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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 11-17, 2017
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OCT. 11-17, 2017
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ORLANDO WEEKLY
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oRlando wEEkly ● OCT. 11-17, 2017
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FREE | OCT. 11-17, 2017
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 Peg Aloi, Rob Bartlett, Jen Cray, Jason Ferguson, Hannah Glogower, Alma Hill, Scott Horn, Liv Jonse, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Seth Kubersky, Bao Le-Huu, Cameron Meier, Richard Reep, Joey Roulette, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Madeleine Scott, Nicolette Shurba, Abby Stassen Editorial Interns Hind Berji, Nicole Dudenhoefer, Brian Leng Advertising Director of Sales Jeff Kruse Major Accounts Specialist Leslie Egan Senior Multimedia Account Executive Dan Winkler Multimedia Account Executive Scott Navarro Classified and Legal Rep Jerrica Schwartz Advertising Coordinator Danielle Lebron Marketing and Events Events Director Zackary Rowe Events and Promotions Coordinator Kevin Ruane Marketing and Events Coordinator Rachel Hoyle
11 Cover photo of Ginger Minj by Austin Young; above photo of Opulence Black by Demetrio Asciutto
Creative Services Production Manager Melissa McHenry Graphic Designer Daniel Rodriguez 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 VP of Digital Services Stacy Volhein Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon Human Resources Director Lisa Beilstein 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 Phone 407-377-0400 Fax 407-377-0420
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news + features
food + drink
6 Your Words
33 Spell check
Readers react to stories in our last issue
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musiC 42 Picks This Week Great live music rattles Orlando every night
42 Oh! You pretty thing
Muddy Waters in South Eola got its mojo working
6 This Modern World 6 ICYMI
Perfume Genius stands up for happiness on No
33 Tip Jar
News you need to know but may have missed in the past week
Shape
Rogue Pub goes for Roque, Polski’s goes the way of Polonia, plus more in our weekly food roundup
45 This Little Underground Goodbye to Tom Petty; the audiovisual wonder of
9 War and peace
37 Recently Reviewed
What Russian novels, Catalonian cannabis clubs and umbrellas have to tell us about anti-fascism
Short takes on restaurants we’ve reviewed recently
Sound of Ceres; the loving return of former local Ariel Bui
11 Pride and prejudice By night, Orlando’s drag queens entertain the masses; by day, they lead the way in the fight for LGBTQ rights
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.
arts + Culture
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29 Top of the lake Crealdé exhibit is both a quiet, contemplative elegy and a cautionary tale
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film
Calendar
39 Cost of admission
48 Selections
Visit Orlando won’t be happy about The Florida Project, but it’s required viewing for Central Floridians
50 The Week 51 Down the Road
39 Film Listings
29 Culture 2 Go
Cinema-oriented events to go see this week
Central Florida actor Michael Walters may be Broadway bound, Playfest dates are announced, plus more performing arts news
41 On Screens in Orlando
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Back Pages
65 Gimme Shelter 65 Savage Love
Movies playing this week: Professor Marston and the Wonder Women, Happy Death Day and more
66 Classifieds
31 Live Active Cultures If you want a truly unnerving experience, get out of the theme parks and into an independent haunt
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Readers react to last week’s issue.
@Josh Harper Damn Orlando Weekly why cant you just report the news and share cool articles. @Anthony Rigsby Stick to restaurant and
In our Oct. 4 issue, columnist Jeffrey
beer recommendations. Your political bullshit
Billman agreed with ESPN Sports Center
is quite nauseating.
anchor Jemele Hill that President Donald
@Rachel Andre Anyone who is still debating
Trump is, in fact a white supremacist, and
this is either delusional, lying or acting in bad
posited that bigotry has something to do
faith.
with the level of aid to Puerto rico after the hurricane. This sparked plenty of, er,
@Darhlene Zeanwick I am absolutely
lively debate in our comments section.
stunned at the ignorance of the comments here against OW and this article about Puerto Rico. The case was presented logically and
@Eddie Brown Just more fake news from
without name-calling. All the evidence that
Orlando Weekly, the most racist trash paper
our perverted POTUS provides on a weekly
around.
basis demonstrates that he is nothing at all to
@Mark Marino Every article that this author
Puerto Ricans but a bad person.
writes is anti Trump and anti GOP. Another
Orlando feels the impact of the Las Vegas mass shooting, Pulse owner files plans for a temporary memorial, a Florida gun shop’s YouTube account is shut down and other things you may have missed this week. »
The minutes felt like hours as the bells of the First United Methodist Church of Orlando tolled for the 58 people killed in the Las Vegas massacre. More than a year ago, the same bells rang 49 times, once for each person killed by a single gunman in Orlando’s gay nightclub Pulse. Aside from the dead, more than 500 people were injured last week in Las Vegas after a gunman shot from his 32nd-floor window at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino into a group of about 22,000 people enjoying a country music festival.
@Larry Fulford All of these incredible
sore loser liberal spreading more hate.
comments are why articles like this exist. Way
@Sissy Atkinson Shut the he’ll up stupid
to step into the light and surprise absolutely
media
no one.
Orlando rings church bells in honor of Las Vegas shooting victims:
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Orlando lawmakers push for assault weapons ban after Las Vegas: Orlando lawmakers and gun reform activists rallied outside the Orange County courthouse last week to renew the push for a ban on assault weapons and largecapacity magazines. State Sen. Linda Stewart and Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, both Orlando Democrats, filed similar bills last session with the support of many Pulse survivors and victims’ families, but their legislation did not get a hearing in committee. Pro-gun advocates in the state Legislature say banning assault weapons would infringe on the rights of people who follow the law. With a Republican-led state Legislature, Stewart and Smith aren’t naive to the fact that their bills are likely to fail – but at the least, they want a public discussion in Tallahassee and a vote recording every lawmaker’s position.
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Pulse owner files plans for temporary memorial at nightclub site: Pulse nightclub owner Barbara Poma and the OnePulse Foundation have filed plans for a temporary memorial at the site of the mass shooting. The interim memorial would include a new, more durable fence around the perimeter, with tribute murals; lighted benches and enhanced seating; landscape improvements; and an encasement that secures the Pulse sign, according to documents filed with the City of Orlando. The plans also include a steel wall with small holes where people can leave tributes.
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Florida gun shop owner who banned Muslims is banned from YouTube:
Surprise! Or not, if you’ve read YouTube’s community guidelines. Florida Gun Supply was banned from YouTube reportedly for hate speech after the Inverness store’s owner, Andy Hallinan, said he planned to ban all Muslims from shopping there two years ago. In a Facebook comment, the store claims to have “no idea” why they were banned. After declaring the store a “Muslim-free” zone, Hallinan was sued by the Council on American-Islamic Relations for religious discrimination, though the suit was later tossed out by a federal court after a judge ruled Hallinan’s comments were protected under the First Amendment. mcordeiro@orlandoweekly.com
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war and Peace What Russian novels, Catalonian cannabis clubs and umbrellas have to tell us about anti-fascism By Bay nard Woods
a few moments before Sens.
Richard Burr and Mark Warner, chair and co-chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee respectively, came out to present an update on their investigation into Russian attempts to interfere with the 2016 election, a man walked out carrying a large cardboard sign – not a protest sign, but one of those press-conference explainers that are always terrible but expensive-looking. The posterboard laid out the extent of the committee’s investigation: They interviewed more than 100 people for more than 250 hours in 11 open hearings. Then, with a clip-art picture of a book, it noted “100K PAGES of Documents Read” and below that, with no real explanation of the link: “80+ COPIES of War and Peace.” As it turns out, that was the most interesting part of the presentation, which was, essentially, like a news report bragging about how much reporting was done, without actually telling the story. There was no new information. I kept wondering if there was some hidden meaning in the poster. It was, after all, an example they were using in their hearing on Russian hacking. Given the paranoia surrounding Russian meddling, the War and Peace reference made it seem as if even Tolstoy were in on the scheme. Maybe some staffer made an inside joke, or more likely, it was just because War and Peace is a really big book. I asked; Warner’s office
thought it was a good question, but had no answers, saying that the chair’s office created it. I wrote and called Burr’s office numerous times and got no response. But as I stood in the back of the crowded briefing room listening to the Senators take credit for the work their staffers were doing, I couldn’t help but stare at the clipart book beside the words “War and Peace” and ponder how, when you look at something too long, it splinters into millions of micro-realities. I found myself thinking of The Umbrella Man, Errol Morris’ mini-documentary about a man who was seen in the footage of the crowds along the motorcade route in Dallas on the day that Kennedy was assassinated. The film starts with a man in a black suit, holding an umbrella, walking. It cuts to Josiah Thompson, who made Six Seconds in Dallas, a film examining the assassination in great detail, explaining the “Umbrella Man” theory: “And then I noticed in all of Dallas there appears to be exactly one person standing under an open black umbrella, and that person is standing where the shots begin to rain into the limousine,” he says. “Can anyone come up with a non-sinister explanation for this?” Every sort of conspiracy sprung up. In a “Talk of the Town” New Yorker piece in December 1967, John Updike offered a philosophical rumination on the Umbrella Man and Thompson’s micro-examination
“Participants in the ‘black bloc’ often bring items that can serve a dual purpose (i.e., a sign that can double as a shield, a large banner that can be used to project a message and block the passage of police trying to carry out an arrest, or an umbrella that can also be used to deflect pepper spray),” reads the government’s recently filed notice that they would call an expert in the trials of the defendants, which begin Nov. 20. On Nov. 22, 1963, in Dallas, it was not raining. In Washington, D.C., on Inauguration Day, it was. If someone is spraying you with pepper spray and you have an umbrella and you don’t use it to protect yourself, you are insane. The world saw the same kind of stormtrooper police violence that was used against the Inauguration protesters during the Catalonian referendum a couple of weeks ago. People there are deeply anti-fascist. I was in Spain reporting on cannabis clubs just before the inauguration, and many people I talked to linked the clubs to the anarchist collectives that existed before the long fascist regime of Franco. For them, a government that tells you you can’t do what you will with your own body is, de facto, fascist. Anna Obredors, a consultant I interviewed, was convicted this week for drug trafficking for working in one of the clubs. It was, she says, devastating. But the larger political situation is just as frightening. “It’s scary,” she wrote me. “Spanish state is about to send the army here if the independence is declared … and it doesn’t seem Europe will be helping … after a century we feel somehow like our grandpas did on 1936 … weird and scary.”
of the photographs and films of Dallas that day. “It’s as if there’s the macro level of historical research where things sort of obey natural laws and usual things happen and unusual things don’t happen, and then there’s this other level where everything is really weird,” Thompson says in the film, paraphrasing Updike. In Updike’s piece, he ends the passage Thompson cites by declaring that the search for the truth about the few seconds when Kennedy was killed “seems to demonstrate how perilously empiricism verges on magic.” It seems like everyone is lost in some form of magical thinking at the moment, digging deep into their favored minutiae and ignoring everything else. When Thompson found the man with the umbrella, he came to testify before the House Select Committee on Assassinations. “He explained then why he had opened the umbrella … that day,” Thompson said. “The open umbrella was a kind of protest. A visual protest. It wasn’t a protest of any of John Kennedy’s policies as president. It was a protest of the appeasement policies of Joseph P. Kennedy, John Kennedy’s father.” That’s right: The Umbrella Man was an anti-fascist activist. And that’s another of these strange coincidences, because the 200 protesters – many of whom are also anti-fascist activists – being charged with conspiracy to riot at the Trump inauguration use an umbrella as the emblem of their Defend J20 campaign. Like the Umbrella Man, many of them wore black. Like the Umbrella Man, they carried umbrellas. But unlike the Umbrella Man, they are being criminally charged for their umbrellas. orlandoweekly.com
@baynardwoods on Twitter baynard@democracyincrisis.com ●
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and prejudice B
y now, the majority of America knows the difference between being told, “Shanté, you stay,” and the heartbreak of “Sashay away.” Drag in its various forms has been around for centuries, but no one can deny RuPaul Andre Charles’ Emmy award-winning phenomenon of a show, RuPaul’s Drag Race, has managed to overwrite the mischaracterization of drag queens as deviants, replacing it with the real-life dreams of queer performers trying to artistically combine the perfect lashes, wig and glittery gown into an iconic look for the gods. Not only does Drag Race challenge the gender binary and elevate queer gender expression in between quoteworthy reads and messy shade – it’s also deeply infused drag culture into the mainstream world’s fashion, music, dance and video – even infiltrating the everyday slang lexicon. But drag has always been about more than just lip-sync performances, expensive makeup palettes and dazzling costumes. For decades, drag activists have been at the forefront of the LGBTQ liberation movement – their eye-catching outfits make the protest march behind them hard to ignore. Self-described drag queens Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson, two transgender women of color, were both key figures in the 1969 uprising against police raids at the Stonewall Inn in New York City and later became tireless advocates for homeless LGBTQ youth, transwomen of color and gender-nonconforming people. Sometimes, that even meant railing against their own, as when Rivera called out mainstream gay rights activists who sought to exclude those who didn’t fit into the neat, “acceptable” categories of the straight world during New York City’s Christopher Street Liberation Day Rally in 1973. “Y’all better quiet down,” she yelled at them. “I have been beaten. I have had my nose broken. I have been thrown in jail. I have lost my job. I have lost my apartment for gay liberation and you all treat me this
By Monivette Cordeiro
PHOTO BY DAVID LAWRENCE
By night, Orlando’s drag queens entertain the masses. By day, they lead the way in the fight for LGBTQ rights. way? What the fuck’s wrong with you all? … The people are trying to do something for all of us, and not men and women that belong to a white middle-class, white club.” Although LGBTQ advocates have
President Donald Trump last year have pushed queer leaders to protest against homophobic and transphobic policies, racial discrimination and gun violence. For this year’s Pride issue, we profile several of Orlando’s iconic drag queens (and drag nuns), who not only entertain and inspire with their beauty, talent, art, comedy and charm, but also use their status in the community to challenge inequality on the front lines.
recently won hard-fought, decades-long nationwide battles for civil rights and marriage equality, the mass shooting at the gay nightclub Pulse in Orlando that ended the lives of 49 people and the election of orlandoweekly.com
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PHOTO BY MONIVETTE CORDEIRO
DARCEL STEVENS
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hen the queen of the Parliament House gets on stage, she’s not just lip-syncing to Missy Elliott or Tina Turner – Darcel Stevens sees herself as preaching a ministry of hope for those who may not be accepted by society. Darcel, né Darnell Stevens, has been performing at Parliament for 25 years and currently serves at the gay entertainment complex’s entertainment director. The drag character was born in 1983, after a friend in Gainesville dared Stevens to dress up. Back then, drag was regulated to someone’s house or a gay bar – certainly not on televi-
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sion, Darcel says. Aside from mastering the art of female impersonation for decades now, Darcel sees it as her duty to use her platform as a drag queen to promote gay rights, educate on sexual health and help get resources for people who are HIVpositive or have AIDS. After all, it was drag queens who started the rebellion at Stonewall, Darcel says, and it was Stevens and other drag queens at Orlando City Hall years ago protesting for anti-discrimination ordinances. “We were in full-beat drag, therefore we got attention,” Darcel says. “We started a ●
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dialogue and a conversation. Within each one of those queens is the spirit of activism. Most queens who take their job seriously know that being an entertainer is more than just the stage. We don’t take any shit and we will fight for our rights.” Darcel has inspired dozens of people to follow their dreams, but her main goal at this stage in her career is to convince youth to take up the mantle of activism and community organizing in the age of Trump. “My mission and ministry is to inspire and empower people – to let them know that there’s hope, that they’re better than
what they [think they] are,” she says. “Young people grew up in a whole different era with rights and there was a time when we got to enjoy them without thinking. But I think what woke everybody up was this past election – we were smooth sailing until this person who is a racist and a bigot was elected. Now is not a time for people to be complacent.” Darcel plans to be in the Pride parade this year, though she says she wishes the LGBTQ celebration were less focused on corporations and more on making a statement. “We as gay folks need to become more radical,” Darcel says. “We’ve got to show we’re not sitting back. We’ve got an administration not looking out for us, and we’ve got to let them know we’re here, we’re queer and we’re going to vote.”
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D
uring the hate-filled demonstrations by the Westboro Baptist Church at the funerals of Pulse victims in 2016, there were several faces that stood out from the hundreds who came to shield families from additional pain. They were the faces of men, painted stark white with sparkling glitter beards and rainbow eye shadow, clad in the wimples and habits of traditional nuns (but with fishnet tights). The small group was part of the Orlando Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a chapter of local drag nuns who are part of the larger organization started in San Francisco in 1973. Though mostly made up of gay men, any person, regardless of sexual orientation or gender, is welcome to join the years-long process of taking lifelong vows to become part of the order. The original sisters used their painted faces to promote safer sex in a time when AIDS ravaged the gay community and created “Play Fair,” the first safer sex pamphlet written in plain language with humor. Today, the Orlando sisters still honor that work by passing out small plastic bags with a condom, a packet of lube, a mint and a safe sex pamphlet. Sister Secret Synnda Sauce, president of the Orlando order, says aside from raising thousands of dollars for charitable causes, much of their job is informing people on the street about safer-sex practices and letting men, women and other gender-nonconforming people know about PrEP and PEP, medication protocols to be taken before and after possible exposure to HIV. (The Orlando metro area ranks sixth among U.S. cities for the highest rate of new HIV diagnoses in 2015.) Sister Secret says it’s hard to get the word out about these helpful drugs when some doctors and pharmacists don’t even know about them. Part of the job is also breaking down stigmas surrounding HIV-positive people, which still persist even though the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently agreed that an HIV-positive person taking medication with an undetectable viral load can’t transmit the virus. Whether it’s sex education or raising visibility about homeless youth, the sisters use their costumes to attract attention and hopefully a listening ear. “Part of the mission of the sisters is to go out and fight for queer rights and visibility and to bring joy and fun,” Sister Secret says. “We go out and tell people that they’re loved, that they’re worthwhile and that they’re a valued part of our society. We give people hugs and tell them we want them here.”
THE SISTERS OF PERPETUAL INDULGENCE
Sister Edwina Rosewood
Sister Enya Bocca
PHOTO BY DAVID LAWRENCE
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t’s easy to find Miss Sammy’s house among the oak trees and Spanish moss of Mills 50 – it’s the only one on the street with a huge banner above the door that says “DUMP TRUMP.” “You do phone calls and send emails to senators and representatives, but it just doesn’t seem like anything is getting done,” Miss Sammy says. “During the campaign, it was obvious he was totally incompetent for the job and none of us thought he could beat Hillary. That would be a cold day in hell, we thought. Nobody is hearing us, so I decided to express my opinion this way.” Sam “Miss Sammy” Singhaus says he received an anonymous letter from a neighbor shortly after putting the banner up. “It said, ‘Dear neighbor, your political reviews stink, just like your ass,’” Singhaus says. “Then he said, ‘Well, if I had one, it would say in big letters, fuck you, faggots.’” But that doesn’t scare off Singhaus from expressing his views on equality for everyone. He’s been vocal about being true to himself since he left his Orlando home as a teenager and went to New York to study dance. His talent led him to Broadway, where he starred in Seven Brides for Seven Brothers in 1982 and La Cage aux Folles in 1983 as the original Clo-Clo. Singhaus remembers gay was chic in New York – until the HIV/AIDS crisis, then known as “gay cancer,” hit. The epidemic killed thousands and left lasting stigmas for HIVpositive people and the LGBTQ community. “When AIDS hit, everybody changed their mind and gay had to be put back in the closet,” he says. “I lost my twin brother [Daniel Singhaus], five guys in my show, my best friend. I’m one of the few guys that lived in New York City for all that and is still alive.” Singhaus came back to Orlando in 1987 and opened the Big Bang club in downtown, and later worked at the Firestone club and Pulse. One night at the Firestone, an entertainer threw an “artistic fit” and walked out, so the boss asked Singhaus if he knew how to do drag. Singhaus agreed to do it and Miss Sammy was born, a charming Midwestern housewife with witty quips, the beauty of Lucille Ball and the lungs of a Broadway star. The rest is history – Miss Sammy has been a staple in Orlando’s drag scene for decades now and is a charming hostess at Hamburger Mary’s for “Hambingo” on Tuesdays. In an age of angst, Miss Sammy singing “Life Is a Cabaret” into your ear while rocking a floofy red polka-dot dress and pearls, cocktail in hand, is a welcome respite that never gets old.
MISS SAMMY orlandoweekly.com
PHOTO BY DAVID LAWRENCE
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CHACHITA GIFT & AALIYAH VALENTINO
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hen the gunman stormed into the gay nightclub Pulse, he robbed 49 people of their lives, dozens of survivors of their peace of mind, and Orlando of one of its only Latin nights. The mass shooting on June 12, 2016, happened on “Latin Night,” meaning many of the victims were Latinx, with the majority being of Puerto Rican descent. But now, a year later, two drag queens are joining with Pulse survivor and promoter Orlando Torres to bring back a safe space for the Latinx community at Savoy Orlando on Saturday nights. Chachita Gift brings a comedic touch that makes everybody feel like family as the night’s host. The performer, whose given name is Nicolas Diaz, started his drag career in an unusual path. He was working as a professional clown in Puerto Rico when someone told him they wanted a “clown for adults.” “That’s when Chachita started, and I liked it,” he says. “It paid more than children and I can drink while I’m performing.” When he moved to Orlando decades ago, Diaz began performing at weddings and quinceañeras – Chachita stood out from other pretty Latinx queens for being hilarious and
PHOTO BY JOEY ROULETTE
mixing in that humor between songs. “Why don’t you want to laugh and forgot about five minutes for everything, your job, your family and disconnect,” he says. “That’s what I love, to make people laugh. This is an art, and a way of living, but it’s more than that – you can use it to help a lot of people, too.” Last Saturday, Aaliyah Valentino, 23, was getting ready next to Chachita with multiple makeup kits at a kitchen table. The two had helped raise money for Puerto Rico hurricane victims at Savoy along with other queens. Aaliyah, whose real name is Luis Rodriguez, was born in Deltona to Puerto Rican parents. By day, he works as an erosion control specialist on the I-4 Ultimate Project, but for a year now, he’s been making the hour-long drive to Orlando perform in local clubs as a drag queen because there are no gay clubs where he lives. He likes to rap to Ivy Queen and Cardi B, though he occasionally plays with gender while lipsyncing to Marc Anthony. “I want to show people you can go out and be yourself and try something new,” Aaliyah says. “Five years ago, I would have never imagined myself doing this because of the person that I was and how shy and timid I could be. I would have never imag-
PHOTO BY JOEY ROULETTE
ined myself being in front of people on a stage and a crowd, but here I am.” Both were touched personally by the Pulse massacre. That’s the first club where Aaliyah was inspired to be a drag queen; orlandoweekly.com
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Chachita lost friends at Pulse and wasn’t sure she’d be able to perform again. “It was scary and hard to go out the next day, but life needs to go on,” Chachita says. “The show must go on.” OCT. 11–17, 2017
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MINJ
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GINGER
here hasn’t been a time in Ginger Minj’s life that she wasn’t a performer. The self-described “glamour toad” contestant from RuPaul’s Drag Race first got on stage at six months old, when her mother volunteered her to play a baby in a local production of Fiddler on the Roof. “I got into drag when I realized drag paid the bills more than theater did,” says Minj, whose given name is Joshua Eads. “I focused my energy on that and it took on a life of its own.” After growing up in nearby Leesburg, Eads, 33, continued his life in Orlando theater productions until he started working as a drag queen – some of the first places to book him included Pulse, Hamburger Mary’s and Sleuths Mystery Dinner Show. Ginger Minj was born out of a reference to the British slang term for red pubic hair and quickly became the iconic “overweight, asthmatic, chain-smoking cross-dresser from Orlando.” After making the top three in Season 7 of Drag Race, Eads traveled the world with the cast of drag queens “four or five times over” and brought his Southern-fried sass to his 2016 album, Sweet T. With a second album of club tracks and film appearances on the way, Ginger is now turning her focus back to what got her started in the first place – theater. Eads and his friend Janine Klein, a fellow performer whom he describes as the “Lucy to my Ethel,” are going on a world tour of Eads’ musical Crossdresser for Christ and are working on creating a show about the life of Harris Glenn Milstead, the legendary drag queen known as Divine. “No matter what roles you get as a drag queen, what amazes me is people don’t take you serious as an actor,” Eads says. “Being a drag queen is just a portion of what I do. It’s been kind of an uphill battle to fight stereotypes, but I wouldn’t trade it for anything – it’s given me a lot more than it’s taken.” Still, being a drag queen has become that much more important as the current presidential administration attempts to ban transgender people from the military and roll back LGBTQ protections. “I think we’ve made so much progress over the last decade or so, and now literally every step we’ve taken is threatened,” Eads says. “If we don’t stand and fight for that, we’ll go backward. We’ve lost too many lives to see things being undone in front of our eyes.”
PHOTO BY AUSTIN YOUNG
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OPULENCE BLACK
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pulence Black has managed the difficult task of summarizing her eccentric drag style into a pithy phrase: “Hobby Lobby shopper gone crazy.” One day, she might glue pearls to her face and contour herself into violet alien business-bitch realness; on another, slip into a green, muscly costume for a sexy, androgynous Creature-From-the-BlackLagoon feel or stick white contact lenses in her eyes and don a glittery teal wig for a creepy hipster soothsayer vibe. “Sometimes, I’m feeling like a magical alien, other times I’m inspired by insects, animal heads, bones, crystals, weird little oddities,” says the performer whose offstage name is Rock Kelly. “I want people who see me to warp their expressions and their expectations of what they think a queen or a person should be. For me, drag celebrates the grotesque, the parts of yourself you don’t like – it’s about celebrating what you have and taking something ugly and making it pretty.” Kelly, 23, began doing drag seriously three years ago after contacting a drag queen on Instagram for help with an art project while a student at the University of Central Florida. Demetrio Asciutto, also known by his stage name, Victoria
three months into their relationship with her first performance of alternative drag at the gay nightclub Pulse. Now she works Thursdays at Southern Nights as part of the freshman lineup, though she still misses Pulse. “I was booked literally the Thursday after the shooting happened at Southern Nights,” Kelly says. “My mom didn’t want me to go out, but I told her, ‘No, I’m not
PHOTO BY DEMETRIO ASCIUTTO
Elizabeth Black, specialized in creating a ghostly glamazon persona and taught Kelly the tricks of Halloween makeup.
(Victoria is currently competing on Season 2 of the Boulet Brothers’ DRAGULA television show.) Opulence Black was born about
going to sit home. I’m going to go out and keep doing it.’” The hate that ended the lives of 49 people at Pulse doesn’t make him want to hide – Kelly says it has pushed him to stand out more in his queerness. “I’m not hiding the fact that I’m gay,” he says. “We need to be more outspoken and everyone needs to get registered to vote. There are still those people in the world not aware this is normal. This is love. We want to live more out loud in day-today life because you never know how long you have.”
PRIDE EVENTS THURSDAY Come Out With Pride Launch Party The countdown to Pride Weekend ramps up with energetic performances, including Drag Race star Trinity “The Tuck” Taylor, in a dazzling social setting. Thursday, 6:30 pm; The Veranda at Thornton Park, 111 N. Summerlin Ave.; $35$40; 407-872-8454; comeoutwithpride.com.
FRIDAY Pride on Church Street Hamburger Mary’s turns Church Street into the biggest block party in town. Friday, 8 pm; Hamburger Mary’s, 110 W. Church St.; free; 321-319-0600; comeoutwithpride.com.
SATURDAY Big Gay Brunch The party before the parade features
Drive; free, $5-$7; comeoutwithpride.com.
a delicious brunch spread, bottomless mimosas, a Bloody Mary bar, live entertainment and more. Saturday, noon-3 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $45; 407-704-6261; biggaybrunchorlando.com.
Shea Coulee
Come Out With Pride Festival Annual daylong Pride festival with vendors, entertainment, food and drink, and more. Saturday, noon-10 pm; Lake Eola Park, East Central Boulevard and North Eola Drive; free; comeoutwithpride.com. Come Out With Pride Parade Downtown’s most colorful annual parade, circling the Lake Eola perimeter. Saturday, 4 pm; Lake Eola Park, East Central Boulevard and North Eola Drive; free; comeoutwithpride.com.
Come Out With Pride Fireworks Come Out With Pride culminates with a rainbow of colorful explosions over Lake Eola. Saturday, 9 pm; Lake Eola Park, East Central Boulevard and North Eola Drive; free; comeoutwithpride.com. Girl the Party Orlando Pride Edition Afterparty for pride with drag performances, burlesque, drink specials and more. Saturday, 6 pm; Southern Nights, 375 S. Bumby Ave; free; 407-412-5039; southernnightsorl.com.
Keep Dancing Orlando The special “Keep Dancing Zone” is a multitiered dancefloor located on the south side of Lake
Eola Park. Show off your moves for free until 5 p.m.; after that, a donation to the One Pulse Foundation will
secure you a spot on the floor. Saturday, noon-5 pm & 6-11 pm; Lake Eola Park, East Central Boulevard and North Eola
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Pride With Shea Coulee After-Pride party with the Drag Race finalist from Season 9. Saturday, 8 pm; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; $10-$25; 407-425-7571; parliamenthouse.com.
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[ arts + culture ]
By SeTh KUBeRSKy central Florida actor Michael Walters is currently in the cast of a new musical that may be Broadway-bound. Walters, a former performer in Disney’s Hoop Dee Doo Revue and Finding Nemo shows who is best known as a Dame edna impersonator, is understudying tony-winner Michael Mcgrath as Ralph Kramden in The Honeymooners at new Jersey’s Paper Mill Playhouse. the cast also stars Michael Mastro as ed norton, Laura Bell Bundy as trixie norton and Leslie Kritzer as alice Kramden. the show runs through oct. 29, and if successful is expected to transfer to new york like previous Paper Mill hits Newsies and A Bronx Tale.
Orlando Shakespeare Theater’s annual
“ReseaRcheRs With sJWMD suRveying MontveRDe, FL (2017),” By cynthia sLaughteR
pipes is made to look like a crime scene. And indeed in many ways, it is. The paintings, more than the photographs, raise the emotional stakes in this story. Photography is used here in high method, neutrally documenting Lycra-clad white guys pumping Crealdé exhibit is both quiet elegy and cautionary tale their bikes up Green Mountain and boxy new houses splayed in a manicured landscape. By RichaRd Reep Judgment is left to the viewer … is the lake f you go way, way back in Apopka history, cling-plant worker. His pleasant round face better off now? you’ll find Seminoles cultivated wild pota- and close-cropped mustache conceal a tough It is a quiet, contemplative elegy to the toes growing from the rich soil around interior hardened by each new phase of his place that was once Florida’s bass fishing the lake. (The spuds bequeathed the name existence. At the Hannibal Square Heritage capital and a fertile contributor to the war Apopka.) In our times, this name – Lake Center, Kucku Varghese displays a portrait effort. The portraits draw a deep level of Apopka – has come to be associated with a mel- titled “Lake Apopka Farmworker Linda Lee.” respect for the people of Apopka, people who ancholic, slow-moving, seemingly irreversible Seated on her sofa under a photo collage of have endured in this difficult place, while the environmental disaster. Peter Schreyer, exec- her family, Ms. Lee’s hair is pulled back tight, modern world whizzes on past. Yet glimpsutive director of Crealdé School of Art, led revealing pursed lips and a stoic, oval face. es of the lake’s natural beauty also shine a master class to document the lake, result- Heavy-lidded eyes hint at a life that is far through here: Martha Lent’s painterly “Gray ing in a fascinating narrative illustrated by from that of the precocious young boy in a Heron and Ibis” in the Crealdé gallery is photographs, maps, sculpture and paintings bow tie floating over colorful and humordepicting Apopka’s current state. Twenty- her head. ous, a reminder of the The Lake: a DocumenTary four artists exhibit in both Crealdé’s main Lake’s still-abundant Portraits are rare, expLoring The LanD anD campus (600 Saint Andrews Blvd., Winter though, in this exhibit, wildlife. peopLe of Lake apopka Park, 407-671-1886) and the Hannibal Square which focuses instead Lake Apopka’s through Jan. 13, 2018 Heritage Center (642 W. New England Ave., on the natural and tragedy is too often crealde.org Winter Park, 407-539-2680). manmade landscape. brushed under the free Black-and-white photographs, each It is bent on capturing rug in our tourist-conframed with an explanatory text, breathe Apopka’s unsavory scious region. What life into the rarely intersecting worlds of demeanor as well as its beauty. At Crealdé’s emerges from this show is a sense of this the farmworkers and the new suburbanites main campus, Tom Sadler’s “Pump House deeply wounded place in permanent hospice, around the lake. Cynthia Slaughter’s por- Nocturne” is an oil painting of an unholy unrecoverable and yet still respirating slowly. trait “Former Farm Worker Geovany Lopez” structure looming in the dusk. Apparently In this cautionary tale, the viewer can only poses him on his front porch among jas- built in the early 1940s to pump down the hope to avoid making these mistakes elsemine vines. His story is that of a survivor: lake for more farmland, its weathered wood where. Here, we must live with ours forever. farmworker and citrus grader, now recy- architecture and three horrid lake-sucking arts@orlandoweekly.com
Top of The lake
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Playfest returns for two weekends of staged script readings, from oct. 27 through nov. 5. the headliner of this year’s event is Gertrude and Claudius, Mark st. germain’s adaptation of novelist John updike’s Hamlet prequel. this is your chance to preview the play, which is planned to make its world premiere at shakes in 2019. other shows featured on opening weekend will include Well Intentioned White People by Rachel Lynett, Ada and the Engine by Lauren gunderson and Your Best One by Meridith Friedman.
NOW pLayiNG Disney’s Newsies, through oct. 22 at orlando Rep … Big River, through oct. 22 at Mad cow … The Hound of the Baskervilles, through nov. 19 at orlando shakes.
UpcOMiNG Of Thee I Sing, oct. 12-22 at ucF … Hand to God, oct. 12-22 at Dr. Phillips center … Phantasmagoria: The Chains of Fire, oct. 13-nov. 4 at orlando shakes … Jeffrey, oct. 13-28 at Parliament house … The Odd Couple, oct. 13-29 at garden theatre … On Your Feet!, oct. 17-22 at Dr. Phillips center … Evita, oct. 20-29 at valencia east … Sylvia, oct. 20-nov. 5 at cFcarts … spotlight cabaret: Kelly Morris Rowan, oct. 25-26 at Winter Park Playhouse … Eleemosynary, oct. 25-27 at Fred stone … Bay street Players present Avenue Q, oct. 27-29 at the historic state theatre … Grounded, oct. 27-nov. 19 at Mad cow … Bad Jews, oct. 31-Dec. 3 at tierra del sol … orlando story club: a Promise, nov. 1 at the abbey … Debbie Does Dallas, nov. 3-18 at Parliament house … Orphans, nov. 3-26 at theatre on the edge … Two Can Play That Game, nov. 5 at Bob carr.
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BY SETH KUBERSKY THE SHallow GRavE | Photo by Joe PhilliPs
You wanna see something real
scary? As entertaining as Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights is, conga-line crowds and flashlight-waving employees inside the mazes always undercut any actual fear, holding HHN back from ever being truly terrifying. If you want the kind of unnerving experience that can only exist with isolation and intimacy, you’ll need to get out of the theme parks and into an independent haunt. Unfortunately, Orlando has a history of being hard on haunted houses that aren’t associated with a major attraction; Terror on Church Street, Skull Kingdom, Nights of Terror and Terror in Orlando are among the city’s extinct efforts, and this season’s Slaughterhouse Escape in College Park was canceled due to zoning issues. So if you want to see something really scary, you’ll have to head an hour outside Orlando and brave one – or three – of these independent haunted experiences.
The Shallow Grave
When I first found Winter Haven’s Shallow Grave during its opening year in 2013, it was like discovering a diamond in the rough. Despite its inconvenient location and inauspicious exterior, the creativity and passion driving the demons inside led me to instantly declare that Shallow Grave “rivaled or exceeded Universal’s mazes in most respects.” Four years later, my estimation of Shallow Grave has only increased, as the attraction has expanded to two mazes encompassing nearly 13,000 square feet; at $25 for both supersized haunts, it’s a better value than HHN even after factoring in the long drive. The original haunt has many of the same spectacularly disgusting sets and animatronics that grabbed me (literally) on my first visit, but the pathway through them has been remixed for this year’s “Betrayal” edition, eliciting fresh surprises. Better yet, “Pavor Nocturnus” reimagined the former
If you want a truly unnerving experience, get out of the theme parks and into an independent haunt. “ADHD” maze with an all-new asylum finale that genuinely freaked me out: When the crazy doctor asks you to touch his bloody fetus, I suggest you say no (or bring wet wipes). Shallow Grave creator Joe Phillips – who also portrayed murderous patriarch Thaddeus Van Buren – has become something of a “gorefather,” inspiring other area haunters, but he’s hanging up his ax after this season, which is advertised as Shallow Grave’s last. His wife tells me that she’s looking forward to having him home next Halloween, but I’m hoping that he’ll have a new location (preferably closer to I-4) before too long. (shallowgravefl.com)
Sir henry’S haunTed Trail
Long before Universal’s moviequality mazes even existed, I fell in love with Halloween through handmade neighborhood haunts and hay rides. Sir Henry’s Haunted Trail in Plant City took me back to those more innocent days. Conveniently located only minutes off I-4, Sir Henry’s two haunted trails don’t have sophisticated animatronics, realistic gore or even ceilings. What they do boast, as Walt Disney said, is the blessing of size: At nearly a mile in total, these trails are longer than all nine of Universal’s houses put together. During the witchcraft-themed “Curse of Hollow Oak” trail you’ll be wandering through the woods, surrounded by a zombie summer-stock production of The Crucible, while “Resurrection” is a credible re-creation of a crumbling mansion, minus
the roof. Each has a handful of memorable effects, including a laser-lit fog bank and an inflated “birth canal,” but there are also some confusing turns and long gaps between boos. Claustrophobics may find these trails more comfortable than conventional haunted mazes, and while the cast cleverly found some hidden spots to startle me from, the scares are a bit more family-friendly than the competition. (sirhenryshauntedtrail.com)
ominouS deScenT
Ominous Descent was easily my most-anticipated freshman haunt this season, based largely on the perverse yet professionally polished backstory posted on their website. Their plan to open an enormous indoor/outdoor haunt in Bartow was blown away by Hurricane Irma, which destroyed parts of the former fruit-packing plant Ominous Descent occupied. Luckily, Sir Henry’s Haunted Trail offered a spot for co-creators Eric Dodson and Chad Ashley to set up what they were able to salvage, resulting in a downsized “Wrong Path” edition of Ominous Descent being offered alongside Sir Henry’s trails for a $30 combo ticket. Though it only comprises a third of what was originally intended, the haunt is incredibly impressive, especially considering it was assembled in under two weeks. The environments and makeup designs are as well-crafted as the best indoor haunts, with a slaughterhouse theme that was so gruesomely immersive that I began having Temple Grandin flashbacks. Most importantly, Ominous Descent’s performers go beyond relying on simple jump-scares, instead quietly intimidating you with unnerving effectiveness. Based on this terrifying taste, Ominous Descent is in prime position to carry the flag for Central Florida’s independent haunts in 2018, providing they survive the next storm season. (ominousdescent.com) skubersky@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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tip jar
[ food + drink ]
by Faiyaz Kara
OpeNINGS: Mary Mattern, former road chef for Blink-182, and fiancé Neil Westfall, guitarist for A Day to Remember, will open a vegan eatery called Heirloom Deli this April at a yet-to-be-disclosed location … Jeremiah’s italian ice will open in the old Subway locale on Edgewater Drive in College Park … Look for Wonton asian Kitchen to open in the Winter Park Financial Center on the corner of Fairbanks and Orlando avenues … Pho 4 U has opened in the old Polonia’s space in Longwood, and Polski’s, the lovechild of Polonia and Biscuits, has closed … Look for the General Public House to open in the old Mikki V’s space on Tuskawilla Road in Winter Springs … Also in Winter Springs, the red-Eye Sports Tavern has opened on State Road 434 … Drews Pizza is serving up NYC-style pies on the corner of I-Drive and Kirkman Road. clOSINGS: Mama Louise restaurant in Dr. Phillips has shuttered … Chalten Pizza & Helado, the Argentinean pie and gelato joint that was to have opened in Ivanhoe Village, is currently offering catering service only.
PHOTO BY ROB BARTLETT
of raw Apalachicola oysters and gumbo will def be in order. Shoot, we’d probably order steamed Cedar Key clams ($12) in a white wine sauce flecked with pancetta pepper flakes as well. Oh, and an extra order of bread ($1) to sop up that wondrous liquor Muddy Waters in South Eola got its mojo working before licking our fingers clean in anticipation of what’s to come next. By Faiyaz Kara Smoked trout beignets ($12) are a true hen the Beacon Hill Group, however, most certainly has not. Acadian indulgence, very much like the owners of Mucho Tequila Oysters are highly touted here, but we crab and seafood beignets I saw on menus and Tacos, grew tired of their weren’t deep enough into fall to feel wholly in New Brunswick. Here, they’re served meh Mexican concept, they looked to an comfortable slurping raw Gulf oysters – with a spicy tartar dip, which we enjoyed old friend for a little inspiration: Bernard even in this month ending with “R.” But fully, just as we did a glorious serving of Caramouche, former culinary director of we had no problem having them fried and shrimp and grits ($18). The shrimp – plump, Emeril Lagasse’s Orlando restaurants. That stuffed into a sizable po’boy ($16) with sweet and slightly charred – are daintily the man with the most N’awlins name of lettuce, tomato and mayo. The sammie set atop creamy cheddar grits, mushrooms all time would steer them toward the cui- is a classic through and and fines herbes, all spatsine of the Crescent City wasn’t the least through, right down to tered with a caramelized bit surprising. Caramouche and his com- the bread from Gambino’s onion demiglace. MUDDy WaTErS rade Larry Sinibaldi were already operating bakery in Metairie – After sampling a 101 S. Eola Drive Two Chefs Seafood Oyster Bar, a successful crisp and flaky on the burger ($14) of grass407-843-9676 NOLA-inspired boîte in the North Quarter, outside, airy-soft on the fed beef cooked to a nice muddywaters-orlando.com so when the pair agreed to partner up with inside. While the fries are medium-rare, we were $$$ the Beacon Hill Group to open another, it perfectly fine, a side of all under the restauwas also not surprising. rant’s spell, and when we chicken and sausage jamAnd so Muddy Waters (“a Two Chefs balaya ($7) put the boogie-woogie into the unquestioningly acquiesced to our charming server’s suggestion to end with banana Restaurant,” parenthetically) was born pairing. When it ($11) isn’t served tepid, the bread pudding ($7), we knew we were sending Mucho Tequila and Tacos to its grave. If you happen to be one of the few gumbo here is arguably the best damn damn well ensorcelled. Clearly, Muddy mourning the loss of Mucho, take heart gumbo in the city, with its luscious slivers Waters got a black cat bone in its mojo knowing that it went peacefully, and that of duck meat, andouille, okra and perfect- bag and, honestly, it’s fine by us if the spell much of the decor and furnishings remain ly cooked rice. When temps outside cool don’t break. the same (even that rope ceiling). The food, down a bit (if they cool down a bit), a meal fkara@orlandoweekly.com
Spell check
NeWS: rogue Pub on Curry Ford Road is now roque Pub, thanks to a legal wrangle with the Rogue Bar in Jacksonville. eVeNTS: Orlandough and Kelly’s pair up for an ice cream and doughnut flight night Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. Cost is $17 … PB&G at the Four Seasons Resort hosts an adults-only Oktoberfest bash Oct. 21 at 6 p.m. The $75 cost includes three beers (Crooked Can’s Oktoberfest Brew), a beer stein and 27 different food offerings … The Osprey Tavern hosts Pastry in the Park Oct. 22 at 6:30 p.m. featuring a seven-course dessert tasting by Osprey’s pastry chef Kristy Carlucci as well as pastry chefs from Urbain 40, ravenous Pig, 1921 by Norman Van aken, K restaurant, Canvas and Luma. Cost is $65 … On Oct. 25, Lee & rick’s Oyster Bar celebrates 67 years with 2-for-1 buckets of oysters. That’s a lot of shucking bivalves … Save the date: Le Dîner en Blanc, the flash-mob/popup/outdoor dinner party, returns Nov. 10. Location to be announced day of … The alfond inn celebrates its first Wine Spectator Award of Excellence with a five-course wine dinner Nov. 11. Cost is $150. Got restaurant dish? Send tips to dining@orlandoweekly.com
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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG
$$$$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$$
$10 or less $10-$15 $15-$25 $25 or more
The price range generally reflects the average cost of one dinner entree. Bakeries, ice cream shops, etc. reflect relative cost for one person. Search hundreds more reviews at orlandoweekly.com
Pizzeria roberti You’ll be hard-pressed to find a better New York-style pie in the city. Proprietor and pizzaiolo Joe Roberti takes great pride in his dough and in-house fermenting approach, which results in a crust that’s thin and bubbly, crisp yet yielding and, above all, flavorful. No matter the pie – simple margherita, or comforting short rib with caramelized onions, or fanciful foie gras – you won’t be disappointed. Wonderful rice balls and dense all-beef meatballs shouldn’t be overlooked. Closed Sundays. 2751 Chickasaw Trail, 407-634-0041; $
Joyful Garden Those with a sense of the adventurous will dive headlong into the seafoodheavy options at this West Colonial Chinese restaurant. There are live critters like crystal crab, lobster, baby pomfret, striped bass, eel and more for the taking (and you should def take the crystal crab and have it prepared in garlic sauce), as well as plenty of Hong Kongstyle fare. Baby eggplant in a spicy garlic sauce is absolutely luxuriant. The menu is vast, but if you’re in a group, consider sharing a pricey portion of geoduck sashimi. Open daily. 5210 W. Colonial Drive, 407-270-8810; $$$
mesa21 There’s better straight-up Mexican food to be had in this city, though Mesa21’s lakeside view and patio seating is unparalleled. No dishes are particularly noteworthy; most items fall in the “meh” category. A full cocktail bar – and that view – draws the happy hour crowd in. Open daily. 1414 N. Orange Ave., 407-930-8000; $$$
oh my Gyro! Family-run eatery in Longwood follows in the cart tracks of NYC’s Halal Guys offering platters of yellow turmerictinged rice with chicken, gyro, and falafel along with pita bits, salad, and a drizzle of requisite white sauce (an infernal red sauce is also offered on the side). One thing OMG! has that its halal cart brethren don’t: a selection of below-thefold Indian fare. Closed Sundays. 1150 W. State Road 434, Longwood, 407-960-4496; $
zeytin turkish Cuisine It’s a hit and miss affair at this Turkish resto situated in the shabbier sector of College Park, but there are dishes that make it worth the visit. Doughy lavash with a racy ezme salad, for one, and a stellar pide (flatbread) stuffed with plush roasted beef. Kebabs like the chicken and lamb shish are worth a look, but prices force you to think twice. Pass on the moussaka. End with kunefe and a demitasse of Turkish coffee. 4439 Edgewater Drive, 407-988-3330; $$$
nine sPiCes hotPot At this MetroWest hotpot house, a conveyor belt transports ingredients from table to table for gluttonous allyou-can-eaters. There are six soup bases to choose from (the spicy veers toward the infernal end of the pepper spectrum), a dozen or so sauces and condiments, and more than 50 pot-dunking meats and veggies. Fine dining it’s not, but if you haven’t eaten for a day or so, this is just the place for you. Open daily. 5320 S. Kirkman Road, 407-704-1033; $$
Paddlefish This three-story floating fortress is the best place for seafood in Disney Springs, though the prices may have you abandoning ship. Still, the palatable fare – lobster corn dogs, fried green tomato crab cakes, striped bass en papillote, and delightful seafood boils – make the prices easier to stomach. Strawberry shortcake and a chocolate-bourbon tart with candied bacon also help. Some rooms can be louder than others, so don’t hesitate to request a quieter spot if desired. 1670 Buena Vista Drive, 407-934-2628; $$$$
the Waterfront The fare coming out of the kitchen of this lakeside bar/restaurant isn’t just a notch above its Julie’s Waterfront days, but downright impressive. Korean pork belly with house kimchi, sesamecrusted ahi tuna with seaweed salad, and tuna poké bring an undeniable Asian bent to the menu, but fish camp classics like blackened catfish and stellar fish (haddock) and chips are worth consideration. The cheeseburger is a knockout. Open daily. 4201 S. Orange Ave., 407-866-0468; $$
biG kahuna’s island style boWls This welcoming Winter Springs poké joint does it right with fresh seafood options (ahi tuna, hamachi, salmon, shrimp and octopus) and a bevy of marinades, sauces and toppings from which to choose. Skip the set bowls on the menu and have fun experimenting while customizing your bowl. Don’t leave without a Dole Whip indulgence. Open daily. 1450 Tuskawilla Road, Winter Springs, 407-543-3700; $ n
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FILM LISTINGS
[ film + tv ]
6 Below: Miracle on the Mountain When Eric LeMarque (Josh Hartnett) gets lost in a massive winter storm in the backcountry of the High Sierras, he is pushed to the limits of human endurance. Thursday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $13.31; fathomevents.com. The Florida Project Film about a single mother and her daughter living a semi-homeless life on the tourist strip of Kissimmee. Opens Thursday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Freakshow horror Film Festival The largest horror genre film festival in the state of Florida, featuring the best independent horror films from Florida, the U.S. and around the world. Friday, 6 pm, Saturday, 11 am, Sunday, 11 am; Premiere Cinemas 14 at the Fashion Square Mall, 3201 E. Colonial Drive; $10-$50; 407-494-3327; freakshowfilmfest.com. halloween horror Movie Night Screenings of Trick ’R Treat, Halloween and The Void. Thursday, 6 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-332-9636. Loving Vincent The world’s first fully oil-painted film, exploring the life and work of Vincent Van Gogh. Through Wednesday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. The Met live in hd: Die Zauberflöte The fulllength German version of Mozart’s magical fable. Saturday, 12:55 pm; multiple locations; $25.56; fathomevents.com. Midnight Movies: The Exorcist Two priests investigate the possible demonic possession of a young girl. Saturday, 11:59 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. More Q Than a: Trust Hal Hartley film about a pregnant high-school dropout and her quirky new boyfriend. Wednesday, 7 pm; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; $5-$7; avalongallery.org. The Princess Bride Princess Buttercup’s true love, Westley, rescues her from the loathsome Prince Humperdinck. Sunday, 2 & 7 pm; multiple locations; $13.31; fathomevents.com.
Actor nomination. An inversion of his trademark over-the-top performances in films like The Boondock Saints or Shadow of the Vampire, Dafoe’s Bobby is a gentle soul – a Florida Man in all the best ways – who Visit Orlando won’t be happy about The Florida Project, brings a small semblance of order to the but it’s required viewing for Central Floridians lives of the children who often fall under his supervision. Despite hints that there’s By T haddeus Mccol lu M a history of conflict within his own family, he Florida Project, the new film week-to-week to have a roof over their he sets boundaries for the kids even as he from director and co-writer Sean heads, are exposed to more of the seedy butts heads with Halley, whose deep-set Baker (Tangerine), has created plen- side of life than most children their age, combativeness threatens to get her and her ty of buzz at prestigious film festivals like including violence and drug use from the daughter kicked out of the motel. The title of the film may bring ire from Cannes and Toronto. But nowhere has that adults around them. But their spirits are buzz been more palpable than in Central still those of children, finding adventure locals worried that this depiction of life Florida, since the film was shot on the tour- and play – and sugar – wherever they can. in Central Florida may end up being what But the adult world is always there, even non-Floridians think of when they think ist strip of U.S. Highway 192 in Kissimmee. The film follows a single mom, Halley if Moonee can’t see it. “We’re going to of our home, but it’s actually a reference (Bria Vinaite), and her daughter, Moonee take bikini pictures,” Halley tells Moonee to the codename that Walt Disney had (Brooklynn Prince), as they eke out a semi- after her perfume-selling hustle is shut for Walt Disney World back when it was homeless existence while staying at the down by a security guard at a neighbor- in the planning phases – back when he Magic Castle, a garishly purple run-down ing swanky resort. Moonee may think it’s and the Disney corporation used dummy motel. The film isn’t going to receive many a fun game, but an adult audience knows companies to buy up large tracts of land in appreciation awards from tourism groups that something’s up when Halley takes a an attempt to secure the cheapest possible like Visit Florida, but its humanist depic- split second to make sure Moonee’s not per-acre price. Baker’s film could be read as an indictment of the tion of families on the fringe of society – an reflected in the mirror as economic impact that a experience that is too often erased from the she takes a picture of her tourist economy has on The Florida ProjecT narrative we tell ourselves about the place mom pouting at the camthe people who live in where we live – makes it essential viewing. era in a skimpy bathing Opens Thursday, Oct. 12, at the area, but that would The film is delivered mainly from the suit. Moonee’s frequent Enzian Theater, enzian.org be a too-simplistic interperspective of Moonee, an adorable young extended bath time play pretation of a tragically girl who runs around the premises of the sessions – accompanied beautiful film. The final, Magic Castle and neighboring hotels with by a radio playing fullambiguous scene, which her friends Scooty (Christopher Rivera) blast – are interrupted Baker somehow got perand Jancey (Valeria Cotto). Almost com- one night when a man pletely unsupervised, the trio spend their walks into the bathroom as we hear Halley mission to shoot on Disney property, seems to mirror many Central Floridians’ day-tosummer spitting off railings, climbing yelling at him. Willem Dafoe plays Bobby, the manager day experience with the Mouse: It’s always trees, sneaking into abandoned condos and spying on grown-ups. The kids in these of the Magic Castle, in a performance that there, even if you can’t see it. motels, whose families are often paying seems predestined for a Best Supporting tmccollum@orlandoweekly.com
Cost of admission
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The Rich Weirdoes Present: The Rocky Horror Picture Show Screening of the cult classic with
a shadow cast, props and callbacks. FridaySaturday, 11:15 pm; AMC CityWalk, 6000 Universal Blvd.; $11; richweirdoes.com. RWBY Volume 5 Premiere Premiere of the fifth series of the popular anime about four girls who fight monsters. Thursday, 7:30 pm; multiple locations; $13.31; fathomevents.com. Samurai Jack The fully remastered Emmynominated premiere movie from Season 1. Monday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $13.31; fathomevents.com. saturday Matinee classics: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari Early silent film in the German
Expressionist style, telling the tale of the mysterious Dr. Caligari and his mind-control experiments. Saturday, noon; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $8; 407-6290054; enzian.org. Selling Sunshine: The Florida Trains Florida premiere of a documentary by award-winning director Richard Luckin. Friday, 6:30 pm; Mead Garden, 1300 S. Denning Drive, Winter Park; free; 407-599-3334.
HHHHH
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ON SCREENS iN orlando
Professor Marston and the Wonder Women
By sT eV e schN eid eR This WeeK: Blood Money John Cusack stars in a modern
riff on The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, in which a corporate criminal’s loot stash brings out the worst in a trio of pals on a nature outing. When you see Cusack in a few weeks signing autographs at Spooky Empire, you can ask him where the money went. (Just make sure he knows you’re talking about this movie.) (R) The Foreigner A U.K.-based businessman played by Jackie Chan gets less help than he’d like from the British authorities after his daughter is killed by a terrorist organization. The preferred PR hook is that the picture reunites director Martin Campbell with his GoldenEye star, Pierce Brosnan, here playing one of the Limey stonewallers in question. But the real talking point is that somebody finally let Campbell make another film after Green Lantern. Who says there are no second acts at American multiplexes? (R)
semester law students are made to study the intricacies of Daisy v. Hoke. (PG-13) Professor Marston and the Wonder Women
Timed perfectly to cash in on the year of Princess Diana (no, the other one), this biopic shows how psychologist William Moulton Marston and his wife created the character of Wonder Woman – with the help of a young lady with whom they were engaged in a polyamorous relationship. Early reviews claim that the three-way sex is depicted with as much taste, dignity and restraint as is customarily afforded portrayals of standard marriages. Aaaand they went and ruined it. (R) also PlayiNg: Earth: One Amazing Day Robert Redford nar-
rates a BBC Earth documentary that covers a 24-hour period in the biological life of our planet, with animal protagonists including “a sloth on the hunt for love.” Hey, I bet there’s an opening at William Moulton Marston’s house! (G)
Happy Death Day Blumhouse has you covered
Generational Sins The makers of this Christian
for Halloween with this tale of a college student who has to relive the day of her murder over and over again until she figures out who the culprit was. Customers who bought this also bought Groundhog Day; just don’t expect it to be as easy to adapt as a Broadway musical. (PG-13)
drama hit on a novel approach to attracting secular audiences: They went full-on Tarantino/Mamet in their devotion to realistic dialogue. The Hollywood Reporter counted a full 32 uses of profanity, including the F-word, the S-word, the B-word and the D-word. But not, apparently, the C-word, because a good Christian’s gotta draw the fuckin’ line somewhere. (PG-13)
Marshall Apparently determined to play every hero of color the 20th century produced, Chadwick (Jackie Robinson/Black Panther) Boseman portrays future Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall as a young man. Marshall’s first case as a lawyer for the NAACP has him defending a black chauffeur accused of rape and attempted murder by his white female boss. And that’s why, to this day, first-
The Stray A new dog effects a miraculous
turnaround in the life of the family that finds him – because he’s a guardian angel sent straight from Heaven! “Based on a true story,” the fundie filmmakers brazenly claim. But hey, at least this is one Christian flick with a reason to say “bitch.” (PG) orlandoweekly.com
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[ concert preview ]
Great live music rattles OrlandO eVerY nIGHt J. Balvin the colombian reggaeton demigod has been referred to as the “Drake of reggaeton,” but don’t allow clumsy pop hyperbole distract you from the undeniability of Balvin’s songwriting Midas touch. 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 11, at Hard Rock Live, $65-$75
Chris Isaak Actor and noir-inclined rockabilly singer Isaak is sure to melt hearts upon the first reverbed notes of the immortal “Wicked Game.” 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 12, at Hard Rock Live, $43-$187
The Devil Wears Prada
Taxi three imaginary boys create urgent, youthful postpunk – this is not about the cure in the late ’70s, this is about the very enjoyable taxi from Miami in 2017. 10 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14, at Uncle Lou’s, donations encouraged
Ricardo Arjona Rough-and-tumble Guatemalan singersongwriter has sold roughly 40 million albums worth of his Latin-pop/rock anthems. He’s touring behind his 15th (!) album, Circo Soledad. 8 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 15, at the Amway Center, $51-$150
Cortex Norwegian free jazz upstarts play a last-minute show downtown. Don’t let something trivial like parking worries deter you from this ensemble’s propulsive hybrid of free improv and fierce swing. 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 16, at Gallery at Avalon Island, donations encouraged
Dueling Pianos What’s better than one piano? two! See two pianos face off in a (non) death match at Ace cafe. Gratis! 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 17, at Ace Cafe, free
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oh! you pretty thing
their happiness growing, No Shape puts the despondency of the past in the rearview to focus on a more content present. “Music helped me as a kid to feel less lonely,” Hadreas says. “That’s why I sing about the details of life – as a teenager I wish someone had been singing directly to me, so I’m going Perfume Genius stands up for happiness on No Shape to try to do that for [queer kids] today.” By NICk MCGReGoR Performing the excruciatingly personal No Shape material day in and day out orget, for a moment, the music. Under he has cracked in multiple interviews. “It certainly takes its toll. “It’s been full on,” the name Perfume Genius, Mike took a while for me to figure out how to Hadreas says. “At the beginning [of the Hadreas has released four albums take care of myself,” Hadreas tells Orlando album cycle], it’s exciting, but you’re still (2010’s Learning, 2012’s Put Your Back N 2 Weekly. “I felt trapped in my body [when I kind of figuring it out. Now I’ve played these songs enough where I can kind of It, 2014’s Too Bright and 2017’s No Shape) was younger], unhealthy, not confident.” Four years later, teetering on the edge relax on stage. I can kind of just flow better. of intense, ecstatic, abrasive electronic pop that’s explored everything from sexual of overdose daily, he fled back to Seattle, If something feels awkward, that’s part of manipulation to mental illness to domestic checked himself in to rehab, and moved the performance I put on for the audience, bliss. These records have redefined the pos- back in with his parents, both recovering who come out so they can be who they want to be.” sibilities of modern music, earning universal addicts themselves. The Appearing in Orlando love from the queer community, effusive sobriety led to an emoPERFUME GENIUS just two miles from praise from critics and the acclaim of fellow tional upwelling Hadreas with Dearest the site of the Pulse artists, who insist that Perfume Genius is hadn’t been prepared for. 8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 16 nightclub shooting and truly an artist of singular origin. Perfume Confronting the intense the Social, 54 N. Orange Ave. 15 days after the mass Genius, sui generis – the connections extend self-hatred he felt as a 407-246-1419 shooting in Las Vegas, teenager and reconnectbeyond just the phonetic. thesocial.org Perfume Genius’ first In many ways, the story of Perfume Genius ed with minus the haze $21 trip to Florida might just – Hadreas’ personal story, which he has told of drugs and alcohol, take on a revelatory feel over the last 10 years with more cutting Hadreas wrote Learning in detail than most artists can muster in a life- his bedroom. Put Your Back N 2 It was even for local fans. “Things are totally fucked time – is just as captivating. Born and raised bolder in its direct dissection of gay dynam- right now,” Hadreas says. “And it seems like they aren’t going to get better.” How does an in the Seattle area, Hadreas came out as gay ics, while Too Bright was confrontational. Many of those songs were written with artist sing about love and joy at a time like at 15, after years of suffering with Crohn’s disease and depression. In his early 20s, he the help of Alan Wyffels, whom Hadreas this? “You have to find a way to exist and be decamped for New York, becoming a self- met in AA. The two quickly became collabo- happy,” Hadreas says. “And today, that’s a described “junkie artist” addicted to both rators and romantic partners; eight years good way to stand up and be heard.” alcohol and drugs – “everything but heroin,” later, their relationship on solid ground and music@orlandoweekly.com
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Metalcore act still stands tall and musically valid, but wayyyy more importantly, did you know that they devised their own small-batch coffee with Metric coffee out of chicago?? 6 p.m. Friday, Oct. 13, at the Plaza Live, $20$27.50
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BY B AO L E - H U U ArieL Bui | photo by jen cray
I hate that this space has been
an obituary lately but if anyone deserves a big pour on the floor, it’s Tom Petty, a Gainesville boy and one of the most classic and quintessentially American voices of all time.
SOUND OF CERES AND AVELEON, WILL’S PUB, OCT. 1
Sound of Ceres are a relatively new Brooklyn band that comes with some deep credentials: They’re on Joyful Noise Recordings, and are loaded with members from Candy Claws, the Drums and the Apples in Stereo. Their particular brand of dreampop exists on a stranger plane steeped in psychedelia and electronics. But to get too into just their sound is to miss much, perhaps the majority, of their concept and aesthetic. As their recent Orlando show just ahead of the release of their sophomore album (The Twin) proved, this is a band conceived to be seen live, with elaborate stagecraft that arguably bests their highly textured soundscapes. First of all, their laser game is serious. Just as notable is that it’s neither high technology nor passive backdrop. They work the beams with basic fog, screens and mirrors to produce 3-D effects, and the most moving moments are when the players manipulate the light manually, which they do with great purpose and precision. While their etheric music often drifts, their visual presentation is a thing of exceptional focus. Low-tech but higheffect, this is next-level DIY production. Combined, their music and optical flair are chemistry that turns a room into a nocturnal wonderland of intergalactic ren-
Ariel Bui’s cabaret country is a modern abstraction of vintage countrypolitan sounds. Led by her long, suspended voice, the music unfolds like Mazzy Star channeling Patsy Cline. dering. Until you see them live, you’ve only scratched the surface of the multimedia Sound of Ceres experience. Launching the night was nice local surprise Aveleon. This solo project of Caitlin Pequignot is an indie-pop act that combines electronic and classical. The intimate digital production of her tracks is both counterbalanced and warmed by the airy, organic touch of her violin and her clear, velvet voice. Her violin playing is for real, too, and not just for texture or layer. When it comes in, it leads. And her pillow-crooning voice is the kind that inhabits a room and makes it breathe. Taken together, it’s lovely pop music with just enough twist to catch.
ARIEL BUI, WILL’S PUB, OCT. 7
When Ariel Bui was in Orlando last decade as a Rollins student, she was perhaps known more for her active but behind-the-scenes work in the city’s music community. But it’s good to see this homegrown, now-Nashville talent return as a feature artist herself, one of both cultivation and achievement.
Bui’s cabaret country is a modern, torchlit abstraction of vintage countrypolitan sounds. Led by her long, suspended voice, the music unfolds like Mazzy Star channeling Patsy Cline. Purposefully minimal, sonorous and full of atmosphere, it’s a vision that dovetails with the luminous class of artists like Angel Olsen. As a live trio, her band provides her depth without sacrificing her raw resonance. More than just the playing, though, it was a show radiant with personality and heart. From between-song reflections filled with Orlando remembrances, Bui’s appreciation for her local roots was palpable. That, honestly, would’ve been enough to make it an especially intimate night. But just as moving was her getup, which included a Billy Manes shirt and a shaved head in solidarity with her Nashville friend Jessi Zazu, the electrifying frontwoman of Those Darlins whom I saluted in last week’s column as a star recently dimmed far too soon by cancer. Worth noting is that this was the latest local show, not coincidentally booked by Tierney Tough’s OYG Presents, to be contributing to the Billy Manes Foundation. And it was a mutually affecting homecoming with a room as glad to have Ariel Bui back as she was to be on her old turf again, this time rightfully in the spotlight. If you missed it, there are more area opportunities this next week to catch her while she’s home. Locally, there will be a listening party featuring Bui’s traveling multimedia art exhibit on Wednesday (Oct. 11, 7 p.m.) at Park Ave CDs and a solo performance Saturday at the Gallery at Avalon Island (Oct. 14, 7 p.m.). baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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Thursday, Oct. 12
The Growlers MUSIC
Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 12-14
Sanford Oktoberfest EVENTS
our picks for the best events this week 48
Short of flying to Germany, Oktoberfest celebrations don’t get much more authentic than the one at Hollerbach’s Willow Tree Cafe. The three-day event kicks off with Sanford’s Alive After 5 Street Festival, with live music, food and craft beer from local vendors. Hollerbach’s keeps the party going on Friday and Saturday with giant pretzels, savory bratwurst and boots of German beer. Admission and parking is free, but if you actually want to take part in any of the festivities, you’ll need to purchase pre-sale tickets since no cash or cards will be accepted at the event (just “Hollerbucks”). As a bonus, ticket packages also include specialty pins or T-shirts from the restaurant’s outfitter store. So gear up and get ready to get your drink on at Hollerbach’s, girl. – Nicole Dudenhoefer 5-8 p.m. Thursday, 6-11 p.m. Friday, 2-11 p.m. Saturday | Magnolia Square, East First Street and Magnolia Avenue, Sanford | 407-835-7323 | hollerbachs.com | $15-$60
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In the modern indie-rock world, being genre-less has become a subgenre all its own. Throw just about any description at California’s weirdo art band the Growlers and it’ll probably stick. Like Donnie and Marie, they’re a little bit country and a little bit rock & roll … and a little bit of everything else, too. “Beach Goth” is the term that most often sticks and, in fact, the band has been putting on an annual festival under that same moniker since 2012. They’ve got the Strokes’ Julian Casablancas producing songs for ’em, a cult following that has fans comparing singer Brooks Nielsen to fellow drunken poet Jim Morrison, and they scored the on-hiatus Yeah Yeah Yeahs as a headliner for their two-day Growlers Six Festival later this month. Those juicy facts alone should pique your interest enough to hightail it to the Plaza Live to see for yourself. – Jen Cray 7 p.m. | The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave. | 407-228-1220 | plazaliveorlando.org | $25-$39.50
of the still-under-construction St. Petka’s Orthodox Church, the festival promises three days to celebrate Serbian music, cuisine and culture. Expect fare to include cheesy gibanica cakes, pecenje spit roasts and the homemade sweets of the ladies of St. Petka’s Parish. (As per Orthodox tradition, fish takes the place of other meats on Fridays.) Also hailing from the parish is the Serbian Crown Dance Ensemble; you can catch them, along with all of the show’s other performers, on all three days of Serb Fest. – Brian Leng
Though they call Los Angeles home now, electronic innerspace trippers Hundred Waters are Florida through and through, having got their start in Orlando and released early recordings on Gainesville imprint Elestial Sound. They’ve come a long way since then, captivating a much wider audience, organizing and curating the impeccable FORM Arcosanti festival, and even signing with Skrillex’s OWSLA label. New album Communicating, recorded in an abandoned church in Detroit, is their most captivating and expansive suite of songs yet. But the real proof of these evolutions and transformations will be on display – along with a riot of lights and colors – when they play this Social show, one of only two Florida dates. – Matthew Moyer
MUSIC
What better way to gear up for Pride weekend than with Orlando’s biggest pre-parade brunch? Big Gay Brunch includes a brunch spread with bottomless mimosas, a Bloody Mary bar and blended drinks from Licor 43. This year, the event features music by DJ Erik Armiliato and other performances, along with raffle prizes. The event benefits Pride Gives Back, a Come Out With Pride initiative that provides other small organizations like the Barber Fund and Libby’s Legacy with grants, so you can brunch for a good cause. – Hind Berji noon-3 p.m. | The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive | biggaybrunchorlando.com | $45
with Phony Ppl | 7 p.m. | The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave. | thebeacham.com | 407-246-1419 | $20
Thursday, Oct. 12 MUSIC
Kali Uchis
Torchy Colombian-American singer-songwriter Kali Uchis came out of seemingly nowhere with the surprisingly self-assured debut mixtape Drunken Babble in 2012, released when she was 18. On the strength of that and a few well-placed YouTube performances, Uchis was suddenly collaborating with Snoop Dogg on the track “On Edge” in 2014. Uchis kept the creative pace relentless, quickly releasing the Por Vida album in 2015, with production work from heavies like Diplo and Tyler, the Creator. Now she’s got an album about to be dropped by Interscope, which is definitely going to hip the unaware to Uchis, who is remolding classic and modern neo-soul, hip-hop and pop sounds in her own singular image. Because of high demand, this show has been bumped up from the Social to the Beacham. That, along with the news that Uchis will be opening dates on Lana Del Rey’s 2018 tour, is clear evidence that there’s something big going on here. Get in on this early. – Matthew Moyer
6-11 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Sunday | St. Petka Serbian Orthodox Church, 1990 Lake Emma Road, Longwood | 407-831-7372 | serb-fest.com | free
Hundred Waters
Saturday, Oct. 14
Saturday, Oct. 14
Big Gay Brunch EVENTS
with Kelsey Lu | 7 p.m. | The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thesocial.org | $15
Thursday, Oct. 12
Popcorn Flicks in the Park: The Blob FILM
Pop-cultural immortality would be owed The Blob (1958) merely for its jaunty main-title sequence and that iconic, later-arriving shot of a marauding mass of Jell-O oozing out of every window and door of a besieged movie theater. But look beyond such cheap thrills, and what you have is actually a fairly credible intergenerational drama, with a young Steve McQueen and his teen pals forming an uneasy alliance with a bunch of older squares to rid their town of a menace from space. (Go easy on those cops and parents, Steve: They fought a world war for ya.) It’s kind of a low-rent Rebel Without a Cause, but with homicidal goo. A few years later, kids McQueen’s age would be shipped off to ’Nam, and the Blob would move on to bedeviling Larry Hagman. Hey, you don’t always get to pick your battles. – Steve Schneider 8 p.m. | Central Park, 150 W. Morse Blvd., Winter Park | enzian.org | free
Friday-Sunday, Oct. 13-15
Serb Fest EVENTS
Živeli! Drinking and dancing, cevapcici and pljeskavica – it’s the annual Serb Fest! Hosted on the site
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THEWEEK
Submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com at least 12 days before print to have them included
wedneSday, oct. 11-tueSday, oct. 17 coMPIled By thaddeuS MccolluM
MuSIc wedneSday, oct. 11 The Daniel Heitz Band 10:30 pm; tanqueray’s, 100 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Eugene Snowden’s Ten Pints of Truth 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. J Balvin 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $65-$75; 407-351-5483. Lost Kreatives Live 8:30 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570. Maple Sparrow, Oak Hill Drifters, Poppsy Cole, Justin Marshall Orlow 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5. The Met Live in HD: Norma 1 & 6:30 pm; Bellini’s masterpiece opera, set deep in a Druid forest where nature and ancient ritual rule. Multiple locations; $25.56; fathomevents.com. Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra Young People’s Concert: Celebrate! Noon; classical concert for children. the Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $8; 407-228-1220; orlandophil.org.
[MuSIC] Bruno Mars Saturday at Amway center
The Ozone Rhythm 8 pm; the Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $5; 407-673-2712. Sammy J. & Anuhea 8 pm; the Social, 54 N. orange Ave.; $15-$18; 407-246-1419. Women in Song: Maeve Gilchrist & nic Gareiss 8 pm; the Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $22; 407-228-1220.
thurSday, oct. 12 Chris Cortez Birthday Bash 8 pm; Blue Bamboo center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Chris Isaak 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $45-$65; 407-351-5483. Create: Whethan 10 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. orange Ave.; $10; 407-872-0066. Faculty Recital: Ben Lieser and Yun-Ling Hsu 8 pm; UcF horn and piano professors Dr. Ben Lieser and Dr. yun-Ling Hsu present a horn and piano recital. University of central Florida Rehearsal Hall, 4000 central Florida Blvd.; free; 405-823-1500. The Growlers 7 pm; the Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $25-$39.50; 407-228-1220. 50
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PHoto By KAI Z. FENG
Have Mercy, Boston Mano, Can’t Swim, A Will Away 6 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $15; 407-999-2570.
The Devil Wears Prada, Veil of Maya, Thousand Below 6 pm; the Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $20-$27.50; 407-228-1220.
Hundred Waters, Kelsey Lu 7 pm; the Social, 54 N. orange Ave.; $15; 407-246-1419.
Dougie Fresh & the Slashers, Sacred Owls, October’s Flame, the Prople, Disfunction – Horrorpunks in 21, Pig Pen, the Filthy Dix 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $5; 407-270-9104.
Kaleigh Baker 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Marbin 5 pm; West End trading company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $8-$12; 407-322-7475. The Mellow Relics 10:30 pm; tanqueray’s, 100 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Raleigh Estes and Friends 8 pm; Muldoon’s Saloon, 7439 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-657-9980. Ritual 10 pm; Vinyl Arts Bar, 75 E. colonial Drive; free. uCF Homecoming: Martin Garrix 7 pm; cFE Arena, 12777 N. Gemini Blvd.; $25-$35; 407-823-6006.
FrIday, oct. 13 The Bloody Jug Band 10:30 pm; tanqueray’s, 100 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.
Fusion Beat: Benefit Concert for Puerto Rico 8 pm; Blue Bamboo center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $20; 407-636-9951. needtobreathe 6:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $35-$77; 407-934-2583. Ñengo Flow, Darrell, OG Black y Master Joe, Opi 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $20-$40; 407-504-7699. The Sh-Booms, Luscious Lisa, Gino & the Goons, DJ Rich Evans 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12.
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BBQ and Blues Festival the halloween roast of a Pumpkin Halloween may be known as the time of the year when the spooky and scary are (even more) in vogue, but we’d argue that it’s also the season for laughs, considering how often comedy gets wrapped up with the spoopy during the season (see The Addams Family, Hocus Pocus). So this comedy roast of … uh … a gourd, with comedians taking on the personas of famous movie monsters like Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster and his bride, and the Wolfman fits right in with the spirit of the season. costumes encouraged. 8:30 p.m. Friday; Deadly Sins Brewing, 750 Jackson Ave., Winter Park; free; deadlysinsbrewing.com
BBQ and Blues Festival It might be a bit of a drive, but Lakeridge Winery is the only place around where you can pair barbecued pork ribs with wine produced on-site this weekend. Five of the nation’s top ribmasters compete for the title of “Rib King” while attendees enjoy blues bands on the outdoor stage. And in case you were wondering, you should pair ribs with a full-bodied red like a cabernet sauvignon. 10 a.m. Friday-Saturday, 11 a.m. Sunday; Lakeridge Winery, 19239 N. US Highway 27, clermont; $8; lakeridgewinery.com
Body//talk: the decades Party one of Body//talk’s signature events, the Decades Party is an accelerated living history of music from the last half-century. Starting out with music from the ’50s, the decade changes every hour on the hour, along with the DJ. the usual Body//talk sideshow gets set up in the rooms surrounding the main dance floor at Vinyl, creating a choose-your-own-adventure type of vibe for the party. 9 p.m. Saturday; Vinyl Arts Bar, 75 E. colonial Drive; $5-$7; bodytalkparty.org
Gran Papi’s this karaoke benefit for relief funds for Puerto Rico, hosted by boss Boricua babe DJ Di, invites attendees to come dressed as their favorite Puerto Rican celebs (J. Lo, Ricky Martin, all of Menudo) and sing their songs. yes, there’s going to be a lot of poorly pronounced Spanish sung at this event, but it’s all for a good cause. 9 p.m. tuesday; Big Daddy’s, 3001 corrine Drive; donations; djdi.com PHoto By Scott MADoRE
Pink April 24, 2018, at Amway Center PHoto By SØLVE SUNDSBØ
neil deGrasse Tyson, oct. 18 at the Bob carr theater
Bad Suns, Nov. 3 at the Beacham
Marc Anthony, Nov. 19 at Amway center
Say Anything, Jan. 9-10, 2018, at the Beacham
Iron & Wine, Nov. 7 at the Beacham
The Front Bottoms, Nov. 19 at House of Blues
Shakira, Jan. 9, 2018, at Amway center
Jethro Tull, Nov. 8 at the Dr. Phillips center
The Drums, Nov. 30 at the Social
Pato Banton, Nov. 8 at the Social
Bear Grillz, Nov. 30 at the Beacham
Tim McGraw & Faith Hill, oct. 21 at Amway center
Hoodie Allen, Nov. 9 at the Plaza Live
Poptone, Dec. 1 at the Beacham
Halsey, oct. 22 at Amway center
Imagine Dragons, Nov. 10 at Amway center
Conor Oberst, oct. 19 at the Beacham Descendents, oct. 20 at House of Blues RuPaul’s Drag Race, oct. 21 at the Plaza Live
Bleached, oct. 25 at Will’s Pub Santana, oct. 26 at Amway center Toadies, oct. 27 at the Plaza Live
Wax Tailor, Nov. 3 at the Social
Jay-Z, Nov. 11 at Amway center Enrique Iglesias & Pitbull, Nov. 14 at Amway center
Third Eye Blind, oct. 28 at House of Blues
Grizzly Bear, Nov. 15 at House of Blues Son Volt, Nov. 15 at the Social
John Bellion, oct. 30 & Nov. 2 at House of Blues
Waxahatchee, Nov. 16 at the Social
Bebe Rexha, Nov. 1 at the Plaza Live
Lydia Lunch Retrovirus, Nov. 18 at Will’s Pub
The Zombies, Jan. 10, 2018, at the Plaza Live The Moody Blues, Jan. 12, 2018, at cFE Arena
Gabriel Iglesias, Dec. 2 at Amway center
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Jan. 26, 2018, at the Beacham
Wynton Marsalis, Dec. 3 at the Dr. Phillips center
Lana Del Rey, Feb. 2, 2018, at Amway center
Cut Copy, Dec. 5 at the Plaza Live
Adam Ant, Feb. 3, 2018, at the Beacham
The Kills, Dec. 8 at the Beacham
Rufus Wainwright, Feb. 8, 2018, at the Dr. Phillips center
Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Dec. 16 at Amway center Katy Perry, Dec. 17 at Amway center Reverend Horton Heat, Dec. 22 at House of Blues
Alice Cooper, March 24, 2018, at Hard Rock Live OMD, April 12, 2018, at the Beacham Pink, April 24, 2018, at Amway center
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SunDAY, OCT. 15
PHoto By JAMES MINcHIN
Willie nelson & Family MuSIc
one of the most hands-down beloved and legendary figures in country music rolls through town as part of a truly never-ending tour. the (not quite) Red-Headed Stranger is touring behind his newest release, God’s Problem Child, but the man has a lifetime of classics to draw from. Willie Nelson has lived a multitude of lives in his storied career: outlaw country mainstay, Highwaymen anchor, songwriter to the stars, beloved taco Bell pitchman, concept (and Xmas) album maestro, and duet partner to both Ray charles and the Great Gonzo. the chance to see an icon of this stature in such an intimate theater venue (instead of, like, an enormodome or outdoor fair stage) is not to be missed. – Matthew Moyer
8 p.m. | Walt Disney theater, Dr. Phillips center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave. | 844-513-2014 | drphillipscenter.org | $59.50-$323 CONTINUED FROM PaGe 50
Saturday, oct. 14 Ariel Bui (Solo Acoustic) 7 pm; the Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free. Beers of a Tyrant: The Other Face, Tears of a Tyrant, Gargamel! 9 pm; orlando Brewing, 1301 Atlanta Ave.; free; 321-278-0452. Body//Talk: The Decades Party 9 pm; Vinyl Arts Bar, 75 E. colonial Drive; $5-$7. Bruno Mars 8 pm; Amway center, 400 W. church St.; $45-$135; 800-745-3000. Classical Mystery Tour: A Tribute to the Beatles 8 pm; Bob carr theater, 401 W. Livingston St.; $17.50-$85; 407-246-4262.
The Company 10:30 pm; tanqueray’s, 100 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Cori Cochrane 8 pm; Aloma Bowl, 2530 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-671-8675. Destroy the Speakers: David Salgado, Beni Hill, Logan Kendrick, Amy Shiver 10 pm; Peek Downtown, 50 E. central Blvd. Suite B; $5. DJ Jaymob 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Four Year Strong, Seaway, Like Pacific 5:30 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $20; 407-999-2570. Jazz’n Blues Concert: The Dave Capp Project, Little Mike & the Tornadoes, Mud Rooster Blues 7 pm; Harry P. Leu Gardens, 1920 N. Forest Ave.; $15-$20; 407-246-2620. CONTINUED ON PaGe 54
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Kali uchis, Phony Ppl 7 pm; the Beacham, 46 N. orange Ave.; $20; 407-648-8363. Kid Cudi 9 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $42-$50; 407-351-5483. Marbin 8 pm; Blue Bamboo center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Mariachi Oro Internacional de Orlando 11 am; chickasaw Library, 870 N. chickasaw trail; free; 407-835-7323. Ookay 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$30; 407-504-7699. The Pilfers, Joystick, Control This, Hoverounds 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$15. Rocket 88 (25th Anniversary Show), Brown Bag Brass Band 8 pm; the Social, 54 N. orange Ave.; $10-$12; 407-246-1419.
uCF Concert Band 7-8 pm; UcF Visual Arts Building, 4000 central Florida Blvd.; free; 407-823-1500. Willie nelson and Family 8 pm; Walt Disney theater, Dr. Phillips center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $59.50-$99.50; 844-513-2014.
Monday, oct. 16 Acoustic night: The Year I Disappear, Mandee Joe, Goblin Sharks, Lili 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $6-$8. Animal Portraits, Lines in the Sky, the Dancing Bones 8 pm; 64 North, 64 N. orange Ave.; $5 suggested donation; 321-245-7730. The In-Between Series: Cortex 7 pm; the Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free. Memento Mori Monday, 10 pm; Independent Bar, 70 N. orange Ave.; free; 407-839-0457. Perfume Genius, Dearest 8 pm; the Social, 54 N. orange Ave.; $21; 407-246-1419. Reggae Mondae: Hor!zen 10:30 pm; tanqueray’s, 100 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.
Thievery Corporation, Zach Deputy 7:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $38-$84; 407-934-2583.
tueSday, oct. 17
Sunday, oct. 15
The Groove Orient 10:30 pm; tanqueray’s, 100 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.
Ancient Sun 10:30 pm; tanqueray’s, 100 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.
Twisted Bazaar: Raspberry Pie 8 pm; St. Matthew’s tavern, 1300 N. Mills Ave.; free.
Bakey and Betty 8 pm; Blue Bamboo center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $20; 407-636-9951.
theater
CamelPhat, Weiss 2 pm; Aloft Hotel orlando Downtown, 500 S. orange Ave.; $10-$20. Concierto Para Puerto Rico 4-8 pm; the Stranded Sailor Pub, 418 Sanford Ave., Sanford; donations; 407-878-2519. Four Year Strong, Seaway, Like Pacific, Grayscale, Life Lessons 5:30 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $20; 407-999-2570. nBA Youngboy 5:30 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $20-$30; 407-504-7699. Ricardo Arjona 8 pm; Amway center, 400 W. church St.; $51-$150; 800-745-3000. Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $30-$1,000; 407-351-5483. Time Lapse: new Woodwind Quintets 7 pm; New works from central Florida composers. timucua White House, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; free; 407-595-2713; timucua.com.
Big River Musical based on Mark twain’s beloved scamp, Huckleberry Finn. thursdaySaturday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2:30 pm; Mad cow theatre, 54 W. church St.; $23-$47; 407-297-8788; madcowtheatre.com. Hand to God After the death of his father, meek Jason finds an outlet for his anxiety at the christian Puppet Ministry. thursday-Friday 8 pm, Sunday, 2 pm, Monday-tuesday, 8 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh theater, Dr. Phillips center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $31.67-$45.52; drphillipscenter.org. New Orleans: The Beginnings Interactive theater experience that takes place in 1840s New orleans and features vampires, pirates, voodoo and more. tuesday, 7:30 pm; Stonewall Bar orlando, 741 W. church St.; $20; 407-373-0888. Newsies: The Broadway Musical Musical based on the 1992 film of the same name that follows the story of the Newsboy Strike of 1899. Saturday-Sunday, 1:30 & 6:30 pm; orlando Repertory theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; $15-$25; 407-896-7365; orlandorep.com. CONTINUED ON PaGe 57
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The Odd Couple two unlikely roommates, one slovenly and the other fastidious, come together after a marital separation and hilarity unravels. Male and female versions performed in repertoire. Friday, 8 pm, Saturday, 2 & 8 pm, Sunday, 2 pm, Monday, 8 pm; Garden theatre, 160 W. Plant St., Winter Garden; $25-$29; 407-877-4736; gardentheatre.org. Of Thee I Sing A comedic send-up of national institutions. thursday-Saturday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; University of central Florida, theatre UcF, 4000 central Florida Blvd.; $10-$20; 407-823-1500; theatre.cah.ucf.edu. On Your Feet! The Emilio & Gloria Estefan Musical Jukebox musical featuring the songs of the Estefans and the Miami Sound Machine. tuesday, 8 pm; Walt Disney theater, Dr. Phillips center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $34.25$149.25; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org. A Petrified Forest one of central Florida’s premier scare trails. thursday-Saturday, 7:30-10:30 pm; A Petrified Forest, 1360 State Road 436, Altamonte Springs; contact for price; 407-468-6600. Phantasmagoria A variety of selections from their stories, poems, sideshow and dances. Sunday, 2 pm; orlando Public Library, 101 E. central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. The Vagrant A heartwarming story about a homeless man and his friends in Nyc. Sometimes you just can’t hide in plain sight. Fridays, Saturdays, 7:30 pm; Dangerous theatre Sanford, 115 W. First St., Sanford; $15-$20; 407-358-6677; dangeroustheatre.com.
coMedy Broken Cauldron Comedy Showcase thursday, 8 pm; Broken cauldron taproom & Brewery, 1012 W. church St.; free. The Halloween Roast of a Pumpkin comedians in costumes “roast” a pumpkin. Friday, 8:30 pm; Deadly Sins Brewing, 750 Jackson Ave., Winter Park; free; 407900-8726; deadlysinsbrewing.com. Hook Line & Sinker: Spooky October Laughs tuesday, 9 pm; Little Fish Huge Pond, 401 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-963-5522. Leo Lins & Murilo Couto comedy in Portuguese. Saturday, 8 pm; the Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $26.99-$41.99; 407-228-1220; plazaliveorlando.com. Randy & Mr. Lahey’s never Cry Shitwolf Tour characters from Trailer Park Boys. tuesday, 8 pm; the Social, 54 N. orange Ave.; $25-$30; 407-246-1419; thesocial.org.
THEWEEK dance Cocktail Cabaret: Dark Menagerie Burlesque Burlesque, bands and booze, featuring orlando’s own Kaleigh Baker. thursday, 8:30 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12; 407-412-6895; willspub.org. Concrete Palm Treezs IV: Breakin’ Bred Edition A breakdancing tournament and potluck. Sunday, noon-6 pm; Bill Frederick Park, 3401 S. Hiawassee Road; $15. nocturnal Desires: A Dark Burlesque Cabaret A sultry burlesque cabaret paying tribute to some of the great horror flicks of the past and present. Friday, 10 pm; Bikkuri Sushi, 1915 E. colonial Drive; $16-$20; 407-986-4718; bikkurisushi.com. underground Vampire Bar Vampire-themed dance show with splash effects, a special drink menu and more. Fridays, Saturdays, 8 pm; DRIP, 8747 International Drive; $44$79; 347-855-3747; lovedrip.com.
art oPenInGS/eventS
Friday the 13th Mega Art Party Party featuring dark art, music and more. Friday, 6:30 pm; thirty Six Black Art collective, 1809 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-930-6469; thirty6black.com. Loving Vincent: The Legacy of Vincent Van Gogh Lunch Lecture A discussion of Vincent van Gogh’s life and work, paired with a three-course lunch menu. thursday, noon; 1921 by Norman Van Aken, 142 E. Fourth Ave., Mount Dora; $35; 352385-1921; modernismmuseum.org. Quiet Revolution: A Survey of the Art of Theo Wujcik In this survey, one can sense the artist’s shift in sensibility. the analytical and the formal are rejected and strange new kinds of historicism, primitivism and expressionism are embraced. opens Friday, 5-7 pm, through Jan. 7; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $5; 386-734-4371. Scott White Art exhibit from the Rise Above tattoo artist. opens Friday, 6-10 pm, through Nov. 12; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org. Selections From the Permanent Collection: Paintings, Drawings, Graphics & Sculpture Some of the more recent donations to the museum’s permanent collection. opens Friday 5-7 pm, through Jan. 7; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $5; 386-734-4371.
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Wine Box Art Show Annual charity art show with wine boxes painted by 35 different artists. Wednesday 6-9 pm; Quantum Leap Winery, 1312 Wilfred Drive; free; quantumleapwinery.com. contInuInG thIS week
Art Is Moving A moving art exhibit on SunRail, featuring central Florida artists’ work on every window of the designated car. ongoing; various locations; 407-398-2862; sunrail.com. Baggage Claims through Dec. 31; orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231. Bravo! Chris Raschka through oct. 29; orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231. Captured in Paint: Central Florida in Art tuesdays-Saturdays, 10 am-4 pm and Sundays, 1-4 pm; Albin Polasek Museum and Sculpture Gardens, 633 osceola Ave., Winter Park; $5; 407-647-6294; polasek.org. Cloth as Community: Hmong Textiles in America tuesdays-Saturdays.; Ruth Funk center for textile Arts, 150 W. University Blvd., Melbourne; free; 321-674-8313; textiles.fit.edu. From Muse to Master: Celebrating Women in Art Saturday, noon-1:30 pm; SoBo Art center, 127 S. Boyd St., Winter Garden; $15; 407-347-7996; wgart.org.
Mount Dora Art Stroll Friday, 6-8 pm; Downtown Mount Dora, East Fifth Avenue and North Donnelly Street, Mount Dora; free; 352383-0880; mountdoracenterforthearts.org. Oded Halahmy: Babylonian Odyssey through Dec. 31; orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231. Sketch & Kvetch thursday, 7 pm; Rabbitfoot Records coffee Lounge, 307 E. Second St., Sanford; free; 321926-3417; rabbitfootrecords.com. Steady Observation: The Intersection of Scientific Inquiry, Art and Life through Jan. 7, 2018; orlando Science center, 777 E. Princeton St.; $20.95; 407-514-2000; osc.org. Time & Thought through Jan. 7, 2018; Mennello Museum of American Art, 900 E. Princeton St.; $5; 407-246-4278; mennellomuseum.com. Time as Landscape: Inquiries of Art and Science through Dec. 31; cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins college, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu. Vintage Halloween Costumes tuesdays, Saturdays, 10 am-3 pm and Wednesdays, thursdays, 11 am-7 pm; Lake Mary Museum, 158 N. country club Road, Lake Mary; free; 407-585-1481; lakemarymuseum.com. Virtual Views: Digital Art From the Thoma Foundation through Dec. 31; orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231. Wilderness through Saturday; Redefine Gallery, 29 S. orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060.
Hip-Hop vs. Comics Mash-up Art Show through Saturday; the Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060.
eventS
Horror by Design through oct. 31, 9 am-6 pm; orlando Public Library, 101 E. central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info.
ACA Exposed A benefit gala with innovative tastings, performances and art. Friday, 6-9 pm; Atlantic center for the Arts, 1414 Art center Ave., New Smyrna Beach; $150; 386-427-6975; atlanticcenterforthearts.org.
Hye Shin: Embrace the Hope through oct. 19; Anita S. Wooten Gallery, 701 N. Econlockhatchee trail; free; 407582-2298; valenciacollege.edu.
407-755-0012
Memories of Underdevelopment through Saturday; the Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; avalongallery.org.
The Lake: A Documentary Exploring the Land and People of Lake Apopka through Jan. 13, 2018; crealdé School of Art, 600 St. Andrews Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-671-1886; crealde.org. Limited Edition through Dec. 31; Snap Space, 1013 E. colonial Drive; free; snaporlando.com.
The Americas Cake Fair the largest trade and consumer show in North and South America dedicated to cake, chocolate, sugar arts and more. Friday, 10 am-5 pm, Saturday, 10 am-5 pm, Sunday, 10 am-4 pm; orange county convention center, 9800 International Drive; contact for price; 845-469-1034; cakefair.com. Asian Cultural Expo Experience the wonders of Asian culture through exhibitions, performances and workshops. Saturday, 10 am-3 pm; Bill Frederick Park, 3401 S. Hiawassee Road; free; 407-808-0497; asianculturalexpo.org.
The Lines That Join Us through Nov. 30, 10 am-6 pm; orlando Public Library, 101 E. central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. CONTINUED ON PaGe 61
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BBQ and Blues Festival Feast on delicious barbecue from five of the nation’s top barbecue rib competitors while enjoying live blues music from a variety of bands. FridaySaturday, 10 am-8 pm, Sunday, 11 am-6 pm; Lakeridge Winery and Vineyards, 19239 N. U.S. Highway 27, clermont; $5; 800-768-9463. Camp Blood Celebration A Friday the 13th party with art, collectibles, screenings, a costume contest, trivia, DJs and live entertainment. Friday, 2 pm-1 am; Gods & Monsters, 5421 International Drive; free; 407-270-6273; godmonsters.com. Central Florida Health Expo Farm fresh produce market. Friday, 9 am-3 pm; International Market World Auburndale Flea Market, 1052 U.S. Highway 92 W., Auburndale; free; 863-248-7537. Cheese for Charity Mac & Cheese CookOff Home chefs compete to see who has the best mac & cheese recipe and raise money for Second Harvest. Saturday, noon; Dead Lizard Brewing company, 4507 36th St.; $5-$10 suggested donation.
Funktober 13th Benefit for Rock Pink, an orlando-based charity whose mission is to raise breast health awareness and support local cancer programs, with live bands, a silent auction and more. Friday, 7 pm; the Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $10; 407-221-1405; funktober.eventbrite.com. Gran Papi’s Hurricane Maria Benefit Karaoke benefit for Puerto Rico with raffles, prizes, a costume contest and more. Hosted by DJ Di. tuesday, 9 pm; Big Daddy’s, 3001 corrine Drive; donations; 407-644-2844; bigdaddysorlando.com. Halloween Horror nights themed haunted houses, scare zones and shows open select nights. through Nov. 4; Universal Studios, 6000 Universal Blvd.; $69.99-$80.99; 407363-8000; halloweenhorrornights.com. The Haunt at Old Town Fears and phobias come to life in haunted mazes and scare zones. Fridays, Saturdays, 6 pm; old town, 5770 W. Irlo Bronson Highway, Kissimmee; free; 407-396-4888; myoldtownusa.com. The Haunted House of Puppetry A Halloween-themed puppet slam with short performances from a variety of puppeteers. Friday, 6-10 pm; Station Street Studios, 66 E. Station St., Apopka; free.
Heart to Heart Anniversary Gala Anniversary gala and fundraiser for Heart to Heart, a community care home. Saturday, 6 pm; the Mezz, 100 S. Eola Drive; $100; 407423-9999; h2hcentralflorida.org.
Lucha por Puerto Rico Bring donations of supplies for raffle tickets for great prizes from artists and local businesses. Saturday, 6-9 pm; the Guesthouse, 1321 N. Mills Ave.; donations. national Skunk Show Pet skunks compete for the title of Grand National champion. Saturday, 11 am-5 pm; Ramada Gateway Kissimmee, 7470 W. Irlo Bronson Memorial Highway, Kissimmee; $3; 727-809-0975; floridaskunkrescue.com.
Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration celebration featuring writers, artists, Latin music, dance, customs, food and art. Saturday, noon; Edgewater Library, 5049 Edgewater Drive; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. Hollerbach’s Oktoberfest three days of authentic German food, drink and entertainment. thursday, 5-8 pm, Friday, 5-11 pm, Saturday, 2-11 pm; Hollerbach’s Willow tree cafe, 205 E. First St., Sanford; free; 407-321-2204; hollerbachs.com.
Orange County Brewers Oktoberfest oktoberfest celebration in downtown’s newest brewpub. Saturday, 11:30 am; orange county Brewers, 131 N. orange Ave.; free; 407-914-2831; theocbrewers.com. Phas3 Grand Opening the official opening of the new Milk District beer and gear shop from five local brands. thursday-Friday, noon-midnight; Phas3, 2428 E. Robinson St.; free; 940232-0665; facebook.com/phas3shop.
International Food & Wine Festival Sample international cuisine at 35 different kiosks, watch culinary demonstrations, or take a beverage seminar. through Nov. 13; Epcot, 200 Epcot center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321; disneyworld.disney.go.com.
SerbFest three-day cultural festival with traditional music, dancing, food and more. Friday-Sunday; St. Petka orthodox church, 1990 Lake Emma Road, Longwood; free; 407-831-7372.
Lake County Folk Festival Family-friendly festival with musicians, crafters, artists and food vendors. Saturday, 10 am-9 pm, Sunday, 11 am-5 pm; Ferran Park, Ferran Park Drive, Eustis; free; 352455-8307; lakecountyfolkfest.org.
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Shots Grand Opening Grand opening of downtown’s newest bar with giveaways, entertainment and more. Friday, 5 pm; Shots, 69 E. Pine St.; free; 407-374-2499; shotsbar.com. The Sugar Art Fashion Show Fashion show where all of the ensembles are crafted out of sugar, cake and chocolate. Friday, 7 pm; orange county convention center, 9800 International Drive; contact for price; 407-685-9800; cakefair.com. Technoween A terrifyingly good time for the whole family, featuring appearances from the tourist city Ghostbusters, the Vampirates, Ghoul School Makeup FX Artist Barry Anderson, a kids’ costume contest and more. Sunday, 1:30 pm; orlando Public Library, 101 E. central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. Will’s A Faire Fall Market A one-day market for retro, vintage and handmade goods with live music, food trucks and fun. Sunday, 1 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org. The Witches Ball Power ballads, dancing, witches and Halloween tricks and treats. costumes encouraged. Saturday, 7:30-9:30 pm; Gateway center for the Arts, 880 N. Highway 17-92, DeBary; $17-$19; 386-6685553; gatewaycenterforthearts.org.
lIterary Diverse Word Spoken word open mic. tuesdays, 8 pm; Dandelion communitea cafe, 618 N. thornton Ave.; free; 407-3621864; dandelioncommunitea.com. Girl Power Literary open mic for female writers and artists. Wednesday, 7 pm; Stardust Video and coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-623-3393; facebook.com/stardustie. Graphic novel Workshop Eddie Pittman, story artist and writer for Disney’s Phineas and Ferb and author of the graphic novel series Red’s Planet, discusses how he crafts stories for graphic novels. Wednesday, 6:30 pm; orlando Public Library, 101 E. central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. Losing the Grand Canyon An evening with author and journalist Kevin Fedarko. Wednesday, 7 pm; orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $50; 850-224-4555; floridafaf.org. Orlando Cringe: The Halloween Show three brave adults read embarrassing stories from their teenage diaries. Wednesday, 7 pm; the Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; contact for price; 407-704-6261; abbeyorlando.com. Safe Words Slam With nathaniel Bek competitive poetry slam with a featured reader. thursday, 8 pm; the Milk Bar, 2424 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-4954.
THEWEEK Terry Ann Thaxton and Kelle Groom Readings from two poets. Sunday, 3-4 pm; the Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; avalongallery.org. Writing a novel through this workshop, you will learn the tips and tricks of accomplishing this intense goal and walk away with a novel on the page. thursdays, 6:30 pm; orlando Public Library, 101 E. central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info.
SPortS Combat night MMA fighting. Saturday, 5 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $25; 407-504-7699; giltnightclub.com. Defying Expectations: The Orlando City Soccer Story Simon and Susan Veness discuss their new book about orlando city Soccer. Sunday, 2:30 pm; Broken cauldron taproom & Brewery, 1012 W. church St.; free; 407335-4192; writersblockbookstore.com. Gary Michael Cappetta Gary Michael cappetta offers a revealing account of his romp through pro wrestling, bringing his lengthy announcing career to life. Sunday, 3 pm; Source of Athletics, 1468 N. Goldenrod Road; $25-$45; 732-610-7724. MudWalk Spooky 5K Walk or run through the haunted Spring Hammock Preserve. Enjoy a free pancake breakfast after the run; costumes are welcome. Saturday, 7 am; Seminole county Environmental Studies center, 2985 osprey trail, Longwood; $15-$35; 407-320-0467; foundationscps.org. Orlando City B vs. Tampa Bay Rowdies Soccer. thursday, 7:30 pm; orlando city Stadium, 655 W. church St.; $10; 1-855-675-2489; orlandocitysc.com. Orlando City vs. Columbus Crew Major League Soccer. Sunday, 3 pm; orlando city Stadium, 655 W. church St.; $31-$105; 855-675-2489; orlandocitysc.com. Orlando Magic vs. Cleveland Cavaliers NBA basketball. Friday, 7 pm; Amway center, 400 W. church St.; $14.25-$637.25; 800-745-3000; amwaycenter.com. Tee Off Towards a Cure Golf tournament benefiting the Parkinson Association of central Florida. Sunday, noon-6 pm; MetroWest country club, 2100 S. Hiawassee Road; $75-$300; 321-348-7223; parkinsoncf.org. n orlandoweekly.com
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“ P O LY WA N T S ”
B Y D A N S AVA G E
Are you looking for a new furry friend? Meet Peanut!
Peanut (A388896) is 4 years old and is looking for a new home. He was surrendered because his owners could no longer care for him. He is housebroken, leashtrained and crate-trained. His previous owner also said that he does well with other dogs. Peanut is ready for immediate adoption! For the month of October, come and participate in our “Pick Your Price Pumpkin Patch” adoption promotion. Fees will be reduced to $5, $10 or $15. Fees include sterilization, vaccinations and a microchip. Orange County Animal Services is located at 2769 Conroy Road in Orlando, Florida near the Mall at Millenia. The shelter is open 10 a.m. through 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 1 p.m. through 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information, please call 407-8363111 or visit ocnetpets.com.
I’m a 25-year-old woman currently in a poly relationship with a married man roughly 20 years my senior. This has by far been the best relationship I’ve ever had. However, something has me a bit on edge. We went on a trip with friends to a brewery with a great restaurant. It was an amazing place, and I’m sure his wife would enjoy it. He mentioned the place to her, and her response was NO, she didn’t want to go there because she didn’t want to have “sloppy seconds.” It made me feel dirty. Additionally, the way he brushed this off means this isn’t the first time. I don’t know if my feelings are just hurt or if it’s a reminder of my very low place in their hierarchy. I hesitate to bring this up, because when I have needs or concerns, they label me as difficult or needy. Should I do anything to address this or just continue to stay out of their business and go where I wish with my partner? Treated With Outrage I’m having a hard time reconciling these two statements, TWO: “This has by far been the best relationship I’ve ever had” and “when I have needs or concerns, they label me as difficult or needy.” I suppose it’s possible all your past relationships have been so bad that your best-relationship-ever bar is set tragically low. But taking a partner’s needs and concerns seriously is one of the hallmarks of a good relationship, to say nothing of a “best relationship ever.” That said … I don’t know you or how you are. It’s entirely possible that you share your needs and concerns in a way that comes across as – or actually is – needy and difficult. Our experience of relationships, like our experience of everything else, is subjective. One person’s reasonable expression of needs/concerns is another person’s emotionally manipulative drama. I would need to depose your boyfriend and his wife to make a determination and issue a ruling. That said … it’s a really bad sign that your boyfriend’s wife compared eating in a restaurant you visited with him to fucking a hole that someone else just fucked, i.e., “sloppy seconds.” It has me wondering whether your boyfriend’s wife is really into the poly thing. Some people are poly under duress (PUD), i.e., they agreed to open up a marriage or relationship not because it’s what they want, but because they were given an ultimatum: We’re open/poly or we’re over. In a PUD best-case scenario, the PUD partner sees that their fears were overblown, discovers that poly/open works for them, embraces openness/polyamory and is no longer a PUD. But PUDs who don’t come around (or haven’t come around yet) will engage in small acts of sabotage to signal their (perfectly understandable) unhappiness. They didn’t want to be open/poly in the first place and are determined to prove
that open/poly was a mistake and/or punish their ultimatum-issuing partner. The most common form of PUD sabotage? Making their primary partner’s secondary partner(s) feel uncomfortable and unwelcome. That said … as you (probably) know (but if you don’t, you’re about to find out), poly relationships have all kinds of (sometimes incredibly arbitrary but also incredibly important) rules. If one of their rules is “My wife doesn’t want to hear from or about my girlfriend,” then your restaurant recommendations are going to fall flat. Being poly means navigating rules (and sometimes asking to renegotiate those rules) and juggling multiple people’s feelings, needs and concerns. You have to show respect for their rules, TWO, as they are each other’s primary partners. But your boyfriend and his wife have to show respect for you, too. Secondary though you may be, your needs, concerns, feelings, etc., have to be taken into consideration. And if their rules make you feel disrespected, unvalued or too low on the hierarchical poly totem pole, you should dump them. My wife said she didn’t care who I slept with soon after we met. At the time, I didn’t want to sleep with anyone else. But we eventually became monogamish. After a couple of years of playing together with others in private and in clubs, she said she wanted to open our relationship. I got a girlfriend, had fun until the new relationship energy (NRE) wore off, and ended things. Then my wife got a great job on the other side of the state and I stayed behind to get our house into a sellable state. Right now, we see each other only on weekends. I also got a new girlfriend. The NRE wore off, but we still really like each other, and we’ve discussed being long-distance secondaries once the move is complete. Here’s the problem: Last night, my wife confessed to me that being in an open relationship was making her miserable. I told my wife that I would break up with my girlfriend immediately. My wife is the most important person in my life, and I don’t want to do anything to hurt her. But my wife told me not to break up with my girlfriend. I don’t want to string my girlfriend along and tell her everything is fine – but my wife, who doesn’t want to be poly anymore, is telling me not to break up with my girlfriend. What do I do? Dude Isn’t Content Knowing Priority Is Crushingly Sad
indeed, the most important person in your life and that you will prioritize her happiness even when she won’t. Or maybe she’s watched you acquire two girlfriends without landing a boyfriend of her own. But there’s a middle ground, DICKPICS: Tell your girlfriend what’s going on – she has a right to know – and put the relationship on hold. Get the house sold, get your ass to your wife, and keep talking until you figure out what is going to work for your wife going forward: completely closed, open but only to sexual adventures you two go on together, i.e., “playing together with others in private and in clubs,” or open with GFs (and BFs) allowed. Good luck. I don’t know if I’m poly or not. I mean, Jesus H. Christ, this has been so difficult. How do I know when to go back to monogamy? Treated With Outrage I don’t think you’re poly, POLY, because I don’t think anyone is poly. I also don’t think anyone is monogamous. Polyamory and monogamy aren’t sexual orientations, they’re relationship models. And if the polyamorous model is making you miserable, it might not be right for you. But you should ask yourself whether polyamory is making you miserable or if the people you’re doing polyamory with are making you miserable. People in awful monogamous relationships rarely blame monogamy for their woes – even when monogamy is a factor – but the stigma against nontraditional relationship models, to say nothing of sex-negativity, often leads people to blame polyamory for their misery when the cause isn’t the model, it’s the people.
On the Lovecast, comedian Amy Miller. Listen up at savagelovecast.com. mail@savagelove.net ITMFA.org
Your wife may want you to dump your girlfriend without having to feel responsible for your girlfriend’s broken heart, DICKPICS, so she tells you she’s miserable and doesn’t want to be poly anymore, and then tells you not to end things. Or maybe this is a test: Dumping a girlfriend you didn’t have to dump would signal to your wife that she is,
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Legal, Public Notices NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, EM.EY.AHY, LLC, of 519 Main St.. Windermere, FL 34786, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: The Nail Atelier at Spa Affair It is the intent of the undersigned to register “The Nail Atelier at Spa Affair” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 10/02/2017
NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale. 2007 NISSAN VIN# 1N4AL21E37C150703 2007 NISSAN VIN# 1N4AL21E07N406283 2002 MITSUBISHI VIN# 4A3AC44G62E025921 To be sold at auction at 8:00AM on October 31st, 2017, at 2500 N. Forsyth rd, Orlando Fl 32807. Around The Clock Towing inc.
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Legal, Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION IN RE: ESTATE OF KENNETH BROWN, Deceased. File No. 2017-CP- 001147-O/ 482017CP001147A001OX NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of Kenneth Brown, deceased, whose date of death was March 11, 2017, is pending in the Circuit Court for Orange County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 425 North Orange Avenue, Suite 340, Orlando, FL 32801. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION
OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is 10/4/17. Personal Representative: Carrie Brown, 9419 Leland Drive, Orlando, FL 32827 Attorney for Personal Representative: Kristine Callagy, Esquire of Bichler, Oliver, Longo, & Fox, PLLC, 541 S. Orlando Ave, Ste 310 Maitland, Florida 32751.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 CASE NO.: DP15-18 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: J.S. DOB: 08/23/2012 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Stacy Sanchez, Address Unknown A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea on Wednesday, November 8, 2017 at 9:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 18th day of September, 2017. This summon has been issued at the request of: Brittany Nesmith, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 109542, Senior Attorney for Florida Department of Children and Family. Brittany.nesmith@myflfamilies. com; CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT BY:/S/ DEPUTY CLERK (court seal).
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 OCTOBER 27TH, 2017@ 9:30am: Janis E. Selva-TV, Gamer Chair, Misc. Boxes, Bags and Totes, Jannette Pagan RodriguezTVs, Luggage, Misc. Boxes and Clothes, Ruben Alers-Luggage, Electronics, Furniture, Boxes and Bins, Julio Y. Zabala-Crib Set, Flat Screen TV, Kids Motorized Car, Kids Kitchen Set and Sofa, Valentina Milian-Bongos, Chairs, Mattress and Comforters, Llajayra Ruiz-Mirror, Table, Dog Crate and Boxes, Monica I. Longo-Sofa, Dresser, Misc. Bags and Boxes, Calisha Mills-Glass Table Top, Underbed Drawer and Boxes, Pedro A. Collado-Dressers, Misc. Boxes, Bags and Totes, Nicole D. Scorzelli-Lamps, Luggage, Misc. Bags and Boxes, Ruben Rosa-Guitar, Luggage, Dresser and Boxes, Denny King-Sofa, Box Spring and Stadium Chairs, Corey Adams-Skateboard, Dressers, Tables and Totes, Cecilia Cardenales-Mattress Set, Boxes and Totes, Pedro Santiago-Cabinets, Desk, Chairs and Doors, Carlos E. Negron-Couch, Luggage and Boxes, Angel L. Martinez-Kiddie Car, Totes and Bags, Eduardo Villasenor-Mirror, Shelf, Misc. Boxes and Totes, Jose Garcia-Weights, Printer, Microwave, Misc. Boxes and Bags, Ralph R. GundlachCDs, Baseball Cards, Boxes and Bags, Erica Long-Speakers, Shelf, Lamp, Misc. Totes, Boxes and Books, Anthony Gallo-Kids Toys, Mattress, Boxes and Books, Teresa Whitfield-Clothes, Misc. Totes, Bags and Boxes, Felix A. Tantao-Chairs, Table, Bags, Jocelyn Bonilla-Dresser, Disney Dolls(Frozen), Mattress, Table and Boxes, Theresa J. Wade-Dresser, Snow Skis and Boots, Artwork, Shelves, Vacuum, Clothes and Shoes, Many Boxes and Totes, Sally Nicholas-Fishing Rods and Equipment, Toys, Clothes, Bins and Boxes, Marcus JohnsonTable, Tires, Holiday Decorations, Boxes and Totes A-AAAKey Mini Storage 5285 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32839-2307 OCTOBER 27th @11:00am: Jose Rojas-End Table, Luggage, Bike Helmet, Misc. Bags and Tubs, Karinthia Edwards-Mattress Set, Dresser, Misc. Tubs, Table and Chairs, Kevin Boyd-Small Fridgette, Misc. Bags, Boxes Tubs and Totes, Elana Arnold-Boxes, Misc. Bags and Tub, Tayontae Banks-Wide Screen TV, Table, Queen Mattress Set, Misc. Tubs, Bags and Boxes, Paulema Augustin-TV, Queen Mattress, Luggage, Bed Headboard, Misc. Boxes and Bags, Luggage, Jovanni Ramirez-Futon Bed, Headboard, Boxes, Bed Frame, Toys and 2 Boxes, Gabriel SantosGenerator, 2 Tables, Lamps, Bags of Concrete, Misc. Bags,Tools and Buckets, Gregory Percy-Suitcases, Misc. Boxes and Books.
Legal, Public Notices 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 11/1/2017 1060 Amy Dorf 6005 Samanta Magalhaes 6007 Shantikwa Cotton 2072 Wendy Pierre 2034 Katrina Edwards 5011 Michael Drew 3065 Nicolas Cardona 4013 Tammy Hall 2008 Brenda Wright 3117 Eric Brinkley 3077 Andlove Gay 6048 Melissa Miller 3036 Robin Williams 1062 Nyrere Nembhard 5037 Courtney Oliver 2016 Lashaun Scott 6045 Ivon Joseph 2086 Jonathan Smith 8027Georgina Martinez 4008 James Ivory 6051 Allison Jackson 5032 Stevenson Victor Uhaul Ctr Orange Ave-3500 S Orange Ave-Orlando 11/1/2017 1062 Brian Margolis 1302 Tan Howard 2303 Rawn Haynes 1401 Krysta Goold 2014 Lauren Elizabeth Uhaul Ctr Baldwin Park- 4001 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 11/1/2017 D210 Michael Crispo B143-45 Jacquese Woodruff C200-01 William Rams C168 Christyna Mcbrayer B194 Roberto Martinez Cardona Uhaul Ctr Goldenrod-508 N Goldenrod Rd-Orlando 11/1/2017 440 Otis Ford 1415 Evelyn Figureoa 223 Crystal Santos 703 Mariano Rivera 510 Jonathan Hernandez 532 Neftali Perales Pena 726 Adam Gregory 632 Grace Senoga 634 Sherri Cox 515 Eduardo Lozada 1213 Victoria Herbin 430 Melissa Ragonese 410 Diniah Matthew Uhaul Ctr Alafaya-11815 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 11/1/2017 1504 Daniyel Rodriguez 1433 George Semidey 1429 Carlos Longmire 1225 Jermaine Adams 1522 Shawna Kay Barbagee.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 10/24/2017, at 10:00 a.m. at the following locations pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. Location: 4412 Allan St, Kissimmee, FL 34746: JA3AY26C91U050172 2001 MITSUBISHI 3VWGD81H6VM109070 1997 VOLKSWAGEN 4F4YR12C5XTM41063 1999 MAZDA 3MEHM08167R605539 2007 MERCURY 2HKRL18982H533694 2002 HONDA 1GHDX13E3YD271403 2000 OLDSMOBILE JH4KB16595C009652 2005 ACURA 3N1CB51DX1L472557 2001 NISSAN JT2AE04B4S0123586 1995 TOYOTA 19UYA1248VL024639 1997 ACURA Location: 9881 Recycle Center Rd, Orlando, FL 32824 JH4DC4450RS037717 1994 ACURA 3J57K5R168515 1975 OLDSMOBILE KL1TD666X6B673897 2006 CHEVROLET KNDJD733635052487 2003 KIA 1G1ZT54814F190690 2004 CHEVROLET KNDJC733165612407 2006 KIA. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that Mindful 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 times and locations: October 17th, 2017 3:30 p.m. at the Mindful Storage facility located at: 900 Cypress Pkwy. Kissimmee, Fl. 34759 (321) 732-6032 The personal goods stored therein by the following:#1142- House Holds, #1192-House Holds, #2064-House Holds, #2080-Clothes, #2104Furniture, #2110-House Holds, #2111-Furniture boxes, #2113-House Holds, #2127Furniture, #2149-House Holds, #2201-House Holds, #2216-House Holds, #C104-House Holds, #C112-House Holds, #C142Boxes, #D218-House Holds, #D245-House Holds, #D251-Arts, #E209-House Holds,#G203-House Holds, #G221-House Holds, #G229- House Holds, #H213House Holds, #H224-House Holds, #K208-House Holds, #M307-House Holds. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Mindful Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
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 OCTOBER 26TH, 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: 0101 - Castilho, Saara. 0107 - Fauntleroy, James, 0117 Latimer, Rashounthia, 0120 - Henderson, Caleb, 0132 - Washington, Jeremiah, 0133 - Roberts, Tyshara, 0136 - Birk, Christina, 0141 Brown, Deborah, 0142 - GRACIA, MAX, 0147 - Goins, Raymond, 0148 - Thomas, Latrissa, 0151 Akande, Adewale, 0158 - Charles, Kevin, 0206 - Buchana, Jo Ann, 0213 - Adams, Aneisha, 0214 - Santos, La Kesha, 0217 - Shockley, Danielle, 0242 - Thompson I I, Keith, 0248 - Anderson, Peggy, 0308 - Bennett, Antwanious, 0311 - Ousley, Baretta, 0312 - Shield Jr, Ken, 0314 - William, Willie, 0315 Brisbane, Harold, 0327 - Telsaint, Kenny, 0339 - Hines Jr., Llewellyn, 0349 - Fraser, Christopher, 0351 - Martinez, Migdalia, 0355 - Johnson, Randy, 0356 - Scarborough, Carrie, 0414 - White, Estella, 0431 - Verdejo, Fernando, 0434 - Kaba, Mark, 0435 - Williams, Edith, 0439 - Daquin, Jacquelin, 0511 - Collins, Tim, 0513 - Cameron, Noreen, 0519 - Melendez, Fernando, 0521 - Bower, Kymani, 0526 - Holmes jr, Harris, 0604 - Maragh, Courtney, 0610 - Northern, Eugene, 0621 - Bridley, Michael, 0628 - Greco, Stevan, 0711 - Knight, Mary, 0714 - Mcwhorter, Rodnelder, 0719 - Johnson, Takelia, 0728 - Williams, Tony, 0732 - Perry, Lakenya, 0806 - Longley, Chelsia, 0814 - Walthour, Gloria, 0820 - Pherai, Dian, 0822 - Davis, William, 0834 - Jordan, Glynn, 0838 - Tobin, Egypt, 0847 - Strouse, Ashley, 0902 - Smith, Toni, 0903 - Jackson, Santana, 0906 Mayfield, Dwight, 09112 - Joseph, Lucie, 09113 - Duffy, John, 0912 - Sansur, Lindsey, 09120 - Barreto, Katia, 09121 - Morrison, Shemela, 09125 - Dais, Julius, 09128 - Reid Jr, Berry, 0922 - Ballou, Jay, 0926 - Sublet, Glender, 0933 - Mcknight, Venus, 0938 - Brown, Ahyanna, 0946 - Herrera, Gabriel, 0949 - Mitchell, Roger, 0955 - Butler, Cordice, 0958 - Rivera Fernandez, Aristides, 0964 - Bryant, Tamiko, 0965 - Russell, Kimberly, 0973 - Bouchaib, Elwady, 0975 - Robinson, Reginald, 0981 - Wilson, Brandee, 0985 - Casel, Auguste, 0988 - Brooks, Vernesheya, 0995 - Vega, Jenmarie, 1004 - Dodds,
Jeffrey, 1008 - Yarber, Kelly, 1019 - Arguelles Tirado, Erline, 1024 Nonsant, Mark, 1029 - Hill, Kelly, 1032 - Lopez, Nieves Myra, 1040 - Day, Kayla, 1041 - River Garcia, Chailyne, 1048 - Standifer, Lester, 1052 - Barnes Jr, Horace, 1059 - Yannetti, Nicole, 1061 - Walker, Angellia, 1062 - Zayas, Jerry, 1063 - Cadely, Dunel, 1086 - Willys, Dacius, 1103 - Gregory, Jacinth, 1116 - Mcneil, Queenesther, 1117 - Conley, Clifford, 1123 - Alba, Zulay, 1132 - Wheeler, Brian, 1134 - Hart, Shirley, 1136 - Taylor, Martin, 1148 - Jack, Esther, 1150 Hanson, Kimberly, 1155 - Collins, Andrea, 1161 - Caldwell, Johnnie, 1170 - Padilla Colon, Angel, 1173 - Hamby, Lucas, 1186 - Louijuste, Louivens, 1216 - Perez, Monica, 1217 - Rochelien, Rosette, 1221 - Caldwell, Denitra, 1222 - Dean, Terry, 1233 - Fedd, Tawanda, 1236 - Duverceau, Yves, 1242 - Alfonso, Julia, 1243 - Butler, Samuel, 1249 - Bracey, Phillippa, 1251 - Mcwhorter, Toni, 1253 - Felix, Ebony, 1255 - Baptiste, Rosita, 1267 - Wilson, Marian, 1268 - Blue, Shiwan, 1273 - Martin, Peter, 1275 - Williams, Rickeya, 1276 - Martinez, Cherry, 1313 - Fisher, Wayne, 1319 - Sands, Carlos, 1321 - Ortiz, Ramon, 1322 - Banks, Dondelle, 1323 - Simmons, Lavon, 1331 Hodges, William, 1362 - Brevard, Wakemah, 1364 - Jackson, John, 1368 - Farmer, Ronald, 1369 Silva, Vilma 25454 - 235 E Oak Ridge Road, Orlando, FL, 32809AT 10:30AM-, A103 - BOBO, MARJEAN, A116 - NADEGE, LAMOUR, A120 - ROSADO, ERVING, A121 - COLON, ANGELICA, A125 - HENRY, SANDRA, A131 - NEGRON, GIOVANNY, A136 - MORALES, MARCIA, A137 - WILLIAMS, SANDFORD, A138 - BULLOCK, GARY, A144 - BRYAN, PEARL, A150 - SPENCE, CARL, A156 - OLIVERAS, CRYSTAL, A157 - SILLS, KARI, B205 - CALDERON, JOSE, B210 - MARTINEZ, ERICA, B218 - KENNEDY, JAMES, B243 - MCCAULEY, SEAN, D404 - MUNOZ, JOSE A, D406 - CINEUS, THERESA, D416 - BRADSHAW, DAVID, D423 NARVAEZ, RUBYMAR, E506 - REGIS, FELIX, E512 - OCEAN, REED, E515 - OUAZANI, JALIL, E529 - HYLTON, CANDACE, E539 - CADET, MARIE, E547 - ESQUILIN, DIANA, F609 - GARCIA, MIGUEL, F612 - ABOAGYE, SAMUEL, F615 - BENNETT, DENISE, F630 - ECHEVARRIA, SALLY, F632 - JONES, COTESHIA, F635 - WILBON, SHAQUILLE, F636 - MARCELIN, IMMACULEE, G702 - ZACHARYIBRAHIM, HARRIETTE, G707 - ANZZIANI, MARGARET, G713 MAYO, SHAWN, G716 - COOLEY, LIZA, G724 - ALLEN, MICHELE, G734 - MATTA, CARLOS, H807 - ETIENNE, KENIA, H817 - OLMEDA, JERAM, H824 - MATTIS, JOSELYNN, H836 - OPTIMAL SOLUTIONS, LLC, H840 MAINA, MARY SAMANTHA, I907 - HERNANDEZ, JOHANNY, I912 - MICHEL, CHERLYNE, I914 - PETERSON, LACHADA, I919 - DIEUVEUIL, ANNA, I923 - ROSAMBERT, JEAN,
I924 - LALANNE, VEDETTE, I927 - SANTONINO, NIKADENA, J005 - SANTANA, IRENE, J009 MUNIZ, FELIX, J010 - HILARIO, ELVIN, J012 - AYALA, JOSHUA, J013 - GUIDRY, CHARLES, J021 - ANGELES, JOHN, J033 MUNOZ, JOSE A, J034 - SHAFEI, NOUR, J037 - JANICKE, DINA, J038 - CHERI, GOSETTE, K101 - GERMAN CABRAL, LIZMARIE, K109 - GIPSON, JAMES, K110 - DORSEY, ERRICK, K113 - NARVAEZ, RUDY, K114 - MITCHEL, SHAVETTA, K120 - SMITH, LABRINA, K121 - ROBINSON, MECELL, K138 - LEBRUNO, MICHAEL, L221 - SHAW, WILLIAM, L223 - MARGESON, JO, L224 - ROMERO, SOLAMAN, N401 - COLEMAN, BRITTANY, N403 - PACHECO, MIRIAM, N404 - CANDELARIO, JONATHAN, N405 - FONSECA-GARCIA, HECTOR, N407 - MUNOZ, DANIEL, O515 - WRIGHT, SHAYLA, P021 - PRYCE, GLENN, P046 - LAURENT, MATHEUS, P046VENANT, CLAUDY 20711 - 1801 W Oakridge Rd Orlando, FL 32809 AT- 11:30AM: B012 - Smith, Eric, B025 - Candelario, Menona, B028 - Loyd, Pauline, B041 - Oliver, Barbara, C001 - Harkness, Sean, C015 Rodriguez, Rene, C018 - Reese, Destiny, C024 - Lee-Williams, Precious, C031 - Barner, Tonia, D008 - Torres, Miguel, D009 King, Ye’Mis, D015 - St fleur, Herica, D016 - Bilakanti, Srini, D022 - Mendoza, Stalin, D025 Jean-Louis, Wilda, D031 - Greene, Sherman, D037 - Gonzalez, Michelle, D044 - Young, Anthony, D047 - Gogin, Augusto, D050 - Casas, Victor, D051 - Pineda, Juan, D058 - Thompson, Stanley, D068 - Brown, Nicole, E007 Ortiz, Yamary, E030 - Collins, Sharanda, E032 - Lavache, Gina, E038 - Townsend, Jeffery, F023 - porrata, emory, F028 - Jones, Patricia, G003 - Noel, Jean, G008 - Matthews, Tonya, G018 Tovar, Semei, G033 - Mcclatchey, Deloris, H002 - Louissaint, Marie, H005 - Sneed, Audrey, H013 - Ryan, John, H015 - Meuse, Carolyn, H025 - Washington, Raniskia, H027 - Ortega, Kiaraly, H028 - Rivera, Felisha, H029 Rengel, Eriel, H042 - Cameron, Levene, J005 - Garcia, Sarah, J009 - Brewer, Daquan, J016 - Adorno, Louis, J019 - CHRISTIAN, BRANDON, J032 - Brown, Tanzy, J035 - Adams, Danny, J039 - Caldeyant, Christella, J051 - Cassamajor, Smith, J053 - Welch, Zahra, J056 - Smith, Damien, J062 - Isaac, Michael, J063 - Deverney, Vivian, J079 - Hart, Marlon, J087 - Devletian, Ariel, J088 - FOSTER, KATHY, J090 - Roman Borrero, Javier, J091 - Johnson, Kenya, J094 - Ramon, Jose, J102 Wright, Shanice, J112 - Pinnock, Carlington, J116 - kanarick, yvette, J118 - Danza, Michelle, J124 - Siplin, Janarus, J138 - Reese, Calvin, J156 - Graf, Elizabeth, J158 - Weidman, Tammi, J160 - Rivera, Sonia, K011 - Crispin, Akeem, K020 - Carter, Kathryn, K036 - Ellis, Jadae, K046 - Elie, Michael, K048 - Reed, Tamika, K053 - Turner, Nina, K082 - Lingard, Jaqueline,
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K093 - Gomez, Simona, K104 brennan, larissa, K108 - rodriguez, oscar, K109 - Danza, Michelle, P002 - Lopez, Loraine 24303- 1313 45th Street, Orlando, FL 32839-AT 12:30PM: A105 - Fairley, Arantes, A107 Romelus, Dieujuste, A111 - Vick, Rahshonda, A113 - Felix, Eupene, A121 - Laury, Sainnelhomme, A123 - STANLEY, LAWANDA, A126 - Brummitt, Valishia, A131 Smith, Dyemond, A135 - Moore, Betty, A136 - Perez, Stanley, A193 - Simpson, Gail, A195 - Cheri, Angie, B201 - Parker, Rick, B202 - joseph, Darly, B204 - Morgan, Virginia, B205 - Simon, Kyle, B212 - Bernard, Jonathan, B215 - Esquilin, Cynthia, B218 - Seabrook, Faith, B229 - Smith, Virgil, B230 - Monroe, Cy, B235 - Ceraphin, Fritznel, B237 - Young, Tashiekka, B238 - Dabney, Karen, B241 Baker, Carl, B256 - Robinson, Shaterious, B260 - Louis, Monet, B280 - Thorne, Joseph, B281 Mcknight, James, C302 - Roman, Evangelina, C305 - Owens, Lee, C307 - Rene, Nicole, C310 - Cruz, Sandra, C311 - Kaylor, Johnny, C317 - Williams, Zarnica, C324 - Henderson, Tony, C325 Echavarria, Brenda, C328 - Pierre, Emmanuael, C329 - Lawrence, Khanisha, C331 - Colon, Erik, C333 - Jordan, Jennay, C381 - Fequiere, Stephanie, D403 - Neely, Donna, D409 - Woodson, Lesine, D417 - Washington, Teresa, D429 - Woods, Reese, D435 - Alberto, Francisca, D436 - Patterson, Harry, D438 - Thompson, Trenton, E511 - Reed, Abkeisha, E520 Williams, Kiya, E525 - Warren, Eddie, E526 - Haynes, Kawanda, E531 - Hamlet, Terrance, E534 - Jeune, Prophete, E547 - Floyd, Leroy, E549 - Arancio, Sonia, E572 - Garcia Diaz, Christian, F624 - Sanders, Laquanda, F630 - Simon, Karen Ingrid, F636 Sneed, mary, F640 - Naffi, Samia, G710 - Fraser, Christopher, G722 Richardson, Michael, H804 - Miller, Samson, H822 - Perez, Juan, H828 - Alexander, Deborah, H834 - Sadikov, Ildar, H846 - Hamilton, Terrence, H850 - Hairston, Joseph, J900 - Moya, Olga, J901 - Honore, Nicole, J904 - Bellamy, Leonard, J905 - Mera, Charlyne.
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Legal, Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 7/DAWSON CASE NO.: DP14-192 In the Interest of: S.C., DOB is 07/11/2012, Minor Child. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF TPR ADVISORY HEARING, STATE OF FLORIDA TO:Travis Daniel Miller, Address Unknown WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren). You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Daniel P. Dawson, on Thursday, November 9, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. 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. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 26th day of September, 2017. This summons has been issued at the request of: Kim Crag-Chaderton, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 0433871, Children’s Legal Services State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 882 S. Kirkman Road, Ste 200, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 563-2380, Kim. crag-chaderton@myflfamilies. com. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, By /s/ Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal).
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 07 CASE NO.:DP14-502 IN THE INTEREST OF: K.T. DOB: 06/06/2016, MINOR CHILD. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: TALISHA THOMAS, Address Unknown WHEREAS a Petition for Termina-
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tion of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached, you are hereby commanded to appear before the Honorable Judge Daniel P. Dawson on November 13, 2017 at 11:00 a.m.,, at Thomas S. Kirk Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806 for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. 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. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 22nd day of September, 2017. This summons has been issued at the request of: Jennifer Shepard, Esquire FBN: 93027, Attorney for the State of Florida, Children’s Legal Services, 400 West Robinson Street, Suite N211, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 317-7643-Telephone, (407) 317-7126-Fax jennifer.shepard@ myflfamilies.com. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Rochelle Marrero, Deputy Clerk (Court Seal).
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 CASE NO.: DP16-257 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: J. V. DOB: 12/02/2006 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Shannon Duval, Address Unknown A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea on Monday, November 20, 2017 at 9:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT IF YOU
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FAIL TO APPEAR WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 28th day of September, 2017. This summon has been issued at the request of: Brittany Nesmith, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 109542, Senior Attorney for Florida Department of Children and Family. Brittany.nesmith@myflfamilies. com; CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT BY:/S/ DEPUTY CLERK (court seal).
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA PINE HILLS SERVICE CENTER, JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/DAWSON CASE NO.: DP17-39 In the Interest of:C.B, DOB: 01/23/2004, Minor Child. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Lauren Zayas (mother) 235 Osceola Street Clermont, Florida 34711 WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Daniel P. Dawson, on Monday, November 6, 2017, at 11:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION 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. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 2nd day of October, 2017. This summons has been issued at the request of: Audrea Beth Ashcraft, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 101358, Children’s Legal Services, State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 882 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, Florida 32811, (407) 563-2380, audrea. ashcraft@myflfamilies.com, CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk. (Court Seal).
THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03/Shea/Pine Hills CASE NUMBER: DP17 - 77 IN THE INTEREST OF: A.B. male child, DOB: 02/18/2002 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA TO: MOLLY RIVER-BATISTA , ADDRESS UNKNOWN WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea on 23rd day of October 23, 2017 at 9:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS TPR ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THESE CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) 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. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 14th day of September, 2017. This summons has been issued at the request of: Layali Salem, Esq., Florida Bar #0111746, State of Florida, Children’ Legal Services, 882 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32811, 407/563-2380 Layali.salem@myflfamilies.com. By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). 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: 2011 Honda VIN# 3CZRE3H32BG700703 2003 Volkswagen VIN# WVWRH63B83P256897 2009 Honda VIN# 2HGFG12869H535150 1997 Honda VIN# 1HGEJ6227VL030852 2005 Dodge VIN# 1B3ES56C05D110398 1995 Toyota VIN# 2T1AE04B0SC072780 2002 Honda VIN# 1HGES15532L001320 2000 Saturn VIN# 1G8JW52RXYY646844 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on October 25, 2017, 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC
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, 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, October 25, 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- storage-units/ for more info. Personal Mini Storage Edgewater-6325 Edgewater Dr Orlando, FL 32810-at 11:30 am: 0203 Andrew Loch Holm, 0523 Sarah Elizabeth Bowman, 0631 Sharenee Walker, 0632 Jaime A Lezcano Bedoya, 0711 Kimberly Ann Hudson, 0743 John Lasane Jr, 0833 Laquita Maria Langley, 0851 Shavonda Latrice Beauford, 0956 Joeshian Mujica Rossy, 1011 Isaiah R Boyd, 1543 Brittany Beverly Rebello, 1739 Frederick Lee Dinkins, 1740 Danielle Cheree Jones Personal Mini Storage Forest City Rd-6550 Forest City Rd Orlando, FL 32810-at 12:00 pm: 1002 Austine Oluwasegun Stephen, 6020 Trista Shavonna Jackson, 5061 Tivia Taquishea Janay Hill, 3312 Teresa Ann Johnson, 7007 Lucas Paul McGrew, 3182 Patricia Ellen Pearlman, 1039 Derrick James Robinson, 2055 John Weston Hicks Jr, 3130 Akeima Kristina Young, 4119 Paul Richard Paxson Jr, 1010 Shawn Nicholas Anderson, 1011 Candis Martin, 4117 Gloria Colon, 4097 Jennifer Pinard Cameron, 1072 Tony Ray Ford, 1001 Giovanni Andujar Cruz, 1102 Jeremy Dejuan Seay, 3316 Zakiya Laurent, 4120 Ciara Simmons, 2034 Angelique Magnolia Terrell, 3297 Tiffaney Alyha Langhorn, 3181 Albert Bonner, 1125 Cecile Jones, 1028 Andy Barrett. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property under The Florida Self Storage Facility Act Statutes (Section 83.801-83.809). The undersigned will sell at public sale by competitive bidding on, Thursday, October 26th, 2017 at 10:00 AM, on lockerfox.com said property has been stored and which are located at: iStorage, 3400 Forsyth Rd, Winter Park FL 32792 Name, Unit #, Contents: Angel Castaneda & Carlos Porrata 214 Jet Ski Seat, Random Parts, Christmas Lights Jeremiah Drummer 476 Dumbbell Weights, Crock Pot, Tool Belt, Weight Bench Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase by cash only. All purchased items are sold as is, where is, and must be removed at the time of the sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between owner and obligated party. Dated this 11th and 18th day of October, 2017.
Legal, Public Notices 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 OCTOBER 27TH, 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. 08714- 8149 Aircenter Court, Orlando, FL 32809-7414 AT9:30AM- 1004 - Oburn, Dennis, 1128 - Parker, Dora, 1152 - Culver, Anthony, 1155 - Guzman, Ivonne, 1156 - O`Quinn, Chelsea, 1166 O’Quinn, Chelsea, 1175 - Heslin, Charlotte, 2005 - Barton, Billy, 2016 - Claudio, Catheryne D, 2025 - Bath & Body Works, 2031 - Perez, Maria, 2106 - Torres, Geomares, 2115 - Batista, Jose, 2119 - Heidkamp, Christopher, 2120 - Bowen, Michael, 2136 - heifetz, avee, 2139 - Delgado, Luis, 2163 - Neville, Darla, 2170 - Morales, Jonathan, 2190 - Rabassi, Rick, 2198 - Bannister, Brenique, 2214 - Okamoto, Michael, 2215 Freeland, Debbie, 2216 - Mackey, Gregory, 2268 - Dilmore, Sara, 3005 - Carrabbas Restaurant, 3012 - zigler, eugene lee, 3020 Witt, Tammy, 3030 - Happy Floors, 3047 - winslow, Jessica, 3055 - Black, Bhrett, 3058 - Watkins, Timothy, 3072 - Rodriguez, Maricarmen, 4026 - Carrabbas Restraunt, 4043 - Hagness, Sheri, 4050 - Mendez, Luis, 4065 - JNS PROFESSIONAL FLOORING INC, 6010 - Ross, Teresa, 6013 Welch, Andre, 6016 - Rivera Ortiz, Shelly, 6102 - Rosado, Jose, 6114 - Acree, Christina, 6121 - Sorrell, Miriam, 7209 - Rogers, Adrain 08726- 4801 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL, 32822-2316 AT09:45AM- 0102 - Afflick, Iona, 0112 - Melton, Donnie, 0118 Hurlburt, Sebron, 0131 - Lyons, Brent, 0141 - Cordero, Josephine, 0142 - Duclos, Nadeige, 0148 - Abubakar, Abubakar, 0150 - Larribeau, Annelle, 0151 - CLEVELAND, MELANIE, 0180 - Stevens Jr., James S., 0186 - Jordan, Tahler, 0216 - sanchez, felix, 0221 - Matos, Lisette, 0222 - Escobar, John, 0240 - Oliver, Natasha, 0245 - Garces, Luis, 0253 - Acevedo, Luis, 0260 - Kinard, Alyson, 0265 - Marsh, Glendell, 2003 - Ysabel, Ramon, 2011 - Teague, Joseph, 2012 - Vega, John, 2017 - Lebron, Luis, 2026 - Williams, Barbara, 3009 - Hatoum, Allam, 3021 Weller, William, 3033 - Pomales, Rosa, 3039 - Pryor, Ariel, 3074
- Kuhn, Donna, 4003 - Williams, Barbara, 4011 - Lamrani, Zohra J, 4018 - Prescott, Rahman, 4019 - Acevedo, Victor, 5001 - Vera, Ysaac, 5004 - Becerra, Euriel, 6005 - McPhee, Marcia, 6019 Turpin, Shannone, 6023 - Taylor, Taronda, 6027 - Ford, Shawn, 7008 - Ewen, Monica, 7013 Quiles, Jessica, 7024 - Rosa, Eduardo, 7027 - Dyer, Shankara, 7043 - Gulbronson, Ashley, 7053 Joseph, Macdarlie, 7060 - Walker, Benjamin, 7062 - Winkle, Tracy, 7072 - Flores Santiago, Adalberto, 7086 - Rivera, Lourdes, 7087 Lind, Katherine, 7097 - Roman, Carlos, 7100 - Stillwell, Kealin, 7129 - Booth, Zachary, 7135 Rivera Santiago, Julia Enid, 7149 - Rodriguez, Diana, 7150 - Green, Thaddeus, 7156 - Dan Casto Wallcovering, 8019 - potts, jennifer, 8029 - Butler, Victor, 8036 - Montijo, Teresa, 8092 - Irizarry, Chris, 8102 - Avalo, Jose, 8104 - Bohec, Katia, 8123 - Sanchez, Felix, 8150 - Oliver, Marilyn, 8166 - McPhee, Marcia, 8167 - Hart, Roger, 9008 - Skywb Networks Inc and E Malcom Field, 9017 - Beecham, Joshua, 9027 - Sanchez, Francisco, 9028- Sanchez, Francisdo 28084- 2275 S. Semoran Blvd. Orlando FL 32822 at 10:00AM: A101 - Whipple, Gregory, A106 Wynecoop, Alicia, A108 - Jeffries, Donald, A110 - Slocki, Ashley, A123 - Wahl, Sarah, A135 - Williams, Lynette, B105 - Viering, Christine, B108 - Maholick, Johmig, B118 - Wellesley, Brandon, B119 - Suter, Chrissy, B145 - Mole, Frances, B152 - Smith, Marisha, B155 - Seraphin, Jesse, B156 - Munoz, Patricia, B157 - Elorre, Natalie, B163 - Perez, Joel, B170 - Parker, William, B177 - Sanchez Rivera, Lyanne, B185 - Leonard, Gwendoline, B200 - Guzman, Marvin, B201 Flanagan, Christy, B205 - Hidalgo, Renee, B208 - O’Donnell, Mary, B223 - Rojas, Jeny, B224 - Conley, Christopher, B230 - Edwards, Darryl, C103 - Robles, Ebony, C110 Diaz, Christopher, C111 - Morales, Olga, C119 - Maldonado, Nayda, C136 - Brevil, Natasha, C137 - Samaroo, Winston, C144 - Gilchrist, Sheronne, C153 - Ranson, Clark, C154 - Benavides, Brizaida, C155 - Ogden, Kevin, C162 - Phillips, Renee, C189 - Barry, Danielle, C195D - Martinez, Tricia, C195G Thomas, Terrell, C195I - Cesareo, Samantha, C199B - Wills, Brenda, C199D - Pierre, Ricardo, C199E - allen, charles, C200 - White, Ashley, C207 - Brown, Chris, C211 - Aguero, Anelsy, C211A - Figueroa, Francisco, C211E Walker, Nifisha, C212A - Foreman, Monica, C212C - Lopez, Maria, C230F - Williams, Taylor, C230H Carlisle, Kelly 20179- 903 S. Semoran Blvd. Orlando FL, 32807 at 10:30AM: B001 - Lozado, Susana, B023 Faraldo, Jessica, B031 - Vega, John, B032 - Oquendo, Elizabeth, B038 - Ruiz, Edgar, B043 - Boutot, Amanda, C002 - lawrence, jabina, C012 - Comcepcion, Samuel, C015 - TEJADA, MARITZA, C027 - Hardy Jr, Boice, C028 - Prescott, Anwar, C033 - Cruz, Rosemarie, C050 - Locke, Brian, C054 - Lewis,
Kelly, C076 - Quiles, Jeamy, C079 - Taft, Andre, D010 - Genelle, Maria Casandra, D013 - Wagner, Tonya, D014 - Correa, Brenda, D019 - Nobles, Cristopher, D027 - Conway, Leon, D049 - Torres, Pedro, D057 - Romero, Ramona, D059 - Lewis, Tomise, D065 Medina, Alfred, D070 - Valdez, Jerryaliz, D076 - Cabrera, Christine, D083 - Black, Austin, D092 - Collazo, Awilda, D101 - Nesbitt, Sharon, D106 -Brandenburg, Dylan, D107 - Cordova, Amilcar, D114 ruiz, christopher L, D117 - Morales, Jennyfer, D120 - Newlan, Cynthia, D123 - betancur, matthew, D154 - Mann, Ted, D161 - Perrone, Danna, D163 - Rodriguez, Krystian, D166 - Cruzada, Joel, D182 - Chaisson, Michelle, D183 - Kipp, Ronald, D185 - Cabrea, Madelyn, D187 - Pearse, Jason, D197 - Barriga, Margarita, D203 - Benjamin, Danny, D209 - Jackson, Justen, D213 - Fariello, Jason, D219 Mercer, Brittany, D227 - Spruell, Shelley, D228 - Slayton, Victoria, D230 - Zapata, Osman, D231 Stokes, Monica, D233 - Russell, Kraig, E004 - Haylett, Richard, E015 - Reed, Paul, E019 - Rivera, Christian, E020 - Norman, Nora, E024 - Strader, Travis, E030 Welker, Bonnie, E037 - Green, Tiffany, E042 - AGOSTO, LILLIAN, E045 - Arroyo, Pauline, E057 Nieves, Moises, E058 - Perez, Yomarie, E069 - Correa, Estefani, E082 - Mcrae, Channing, E086 Rodriguez, Rhina, E094 - Hagy, Susan, E101 - Bonilla, Victor, E108 - Burgos, Alberto 25850- 2525 E. Michigan St, Orlando FL 32806 11:30AM: 1013 - Ford, Kevin, 1027 - Melendez, Wanda, 1029 - Engman, Yvonne, 2021 - Maldonado, Marisol, 2029 - Rodas, Iris, 2032 - Lill, Kristin, 3017 - Francis, Aaron, 4002 O’loughlin, Daishia, 4011 - Smith, Benjamin, 4033 - Zeek, Jason, 4035 - Haywood, Summer, 4037 - Atkinson, Jon, 5049 - Musgrave, Shannon, 5053 - Hinson, Christina, 5071 - Katta MD, Thomas, 5415 - Henkels Jr, Peter, 5419 - Davis, Jaime, 6105 - Sharkey, Thomas, 6219 - Bohanna, Gwen, 6312 - Richarde, Samuel, 6313 - King, Stephen, 6324 - Bizzelle, Ashleigh, 6335 - King, Kita, 6406 C/O Janet Bennett, Sodexo, 6432 - Mitchell, Tiffany, 6449 - Nerette, Jean Emmanuel, 6502 - BJanes, Beth, 6522 - Wiles, Brooke, 6605 - Slomba, Scott, 6614 - Downtown Arts District, 6620 - Diaz, Francesca.
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Employment CREATE HOLIDAY MAGIC!™ @ Gaylord Palms CHP PHOTO TEAM is now hiring, No Exp Req. Become a GUEST EXPERIENCE SPECIALIST. Seeking Friendly Enthusiastic Team Players. $10/hr, PT, 16+ Facebook.com/CHPPhotoTeam
Project Manager - Responsible for the daily operations of the job & management of all workers & subconstractors for projects involving emergency restoration services for property damaged by water, fire, storms, smoke & mold, etc. Ensure that the job is delivered on time, on budget, & to required quality standards within agreed specifications. Responsible for the job from start to finish. 2 yrs prior exp in job duties required. Bachelor’s degree in Civil Engineering, or its equivalent, required. Resumes only to Construemax Corp., 325 N. Orange Blossom Tr., Orlando, FL 32805. Attn: Ms. Moore.
Sr. Information Analyst sought by Walt Disney Attractions Technology LLC. in Orlando, FL. to manage, plan and implement IT projects. 5 years of information analysis, data warehouse develpmnt, IT or rel. exp. incl. IBM Infosphere DataStage admin.; queries & stored procedures for Teradata and Oracle data warehouses and data marts. Send resume to: Walt Disney Attractions Technology LLC., Attn: I. Kugler, Job ID#463203-17, PO BOX 6992, Burbank, CA 91510-6992.
Pharmacy Technician Westminster Services 6280370 Front Office Supervisor Embassy Suites Orlando - Lake Buena Vista South 6280368 Lincesed Sales Agent - Direct Sales Diamond Resorts International 6280367 Licensing Adminstrative Assistant TeleTech 6280133 Administrative Assistant - HR Merlin Entertainments 6280131 Streets & Stormwater Superintendent City of Casselberry 6280134 Crew Leader - Parking City of Orlando 6280124
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Vacation Sales Advisor (English & Spanish Required) Tourico Holidays Inc. 6280113 Financial Analyst Universal Orlando 6280107 Supervisor Fire Safety Universal Orlando 6279987 Culinary Cook 1 Pastry/Bakery Walt Disney World Resort 6278606 Admissions Guide - Online Full Sail University 6277977 Copywriter Full Sail University 6279581 Pest Control Operator Walt Disney World Resort 6276230 Inventory Dispatch Coordinator Give Kids The World 6278652 Medical Assistant - Certified Women’s Care Florida 6275020
Host The BOATHOUSE 6280256 Accountant Orange County Clerk of Courts 6280158 Golf Cart Attendant Reunion Resort & Club, A Salamander Golf & Spa Resort 6280157 Proposal Analyst I ProActive Technologies Inc. 6275449 Medical Assistant - Oviedo Orlando Health Physician Associates 6280062 Sales Development Representative Fattmerchant 6279187 Motor Coach Mechanic Mears Transportation 6280102 Facilities Support Specialist Rifle Paper Co. 6279638 Financial Literacy Outreach Specialist Seminole State College of Florida 6279552
Custodian - Titusville YMCA of Central Florida 6280344
Technical Supervisor Call Center Operations Spectrum / Charter Communications 6280091
Child Development Staff - Oviedo YMCA of Central Florida 6280342
Advertising Sales - Winter Haven, FL Welcome Wagon 6280085
Crew Driver Mister Car Wash 6280327
Customer Service Representative Vistana Signature Experiences 6278165
Account Manager - Sales US Health Advisors 6280266 Sales Specialist Holler Classic Automotive Group 6280277
Technical Support Engineer Nautique Boat Company 6279984
Make $4500 GIVE THE GIFT OF LIFE! Healthy women aged 21-30 Easy 3 step process: 1. Application 2. Screening 3. Treatment $4500 compensation upon completed cycle All visits done in one easy location Donors have the potential opportunity for complimentary egg freezing/preservation
407.603.7551 • IVFORLANDO.COM •
@DONOREGGTEAM orlandoweekly.com
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