybody in the family says we had the same smile.” Garcia says she hopes that when people remember her cousin, they remember to stay true to themselves. “I think he would just never want someone to not stand up for who they are.” – Deanna Ferrante
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ICYMI ILLUSTRATION BY CHRIS TOBAR RODRIGUEZ
Marco Rubio gets booted from another office, Florida lawmakers vote to kill Enterprise Florida, Mayor Buddy Dyer unveils a big gaudy belt and other things you may have missed this week. »
Rubio asked to vacate Jacksonville office due to protests:
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Despite an angry Rick Scott, House lawmakers kill Enterprise Florida:
For the second time this month, a building owner has asked Florida’s junior senator to leave his office, thanks to regular protests by Floridians who won’t stop loudly requesting to see Rubio in the flesh at a town hall. Rubio spokesperson Christina Mandreucci said in a statement that the “unruly behavior of some anti-Trump protesters is making it more inconvenient for Floridians to come to our local office to seek assistance with federal issues.” Rubio was already asked to leave his office space in Tampa for similar reasons.
State representatives voted to abolish one of the governor’s favorite business incentive programs, which House Speaker Richard Corcoran has called “corporate welfare.” Scott has said the proposals to end Enterprise Florida and curtail Visit Florida would harm job creation in Florida.
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Orlando Mayor Dyer reveals giant WrestleMania belt at Lake Eola: If you’re wondering why your social media feeds are full of people doing a “superstar pose” in front of a 12-foot-high glittery belt, it’s because WrestleMania 33 is coming to the Camping World Stadium next month. Dyer unveiled the belt in the city’s downtown park last week, saying he likes to “accessorize.”
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Florida looking into graduation rates at Orange County alternative schools: The state Department of Education is expanding an analysis of graduation data to see how schools document students who transfer to alternative schools, including ones in Orange County. This comes after an investigation by ProPublica into Sunshine High School, which reportedly served as a “silent release valve” for nearby traditional high schools by taking in academically challenged students unlikely to graduate on time, thereby improving graduation rates for those high schools. The state Board of Education will consider the issue when members meet on March 22.
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UCF announces groundbreaking ceremony for downtown campus: The University of Central Florida downtown campus finally feels within reach after the school announced a groundbreaking ceremony on May 11. The campus for about 7,700 UCF and Valencia College students is set to open in the fall of 2019. mcordeiro@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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THE GOP’S SEVEN-YEAR ITCH
Human Services Secretary Tom Price can say with a straight face: “Nobody will be worse off financially.” Which brings us to our second point: Trump, who during the campaign promised to cover everybody for less money, The three things we learned from the first week is playing his supporters for suckers. of the Trumpcare debate Price, after all, is unequivocally lying. It’s now been six years and 51 public institutions – in this case, a pre- The AHCA swaps out the ACA’s subsidies weeks since President Obama signed the emptive campaign launched last week to for less-generous tax credits and derives Affordable Care Act. That means it’s been discredit the nonpartisan Congressional most of its $337 billion in deficit savings six years and 51 weeks of court battles and Budget Office, which released its anal- from drastic cuts to Medicaid. LowerRepublican efforts to force its repeal and ysis of the bill Monday. That analysis income people are going to pay more or go promises that, if given the reins of power, predicted that the AHCA will increase without insurance – especially the rural, they would replace it with something bet- the number of uninsured by 24 million blue-collar whites who went strongly for ter. That also means they’ve had six years and will generally be terrible for poor and Trump, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. and 51 weeks to figure out what that some- older people. A Harvard econoOn Sunday, however, thing should look like. mist estimates that So you’d think they’d have come up with Trump’s director of the those who’ve used something smarter than the American Office of Management subsidies to purchase Health Care Act, a plan dismissed as cal- and Budget proacIf you’re cynical insurance on the lous by the left, lambasted as unviable by tively dismissed the you’d say the AHCA health care exchanges conservative wonks, despised as politi- CBO report he hadn’t was designed to fail, will fork over nearly cally catastrophic by Republican elites seen yet as an exercise allowing the GOP $2,500 more per and ridiculed as “Obamacare lite” by the in futility, telling Fox to say they tried to year. Those between far right. In short, House Speaker Paul News that “estimating the ages of 55 and Ryan took seven years to develop a bill the impact of a bill of repeal Obamacare 64 could pay almost that pleases no one except President this size probably isn’t while freeing them of $7,000 more, as the Trump, who is less concerned with policy the best use of [the the burden of actual AHCA specifically details than he is desperate for a politi- CBO’s] time.” lawmaking. allows insurers to That is literally the cal victory. If you’re cynical, you’d say jack up rates on older the AHCA was designed to fail, allowing CBO’s job, and the CBO Americans. Most of House Republicans to say they tried to does it well. (While not the plan’s benefits will repeal Obamacare while absolving them dead-on accurate, the CBO predicted the effects of Obamacare go toward the highest earners. According of responsibility for actual policymaking. Even if that’s not the strategy, this first better than other forecasters.) Trump’s to the Tax Policy Center, those in the top 1 week of Republican health care policy OMB, however, is reportedly planning percent would receive an average tax cut has revealed three things that will be to release its own forecast, which will of $33,000; in the top 0.1 percent, almost important to keep in mind over the next no doubt be friendlier than the CBO’s, $200,000. Most troubling, the last week has affordthus perpetuating a pattern in the Trump four years. The first is the Trump administration’s administration: When reality is inconve- ed a glimpse of the social-Darwinist prism continued intentional erosion of trust in nient, invent your own. Thus Health and through which top Republicans apparorlandoweekly.com
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ently view the less affluent. On Sunday, Ryan admitted that his plan would cover fewer people, but he said he wasn’t worried about it, because “we’re not going to make an American do what they don’t want to do.” In other words, people who would no longer be able to afford health insurance would be “choosing” to forgo it, and that’s OK. Then there’s U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah, who, like Ryan, believes poor people make poor decisions. “You know what,” he lectured last week, “Americans have choices, and they’ve got to make a choice. And so maybe, rather than getting that new iPhone that they just love and want to go spend hundreds of dollars on, maybe they should invest in their own health care.” This talk of “freedom” elides a crucial point. If you can’t afford health care, not having it isn’t a choice. For all its design flaws (e.g., not having a public option or Medicare buy-in) – many exacerbated by Republican sabotage (e.g., 19 states, including Florida, not expanding Medicaid) – the ACA recognized that. So while some premiums have spiked and several insurers have bailed, the subsidies and Medicaid expansion have also brought the uninsured rate to an all-time low, covering more than 20 million people. The Republican replacement isn’t concerned with that stuff. Instead, it’s rooted in the Randian philosophy that the poor are poor because they’re lazy or make bad choices and that health care isn’t a right but a privilege – and that privilege is secondary to the tax burden placed upon the wealthy. @jeffreybillman on Twitter feedback@orlandoweekly.com
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BEST PH O | PH O 8 8
BE ST PR E SC R I PT I ON F OR LIV IN G T HE SA N C T UM
You won’t need burgers for a fast-food fix once you find this Vietnamese noodle shop. Specializing in gigantic, weirdly addictive bowls of very thin rice noodles and various cuts of beef submerged in delicately seasoned broth, they also serve the usual exotics of shrimp paste and grilled pork – but the soup’s the thing. 730 N. Mills Ave., 407-897-3488; also 9728 E. Colonial Dr., 407-930-7670,
Plant-based eatery deftly disproves the antiquated notion that meatless and wheatless equates to tasteless with boldly flavored green, grain and pasta bowls. Oh, and they can also pull a proper espresso. Note: Dairy and gluten options are available. 715 N. Ferncreek Ave., 407-757-0346
BEST BAKERY Valhalla Bakery
BEST CUPCAKE Sweet! by Good Golly Miss Holly
BEST INDIAN Tamarind Indian Cuisine
BEST PHO Pho 88
BEST SUSHI Seito Sushi
BEST BARBECUE 4 Rivers Smokehouse
BEST DELI TooJay’s Gourmet Deli
BEST ITALIAN (NOT JUST PIZZA) Prato
BEST PIZZA Mellow Mushroom
BEST TACOS Gringos Locos
BEST BRUNCH Santiago’s Bodega
BEST DESSERTS Better Than Sex
BEST JUICE/SMOOTHIES Planet Smoothie
BEST PLACE TO BUY MEAT Freshfields Farm
BEST TEAHOUSE Pom Pom’s Teahouse & Sandwicheria
BEST BURGER BurgerFi
BEST DINER Christo’s Café
BEST KOREAN Korean BBQ Taco Box
BEST PLACE TO BUY PRODUCE Freshfields Farm
BEST THAI SEA Thai Restaurant
BEST CARIBBEAN Bahama Breeze
BEST DOG-FRIENDLY PATIO The Hammered Lamb
BEST LATE-NIGHT RESTAURANT Gringos Locos
BEST PUB GRUB Oblivion Taproom
BEST THEME PARK BAR Margaritaville
BEST CHEAP EATS Gringos Locos
BEST FOOD TRUCK Korean BBQ Taco Box
BEST LATIN Black Bean Deli
BEST RAMEN Noodles & Rice
BEST THEME PARK RESTAURANT Be Our Guest, Magic Kingdom
BEST CHEF James Petrakis
BEST FRENCH Le Coq au Vin
BEST MEXICAN Gringos Locos
BEST RESTAURANT TO TAKE A DATE The Ravenous Pig
BEST VEGAN Ethos Vegan Kitchen
BEST CHINESE Hawkers Asian Street Fare
BEST FRIED CHICKEN The Coop
BEST MIDDLE EASTERN Bosphorous Turkish Cuisine
BEST SANDWICHES/SUBS Publix deli
BEST VEGETARIAN Dandelion Communitea Café
BEST COFFEE Drunken Monkey
BEST GREEK Mediterranean Blue
BEST NACHOS Tijuana Flats
BEST SEAFOOD Winter Park Fish Co.
BEST VIETNAMESE Pho 88
BEST CUBAN Black Bean Deli
BEST ICE CREAM Jeremiah’s Italian Ice
BEST OUTDOOR DINING Hillstone Restaurant
BEST STEAKHOUSE Linda’s La Cantina Steak House
BEST WINGS Gator’s Dockside
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2017 ●aorlandoweekly.com ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 15-21, To order Best of Orlando
plaque visit: orlandoweekly.newskeepsake.com To participate in this page call: (407) 377-0400 ext 278
PHOTO OF WILLIAM STILES BY LARRY GRIFFIN
ARRESTING SITUATIONS
Untreated mental illness is rampant in Florida jails, while mental health funding is almost the lowest in the nation. Maybe if we spent less on incarceration, we could spend more on helping those who need it
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BY L ARRY GRIFFIN
ollowing a stressful dispute with a local law firm in 2014, Orlando resident William Stiles, 48, was not in a good place. He was attempting to get Social Security disability benefits, and says the firm quit working with his case, but took his money anyway. When he couldn’t get his money back from the firm, Stiles called 211, the federal crisis support line, and told them, according to arrest documents from later, that he wanted to “shoot up” the firm. A local law enforcement officer responded by appearing at Stiles’ residence, feeling that without care or treatment, he could be at risk of harming others. The officer intended to use the Baker Act to get Stiles admitted to the Lakeside
Behavioral Health Center, a treatment facility for the mentally ill. Stiles told the officer he intended to “run a fuel truck into the building and blow it up” if he didn’t get the money he claimed he was owed by the next day, the court documents state. Stiles refused to go to Lakeside, saying he “wasn’t going anywhere,” and instead got into a verbal altercation with the officer. According to court documents, he said they had caught him on a “lucky” day and that he wasn’t ready for them. “I would feel really bad for your wife, your mom, your kids and family if something happened to you,” Stiles is quoted as saying in the arrest documents. Because of that, as well as his refusal to go to Lakeside, Stiles was instead taken to the Orange County Jail, arrested for resisting an officer without violence. Stiles, who suffers from depression
and anxiety, said he was not on his medication at the time – and the incident with the law firm pushed him over the edge. In jail, though, he says, he didn’t get much better. “I was in there for 14 months before they let me out,” Stiles tells Orlando Weekly. “They put you in this glass room, all glass windows like fish tanks. Like 10 of them in a row. There was no counseling. You just had to suffer in isolation whatever you were in there for.” Orange County Corrections Department health administrator Jane Jenkins says it’s entirely plausible that an officer would have taken Stiles to jail for this incident. “If law enforcement responds to someone who comes off as threatening, even in the slightest bit, a non-CIT (crisis intervention training) officer’s response will be to bring them to for resisting with or without force,” she says. “But a CIT officer would have known how to talk to them, and encourage them to go to Lakeside.” Crisis intervention training is a way police officers can learn to help better deal with sensitive situations on the job, particularly those in which they’re dealorlandoweekly.com
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ing with a mentally ill person. Eventually, a doctor finally deemed Stiles incompetent to stand trial for the resisting charge, due to his mental disorder. He was released. Until the 2014 incident, Stiles’ criminal record has been clean since a collection of burglary and weapon charges dating back to 1989. Stiles says he’s fine when he’s on his meds. He says he regrets the way the incident turned out and blames himself in some capacity for what happened. However, he also isn’t a fan of how the jail treats the mentally ill. “I should have gone to Lakeside,” he says. “But there should be other places to go to. It’s more convenient for them to take us to jail.”
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tiles’ case is not an anomaly. Inmates at the Orange County Jail too often find themselves trapped in a vicious cycle of imprisonment – homeless and often suffering mental illness, they get arrested if they act out on the streets. Then, when they’re released,
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the cycle simply starts over. And it isn’t helped by how tight Florida’s wallet is when it comes to spending for mental health needs. A study by the Florida Policy Institute states that in 2014, the last time the data was collected, only $36.05 per person was spent on mental health needs in Florida, putting us dead last in the entire country. That’s even less than the 2012 per-person spending, which was $37.28. By contrast, Maine spent the most in the nation – $362.75 per person was spent on mental health in 2014, up from $338 in 2012. The United States average for mental health spending in 2014 was $125.90 per person, the study says, which is more than three times what Florida spent. Another number that paints Florida in a negative light is how many uninsured people are living with mental illness. In the FPI’s 2017 “Report of Mental Health America,” it’s reported that there were approximately 594,000 in the state fitting that criteria, making Florida the third worst in the nation. This doesn’t bode well for them in terms of staying out of jail. The Florida Policy Institute’s study doesn’t mince words – they say it’s “crucial” that Florida start redirecting more funds toward the issue of mental health. “Acts of violence by people with mental illness are associated with the lack of needed mental health services,” the study reads. “Further, serious mental illness can trap individuals in a lifetime of poverty, dependency and homelessness. Untreated mental illness has significant fiscal consequences for state and local governments and exacts a high toll on the nation’s economy. It can also lead to costly and frequent hospitalization, institutionalization and recurrent involvement in the criminal justice system.” Florida Policy Institute president Joseph Pennisi says the problem comes down to not enough being done to help the mentally ill. “Florida’s level of support for the mentally ill is unfortunate,” he says. “There are tremendous social, health and physical costs to letting this issue go unaddressed. Providing mental health services will reduce issues of poverty, homelessness and incarceration and help them become contributing members of society.” That hasn’t been proven wrong in Orange County so far. According to a study by the Orange County Corrections Department on homelessness and arrests, 42 percent of the 4,161 homeless people arrested in the 14
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area in 2014 suffered from some type of mental illness. The study makes note of the vicious cycle of homelessness, mental health and imprisonment, too, noting that 91 percent of homeless inmates had prior arrests. And they weren’t very likely to improve, either, the study states. “Unfortunately, there are not many resources available upon release to help these individuals successfully reintegrate back into society,” it reads. “The majority of homeless individuals that are released end up living on the streets again and committing crimes that will get them back into our facilities.”
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he mood of the Pathways Drop-in Center is tranquil and laid-back, a series of rooms decorated in pastel-colored bricks and tile, with a piano in the lobby and a kitchen where a dedicated staff cooks for the residents. There are couches where those who frequent the house can sleep, outside porch areas adorned with lunch tables where they can smoke and talk, computers where they can check email and use the internet, and TVs they can watch. Some people play cards in the living room. Others lounge on couches outside in the Florida afternoon sun, on a covered patio providing much-needed shade. The house serves as a support system for the homeless and the mentally ill. It is run solely by people who also suffer from mental illness, who know the struggle, and it’s funded by money from Orange County and from charities and nonprofits such as the Chatlos Foundation, as well as money from the National Alliance on Mental Illness Greater Orlando, according to Pathways president J. Nelson Kull. Many of those who stay at Pathways have seen the inside of the Orange County Jail. From their points of view, the jail’s treatment of people like them is nothing but frustrating and frightening. Keelan Murrell, 60, suffers from paranoid schizophrenia. He was in jail in the 1990s for a trespassing charge and, due to his illness, says he felt suicidal in jail for the 30 days he was inside. He says the people in charge of mental health there didn’t seem terribly invested in the job – either that, or they were simply “not the right people for the job.” He describes an incident in which he said he had a strong negative reaction to a medication given to him at the jail. “It made my throat swell up,” he says. “I couldn’t breathe. It was painful. But they didn’t believe me – they didn’t listen to me. They gave me another dose of the same stuff and refused to give me what I needed.” Murrell has been homeless for years
and has numerous past arrests for charges of burglary, criminal mischief, trespassing, resisting arrest and battery, according to the Orange County Clerk of Courts files. In one incident from 2016, Murrell was arrested for throwing a rock at a random car window as it was coming off a highway ramp. Now he says he’s living on an assisted income check and has received assistance from the Lakeside Behavioral Health Center in the past, but wants to get his own job and fend for himself. “I don’t want that [check],” he says. “I want a regular, legal job.” Unfortunately, he has yet to make that happen for himself. Pathways president Kull was in the Orange County Jail in the 1970s and says he never had a problem with the mental health services offered there. He speaks from experience, as he suffers from depression and anxiety, and was diagnosed with schizophrenia in his teens. Since his jail term, he has been an advocate for mental health, currently serving on the State Mental Health Planning Council and previously on the boards of National Alliance on Mental Illness Greater Orlando, NAMI Florida, the Mental Health Association of Central Florida and others. He says the problem lies in the number of people in jail who shouldn’t be. “We need to get people out of jail and into mental health facilities,” Kull says. “They do not need to be in jail.” Because of the nature of mental illness, not taking one’s medication is a frequent problem and can lead to other troubles, Kull says. “You’re not taking your meds anyway,” he says. “Some of them aren’t. They tend to be people who need their meds – you’re sick but you don’t think you’re sick. You don’t realize you’re sick. You don’t take meds and you become disruptive of people’s lives.” According to Ninth Circuit public defender Melissa Vickers, the problem isn’t the jail itself – they try their best – but more just that they aren’t a mental health facility and don’t have the capabilities to treat people in the best way possible. “The Orange County Jail tries to do the best they can with what they have,” Vickers says. “They’ll medicate them, but that’s all they can do. And the medication is sometimes not the same as what they have on the outside. It’s not set up to treat them – there’s no therapy, no counseling. Some won’t get medication at all, depending on the client and what behavior they’ve exhibited.” She says the issue is one for the courts and legislators rather than the jail itself
– there needs to be an effort to identify and get people out of jail who are suffering from mental illness. “It’s not the jail’s fault,” she says. “If they’re told to hold someone there, they have to do it.” Jenkins says this is true – and she doesn’t mince words in saying the jail is not and never was intended to be a mental health facility. “Everyone who comes in is screened for mental illness,” she says. “They’re seen by a mental health professional. But we’re not a behavioral center here – we have a mental health coordinator, but we don’t do counseling with a private office, with couches where you can put your feet up.” Inmates have the option to ask to speak to a mental health counselor, she says – but if they’re deemed a danger to themselves, they can be put in isolation. The stress of coming into the jail may amplify their already tense mindsets, though. “Anybody coming into the jail has a reaction,” Jenkins says. “Those who are mentally ill may have an exaggerated reaction.”
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risis intervention training classes in Orange County are taught by Aspire Health Partners, an amalgam of three different local entities: Lakeside Behavioral Healthcare, Seminole Behavioral Healthcare and the Center for Drug-Free Living. The classes are intended to help law enforcement deal with mentally ill individuals in a compassionate and efficient manner. In Orange County, the training is funded by the Valencia Criminal Justice Institute and costs $2,500 per class. Also known as the Memphis Model, CIT places officers in simulated scenarios so they can learn to problem-solve in a safe setting. According to NAMI, the model was developed through a partnership between NAMI, the University of Memphis CIT Center, CIT International and the International Association of Chiefs of Police. CIT was chronicled as an overall success in a 2012 study by the National Center for Biotechnology Information. The study says because officers “frequently respond to crisis calls involving individuals with serious mental illness,” it’s important for them to know how to deal with those people delicately and intelligently. “Serving as de facto psychiatric specialists, police officers often must assume roles held by nurses, social workers and case managers as the principal referral source to psychiatric emergency servicCONTINUED ON PAGE 17
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es,” the study reads. “For these reasons, it is crucial that officers are equipped with knowledge about various mental illnesses, and have the appropriate communication skills to safely intervene and expedite the disposition of the individual who is experiencing a psychiatric crisis.” The CIT model focuses on educating law enforcement on the signs and symptoms of mental illness and techniques to de-escalate situations when dealing with a mentally ill person. Through roleplaying and field trips to actual jails and mental institutions, officers learn more about the issue. The study found that CIT training helped officers empathize more with the mentally ill and increased their knowledge of how to spot a mentally ill individual when responding to calls. “Models such as CIT empirically show that this collaborative training is effective and provides a better standard of care to consumers, prevents a behavioral health crisis caused by unnecessary escalation, increased safety and proficiency for officers and lessens the intensity of care for psychiatric nurses, which is to the benefit of everyone involved,” the study concludes. The woman in charge of those classes in Orange County is Laura Gailey, Aspire’s Director of Acute Services. From her office off Lee Road, Gailey discusses the importance of making sure officers know how to respond to delicate situations on the job. “People with mental illness don’t always understand what they’re doing,” she says. “They’ll be arrested for trespassing. They’ll be booked in jail. The other hope for CIT is they’ll recognize it as a mental illness, and they can be brought here for treatment. It can be hard to get them to take medication in jail, so a lot of times it can be very symptomatic. They can hear voices in jail; they can be very depressed in jail.” The Aspire campus has nine beds total for the jail to use. Though they may have to return to jail when they’re done at the facility, she notes that it doesn’t always happen that way. Sometimes the system can be sympathetic, she says. “A lot of the times, the charges are dropped because of the illness,” she says. “It takes that CIT corrections officer to help identify those clients in the jail. These people are truly sick, and they need the stabilization. They don’t really need to be in jail.” Some officers who take the CIT class relate stories of what they saw in jail and, retroactively, realize what they were seeing was symptomatic of mental illness. “The CIT training teaches corrections
officers to identify people who are truly sick,” Gailey says. “They’ll start sharing stories about what they see in jail, and they’ll have no idea that was a mental illness.” Officers aren’t required to undergo CIT training, though. Some of them do it voluntarily and others, if a supervisor thinks it would be prudent, are “voluntold” to do it – a portmanteau of “volunteer” and “told” that Gailey relays with slight humor. Not every officer has to go to the training, though, under the current system Orange County uses. But it’s “best for everyone,” Gailey says, if more law enforcement and corrections officials learn to recognize the signs of mental health and the best ways to de-escalate situations with those who may be suffering from mental illness. “They’re able to talk the person down,” she says. “Or just talking to the person can actually calm them down. For us, it decreases injury.” At Pathways, Kull says the CIT programs are close to a godsend for some mentally ill individuals. “My Pathways members love CIT officers,” he says. “I tell [the officers] ‘Your uniform, everything needs to have a CIT pin on it, every one of them.’ The mentally ill know to look for that pin – it changes everything. … I don’t want to tell the jail what to do, but if all their officers had CIT training it’d probably be a good thing. Any jail is going to deal with mentally ill people. More than half of the inmates here have it. So all officers should take CIT.” However, none of these opinions matter as long as the state of Florida continues its trend at the very bottom of the country in terms of mental health spending. So the cycle continues: People go off their medications, they get sick and they end up in jail. “We’ve bounced between 49th and 50th for mental health funding for years,” Gailey says. “People here have wonderful ideas of what to do. But the services don’t exist; nobody’s willing to pay for them.” Pennisi says the solution will come down to not relying so much on the jail to place people – help will come when more distinction is made between who needs to be in jail and who doesn’t. “The jail is not the place to spend all our money,” he says. “If we downsize the number of people we put in jail, that will enable us to provide more resources needed for mental health. We need to get people out of corrections who are not a danger, who have mental health issues. “We need to separate people we’re genuinely afraid of versus those we just don’t like for some reason.”
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[ arts preview ]
‘PIETA’ SKETCHES BY WANDA RAIMUNDI-ORTIZ
HOLDING ACTION Durational performance by Wanda RaimundiOrtiz creates a space for radical empathy
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BY L EAH SA N DLER
y mother used to hold me in her lap nightly, cradling my small body in her arms, protecting me from the world’s indifference. At some point, probably during the self-conscious years of early adolescence, these gestures of closeness became less frequent, reserved only for the most joyous or traumatic moments, when my need for grounding warmth overcame my performance of teenage aloofness. Orlando-based artist Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz is responding to our current moment of collective mourning and trauma by opening her arms to the community in Pietà, a performance at Knowles Chapel as part of her Reinas (Queens) series of work, which offers a space for grieving and a gesture of comfort to those most closely affected by contemporary tragedies both personal and political. Michaelangelo’s Pietà, the famed Renaissance sculpture portraying a mourning Mary with her son Jesus’ limp, lifeless body draped across her lap, is a source of inspiration for Raimundi-Ortiz’s performance. The artist will re-enact Mary’s gesture of mourning, cradling 33 individuals (people of color and members of the LGBTQ community, specifically) in her arms for three minutes
and 33 seconds each, the repetitive action referencing the UCF professor Kristina Tollefson to create her costume, repeated violences against these communities: “This keeps inspired by the carven robes draped around Michelangelo’s happening and happening and happening,” she says in a Mary, in a “communion of mothers discussing and consoling.” While anchored in grief, Raimundi-Ortiz says the phone interview. In the Reinas series, Raimundi-Ortiz confronts her own project is also connected in a gentle way to her understanding of motherhood, and the role’s associated embodiments anxieties by performing queen-archetype characters, creating elaborate costumes and situations to reflect her and instincts. She is interested in physical contact, in bringinsecurities and fears. For Pietà, the artist channels the ing the iconic mother figure, Mary, to a place where she can Virgin Mary as an archetypal grieving mother, in response be touched and physically present. Physical contact, intimacy and touching have been to our current cultural milieu. “I am afraid of what has been happening to brown folks,” says Raimundi-Ortiz, “both important components of previous performances by young and old people of color who are brutalized, and their Raimundi-Ortiz. In Hush (seen in both New York and family members [who] are treated like they deserve what South Korea in 2011), the artist lay in a bed placed within they got. There is a sense of collective mourning and fear the walls of a gallery for four hours, inviting visitors to that every person of color feels for their child. Every parent lie with her, an incredible experience of intimacy in a public place. Raimundi-Ortiz says that is terrified for their child.” in her approach to physical presence, Amy Galpin, curator at the Cornell she is “almost the opposite of” perforFine Arts Museum, says about the mance artist Marina Abromovic, best performance’s current relevance, PIETÀ known for her stoic performance piece “This project was born from a want 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 21 The Artist Is Present, in which she sat to address police brutality and the disKnowles Chapel, Rollins College, silently across a table from participants, proportionate manner in which people 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park who were asked not to touch or speak of color are victims of this type of cfam.rollins.edu to the artist. Raimundi-Ortiz wants to violence. People of color have long free touch the viewer, in hopes of achieving experienced unjust treatment from law empathy through closeness. enforcement. … Philando Castile, Eric Art is a forum in which symbolic Garner, Sandra Bland, Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin are names that are all too familiar and gestures are granted heightened meaning, and deep selfreflection is encouraged. This is a space for politics and evoke tragic violence.” Raimundi-Ortiz will be accompanied by an a cappella also for affect – a consideration of how our emotions performance by the UCF gospel choir, setting a mood of direct our actions. As our newly instated executive branch reverence, as well as some spoken texts and wide-ranging seeks to retract protections of those most vulnerable and music selected by DJ Stereo 77, creating a soundtrack marginalized by systemic oppression, there is a need for of struggle, resilience and hope spanning generations. recognition of this as the violence that it is, and to respond with action as well as radical empathy. Further anchoring this performance in community collaboration, Raimundi-Ortiz worked with designer and fellow arts@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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BY SETH KUBERSKY RAGTIME GALS BARBERSHOP QUINTET | PHOTO BY SETH KUBERSKY
Last month, I began the first of
Race Through New York
three theme-park related columns with is a giant leap forward my rave review of Disney’s Rivers of Light, for crowd management, a show that greatly exceeded my tempered expectations. This week, we wrap up this a small step sideways attractions trilogy by taking a trip to the for simulators Big Apple – or at least Universal Studios Florida’s version of it – for a “technical rehearsal” sneak preview of that park’s big new summer addition, Race Through New you’ve never toured the building, like York With Jimmy Fallon. Kenneth from 30 Rock) assign guests a color-coded boarding group. When the lobby lights change to the proper hue, it FIRST IMPRESSIONS The new Tonight Show-themed expe- signals your turn to ascend to the buildrience, which replaced the cheesy ing’s second level. While you wait, there’s cult-favorite Twister walk-through, sits on a handsome exhibit to explore that pays the very same spot where I enjoyed my tribute to all Tonight Show hosts past and first employment in Orlando, as a tech- present, including Steve Allen, Jack Parr nician on the Ghostbusters show. So I’ll and even Conan O’Brien, complete with admit in advance to holding Universal’s a Triumph the Insult Comic Dog puppet. latest ride to an elevated standard, if only Take your time here to inspect the artifor sentimental reasons. After over a year facts, rather than herding in front of the of anticipating Fallon’s arrival, the affable staircase as many guests seem to do. Once upstairs, guests await their audiTonight Show host’s attraction turns out to be both a giant leap forward for crowd ence with Fallon in a plush lounge featuring management, and a small step sideways comfy couches, USB charging stations and touchscreen tables loaded with custom for simulators. As for first impressions, the new 8-bit video games and emailable “Thank building’s facade – an exacting scaled- You” notes. The highlight of this high-tech down replica of NBC’s historic offices holding pen is a replica of the Studio 6B at 30 Rockefeller Center, including the stage, which hosts live appearances by Art Deco bas-relief carvings and lighted accident-prone mascot Hashtag the Panda marquee – makes a far better anchor for and the Ragtime Gals barbershop quintet. Universal’s New York area than Twister’s Directed by Jason Horne, who has also bland, boxy soundstage did, and gets been pulling double duty directing the bonus points for window-dressing nods to Mardi Gras parade, the ensemble performs the late Bill Paxton. You may be tempted medleys of pop and rap hits with a capto charge through the front doors, but pella harmonies; just think of them as the slow down: In a first for a major Central Dirty Dapper Dans. With a wealth of bits Florida attraction, there is no standard in their repertoire – including classroom standby queue; instead, all guests (except instrument covers and lip-sync battles – those with Express passes) must first be this is the best new live musical show in assigned a Virtual Queue reservation time an Orlando park since Celestina Warbeck via Universal’s smartphone app or auto- debuted in Diagon Alley. mated kiosks that resemble Disney’s old FastPass dispensers. TONIGHT RIDING When it’s finally your turn to ride – about 20 minutes after entering the LEVEL UP At their appointed entry time, “NBC building once the attraction is at full pages” dressed like the real thing (or, if capacity, according to Universal Creative
designer Jason Surrell – you’ll grab your de rigueur dichroic 3-D goggles and line up for one of the attraction’s twin 72-seat simulators, each of which sports six 12-passenger rows with wood accents that mimic Fallon’s actual studio audience seating. Dubbed “the world’s first flying theater,” the DyMoRides-based motion platform has more in common with Universal’s Despicable Me and Shrek shaking seats than with Epcot’s Soarin, but it does generate remarkably smooth movement that most guests should be able to stomach. A four-story-tall curved screen provides razor-sharp visuals as you chase Jimmy’s juiced-up jalopy (named the “Tonight Rider,” natch) from Times Square to the Statue of Liberty, with a side trip to the moon. Unfortunately, the clarity highlights the rendering flaws in the ride film, which was produced by the usually reliable Industrial Light and Magic; Fallon and the other obviously green-screened live actors look like cartoonish Colorforms plastered atop hyper-realistic backdrops. A more fundamental problem is that, while devoted Fallon watchers may laugh in recognition at characters like the “Ew! Girl” and “Tight Pants,” as someone who quit watching the Tonight Show when Carson retired, I was left nonplussed by the jokes. Surrell says they can swap out the preshow entertainment over time to stay current, but Jimmy’s pre-recorded material already feels dated after only a few visits. Ultimately, Fallon’s new attraction is a E-Ticket wrapper surrounding a C-Ticket ride. Race Through New York’s real legacy won’t be clear until it officially opens and we see if it operates efficiently enough to fulfill its promise to eliminate the usual queuing that curses most theme park visits. If it can, look for similar strategies to spread to other new attractions, like 2018’s Fast and Furious ride. Then, the only question left for Universal’s designers to answer will be: What to do with all the guests who aren’t standing in lines? skubersky@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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ILLUSTRATION BY CHRIS TOBAR RODRIGUEZ
Continental breakfast Be your own (eggs) Benedict Arnold and eschew that allAmerican short stack – the world is your brunch buffet
S
BY HO LLY V. KAPHERR
o you call yourself a “citizen of the world?” Put your money where your mouth is: Instead of settling down in front of yet another stack of blueberry pancakes and sausage links (zzzzzzz), go global the next time you brunch. We’ve got plenty of “greasy spoon” spots slinging scrambles and hash, and Orlando certainly has no shortage of french toast and eggs benny, but when was the last time you slurped ramen or dove into dumplings first thing in the morning? You can do that, and more, at these spots around town that find their morning mojo in the wide world of flavor.
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Croque-madame, Croissant Gourmet PHOTO BY RICKY LY
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FRANCE:
Western mainland Europe isn’t an especially breakfasty place – croissant and café au lait are usually the extent of the morning meal – but the French spots in our city have raised the bar for their au maison brunch offerings. The croque-monsieur (a fried or grilled ham-and-Gruyere sandwich, sometimes topped with béchamel sauce) and croque-madame (the same, with the addition of a sunny-side-up egg on top) are the two most popular brunchy French dishes, and you’ll find them at just about every restaurant français in town: Croissant Gourmet, DoveCote, Paris Bistro and Urbain 40 all have some iteration of the favorite. At Urbain 40’s prix fixe, $50 brunch buffet, you’ll also be privy to house-made pastries and your choice of one entrée, including French toast and steak frites. DoveCote’s brunch menu starts at 10:30 a.m., and traditional brasserie fare is on tap. A salade Lyonnaise – bitter frisée lettuce topped with bacon, poached egg and honey-truffle vinaigrette – plus a glass of sparkling rosé is essential eating for Francophiles.
SPAIN:
Sundays are for sangria at the Iberian boîtes about town. Check out Tapa Toro on International Drive, Bulla in Winter Park, and Santiago’s Bodega’s two always-packed locations for paella and a party to boot. Tapa Toro’s four-hour brunch window is marked by a live Gipsy Kings-style band and plenty of flamenco to background the marvel of the nearperfect paella in front of your face. Their “Three Little Pigs and grits” plate is everything a carnivore wants for breakfast, with chicharrones, chorizo and braised 26
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pork belly sitting atop creamy corn grits. Bulla’s Catalan menu gets an upgrade at brunchtime with a separate section for eggs. Find scrambled eggs with oyster mushrooms, chickpea stew topped with a poached egg, and of course, tortilla española (a potato omelet of sorts). Make reservations well in advance if you want a table at Santiago’s Bodega. The brunch buffet is one of Orlando’s most beloved weekend nosh spots, and though the buffet leans traditional, there are still quite a few Spanish-style offerings, including chorizo paella and plenty of Manchego cheese.
ENGLAND & IRELAND: If there’s any nation that loves breakfast as much as the United States, it’s the United Kingdom. Also, they drink beer with breakfast, which we can totally get onboard with – Guinness tastes just like nitro cold-brew coffee anyway, right? A traditional “fry-up” includes mushrooms, sausages, beans, eggs and a rasher or two of Irish bacon (the round, fat-edged, not -streaked, slices of pork that Americans often call “Canadian bacon” or “back bacon”). You can score a half or full breakfast at the Harp and Celt Irish Pub and Restaurant while you watch a Premiere League match on weekend mornings, or settle into a cozy booth at Fiddler’s Green in Winter Park for seafood crepes filled with shrimp, crab or whitefish. Feel like brunch and a show? Raglan Road at Disney Springs serves a twist on an Irish classic they call “Three Times a Boxty” – sliced ham with cheddar sandwiched between two potato cakes, with a fried egg on top – and you’ll get to see an Irish clogging show every hour.
Dim sum, Mr. Wong’s Family Taste PHOTO BY RICKY LY
JAPAN:
Food enthusiasts are still buzzing about Domu, which took over the full-service restaurant space at East End Market several months back. Brunch service started recently, and along with their addictive ramen bowls, the mid-century modern Japanese joint added a few brunch-only creations, like steamed bao stuffed with Spam and soft scrambled eggs. Mama’s Breakfast includes sweet Chinese sausage, fried eggs and cucumber salad over rice. The menu is updated regularly, so don’t be surprised if you find a special breakfast ramen at the top of the menu next to the Richie Rich. Domu has even upgraded traditional mimosas by adding popping pearls to their fruit-forward fizzy drinks. They don’t take reservations, so best be there when the doors open at 11 a.m. if you’re really hungry.
CHINA:
Dim sum may seem like a cost-conscious option – dishes are between $2-$5 and meant for sharing – but if you’re not disciplined when that cart comes rolling around, expect a hefty bill. It adds up, but it’ll all be worth it, especially at some of the dim sum houses around Mills 50. Show up before 11 a.m. to make sure you get a seat. Dim sum is a marathon, not a sprint, so waiting for a table could take some time if you lounge around the house too long. Grab some friends and a giant round lazy-Susaned table, and start plucking translucent rice-paper dumplings, char siu bao, shrimp-stuffed siu mai and glistening chicken feet from the carts that roam Chan’s Chinese Cuisine, Ming’s Bistro and Lam’s Garden. If you find yourself around the attractions
area, iShanghai’s dim sum starts at noon and it’s the only place in town with soup dumplings. Over in West Orlando, Mr. Wong’s Family Taste begins dim sum service at 10 a.m. on weekends, and the chive pancakes and oblong Chinese eggplants stuffed with shrimp will be the talk of the table.
MEXICO:
Transplants from the Left Coast and Southwest often decry Orlando’s lack of quality Mexican grub, but that’s starting to change – if you know where to look. Two tiny spots on either side of town offer truly authentic breakfast options, from chilaquiles to breakfast tacos to chorizo-and-egg scrambles. At Tortilleria & Restaurant La Mexicana on Oak Ridge Road and Texas Avenue, prepare for two-for-one margaritas all day, starting at 6:30 a.m. (you read that right). Similar offerings are found at La Hacienda Market and Taqueria on Aloma Avenue in Winter Park. Upscale Tex-Mex brunch can be found on the patio at Cocina 214, the ideal spot for lazing with a $3 mimosa or a specialty margarita, and if your weekend morning brain can stand the raucous atmo of Rocco’s Tacos and Tequila, we suggest washing some huevos rancheros down with a shot of sangrita. Colibri Mexican Bistro in Baldwin Park (and the new location in SoDo) has just started serving weekend brunch, and the “huevos benedictinos” – corn tortillas topped with refried beans, carnitas, hollandaise sauce and two poached eggs – is what desayuno dreams are made of. CONTINUED ON PAGE 29
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Breakfast, Munch, Lunch and Craft Cocktails Available! Monday to Sunday from 7:00am to 2:30pm Plaza on University
12250 Strategy Blvd. Orlando, Fl. 32817
OmeletBar.com • 407-704 -1597
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Full Irish breakfast, Harp & Celt PHOTO BY ROB BARTLETT
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ITALY:
The good Lord in His infinite mercy has blessed us with Pizza Bruno, and a couple of months after this temple of pizza opened, they added brunch service. And there was much rejoicing. The menu for Bruno’s brunch changes weekly, so there’s no guarantee your favorite thing from last week will be there this week (kinda like those garlic knots), but the breakfast “sammy” is pretty much the best thing we’ve put in our mouths before noon in forever. Fontina cheese, a fried egg, arugula, pepperoni jam and the world’s most underappreciated meat, mortadella, are all sandwiched into an “everything” potato roll. Come. On. Now. Al Bacio on Park Avenue also puts away the pasta in favor of breakfast alla italiana. A few authentic Italian specialties are on the morning menu, including a pesto omelet; crostata with ham, cheese and spinach; and a housemade jelly-, chocolate- or cream-filled pastry. Sister restaurants Brio Tuscan Grille and Bravo Cucina Italiana both feature a Sicilian omelet on their menus, full of ham, bacon, sweet Italian sausage, tomato compote, caramelized onions and three cheeses.
LEBANON:
Fighting tourist traffic first thing in the a.m. might not sound like an A-plus idea, but the Lebanese brunch at Paramount Middle Eastern Cuisine is an excellent
raison de guerre. (Also, there’s free parking just steps away in a giant covered garage.) On weekends, the halal restaurant opens at 8 a.m. for a special menu section. Generally, breakfast is served, but on Saturday and Sunday, patrons of Paramount are treated to foul and fatteh, two traditional chickpea-based Lebanese breakfast dishes. Add beef shawarma or a plate of labneh yogurt with pita for a complete meal.
DEEP SOUTH:
Brunch was born in the U.S.A., and so was Southern food, so it’s appropriate to include our only native cuisine in this list. It’s exciting that previously lowly breakfast dishes like shrimp and grits and biscuits and gravy are having their day in the blistering Florida sun. Grab a 40 of Cask & Larder beer and sit down at a communal table at Swine & Sons Provisions to nosh on one of their rotating breakfast specials: We particularly love the biscuit sandwich with Tennessee-style cured ham, cheddar and tomato jam. Next door at the Ravenous Pig, either show up on the first Saturday of the month for the pig roast, or on Sundays starting at 10:30 a.m. for the à la carte brunch: The chicken and cornbread waffles with Nashville hot honey glaze and pickle relish are a go-to. Short-rib hash and sweet-potato pancakes are on the griddle at Soco in Thornton Park, where you should definitely sit on the patio and watch people parade their pups to and from the Lake Eola Farmer’s Market on Sunday mornings. dining@orlandoweekly.com
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FIZZY LIFTING DRINKS Some bar-raising mimosas to get you sophisti-sloshed The Porch
Osprey Tavern
For a $16 upcharge, you can take as many trips to the juice bar with your glass of prosecco as you like – they’ll keep the corks poppin’. Mix your mimosa with sweet nectars like passionfruit, mango and lychee. 643 N. Orange Ave, Winter Park, 407517-9101, theporchwinterpark.com
Right now, the kitchen is in flux, but the bar is still boppin’. Bottomless mimosas for $15 are made with Spanish cava and pair perfectly with a pork belly tartine. 4899 New Broad St., 407-9607700, ospreytavern.com
Crafted Block & Brew Seven different juices adorn the mimosa bar ($4 each) at Crafted in MetroWest. Mix and match, then top with any of the fruit on offer for a daytime drink that’s all yours. 2417 S. Hiawassee Road, 407-6016887, craftedorlando.com
Nova Restaurant Ivanhoe Village’s gastrobar begins brunch early, at 10 a.m., and they start slinging bottomless mimosas for $18 slightly after. Pineapple, cranberry and orange are your choices here. 1409 N. Orange Ave., 407-745-4080, novaorlandorestaurant.com
Two Chefs Seafood & Oyster Bar Oysters and champagne. Duh. Saturday and Sunday’s bottomless brunch mimosas are just $8, and you’ve got your pick of juices. 743 N. Magnolia Ave., 407-2704740, twochefsseafood.com
The Stubborn Mule The namesake cocktails are great, but mimosas are for brunching. Ten bucks will get you bottomless champs and OJ at this downtown spot. Ask if they’ll spike it with one of their mule mixers. 100 S. Eola Drive, 407-930-1166, thestubbornmuleorlando.com
The Hammered Lamb At this jam-packed brunch bar with one of the best patios in town, swill mimosas in 14 different flavors, including pomegranate, blood orange, strawberry, lemon and melon. 1235 N. Orange Ave., 407-7043200, thehammeredlamb.com
Graffiti Junktion At any one of the locations around the area (College Park, Thornton Park, Church Street, Lake Nona, Lake Mary, etc.), you can booze on mimosas all you want for $15. Choose from pineapple, cranberry or classic orange. Multiple locations, graffitijunktion.com
Café Tu Tu Tango Bring the color from the decor of this artists’� haven to your glass with either a pineapple or mango mimosa on weekends for $15 starting at 11 a.m. 8625 International Drive, 407248-2222, cafetututango.com
Dexter’s A brunchtime favorite, the bottomless mimosas at any one of the four locations are $12 and come in six flavors: mango, raspberry, peach, orange, cranberry and pineapple. Multiple locations, dexwine.com dining@orlandoweekly.com
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tip jar
THE LOCAL ALTERNATIVE FOR
EVENTS & ENTERTAINMENT ORLANDO LIVE EVENTS
BY FAIYAZ KARA
MARCH 17
OPENINGS Pig Floyd’s Urban Barbakoa will open its Lake Nona outpost Monday, March 20. Expect a menu identical to the Mills 50 original … Mesa21 Real Mexican opens this weekend in the former Gargi’s building in Ivanhoe Village … The District: Eatery and Tap & Barrel will open on Second Street in Sanford at the end of the month … KISS frontmen Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley will open their second Rock & Brews on South Semoran Boulevard near the airport in the third week of April … Lisbon Portuguese Cuisine is now open at I-Drive 360.
MARCH 30 THROUGH APRIL 2
SATURDAY IS THE NEW
Sunday
FOR REJUICINATION BRUNCH
CONTACT: BOXOFFICE@ORLANDOLIVEEVENTS.COM
Come see us at United We Brunch! 407.674.6841 • maxinesonshine.com
6405 S US HWY US 17-92, FERN PARK, FL 32730 | 407.951.8751
NEWS/EVENTS Quantum Leap Winery’s Tasting Room has expanded its hours (now open noon to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday), as well as their wine and food offerings … Baoery Asian Gastropub in Thornton Park has launched a new menu. Spicy lobster ramen, anyone? … Talley Vineyards, Bishop’s Peak and the Ravenous Pig collaborate on a four-course dinner Wednesday, March 22. Cost is $80 … Food Network Star Emily Ellyn hosts an evening of Sippin’ and Suppin’ Under the Stars at the Edible Garden & Outdoor Kitchen at Bok Tower Gardens Friday, March 24. Cost for the beer-inspired feast is $150 … The fourth annual Field to Feast dinner goes from 5-8 p.m. Saturday, March 25, at Long & Scott Farms, featuring eight Disney chefs and a master sommelier. Cost is $175 … In celebration of National Paella Day, the chefs at Bulla Gastrobar will prepare a massive paella on the restaurant’s patio during its happy hour from 5-7 p.m. Monday, March 27 … Do Good Date Night returns Friday, March 31, at 7 p.m. Guests will create and package meals at Feeding Children Everywhere’s Longwood facility, after which beer, wine and barbecue courtesy of 4 Rivers Smokehouse will be served. Cost is $20 … Taste at I-Drive 360 is Sunday, April 2, at 2 p.m. The $45 ticket includes tastings from eight restaurants, admission to the Orlando Eye, and complimentary parking … The Taste of College Park takes place at 6 p.m. Thursday, April 6, in the Dubsdread Ballroom. Cost is $70.
Got restaurant dish? Send tips to dining@orlandoweekly.com
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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG
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The price range generally reflects the average cost of one dinner entree. Bakeries, ice cream shops, etc. reflect relative cost for one person. Search hundreds more reviews at orlandoweekly.com
IPHO NOODLE HOUSE Vietnamese fare comes to Maitland with this second outpost of the Lake Mary original. The interior won’t lift your spirits, but a savory golden pancake folded with shrimp, pork and bean sprouts will. Same goes for their signature pho – the broth veers toward the sweeter side, but it’s hearty and can be made heartier with the addition of oxtail. Bracing beef and pork noodle soup with lemongrass is a coldsufferer’s delight. Don’t overlook their clay pots, and ask for the banh mi menu if you’re not handed one. Open daily. 156 Lake Ave., Maitland, 321-422-0181; $
CHROMA MODERN BAR + KITCHEN The modern kitchen anchoring Lake Nona Town Center’s ultra-modern landscape serves up some time-honored dishes courtesy of chef Jason Bergeron. Succulent short-rib sliders, lamb ribs, littleneck clams and luxuriant bone marrow make sharing joyfully gratifying. Lackluster desserts could use some inspiration, but it won’t tarnish Chroma’s sheen. Open daily. 6967 Lake Nona Blvd., 407-955-4340 ; $$
MAESTRO CUCINA NAPOLETANA Local restaurateur Rosario Spagnolo (TerraMia) returns to Park Avenue in this joint venture with fellow Neapolitan Antonio Martino. What you get is an expected blend of authenticity and populist fare, and it’s a mix that doesn’t disappoint. Sure, better Neapolitan pizzas can be had elsewhere, but you won’t find a better space in which to enjoy a slice of pie, or antipasti (fritiura del golfo), pasta (con polpette) or secondi (spezzatino di vitello). Desserts like profiteroles and pastiera won’t disappoint. Open daily. 528 S. Park Ave., Winter Park, 407-335-4548; $$
DOMU Popular ramen joint lives up to the hype offering near-perfect bowls of tonkotsu, shoyu, miso and curry ramen. There’s an uni pasta for those who want to forgo broth for the richness of sea urchin, but don’t overlook other soupless options like CONTINUED ON PAGE 37
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the crackling good Korean fried chicken with Korean butter sauce, the grilled octopus, and Sichuan cucumbers. Cocktails crafted by Rene Nguyen (Herman’s Loan Office) are taken seriously here. 3201 Corrine Drive, 407-960-1228; $$
THE STUBBORN MULE
The folks who brought us RusTeak are behind this casual Thornton Park eatery where dishes veer toward the weighty, and beverages toward the crafty. Fried Wisconsin cheese curds and equally addicting pork belly slicked in an “Asian” sticky sauce make fine starters, while burgers, Reuben tacos, and the catch of the day make fine entrée choices. Ending with a cronut topped with vanilla bean ice cream will only cement your decision to return. Closed Mondays. 100 S. Eola Drive, 407-930-1166; $$$
BULLA GASTROBAR
South Florida Spanish joint serves up some mighty fine tapas and tipples. Chef Felix Plasencia gets it going with marvy croquetas, stellar octopus salad, and pintxos of charcoal-fired cumin-marinated pork. Jamon ibérico de bellota and Leonora cheese are good any time of day. For more substantial plates, consider the seafood paella, arroz marinero cooked with plankton, and the red snapper fired up in a charcoal oven. Torrijas (Spanish-style French toast) drizzled with honey and served with turrón ice cream is our choice to end the meal. Open daily. 110 S. Orlando Ave., Winter Park, 321-214-6120; $$$
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TASTE OF YUCATÁN
No-frills Mexican joint serves up a taste of Yucatán cuisine with a grand selection of tacos, salbutes (deep-fried tacos) and panuchos (salbutes stuffed with refried beans), as well as tortas, quesadillas and rice bowls. Fillings you’ll fancy: cochinita pibil, al pastor, barbacoa and vegetarian rajas poblanas. Pollo adobado can be a tad dry, but superb housemade salsas, like tamarind-habañero and salsa macha, counter the effects. Closed Mondays. 1375 S. Semoran Blvd., 407-704-2248; $
BARTACO
Beach-themed taquería fuses Mexican tradition with Latin, Mediterranean and Asian flavors and, for the most part, does so successfully. Tacos are on the small side, but when corn tortillas are filled with such succulent meats as duck confit in tamarind glaze, rotisserie pork pastor, and soy-, sesame- and sriracha-marinated Angus ribeye topped with kimchi, substance tends to trump size. Vegetarian options (falafel, cauliflower, portobello) abound, but don’t overlook other items like grilled corn rolled in lime, cayenne and cotija. Cocktails please even when desserts don’t wow. Open daily. 7600 Dr. Phillips Blvd., 407-801-8226; $$ n
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“New Trendy Bar in Orlando” GRAND OPENING OF TASTING ROOM (OF ORLANDO) LUNCH & DINNER A pre-booked event that can be reserved for up to 30 people. Indulge in a delicious, 5 course menu. Which is paired with the perfect wine and champagne, that is carefully selected by our sommelier. As part of the experience, we enrich your knowledge by showing you the stories and flavors behind each wine
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S U N D AY B R U N C H Discover the most amazing champagne brunches in Orlando. We’ve partnered with professional chefs to offer you a gourmet, French Style brunch. Pair the exclusive menu with 3 hours of unlimited alcohol flow: Prosecco, cocktails, champagne or bourbon. Make every Sunday the day to enjoy delicious food and drinks, with the best DJ spinning an afterparty vibe.
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FILM LISTINGS
couchsurfing: stuff to stream & download
[ film review ]
Singin’ in the Rain
The Decline of Western Civilization II: The Metal Years Documentary about the mid-’80s
metal scene in Los Angeles. Monday, 9:30 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Erin Brockovich Celebrate Women’s History Month
with films that highlight the achievements of women. Wednesday, 11 am; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. I Am Not Your Negro Documentary about
writer James Baldwin’s relationships with Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin
PHOTO COURTESY OF NETFLIX
MISSED CONNECTION
Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland;
Despite a strong start, Deidra & off the rails
$11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org.
BY T HA D DE U S M CCO L LU M
Luther King Jr. Through Thursday; Enzian
Postcards From the Edge Meryl Streep and
Shirley MacLaine star as an actress in recovery and her mother. Based on the autobiographical novel by Carrie Fisher. Sunday, noon; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $9; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Selma Screening of Ava DuVernay’s 2015 film
about Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1965 marches in Selma, Alabama. Thursday, 7 pm; Canvs, 101 S. Garland Ave.; free; 407-378-4150; canvs.org. Singin’ in the Rain Debbie Reynolds and
Gene Kelly star in this tribute to the heyday of Hollywood musicals. Saturday, noon; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $9; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. 40
“M
ore’s not for us,” dejected teenager Laney (Rachel Crow) observes while visiting her incarcerated mother, Marigold (Danielle Nicolet), in Deidra & Laney Rob a Train. Laney and her sister, Deidra (Ashleigh Murray) have been left in charge of running the household and paying bills after Marigold lands in jail after destroying televisions in the Best Buy-knockoff where she works. “No, baby, I don’t think it is,” Marigold replies. And that’s just how it feels to watch Deidra & Laney: Even though there’s plenty to like, there’s a nagging sense that there should have been more. The first half-hour or so of the movie – in which we meet Deidra (valedictorian high-school senior who sells test answers to classmates for extra cash) and Laney (shy middle sibling who struggles to stand out), see their mom get carted off to jail, and watch as they come up with a plan to raise money for bail and bills by stealing goods off the freight trains that pass
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vicious frenemy; and an investigation into the train robberies by an overzealous railway detective (Tim Blake Nelson), are all presented so broadly that they detract from the originality of the premise. Nelson, a fine character actor, is particularly misused here. His cartoonish Laney Rob a Train veers portrayal of Truman, the bumbling detective in charge of tracking down the mysterious train robbers, is straight out of an ABC Family made-for-TV movie. Goofily clad in khaki shorts and a fanny pack, he by their house – moves like a well-oiled dismisses questioning Deidra, despite her machine, balancing plot, character, humor matching the physical appearance of one of and pathos. But instead of a black comedy the two suspects caught on blurry security with some subtext about the small victo- footage, simply because she’s the valedictorian. Presumably, the ries of the working poor scene is played for against the emotionlaughs, but the jokes less, unyielding march DEIDRA & LANEY ROB A TRAIN never quite hit, which of capitalism, Deidra & is a problem that perLaney quickly descends Streaming on Netflix Friday, March 17 vades most of the film. into all-too-predictable This is director family farce. Sydney Freeland’s That’s not to say that second feature about there aren’t things to like teens stuck in small about the movie. Murray and Crow as the titular sisters are a notch Western towns taking extreme chances to or two above most teen actors as far as cha- try to better their lives, but while 2014’s risma goes. And SNL’s Sasheer Zamata steals Drunktown’s Finest took its subjects’ probevery scene she’s in as an ambitious guid- lems seriously, Deidra & Laney tries to make ance counselor whose only hope for career light of them. The result feels tone-deaf at advancement is getting Deidra into college. best. With this talented a cast and such an But subplots about the sisters rekindling a intriguing premise, a little more empathy relationship with their estranged, lovable could have made Deidra & Laney Rob a screw-up father, Chet (David Sullivan); Laney Train so much more. competing in a teen beauty pageant against a tmccollum@orlandoweekly.com
HHHHH
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ON SCREENS IN ORLANDO
Beauty and the Beast BY ST EVE SCHNEIDER Beauty and the Beast OK, I really need to get
this off my chest. We aren’t even a quarter of the way into the year, and I’ve already had it up to here with people getting mad at movies. First there were the reports of audience members storming angrily out of showings of Get Out, complaining that the movie is antiwhite. Yeah, what of it? Back in the day, I bet there were plenty of men who refused to stay seated until the end of The Stepford Wives because they thought it was anti-male. You know what? A) They were right; and B) Good! So fare thee well, cracka. I’ll finish your popcorn. Now we have theaters refusing to show Disney’s live-action remake of its Beauty and the Beast because one of the characters is openly gay. And that’s the sort of reimagining Alabama just won’t stand for. Of course, it only counts as a reimagination if you have no imagination in the first place, because Disney history is littered with characters that were obviously friends of Dorothy. They just couldn’t say so. And I think you know why: Because Dorothy was the property of MGM! And it isn’t just Disney. All of cartoondom is replete with pole-vaulters. (Take a good hard listen to the Great Gazoo sometime.) I had to laugh when I heard DC Comics had gotten in hot water for an upcoming series in which they reinterpret Snagglepuss the mountain lion as a gay Southern Gothic playwright. Excuse me, but when wasn’t Snagglepuss a gay Southern Gothic playwright? The guy’s two key catchphrases are “Exit, stage left” and “Heavens to Murgatroyd.” You know that anybody who talks like that, the odds are pretty close to 100 percent he’s passing out poppers at ’80s night. Now we’re all supposed to get our Under Armour in a wad because two male characters in a Disney flick – SPOILER ALERT! – dance with each other. That’s only revolutionary behavior in the sense that, 20 years ago, it could get you kicked out of the Magic Kingdom. By a guy named Tristan, who then went home and cried to his “roommate,” Tad, that his bosses were making him do some awful things.
So instead of expressing outrage that a character named LeFou is not in fact a fan of Le Puss, maybe we should all just offer up a heartfelt “You’ve come a long way, Mary” and move on to debating issues that really matter – like if this live-action Beauty and the Beast is actually enhanced by the new songs contributed by Alan Menken and Sir Tim Rice. BTW, I dare you to name three words in the English language that are gayer than “Sir Tim Rice.” And you can’t say “Exit, stage left,” because I already gave you those. (PG) Land of Mine Only after losing this year’s Best Foreign Film Oscar is Land of Mine seeing release in Orlando, which seems kind of counterintuitive. Then again, the picture is a bit of a hard sell, taking as its protagonists a bunch of German POWs who were made to remove and defuse almost 2 million landmines along the Danish Coast in the immediate aftermath of World War II. With their bare hands, yet! The intended sympathetic hook is that the soldiers picked for this incredibly dangerous duty were mostly still in their teens. But if you understand much about the world, you know that the only demographic group less innocent than “Nazis” is “teenagers.” Which is why I’m going to hire a freshman from Winter Park High School to send and read all my texts if I ever upgrade to a Galaxy 7. (R) The Sense of an Ending Boy, talk about a title
that could pertain to just about half the films you see at festivals. (“Caché did not have an ending, but I feel it had the sense of one.”) Fortunately, advance reports portend a bit more closure from this enigmatically structured literary adaptation, in which an old geezer tries to make sense of the path his life took after he lost his college sweetheart to one of his closest friends. But which one of them was he really attracted to? (“Goddamn it, not this homoerotic shit again!” grumbles the Alabama moviegoer, fleeing the theater and sneaking into the neighboring one that’s showing this promising-sounding little film, Get Out. Only 90 minutes till he woke AF!) (PG-13) orlandoweekly.com
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[ concert preview ]
GREAT LIVE MUSIC RATTLES ORLANDO EVERY NIGHT Nice Try Fantasically buoyant barbed wire kisses from this Bloomington twee punk duo: the stuff that K Records dreams are made of. 9 p.m. Wednesday, March 15, at Will’s Pub, $5
Paper Bird Colorado indie folk army plays a free show at the Social as part of a Breckenridge Brewery event. Music will be windswept and lovelorn. 9 p.m. Thursday, March 16, at the Social, free
St. Patrick’s Day Slosher
Millionyoung
American Party Machine and a handful of other valiant locals vie for the attention of a thoroughly, well, sloshed audience. Watch out for the splash zone(s). 8 p.m. Friday, March 17, at Will’s Pub, $8-$10
Paul Oakenfold Veteran U.K. DJ goes back to the future with a stripped-down setup and a set that aims to look back at his 30 years of dancefloor duty. 10 p.m. Saturday, March 18, at Gilt, $10-$30
Karl Berger Improvisers Orchestra Composer Karl Berger drilled an ad hoc Orchestra of locals to knife-point sharpness during a Florida residency in 2015; now he’s back to finish the job with a program heavy on Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry. 7:30 p.m. Sunday, March 19, at Timucua Arts White House, donations accepted
Beach Slang Philadlephian punks blow through town again, this time in the company of Minus the Bear. Unlike last time’s “Quiet Slang” solo performance, this will be a band outing. 8 p.m. Monday, March 20, at the Beacham, $22.50-$28.50
High Waisted Feeling some distinct Best Coast vibes from this New York-based garage-surf band. Just the right amount of reverb too. 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 21, at Will’s Pub, $6-$8
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LOUD AND CLEAR The Contact Music Festival aims together under one roof BY MATTHEW MOYER
“C
ontact is about celebrating the cultural renaissance the city is experiencing right now. We want to bring together as many dope musicians, artists and activists as we possibly can. Like a massive spirit bomb of Orlando underground energy,” says Phillip Santos, in response to Orlando Weekly’s question about his motivations for creating the Contact Music Festival. Coming from most anyone else, a statement like this might come off as idealistic overreach, but Santos has put in his time in the DIY trenches. Santos, as founder of the eclectic and successful Body//Talk club nights, has been putting on monthly events for several years running that combine adventurous local musicians with DJs and live art installations, all with fiercely independent and community-centric ethics. “When I was 13 I started going to shows. … The way I found community was through music,” says Santos about Body//Talk’s genesis. “So I wanted to make sure when I started doing these events that there was no one off being awkward and lonely in the corner.“ Contact is the next step in Body//Talk’s evolution, their biggest and most ambitious
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dance ensemble Thrift House. Elsewhere, art installations by the likes of Halsi and John Alamo sit alongside a day market, food trucks, and representation from socially to bring Orlando’s underground conscious groups from Planned Parenthood to Equality Florida, to say nothing of a series of workshops running throughout the day presented by local activist organizations and sundry creatives. “The lineup was intentionally planned to event yet. The daylong (and nightlong) festival combines an incredible array of local hit as many scenes as possible,” says Santos music, local art, local goods and, intriguing- about the day’s music. “We started, first and ly, local activism. “Logistically, we’ve been foremost, evaluating acts by the quality of doing a monthly series of events that have their music and their live show, and then we been adding more and more complexity tried to represent the different factions of every month so it’s been a natural progres- Orlando music. I’m excited to see hip-hop sion,” says Santos, when asked about the kids wandering into a techno room, or some mechanics of an undertaking of this scale. older fans stumbling across a nonviolent mosh pit.” “It’s a learning curve Contact, much like as far as vendors and last year’s grass-roots workshops and sponCONTACT MUSIC FESTIVAL Florida Is Loud Fest, sorships. … It’s kind of 5 p.m. Saturday, March 18 aims to present the like opening a venue for Henao Contemporary Center, musical breadth of a six hours and then tear5601 Edgewater Drive festival, only on a more ing it down.” bodytalkparty.org | $12 human scale. “I went to Santos states a festival recently … the Contact’s aim simply as “bringing the underground together,” but music and lighting can be incredible but if there’s more to it than that. It’s almost a love that human element isn’t there then I’m not letter to the creativity simmering in certain necessarily going to feel comfortable,” posits pockets of the local scene across disciplines Santos. “So we’re not only going to pack and genres. Spread across two stages at Contact with amazing music and amazing the Henao Contemporary Center, Eugene production but also activities and lots of Snowden and Millionyoung headline a mul- opportunities to engage directly with one tigenerational bill that takes in groups as another, instead of just engaging with some diverse as downcast rockers RV to rag- artistic experience at a distance.” ing punk garage outfit Wet Nurse to indie mmoyer@orlandoweekly.com
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BY B AO L E - H U U VAGABON | PHOTO BY JEN CRAY
Even if you forgot that St. Patrick’s Day was coming, the concert calendars should’ve Paul Revered you with the Celtic-punk invasion of the Dropkick Murphys at House of Blues and the Real McKenzies at Backbooth that descended upon Orlando in a 24-hour period.
DROPKICK MURPHYS, HOUSE OF BLUES, MARCH 8
I’ve seen Dropkick Murphys numerous times but it’s been years, possibly a decade. In that time, they haven’t simply gotten bigger, they’ve woven themselves deeper into the rich American musical tapestry, going from hardcore hooligans to folk heroes as Boston’s rock & roll laureates. I never really forgot how primary their appeal is. This show, however, was a forceful and triumphant reminder. Their songs are nothing if not emotionally straightforward. They’re guilelessly obvious in a way that – like, say, love or parenthood – always feels clichéd to write about. But when you’re there face to face, feeling it with all senses, well, it becomes viscerally universal. Besides, the Murphys are all about heart, not art. Their blue-collar music’s got ethos and soul, and is populist in ways far more authentic and virtuous than the people who co-opt the stance for politics. And they do it loud, proud and with maximum pageantry. Their depiction of the majesty and heroism of the working class in anthem after ringing anthem has made them icons of America’s up-by-the-bootstraps immigrant culture, the one that the Right loves to downplay. Also they’ve been known to beat some Nazi ass onstage. What further bodes well for their legacy is that they’ve shown a remarkable ability to age. They’ve become a multi-
Vagabon’s rich music is a rock experience of power and beauty. The arrangements are smart and effective, but add in an extraordinarily expressive voice and the result is both tender and crashing.
generational phenomenon positioned to become a heritage act. What was once a boys’ night out is now a family affair. Kids were everywhere at the concert, in the crowd and even onstage. They brought up 10-year-old Floridian Teagan Lynch to sing on their classic duet “The Dirty Glass.” According to singer-bassist Ken Casey on video captured two nights earlier at the St. Pete show, she’s the daughter of a friend (Gene Lynch) who actually tried out to be a singer for the Murphys back in the day and later relocated here. For a socially conscious people’s band like them, though, the Murphys did miss a big connective opportunity with Orlando as a fellow city of modern terrorist tragedy. But that’s not a lapse in their show, just something that would’ve made for a truly historic moment. On all other counts, they brought their famous spirit with grand production to match.
ALLISON CRUTCHFIELD AND THE FIZZ WITH VAGABON, WILL’S PUB, MARCH 9
By sheer presence alone, the Crutchfield sisters practically own today’s indie scene.
Between Allison’s work in Swearin’ and Katie’s as Waxahatchee, it’s like they’ve been the twin prom queens of the underground for the last several years. Now that her breakout band Swearin’ has folded amid romantic collapse, Allison Crutchfield has officially embarked on a fresh solo career with the January release of her debut album on Merge Records. But fans of her late band need not lament. Crutchfield’s solo material has the same distinctive and keening melodies as Swearin’. It just trades punk crunch for a broader emotional and instrumental palette. Musically, it’s a blend of rock and electronics that weaves in her keyboards like an American college-rock interpretation of New Order’s architecture. Most crucially, the clear, melodic vulnerability of Crutchfield’s singing remains the cornerstone. Even with some rhythmic awkwardness with her live band the Fizz, Crutchfield’s new vehicle features her furthest-reaching and most interesting sounds yet. Just as auspicious was tourmate Vagabon, the budding solo vehicle of Cameroon-born New Yorker Lætitia Tamko that made a Florida debut amid some hot early word of mouth. Tamko only just emerged with her first LP less than three weeks ago, but she’s already being aligned with the bright new class of women who aren’t just practicing indie rock but furthering it. If you were at this show, you saw why. Vagabon’s rich music is a rock experience of power and beauty. The arrangements are smart and effective, but add in Lætitia Tamko’s extraordinarily expressive voice and the result is both tender and crashing. More than that, it’s ready. Look out for her. baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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STIL AFTER T L GREEN HE PART Y? DA
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AND SUN DAY AT WWW.YO 9:30 AM GAMIXO RLANDO .COM
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Saturday, 18
Saturday, 18 Ootheca MUSIC
An intriguing bill boasting a couple of generations of local creative outsiders and stark differences in methods of expression makes this a mandatory event for Saturday night. On the one hand you have Ootheca, a new solo project from local stalwart Brian Phillips (Anatolya, Discovery of Magnetic North). But whereas DMN was soothing sinewave ambience, early listens to Ootheca reveal a much more filth-ridden and blown-out industrial sound, similar to SPK or Throbbing Gristle. Then there’s local poet Ashley Inguanta, making a much-welcomed return to the stage after a slate of shows following the release of her latest volume of work – Bomb – late last year. Filling out the bill is the surprising but satisfying inclusion of Tiger Fawn, a young musician but at this point a scene veteran in her own right. Tiger Fawn has been laying low so far this year while putting the finishing touches on an album, and no doubt some of this material will be aired on stage. All proceeds from the evening go toward Organize Florida, a nonprofit dedicated to social and economic justice. – Matthew Moyer
Dave Hill COMEDY
Music and comedy is one of those pairings like peanut butter and chocolate, or pineapple and pepperoni (shut up and try it), which just seem to work for whatever reason. Take the career of Dave Hill, a comedian who got his start as a musician playing in ’90s one-hit wonders Sons of Elvis, appeared on Fuse TV’s Hoppus on Music as a correspondent for two years, and whose current band, Valley Lodge, is responsible for “Go,” the catchy opening theme to HBO’s Last Week Tonight With John Oliver. Hill stops into Will’s Pub this week with Greg Barris, a comic whose “Heart of Darkness” shows are known to close with a musical rave-up. Plus, Tierney Tough, the frontwoman of noted local indie pop band the Pauses, is slated to provide music – though we kind of hope she tries her hand at cracking a few jokes as well. – Thaddeus McCollum with Greg Barris, Tierney Tough, Heather Shaw | 9 p.m. | Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. | willspub.org | $10-$12
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If there’s one thing that Orlandoans know how to do well, it’s brunch. Here in the City Beautiful, there’s nothing a Bloody Mary and some bacon can’t fix, and you’ll find all your favorite boozy breakfast treats at United We Brunch. Come check out brunch destinations from all over the city coming together to provide you with the ultimate afternoon meal. There’ll be plenty of your go-to local restaurant favorites, including Canvas, First Watch, Maxine’s on Shine, Foxtail Coffee Co., Kasa and Red Mug Diner ready to keep the griddles hot and the mimosas flowing. Don’t worry, we won’t judge you for wanting seconds: After all, who can resist the sweet euphoria only an overload of sausage, eggs and pancakes can provide? – Deanna Ferrante noon-3 p.m. | The Orchid Garden, 126 W. Church St. | brunch.orlandoweekly.com | $40-$65
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Sunday, 19 Postcards From the Edge FILM
Saturday, 18 United We Brunch
OUR PICKS FOR THE BEST EVENTS THIS WEEK
with Ashley Inguanta, Tiger Fawn | 8 p.m. | Stardust Video & Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road | stardustie.com | $5 suggested donation
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Carrie Fisher was more than just the actress who played Princessturned-General Leia Organa in four of the Star Wars films. She was also a gifted writer and script doctor. Her 1987 novel, Postcards From the Edge, won her acclaim for its humorous take on serious issues like substance abuse, inspired by Fisher’s own struggles and relationship with her mother, Hollywood legend Debbie Reynolds. Inevitably, the book was turned into a 1990 film – with a screenplay again written by Fisher – that stars Meryl Streep as “Suzanne,” the fictionalized version of Fisher, and Shirley MacLaine as “Doris,” standing in for Reynolds. Both Fisher and Reynolds died within days of each other at the tail end of the celebrity bloodbath that was 2016, but it’s hard to watch MacLaine’s showstopping performance of the Stephen Sondheim-penned “I’m Still Here” in Postcards and not be grateful that their talents, at least, remain with us. – TM noon | Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland | 407-629-0054 | enzian.org | $9
Sunday, 19 King Woman
Monday, 20 Tortoise MUSIC
With doom and sludge metal, the discerning listener has to be increasingly picky, as so many bands get bogged down in cartoonish Black Sabbath signifiers and clichés, but thankfully, San Francisco’s King Woman are reinvigorating the form. The brainchild of Kristina Esfandiari (also of the stellar Miserable), KW started as a solo venture and now has expanded into a full band, and as personnel expanded so did the scope of their eldritch sound. King Woman craft a bleak, anguished wall of tar informed as much by Chelsea Wolfe as by Grief. And for that matter, even beyond the Jarboe-esque commanding bellow of Esfandiari, we detect a pulpy deathrock influence. And why not? King Woman’s new album Created in the Image of Suffering is definitely a prime noose-tightening soundtrack. Not only that, the goddamn thing is being put out by prime mover metal label Relapse in a beautiful vinyl edition. It’s the perfect physical medium for a new set of songs that are fully realized and cinematic like the best horror and/or Tarkovsky films. We’ve been following King Woman since the Doubt cassette a few years back and are eager to see how this new sonic ambition plays out live, in the company of fellow metal iconoclasts Oathbreaker. – MM with Oathbreaker, Jayle Jayle, Arms | 7 p.m. | Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St. | 407-999-2570 | backbooth.com | $12
Monday, 20 Brian Feldman’s William Shakespeare’s Macbeth THEATER
Performance artist and actor Brian Feldman may be based out of Washington, D.C., now, but we’re lucky that he still comes down to visit pretty frequently. He’s known for such performance pieces as “The Skill Crane Kid,” in which he locked himself inside a claw machine, “Leap Year Day,” in which he jumped from the top of a ladder 366 times within the space of 24 hours, and “Brian Feldman Marries Anybody,” in which he married a complete stranger in order to needle the idea that heterosexual marriages were somehow inherently more valid than homosexual ones. But his acting career began on the stage at Lake Eola’s Walt Disney Amphitheatre, where he played the Third Witch in an Orlando Shakespeare Theater production of Macbeth at the tender age of 10. Feldman returns to that very stage this week with this performance, the details of which he’s keeping under wraps, but it involves Feldman playing all 40 characters throughout the cursed “Scottish play.” We’re not sure what he has planned, exactly, but Feldman promises that it will be the most experimental thing he’s ever done, which, coming from a guy who once passed off reading Orlando Weekly out loud as art, is saying something. – TM 7 p.m. | Walt Disney Amphitheatre, Lake Eola Park, 99 N. Rosalind Ave. | brianfeldman.com | free
MUSIC
Post. Post-modern. Post-punk. Post-mortem. Post-apocalyptic. Post-rock. Since the mid-20th century the antecedent has been tarred, affixed and bound to a multitude of words in the English vocabulary. The present offers no certain insight into the future, and these four letters once carried the charge of that uncertainty. Tortoise, Chicago’s forebears of post-rock, found themselves post-six studio albums and birthing a seventh in January 2016, the first since 2009. Even following this healthy outlay of releases, there’s something inarguably futuristic, something fresh and avant-garde to their sound still. Their compositions are thematic and self-aware – intentionally plodding, deliberately meandering. Their palette is bleak and white; washed but never pastel and never drab. This distinctly desaturated quality returns on Catastrophist: blurring, blending, brooding over, then bleeding out the motifs of the past. Each of the group’s members are thoroughly accomplished and wildly prolific in their own right, and the seven-year gap since Beacons of Ancestorship has no relation to lack of inspiration. And with the present ever more fractured and foreboding, Tortoise’s “everything must go” sonic approach has perhaps never been more timely. – John Rousseau with Tara Jane O’Neil | 8 p.m. | The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thesocial.org | $15-$18
Tuesday, 21 Stevie Nicks MUSIC
Does she have a new album out? No. Does it even fucking matter? No. Look, Stevie Nicks – vocalist for Fleetwood Mac when the remaining members temporarily bury respective hatchets anywhere other than in one another’s backs, and a solo artist unsurpassed in terms of reality-building and mystique – at this point in her career is a singular figure who exists slightly outside of all pop narratives and promotional obligations. To say nothing of the mythmaking! Does she live in a castle by the ocean all by herself? Her only company being a small flock of regal doves, attentively watching as she plays an ivory piano long into the night? Well, yes, duh, but we’re more PHOTO BY KRISTIN BURNS interested in her total autonomy in her art and her work and her life. There are no Svengalis, no collaborators, no dead weight – and even above that, the lethal, sleek cyber-witch hooks and choruses embedded in songs like “Edge of Seventeen,” “Stand Back,” “Bella Donna” and the “Nightbird.” She doesn’t even have to touch the goddamn Fleetwood Mac songbook if she doesn’t feel like it. At this point in the game, going to see Stevie Nicks live is akin to a religious pilgrimage; go pay your tribute to a pop Oracle of Delphi. – MM with the Pretenders | 7 p.m. | Amway Center, 400 W. Church St. | 800-745-3000 | amwaycenter.com | $61.30-$165.40
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submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com at least 12 days before print to have them included
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15-TUESDAY, MARCH 21 COMPILED BY THADDEUS MCCOLLUM
MUSIC WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15 Brian Killeen 8 pm; The Imperial at Washburn Imports, 1800 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-228-4992. Eugene Snowden’s Ten Pints of Truth 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Hear Me Out Showcase 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $7; 407-999-2570. The Met Live in HD: La Traviata 6:30 pm; Sonya Yoncheva stars as Violetta Valéry opposite rising American tenor Michael Fabiano as her lover, Alfredo. Multiple locations; $25.56; fathomevents.com. Nice Try, the Welzeins, TV Dinner, Don Kng 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5. Reggae Night with Hor!zen and DJ Red I 10 pm; The Caboose, 1827 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-898-7733. Timothy Eerie 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.
THURSDAY, MARCH 16 Breck Trek: Paper Bird 9 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; free; 510-206-3932. Create: Shiba San, MK 10 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $10-$15; 407-872-0066.
[MUSIC] Hayley Kiyoko Tuesday at the Social
The Dorothy Shaw Bell Choir 5:15 pm; Disney Springs Town Center, 1676 E. Buena Vista Dr., Lake Buena Vista; free; 817-924-3640. Kaleigh Baker 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.
Bomi Boys 8:30 pm; Little Fish Huge Pond, 401 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-221-1499.
Luke Wagner & the Bootleg Bros 9 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171.
Casting Crowns, Danny Gokey, Unspoken 7 pm; CFE Arena, 12777 N. Gemini Blvd.; $18-$45; 407-823-3070.
The Mellow Relics 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.
The Charlie Daniels Band, Spayed Koolie, Scooter Brown Band 6 pm; Apopka Amphitheater, 3710 Jason Dwelley Parkway, Apopka; $35-$85; 352-324-0272.
Raleigh Estes and Friends 8 pm; Muldoon’s Saloon, 7439 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-657-9980. Shallow Side, Seasons After, Guns Out at Sundown, the Knowing Within, Armada 7:30 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $10-$15; 407-673-2712. Voodoo Glow Skulls, Askultura, Control This!, Abandon the Midwest 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$13.
FRIDAY, MARCH 17 Acropolis: Liquid Stranger, Eazybaked, Tadeo, Rest in Pierce, Cosmic Anarchy 9 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $10-$30; 407-704-6261. 56
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Classic Albums Live: The Beatles Abbey Road 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $16-$31; 407-351-5483. Dikembe, Expert Timing, See Through Dresses 7 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; $5; 407-623-3393. Floorplay: Frankie Alex & Trini D. 10 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free; 407-999-2570. Jacqueline Jones 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Primary Colors 5 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-270-9104.
Runaway Country Music Fest: Brad Paisley, Jason Aldean, Billy Currington and more Osceola Heritage Park, 1875 Silver Spur Lane, Kissimmee; $89-$145; 321-697-3333. The Smoking Jackets 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Talk Yo Shit St. Patrick’s Day: Fiona, B8ta, Grape La Flame, Yosh 9 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-246-1419. Uberbahn 10 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060.
SATURDAY, MARCH 18 Anvil, Night Demon, Graveshadow, Question, Dylan Mathews 6 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $16; 407-322-7475. Bailo 9:30 pm; Native Social Bar, 27 W. Church St.; $20; 407-403-2938. Beebs and Her Money Makers, Resinated, Tropidelic, Bothering Dennis 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$18; 407-246-1419. CONTINUED ON PAGE 59
Were You and He Lovers? Orlando Language Exchange Taking a cue from a similar program in Gainesville, the Orlando Language Exchange is a group of language enthusiasts who want to broaden their linguistic horizons. The rules are simple: Show up, let people know which languages you speak by putting flag stickers on your shirt, then grab a drink to get your tongue lubricated and chat with some people. You’ll be surprised how quickly you can dust off old language skills – or acquire new ones – with just a little practiced conversation. 8 p.m. Wednesday; Sandwich Bar, 2431 E. Robinson St.; free; facebook.com/orlandolanguageexchange
Bangrak This pop-up Thai street food kitchen has had several successful iterations over at Swine & Sons, but tonight they head over to Redlight Redlight, which means you get
Ed Sheeran
a wider selection of fancy beers to pair with
Aug. 31 at Amway Center
such tasty delicacies as spicy grilled pork neck, chilled glass noodle salad and five-spice braised pork leg. There’s a limited quantity of food available, so get there early if you want to try it all. 6 p.m. Saturday; Redlight Redlight, 2810 Corrine Drive; various menu prices; redlightredlightbeerparlour.com
Escape The monthly fetishwear party returns to Backbooth with a cartoons and comics theme for March. Expect a whole lot of vinyl and rubber Harley Quinn costumes. Go another direction if you want to win the costume contest, or participate in the game show hosted by goth model Destin Dern. Half price admission if you get dressed up. 10 p.m. Saturday; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $5-$10; facebook.com/escapeorlando
Were You and He Lovers? Though we’ll be happy in the haze of a drunken hour on Friday night for St. Patrick’s Day (see page 67), Saturday will surely find us miserable. What better way to take the edge off that hangover than with a pity party led by the King Mope, Steven Patrick Morrissey? DJ Spank spins a tribute to Morrissey and the Smiths for a night of commiseration with your favorite songs. Dress up, bring flowers, try not to get attacked by crazed fans. 10 p.m. Saturday; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org
St. Paul & the Broken Bones, March 23 at the Beacham
Chronixx, April 12 at the Beacham
Demetri Martin, March 23 at the Plaza Live
Killswitch Engage, Anthrax, April 13 at House of Blues
The Menzingers, March 23-24 at the Social Brian Wilson, March 27 at the Dr. Phillips Center Hans-Joachim Roedelius, March 29 at Timucua White House
Acid Mothers Temple, April 14 at the Social Testament, Sepultura, April 14 at House of Blues Whiskey Business, April 14 at the Cheyenne Saloon
Dinosaur Jr., March 30 at the Beacham
Ariana Grande, April 15 at Amway Center
Steve Miller Band, March 31 at the Dr. Phillips Center
Poca’s Hottest CookOff With G. Love, April 16 at Will’s Pub
We the Kings, April 1 at the Beacham
Chris Rock, April 1617 at the Dr. Phillips Center
Clipping., April 3 at the Social Flaming Lips, April 3 at House of Blues Portugal, the Man, April 7 at the Plaza Live Shovels & Rope, April 7 at the Beacham
Red Hot Chili Peppers, April 26 at Amway Center Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, April 27 at the Social Umphrey’s McGee, April 27 at House of Blues
Big Wild, April 28 at the Social Sheryl Crow, April 29 at Bob Carr Theater The Delusionaires, April 29 at Will’s Pub Ben Harper, May 1 at Hard Rock Live Spoon, May 2 at House of Blues Marty Stuart, May 4 at the Social State Champs, May 5 at the Beacham Steve Winwood, May 6 at Hard Rock Live New Found Glory, May 8-10 at the Social Bush, May 9 at Hard Rock Live Jimmy Buffett, May 13 at Amway Center New Found Glory, May 14 at House of Blues Bishop Briggs, May 16 at the Social Run River North, May 18 at the Social
Richard Cheese, May 19 at the Beacham Nora En Pure, May 19 at the Social Morbid Angel, May 23 at the Beacham Real Friends, May 24 at the Beacham The Avett Brothers, May 25 at House of Blues Say Anything, Bayside, May 25 at the Beacham Beach House, May 26 at the Social Wolf-Face, May 27 at the Social Blondie, Garbage, Aug. 9 at Hard Rock Live Goo Goo Dolls, Aug. 30 at Hard Rock Live Ed Sheeran, Aug. 31 at Amway Center Descendents, Oct. 20 at House of Blues
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MONDAY, 20
Fab Fringe Fundraiser: Carrie Manolakos THEATER
Every year, Fab Fringe serves as the first big leadup event to May’s Fringestravaganza, and as such we tend to think you can make some predictions about the festival by closely observing this fundraiser. Observations on Fab Fringe 2017: It’s the first one without the actual presence of former executive producer George Wallace, but he laid the foundation for what’s sure to be a great night (much like the festival). It features an accomplished out-of-town actress – Broadway’s Carrie Manolakos, a singing-acting double threat whose cover of Radiohead’s “Creep” Gawker.com called “upsettingly good” – more than ably supported/surrounded by our talented locals (much like the festival). And the price of admission goes to a very worthy cause – much like the festival, but with one important difference: 100 percent of proceeds from Fringe show tickets go to the artists, whereas Fab Fringe helps fund the lean machine that is the Orlando Fringe team. Not only will this night get you fired up for one of Orlando’s best cultural experiences, you’ll leave with the warm glow of knowing that you helped make it happen. – Jessica Bryce Young VIP dinner 6 p.m., general admission doors 6:30 p.m. | Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St. | orlandofringe.org | $25-$50
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The Company 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Contact Music Festival: Millionyoung, Grant, Eugene Snowden, Wet Nurse and more 5 pm; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $12-$15. Dae Dae, Money Man 10 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $10pm; 407-872-0066. Escape Costume Party 10 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $5-$10; 407-999-2570. Fort Christmas Bluegrass Festival 10 am-4 pm; Fort Christmas Historical Park and Museum, 1300 Fort Christmas Road, Christmas; free; 407-254-9310. Gioia Bruno 9 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; contact for price; 407-704-6261.
Gold Frankincense & Myrrh, In the After, Sick Thrill, Severed Sun 9 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $7; 407-673-2712. Jestelle 4 pm; Ollie’s Public House, 3400 Edgewater Drive; free; 321-278-0452. Ootheca, Tiger Fawn, Ashley Inguanta 8 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; $5 suggested donation; 407-623-3393. Orlando Philharmonic: Rimma Plays Tchaikovsky 8 pm; An all-Russian program featuring Rimma Bergeron-Langlois performing the dazzling Violin Concerto by Tchaikovsky. Bob Carr Theater, 401 W. Livingston St.; $21-$68; 407-246-4262; orlandophil.org. Paul Oakenfold 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$30; 407-504-7699.
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Punk for Pits Fest: Fero Lux, Ghost Cat, Tarek Kasmi, Matt Harmon, Stay Here, Headfirst for Halos, Dretch, Livewire and more Noon; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; $10; 407-636-3171. Runaway Country Music Fest: Brad Paisley, Jason Aldean, Billy Currington and more Osceola Heritage Park, 1875 Silver Spur Lane, Kissimmee; $89-$145; 321-697-3333. Shaun David Williams 2 pm; Chickasaw Library, 870 N. Chickasaw Trail; free; 407-835-7323. Were You and He Lovers: A Tribute to Morrissey and the Smiths 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.
SUNDAY, MARCH 19
Reggae Mondae: Hor!zen 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Robotman 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Stolas, Mylets, Icarus the Owl, Enjoy: Cassette, I Met a Yeti 6:30 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $12; 407-999-2570. Torque: The World of Drum & Bass 8 pm; Native Social Bar, 27 W. Church St.; $20-435; 407-403-2938. Tortoise, Tara Jane O’Neil 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$18; 407-246-1419.
TUESDAY, MARCH 21 The Groove Orient 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Hayley Kiyoko, Flor 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15; 407-246-1419.
Ancient Sun 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.
High Waisted, Beach Day, Field Fires 7 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $6-$8.
Fort Christmas Bluegrass Festival 10 am-4 pm; Fort Christmas Historical Park and Museum, 1300 Fort Christmas Road, Christmas; free; 407-254-9310.
I See Stars, Echos 6 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $16-$20; 407-999-2570.
GWADCIP$ 9 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Karl Berger Improvisers Orchestra 7 pm; Timucua White House, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; free; 407-595-2713. Melted Fest: Odessos, the Ned, March Onto April. John David Williams, Shadow Wall, the Catalystix, the Robinsons, Stranger Stranger 4 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; contact for price; 407-636-3171. Oathbreaker, King Woman, Jayle Jayle, Arms 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $12; 407-999-2570. Orlando Tropical Fest 11 am; Festival Park, 2911 E. Robinson St.; $10; 407-381-5310. Runaway Country Music Fest: Brad Paisley, Jason Aldean, Billy Currington and more Osceola Heritage Park, 1875 Silver Spur Lane, Kissimmee; $89-$145; 321-697-3333. Southern Fried Sunday 5 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; TBA.
MONDAY, MARCH 20
Jazz in the Courtyard with the DaVinci Jazz Experiment 7-9 pm; Cafe DaVinci, 112 W. Georgia Ave., DeLand; free; 386-873-2943. Music Remembrance Jazz Trio 8 pm; Paradise Cove Restaurant and Bar, 4380 Carraway Place, Sanford; free. Singer-Songwriter Open Mic 7:30 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364. Stevie Nicks, the Pretenders 7 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $61.30-$165.40; 800-745-3000.
THEATER Brian Feldman’s William Shakespeare’s Macbeth A fresh take on Macbeth from local performance artist Brian Feldman. Monday, 7 pm; Walt Disney Amphitheater, Lake Eola Park, Rosalind Avenue and Washington Street; free; 407-792-9421; brianfeldman.com. The City Beautiful A new play by Devon Lucia and Adam Ressa that takes place during three distinct periods of Orlando history. Friday, 7 pm; The Venue, 511 Virginia Drive; free; 407-412-6895; thevenueorlando.com.
Constellations Sparks fly between a Glass House Point, Alex Di Leo, the States 8 pm; physicist and a beekeeper in this explora64 North, 64 N. Orange Ave.; free; 321-245-7730. tions of love’s many manifestations in the multiverse. Thursday-Saturday, 8 pm, Jazz Meets Motown 8-11 pm; The Abbey, Sunday, 3 pm, Wednesday, 8 pm; Mad 100 S. Eola Drive; $10; 407-747-7223. Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St.; $30-$40; Minus the Bear, Beach Slang, Bayonne 407-297-8788; madcowtheatre.com. 7 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; Fab Fringe: Carrie Manolakos Fundraiser for $22.50-$28.50; 407-648-8363. Orlando Fringe featuring performances by Open Mic Hip-Hop 9:30 pm; Austin’s VarieTease, Orlando Gay Chorus, the Upright Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter CONTINUED ON PAGE 63 Park; free; 407-975-3364. orlandoweekly.com
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Gents and Broadway star Manolakos. Monday, 6 pm; Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St.; $25-$50; 407-447-1700; orlandofringe.org. The Great Gatsby The stage adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s classic novel. Thursday-Friday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2 pm, Tuesday, 2 pm; Margeson Theater, Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St.; $13$40; 407-447-1700; orlandoshakes.org. Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat The Biblical saga of Joseph and his coat of many colors comes to a vibrant life in the delightful musical parable. Friday, 7:30 pm, Saturday, 2 & 7:30 pm, Sunday, 3 pm; Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, 201 S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford; $20-$27; 407-321-8111; wdpac.com. Love’s Labours Lost Shakespeare’s boisterous romantic comedy about love and marriage. Wednesday, 2 pm, Saturday, 7:30 pm; Margeson Theater, Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St.; $25$50; 407-447-1700; orlandoshakes.org. String Tea A performance about life, about thought and the absurd. String Tea questions the space between our thoughts and actions. Tuesday, 7:30-9:30 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $10; 518-328-4773; bluebambooartcenter.com. Tape A reunion between three friends from high school in a seedy motel room exposes lies, misconceptions and truths, all caught on tape. Wednesday, 7 pm, Saturday, 2 & 8 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; Theater on the Edge, 5542 Hansel Ave.; $19-$22; theaterontheedge.org.
COMEDY 10 for 10 Showcase featuring 10 Florida comics. Thursday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $10; 407-4805233; theimprovorlando.com. Carrot Top Prop comedy. Tuesday, 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $29.50-$49.50; 407-228-1220; plazaliveorlando.com. Comedian of the Year Second round of Monsters in the Morning’s comedy contest. Thursday, 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $7; 407-704-6261; abbeyorlando.com. Dave Hill, Greg Barris, Tierney Tough, Heather Shaw Saturday, 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12; willspub.org. Drunken Monkey Open Mic Comedy open mic. Fridays, 8 pm; Drunken Monkey Coffee Bar, 444 N. Bumby Ave.; free; 407-8934994; drunkenmonkeycoffee.com.
Immature Games Comedy game show where hecklers are welcome for some reason. Wednesday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $10; 407480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Jack’s Open Mic Comedy Night Open mic comedy night hosted by Myke Herlihy. Tuesdays, Thursdays, 9 pm; Jack’s Pub & Grub, 5494 Central Florida Parkway; free; 407-787-3886. Joe List Wednesday, 8 pm; Barley and Vine Biergarten, 2406 E. Washington St.; $5; barleyandvineorlando.com. Katt Williams Saturday, 7 pm; CFE Arena, 12777 N. Gemini Blvd.; $52.50-$125; 407-823-6006. Michael Blackson Friday, 5:30 & 9 pm, Saturday, 7 & 9:30 pm, Sunday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $25; 407480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Open Mic Comedy With Craig Norberg Comedy open mic for aspiring comedians. Sundays, 8 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364; austinscoffee.com. Other Bar Open Mic with Ken Miller Comedy open mic with rotating hosts. Mondays, 8 pm; The Other Bar, 18 Wall St.; free; 407-843-8595. 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.
DANCE Bolshoi Ballet: A Contemporary Evening Some of the best dancers in the world perform contemporary choreography. Sunday, 12:55 pm; Multiple locations; $19.17; fathomevents.com. Peek-A-Boo: Candyland Themed burlesque show. Wednesday, 9 pm; Stardust Lounge, 431 E. Central Blvd.; $7; 407-839-0080. Pilobolus: Shadowland The acclaimed dance troupe performs a new narrative piece about a girl who travels to the land of shadows. Saturday, 8 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $29; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org. Visceral: Movement Unleashed A nontechnical dance class focused on feeling your body from the inside out. Monday, 6:30 pm; The Gatlin Creative, 4940 S. Orange Ave.; $5; thegatlincreative.com.
ART OPENINGS/EVENTS
50 Great American Places: Essential Historic Sites Across the U.S. Lecture and book signing with the former director of the National Museum of American History. Monday, 2 pm; Art & History Museums - Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; free; 407-539-2181; artandhistory.org. CONTINUED ON PAGE 64
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The Art of Vaughn Belak Solo exhibition of airbrushed pop culture portraits. Opens Friday, 6 pm, through April 16; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org. Kaleidoskull A collection of collaborative works with the contrasting style and imagery of Tony Philippou’s finely rendered, detailed Illustrations of beauty and decay; juxtaposed directly on top of the colorful, geometric abstraction paintings by Monty Montgomery. Opens Thursday, 6-10 pm, through April 15; Redefine Gallery, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060. Le Salon An array of mediums, styles, and artistic subjects ranging from iconic fashion and portrait photography to poignant, universal themes relating to the human experience. Opens Friday, 7-10 pm, through Aug. 26; Snap Space, 1013 E. Colonial Drive; free; snaporlando.com. Matthew Weinstein: The Living End Opening reception with the artist. Friday, 6:30-8 pm; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $10; 407-896-4321. Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz: Pieta Durational performance in which Raimundi-Ortiz cradles 33 young people of color. Tuesday, 6 pm; Rollins College, Knowles Memorial Chapel, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2000. Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival One of the largest juried outdoor art festivals in the southeast. Friday-Sunday, 9 am; Central Park, North Park Avenue and West Morse Boulevard, Winter Park; free; wpsaf.org. CONTINUING THIS WEEK
AfroFantastic: Black Imagination and Agency in the American Experience Through April 2; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; rollins.edu. Art31: Borrowed Light Through April 16, 11 am; Art & History Museums - Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; $3; 407-539-2181. Art31: Chief Curator Tours Tuesday noon; Art & History Museums - Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; free; 407-539-2181. An Awareness of Gravity Through April 2; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $10; 386-734-4371; moartdeland.org. The Black Figure in the European Imaginary Through May 14; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; rollins.edu. Bo Bartlett: American Artist Through May 7; Mennello Museum of American Art, 900 E. Princeton St.; $5; 407-2464278; mennellomuseum.com.
Contemporary Visions of Frantz Zéphirin: Haitian Mystic Through April 16; Albin Polasek Museum and Sculpture Gardens, 633 Osceola Ave., Winter Park; $5; 407-647-6294. Dancers Through April 9; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $10; 386-734-4371; moartdeland.org. Enchant Through April 1; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $5; henaocenter.com. Jack King: Searching for Truth Through April 29; Crealde School of Art, 600 St. Andrews Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-671-1886; crealde.org. Pablo Picasso: The Diary of a Master Mondays-Fridays, 10 am-5 pm; Baterby’s Art Gallery, 6848 Stapoint Ct., Winter Park; $5-$50; 888-682-9995; baterbys.com. Painting and Sculpture Through April 2; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $10; 386-734-4371; moartdeland.org. Philip Evergood & William Gropper: Social Realists Through April 2; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $10; 386-734-4371; moartdeland.org. Preview of Bo Bartlett: American Artist Through April 23; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231; omart.org. Raymond Smith: In Time We Shall Know Ourselves Through April 15; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386-506-4475; smponline.org. Reframing the Picture, Reclaiming the Past Through April 2; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; rollins.edu. Sanford Art Walk Saturday, 6-9 pm; Downtown Sanford, Sanford Avenue and First Street, Sanford; free; 407-323-2774; sanfordartwalk.com. Third Thursday Gallery Hop Enjoy art, food, tech and more in downtown Orlando’s arts and culture district. Thursday, 6 pm; CityArts Factory, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060; cityartsfactory.com. Trails Through March 31; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-623-3393; facebook.com/stardustie. Virunga Through Friday; Snap Downtown, 420 E. Church St.; free; snaporlando.com. The Wyeths and American Artists in Maine Through April 23; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231; omart.org. CONTINUED ON PAGE 66
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EVENTS Bangrak Thai street food pop-up kitchen. Saturday, 8 pm; Redlight Redlight, 2810 Corrine Drive; various menu prices; 407-8939832; redlightredlightbeerparlour.com. Brain Candy Live! Adam Savage and Michael Stevens demonstrate crazy toys, incredible tools and mind-blowing science experiments on stage. Thursday, 8 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $37.03$159.51; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org. Breck Trek Beer Dinner A curated evening of intriguing dishes creatively paired with special beers from Breckenridge Brewery. Wednesday, 7:30 pm; The Crooked Spoon, 200 Citrus Tower Blvd., Clermont; contact for price; 510-206-3932; breckbrew.com. Chef’s Night The chefs of Seasons 52 prepare a special menu to help benefit Second Harvest’s educational programs. Monday, 6-9 pm; Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida, 411 Mercy Drive; $100; 407295-1066; foodbankcentralflorida.org. LGBTQ Wedding Expo Exhibitors from many different aspecta of wedding and event planning. From wedding caterers and cakes to music, photographers, reception halls, limos and more. Sunday, noon-5 pm; Park Inn, 3011 Maingate Lane; $20; 941-979-5235; the-rainbowknot.com. Orlando Caribbean Festival Cultural festival with live music, food, rides, games and more. Saturday, 3 pm; Central Florida Fairgrounds, 4603 W. Colonial Drive; $35; 407-295-3247. Queens for the Cure All-star drag revue benefit show. Wednesday, 6 pm; Southern Nights, 375 S. Bumby Ave.; $29.50-$199.50; 407-412-5039; southernnightsorl.com. United We Brunch Brunch smorgasbord from several of the best brunch spots in town, along with unlimited drinks, music, giveaways and more. Saturday, 11 am-3 pm; The Orchid Garden, 122 W. Church St.; $45-$65; brunch.orlandoweekly.com. Will’s A Faire Spring Market Parking lot market with several vendors and live music. Sunday, 1 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org.
LEARNING Orlando Language Exchange Meet new friends and practice a foreign language, or help teach one you already know. Wednesday, 8 pm; Sandwich Bar, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-421-1670.
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CIVICS Affordable Care Act Rally Rally to protect Florida’s patients and healthcare workers by showing support for the ACA outside of Marco Rubio’s Orlando office. Friday, 11 am-2 pm; Seaside Plaza, 201 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-839-4824; cityoforlando.net. Mayor Dyer’s Neighborhood and Community Summit More than 300 neighborhood and community leaders come together for a day of learning, networking and sharing. Participants have the opportunity to gather resources and information necessary to build a strong, vibrant community. Saturday, 7:30 am-2:15 pm; Loews Royal Pacific Resort, 6300 Hollywood Way; $12; 407-503-3000.
LITERARY Diverse Word Spoken word open mic. Tuesdays, 8 pm; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free; 407-3621864; dandelioncommunitea.com. Meet the Author: Troy Ball Join author Troy Ball for a discussion of her book, Pure Heart. Saturday, 2 pm; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. Open Mic Poetry and Spoken Word Poetry and spoken word open mic. Wednesdays, 8:30 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364; austinscoffee.com. Poetry Open Mic Open mic from the Writers of Central Florida or Thereabouts. Monday, 8 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171; letsmakeitathing.com. Spilled Milk Literary Open Mic Literary open mic. All genres and forms welcome. Thursday, 8 pm; The Milk Bar, 2424 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-4954. Writing Workshop: Intro to Flash Fiction Learn how to craft fiction that’s less than 1,000 words. Saturday, 1-3 pm; Writer’s Atelier, 336 Grove Ave. Suite B, Winter Park; $40; 407-697-1261; writersatelier.com.
SPORTS NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship The first and second rounds of the 2017 NCAA tournament. ThursdaySaturday; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $150-$300; 800-745-3000; amwaycenter.com. Orlando City vs Philadelphia Union Soccer. Saturday, 7:30 pm; Orlando City Stadium, 655 W. Church St.; $31-$156; 855-675-2489; orlandocitysc.com. Orlando Magic vs. Philadelphia 76ers NBA basketball. Monday, 7 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $13-$149; 800-745-3000; amwaycenter.com. n
& drink and more. Friday, 10 am; Liam Fitzpatrick’s, 951 Market Promenade Ave., Lake Mary; free; 407-936-3782. St. Patrick’s Day Brewery Crawl Try Irish-inspired beers from Ten10, Cask & Larder and Redlight Redlight and enter to win prizes from each brewery. Friday, 5 pm; Redlight Redlight, 2810 Corrine Drive; various menu prices; 407-8939832; redlightredlightbeerparlour.com. The Lucky Shamrock Pub Crawl Each ticket includes one complimentary drink at each participating stop. Complimentary golf cart transportation available during the event. Thursday, 6-9 pm; Waterford Lakes Town Center, 413 N. Alafaya Trail; $10; 407-737-2866.
St. Patrick’s Day Festival A beer garden, Celtic food, crafts, music, Highland Games and more. Presented by Crooked Can Brewing. Friday, 4-11 pm; Winter Garden - Plant Street, Plant Street and State Road 429, Winter Garden; free; 407-395-9520; crookedcan.com.
Mighty St. Patrick’s Day Festival Four-day St. Patrick’s Day festival with live music from the Young Dubliners, the Byrne Brothers and more, food and drink specials and special dance performances. ThursdaySunday; Raglan Road Irish Pub, 1640 E. Buena Vista Drive, Lake Buena Vista; free; 407-938-0300; raglanroadirishpub.com.
St. Patrick’s Day: Level 360 Cover band. Friday, 9 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407636-3171; letsmakeitathing.com.
Alive@Five St. Patrick’s Day Free Coors Light from district bars, live music from the Tom O’Keefe Band, an indie art market and more. Friday, 5-8 pm; Downtown Orlando, Church Street, Orange Avenue and Church Street; $5; churchstreetdistrict.com. Irish Food Fest Special menu featuring Irish pub salad, bangers & mash, corned beef sliders, fish & chips and more. Friday, 6-9 pm; East End Market, 3201 Corrine Drive; $25-$30; 321-236-3316. The Kidney Stones Annual St. Patrick’s Day performance by the pirate rock band. Friday, 9:30 pm; Pipers Bar and Grill, 4544 Curry Ford Road; free; 407277-2883; pipersbarandgrill.com. Saint Punk Festival: Michale Graves, SKS, the Problem Addicts, Dial Drive, Grave Return, Picking Up Pedro St. Patrick’s Day party with the former lead singer of the Misfits. Friday, 7 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $12-$18; 407-673-2712; thehavenrocks.com. St. Patrick’s Day at Lizzy’s Featuring an Irish whiskey beer garden, live music, food and giveaways. Friday, noon; Lizzy McCormack’s, 55 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-426-8007. St. Patrick’s Day Bash Featuring live performances, kilted shot girls, corned beef and cabbage and more. Friday, 11 am; An Tobar, 600 N. Lake Destiny Drive, Maitland; free; 407-996-7800. St. Patrick’s Day Block Party St. Patrick’s Day party with Irish dancers, the Orlando Firefighters Pipes & Drums, music, food
St. Patrick’s Day Party St. Patrick’s Day party with live music, food and drink specials and more. Bring cash for faster service. Friday, 11 am; The Harp & Celt, 25 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; 407-481-2928; harpandcelt.com.
PURCHASE YOUR TICKETS FOR UPCOMING EVENTS AT
ORLANDOWEEKLYTICKETS.COM F E AT U R E D E V E N T FEATURED EVENT F E AT U R E D E V E N T UNITED WE BRUNCH
St. Patrick’s Day Slosher: American Party Machine, Leisure Chief, Damez, Deaf Poets, Locus of Chiron, Blonk St. Patrick’s Day party. Friday, 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $8-$10; willspub.org.
THIS SATURDAY!
St. Pat’s Day Rock the Block Party Block party with live music, drink specials and a full menu. Friday, 6-11 pm; Dexter’s of Winter Park, 558 W. New England Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-629-1150; dexwine.com. St. Patty’s (sic) Day Pub Crawl Purchase a wristband at Wally’s or the Thirsty Topher and get drink specials at several stops throughout the district. Friday, 7 pm; Mills 50, multiple locations; $5; mills50.org.
PUNK FOR PITS THIS SATURDAY!
ART HOUSE MARCH 25TH
5TH ANNUAL DOWNTOWN BREW APRIL 1ST
WHISKEY BUSINESS APRIL 14TH
POCA’S HOTTEST COOK-OFF FEATURING G-LOVE APRIL 16TH
SALSA FESTIVAL APRIL 30TH
St. Patrick’s Day Party Free corned beef and cabbage as well as a special brew just for the holiday. Friday, 4 pm; Deadly Sins Brewing, 750 Jackson Ave., Winter Park; free; 407900-8726; deadlysinsbrewing.com. The Wurst St. Patrick’s Day Special concert with Jimmy & Eckhard and the Alex Meixner Band with unlimited trips to the sausage bar and unlimited draft beer, house wine and well drinks. Friday, 9 pm; Hollerbach’s Willow Tree Cafe, 205 E. First St., Sanford; $40$50; 407-321-2204; willowtreecafe.com. Ain’t Paddy’s Day Luau Hawaiianthemed post-St. Patrick’s Day party with green rum drinks, live music and a homemade lei contest. Saturday, 9 pm; Little Fish Huge Pond, 401 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-221-1499. n
SELL YOUR EVENT TICKETS on OrlandoWeeklyTickets.com & get FREE PROMOTION in Orlando Weekly.
Call Brad: (407) 377-0400 ext 204 or email brad@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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B Y D A N S AVA G E
I went to Dark Odyssey Winter Fire, the big kink hotel takeover event in Washington, D.C., in February. There was one thing I saw there that is messing with my head, and I hope you can set me straight. There was this lovely little sixperson orgy going on with two cute-ascould-be hippie girls and four older dudes. Then these four people came along. They sat and watched – a guy and three women in hijabs and dresses that went wrist to ankle, fully covered. After a while, one of the hippie girls turned to them and said, “I’d be happy to flog you later if you’d like.” The three women in hijab giggled. The whole scene was really sweet, but I just couldn’t get over these three women. I saw them walking around all night, taking it all in. Intellectually, I know there is no reason to think that conservative Islam is incompatible with kink. But my cultural biases make me feel that it is. Or is it possible that covering up is their kink? What would you make of that? Washington Kinkster Wondering “With all the hateful anti-Muslim rhetoric out there these days, it is tempting to romanticize Islam,” says Eiynah, a PakistaniCanadian children’s book author who also hosts a podcast that focuses on sex, Islam and apostasy. “The impulse is understandable, but Islam is another one of the blatantly sex-negative Abrahamic faiths.” The other blatantly sex-negative Abrahamic faiths, for those of you keeping score out there, are Judaism and Christianity. “Nothing outside of ultra-vanilla plain ol’ two-person hetero sex within the confines of marriage is permissible,” Eiynah says. “So as much as I’d love to agree with WKW that conservative Islam isn’t incompatible with kink, there’s every reason to say that it is. It’s even incompatible with a woman being slightly ‘immodest’ in front of men. Modesty codes are pretty rigid in Islam, and in non-Muslim-majority countries, modesty garments tend to stick out rather than blend in. Which achieves the exact opposite purpose – attracting more attention, not less.” And when sex-negativity, modesty and religion mix it up, WKW, the part of our brain that grinds out kinks – precise location yet to be determined – kicks into high gear. That’s why there is Mormon-undergarment porn out there and nun porn and hot-priest calendars for sale on sidewalks just outside Vatican City. “Islamic modesty has become fetishized for some – quite literally,” Eiynah says. “There’s hijabi porn and hijabi Lolitas. So the people WKW saw could be into some form of hijab kink.” I’ve seen a few people dressed up as Catholic nuns at fetish parties, WKW, and I didn’t think, “Hey, what are nuns doing here?!?” I thought, “That person has a nun 68
kink.” (Related point: The nuns you see at queer pride parades? Not really nuns. #TheMoreYouKnow) “Finally, it’s possible they could be a more ‘open-minded’ polygynous Muslim family that ventured into the hotel in a moment of adventurousness,” Eiynah says. “We are all human, after all, with urges, kinks, curiosities and desires that surface, no matter what ancient morality code we try to follow.” Amen. Eiynah tweets @NiceMangos, her terrific podcast – Polite Conversations – is available on all the usual podcast platforms, and her children’s book, My Chacha Is Gay, can be ordered at chachaisgay.com. I’m a 30-year-old woman in a long-term polyamorous relationship with a stellar guy. Our relationship began as extremely Dom/sub, with me being the sub. My boyfriend and I began super casually but quickly became serious partners. Now, six years later, I find having kinky sex with him challenging. We have a very deep, loving relationship, so my feelings get hurt when we engage in bondage and kink play. This is especially problematic because I still enjoy BDSM with folks I’m not dating. Basically, if I’m not in love with someone, it doesn’t hurt my feelings when they beat me and humiliate me. My boyfriend feels slighted, but I just don’t know what to do. Every time we play rough – the same way we had played for years – my feelings get hurt. Any thoughts? She’s Hurting His Heart It’s not uncommon to meet people in BDSM spaces/circles who have passionate, intimate, solid and regular vanilla sex with their long-term partner(s) and intense BDSM play and/or sex with more casual partners. For some submissives, intimacy and a long-term connection can interfere with their ability to enter into and enjoy their roles, and the same is true for some Doms. If this is just how you’re wired, SHHH, you may need to write a new erotic script for your primary relationship – or make a conscious decision to have new and different and satisfying sexual adventures with your boyfriend. I cannot find a woman who will accept my panty fetish. Please advise. Trembling Man Inquires
“WISHFUL KINKING”
for me to have sex with her is by using my strap-on on her. When I do that, all I can think of is my best friend Roberto who I am very attracted to. I shared a queen-size bed with him for two years. While we lived together, I did all of the “women’s work.” Roberto always told me how small and soft and feminine my hands were. He drank a lot and then would pass out in our bed. I would put on one of my sexy pink nighties and sleep next to him. Now I have a wife, and I am so jealous that Roberto might find a girlfriend. I have begged my wife to cuckold me with Roberto. She said, “Roberto is a very sexy man, but I don’t know.” How can I tell her that I am totally feminine and turned off by women and totally turned on by men? How do I tell her that she is married to a sissy man-lover? I want her to have a boyfriend. Then when she is out with her boyfriend, I would get dressed up like a sissy and be locked out of the house dressed as a woman and have to wait for her to let me back in after her boyfriend left. Please help. Lust In South America Thanks for sharing. Not sure I believe a word you wrote, LISA, but it was an entertaining read. (OK, OK, some advice: Tell your wife the truth, i.e., you are not and have never been attracted to women; suggest redefining your marriage as a loving-but-companionate one; propose cuckolding as a way for you two to maintain a sexual connection, albeit one mediated through a third party. Good luck.)
Are you looking for a new pal? Meet Tinkerbell!
Tinkerbell (A371918) is 4 years old and was surrendered because her owners could no longer care for her. She is a sweet kitty and her previous owner said that she gets along with other animals. Tinkerbell is trained to use the litter box, and she is pretty mellow. She enjoys being petted
On the Lovecast, “The Epidemic of Gay Loneliness” and a takedown of Beauty and the Beast: savagelovecast.com. mail@savagelove.net ITMFA.org
and she likes attention. She is ready to go home today! For the month of March, our Luck of the Paw adoption promotion is back! Adopters will choose a gold coin out of a bucket that will display their new adoption fee. Fees will be $5, $10 or $15. Fees include sterilization, vaccinations and a microchip. Orange County Animal Services
Keep looking, TMI. There are women out there who think men can be sexy in panties – and anyone who thinks men can’t be sexy in panties needs to check out all the hunky panty-wearing models at xdress.com.
is located at 2769 Conroy Road,
I am a sissy husband. My problem is I am not attracted to women at all. I have asked my wife to cuckold me. My penis is less than 2 inches long, and the only way
and from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. For
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near the Mall at Millenia. The shelter is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday more information, please call 407836-3111 or visit ocnetpets.com.
Marketplace Cash for cars and trucks Running or not Any Condition 352-771-6191. WANTED - All motorhomes, fifth wheels and travel trailers. Cars, vans and trucks any condition. Cash paid on the spot. Call 954-789-7530.
Research Studies Do you have Osteoarthritis? –
Osteoarthritis studies are enrolling now. Those who qualify may receive*: -Compensation which varies by study up to $1,000 -No-cost study-related care from doctors -No-cost study medication. Call today at 866-290-5847 Or visit www.OAresearchstudies. com. *In a clinical research study, the participants may receive investigational study product or may receive an inactive substance, or placebo, depending on the study design. Participants receive study-related care from a doctor/research team for the duration of the study. Reasonable payments will be made for participation and the length of the study may vary.
Do you have Rheumatoid Arthritis? –
Rheumatoid Arthritis studies are enrolling now. Those who qualify may receive*: -Compensation which varies by study up to $625 -No-cost study-related care from doctors -No-cost study medication Call today at 1-866-291-3330 Or visit www.raresearchstudiestoday.com. *In a clinical research study, the participants may receive investigational study product or may receive an inactive substance, or placebo, depending on the study design. Participants receive study-related care from a doctor/research team for the duration of the study. Reasonable payments will be made for participation and the length of the study may vary.
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Legal, Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO: 2015-CA-010900-O HMC ASSETS LLC SOLELY IN ITS CAPACITY AS SEPARATE TRUSTEE OF CAM XIV TRUST, Plaintiff, v. MICHAEL STONEBURNER, et. al., Defendants.. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE is hereby given that pursuant to the Final Judgment entered in the cause pending in the Circuit Court of the Ninth Judicial Circuit, in and for Orange County, Florida, Case No. 2015-CA-010900-O in which HMC ASSETS LLC SOLELY IN ITS CAPACITY AS SEPARATE TRUSTEE OF CAM XV TRUST, is the Plaintiff, and Michael Stoneburner, Defendant, and all unknown parties claiming interests by, through, under or against a named defendant to this action, or having or claiming to have any right, title or interest in the Property herein, situated in Orange County, Florida described as follows: LOT 35 IN BLOCK “A” OF WEKIWA MANOR SECTION 1, ACCORDING TO THE MAP OR PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK “X”, PAGE 6, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. Property Address: 2009 Athens Ct, Apopka, FL 32703. Together with an undivided percentage interest in the common elements pertaining thereto, the Orange County Clerk of Court will offer the above-referenced property at public sale, to the highest and best bidder for cash at 11:00 a.m. on the 20th day of June, 2017, at www.myorangeclerk.realforeclose. com. Any person claiming interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale. DATED this 3rd day of March, 2017. /S/ Jason R. Hawkins, CAMERON H.P. WHITE,Florida Bar No. 021343, cwhite@southmilhausen. com, JASON R. HAWKINS, Florida Bar No. 11925, jhawkins@southmilhausen.com, South Milhausen, P.A., 1000 Legion Place, Suite 1200, Orlando, Florida 32801, Telephone: (407) 539-1638, Facsimile: (407) 539-2679, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE FOLLOWING TENANTS WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH TO SATISFY RENTAL LIENS IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE FACILITY ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. CONTENTS MAY INCLUDE KITCHEN, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS, BEDDING, TOYS, GAMES, PACKED CARTONS, FURNITURE, TOOLS, TRUCKS, CARS, ETC. THERE’S NO TITLE FOR VEHICLES SOLD AT LIEN SALE. OWNERS RESERVE THE RIGHT TO BID ON UNITS. LIEN SALE TO BE HELD ONLINE WEDNESDAY APRIL 5, 2017 AT THE TIMES INDICATED BELOW. VIEWING AND BIDDING WILL ONLY BE AVAILABLE ONLINE AT www. storagetreasures.com BEGINNING AT LEAST 5 DAYS PRIOR TO THE SCHEDULED SALE DATE AND TIME. www.personalministorage. com PERSONAL MINI STORAGE FORSYTH - 2875 FORSYTH RD. WINTER PARK, FL 32792 - AT 10:00AM: #54- Treavor Demetree Glover; #116-Sean M Higgins; #215- Adam David Bonavia; #405Melita Chantelle Wootson; #486Sara Emily Karwowski; #502- Nevill Torres MICHIGAN MINI STORAGE - 200 W. MICHIGAN ST ORLANDO, FL 32806 - AT 10:30AM: #46-Jamale Edwards;#79-Javonia Adderley; #94-Omar Arias Ramirez; #191-Nancy Nixon; PERSONAL MINI STORAGE LAKE FAIRVIEW - 4252 N ORANGE BLOSSOM TR. ORLANDO FL 32804 - AT 11:00AM: #077-Graham, Verrisa Erica; #0158-McGee, Shirley Ann; #0355-Arney, William Eugene; #0597-Rothrock, Marilyn Ruth; #0726-Castro, Eddy; #0801-Carter, Shelton Lee; #0908-Arroyo, Karina; #0988-Martinez, Adan; #0996-Hall, Margaret Jean PERSONAL MINI STORAGE WEST - 4600 OLD WINTER GARDEN RD. ORLANDO FL 32811 AT 11:30 #138-Nathaniel Maldonado; #184-Victoria Jackson; #218-Isaac Carnagie; #260-Stanley Jennings; #327-Vergenia Hair; #407-Alida Edelmira Quintana; #482-Patsy Caitlin Symons; # 529-Becky Elysee; #584-Kietta Mayweather Gamble; #591-Shyrl Williams; #611-Kim Whittley; #618-Brenda Clark; #631-M C Collins Jr.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: March 29th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 11971 Lake Underhill Rd. Orlando, Fl. 32825 (407) 380-0046 #706 Beverly Rodriguez – bins, totes, clothes, wheelchair, mattress. #1119 Jaylinn Samone – bed set, living room, twin bed, qn bed, matt and box, dining table, electronics, dresser, clothes. #505 Maurice Bell – household goods, washer, dryer, treadmill, crib, furniture. #1313 Patricia Marshall- Riley – bedroom furniture, mobility scooter, filing cabinet, plastic storage containers, clothes, books, toys. #1302 Samuel Fraticelli Jr. – furniture, boxes household items, bikes, beds, electronics. #1340 Daliah Bryant – clothes, futon, boxes, household items. 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 In order to satisfy a contractual landlord’s lien, under the provisions of the Florida SelfService Storage Space Act, public notice is hereby given that the following described property will be sold at public sale to the highest bidder for cash only. The sale will be held at the times and locations listed below: A-AAAKey Mini Storage 1001 S. Semoran Blvd. Orlando, FL 32807 March 30th, 2017@9:30am: Anthony PaganMisc. Boxes, Bins, Totes and Clothes, Hanna Abi Habib-Rug, TV, Boxes and Clothes, Eugene Chad Ricciardi-TV, Chairs, Bike and Boxes, Cristobal Flores-Dresser, Sofa, Gun Rack and Mattresses, Gregory Colon-Toolbox, TV Stand, Armoire and Barrels, Ruben AlersLuggage, TV, Electronics, Kitchen Table and Chairs, Misc. Boxes and Bins, Jose A. Maldonado-Dresser, Mattresses, Tools, Boxes and Bins, Eastlyn Bailey-Sentry Safe, Luggage, Toys, DVD’s and Decorations, Hugo Inocente-Table, Sofa, Misc. Boxes and Bags, Decorations, Jason Cavanzo-Cubicles, Electrical Equipment, Misc. Tools and Totes, Lee A. Goode-Dresser, Table, Kitchen Equipment and Mattress, Rachel Nunley-Kids Furniture, Toys, Garden Equipment, Misc. Boxes and Bags, Laura Gonzalez-Exercise Equipment, Computer Equipment, Misc. Tools, Kitchen Equipment, Clothes and Purses, Misc. Boxes and Bags, Tanya Michelle Korrodi-Wrought Iron Lamp, Table, Artwork and Clothes, Floyd Stewart-Large Flat Screen TV, Exercise Equipment, Bike, Boxes and Bags, Mireya Cuotto-Leather Sofa and Loveseat, Leather Overstuffed Chair, Dining Room Set, Multiple Rugs, Boxed Kitchenware, Hector L. CamanoMercedes Benz 2006 R500AMG White vin#4JCB75E86A008608, Misc Tools A-AAAKey Mini Storage 5285 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32839-2307 March 30th 2017 @11:00: Krystal Garcia-Couch, End Table, Chair, Misc. Tubs, Boxes and Bags, Brittney Crenshaw-Couch, Table, Chair, Misc Boxes and Bags, Gina Jean- 2 End Tables, Dresser, Coffee Table, Misc. Luggage and Boxes, Sami Zrida-Kitchen Fryer, Industrial Restaurant Racks, Restaurant Oven, Cake Supply Rack, Misc. Restaurant Dishware, Sami Zrida-Restaurant Quality Bread Warmer/Proofer, Restaurant Oven, 16 Restaurant Chairs, Table, Misc Boxes, Tubs and Bags.
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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/SHEA IN THE INTEREST OF: K.L DOB: 9/10/2013, K.L DOB: 2/29/2012; Minor Children. CASE NO.: DP13-410 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF TPR ADVISORY HEARING, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: MICHELLE LIVOLSI, UNKNOWN ADDRESS. A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above referenced child(ren), a copy of which is attached. You are to appear on May 8, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. at the Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, FL 32806, before honorable Judge, Timothy Shea, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THESE CHILDREN. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILDREN NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes. If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact Court Administration, 425 N. Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32801, telephone 407-836- 2303 within two working days of your receipt of this summons. If you are hearing or voice impaired, call 1-800- 955-8771. Witness my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County Florida on this 2nd day of March, 2017. Kelley Galvin, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 103302, Senior Attorney for , Children’s Legal Services, State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 400 West Robinson Street, Suite N211, Orlando, FL 32801. Clerk of Court, By: /s/ Deputy Clerk.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 2013-DR-16642-038 IN THE MATTER OF ADOPTION AND TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS: E.M.R. AND E.R.R., Adoptee(s) AMENDED NOTICE OF ACTION TO:MICHAEL ROSS, Respondent’s last known address: 1001 Crystal Glen Blvd., Orlando, FL 32837. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action for adoption and termination of parental rights has been filed against you in this Court. You are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to Chad and Jennifer Brandt, whose address is 5881 Cheshire Cove Terrace, Orlando, FL 32829. The response must be filed before 4/6/17 and filed the original with the Clerk of Court at (Clerk’s Address) 425 North Orange Ave., Suite 320. Orlando, FL 32802, before service on petitioner or immediately thereafter. If you fail to do so, a default may be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Petition for Adoption and Termination of Parental Rights. Copies of all court documents in this case, including orders, available at the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s office. You may review these documents upon request. You must keep the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s office notified of your current address. (You may file Notice of Current Address, Florida Supreme Court Approved Family Law Form 12.915) Future papers in this lawsuit will be mailed to the address on record at the clerk’s office. Dated 2/21/17. Tiffany M. Russell, CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT. By: /s/ Jason Glenn, Civil Court Seal, Deputy Clerk.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Pursuant to Florida Statute 713.78 on APRIL 4, 2017 at 8am, Mike’s Towing, 3141 Sharpe Rd., Apopka, FL will sell the following vehicle(s):1974 HONDA VIN#CB7502312020. Seller reserves the right to bid and to refuse any/all bids. Sold as is, no warranty. Terms Cash.
The following vehicle is to be auctioned at Avalon Towing, 549 N Goldenrod Rd Orlando Fl 32807 at 7:30am on March 29 2017 Vehicle will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bid are: cash only, and buyer must have funds on hand at time 2007 Honda Fit vin JHMGD38677S052882.
ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 15-21, 2017
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Notice is hereby given to the owners, lienholders, and other interested parties that the following described abandoned vehicles will be sold at auction for cash to the highest bidder at 1:45 pm, March 21, 2017 at 2851 St Johns Pkwy, Sanford, FL. 32771: 2000 Chrysler Town & Country VIN# 1C4GP64L9YB653296, 2004 Ford Sport Trac VIN# 1FMZU67K24UA28706, 1997 Dodge Caravan VIN# 1B4GP45R3VB461226, 1994 Ford Crown Victoria VIN# 2FALP74WXRX153182, 2007 Dodge Caravan VIN# 1D4GP25B07B154547. Seller reserves the right to reject any bid and the right to bid.
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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 2016-CA-007844-O ASHINGTON PARK HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, vs. JONATHAN S. BLAEDE, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JONATHAN S. BLAEDE, and UNKNOWN PARTIES IN POSSESSION, Defendants. NOTICE OF ACTION TO: JONATHAN S. BLAEDE 14562 Greydale Circle, Orlando, Florida 32826 Current residence unknown, if living, and ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PARTIES, including if a named Defendant is deceased, the personal representatives, the surviving spouse, heirs, devisees, grantees, creditors, and all other parties claiming, by, through, under or against that Defendant, and all claimants persons or parties, natural or corporate, whose exact legal status is unknown, claiming under any of the above named or described Defendants. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose a lien on the following property located in Orange County, Florida: LOT 22, STONEMEADE, PHASE 1, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 33, PAGE 113, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. Street address of: 14562 Greydale Circle, Orlando, Florida 32826, has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to Peter Hagood, Esquire, Hagood & Garvey, LLC., Plaintiff’s attorney, at 451 Maitland Avenue, Altamonte Springs, Florida 32701, within 30 days of the first date of publication of this notice, and file the original with clerk of this court (425 North Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32801) either before March 2, 2017 on Plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. Dated January 31, 2017. Tiffany Moore Russell, Orange County Clerk of Court. BY: /s/ Sandra Jackson , Deputy Clerk, 2017.01.31 13:17:29 -05’00’, Deputy Clerk. Civil Division, 425 N. Orange Avenue, Room 310, Orlando, Florida 32801.
NOTICE OF SALE The following vehicles will be auctioned at A Reliable Towing, 2500 Forsyth Rd F-7, Orlando FL 32807 on April 2, 2017 at 9:00 am: 99 Toyota vin: 4T1BG22K0XU456237; 03 Toyota vin: 2T1CE22P83C020110; 03 VW vin: 9BWKE61J034063428; 94 GMC vin; 1GKCS13W1R2522526.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8 am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul Ctr Kirkman-600 S Kirkman Rd-Orlando 4/5/17 2053 Sabrina Collins 1056 Evalson Thibault 2109 Shelie Mansfield 6016 Guillermo Torres 3002 Wanda Jones 6050 Valerie George 1055 Romean Hamzehloui 5008 Shyrl Williams 1082 David Young 4008 James Ivory Uhaul Ctr Orange Ave-3500 S Orange Ave-Orlando 4/5/17 1031 Marianne Oden 2208 Recovery Alexis Gutierrez EL5274M 1730 Shanique Marlin 2113 Michele Ross Uhaul Ctr Baldwin Park- 4001 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 4/5/17 B143-45 Jacquese Woodruff C169 Shannan Wright D193 Maya Aleandre D125 Elyssa Baity Uhaul Ctr Goldenrod-508 N Goldenrod Rd-Orlando 4/5/17 703 Mariano Rivera 737 Christian Bermudez 734 Lady Bermudez 322 Noemi Ortiz 424 Gustavo Silva 507 James Ashbridge 430 Melissa Ragonese Uhaul Ctr Alafaya-11815 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 4/5/17 1277 Tiffany Briggs 1279 Tiffany Briggs 1609 Felicia Tate 1422 Gloria Thompson 1009 Florence Sanguedolce 1135 Tiffany Bgiggs 1512 Greda Marrero 1275 Tiffany Briggs.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE APRIL 11, 2017 at 8:00AM at My Towing Company 1800 N Forsyth Rd., Orlando FL 32807. Will sell the following vehicles to the highest bidder 05 TOYOTA VIN # 4T1CE38P45U552615 01 HONDA VIN # 1HGCG16571A085899 04 NISSAN VIN # 1N4BA41E34C870746 02 FORD VIN # 1FTYR10U22TA06921 02 FORD VIN # 1FMDU63E22UA85611 Term of the sale are cash. My Towing Company reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids. Vehicle sold as is, no warranty, no guarantee, no title.
Notice of Public Auction for monies due on storage units located at U-Haul company facilities. Storage locations are listed below. All goods are household contents or miscellaneous and recovered goods. All auctions are hold to satisfy owner’s lien for rent and fees in accordance with Florida Statutes, Self-Storage Act, Sections 83.806 and 83.807. The auction will start at 8:00 a.m. on April 6, 2017 and will continue until finished U-Haul Moving and Storage of Maitland, 7815 North Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32810; A40 Reneka Logan $171.48, B05 Melanie Burnside $463.10, A0008A Jennifer Rossignol $933.40 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Apopka, 1221 E Semoran Blvd, Apopka, FL 32703; 1253 Vivian Menendez $519.05, 1131 David Desch $545.80, 1296 Latricia Samuels $819.65 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Semoran, 2055 N Semoran Blvd, Winter Park, FL 32792; 1221 Michael Acevedo $609.50, 2424 Paul Wilansky $288.50, 1369 Paul Crane $414.50, 1072 Belisa Quinones $443.60, 1096 Willie Gilliard $443.60 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Longwood, 650 Ronald Reagan Blvd, Longwood, FL 32750, A083 Michael Lett $504.95, B081-82 Robert Burgess $712.30, C039 Selah Fox $625.50 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Lake Mary, 3851 S Orlando Ave, Sanford, FL 32773; 2528 Betty Schultz $562.25, 1276 Norman Neil $448.60, 1146 Mark Harb $668.00, 2063 Juan Cruze $469.80, 1443 Jennifer Hollenbeck $460.40, 2003 Jason Martin $438.00, 2044 Mary Harris $318.50, 1448 Ashley Miles $326.30, 2522 Taylor Lovett $372.35, 1571 Mikerra Coleman $376.30, 2051 Dante Thomas $392.35, 1280 Peter Voigt $326.30, 2425 Betty Schultz $657.60, 1451 Rapahel Brown $373.30 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Rinehart, 1811 Rinehart Road, Sanford, FL 32771; 4176 Jeri Brannon $411.20, 2112 Bernard Kielton $630.35, 4079 Nereida Davila $574.60, 4113 Jerome Gipson $359.00, 3106 Jennifer Odom $539.60.
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: 1996 Pontiac VIN# 2G2FS22K9T2221392 1999 Chevy VIN# 2G1FP22K4X2123706 2001 Volkswagen VIN# 9BWGP61JX14076927 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on March 29, 2017, 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC
NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON MARCH 23, 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED. 1080 E ALTAMONTE DR, ALTAMONTE SPRINGS FL AT 9:30 AM: B005 - BOWEN, DOUGLASS, B008 - GREEN, ARRIA, B025 - FADER, NICOLE, B032 - FERNANDEZ, MELVA, B047 ROACH, CAPRI, B076 - NIEVES, DAMARIS, B099 - BENNEFIELD, ANITA, B116 - LECHTENBERG, SAMUEL, B123 - GOODWIN, MARCUS, B137 - ANGULO, WILLIAM, B146 - BELL, BRENDA, B150 - LANDIS, STOREY, B152 QUINN, KAYLA, B156 - PETTIS, SHERIDON, B192 - PETTIT, BEN, B194 - TIMPANARO, THOMAS, B199 - HAWS, TARACITI, B209 - RAMSEUR, ROSS, C026 - GARDNER, LADAWN, C038 DIAZ, JAN-PAUL, C044 - AHMAD, CHERYL, C047 - HOLT, JELENA, C076 - BARRETO, JASON, C084 - QUEVEDO, ADRIAN, C091 - DAVIS, CASSANDRA, D002 - STEPHENS, JERRISH, D014 HILL, ELAINE, D017 - GROFFEL, CHRIS, D018 - SANCHEZ, JESUS, D031 - TOTARO, TIMOTHY, D036 - GREER, KEITH, D060 - REED, LISA, D066 - TULLOCH, JAMES, D068 - YATES, JESSICA, D071 - BENJAMIN, DANNY, D083 BABER JR, AMOS, F028 - PARISI, MICHAEL 310 W CENTRAL PARKWAY, ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, FL, 32714 AT 9:45 AM: 0008 - BURNS, VICTOR, 0058 - MADDUX, MATTHEW, 0250 - THOMAS-BROWN, ALEXANDRE, 0318 - FLEMING, HELEN, 0422 - TAVARES, MELISSA, 0477 - MURIEL, ROSA, 0505 - LOGAN, KRISTOPHER, 1002 - HOLTON, SANDRA, 1017 - HARVELL, TONYA, 2048 - REYNOLDS, LISA, 2138 ALCORN, PEYTON, 3022 - PLAZA ECHEVARRIA, FREDDIE, 3023 ORTIZ, ANGEL, 3032 - GARZA JR, EFRAIN, 3091 - WINCHESTER, ED, 4001 - ROBINSON, CYNTHERIA, 4013 - CARABALLO, ILIANA, 4023 - LORENZO, ELIEZER, 4028 - GRISSETT SR, MAURICE, 5022 - CUNNINGHAM, MICHAEL, 6009 - MINCEY, SHAMYA 2800 W STATE ROAD 434 , LONGWOOD , FL, 32779 AT 10:00 AM: 0283 - MILES, DANIELLE, 0303 - ROTHWELL, CHIAKI, 0351 - MANZANO, JHON, 0357 - RAPHINO, DARLENE, 0541 - ROSARIO, ANGELICA, 0548 MORT, RACHEL, 0641 - BUCKLEY, GREGORY, 0663 - RODRI-
GUEZ, DAVID, 0671 - NEWCOMB, KAREN, 0674 - BROOM SR., DUANE, 0729 - PETITTI, LAURA, 0768 - SANTOS, LOUIS, 0777 - BURHENNE, RONALD, 0782 - BURHENNE, RONALD, 0823 - GARFINKEL, SCOTT, 0836 - WILLIAMS, JEREMY, 0867 - CROSSMAN FLOORING, 0875 - CHADEAYNE, DONALD, 0906 - COWAN, MELISSA, 0928 KUFUS, SCOTT, 0941 - DICK, MICHAEL, 0944 - WIRES, NOELLE 521 S STATE ROAD 434, ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, FL, 32714 AT 10:15 AM: 1024 - MOORE, ANTONNETTE, 3021 - MANGUAL, ARIEL, 3032 - JOHNSON, LAMEKA, 4034 - WILLIAMS, ANGELA, 5057 - TODD, GEORGE, 5088 VINCENT, JONATHAN, 5092 - MORALES, ANA, 5136 - CARMONA, SHANTAE, 5148 - KOSCINSKI, MATTHEW, 5161 - COTEY, SALVATORE, 5166 - THOMSEN, JACQUELINE, 6001 - HOLMES, ZETA, 6011 - EDWARDS, KRISTINA, 6028 - FRANCIS, KIRK, 6048 AYALA, MARIA, 6076 - CUFF, GWENDOLYNN, 6101 - MARTIN, JOSEPH, 6146 - GONZALEZ, FRANKIE 455 S HUNT CLUB BLVD, APOPKA, FL, 32703 AT 10:30 AM: 2011 - NOTTAGE, LEESA, 3017 NIENSTEDT, LEEANN, 3032 - OLIVARES, ERIKA, 3044 - MUNOZ, MAGLADENA, 4066 - PETERSON JR., NORMAN (NORM), 4081 - ENRIQUEZ, JOSE, 5001 - NORMAN, CLIFTON, 5026 - ROSA, ABIGAIL, 5054 - ROBINSON, ANGEL, 5117 - GERRY, MATTHEW, 5122 - GRILLOS, MICHAEL, 6003 - SHAW, TONI, 6005 - SANTANA, LIZ, 6019 - SHEFFIELD, MATTHEW, 6093 - HAMMONDS, DOMINIQUE, 6192 - JALBERT, RONALD, 6201 - JALBERT, MEGHAN, 6202 - FRANK, JELDA, 6217 - SHROCK, DAVID, 7002 ANDERSON, PENELOPE 2431 S ORANGE BLOSSOM TRAIL, APOPKA, FL, 32703 AT 10:45 AM: B017 - CARUSO, LORIE, B035 - CLARK, SHAKEANA, D032 - FLEMING, AUSHANTA, D065 - HALL, TRACEY, E009 HARRIS, JOHN, H028 - POLINGO, KATHY, H052 - PETERS, EDWARD, NA03 - MILLER, CARL, NA04 - COLON, ALBERTO, NA07 - COSSAIRT, JASON,NA13 - WASHINGTON, KIMBERLY, NA16 - GRANT, KENNLEY, P096 - MOORE, HARLEY - VIN# 4X4FRLD23D1852513, S017 HENRY, AESHA, S032 - COOPER, ANTHONY, T017 - GROVE, DONALD, U030 - MESSENGER, JEFFREY, V005 - BOLDEN, ANETRA, V016 - CAMPBELLS, JACQUELINE, X004 - REYES FLORES, ALEJANDRO 108 W MAIN ST. APOPKA , FL, 32703 AT 11:00 AM: 0122 - APONTE, KENDRISH, 0124 - DURHAM, ARIKA, 0205 - VILLARINO, DAVID, 0304 - MILLER, JENNIFER, 0305 - PORTER, ROBIN, 0311 - HART, JEANNIE, 0313 - ACAJABON, KATHERINE, 0319 - HUMPHREY, JENNIFER, 0406 - SPEARS, MARILYN, 0423 - DAWSON, MARISA, 0511 - NEIL, ANTOINETTE, 0519 - EDWARDS, LADREAER, 0621 - LEWIS, BRITTANY, 0715 - LAWSON,
LATOYA, 0801 - LONG, JEREMY, 0802 - GRIFFIN, ELIZABETH, 0816 - BASCOM, BENJAMIN, 0817 - JAMES, LATASHA, 0820 BROWN, TONIQUE, 1008- WHITAKER, TIFFANY, 1104 - CALLAHAN, LARRY, 1124 - GOINS, ROGER, 1323 - HUGHLEY, JAMES, 1327 - BRATHWAITE, SHAWN, 1329 - LOPEZ, BRENDA, 1367 - WASHINGTON, TARCHELLE, 1388T - COBB, JAMAICA, 1484 - RIVERS JR, CALVIN, 1501 - WHEATLEY, HIEDE, 1503 - DAWSON, JOSHUA, 1526 - PRINCE, TEVIN, 1726 - BECKETT, RACKEL, 1735 - KUNKEL, BRANDONl 1741 WORTHAM, BONITA, 1746 - LEE, DAVID, 1767 - LOWRY, MARK, 1770 - DAVIS-HILLWIG, CARISSA 8255 SILVER STAR ROAD ORLANDO, FL 32818 AT 11:15 AM: 1209 - HYMAN, LISA, 1305 - JOHNSON, DUANE, 1353 DELEON JR., JOSE, 1354 - DUBE, DUSTIN, 1408 - BEAVERS, DASHE, 1442 - RUCKER, LORNA, 1476 - ZUMAETA, VANESSA, 1508 - LEE, CAROL, 1606 - ZUMAETA, ADA, 1610 - BARRETT, CARLYON, 1617 - COLE, GINA, 1619 - FRAZIER, LA’TALYA, 1718 - LAWRENCE, DWIGHT, 2047 - VAZQUEZ, CHRISTIAN, 2163 - SCOTT, STERLE, 2170 - LOUISSANT, MARIE, 2212 - COLON, DEBORAH, 2233 - MARSHALL, ASHA, 2260 - CLARK, ARIELLE, 2291 - MONTERO, JOSE, 2307 - SANTIAGO, KATHRYN, 2331 - DONALDSON, NICOLE, 2422 - DE ST AUBIN, NICOLE, 3015 - CLARK, CARLOS, 3122 - MAURICE, CHOIZILIEN, 3123 VARHOL ELECTRIC CO. 3150 N. HIAWASSEE RD ORLANDO, FL 32818 AT 11:30 AM: 1107 - BARNES, APOLLONIA, 1113 - SOBERS, DELESHA, 1311 - SUTHERLAND, ERICA, 1402 - SLATER, REBECCA, 1412 - SKALYO, ELAINE, 1509 - COOPER, SHEARICO, 1511 WIGGINS, LISA, 1602 - FELLOWSHIP, ORLANDO BIBLE, 1605 - SMILEY, SHANICE, 1611 - SIMS, BEATRICE, 1702 - HORTON, THOMAS, 1808 - HERNANDEZ, MICHELLE, 1829 - HEADLEY, MARCIA, 1831 - NEAL, ANDRE, 1833 - LOUIS, NATASHA, 1907B - CLANCY, MISTY, 1908D - IWUAGWU, JANNELLE, 1909C - BANNISTER, TIMONT, 1912 - MASON, IRIS, 1915 - BILLINGSLEA LLL, ROBERT, 1917 - LOPEZ, KYLARIE, 1921 - WALTON, JAMILA, 1926 - ROSA, FRANCES, 2104 - WALLACE, DENISE, 2109 - CLAY, TARA, 2110 - GRIFFITH, LEONARD, 2230 - JENKINS, STACEY, 2315 - GWINN, SIMIYA, 2321 - PERCIVAL, DERELYN, 2502 - SKALYO, ELAINE, 2522 - CLAY, TARA, 2606 - JOHNSON, JANICE, 2615 - SMITH, PHEDRA, 2620 - LONGSTREET, CHARLEEN, 2704 - COCHRAN, MARGARET, 2721 - LOWE, CASSANDRA, 2724 - MCCALL, KONSTANCE, 2810 DAVIS, SHANNON 6770 SILVER STAR ROAD ORLANDO, FL 32818 AT 11:45AM: 0007 - JONES, APRIL, 0015 DENNISON, LATASHA, 0021 - OSORIO, JUSTIN, 0026 - CHAVOUS, HEATHER, 0029 - DESAUSSURE, CHARLIE, 0032 - SULLIVAN, JAMES, 0054 - HOLT, TERRENCE,
0086 - BYNUM, JAMES, 0110 - STEPHENS, KIMBERLY, 0117 SMITH, EJIA’NEA, 0119 - PRUITT, AMINA, 0131 - HAIRSTON, JOHNNIE, 0151 - FORD, LATESHIA, 0166 - JACKSON, MALINDA, 0173 - GRIFFIN, IVY, 0176 - ROUSE, LA SHANDA, 0199 - PIRANT, MARY, 0208 - NORFLEET, NAPORSCHIA, 0233 - WHITE, CHARLOTTE, 0235 - POWELL, RAPHAEL, 0236 - BROWN, LATREVEOUS, 0237 - ANDERSON JR, DUDANE, 0255 - COLEMAN, ALVIN, 0259 - KELLY, VINCENT, 0263 - GIBSON, SHANTARA, 0265 - COAR, GEORGE, 0267 - SCHILT, RONALD, 0268 - GILMORE, ERNEST, 0271 - LACOMB, JOANNE, 0273 - GIBSON, SHARON, 0308 - LEEKS, RODRIGUEZ, 0310 HARRIS, TAKITA, 0324 - CRUZ, JAVIER, 0332 - WRIGHT, TROY, 0338 - WHEELER, CHIQUITA, 0372 - TESTRA, MARIE, 0430 - SCHLAWIEDT, BRITTANY, 0436 CUNNINGHAM, CRYSTAL, 0460 HALL, CELESTE, 0474 - WESLEY, DARRIUS, 0475 - DADAILLE, PIERRE, 0491 - ORACUIS, MARIE, 0509 - RUTLAND, CORY, 0527 - ROBERTS, PATRICK, 0539 - VERDIEU, RICHARDSON, 0548 – HUDSON, DEBRA, 0555 - FRANCOIS, GUINOTTE, 0562 - FLETCHER, VERNITA, 0563 - ROBINSON, DEQUAN, 0566 - BOSCH, JOSE, 0573 TORRES CALDERON, AILED, 0574 - SNELL, WILLIAM, 0577 JOHNSON, LISA, 0586 - KILPATRICK, COURTNEY, 0614 - KING, DAVATTE, 0638 - ALLEN, JAIMIE, 0642 - CIPRIANI, BERYL, 0660DAREUS, ROODLY, 0661 - HENKLE, JACK, 0672 - W.E FREEMAN
OUTREACH CENTER OF CENTRAL FLORIDA, 0672 – GIBSON, JOHNNIE, 0724 - WOODS, HAROLD, 0736 - HURDLE, SHIRLEY, 0766 - WARRELL, MAKILA, 0772 - REESE, MILLICENT, 0786 - JACKSON, QUINCY, 0799 WILLIAMS, LATOYA, 0813 - CHIN, DAVID, 0842 - JONES, OCTAVIA, 0866 - MARTINEZ, WENDY, 0869 - FIGUEROA -RUIZ, NEREIDA, 0893 - SERGILE, PATRICK, 0897 - JOHNSON, TANGELA, 0912 - WILLIAMS, BARBARA, 0914 WATSON, BARBARA.
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. 1990 NISSAN JN1RZ24A6LX009702 2004 MAZDA JM1FE17N340139063 1999 LINCOLN 1LNFM82W8XY611075 1993 CHEVROLET 1GCEC14Z1PE245110 To be sold at auction at 8:00AM on APRIL 4TH, 2017, at 2500 N. Forsyth rd, Orlando Fl 32807. Around The Clock Towing inc.
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MARCH 15-21, 2017
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: March 30th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 1:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL. 32839 (407)839-5518#3120-Altrese Johnson- Household items, furniture, #4057 -Bernard Mcdonald-Household goods, #3069- Randall RedpathHousehold items, #1093-Dustari Fortilien-Household items, #3043-Raphael Antoine-Household items, #3081- Laerika JohnsonHousehold items, #1034-William Sanders-Household items, #4030-Annie Harvey-Household items, #3028-Habbas Habbas-2 queen mattresses, tv, #4101-Angela Beatrice Louis-Household items, #4023-Marurice Bright- Boxes and queen bed, #1058-Janet Sandra Thomas-Bags,clothes, #4005-Andres Olivencia-Household items, #2147C- Stephon Ford-Household items, #4031-Shanika Shaunte Jackson- Clothes,tv,dvd’s,vhs tapes. 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. ●
ORLANDO WEEKLY
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Legal, Public Notices NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Personal property of the following tenants will be sold for cash to satisfy rental liens in accordance with Florida Statutes, Self Storage Facility Act, Sections 83-806 and 83807. Contents may include kitchen, household items, bedding, toys, games, boxes, barrels, packed cartons, furniture, trucks, cars, etc. There is no title for vehicles sold at lien sale. Owners reserve the right to bid on units. Lien sale to be held online ending Wednesday, March 29, 2017 at times indicated below. Viewing and bidding will only be available online at www.storagetreasures.com beginning 5 days prior to the scheduled sale date and time! Also visit www.personalministorage.com/Orlando-FL- storageunits/ for more info. Personal Mini Storage Edgewater Annex-6220 All American Blvd Orlando, FL 32810-at 11:30 am: 0043 Reinaldo Rodriguez Garcia, Reys Auto Body Personal Mini Storage Edgewater-6325 Edgewater Dr Orlando, FL 32810-at 11:30 am: 0135 Keenigya Callier, 0324 Haroldo Alfonso Plata Miro, No Limit Carpet Care, 0338 Rohnda Manning Emrich, 0421 Scott Matthew Ramsey, 0428 Tomika Lawanna Johnson, 0521 Lee Anthony Johnson, 0731 Efrain Salazar, 0749 Christy Sherice Phillips, 0953 Craig C Maguire, 0956 Craig C Maguire, 1408 Jason Manley Daniels, 1413 Stephanie Jean Brandon, 1551 Catherine Greer, 1735 Marvin Cliffton Day, 1752 Anne Marcelle Ainsbury, 2004 John Dominic Pinnaro, Gary Wallace Slater III, 1970 Jon Boat VIN# FLZZ6569B170 Tag#FL1499LM & Shoreland’r Trailer - No VIN Avail, 2021 Tyrone Welton Scott, 1986 Skeeter 14’ Boat VIN# TSB07107D585 & Boat trailer VIN# 1L8T1201XF1018179 Plate# 559GP - No title avail Personal Mini Storage Forest City Rd-6550 Forest City Rd Orlando, FL 32810-at 12:00 pm: 1007 Stephen Lamar Williams, 1015 Angela Marie Thomas, 1053 James Andrew Bollman, 1065 Phyllis Rena Mccray, 1066 Kenetra Denise Sapp, 1101 Eric James Ligon, 1106 Carlos Davila, 2055 John Hicks, 3297 Tiffaney Alyha Langhorn, 4001 Jeffery Barstta, 4030 Tyrone Denod Mills, 4049 Evelyn Lowe, 4065 Thomasina Latrel Brown, 4071 Vashti Lynn Whaley, 4089 Dequan Emell Branker, 4123 Anfernee Laishay Burnside, 5027 Rhynette Redding, 5039 Alzet Parker, 5066 Cameron Campbell, 6009 Amir Kareem Beigali, 6017 Dana Michelle Neal, 8031 David Francis Donahue, 8038 David Francis Donahue, 9018 Kevin Bernard Williams 2005 Ford Escape VIN#1FMYU02Z05KB84883 Tag#SS671, Kingsland Auto Pawn G310 2005 Ford Escape VIN#1FMYU02Z05KB84883 Tag#SS671.
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NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON MARCH 24, 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED. 8149 Aircenter Court, Orlando, FL 32809-7414 AT- 9:30AM- 1011 - Mayo, Chrystal, 1018 - Segui, Angel L., 1108 - luciana, april, 1111 - Cruz, Damarys, 1115 - Passalacqua, Mirtha, 1133 - Rose, Deno, 1141 - Dandy, David,1167 - AMERICAN KIOSK, 1175 - Heslin, Charlotte, 2032 - Rinaldi, Ronald, 2046 - Roman Diaz, Hector, 2064 - Williams, Barnett, 2106 Torres, Geomares, 2136 - heifetz, avee, 2138 - Mitchell, Trayjon, 2202 - HEENY, WYZEENA, 2215 - Freeland, Debbie, 2217 - Hill, Sashenee, 3010 - Johnson, Donna Lea, 3025 - Blake, Adam, 3033 - Calo, Hendy, 3047 - winslow, Jessica, 3058 - Watkins, Timothy, 3073 - IGLESIA, PENTECOSTAL EL CAMINO, 3084 - Rose, Janet, 4008 - Kirkpatrick, Thomas, 4037 - Boggs, Brian, 4043 - Hagness, Sheri, 4045 - Reece, Thomas, 4047 - Teixeira, Marcos, 6016 - Rivera Ortiz, Shelly, 6106 - cardona, paul, 6114 - Acree, Christina, 6115 Luciano, Juan. 4801 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL, 32822-2316 AT- 09:45AM0115 - Vendlands-Figueroa, Patricia, 0118 - Hurlburt, Sebron, 0126 - Sanchez, Pedro, 0129 Rodriguez, Emilio, 0146 - Castro, Brenda, 0155 - Anglero, Hamilton, 0182 - Caputo, Dilson, 0197 Harden, Tiffany, 0202 - Young, Olando, 0215 - Biggs, Keith, 0216 - sanchez, felix, 0219 - Lasher, Parker, 0238 - Rodriguez Martinez, Victor, 0260 - Kinard, Alyson, 0296 - Jean, Shadee, 1012 - Dominguez, Vanelis, 1021 - Campbell, Melanie, 3029 - Nieves, Yomari, 3039 Pryor, Ariel, 4015 - Brown, Gwendolyn, 4026 - Hernandez, Jorge, 5015 - Mulling, Nicolette Lynn, 5016 - Ulrich, Delinda, 6023 - Taylor, Taronda, 7002 - Fleming, Glenn, 7013 - Cotts, Elizabeth, 7024 Rosa, Eduardo, 7034 - Cordoba, Juan, 7052 - Rodriguez, Jilka, 7060 - Walker, Benjamin, 7061 - Tate, Tami, 7064 - Garcia, Wilda, 7072 Vargas, Fernando, 7075 - Bonilla, Norberto, 7086 - Pinero, Monica, 7087 - Reese, Rosalyn, 7097 - Roman, Carlos, 7105 - Roach, Tony, 7108 - Hoenstine, Jackie, 7123 - Cusiccanqui, Cammie, 7125 Burns, Rashaud, 7156 - Dan Casto Wallcovering, 8019 - potts, jennifer, 8094 - Rojas, Yesenia, 8095 - Rojas, Rafael, 8123 - Sanchez, Felix, 8152 - Becker, Jonathan, 8171 -
ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 15-21, 2017
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Khan, Mehjabeen. 2275 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL, 32822-2703 AT 10:00AMA108 - Jeffries, Donald, A109 - Padilla, Jessica, A122 - Rivera, Loraine, A125 - Singleton, Carlton, A130 - Wilcox, Kimberly, B105 Viering, Christine, B118 - Cobb, Brenda, B135 - Cromie, Tim, B148 - Yvon, Lisa, B149 - Vega, Odemaris, B152 - Smith, Marisha, B200 - Medina, Maritza, B201 Flanagan, Christy, B205 - Hidalgo, Renee, B221 - Taffani, Anouar, B225 - Nardi, Kimberly, B227 Archer, Amber, C113 - gil, Lemuel, C117 - guerra, luis, C129 - Colon, Enrique, C137- Esquivel, Jaquelinne, C153 - Ranson, Clark, C166 Brent, Ellyse, C178 - Perez, Ivalee, C195E - Proctor, Antione, C195G - Thomas, Terrell, C195H - Pacheco, Jennifer, C195I - Cesareo, Samantha, C197 - Rodriguez, Maycol, C199G - Blackwell, Elizabeth, C208 - Shomefun, George, C209 - LAMERE, ALYSSA, C211 - Marrero, Ismael, C211E - Walker, Nifisha, C212C - Lopez, Maria, C227C - Bailey, Monica, C230H Carlisle, Kelly. 903 S. Semoran Blvd.Orlando FL, 32807 at 10:30AM: C004 - Clum, Vicki, C015 - TEJADA, MARITZA, C019 - hall, brenda, C045 - Jones, Clarrisa, C054 - Lewis, Kelly, C063 - Ayala, Martha, C067 - Perez, Carlos, C080 - Millward, Nathan, D002 - Romero, cristino, D004 - Jimenez, Henry, D027 - Conway, Leon, D038 - Orange County, Democratic Exec. Cte., D042 - Ray, Lamar, D053 Edwards, Katrina, D054 - Ocasio, Yolanda, D057 - Romero, Ramona, D077 - Loeza, Lorenzo, D090 - Torres, Alexander, D108 - Gonzalez, Hector, D114 - ruiz, christopher L, D120 - Newlan, Cynthia, D166 - Cruzada, Joel, D183 - Kipp, Ronald, D196 - Age, Kirk, D203 Benjamin, Danny, D206 - Irizarry, Lynette, D213 - Fariello, Jason, D222 - Coloski, Edward, D227 Spruell, Shelley, D228 - Slayton, Victoria, D229 - Smith, Milton, D230 - Zapata, Osman, D233 - Russell, Kraig, E013 - Irizarry, Lyzette, E019 - Rivera, Christian, E030 - Welker, Bonnie, E040 - Rodriguez, Aimara, E042 - AGOSTO, LILLIAN, E053 Diaz, Awilda, E062 - Cancel, Keila, E069 - Correa, Estefani, E084 Washington, Nelisa. 2525 E Michigan St , Orlando , FL, 32806-5039 AT 11:30AM: 1020 - Walker, Ernestine, 1027 Melendez, Wanda, 1029 - Dison, William, 2004 - Williams, Chad, 2026 - Crouch, Fred, 2028 - Hill, Laura, 4005 - Linares, Alba, 4033 - Zeek, Jason, 4035 - Haywood, Summer, 5055 - Alves, Melanie, 5345 - Davis, Bradley, 6306 Hayman, Quinn, 6334 - Rollings, Eric, 6347 - Marrero, Ashley, 6432 - Mitchell, Tiffany, 6449 - Nerette, Jean Emmanuel, 6501 - Pinkney, Prince, 6518 - Stewart, David, 6520 - Petersen, Donald, 6621 - Cook, Christina, 6634 - Castaneda, Oscar, 6643 - Ryder, Laurie.
orlandoweekly.com
NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON MARCH 23, 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED. 28075- 4729 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL, 32839—AT 9:30AM: 0117 - Latimer, Rashounthia, 0118 - Torez, Yaira, 0120 - Henderson, Caleb, 0121 - Fair, Kevin, 0133 - Fort Jr., Ritchie, 0136 - Greene, Ivy, 0154 - Stennett, Sheena, 0158 - Charles, Kevin, 0231 - Johnson, Jermaine, 0237 - Smith, Deshanne, 0242 Thompson I I, Keith, 0305 - Irving, Dwan, 0311 - Ousley, Baretta, 0315 - Brisbane, Harold, 0318 Browdy, Marquis, 0322 - Jackson, Cornelius, 0340 - Desir Israel, Anne, 0353 - Naylor, John, 0354 Gardner-oliver, Gina, 0414 - White, Estella, 0435 - Williams, Edith, 0503 - Charles, Marianne, 0513 Cameron, Noreen, 0522 - Gumbs, Janet, 0601 - Roque, Jose, 0604 - Maragh, Courtney, 0607 - Mcfield, Ruth, 0610 - Flannery, Debra, 0621 - Sheppard, Darryl, 0622 - Stodtko, Katherine, 0623 - Hanshaw, Ezmone, 0624 - Weeks, Tylishia, 0706 - Cameron, Andrea, 0707 - Ramirez, Jose, 0711 - Knight, Mary, 0732 - Perry, Lakenya, 0733 - Flannery, Debra, 0801 - Montgomery, Ronnie, 0805 - Pantojas, Jessie, 0815 - Patterson, Dana, 0818 - Derival, Nicole, 0831 - Bommarito, Elizabeth, 0902 - Smith, Toni, 0903 - Jackson, Santana, 0906 - Mayfield, Dwight, 0910 Driver, Silitta, 09102 - Obena, Willy, 09105 - Martinez, Jellitza, 09109 White, Emanuel, 09121 - Morrison, Shemela, 0916 - Hopkins, Freddie, 0930 - Collie, Carl, 0938 - Brown, Ahyanna, 0949 - Mitchell, Roger, 0977 - Sutherland, Rushbourne, 0989 - Butler, Johnny, 0995 Vega, Jenmarie, 0996 - Munoz, Abdias, 0997 - Jumpp, Janelle, 1003 - Smith-Lott, Master, Dearta, 1063 - Cadely, Dunel, 1064 - Burke, Kaishma, 1068 - Milhomme, Manes, 1086 - Smith, Athena, 1104 - Thomas, Simeon, 1116 - Mcneil, Queenesther, 1121 - Johnson, Theresa, 1123 - Alba, Zulay, 1129 - Brown, Suddaney, 1133 - Blake, Jasmine, 1138 - Snell, Jordan, 1139 - Were, Caroline, 1145 - King, Wendy, 1147 - Cudjoe, Richard, 1161 - Caldwell, Johnnie, 1168 - Lavigne, Lawrence, 1244 - Johnson, Shavon, 1249 - Bracey, Phillippa, 1251 - Mcwhorter, Toni, 1254 - Mccoy, Conrad, 1269 - Townsend, Zandrya, 1272 - Frederick, Louise, 1304 - Jerome, Mackenson, 1313 - Fisher, Wayne, 1325 - Brookins,
Tamara, 1326 - Miranda, Rene, 1331 - Hodges, William, 1344 Gonzalez, Carlos, 1365 - Sutton, Fitima, 1366 - Roman Jr., Steve. 25454: 235 E. Oakridge Rd.Orlando Fl 32809 at 10:30am: A101 - Carter, Michael, A103 Tezuka, Shota, A104 - Haskell, Charles, A106 - Schmidt, Damon, A116 - Nadege, Lamour, A146 Roman, Edelmiro, A150 - Spence, Carl, A157 - Sills, Kari, B205 - Calderon, Jose, B223 - Arroyo, Brandaly, B239 - Williams, Jahliese, B241 - Martinez, Gregory, C319 - Berrios Lopez, Luis, C321 - Muniz Torres, Carlos, D403 Simon, Johnesha, D418 - Winn, Jaleesa,D423 - Narvaez, Rubymar, E506 - Regis, Felix, E515 Johnson, Jessica, E537 - Lebbar, Said, E544 - Valentin, Eddy, F635 - Wilbon, Shaquille, H806 - Burnes Bowles, Kimberly, I924 - Lalanne, Vedette, I932 - Cuevas, Noemi, J027 - Ross, Teresa, J040 Luna, Iris, K110 - Dorsey, Errick, K111 - Rigg, Taj, K113 - Narvaez, Rudy, K120 - Smith, Labrina, L215 - Perez, Marta, L221 - Shaw, William, L223 - Margeson, Jo, L232 - Berdiel, Waykiria, M302 - lopez, cynthia, N412 - Israel, Jean, P037 - Torres, khermes, P046 - Laurent, Matheus. 20711- 1801 W. Oakridge Road, Orlando FL 32809- 11:30am: B021 - Willaims-Merchant, LaShawncia, B025 - Candelario, Menona, B041 - Oliver, Barbara, B049 - Vega, Alefredo, C006 Castillo, Barbara, C015 - Rodriguez, Rene, C020 - Dyer, Robert, C023 - Snipes, Prince, C031 - Barner, Tonia, C037 - Divra, Anly, D016 - Sparrow, stephen, D025 - Jean-Louis, Wilda, D028 - Bell, Warnika, D038 - Perez, Freidlando, D041 - ALMONOR, ERNST, D045 Palacios, Glenda, D049 - Jacques, Scardy, E022 - Aldrich, Barbara, E027 - Bonhomme, Dieula, E032 - Lavache, Gina, E-033- Wilson, april, E045 - Vega, Carlos, E046 - Tracy, Michelle, F001 - Medical Eyebank, F009 - Correa, Loida, F010 - Millington, Kristin, F036 Lemon, Adrianna, G013 - Joseph, Marc, G024 - Vargas, Miguel, G025 - ABDUSH, YOSI, G037 - Roques, Gaudy, G045 - Johnson, Tywanna, H025 - Washington, Raniskia, H039 - Johnson, Traci, H040 - Morris, Janice, H042 - Cameron, Levene, J003 -Brown, Angela, J005 - Patterson, Sidney, J014 - Cartaxo, Cynthia, J032 - Brown, Tanzy, J034 - King, Yarvis, J035 - Adam, Danny, J040 - Radiano, Kimberly, J048 MARTINEZ, JUAN, J054 - Casas, Victor, J055 - Brown, Leo, J066 Jordan, Shirley, J073 - King, Sierra, J074 - Fogle III, Elijah, J083 - Rodriguez, Bernadette, J084 - Jocelyn, Frank, J088 - FOSTER, KATHY, J089 - Johnson, Dominique, J091 - Baez, Gladys, J099 - Gomez, Monica, J111 - Johnson, Margie, J116 - kanarick, yvette, J118 Danza, Michelle, J124 - Best, Ernest, J131 - Bryant, William, J133 - Berno, Melissa, J158 - Weidman, Tammi, J160 - Rivera, Sonia, J172 - Matos, Nubia, K025 - Cobb, Breandra, K036 - Ellis, Jadae, K057 - Hodgson, Jayson, K083 - Pierre Fils, Dieurilus, K092 - Martinez, Carmen, K103 - Sham, Raboune,
K109 - Danza, Michelle. 24303- 1313 45th St. Orlando, Fl 32839 12:30pm: A105 - Fairley, Arantes, A114 - Pollack, Ronada, A118 - Anderson, Stacy, A121 - Laury, Sainnelhomme, A125 Fraser, Christopher, B237 - Young, Tashiekka, B238 - Dabney, Karen, B262 - Jones, Annia, B281 - Mcknight, James, C303 - Shaw, Kimberly, C308 - Campbell, Gloria, C311 - Taylor, Kendric, C323 Jones, Jacqueline, C325 - Webb, Antoni, C328 - Pierre, Emmanuael, C332 - Daise, Marvin, C333 Jordan, Jennay, C380 - Hickson, Omyry, C394 - King, Kanesha, D403 - Neely, Donna, D409 Woodson, Lesine, D426 - Smalarz, Laura, D485 - Jones, Karlis, E508 Wright, Althea, E520 - Valderrama, Madeline, E541 - Anderson, Ruby, E550 - Lavoile, Emmanuel, E566 - Lopez Jr, Rafael, E568 - Tillman, Tory, E572 - Cleveland, Willie, F604 - Morgan, Virginia, F630 - Simon, Karen Ingrid, F640 - Brown, Randy, G722 - Richardson, Michael, H818 - Hair, Shawn, H828 - Alexander, Deborah., H846 - Hamilton, Terrence, H850 - Anthony, Tamara, J907 - Mercier, Martine, J911 Jean, Max. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: March 30th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 9:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1101 Marshall Farms Rd. Ocoee, Fl. 34761 (407) 877-0191 #C211Heriberto Silva-Household #B077-Deborah Wright-Furniture #E331-Deborah Wright-Household #G425-Deborah Wright-Household #A013-Deborah Wright-Household #H457-Elite Services and import/ Akm Hussain-Household #A024Thomas Siegfried-Furniture #D270-Angelia Bosket-Household #P615-Roberto Santana-Trailer 2015 White Enclosed Trailer VIN #15907X12FM982097. 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5603 Metrowest Blvd. Orlando, FL 32811 (407) 445-0867 #07015 Brigetha Carbonell hsehold goods; #02301 Aries Blandon hsehold goods; #07011 Carolyn Rozier hsehold goods; #08004 Tammi Griffin personal property; #03022 Betuna Laplace hsehold goods; #02127 Emmitt Pete Harris hsehold items; #06008 Wendy Martin hsehold furniture ,items, etc;, #02115 Tricia Slavin hsehold furniture ,items, etc.; #02017 Christine Lormil 1 twin bed set kids, kitchen boxes; #04030 Ellen Tavarez Furniture boxes; #07033 Ellen Tavarez hsehold goods; #03001 Louis Trocola boxes, furniture; #02265 Michele Greene hsehold furniture, items, etc.; #06036 Nicole Watts personal items etc; #07010 Jose MartinezResendiz hsehold furniture, items,
etc; #06060 Kesean Hawkins hsehold furniture, items, etc; #07019 Rahmlee Birch furniture, hsehold items; #02034 Darrin McCoy II mattress, headboard, boxes, dresser; #04004 Sophia Cesar 1 queen bed,1 twin bed, chest, night stand, small section couch, boxes, bins; 02005 Nelson Mitchell small furniture items; #08012 Ernst Louis clothes, boxes. 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5592 L. B. McLeod Rd. Orlando, Fl. 32811 (407) 445-2709 #610 Norvella Watson- HHG #044 Norvella Watson- HHG #260 Randall Morrison-HHG #883 Sonia Bush –School supplies #273 Joel Roger –HHG #728 Brian Rollo –Bike #203 Reginald Griffin–HHG #897 Leaza Lopez– Office Supplies #032 Manita Lubin– HHG #600 Llamar Moore –HHG. 3:00p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1420 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804 (407) 650-9033 #136 Jim L Randle Jr – Appliances, Furniture, Household goods; #202 Keron Decoteau – Appliances, Furniture, Boxes, Household goods; #316 Latreca Howard – Appliances, Furniture, Electronics; #370 Joseph Miller – Bags, Boxes; #478 Raoul Vinton Williams Jr – Electronics, Furniture, Boxes, Appliances, Clothes; #529 Kimberly Welcome – Furniture; #737 Carmen Reyes – Bed and boxes; #777 Tressica Mincey – Household goods, Boxes, Totes, Clothes; #856 Camille McKinnis – Bags, Boxes, Clothes, Totes. 4:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1001 Lee Rd. Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 539-0527 #4115 April Conner- Mattress, Printer, washer, totes, file cabinet, guitar, tiles. #3135 Angel Ramos- bed, couch, microwave, bags, clothes, totes. #1047-Keionna Dionne Jensen- chair, dresser, mattress, bags, boxes, totes, toys, household appliances. #2160 Alexa Clavijo- mattress, bags, boxes, clothes, totes, toys, bike, luggage. #2098 Barbara Davis- bags, totes, bike bbq grill, fan, toilet paper. #1003A Willis Dorsey- bags, clothes, totes, tool box. #3005 John Sitton- boxes, clothes, shoes, totes, luggage. #4016 Aaron Bennet- computer, bags, boxes, toys, pictures, games, books. #2035 Johnell Tate- TV, boxes, clothes, totes, hand tools. 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 Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: March 29th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 9:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 13125 S. John Young Pkwy. Orlando, Fl. 32837 (407) 240-0958 #450-Dalila Rhea- Furniture, #1030-Christopher Pineiro- Household Items, #636-David I OrtizHome Items, #419- Elizabeth Ann Hallett- Home Items, #116-Mark Grof- Household Items, #420-Adam Ocasio- Home Items, #115-Ingrid Acevedo- Home Items, #529-Robert Dailey- Home Items, #535-Renier Maiguel- Household Items, #835-Corey Hall- Home Items. 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5753 Hoffner Avenue Orlando, FL 32822 (407) 212-5890 #5022-Mentzwe Jr Brian Cannon- Household goods, #1499-Katherina SantanaHousehold goods, #7013-Travis Rinehart- Household goods, #1251-Leslie Fleury- Household goods, #9014-Jacqueline ValenciaHousehold goods, #1085-Guillermo Suarez Mendoza- Household goods, #1496-Jennifer CabreraHousehold goods, #1491-Barbara Gilchrist- Household goods. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Pursuant to Florida Statue 713.78 on March 25, 2017 AT 9:00 am Auto Towing & Repair, 238 N. Cottage Hill Rd., Orlando, FL 32805, will sell the following vehicle(s) sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no titles. Terms cash. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. 95 FORD 1FTCR10A8STA24842 06 CHEVY 1GCFG15X361187304 06 MERZ WDBUF56J56A899050 97 FORD 2FALP71WXVX132475 14 DODGE 1C3CDZAB6EN217153 98 HONDA 1HGCG5658WA018632 05 DODGE 2D8GV58235H622566 06 CHRYSLER 23CKA53G16H271685 03 CHEV 1GNES16SX36160765 08 VOLVO YV1MS382882393954 06 CHEVY 2G1WC581569295809.
NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON MARCH 24, 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED 1051 BUENAVENTURA BLVD – KISSIMMEE, FL 34743 – AT 9:30AM: 01109 - BERRIOS, EMELINDA, 01110 - ABU, JOSSIE, 01119 - RIOS, NANCY, 01127 - ROSARIO, BARBARA, 01134 - RODRIGUEZ, ILSA, 01203 - RIVERA SANTIAGO, JOSE RAMON, 02103 - MELENDEZ, SIOMARA, 02105 - ORTIZ, RAFAEL, 02119 - FIGUEROA, MILAGRO, 02120 - RIVERA, JORGE, 02137 - JOBSON, ALEJANDRA, 02144 - MARTIN, CARNELL, 02149 - STEES, JENNY, 02155 - ALBRIGHT, RANDALL, 02205 OLMO, DANIEL, 02217 - MURRAY, STACY, 02303 - RIVERA, ORLANDO, 02325 - RIVERA, SHERLYN, 02413 - ILLERA, VIVIAN, 02423 - OTTUSO, MARGHERITA, 02505 - MEDINA, ELIZABETH, 02524 - RHODES, KARA, 02606 - RODRIGUEZ, JOSMARILY, 03101 - ALBRIGHT INTERIORS, RANDALL, 03108 - DAVILA, ANGEL, 04104 - TAYLOR, OMMA, 04133 - GONZALEZ, JEANNE, 04137 - RIVERA, LIZBETH, 04410 - RHODES, KARA, 04427 JENKINS, BILL, 04510 - ARTEAGA, JOSE, 04525 - RAISING KNOWLEDGE ACADEMY, 04525 – ARIAM COTTO, 05125 - DAVILA, MANUEL, 05142 - CONCEPCION ROMAN, DAISY, 05169 - ORTIZ, FRANCES, 05209 - OLIVER, REBECCA, 05216 - RAMIREZ, LUIS, 05244 - GUERRA, JUAN, 05337 - CRUZ, MELBA, 05429 - RIVERA, JENNIFER, 21621 - RAMIREZ, GIOVANNI 1800 TEN POINT LN – ORLANDO, FL 32837 – AT 9:40 AM: 0119 - RICHMOND JR, ALLAN, 0121 - TORRES, CARLOS, 0154 REY, JANNETTE, 0158 - MARQUEZ, MARITZA, 0159 - MATHIS, JENNIFER, 0183 - PARLANTE, MARK, 0248 - DAVIS, DALE, 0255 - MORALES, WILFREDO, 0268 - WILHIDE, STEPHANIE, 0289 - WEBSTER, ELIZABETH, 0300 - ARRIBAS, MARISOL, 0304 - EKTHUVAPRANEE, KARLA, 1001 - GABRIELA, TORRES, 1009 - MORALES, NANCY, 1013 - WEBSTER, ELIZABETH, 1024 - ROJAS, MARCOS, 1026 - NUBRITE PAINTING INC, 1030 - FIGUEROA, LINELLY, 1067 - SAYAGO, MANUEL, 2002 - BROWN, TYRONE, 2013 - WELCH, GARY, 2025 - COSTA, BRITANI, 2030 - OLIVENCIA, DAI-
SY, 2040 - GONZALEZ, MONICA, 2061 - RODRIGUEZ, JONATHAN, 3010 - SANCHEZ, ANNALISA, 3011 - HENLEY, CHRISTOPHER, 3014 - MENDOZA, LEYDA, 3043 - GONZALEZ, MONICA, 4004 DOKES, NICOLE, 4013 - AYALA, ALEXANDRA, 5005 - THOMPSON, ROBERT, 5023 - TENORIO, GALO, 5030 - RESTREPO, TATIANA, 5031 - HERNANDEZ, KIMBERLY, 5032 - VELAZQUEZ MORALES, JOSHUA, 7003 PRIES, MICHAEL, 7009 - MEIKLEJOHN, KIRK, 7027 - WEDERBRAND, MARK, 7035 - GUNTER, CURTIS, 7053 - PAGE, JABARI, 7057 - MEJIA, IVAN, 7083 FRANCIS, OWEN, 7085 - RIVERA, YVETTE, 7094 - FIGUEROA, URSULA, 7125 - LIRIANO, RICHARD, 7129 - GEDVILLAS, TYLER, 7147 - PELAEZ, BLANCA, 7153 DUCHAC, NEIL, 8017 - ESTRADA, GUILLERMO, 8035 - FLORES DASIVA, MARCOS 2783 N. JOHN YOUNG PKWY – KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – AT 9:50 AM: 1008 - GARCIA, CARMEN, 1021 - GUZMAN, ERBANELYS, 1053 - SKENES, CARL, 1056 CROUSE, KAHLA, 1059 - PARDO, CESAR, 1071 - NEGRON, DAVID, 1074 - ROBLES, MIRIAM, 1082 LEWIS, JORDAN, 11091 - ZAGBO, MARTIN, 1110 - ANDERSON, GEORGE, 11117 - GONZALEZ, ANA, 11207 - VIGUIE, DEBRA, 1201 - DEPRYOR, CHRISTINE, 12013 - VIROLA, LYNETTE, 12112 - WHITE, RACHAEL, 12122 - BROWN, TIFFANY, 12123 - ACEVEDO CARRASQUILLO, VICTOR, 1215 - BERRY, JENNIFER, 12302 - BROWN, DARLENE, 12503 - SANCHEZ, ARACELIS, 12604 - HERMAN, MATTHEW, 12606 - BONILLA, EDUARDO, 12615 - VALENTIN, SHEILA, 12624 - PEREZ, ENMANUEL, 1267 - RODRIGUEZ, MARIA, 1269 - MADERA, FRANCISCO, 201 - BROWN, MICHAEL, 207 PARDO, IRENE, 301 - FIGUEROA, TIANA, 422 - JOHNSON, KEVIN, 462 - PHELPS, STEPHEN, 481 - VALENTIN, SEBASTIAN, 487 - CONWELL, BERNADETTE, 505 - TALIENTO, ANGELA, 510 - CARAN, SHELLEY, 513 - MABSON, LAVERNE, 603 - OSBORNE, MICHAEL, 694 - RAMIREZ, WILLIAM, 706 - JOHNSON, DARLENE, 709 - GRANDISON, TARA, 714 - TARRAU, CEIDA ELINA, 801 - SANCHEZ-GARCIA, MARIA, 881 - GOINS, ROBERT, 902 GREER, NIKIYA, 905 - ORENGO, KIMBERLY, 909 - SESSOMS, DONTEE, 963 - SANTIAGO, CARLOS, 970 - RHEM, NICOLE 1701 DYER BLVD, KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – AT 10:00 AM: 0027 - CASILLO, VITOR, 0041 - SALDANHA, ROBERTA, 0043 WALKER, CAROL, 0045 - BIELE, FRANCISCO, 0047 - RAMOS, GRISEL, 0052 - CALLE, JILLIAN, 0065 - GUERRA, DAVID, 0075 SOSA, YUDELKA, 0086 - MAYA LERMA, HENRY, 0089 - THOMAS, VALERIE, 0090 - RODRIGUEZ SOTO, SANDRA, 0091 - SENA, MARLENIN, 0095 - CULLEY, JAZZMIN, 0113 - LACEFIELD, MICHAEL, 0133 - GAY, TRINITA, 0145 - PATE, PAUL, 0172 SINGLETON, TWANESHIA, 0308 -
FLORIDA TECHNICAL COLLEGE – 0308 - JENNIFER DURANT, 0317 - GONZALEZ, RICHARD, 1001 - HINES, PHYLLIS, 1016 CARBONE, ERIKA, 1018 - DAVIS, ANGELLA, 1021 - COX, KARI, 1022 - VEGA, KATHERINE, 1025 - GARCIA, CARMEN, 2006 - GOMEZ RIVERA, LUIS, 2020 CRUZ, DAISY, 2041 - QUINONES, LOURDES, 2056 - BURKE, HEATHER, 2061 - GATES, PRISCILLA, 2081 - LARA, JUSTIN, 2085 - DIAZ JR, SAMMY, 2093 MANANA MOJICA, KRIZIA, 2099 - RUIZ, AMANDA, 2103 - GRAU, JUAN, 2106 - HERNANDEZ, NOLBERTO, 2119 - RAPP, MICHAEL, 2120 - LOVE, JOSHUA, 3006 - GONZALEZ, CARMEN, 4006 FLORIDA TECHNICAL COLLEGE - 4006 – JENNIFER DURANT, 4016 - IBRAHIM, MONICA, 4027 PERRY, ERIN, 6008 - RICHARDS, ARTHUR, 6035 - IKE, TERRENCE, 6038 - TRINIDAD, MAYRA, 6043 CARR, RYAN, 6051 - INTERIANO, VERONICA, 6060 - MALLOW, AJA, 6072 - ORTIZ, MARIBEL, 6086 COLEMAN, CONSTANCE, 6104 - MULLINS, WANDA JANE, 6128 - MCEACHERN, KIMBERLY, 6155 - LAW, CURTIS, 6158 - WALKER, CAROL, 6161 - LANIER, VERONICA, 6164 - THOMAS, MARK, 6166 - TORRES, CARLOS, 6188 - RIVERA, MAGALI, 6198 - MCQUEEN, SHERRI, 6208 - LOGAN, ANDY, 6222 - YEAGER, TURINA, 8024 PENA, PEDRO, 8027 - CARTER, BOBBY, 8041 - MAYMI, VANESSA, 8047 - PEGUERO, ANALIS, 8087 FLORIDA TECHNICAL COLLEGE - 8087 – JENNIFER DURANT 951 S. JOHN YOUNG PKWY – KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – AT 10:10 AM: 1002 - RIVERA, CARLOS, 1123 - FRANCIS, LETRIECE, 1208 - JAMES, KELLY, 1212 - LAWES, AVIS, 1218 - DIAZ REGALADO, LEYDI, 1236 - GORDON, ROHAN, 1244 - GENAO, WILSON, 1308 - WEHR, CAMERON, 1404 - HARRIOTT, ANGELLA, 1412 - FIGUEROA, PEDRO, 1422 - STONE, JEION, 1425 - PENA RODRIGUEZ, PEDRO, 1504 SOTO, NEREIDA, 1510 - PEREZ, JENNIFER, 1517 - ORTIZ, CARMEN, 1525 - DENNY, KURT, 1527 PAGAN, JEFFREY, 1609 - WARD, SHERELLE, 1620 - JENKEL, ANDREW, 1621 - WILLIAMS, KATHIE, 1806 - FERGUSON, MARLON, 2005 - SILVA, MARILINDA, 2051 - ORTIZ, BEATRIZ, 2060 - SANTILLANES, RUTH, 2071 - BENNETT, TARTRIEQUA, 2107 - WILSON, SHAUNA, 2114 - RODRIGUEZ, JOEL, 2144 - RAMOS, SONIA, 2145 - HAMILTON, JAMES, 2162 - LOVE, DAVID, 2165 - MCKENZIE, SONIA, 2166 - ROSE, DAVID, 2174 - FISHER, PATRICK, 2187 - CORBIN, DEBRA, 2189 RODRIGUEZ, LOURDES, 2190B - HARRIS, ALKEEM, 2193 - RODRIGUEZ, JAIRO, 2206 - MATOS, LUIS, 2227 - CRUZ, REINA, 2306 - NEGRON, MAGDAELENA (MAGGIE), 2321 - ALVAREZ, EMELYN, 2332 - GREEN, NATHALIE, 2350 - JEAN-BAPTISTE, DOMINIQUE, 2351 - PEREIRA, KEISHA, 2401 - FIGUEROA, GERARD, 2406 - MIRANDA, AURORA, 2408 - LEWIS, SONYA, 2409 - SAT’HERU,
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MARCH 15-21, 2017
RAVEN 227 SIMPSON RD - KISSIMMEE, FL 34744 –AT 10:20 AM: 008 - VELEZ, FRANCES, 045 - KINGDOM RESTORATION WORLD, 045 BYRON TURTON III, 046 - GUZMAN, VICTOR, 061 - BACIAN, EMILY, 078 - ORTIZ, ALEX, 088 - ORELLANA, DANIEL, 092 - DELVA, KERVIN, 155 - QUINONES, RUTH, 156 - HARMAN, SHANON, 157 - BALDWIN, ALICIA, 159 - CARDONA, NILERIS, 202 - MAGDALENO, MIGUEL, 204 - COWART, BENJAMIN, 208 - DRAKE, GLORIA, 212 - HILL, MOLLY, 215 - MARTEL, STEPHANIE, 219 - MALAVEZ, JOSE, 223 - TREMPER, DAVID, 243 VAZQUEZ MELENDEZ, HAYDEE, 256 - JONES-BUTLER, TONY, 262 - SAGAR, LAYLA, 268 - BRISCOE, NIGEL, 309 - BETANCES, MAYLINE, 314 - MUNOZ, EDWIN, 316 - SUAREZ, RAYMON, 324 - INOA, JENNY, 337 - LOCKE, HAILEE, 338 - MARRERO, WILFREDO, 341 - RAMIREZ, GUSTAVO, 342 - VALLE, JOSE, 352 - OREILLY, JAMIE, 354 - FERGUSON, ALLEN, 422 - ACEVEDO JR., CEFERINO, 434 - MARTINEZ, INGRID, 452 - GARCIA, EDWIN, 494 BROWN, MICHAEL, 514 - PAGAN CONCEPCION, NELSON, 557 - PERSONS, JUSTIN, 564 - HOWELLS, KELLY, 583 - RIOS BAEZ, ORLANDO, 610 - BLANCHARD, PATRICK, 618 - ANDERSON, MICHAEL, 706 - HARRISON, ASHLEY, 802 - RESTO CORTES, JORGE, 805 - MIRANDA, JUAN, 814 - ANGOMAS, IRENE, 826 COUTOU, RUPERT, 838 - SOTO AYALA, ANGEL, 863 - RODRIGUEZ, LAZARO, 882 - HIGGS, HERBERT, 889 - LANDRON NIEVES, JOSE, 896 - RIVERA, ALFREDO.
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OR LAND OWEEKLY.CO M/JO B S Legal, Public Notices NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: March 31st, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 2631 E Semoran Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 (407) 818-1681#1304-Phyllis Reed-Boxes, furniture #2023-Norka Pacheco-Boxes #1229-Household #1414- Shirley Lipgens-Household #1311-Brian Morgan-Household #3032-Kimberly Caleb-Household #1501- Charles Jewell and/or Victor Jewell-White, Blue, and Red 2012 Honda CBR250R VIN# MLHMC4107C5203532 Owner: Unknown To be sold as Parts Only. 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 831 N Park Ave. Apopka, FL 32712 (407) 450-0345 #1209 Jeff JonesHousehold Items, #2517 Christie Ramsey- Household Goods, #1013 Phillip Higginbotham- Household Goods, #1507 Robin BrownHousehold Goods, #1116 Sarah Pooler- Household Items. 2:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 610 Rinehart Rd. Lake Mary, FL 32749 (321) 420-1686 #0672-Ayana Outerbridge-household Items, #0866- Christa M. Edwardshousehold good, #0235-Stephanie Vega-household Items, #0599-Randy Brown-boxes, king size bed, sectional, loveseat, #0175-Luis Torres-clothes,boxes,tv,#0318Reginald Gallon-household goods, #0787-Khalilah Simpson- household goods, #0807-Michael Strahlehousehold Items. 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.
Business Opportunities $1000 Per Day Return calls - No selling For details 1-800- 515-3106
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Employment Budget Analyst: conduct research, analyze & review companyʼs financial records to develop & prepare annual budget proposals. Present companyʼs financial reports to shareholders for approval. Ensure proper budget allocation. Analyze costs, tax planning & expenditures to improve efficiency & increase companyʼs profits. Meetings w/ Brazilian clients including investors & home builders to present & explain budget metrics for new projects & follow-up on their financial goals. 2 yrs exp. Bachelor in Management. Must read/ write/speak Portuguese. Res. to: Mikele International Group, LLC d/b/a Davila Homes, 2211 W. Washington Street, Orlando, FL 32805. Drive with Uber. No experience is required, but youʼll need a Smartphone. Itʼs fun and easy. For more information Call: 1-877-931-7446 Financial Analyst needed for Larson Accounting & Consulting Services, Orlando, FL to Consolidating & analyzing fin’l data for co’s goals & fin’l standing; Providing alternatives & recommendations to reduce costs & improve fin’l performance; Assemble & summarize data to prep rprts on fin’l status and risks; Conduct studies on past, future & comparative bus performance; Reqs 2yrs wrk exp as fin’l advisor or investment banker. F/T mail resume to 7901 Kingspointe Pky. Ste 17, Orlando, FL 32819. Law Clerk needed for Larson Accounting & Consulting Services, Orlando, FL to provide legal support in int’l laws. Review, analyze & assist in interpreting frgn: legal docs, contracts, court rcrds & property purchases. Rsrch frgn laws, comparative studies to help mgmt’s outside attorneys. Collect frgn legal documents (Brazil & Latin America) & analyzing avail evidence based on that legal syst. Rsrch legal issues in frgn law for clients. Interview clients & prep rprts. Contact frgn attorneys to discuss cases that involve frgn rules & regulatns. Reqs Juris Doctor or frgn equiv +2yrs exp as law clerk or paralegal. F/T mail resume to 7901 Kingspointe Pky. Ste17, Orlando, FL 32819.
ORLANDO WEEKLY ● MARCH 15-21, 2017
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Public Relations Specialist, Bachelor’s Degree Public Relations or Communications or foreign degree equiv. in same. Strategic planning, marketing & sales promotions, Brazilian market, press & publicity, social media management, content production for social media. Mail resume: Ricardo Castillo Molina, Legacy Travel, Inc., 8681 W Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy #125, Kissimmee, FL 34747.
Crew Leader - Parks / Forestry City of Orlando 6224979
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Sales Career Fair OrlandoJobs.com 6225145
EVS Assistant Central Florida Regional Hospital 6225400
Microbiologist Silver Springs Citrus, Inc. 6225144
Phlebotomist Osceola Regional Medical Center 6225396
RN Clinical Nurse II - Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) Orlando Health 6225142
Bellperson Hilton Grand Vacations 6221787
Marketing Supervisor Diamond Resorts International 6223655
Workforce Management Analyst Tourico Holidays Inc. 6224085
Student Tour Guide Full Sail University 6222796
Lab Specialist - REC4414 - Advanced Audio Workstations Full Sail University 6222785
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Water Safety Instructor City of Casselberry 6221533
Garment Cutter Walt Disney World Resort 6221374
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Receptionist - Lake Mary Orlando Orthopaedic Center 6225143
Therapist Friends of Children and Families 6224669
Lifeguards - Dr. P. Phillips YMCA of Central Florida 6224076
Evening Call Transfer - Inbound Sales Wyndham Vacation Ownership 6220856
Group Exercise Instructor, Osceola County YMCA YMCA of Central Florida 6208463
Pedicab Driver Redi Pedi Cab, LLC 6220217 Activations Manager SunStreet 6224676
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Carpenter / Builder - Custom Exhibits Nimlok Orlando 6218114
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Customer Service Representative II Cru 6225745
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MARCH 15-21, 2017
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ORLANDO WEEKLY
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