Orlando Weekly October 16, 2019

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com


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OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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FREE | OCT. 16-22, 2019

Florida Group Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor in Chief Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Music Editor Matthew Moyer Digital Content Editor Dave Plotkin Calendar and Film Editor Thaddeus McCollum Contributors Peg Aloi, Rob Bartlett, Jen Cray, Jason Ferguson, Maisie Haney, Liv Jonse, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Seth Kubersky, Bao Le-Huu, Anthony Mauss, Cameron Meier, Richard Reep, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Madeleine Scott, Nicolette Shurba Editorial Interns Sarah Jennifer Hardin, Wavanie Henry, Ross Nobles

Advertising Director of Sales Jeff Kruse Senior Multimedia Account Execs Dan Winkler, Matt Whiting Multimedia Account Exec Scotty Spar Digital Media & Event Sponsorship Tanna Latham Classified and Legal Rep Jerrica Schwartz Sales Department Administrator Rachel Gold Marketing and Events Senior Marketing and Events Manager Jessica Pawli Events & Promotions Manager Miranda Hodge Creative Services Art Director Melissa McHenry Production Manager Daniel Rodriguez Graphic Designer Justin “SKIP” Skipper

Cover design by Melissa McHenry

Business Director of Operations Hollie Mahadeo Business Specialist Allysha Willison Circulation Circulation Manager Collin Modeste Euclid Media Group Chief Executive Officer Andrew Zelman Chief Operating Officers Chris Keating, Michael Wagner VP of Digital Services Stacy Volhein Director of Digital Strategy Colin Wolf Regional Digital Director Fran DiCarlo Senior Marketing and Events Director Cassandra Yardeni Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon Controller Kristy Dotson euclidmediagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, vmgadvertising.com Orlando Weekly Inc. 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, Florida 32801 orlandoweekly.com Phone 407-377-0400 Fax 407-377-0420 Orlando Weekly is published every week by Euclid Media Group Orlando Distribution Orlando Weekly is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Copyright notice: The entire contents of Orlando Weekly are copyright 2019 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: Six-month domestic subscriptions may be purchased for $150; one-year subscriptions for $240. Periodical Postage Pending at Orlando, FL POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Orlando Weekly, 16 W. Pine St., Orlando, FL 32801.

NEWS + FEATURES

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

9 ICYMI

23 Arabian bites

13 Rich man, poor man

23 Tip Jar

Nosy-neighbor syndrome is one thing, but adding armed police to the mix could be a recipe for disaster

Cinema-oriented events to go see this week

31 On Screens in Orlando Movies playing this week: Lucy in the Sky, Zombieland: Double Tap and more

MUSIC 33 Doo-wop thou wilt Satanic doo-wop duo Twin Temple dance with the devil

Dark Horizon comes here from California equipped with something that might help it succeed where others did not: a proven track record

Central Florida has the lowest median income of any major metro in the U.S., but the FRLA plays rhetorical games and continues to dodge responsibility

14 Ding dong snitch

29 Film Listings

Immerse 2019 takes over downtown Orlando with creative expression this weekend

FOOD + DRINK

Cheap work makes the dream work for affluent elderly in the Villages

Dolemite Is My Name launches Eddie Murphy back into the public eye

19 Metropolitan mashup

11 Informed Dissent

13 ‘Disgusting, cold-hearted and insulting’

29 Do call it a comeback

CULTURE 21 Live Active Cultures

Trump, like all authoritarians, feels the rule of law exists to further his interests and can be ignored when it restrains him

FILM

23 ARTS +

Orlando is a great place for landlords, the Fulwider story just keeps getting messier, Mennello Museum to more than triple in size, and other news you may have missed last week

33 Picks This Week Great live music rattles Orlando every night of the week

35 This Little Underground Melrose in the Mix rolls out incredible upcoming lineup; B Boys make Florida debut; Clang! and Jeremy & the Clones add to the list of notable Florida bands

CALENDAR

The Saudi and Saudi-style Indonesian fare of World Magic Restaurant lends another layer of diversity to our dining scene

36 Selections 38 The Week 39 Down the Road

Chicago hot dog joint Portillo’s to open in Lake Buena Vista next year, plus more in our weekly food news roundup

Back Pages 46 Savage Love 46 Gimme Shelter 47 Classifieds

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

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OCT. 16-22, 2019

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com


“LULU EIGHTBALL” COMIC BY EMILY FLAKE

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OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Orlando is a great place for landlords, the Fulwider story just gets messier, Mennello Museum to more than triple in size and other news you may have missed last week »

Orlando being pitched as Florida’s top city for buying rental property: As rental rates in Orlando soar, a new report from landlordsoftware TurboTenant is touting Orlando as the No. 1 place in Florida to buy profitable rental property. The report says Orlando is followed by Jacksonville, Tampa and St. Petersburg as the most lucrative area in which to snag real estate and hike up monthly rental fees. Orlando made the list due to the city’s rapidly growing population and increases in home values. Orlando is currently facing an affordable housing crisis worse than cities like Las Vegas and Los Angeles, with a paltry average of 13 affordable rental properties for every 100 low-income renter households in need. A report released by the National Low Income Housing Coalition actually lists the Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford area as the worst among the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the country when it comes to affordable housing. On average, rental properties get 34 leads and stay on the market for 19 days.

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Orlando pastor jailed on child sex-abuse charges hired attorney who had relationship with alleged victim: Earlier in October, Rev. Bryan Fulwider was arrested for alleged sexual abuse of a child, who reported sexual battery by the pastor between 2005 and 2010. Now, it has been revealed Fulwider’s attorney had a past romantic relationship with Fulwider’s alleged victim. Court documents reveal the victim’s lawyer, Lisabeth Fryer, has asked that the attorney representing Fulwider, Jacob V. Stuart Jr., be removed from the case, due to a past romantic relationship between the alleged victim and Stuart in 2012, when she was over the age of 18. Stuart, who is the nephew of District 3 Commissioner Robert Stuart, denied any wrongdoing and filed a petition to strike the motion, calling his relationship with the victim “brief and casual.”

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Mennello Museum of American Art announces design team for 40,000-square-foot expansion: Friends of the Mennello Museum of American Art announced last week that they have secured a design team for their planned 40,000 square-foot museum expansion. The preliminary plans and an architectural model were unveiled by Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and museum director Shannon Fitzgerald in a special presentation at the museum’s White Canvas Party. The museum is owned by the City of Orlando. The $20 million expansion includes a 40,000-square-foot museum facility “integrated around the current 12,000-square-foot museum building,” as well as an increase in cultural programming. The goal of the project is to create a cultural destination on Lake Formosa “designed to preserve and reimagine our green space, the intimacy of the Dr. Phillips Home, walking and bike paths, and sculpture garden.” The expansion will offer the Mennello additional multi-purpose spaces for earned revenue from hosting weddings and other events in the classrooms and conference room. The new space will provide the ability to seat 250 and accommodate more than 400 for standing indoor and outdoor events.

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City of Orlando approves new ownership of the Plaza Live venue: The Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra and the Orlando Philharmonic Plaza Foundation announced last week that the transfer of ownership of the Plaza Live concert and event venue has been approved. The Orlando City Council voted to approve the city’s acquisition of the venue, which will be leased back to the Orlando Philharmonic Plaza Foundation for one dollar per year for a term of 25 years, with the option to extend. orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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BY FORCE, BY FRAUD OR BY LAW

Trump, like all authoritarians, feels the rule of law exists to further his interests and can be ignored when it restrains him BY JE FFREY C. BILL M A N

“T

here are three ways in which we may rule,” Charles Aycock, soon to be the governor of North Carolina, told his supporters in 1900. “By force, by fraud or by law. We have ruled by force, we can rule by fraud, but we want to rule by law.” Aycock was rallying his fellow white supremacists not only for his own election but also to pass a state constitutional amendment that would, in effect, disenfranchise most black voters. By modern standards, this was a startlingly revelatory admission: Whites were willing to govern under the rule of law, Aycock was saying, but only if they could dictate its terms. But they were also willing to use force or fraud to dictate those terms. Indeed, white supremacists had used recently used force to accomplish that goal, during the November 1898 Wilmington coup, overthrowing a municipal government deemed too friendly to African Americans and murdering at least 60 black men. And they used fraud, too. Aycock and the so-called Suffrage Amendment both prevailed that November by a roughly 60-40 spread – according to the unlikely tallies of the voting clerks. For the next 70 years, having cheated and bullied their way to absolute power, white supremacists got to write the laws. I thought of Aycock’s quote – captured in David Zucchino’s forthcoming book, Wilmington’s Lie – and the sense of entitlement behind it, when I read the letter the White House dispatched to the House of Representatives last week, calling the impeachment proceedings illegitimate

and saying the administration wouldn’t participate. “You have designed and implemented your inquiry in a manner that violates fundamental fairness and Constitutionally mandated due process,” White House counsel Pat Cipollone told House leaders Oct. 8. Since the White House judged the case against Trump “baseless,” the president “cannot participate in your partisan and unconstitutional inquiry.” From a legal perspective, Cipollone’s letter is patently absurd. Impeachment is spelled out in the Constitution; it, by definition, cannot be unconstitutional. The administration can’t simply declare the president innocent and therefore ignore congressional subpoenas. As Gregg Nunziata, the former chief counsel for Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans, put it, the letter was a “barely lawyered temper tantrum” and a “middle finger to Congress.” It was the latest in a string of them. That same day, Trump’s Department of Justice was in federal court arguing that the courts had erred four decades ago by allowing Congress to review transcripts of Watergate grand jury proceedings. The House Judiciary Committee now wants to review Robert Mueller’s grand jury materials, and – for some unfathomable reason – the DOJ is desperate to stop that from happening. Also that day, the State Department ordered Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union and now a key player in the Ukraine scandal, not to appear for a scheduled congressional deposition. Text messages between Sondland

and former Special Envoy for Ukraine Kurt Volker released by Congress appear to show that the administration was withholding military aid from Ukraine unless the country indulged Trump’s conspiracy theories about Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election and reopened an investigation into Joe Biden’s son – except for one, in September, in which Sondland told the head of the embassy in Kiev assuring him that he was “incorrect about President Trump’s intentions” and that there was “no quid pro quo.” (Sondland was awarded the ambassadorship after giving Trump’s inauguration committee $1 million; his appointment was championed by U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, to whom he gave $17,900 and his wife gave $57,900, according to federal campaign records.) In addition, Rudy Giuliani announced that he would disregard a House subpoena for documents and dared Congress to hold him in contempt. It didn’t take long for dominoes to begin falling. Two of Giuliani’s henchmen were arrested boarding one-way flights out of the country, accused of routing hundreds of thousands of Russian dollars into Republican political campaigns in an effort to, among other things, oust the American ambassador to Ukraine – which Trump did. Giuliani himself is said to be under investigation. Meanwhile, Sondland has agreed to testify whether the State Department wants him to or not, and the Washington Post reported that he plans to say that Trump dictated his “no quid pro quo” message to the Ukrainian embassy. And according to the Wall Street Journal, in August, Sondland had told U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin that Ukrainian aid was directly tied to these investigations. The White House knows the direction in which this is going. The only recourse is to paint the exercise as illegitimate – to assert, as Richard Nixon did, that “when the president does it, that means it’s not illegal” – and to hope the president’s supporters, cheered on by the president’s propaganda machine, choose not to care. Charles Aycock was a white supremacist, but that’s not the thing that most tightly binds him to Donald Trump. Instead, it’s the authoritarian sense that the rule of law exists to further their interests and can be ignored when it restrains them. By force, by fraud or by law. feedback@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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‘DISGUSTING, COLDHEARTED AND INSULTING’ Central Florida has the lowest median income of any major metro in the U.S., but the FRLA plays rhetorical games and continues to dodge responsibility BY DAVE P LOTKIN A N D J ESSI C A BRYC E YOU NG

Last week the president of the Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association, Carol Dover, decried the words of Orlando attorney and political advocate John Morgan, who compared Florida’s minimum wage to “slave wages.” Dover issued a statement saying she was “deeply offended” by comments made by Morgan at a Tiger Bay Club gathering in Tampa, where he noted the state’s $8.46 minimum wage requires people to work two or three jobs just to stay afloat, often while collecting government relief such as housing subsidies and EBT food assistance. Morgan is funding a campaign to raise Florida’s minimum wage to $15 an hour, starting with $10 an hour effective Sept. 20, 2021, and then a $1-per-hour increase each year until 2026. His ballot initiative, called Florida for a Fair Wage, is only several thousand petition signatures short of the 766,200 needed to appear on 2020 ballots. According to a transcript published by the Florida Politics website, Morgan told the gathering, “Years ago in the South, they said the economy will not work if we don’t have slaves. They were so adamant about it they went to war over it. They fought each other to own people. … What’s going on in America today is we’re paying people slave wages and I’m ready to go to war for that.” Later, he said, “There’s 14 million illegal immigrants in the United States. If you wanted to get rid of them all today … make it a third degree felony to hire them

and charge a $100,000 fine. Do you know why we’re not going to do that? Because we like slave labor.” In a statement issued the next business day, FRLA CEO Dover issued a stormy condemnation. “Mr. Morgan has made his position on minimum wage clear by leading the charge to get a constitutional amendment on the ballot next November. While I respectfully and vehemently oppose his position on this issue, I am deeply offended by his remarks on at the Tampa Tiger Bay Club on Friday. “By referring to minimum wage as ‘slave labor,’ Mr. Morgan showed us all just how tone-deaf he is and how utterly oblivious he is to a very real problem in our state,” said Dover. That “very real problem” Dover was referring to isn’t the fact that many Florida workers have two or three jobs and still need government subsidies to live. Nor was she “deeply offended” by the fact that America was built by slave labor, and that stolen work is still the basis of most generational wealth in this country. No, Dover was scandalized that Morgan would “compare” minimum-wage workers to victims of human trafficking. “Mr. Morgan’s statements highlight his ignorance regarding the modern-day slavery we are actively working to stop, human trafficking. This heinous crime is real, and there are men, women and children in the United States who are literally enslaved because of human trafficking. Drawing comparisons between their

RICH MAN, POOR MAN Cheap work makes the dream work for affluent elderly in the Villages BY COLIN WOLF

The Villages, a giant Sumter County retirement mecca packed with Trump-loving Baby Boomers, is also home to the highest rate of full-time employees stuck in poverty in the United States, says a new study. The term for this is “working poor”: people with fulltime jobs who are essentially just one accident away from sliding into bankruptcy or homelessness. At the Villages, the people working at the many tiki bars, golf courses and health service centers are apparently barely keeping it together: According to a recent report from financial site 24/7 Wall St., the Villages has the high-

est working poor rate in the country, at a whopping 4.4 percent, significantly higher than the national average of 3 percent. The report used data from the 2013 to 2017 U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, as well as data from the Local Area Unemployment Statistics program of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The report also states that only 34.5 percent of the population in the Villages between the ages 16 to 64 actually work full-time: “For the minority of workers who work full-time, many work in the low-paying jobs in the retirement industry. Some 25 percent of workers

PHOTO OF CAROL DOVER COURTESY THE FRLA

plight and those who work for minimum wage is disgusting, cold-hearted and insulting to both groups.” What’s disgusting is this pathetic straw-man argument that fallaciously attempts to draw attention away from the issue under discussion by misconstruing a phrase. What’s cold-hearted is this disingenuous statement coming from a group whose profits depend on underpaid labor. The Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association vehemently opposes the minimum-wage increase, with 55 percent of minimum wage workers nationwide holding jobs in the restaurant and leisure industry, according to the Pew Research Center. Dover made no mention of the living conditions of workers who serve restaurant diners and clean hotels rooms in Florida, who are often paid the lowest wages, to the point of lowering wages overall in the area. The result is that Central Florida has the lowest median income of any major metro in the U.S. And what’s insulting is these words coming from a woman who makes more than a half-million dollars a year. While millionaire Morgan is no pauper, it’s important to note that Dover herself is paid more than $620,000 a year for her work. That’s more than 35 times what someone earning minimum wage earns from a 40-hour workweek. feedback@orlandoweekly.com

are employed in education and health services, and 9.5 percent are employed in leisure and hospitality – each among the largest share of any city. The average wage for workers in the education and health services and leisure and hospitality sectors are $835 and $405 a week, respectively, far less than the $1,101 average pay for all workers nationwide.” Besides the Villages, Sebring was the only other Florida city to make this list, coming in at No. 11 with a poverty rate of 5.7 percent for its full-time workforce. But low wages aren’t just isolated to Sumter County. A 2017 report from United Way found that 3.3 million households across Florida, which is almost half of Florida’s families, are classified as “working poor.” There are plenty of factors that contribute to this data, like our state’s rapidly falling availability of affordable housing and lack of rent controls, our abysmally low minimum wage, and the GOP’s constant attacks on public assistance programs like SNAP.

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Ding dong snitch

Nosy-neighbor syndrome is one thing, but adding armed police to the mix could be a recipe for disaster

BY S OLOMON GUSTAVO

“I

was asleep in a hotel in Illinois. I awoke to an alert on my phone, saw a truck in the driveway that did not look familiar and a person started walking around to the back of the house. That’s when I got on the intercom: ‘Hey dude, get the f*ck out of my yard, the cops are on the way.’ Basically as soon as I saw this guy in my yard I uploaded it instantly to the Neighbors app. Pretty much within minutes that anyone posts, [law enforcement] have already commented on it and they’ve got a deputy heading to the neighborhood to check it out.” That’s “Stephen, a Volusia County resident,” talking in a video on the Ring website about the Ring smart doorbell and its accompanying Neighbors app. His experience might sound heartening to any property owner or tenant, particularly anyone who’s had packages disappear off the doorstep or even been burgled. But after the sobering story of Atatiana Jefferson, a 28-year-old Texas woman shot by a Fort Worth police officer last week in her mother’s house while playing video games with her nephew – a story dismayingly similar to so many others, from Aiyana Jones to Botham Jean – isn’t it time to consider whether enabling the public at large to quickly dispatch armed officers is a good idea? Nosy-neighbor syndrome is one thing, but adding guns to the mix seems to be a recipe for disaster.

PUT A RING ON IT Recently purchased for $1 billion by Amazon (reportedly as a way to save money on stolen deliveries), Ring doorbell and outdoor security devices let people remotely see, hear and talk to whoever is at their door. The company also has an app called Neighbors, in which users post videos and report things they see and hear in their neighborhood. Ring is now joining forces with law enforcement, allowing officers to talk directly to Neighbors users and ask for footage. Police departments can also mark a general region on the Neighbors map that sends out a request-blast to all the users in the area. Users can deny requests, and the police need their consent to access video – but not a warrant. Ring has made it clear it will hand over footage if court ordered or somehow otherwise legally obligated. “Ring’s mission is to make neighborhoods safer,” said a Ring spokesperson via email, in response to our request for comment. “We work towards this mission in a number of ways, including working with law enforcement agencies so they can share official, important crime and safety updates and work together with their local community through the Neighbors app.” Ring’s founder, Jamie Siminoff, echoes the sentiment in a blog 14

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posted to the company’s website, saying the Neighbors app connects Ring users and other people for a more vigilant and safer community. On the same post is a video testimonial from Winter Park Police Department officers and Chief Michael Deal. “We have Ring cameras in our community and we understand the value of those cameras in helping us solve crimes,” says Deal, his voice heard over shots of Winter Park homes with Ring cameras on doors and hanging tucked under eaves. “I was amazed how many cameras were just in our neighborhoods, to begin with,” says John Dalles of Winter Park Criminal Investigations. “As police officers, we cannot be everywhere,” says a patrol officer strolling the town’s residential streets, “so we rely on our citizens to use the Neighbors app.” Speaking over slow-motion shots of Winter Park police sitting at a conference table or walking through a hallway, the short promotional video ends with Chief Deal: “Being able to reach out to citizens on the Neighbors app when we have a crime, where we have an incident and ask them to share that information with us, is incredible.” Other Central Florida law enforcement agencies teaming up with Ring include the Orlando Police Department, Ocoee Police Department, Davenport Police Department, and the Osceola County Sheriff’s Office. Of the more than 400 law enforcement agencies partnered with Ring, over 50 are in Florida. Since at least mid-2018, Ring has made arrangements with law enforcement all over the country. According to some Central Florida police departments, the program is entirely free. Civil liberties advocates worry the streaming cameras and chatroom app might turn citizens into informants, and that police access to large swatches of video surveillance could lead to trampling privacy rights. The Neighbors app is similar to NextDoor and Google Play’s Citizen in that users have been found to often rely on racial stereotypes in determining suspicion. (A Ring device is not necessary to use the Neighbors app.) There are no qualms with private citizens making their own decisions, says Ryan Suto of the Washington, D.C.-based Arab American Institute Foundation. “But when police departments get involved, especially the way Ring is pushing these programs to police departments and the opacity with which those partnerships are created, is the beginning of our concern.” Doorbell cameras, though focused on the porch and front yard, extend into public spaces, Suto points out. This could lead to privacy issues and a “disparate impact” of racial profiling of communities of color. “At various points of times,” Suto says, “Americans have been


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“The Ring program is turning police into de facto salesman for a company,” says Jay Stanley, ACLU senior policy analyst. flagged by private individuals as suspicious when they were doing anything anybody else would be doing.” In the same way that partnership details are not public and clear, noted Suto, Ring software is not subject to public scrutiny. Amazon has said it would not use face recognition software in Ring cameras, but there is no mechanism to detect or stop it if they did. Ring stores video for 30 or 60 days, depending on the user’s plan. Footage is then automatically deleted. In general, finds Suto, public surveillance – or private surveillance of public space – is “superfluous in their operating and take advantage of a climate of fear.” Also, general crime is decreasing. “Our fear of crime is not related to the prevalence of crime.” He believes Amazon is profiting off that fear. “[The Ring program is] turning police into de facto salesman for a company,” says Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst from the ACLU’s D.C. office and editor of their Free Future Blog. The storage and handling of video, he says, is something to worry about. Video, once allowed by the Ring user, is accessed on the cloud. But video is really out of the Ring user’s control once it’s in the cloud to begin with. “They say they won’t share video without a warrant. We just have to believe that,” Stanley says. A couple of decades ago, police had to get a warrant to ask for the security-camera tape in the garage VCR, notes policy analyst Dr. Matthew Guariglia, who’s working on government issues of surveillance for the San Franciscobased Electronic Frontier Foundation. “That VCR is now the Amazon cloud,” he says. “Amazon becomes the keeper and the guardian of that information.” Amazon has been found to train police on the best ways to convince people to fork over their footage, Guariglia says. And once it’s in the police hands, or even once it’s posted to the Neighbors app or to other social sites like Facebook and Twitter – that video, and that person’s face, is around forever.

RING AROUND THE GOVERNMENT This is not the first time an Amazon product has played a role in local law enforcement surveillance. Before teaming up with Ring, Orlando City Council tried building a surveillance program to identify and track suspects using Amazon’s facial recognition technology Rekognition. Though Amazon provided the technology free of charge, the program was cut short in its early stages because it cost the city too much for equipment and to store and maintain nonstop streaming video. With the Amazon Ring program, the private company provides a network of homeowners’ cameras, unlimited storage, and an easy-to-use app – all for free. All it takes for a police department to access the Neighborhood Portal is a non-binding agreement signed by the chief.

The Ring program, some have noted since the rollout, might be a way around the intense attention and public pushback involved when a city government attempts to set up and pay for a surveillance program. In 2017 and 2018, Orlando leaders tested Rekognition technology with eight or so cameras posted outside the police department, in downtown Orlando, and at a community recreation center. As Orlando Weekly reported, the Amazon program was free but the city “was not able to dedicate the resources to the pilot,” according to a city staffer in a memo to City Council, so Orlando never got far enough to give the program a full live run. From beginning to end, the Amazon Rekognition pilot process went without substantial public input or scrutiny, or much thought given as to how an ever-present facereading surveillance program would impact day-to-day life. Orlando City Council acknowledged the heated response from residents and civil liberties advocates over potential issues with video surveillance. When people found out about the program, critics worried the technology would identify suspects indiscriminately. An MIT and University of Toronto study found Rekognition technology misidentified women more often than men, and dark-skinned people more often than lightskinned people. This unfortunate racially specific tic put black women in a bad spot. Alongside the local ACLU chapter, Human Rights Watch and Student Immigration Movement condemned Rekognition tech as a tool with far too much potential for tracking people of color, and for targeting and abusing undocumented immigrants. Multiple Central Florida city commissions did not respond to requests for comments, while others directed questions to the police. Winter Park city manager Randy Knight, when asked whether or not elected officials and the public should have a say in law enforcement surveillance, responded: “In your question you use the word ‘surveillance.’ That mischaracterization implies the Winter Park Police Department has access to Ring doorbell footage at will. This partnership with Ring does not give WPPD surveillance capabilities.”

BETTER RING THAN SORRY “We’re not gonna violate our residents’ rights,” says Davenport Police Chief Larry Holden. Davenport PD started their Ring partnership this summer. Holden learned of the program at a police chief conference and thought it would help solve crimes. All it took for the surveillance program to be part of Davenport PD’s repertoire was for police leadership to agree to the free program by signing a contract with clear opt-out options. After a couple of hours of training overseen by Ring’s legal department on how to post messages, Davenport was good to go. Other police departments and cities, Holden notes,

received free Ring cameras and helped market the product to its residents. He says Davenport hasn’t been approached with such an offer and wouldn’t accept it if they had. The department sees the program as one of many tools officers use to prevent and investigate crime. He says police strictly only have access to video and information that is volunteered by a user. Even when users comply and share videos, it can be done anonymously. Even the address of the door on which the Ring camera hangs can be left out. “I wouldn’t want to know that,” says Holden. Ring hasn’t helped with any criminal investigation the short time Davenport has been part of the program. But it has improved community engagement for the Davenport police, says Holden. In the early goings of the Ring program, a Davenport resident posted to Neighbors that a woman was at her home and walking around her neighborhood. The wandering woman appeared suspicious to the Neighbors user, who then told police about it. Davenport officers went to the area and found the woman, talked to her, and discovered she was a salesperson. “We tell our citizens to call us for anything,” says Holden, adding he’d rather respond to a false alarm and circle back to follow up than having to deal with a breakin. “It has helped solve several cases,” says Orlando Police Sgt. David Baker, adding the department is always looking for technological advantages but, particularly after the failed Rekognition face-scanning program, is concerned with citizen privacy. Winter Park Police, who started their deal with Ring over a year ago, used it right away to solve an investigation. And it worked well, they say – Winter Park PD was able to link a person arrested for arson to other crimes in the same neighborhood. Because of the early success, Ring asked Winter Park Police to be in a video in the hopes of spreading the word to other police departments. “We agreed to participate at no cost as we believe this is a valuable tool for law enforcement agencies to use to solve crimes, encourage community involvement, and, most importantly, keep neighborhoods safe,” Deal says in an email. “Plus, it does not hurt to highlight the great police work being done by the Winter Park Police Department.” The Ring program is free and the company does not require anything from Winter Park PD, said Deal. Winter Park police staff, which has a legal advisor, reviewed the partnership and Deal approved it. “It is an excellent way for the community to get involved by assisting us in solving crimes and preventing new crimes from occurring in our neighborhoods,” Deal says. He added that Winter Park police have no concerns with the program.

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[ arts + culture ]

METROPOLITAN MASHUP Immerse 2019 takes over downtown Orlando with creative expression this weekend BY R OSS N O B L E S

I Diavolo performs ‘Trajectoire’ PHOTO BY SHAREN BRADFORD

An installation built by Architects of Air PHOTO COURTESY ARCHITECTS OF AIR

magine walking outside smack into a met- Florida, to nurture a deeper sense of ownership ropolitan mashup of creative expression, of and care for Orlando amongst its residents, excitement and purpose. Now stop daydream- and to shape the global perception of the City ing and start immersing yourself in Immerse Beautiful as one known for innovation and creativity.” Since then, Immerse has generated 2019. The Creative City Project takes over down- crowds of over 40,000 people on the streets of town Orlando Friday and Saturday with its most Orlando, with over 100,000 expected for the ambitious project to date, Immerse 2019. This 2020 event, which will be expanded to a threeyear’s two-day interactive art mega-project will or four-day event, according to NeSmith. “As we continue to grow, we want to expand expand into the Dr. Phillips Center’s Seneff Arts Plaza and beyond. Returning for its eighth con- our radius to more national and international secutive year, Immerse brings more than 1,000 acts. Our international acts this year showcase artists from 140 organizations and art collec- our reach but also open the door for growth tives to participate throughout downtown along looking into events moving forward,” NeSmith Orange Avenue and on Church and Pine streets says. This year, Immerse will offer four ticket from 5-11 p.m., with installations opening at 3 packages for guests looking p.m. on Saturday. to add to their cultivated This year’s exhibits feature creative experience. While some nationally recognized Orlando residents can walk talent, including the Blue IMMERSE 2019 through the city exhibMan Group, America’s Got 5-11 p.m. Friday-Saturday, its free of charge, general Talent top-10 finalist dance Oct. 18-19 admission pricing is set at group Diavolo and British Downtown Orlando $10, with full-experience installation artists Architects creativecityproject.com packages starting at $22. of Air. free-$150 Full-experience guests Creative City Project aims will not only have access to “shape the global perto 1,000 of Orlando’s most ception of Orlando as a city entertaining artists but known for creativity and also access to the interacinnovation” this year with the inclusion of the Immerse Innovation Expo, a tive installations put together by Architects of showcase of technology open to the public on the Air and to the “Worlds of Corkcicle,” 12 fully west side of Orange Avenue between Church and immersive rooms that feature unique exhibits that you can see, feel and experience for yourJackson streets. “We’re committed to making Immerse a des- self. (These two installations will also be open tination event for people from around the world, Sunday, Oct. 20, through Saturday, Oct. 26, and and we also want Immerse to be an event that tickets can be purchased at creativecityproject. makes us Orlando residents proud,” says Creative com.) “We want artists and audiences to have the City Project executive director Cole NeSmith. Back in 2012, a group of artists performing most amazing experiences of their lives, so we’re on street corners and in plazas around down- always considering how we can collaborate with town Orlando banded together as the Creative artists to do something new and unique,” says City Project. When the event changed its name NeSmith. Attendees can find information on the to Immerse in 2017, a commitment was made to artists, a full schedule, and a map at immerse.city. “cultivate a thriving arts community in Central feedback@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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BY SETH KUBERSKY

Dark Horizon comes here from California equipped with something that might help it succeed where others did not: a proven track record.

Back in 2006, I wrote a cautious-

ly optimistic review of Nights of Terror, a haunt event on I-Drive that attempted to challenge Universal Orlando’s dominance of the spooky season. That effort flamed out after a single installment, and in the 13 Octobers since then, we’ve watched numerous other ambitious independent haunted attractions – from Skull Kingdom to Terror in Orlando to Shallow Grave – come and go. This year, another upstart is seeking to swipe a share from Halloween Horror Nights’ candy bowl, and it comes here from California equipped with something that might help it endure where others withered: a track record. Dark Horizon may be an unfamiliar name in Central Florida, where Universal’s HHN and Busch Gardens Tampa’s HowlO-Scream have build a generation’s worth of brand loyalty. But that’s nothing new to its producers Epic Entertainment Group, whose Dark Harbor event at Long Beach’s Queen Mary has thrived over the last decade, despite competition from not only Universal Studios Hollywood’s Halloween event, but also well-established haunts at Knott’s Berry Farm and Six Flags Magic Mountain. Located in the back parking lot of a Holiday Inn near Disney (formerly the Nickelodeon Hotel), Dark Horizon lacks the luxury of large indoor soundstages, and the Labor Day hurricane forced them to take down their half-finished haunts, resulting in the delay of its originally scheduled debut. When I took a preview tour of the project with co-producer Charity Hill and line producer Kevin Burton a week before its premiere, crews were still working around the clock to rebuild. While I’m impressed that they crossed the finish line ahead of my

DARK HORIZON | PHOTO BY SETH KUBERSKY

return on opening night, you still shouldn’t expect the same level of scenic polish or special effects as you’ll find at Universal; plan on seeing plenty of plywood walls and jute netting. Even without expensive intellectual properties or digital projections, Dark Horizon brings four elements to the table that help set it apart from its rivals:

imported from California, along with local talent including actor Bruce Ryan Costella and aerial acrobat Tempestt Halstead. They’ve been allowed the freedom to improvise and expound on their elaborate back stories, instead of just jumping out to prerecorded sound effects, and they’re eager to get in your face and show off their fabulous, festering makeup effects. Most intriguingly, a free “Terror Up” option randomly offered to about 1 percent of attendees gives a select INTIMACY For me, the scariest thing about Halloween few an opportunity to squeeze through Horror Nights has become the suffocating special detours within each house; I was crowds, which turn every haunted maze grabbed by a fearsome fisherman inside the into an endless conga line. At least on open- “Vodou” maze and forced to crawl through ing night, there were no such overcrowding a tunnel on my hands and knees, which was issues at Dark Horizon – I was able to eas- made especially memorable by a painfully ily experience each of the three haunted unpadded ceiling beam. houses multiple times without needing the extra-cost express option. More manageable ADULT-ORIENTED masses means that guests can be “pulsed” Surviving vengeful spirits can be thirsty through the attractions in small groups – work. Luckily, Dark Horizon’s drinking allowing the scareactors to reset for optimal scene indicates their outreach to fans who scares – and reduces the need for the dis- feel Universal’s event has gotten a little too tracting flashlight-wielding attendants that family-friendly. With personable bartenders mar Universal’s mazes. and frequent visits from fearsome fiends, Dark Horizon’s multiple themed watering holes raise the bar on bars; there’s even a INTERACTIVITY Speaking of scareactors, the performers at secret one hidden inside the “Ghost Ship” Dark Horizon are some of the most engaged maze that can only be accessed by inserting and engaging that I’ve ever encountered special souvenir coins into a hidden door. in a Halloween event. The committed cast The signature cocktails are premixed but contains a mix of Dark Harbor veterans quite potent for the price, and (unlike at orlandoweekly.com

HHN) don’t all taste like spiked Kool-Aid; try soaking them up with a bag of BBQtopped Fritos, the gutbusting response to Universal’s puzzlingly popular pizza fries. And once you’re full of liquid courage, the “Murder Island” walkthrough (by far my favorite maze at the event) brings the legend of real-life serial killer Bloody Ed Watson to life with the goriest finale in any Orlando haunt this October.

AFFORDABILITY

Gate prices at the theme parks’ events approach triple digits, but general admission to Dark Horizon tops out under $40, with an early bird special at only $20. Not everything about the event is a great value – the $20 fee for offsite parking seems excessive, and the plotless Panic House 4-D film wouldn’t be worth the $5 upcharge even if it were in focus. But the ability to experience everything in a couple of unhurried hours – as opposed to the all-night marathon that HHN demands – and exit without aching legs or an empty wallet means that Dark Horizon delivers solid boos for your buck. I’d hate to curse it with my compliments like its now-closed predecessors, so I’ll simply urge my fellow fright fans to visit Dark Horizon early, and hope the event finds enough success to return even bigger in 2020. skubersky@orlandoweekly.com OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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tip jar

[ food + drink ]

BY FAIYAZ KARA

WORLD’S MAGIC RESTAURANT

OPENINGS Portillo’s, the Chicago hot dog and

7044 International Drive 407-0203-3330 facebook.com/worldsmagicrestaurant $$

PHOTOS BY ROB BARTLETT

ARABIAN BITES Saudi and Saudi-style Indonesian fare lends another layer of diversity to our dining scene BY FAIYAZ KARA

I

n Saudi Arabia, Jeddah in particular, Indonesian fare has garnered the sort of following that ramen has here in the Occident. Thanks to the influx of hajj pilgrims from the island archipelago, Saudis have been taken by Indonesia’s melting-pot cuisine, marked by the influences of Indian dynasties, Islamic food law and Dutch colonial rule, not to mention its proximity to Japan and China. The cuisine stands in stark contrast to the Arabian peninsula’s Bedouin-influenced meat-and-rice dishes, which may seem staid by comparison, but you can judge for yourself at World’s Magic Restaurant – the city’s first (to my knowledge) Saudi restaurant. Outside the desert domain, these Saudi joints are hard to come by, even in the world’s most diverse cities. New York, London, Toronto – nothing. I suppose we should be thankful for whatever gastronomic hocus pocus brought World’s Magic to this tawdry stretch of I-Drive. It sits between Nile Ethiopian and the Cairo Bar & Hookah Lounge, in a space that once housed “A Royal Wedding Chapel” (it’s true, look it up). I guess it gave meaning to the very odd and very large painting of playing cards depicting a royal flush inside the restaurant’s tastefully wallpapered and chandeliered dining room, though I’m

not exactly wedded to that idea. Hee hee. Perhaps the royal flush is a reference to the “kingdom” of Saudi Arabia? Or the “Magic” in the restaurant’s name? I honestly don’t know, but a spoonful of gareesh ($9.99) is dining, magical or otherwise, at its finest. It’s a savory chicken porridge made from crushed wheat and milk, topped with a ghee-slicked dollop of seasoned (and salty) caramelized onions. It sounds deceptively simple, and it’s not much to look at, but I’ll be heading back to I-Drive for this. I might just try and nick the recipe. I won’t covet the step-by-steps for the mandi lamb ($15.99), a Saudi rice dish, as much. For one, the bone-in chunks of lamb aren’t cooked in an underground sand pit but in a tandoor. Of course, I kid; that’s hardly their fault. In fact, the lamb had a nice essence of char and the rice, tinged yellow from the spiced stock used to boil the meat prior to its tandoorizing, had a proper fluff. But, to me, the dish seemed more a facsimile of biryani than anything else, its flavors evoking a watered-down familiarity. Anyway, the Indonesian menu comprises the majority of dishes served here. Just keep in mind these are Saudi ren-

ditions of Indonesian staples, so skewers of chicken satay ($12.99), for example, are pre-brushed in a heavy peanut butter dressing and served on a sizzling plate with diced onions. Chunks of beef in the rendang ($13.99) are sweeter, less spicy and have a lot more shredded coconut caked onto them than their Indonesian counterparts. They’re not saucy in the least and the sugary taste may throw some folks off, unlike the den den’s ($15.99) sweet heat of jerky meat. These remarkably thin and crispy fried beef wafers are as addictive as nibbles can get. But for a true representative sampling, the mixed Indonesian plate ($25) gets you everything from heavily coconuted chicken rendang to tender chili sambal beef in soy sauce. It’s all set around a square pyramid of rice crowned with a boiled egg nestled in a mild sambal and tahini sauce. It’s fetching stuff. Canned green beans in tahini and diced sambal potatoes likely of frozen origin? Not so much. The inclusion of elbow pasta in red sauce was a bit of a mystery, but mystery at a place called World’s Magic Restaurant seems entirely apropos. I was hoping they’d serve es teler, the Indonesian dessert of crushed ice and exotic fruits, but no. The hospitable servers did, however, play up the kunafa ($4.99), and apart from the unnaturally red topping, the kunafa – like most of what we had at World’s Magic Restaurant – did the trick. fkara@orlandoweekly.com

Italian beef joint popular with fans nationwide, will open a spot in Lake Buena Vista at the Village of O-Town West late next year … Brick & Spoon, a Southern breakfast and lunch spot out of Lafayette, Louisiana, will open at the Village at Lake Lily on the corner of Orlando and Lake avenues in Maitland this December. Beignets will be served … Cafe D’Avignon, the NYC-based patisserie, will open its first outpost outside the Big Apple next month at Margaritaville’s Sunset Walk … Light on the Sugar Bakery Cafe has opened at the Grove at Winter Park plaza on Aloma Avenue serving gourmet coffee, tea and pastries with an Asian twist … Orange County Brewers has opened their Lake Mary brewery on International Parkway … Crepe Delicious Urban Cafe has opened downtown at 55 W. Church St. … Also downtown, look for French restaurant La Boulangerie to open in the Modera Central luxury apartment tower on the corner of East Pine Street and Rosalind Avenue early next year … Melbourne Seafood Station has opened on Town Center Boulevard in Hunter’s Creek … Bagel Bruno is aiming to open the first week of November in College Park … Nearby, Tin & Taco has opened on Edgewater Drive … Over in Waterford Lakes, MX Taco has opened its second location … Popular food truck Sushi & Seoul on a Roll will take over the kitchen inside Sanford brewhouse Celery City Craft. They’ll debut the concept Oct. 18 with an official opening slated for Nov. 1 … Look for Carolina barbecue joint Brother Jimmy’s to open early next year in the Marketplace at Dr. Phillips … Wrestlinginspired Mexican hot dog concept Cholo Dogs has rolled out a food cart. Look for them slinging weenies at Wally’s, Whippoorwill and other joints around town. For a schedule visit cholodogs.

com. EVENTS Bulla Gastrobar hosts a five-course Spanish wine dinner featuring Ribera & Rueda Thursday, Oct. 17, at 7 p.m. Cost is $70 … Reyes Mezcaleria celebrates National Mezcal Day Oct. 21 at 6 p.m. with a night of tastings, food pairings, live music and raffles. Tickets are $80 with proceeds going to the Helen David Relief Fund, supporting women in the bar industry fighting breast cancer. Got restaurant dish? Send tips to dining@orlandoweekly.com

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

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

$10 OR LESS

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

$10-$15

HUMBL

New and eminently franchisable vegan joint dishes out deeply satisfying fastfood classics from a small but slick space in Windermere. The pizzas steal the show, with a focaccia-like crust that’s able to stand up to vegetable toppings (sogginess being a classic vegan pizza fail). The perversely named “Meat Lovers” has a marinara base topped with roasted cauliflower, a scatter of shitake “bacon” slices and fennel-farro “sausage” crumbles, and dollops of macadamia-nut “ricotta,” all under cashew-based “mozzarella.” If you’d rather skip the fake cheese, the Shroom (mushroom white sauce, chunky little criminis and a jungle of lemony kale) is fantastic. Also of positive note: perfect fries, an Indian-spiced grain bowl and thick-as-a-concrete milkshakes. 5845 Winter Garden Vineland Road, Windermere, 407-349-8800; $$

KAIZEN IZAKAYA

It’s out with the old and in with the new as the old Amura on Church Street gets a long-overdue rebrand. You’ll find all the trendy pan-Asian trappings of the modern izakaya – ramen, Korean fried chicken, bao, donburi – but quality cuts of Japanese fish as well. The moriawase gets you 14 pieces for $35, but don’t overlook Korean staples like that KFC and a comforting bowl of kimchi yaki-udon noodles. Open daily. 54 W. Church St., 407-316-8500; $$

CAFÉ 34 ISTANBUL

The city’s only 24-hour Turkish restaurant means kebabophiles can indulge in some of the most luscious, lip-greasing meats any time of day, though raki drinkers will have to take a break from the hours of 2 a.m. to 7 a.m. Much of the action takes place on the restaurant’s sprawling patio and let’s just say it’s a mesmerizing scene, especially after 10 p.m. Things are a lot more quiet inside. 8255 International Drive, 407-601-7712; $$

HOURGLASS SOCIAL HOUSE

Straddling the line between café and food hall, the Hourglass Social House offers a diverse array of food options – Mexican, Vietnamese, French pastries, vegan handhelds – not to mention beverages aplenty. Foxtail Coffee gets the morning crowd jacked, while the market stocks a

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nice selection of wine, beer, kombucha and juice. Bottomless mimosas are served on weekends from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Open daily. 2401 Curry Ford Road, 407-9307308; $$

JAM-ENG

Jamaican staples like jerk chicken, oxtail stew, curry chicken and fried whole snapper far outshine the mainly drab offerings of the British side of the menu (baked salmon, cottage pie, ploughman’s sandwiches). The vibe is laid-back and service can sometimes operate on “island time.” Open daily for lunch and dinner. 65 N. Orange Ave., 321-424-5062; $

Z ASIAN VIETNAMESE KITCHEN

Mills 50 Vietnamese joint shuns the 100-plus-item menu in favor of a focused bill of fare. Soups, be they stellar duck noodle, seafood, bún bò hue or pho, are laboriously fretted over. More interesting items to consider: pan-fried rice flour, Vietnamese crepes, and an herbal tea dessert beverage with Chinese dates, seaweed, red beans, jelly and longan fruit. Don’t overlook the wings. Closed Mondays. 1830 E. Colonial Drive, 407-601-6024; $$

DON JULIO MEXICAN KITCHEN & TEQUILA BAR

Vivid heaps of salsa-slathered food await the burrito and chimi-loving patron, but with the addition of noted chef Roberto Treviño (El Buda, Food Network), guests at Don Julio’s on Chickasaw Trail can also enjoy remarkably colorful and bracing ceviches. Margaritas are taken seriously here, as are aguas frescas. Open daily. 551 S. Chickasaw Trail, 407-930-3735; $$

MAMA LAU VA OC

The city’s first Vietnamese snail restaurant brings many molluscs to adventurous diners in Orlando, but don’t expect the sort of Vietnamese restaurant prices you’re used to. Get your fill of sea snails filled with garlic and butter, cherrystone clams with buttered onions, razor clams grilled with tamarind, fried onions and peanuts, and scallops – with coral attached. The sturgeon hot pot is gratifying and big enough for four. Closed Wednesdays. 5038 W. Colonial Drive, 407337-9999; $$

KABOOKI SUSHI SAND LAKE

Henry Moso, one of our city’s finest sushi chefs, brings his brand of highend Japanese dining to Dr. Phillips. Stellar omakases (a one-week heads-up is recommended) are worth the pricey admission ($175-$250), though an a la carte version is offered daily based on available ingredients for $150. Nigiri purists can readily indulge in a 10-course tasting for $65, but no one should overlook the cold and hot tasting items. Cocktails get crafty in a good way. Closed Monday. 7705 Turkey Lake Road, 407776-2001; $$$ n

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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[ film + tv ]

FILM LISTINGS Alien A 40th-anniversary screening of Ridley Scott’s sci-fi-horror masterpiece about a group of space truckers who come in contact with a dangerous alien species. Wednesday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com.

DOLEMITE IS MY NAME Opens Friday, Oct. 18 Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland (also streaming on Netflix Friday, Oct. 25) $12 enzian.org; netflix.com

Dolemite Is My Name Eddie Murphy stars as Rudy Ray Moore in a biopic covering the creation of Moore’s enduring character, Dolemite. Opens Friday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $12; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Jay & Silent Bob Reboot Jay and Silent Bob discover that Hollywood is rebooting an old movie based on them. Thursday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $15; fathomevents.com.

HHHHH

Eddie Murphy in Dolemite Is My Name PHOTO COURTESY NETFLIX

DO CALL IT A COMEBACK

Dolemite Is My Name launches Eddie Murphy back into the public eye BY T HADDEUS MCCOL LU M

W

e all love a good comeback story, and this year it looks like it’s going to be Eddie Murphy’s turn. Ahead of a highly publicized return to Saturday Night Live in December, along with the actor’s declaration that he’ll be returning to stand-up comedy soon, Murphy stars in Hustle & Flow director Craig Brewer’s biopic about Rudy Ray Moore, the pioneering comedian and filmmaker, this week. It’s easy to appreciate the casting of Murphy as Moore. At the beginning of Dolemite Is My Name, Moore is working at a record store, trying to push the in-house DJ (Snoop Dogg) to play one of his old,

out-of-fashion soul 45s, and moonlighting as an emcee at a local music club. In short, he’s a man who can’t stop performing, even though he hasn’t caught a break in years. It’s hard not to think of Murphy’s real-life career – his last brush with cultural relevancy was as the voice of an animated donkey in the Shrek movies – during these scenes. Eventually, Moore scores a hit by creating his Dolemite character. Inspired by the proto-rap rhyming games of ex-cons, Dolemite is a living tall tale, the street version of Paul Bunyan, who’s always willing to talk about who he’s fought and what he’s fucked.

After finding plenty of success and fans through live shows and comedy recordings, Moore sets his sights on the big time: a feature film. Moore and his coterie have no experience making movies, but they don’t let that stop them. After talking his record company into financing the movie, Moore and friends take over an abandoned old theater and set out to make an independent picture with plenty of “kung-fu and titties,” the original Dolemite. Along with his core trio of friends, Ben (Craig Robinson), Theodore (Tituss Burgess) and Lady Reed (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), Moore recruits a socially conscious playwright, Jerry Jones (KeeganMichael Key) to write a screenplay, and D’Urville Martin (Wesley Snipes), a smalltime actor with big aspirations. You won’t find a more talented supporting cast in any comedy this year. Throughout the production, Moore is plagued by doubts about whether or not going into debt to make the film was a smart move, conscious of his lack of filmmaking knowledge, acting skill and physical sex appeal. But the movie gives lots of people something to be proud of, warts and all. For once, the subjects of blaxploitation pictures – working-class urban black people – are given the opportunity to have a voice in how they want to be portrayed on screen, even if it’s not up to the standards of mainstream Hollywood. Obviously, Dolemite becomes a hit despite several roadblocks during its production and distribution. It’s a watershed moment in independent black cinema, but Dolemite Is My Name doesn’t play that up, focusing instead on the personal motivations of its cast and crew and the validation that comes from the film’s success. Moore didn’t live long enough to see a film based on his life come out, but the film leaves the audience with a sense of the vast number of actors, musicians, comedians and artists who were inspired by Dolemite, leaving a lasting legacy for Moore. feedback@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

Kid’s Halloween Party: Casper Enjoy lunch, a costume contest and a screening of the liveaction film about a friendly ghost. Sunday, 11 am; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $20-$25; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice New documentary about Linda Ronstadt, a pioneering woman in the music industry. Through Thursday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $12; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Midnight Movies: Bride of Re-Animator Ambitious young doctors experiment with a serum that can seemingly bring the dead back to life. Saturday, 11:59 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $12; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool Through Thursday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $12; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Movie Monday: Ghostbusters Free screening of the supernatural workplace comedy. Monday, 7 pm; À La Cart, 609 Irvington Ave.; free; 407776-4693; alacartorlando.com. Music Mondays: Little Shop of Horrors The director’s cut version of the musical. Monday, 9:30 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $12; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Neil Young & Crazy Horse: Mountaintop A look at the process of Neil Young and Crazy Horse making their first album in seven years. Tuesday, 9:30 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $12; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Orlando Film Festival Screenings, panels, workshops, parties and more. Opens Thursday, through Oct. 24; Cobb Plaza Cinema Café 12, 155 S. Orange Ave.; $20-$300; 407-982-5444; orlandofilmfest.com. QT8: Quentin Tarantino, the First Eight Take a journey through Quentin Tarantino’s first eight films, narrated by the actors and collaborators who know him best. Monday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $15; fathomevents.com. Saturday Matinee Classics: Don’t Look Now Nicolas Roeg directs Donald Sutherland in this supernatural mystery. Saturday, noon; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $9; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Western Stars Bruce Springsteen and his band play 13 songs from his latest album. Saturday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $13.31; fathomevents. com. OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ON SCREENS IN ORLANDO

Zazie Beetz and Natalie Portman in Lucy in the Sky PHOTO COURTESY FOX SEARCHLIGHT PICTURES

BY STEVE SCHN EID ER

OPENING THIS WEEK: Lucy in the Sky Remember when former astronaut Lisa Nowak drove from Houston to Orlando to confront (and maybe kidnap) the woman her boyfriend was having an affair with? Remember how she was so intent on getting there on time that she wore adult diapers so she could just dookie in her seat instead of making rest stops? Well, they’ve made a movie about her. But guess what? They left out the part about the diapers! Crazy, right? That’s what critics and audiences said when Lucy in the Sky premiered last month at the Toronto International Film Festival. I guess you could make the defense that the movie isn’t technically about Nowak, but rather a very similar character played by Natalie Portman and named Lucy Cola (which sounds to me like one of those corporate mascots who all got Saturday-morning cartoons back in the ’80s after Reagan gutted the FCC). Still, leaving such a wonderfully salacious plot detail hanging out there unused seems like a clear-cut case of not giving the people what they want. Next thing you know, they’re going to make a movie about the astronaut who didn’t get to go on a space walk because NASA didn’t have a suit that fit her – and then not mention that she also tried to hack her estranged wife’s bank account from space. I remember when we writers were actually grateful that truth is stranger than fiction, because it meant we could get to the bar quicker. (R)

Maleficent: Mistress of Evil Angelina Jolie is back as the live-action version of the archetypal Disney villainess. This time, she’s joined by Michelle Pfeiffer as a devious queen who hatches a plot to divide humans and fairies forever. But it obviously can’t have worked, because we have Drag Race. (PG) Zombieland: Double Tap Ten years after the first Zombieland, the sales pitch for the sequel is that it’s “from the director of Venom and the writers of Deadpool.” For a while there, there was a real danger they’d have to be identified as the director and writers of the first Zombieland. So here’s to all of us who have managed to rack up serious accomplishments over the last decade. (I went to Mount Dora … twice!) Double Tap also reunites the original movie’s cast of Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg, Emma Stone, Abigail Breslin and Bill Murray. Murray’s character got snuffed last time, but I’ve got a copy of Broken Flowers that says being dead shouldn’t preclude him in the slightest from giving a performance. This time, Murray is joined by fellow Ghostbuster Dan Aykroyd; I started to scroll through IMDb to figure out the last time he looked alive on screen, but when I got to Blues Brothers 2000, a pop-up appeared and tried to redirect me to the website of the Suicide Prevention Lifeline. I wish Pornhub cared that much about my welfare, because I hate adding new bookmarks. (R) orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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[ concert preview ] AMIGO THE DEVIL with Twin Temple, King Dude

GREAT LIVE MUSIC RATTLES ORLANDO EVERY NIGHT

7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 16 The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive abbeyorlando.com 407-704-6103 $15

DOO-WOP THOU WILT

Satanic doo-wop duo Twin Temple dance with the devil BY TYLER BARNEY

B

eing the most wicked band in the world isn’t easy. But for Twin Temple, a self-proclaimed “Satanic doo-wop” duo hailing from the City of Angels, it was never meant to be. “We knew going into this that it’s not gonna be for everybody,” says vocalist Alexandra James of the project formed with her partner, Zachary. “We didn’t make it to be for everybody. We’re really only trying to please ourselves.” And please themselves they have. The two became one (hence the project’s name) on Halloween 2016, and they’ve been spreading their love for Lucifer ever since.

With the release of their debut album, Twin Temple (Bring You Their Signature Sound … Satanic Doo-Wop) in 2018, the couple gained a cult following devoted to their sinful merger of golden oldies and the occult. Combining the sounds of the ’50s and ’60s with “a passion for practicing magick and Satanic ideology,” their witches’ brew of occult philosophy, politically charged lyrics and toe-tapping tunes raised eyebrows and ruffled feathers. Perhaps the most notable opponent of the James’ unholy gospel is right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. Citing an L.A. Times article, the notorious InfoWarrior

dedicated an entire episode of his (thankfully) now-defunct YouTube show to decrying the band for being “pure evil.” Shortly after Jones confirmed Twin Temple’s diabolical nature, the band was inundated with hate mail and death threats. Yet, ever true to themselves, they accepted such opposition as “part of the territory” and continued down the Left Hand Path. Along the way, they’ve found kindred spirits in the damnedest places. During a recent tour with heavy metallers Uncle Acid & the Deadbeats and Graveyard, they did “a huge run through the Bible Belt,” James recalls. “We were a bit nervous beforehand because we were wondering how they would react. The funny thing was, they were all hailing Satan right there with us.” With all this talk of Satan, one can’t help but wonder what the hell they really think of the devil. “To us, Satan is a symbol,” explains James. “We don’t believe there is a literal person with red face paint sending sinners to some imaginary hell after they die. It’s more like the original rebel angel, the first adversary, the first dissenter. We champion that as a symbol of the rejection of authority and instead turning to the self.” This doesn’t stop Twin Temple from occasionally personifying Satan for their own sinister purposes, however. Earlier this year, they released a single titled “Satan’s a Woman,” in which Alexandra performs the role of her infernal majesty, commanding listeners to “bow down to the queen.” Regarding the song’s title, she says, “We didn’t get into this to create yet another patriarchal setup. A true Satanist doesn’t have a gender, but it felt subversive to say, ‘Hey, why are we assuming Satan is a man?’ So we just wanted to flip it on its head a little bit.” On the single’s B-side, “I Am a Witch,” James further spells out the band’s stance on a historically male-dominated society with a call to “hex the patriarchy.” In keeping with the Satanic tradition, Twin Temple uses the tenets of the occult as tools of self-empowerment. “[It’s] about donning the vestments of that which is feared,” James says. “It’s about taking what has traditionally been used to disempower and turning that around by saying, ‘Yes, I am a Satanist. I am a witch. I am a devil worshipper.’” And to that we say: Hell yes. music@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

Garth Brooks Country megastar steers his “Dive Bar” tour into the Barn in Sanford for an exclusive invite-only gig. Promises to be raucous, intimate and sweaty. 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 16, at the Barn, contact organizers for details

Captured! By Robots Welcome your new robotic grindcore overlords as they lay waste to Mills 50. We had it coming. 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 17, at Will’s Pub, $13

John Massari Composer behind pulpy cult-horror gem Killer Klowns From Outer Space throws down at Stonewall with a rare DJ set. 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 18, at Stonewall, $7

Bianculli & Brukhein Local dance promoters La Femme En Noir bring Bianculli & Brukhein to Lou’s. Gonna make you sweat, as the old song goes. 10 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 19, at Uncle Lou’s, $5

.Gif From God State-of-the-art showcase of young grind, screamo and metal with dizzying Richmond headliners .Gif From God paired with C0mputer and Gillian Carter. 9 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 20, at Uncle Lou’s, $7

Golden Pelicans Local garage-punk vets play a free weeknight show at downtown watering hole. Their new album is an impressive plate of vile wax, and it’s worth your time to hear these songs live. 9 p.m. Monday, Oct. 21, at Sly Fox, free

Psyclon Nine Spooky industrial-metal duo steer their 10-year anniversary tour into downtown Orlando. Pro tip: There’s a Halloween-themed bar next door. 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 22 at Soundbar, $13

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com


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

I’ve given detailed looks into a

few hot sessions of the excellent Melrose in the Mix live recording series at downtown’s Orlando Public Library, most recently when it actually featured a notable national act this summer in alternativerap star Onry Ozzborn. I’m not always sure you’re listening, though, so I keep trying because this is one of the city’s most uniquely up-close music experiences and not enough people know about it. But now’s an especially opportune time to get on this train, because MITM just rolled out a sterling string of upcoming close encounters with some unmissable area talent and beyond. Beginning Oct. 29, the series will once again partner with Swamburger Presents to bring in a touring act, Austin’s the Vapor Caves, who will do a session in advance of their concert the next night at Iron Cow. From there, a succession of top locals including rising Americana artist Amy Robbins (Dec. 1), contemporary classical champion Chris Belt (Jan. 11, 2020), hip-hop legends DiVinci & Skip (Jan. 12, 2020), new rap star Mag.Lo (Feb. 2, 2020) and powerhouse soul savior Eugene Snowden (April 5, 2020) will carry you on through to the middle of next year with some essential performances. It’s free, face-to-face and open to the public. You just have to make reservations at ocls.info/melroseinthemix. This week, a Brooklyn buzz band makes their hot Orlando debut and the train of discovery for good Florida bands keeps rolling through town. Also, TLU will be on break next week, but after that it’s pedal to the metal again.

What would typically be all elbows and knees is, in B Boys’ hands, a rubber-tight groove that’s a near-perfect balance of tension, economy and punk urgency B BOYS AND CLANG!, WILL’S PUB, OCT. 6

What a difference a hyphen makes. Even nerds of both words and music could reasonably get tripped up on the distinction between “b-boys” and “B Boys.” But this time we’re talking about the latter, non-hip-hop kind, who are the Brooklyn art-punk trio that just made their Orlando debut. All the Wire and Gang of Four comparisons they’ve drawn are justified. However, even with the angular tendencies that make up their bedrock, this Captured Tracks band have such fluid execution that their jags come out like a well-oiled jog. While so many of their peers sound labored and ungainly, B Boys make this complex and unconventional signature feel intuitive, anthemic even. What would typically be all elbows and knees is, in their hands, a rubber-tight groove that’s a near-perfect balance of tension, economy and punk urgency. Exciting new Tampa band Clang! (the one with the exclamation point, not the other Tampa band without) spring

from similar inspirational headwaters as B Boys. Where B Boys have that spirit distilled down to its shredded essence, though, Clang! instead have jacked it up and thrust it into overdrive. Their fullblast berserk rock may have post-punk outlook but it’s bulging with punk veins and cranked to noise-rock extremity. The saxophone in here doesn’t seduce, it freaks. All of this converges in a swarming maelstrom of pounding, squealing, roaring noise. The streak of discovery on new Florida bands has been good here lately, but Clang! are among the prime of the lot.

JEREMY & THE CLONES, THE NOOK, OCT. 10

Who are Jeremy & the Clones? I had no idea, really. All I heard beforehand was that they were comprised of members of Plastic Pinks and Sonic Graffiti. That’s really all I needed to know, though. The clones in this instance are the Giordano twins, brothers from two exceptional Florida bands. Dane is from Miami breakouts Plastic Pinks and Drew fronts St. Pete standouts Sonic Graffiti. You little Sherlocks can probably deduce by now that drummer Jeremy is the third man. With less than a handful of shows notched, this fresh new act brings all their wonder-twin powers together to – sure, why not – activate. The upshot is a power trio that’s raw, revved and three voices deep. Jeremy & the Clones’ sound is the combustion of high-octane rock & roll, wild garage heat and dark psych danger, and their Orlando appearance was hot and heavy. baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Thursday, Oct. 17

Orlando Film Festival FILM

PHOTO BY DAVID BIEBER

WBCN and the American Revolution

In regard to the sheer number of films screened, the Orlando Film Festival is the biggest film fest in town. Taking over downtown’s Cobb Plaza theater for more than a week, the festival offers more than 200 shorts and features, along with panels and workshops covering all aspects of filmmaking. The celebration doesn’t stop after the screenings, though; nightly after-parties are one of the big draws for those looking to rub elbows and network. Highlights this year include WBCN & the American Revolution, a doc about an influential radio station in the late ’60s, and Walt Disney: Master of Dreamers, the story behind Disney’s plans for Epcot. – Thaddeus McCollum 5 p.m. | through Thursday, Oct. 24 | Cobb Plaza Cinema Cafe 12, 155 S. Orange Ave. | orlandofilmfest.com | $20-$300

Friday, Oct. 18

Nate Bargatze COMEDY

In a time when high-profile comedians seem to be more interested in complaining about their right to say shitty things about people than actually being funny, Nate Bargatze is something of a relief. The Tennessee native has leveraged his laid-back, personal storytelling style of comedy into critical success, earning him accolades from peers as disparate as Jim Gaffigan and Marc Maron. Bargatze’s half-hour special as part of Netflix’s The Standups resulted in a full hourlong special, The Tennessee Kid, earlier this year, and he’s been tapped to develop a sitcom by ABC. See him now while you can afford it. – TM

OUR PICKS FOR THE BEST EVENTS THIS WEEK

PHOTO BY ROBYN VAN SWANK

8 p.m. | Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd. | 407-351-7625 | hardrock.com | $35

Saturday, Oct. 19

Coheed and Cambria MUSIC

PHOTO BY JIMMY FONTAINE

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16-22, 2019

orlandoweekly.com

Prog-rock concept band Coheed and Cambria returns to Central Florida this week after two high-profile tours with Maps & Atlases and Mastodon this year. No big names join them on this stop, though. Instead, fans get a look at the current state of prog from newer bands Astronoid – who successfully take My Bloody Valentine-style shoegaze into the progosphere – and the Contortionist – an Indianapolis band known for incorporating death metal riffs into their work. – TM with The Contortionist, Astronoid | 7:30 p.m. | House of Blues, 1490 Buena Vista Blvd. | 407-934-2583 | hob.com/orlando | $36-$78.75


Saturday, Oct. 19

Midnight Movies: Bride of Re-Animator FILM PHOTO COURTESY ARTISAN ENTERTAINMENT

While the original 1985 Re-Animator will forever be known as the horror movie in which a disembodied head goes down on scream queen Barbara Crampton, the 1990 sequel, Bride of Re-Animator, somehow has less of a good reputation. Though the film reunites actors Jeffrey Combs and Bruce Abbott as the corpse-reanimating odd couple of Drs. Herbert West and Dan Cain, the film leans real hard into its predecessor’s reputation for cheese. Thankfully, Combs’ commitment to the role of over-the-top creeper Dr. West bears repeat viewings, along with David Gale’s return as the aforementioned evil zombie sex criminal. Sure, it’s no Midsommar, but what is? – TM 11:59 p.m. | Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland | 407-629-0054 | enzian.org | $12

Monday, Oct. 21

Melvins/Redd Kross MUSIC

Hard-touring sludge godfathers Melvins (also the unwilling and unwitting grandfathers of grunge) and glam-punk bratfathers Redd Kross (who scandalized the early L.A. punk scene by wearing bellbottoms and long hair) are two of the more uncompromising godheads of the alternative-music pantheon, with a healthy disdain for nostalgia and resting on laurels. The twosome are on a co-headlining tour wherein the bands are swapping members back and forth for some pretty unique configurations: Kross bassist Steve McDonald will be playing in Melvins, and fearsome Melvins drummer Dale Crover will sit in with Redd Kross nightly. Supergroup city. – Matthew Moyer with Toshi Kasai | 7 p.m. | The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thesocial.org | $25

Monday, Oct. 21

Grün Wasser MUSIC

Chicago dark-synth duo Grün Wasser have been on the come-up since their debut show in the City Beautiful last year at the Falcon. Since then, they’ve put in some relentless roadwork around the country playing with the heavy likes of Hide and Street Sects, did the rounds at this year’s SXSW in Austin, and earlier this month, released their newest album, Not OK With Things, on tastemaking label Holodeck Records. Live, they really shine, whipping up pitch-black storms of synthy groove with commanding vocals swirling all around your lil’ ears. If you’re looking for the new Boy Harsher, you should probably start here. – MM with Bacon Grease, ACP PRO | 9:30 p.m. | Stonewall Bar, 741 W. Church St. | 407-373-0888 | facebook.com/stonewall.orlando | $7

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019

ORLANDO WEEKLY

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THEWEEK

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

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16-TUESDAY, OCT. 22 COMPILED BY THADDEUS MCCOLLUM

MUSIC WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16 Amigo the Devil, King Dude, Twin Temple 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $15; 407-704-6261. Drake White & the Big Fire 6 pm; The Tin Roof, 8371 International Drive; $15-$20; 407-270-7926. Frankie & the Witch Fingers, Timothy Eerie 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12. Melanie Martinez, Lauren Ruth Ward 7 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $36-$40; 407-934-2583. Paleface 8 pm; The Lucky Lure, 1427 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-250-6949. Opaque: Patrick Hagerman 9 pm; Grumpy’s Underground Lounge, 1018 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-237-9180.

THURSDAY, OCT. 17 Captured! By Robots 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $13. Bea Miller Saturday at the Beacham

Ego Deathtrap, No PDA, Daisy-Chain 9 pm; Grumpy’s Underground Lounge, 1018 N. Mills Ave.; $5; 407-237-9180. Emo Nite LA 9 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $12-$15; 407-246-1419. Frederic Voorn with Fernwood String Quartet 7:30 pm; Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; $10-$20 suggested donation; 321-234-3985.

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PHOTO BY CHARLOTTE RUTHERFORD

Frederic Voorn 7 pm; Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; $10$20 suggested donation; 321-234-3985. Funhouse Friday: John Massari 10 pm; Stonewall Bar, 741 W. Church St.; $7.

The Living Room: Kristen Warren, Uncle Cub, TranQilo 9 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free.

The Grizzly Atoms, Gamma Waves, 0 Miles Per Hour 9 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free.

Marcel P. Black, Mike Mass, Midaz the Beast, Trini Elev8 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $5; 407-270-9104.

Hollis Brown 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12; 407-748-8256.

FRIDAY, OCT. 18

In Real Life 6 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $25-$99; 407-246-1419.

Banks, Kevin Garrett 7 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $35-$77.75; 407-934-2583.

Oliver Tree, Nvdes 6 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; SOLD OUT; 407-648-8363.

Disney in Concert: Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas 8 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $55-$95; 844-513-2014.

Palm Tree Square, Bobby Mahoney, Everything Etc., Halley’s Comet 8 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; $5-$10 suggested donation; 407-423-3060.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

Quix 8 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $15. Scott Bazar, Millennial Matter, Fetal Flower, Tess Bonacci 9 pm; The Manes Emporium of Doubt, 1318 E. Harding St.; $5. Unlimited Devotion 8 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $10-$20; 407-704-6261.

SATURDAY, OCT. 19 Alison Krauss 8 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $49-$250; 844-513-2014. BassNight: Ill Gates, Aplsoz, Pvper Revlms, Oli 9 pm; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $15-$20. Bea Miller 6 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $22.50-$75; 407-648-8363. Coheed and Cambria, the Contortionist, Astronoid 7:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $36-$78.75; 407-934-2583.


Día de los Muertos Monster Party Día de los Muertos Monster Party CityArts celebrates the 10th year of its annual pre-Halloween Día de los Muertos Monster Party at its new location this week. Along with taking in a new exhibit of themed art, art lovers can visit the outdoor block party with live performances, vendors, food and drink, and more. 6 p.m. Thursday; CityArts, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; $5 suggested donation; orlandoslice.com.

Greg Barris L.A.-based comedian Greg Barris has deep ties to Central Florida, and his seemingly annual shows at and around the Will’s Pub complex feel more like parties than performances. Some of that’s because Barris sometimes shares photos of his travels from the year, and he enlists members of local bands like the Pauses and Watch Me Disappear to back him up during a grand, confessional musical finale. You, too, will be forgiven. 8 p.m. Friday; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org.

Dan Deacon Nov. 6, at Will’s Pub PHOTO BY SHAWN BRACKBILL

The Chainsmokers, Oct. 26 at Amway Center

Miranda Lambert, Nov. 9 at Amway Center

Juan Luis Guerra, Oct. 27 at Amway Center

Sammy Hagar, Nov. 9 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Foreign Dissent 6, Oct. 28 at Will’s Pub

Thievery Corporation, Nov. 9 at House of Blues

Hobo Johnson, Nov. 2 at House of Blues

Elvis Costello, Nov. 11 at the Hard Rock Live

The Casket Lottery, Nov. 4 at Will’s Pub

Titus Andronicus, Nov. 13 at Will’s Pub

King Diamond, Nov. 5 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Quintron & Miss Pussycat, Nov. 15 at Will’s Pub

The Black Keys, Nov. 6 at Amway Center

The Menzingers, Nov. 23 at the Beacham

Bar_Cade Nite Sure, you could stay home to drink and play video games like a loser. Or you could do it at a bar and have it be magically socially acceptable. The Nook sets up three fun multiplayer games – a Dance Dance Revolution-type rhythm game, an eight-player Super Smash Bros. arena on a giant projector, and a Mario Kart drinking game, which OK, yes, now we’re into it. You can even bring your own console and controllers from home if you want, but that sounds like a lot of work. 8 p.m. Saturday; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free; facebook.com/thenookonrobinson.

Will’s A Faire The quarterly parking lot market Will’s A Faire returns this weekend. Shop through a curated selection of vendors for handmade, vintage and retro goods while enjoying live music, DJs, food trucks and probably a White Claw or two. 1-8:30 p.m. Sunday; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org.

Dan Deacon, Nov. 6 at Will’s Pub

Jonathan Van Ness, Nov. 23 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Stiff Little Fingers, Nov. 6 at the Plaza Live

Sara Bareilles, Nov. 24 at Amway Center

AJR, Nov. 8 at Hard Rock Live

Lulu Santos, Nov. 24 at House of Blues

Ariana Grande, Nov. 25 at Amway Center Nick Offerman, Dec. 5 at Hard Rock Live Willie Colón, Dec. 6 at House of Blues John Prine, Dec. 6 at Bob Carr Theater Ski Mask the Slump God, Dec. 10 at the Beacham Nile, Dec. 11 at Soundbar The Heavy Pets, Dec. 14 at Will’s Pub The Isley Brothers, Dec. 17 at Bob Carr Theater Anuel AA, Dec. 19 at Amway Center

Too Many Zooz, Jan. 13, 2020, at the Social Motion City Soundtrack, Jan. 15, 2020, at House of Blues The Dead South, Jan. 21, 2020, at House of Blues American Authors, Jan. 24, 2020, at the Beacham Southern Culture on the Skids, Jan. 24, 2020, at Will’s Pub Raphael Saadiq, Jan. 31, 2020, at the Plaza Live Black Violin, Feb. 8, 2020, at Bob Carr Theater

Rockapella, Dec. 20 at the Plaza Live

The Beach Boys, Feb. 19, 2020, at the Dr. Phillips Center

Jim Gaffigan, Dec. 27 at the Dr. Phillips Center

Billie Eilish, March 10, 2020, at Amway Center

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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SATURDAY, OCT. 19

Alison Krauss MUSIC

Few artists have commanded the respect of both country classicists and modernists as much as Alison Krauss. The singer-songwriter has worked with damn near everyone from Dolly Parton to Robert Plant, and has worked in genres from blues to bluegrass to countrypolitan. This stop at the Dr. Phil sees her fresh off of a summer tour with fellow legend Willie Nelson. – Thaddeus McCollum 8 p.m. | Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave. | 844-513-2014 | drphillipscenter.org | $49-$250

Curtains, Grave Return, Sick Dogs 9 pm; Whiskey Lou’s Lounge, 121 N. Bumby Ave.; free; 407-896-3593. Gravedgr, Bernz 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$20; 407-504-7699. Not Ozzfest: Flagman (Black Sabbath), Linqo (Marilyn Manson), Gillian Carter & Witchbender (Slipknot), Prison System (System of a Down) 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$13. Set It Off: DJ BMF 9:30 pm; Iron Cow, 2438 E. Robinson St.; $5-$10. Tim Baresko 10 pm; Elixir, 9 W. Washington St.; $5-$15. Tiny Waves: CosRave 9 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; $10; 407-332-9636.

SUNDAY, OCT. 20 .Gif From God, c0mputer, Gillian Carter 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $7; 407-270-9104. 40

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

Marco Antonio Solis 7 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $37-$594; 800-745-3000. Red Elvises 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10. Watch Me Work: Litty Edition 8 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $10.

MONDAY, OCT. 21 Bass Emporium: NxWYxRK 11 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $5. Grün Wasser, ACP PRO, Bacon Grease 9:30 pm; Stonewall Bar, 741 W. Church St.; $5-$7. I Met a Yeti, Happy Hour, Secret Keeper, Conversation Piece, Magnolia Park FL 7 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $10. Max Bemis, Perma, Museum Mouth 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $19-$23; 407-704-6261. The Melvins, Redd Kross, Toshi Kasai 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $25; 407-246-1419.


Orlando Philharmonic: Handel & Brahms 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $14.60-$54; 407-228-1220. Stuca 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$20; 407-504-7699.

TUESDAY, OCT. 22 The Band Camino, The Wldlfe 8 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; SOLD OUT; 407-704-6261.

THEWEEK OCT. 18-20

El Inólito caso de Miss Piña Colada Spanish-language comedy by Carlos Ferrari. Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $25.75; drphillipscenter.org. OCT. 18-21

Making Movies 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12. Psyclon Nine 6:30 pm; Soundbar, 37 W. Pine St.; $13. Tribal Seeds, Tropidelic 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $26-$45; 407-228-1220.

THEATER OCT. 16-17

25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee Musical comedy about six tweens competing in a spelling bee. Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $25-$35; drphillipscenter.org.

Evil Dead: The Musical A comedic musical adaptation of all three of Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead films. Moonlight Players Theatre, 735 W. Minneola Ave., Clermont; $15$30; 352-319-1116; moonlightplayers.com. OCT. 18-20

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street This thrilling and dark musical set in Victorian-era London tells the tale of the murderous barber Sweeney Todd as he returns to London after 15 years of exile to seek revenge against the corrupt judge who ruined his life. Central Florida Community Arts, 250 SW Ivanhoe Blvd.; $18-$25; 407-937-1800; cfcarts.com. OCT. 19-20

OCT. 16-21

The Animatronicans Double Feature What happens to Disney animatronics after the parks close? Find out in this Fringe-favorite one-act play and its sequel, presented back-to-back. Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $20-$35; 407-648-0077; orlandofringe.org.

How I Became a Pirate Sail off on a fantastic excursion with a band of comical pirates looking for an expert digger to join their crew. 2 & 5:30 pm; Orlando Repertory Theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; $15-$35; 407-896-7365; orlandorep.com. OCT. 20

OCT. 16-20

Deathtrap Dark comedy thriller about a playwright who would do anything to publish the next great play. Garden Theatre, 160 W. Plant St., Winter Garden; $20-$32; 407-877-4736.

The Royal Palm Ghost Train Phantasmagoria Take a train ride while being entertained by Phantasmagoria, the Victorian steampunk gothic circus troupe. 3:45 & 6:15 pm; The Royal Palm Railway Experience, 305 E. Ruby St., Tavares; $38; 352-742-7200; phantasmagoriaorlando.com.

Macbeth Shakespeare’s cursed play about a Scottish thane who, under the urging of his wife, murders his way up the ladder of success. Orlando Shakes, 812 E. Rollins St.; $30-$59; 407-447-1700; orlandoshakes.org.

Les Misérables Award-winning musical based on Victor Hugo’s novel about the lives of the desperate French proletariat. 8 pm; Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $54.50$164.50; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org.

OCT. 16

COMEDY

The Met Live in HD: Turandot Powerhouse soprano Christine Goerke takes on the icy title princess, alongside tenor Yusif Eyvazov as the unknown prince vying for her love. 1 & 6:30 pm; multiple locations; $24; fathomevents.com.

Anjelah Johnson Saturday, 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $35-$65; 407-3515483; hardrock.com/orlando.

OCT. 17-20

Into the Woods Stephen Sondheim musical that presents a modern take on classic fairytale stories. Athens Theatre, 124 N. Florida Ave., DeLand; $25-$29; 386-736-1500; athensdeland.com.

Bull & Bush Open Mic Weekly stand-up comedy open mic. Wednesday, 8:30 pm; Bull and Bush, 2408 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-7546. Comedy Combat Showcase Wednesday, 8 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $10$40; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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THEWEEK Fresh Drunk Stoned: Franco Harris, Matt Bellak, Tim Hanlon Tuesday, 7:30 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $10; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Greg Barris Friday, 8 pm; Will’s Dirty Laundry, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Heather Land Wednesday, 6:30 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $29-$100; 407-228-1220; plazaliveorlando.com. Jeff Allen Thursday, 7:30 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $20-$35; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Last Podcast On the Left Live version of the popular podcast about real life and fictional horror. Sunday, 7 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $29.50-$49.50; 407-351-5483; hardrock.com/orlando. Nate Bargatze Friday, 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $35; 407351-5483; hardrock.com/orlando. Shit Sandwich Probably the best comedy showcase in town. Show up early to grab a good seat. Saturday, 9 pm; Bull and Bush, 2408 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-7546. Tacarra Williams Friday, 8 & 10:30 pm, Saturday, 7 & 9:45 pm, Sunday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $15-$45; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com.

ART OPENINGS/EVENTS

Accidental Historian Panel Discussion Artists, photographers and more discuss their work, their process, and why it’s so important to document the world around you. Sunday, 2-4 pm; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-836-8594; thehistorycenter.org.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

The Photography of Joey Chase Different from his normal landscape and portrait photography, all of the works in this show were taken in prisons. Opens Friday, 6 pm, through Nov. 18; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org.

EVENTS Asian Cultural Expo Exhibitions, performances, workshops and food showcase the culture of Asia. Saturday, 10 am-3 pm; Bill Frederick Park, 3401 S. Hiawassee Road; free; 646-389-2742; asianculturalexpo.org. Bar_Cade Nite Pop-up arcade night with dancing games, Smash Bros. and a Mario Kart drinking game. Saturday, 8 pm; The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St.; free; facebook.com/thenookonrobinson. Big Bounce America The world’s biggest inflatable theme park with slides, ball pits, a maze and more. Saturday, 9 am-9 pm, Sunday, 9 am-6 pm; Osceola Heritage Park, 1875 Silver Spur Lane, Kissimmee; $17-$32; 321-697-3333; thebigbounceamerica.com. Bubbles & Blackjack Fundraiser for Ronald McDonald House with casino games and complimentary food and drink. Saturday, 7:30 pm; The Mezz, 100 S. Eola Drive; $80$100; 407-423-9999; rmhccf.org. Crooked Can Brewing Company Oktoberfest Three days of pola, German food, beer, wiener dog races and more. Friday, 4 pm, Saturday, 11 am, Sunday, noon; Crooked Can Brewing Company, 426 West Plant Street, Winter Garden; free-$10. Evening Exchange An evening of workshops, culinary demonstrations, specialty cocktail bars, food specials and more. Friday, 6-10 pm; East End Market, 3201 Corrine Drive; free; 321-236-3316. Freak Show Halloween Party Halloween-themed party with music, a costume contest and more. Saturday, 9 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $5-$15; 407-704-6261; abbeyorlando.com.

Día de los Muertos Monster Party Annual block party with live performances, food & drink, and the debut of a new group show inside. Thursday, 6-10 pm; CityArts, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; $5 suggested donation.

Gators, Ghosts & Goblins All-ages daytime Halloween event with spooky areas, shows, games and more. Saturday-Sunday, 10 am-5 pm; Gatorland, 14501 S. Orange Blossom Trail; included with admission; gatorland.com.

Immerse Visual and performing arts take over downtown Orlando with dance and music performances, aerialists, installations, dining and more. Friday-Saturday, 5-11 pm; Downtown Orlando, Orange Avenue and Central Boulevard; $10-$150; creativecityproject.com.

Kiwi Camera Swap & Sale Multiple vendors with cameras, lenses and equipment for sale. Sunday, 9 am-2 pm; Kiwi Camera Service, 1880B Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-539-2731; kiwicameraservice.com.

Larry Mitchell: Master Artist Outreach Presentation from the Grammy-winning producer, engineer and performer, followed by a Q&A. Monday, 5 pm; Atlantic Center for the Arts, 42

1414 Art Center Ave., New Smyrna Beach; free; 386-427-6975; atlanticcenterforthearts.org.

Panic on Plant Street A high-energy, interactive, theatrical walk-through haunt, with a cast of more than 40 talented actors. FridaySunday, 7-10 pm; Winter Garden Masonic Lodge, 230 W. Bay St., Winter Garden; $10.


A Petrified Forest Long-running scare walk with three terrifying trails. WednesdaySaturday, 7:30 pm; A Petrified Forest, 1360 State Road 436, Altamonte Springs; $20-$35; 407-468-6600; apetrifiedforest.com.

THEWEEK

Sam Flax Centennial Celebration Day of art demonstrations, hands-on activities, raffles and more. Free gift bags to the first 100 guests. Saturday, 10 am-6 pm; Sam Flax Orlando, 1800 E. Colonial Drive; free; samflaxorlando.com.

Now and Then: Hannibal Square Walking Tour with Fairolyn Livingston Explore Hannibal Square on a guided walking tour with Chief Historian Fairolyn Livingston. Saturday, 10 am; Hannibal Square Heritage Center, 642 W. New England Ave., Winter Park; $10; 407-5392680; hannibalsquareheritagecenter.org.

Stonewall Food Court Weekly food truck meetup. Thursday, 6-10 pm; Stonewall Bar, 741 W. Church St.; free.

LITERARY

Synapse Orlando Experience technology and creativity when companies, founders, artists and performers from across the region gather to celebrate innovation. Friday, 8:30 am-6 pm; Ace Cafe, 100 W. Livingston St.; $49-$299; 813-775-6990; orlando.synapsefl.com.

Andrea Gibson Spoken word. Monday, 7 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $15-$18; willspub.org. Diverse Word Spoken word open mic. Tuesday, 8 pm; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free; 407-362-1864; dandelioncommunitea.com.

Taste of Thornton Park Enjoy food, beer, wine and cocktails in a festive environment. Thursday, 6:30 pm; Thornton Park, Summerlin Avenue and Washington Street; $35-$45; thorntonparkdistrict.com.

Joy Harjo Reading from the U.S. Poet Laureate, followed by a Q&A and book signing. Tuesday, 7 pm; Stetson University, 421 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; free; 904-822-7000; atlanticcenterforthearts.org.

Thrifty Third Thursday Vintage and artisan vendors, food trucks, live music and more. Plus karaoke and line dancing inside. Thursday, 6-10 pm; Elks Lodge No. 1079, 12 N. Primrose Drive; free; 407-678-0943.

Wednesday Open Words Poetry and spoken word open mic. Wednesday, 8:30 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364; austinscoffee.com.

Wanderlust Wednesday Stroll through Ivanhoe Village and sample drinks at different establishments. Wednesday, 5-9 pm; Ivanhoe Village Main Street, Orange Avenue between New Hampshire and Princeton streets; $25; ivanhoevillage.org.

FAMILY

Will’s A Faire One-day local retro, vintage and handmade market with food trucks, live music, drinks and more. Sunday, 1-8:30 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-625-7893; willspub.org. Zoo Boo Bash Family-friendly trick-or-treating at the zoo. Saturday 9 am-3 pm and Sunday 9 am-3 pm; Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens, 3755 W. Seminole Blvd., Sanford; included with admission; centralfloridazoo.org.

LEARNING Fairvilla University Halloween Edition: Extreme Kink Learn about electrical play, rope play, medical play and sensation play. Wednesday, 7 pm; Fairvilla Adult Mega Store, 1740 N. Orange Blossom Trail; $15; 407-425-6005; fairvilla.com. Jose Antonio Vargas The Pulitzer Prize-winning author, Emmynominated filmmaker, producer and activist discusses his experiences as an undocumented immigrant. Thursday, 7 pm; Warden Arena, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; $25-$125; 407-646-2145; rollins.edu.

Drag Queen Story Hour Gidget Galore reads two stories to children, and every child receives free copies of the books. Thursday, 3 pm; The Center, 946 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-228-8272; thecenterorlando.org.

SPORTS OktoBEARfest 5K Fun Run Run, walk or jog for Bears Who Care, an organization that provides teddy bears and books to needy children throughout Orlando. Saturday, 8 am-noon; Hamlin Town Center, 16406 New Independence Parkway, Winter Garden; $25-$35; 407-451-6441; bearswhocare.org. Orlando Magic vs. Miami Heat NBA basketball. Thursday, 7 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $29-$2,061.50; 800-745-3000; amwaycenter.com. The Orlando Shuffle Free shuffleboard event. All ages and new players welcome. Saturday, 7-9 pm; Beardall Senior Center, 800 S. Delaney Ave.; free; 407-246-4440. Orlando Solar Bears vs. Norfolk Admirals Ice hockey. Friday, 7 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $12.25-$90.75; 800745-3000; amwaycenter.com. n orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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No Filter.

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com


Florida Department of Environmental Protection Division of Air Resource Management, Office of Permitting and Compliance Draft Title V Air Operation Permit No0951378-006-AV Draft Air Construction Permit Revision No. 0951378-005-AC Stanton Clean Energy, LLC, Stanton Clean Energy Orange County, Florida

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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B Y DA N S AVAG E

I’m a Seattle local who basically grew up reading your column. I think you’ve always given really sound advice, so I’m reaching out. My boyfriend and I have been together for two years. We started out poly, but I was clear from the start that when I fall in love with someone, I lose all attraction to anyone other than that one person. I fell in love with him, and we decided to be monogamous. But I know he’s still attracted to other people, and it makes me feel like ending the relationship. I love him like I’ve never loved anyone else, but because he doesn’t feel the same way I do on this subject, I don’t believe he loves me at all. I don’t feel like I can bring it up with him, because it will just make him feel bad for something he probably can’t control, and I don’t think I can make him love me. But I also feel like I’m wasting my time and living a lie. Help! Heartbroken Over Nothing This thing about you – how being in love with someone renders you incapable of finding anyone else attractive – that’s pretty much a unique-to-you trait. The overwhelming majority of even the blissfully-in-loves out there still find other people attractive. And you should know that if you grew up reading my column. You should also know that a monogamous commitment doesn’t mean you don’t want to fuck other people, HON, it means you’ve promised not to fuck other people. We wouldn’t have to make monogamous commitments if sincere feelings of love extinguished all desire for others. Since no one is ever going to love you in precisely the same way you love them, every person you fall in love with will disappoint you. Every potential love arrives pre-disqualified. You meet someone, you fall in love with them, they fall in love with you, you are not attracted to others, they still are, you have no choice but to dump that person and start all over again. Lover, rinse, repeat. Zooming out: People who create impossible standards for romantic partners usually don’t want to be in committed relationships but can’t admit that to themselves. We’re told good people want to be in committed relationships, and we all want to think of ourselves as good people. So someone who doesn’t want a long-term commitment either has to think of themselves as a bad person, which no one wants to do, or has to redefine for themselves what it means to be a good person, which can be hard work. But there’s a third option: to set impossible standards for our romantic partners. And then, when all of our romantic partners fail to meet our impossible standards, we can tell ourselves we’re the only truly good person as we move through life breaking the hearts of anyone foolish enough to fall in love with us. 46

So while my hunch is that it’s not your partner who is incapable of loving you, HON, but you who are incapable of loving him, you’re free to prove me wrong. One way we demonstrate our capacity to truly love someone is by believing them when they say they love us. That’s step one. Step two is accepting that someone’s love for us is legitimate even if they don’t experience or express love in precisely the same way we do. My father passed away recently. I received a contract to sell his house, and soon I’ll have to clean the place out. My question is this: What to do with a dead relative’s porn? I don’t want to keep it, I don’t want to waste it by just putting it in the trash, I can’t donate it to the library. There’s nothing especially collectible in it, so eBay is out. Maybe someone would buy the lot of it on Craigslist, but I’m not entirely clear what the legalities are for selling secondhand porn out of the back of a car, let alone what the potential market might be. I mean, how many folks are looking to buy a deceased elderly man’s former wank bank? I’m certain I’m only the most recent in a long line of folks to find themselves in this situation. Any advice for finding the porn a new home, or is it a bad idea to even try? Added difficulties: smallish town, Midwestern state, I’m his only living family member. Rehoming Inherited Pornography You would be in the same predicament if you had lots of living family members. I have an enormous family – lots of aunts and uncles, countless cousins – and “Who wants the porn?” isn’t a question I’ve ever heard asked at an elderly relative’s wake. And that can’t be because none of my elderly relatives had porn stashes; the law of averages dictates that at least one and probably more dead Savages (RIP) had massive porn stashes, which means whoever cleaned out the apartment or house quietly disposed of the porn. And that’s what you should do. If you’re concerned about your dad’s porn “going to waste,” dispose of it in a conspicuous manner, e.g., drop it off at a recycling center in open boxes or clear bags. Maybe a worker or someone else making a drop-off will spot the porn and decide to rescue it from the pile. And, hey, my condolences on the death of your father. I went on Grindr just before Xmas last year, this handsome dude messaged me, and we ended up hooking up at his place. It was apparent from the get-go that this was no regular hookup. We didn’t even have sex. We just kissed and talked and cuddled for six straight hours. Sounds perfect, right? Well, at

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16-22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

“ S TA N DA R D S ”

about hour five, in the middle of this surprisingly deep conversation, he said something that made my head spin. I asked him how old he was. “Twenty-one,” he replied. Holy shit. He asked how old I was. “Fifty.” Neither of us had our age on Grindr. He looked about 30 to me. He said he thought I was in my late 30s. It was basically love at first sight for us. After nine months of trying to keep a lid on our feelings, he moved away and found a guy close to his own age, which I strongly encouraged. Before they became an official couple, we went on a goodbye walk, which was full of love and tears. We agreed to do the “no contact” thing for one month (he thought three was extreme). But here’s my issue: I’m in love with him. I’ve been incredibly sad since we last spoke about three weeks ago. It’s a week until the agreed-upon day when we can say hi if we want to, and I don’t want to. I can’t. I have to let him go. I know he’s going to want to talk, but I’m afraid if I have any contact with him, it will set me back and I won’t want to stop. It’s taken all my willpower to not contact him so far. My question: How do I let him know I don’t want any further contact without hurting him? Impossible Love Sucks Call the boy, ILS, ask him to meet up, and tell him you made a mistake. Yes, you’re a lot older, and the age difference may be so great that you two aren’t going to be together forever. But maybe you’re perfect for each other right now. A relationship doesn’t have to end in a funeral home with one person in a box to have been a success. If you have three or four great years together before the window in which your relationship makes sense closes, ILS, then you had some great years together. People get it into their heads that they can’t enter into a relationship unless they can picture it lasting “forever,” when really nothing is forever. To quote the great James Baldwin: “Love him and let him love you. Do you think anything else under heaven really matters?” On the “Lovecast,” Dan chats with Joan Price about senior lovin’: savagelovecast.com. mail@savagelove.net ITMFA.org

Meet Nova ! Nova (A440342) is a 7-month-old spayed female and was surrendered to our shelter by her previous family because they were moving and could not bring her along with them. They say she is house-broken, leashtrained, and knows basic obedience commands. Nova is friendly with women, men and children; she also gets along well with dogs and cats. Nova would like to invite you all to come into the shelter today to meet her! For the month of October, we are featuring our Pawbucks promotion; adoption fees for both dogs and cats are only $10. The adoption fees include sterilization, vaccinations and a microchip. Mark your calendars for the 8th annual Barktoberfest noon-4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 17. Barktoberfest is the shelter’s rescue appreciation event to celebrate the partnership between OCAS and the rescue community. Animal Services currently works with more than 100 rescue groups across the state that aid in the recovery and adoption of homeless animals. Many of these pets will be present at Barktoberfest and available for adoption through the individual rescue groups. Orange County Animal Services is located at 2769 Conroy Road in Orlando, near the Mall at Millenia. The shelter is open 10 a.m. through 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 1 p.m. through 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information, please call 407-836-3111 or visit ocnetpets. com.


Marketplace

Legal, Public Notices

Yumilash Keratin Lash Lift and Tint by Certified Technician, please call/text: Steven @ 407-692-6964

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, CIVIL DIVISION: DIRECT GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff, v. CEREENA K. HUMPHREY, et al., Defendants. CASE NO.: 2019-CA-000385-O NOTICE OF ACTION TO: CEREENA K. HUMPHREY, JOSEPH R. FOSTER and ALTAREEK H. GRICE, address unknown. YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for declaratory relief has been filed against you and that you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on PLAINTIFF DIRECT GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY, through its counsel, Robert K. Savage, Esq., whose address is 412 East Madison Street, Suite 815, Tampa, FL 33602, no later than 30 days from first publication of this Notice, and file with the clerk of this Court, Tiffany Moore Russell, whose address is 425 N. Orange Avenue, Orlando, FL 32801, before service on Plaintiff, or immediately thereafter. If you fail to do so, a default may be entered against you for the relief demanded in the declaratory judgment action. Copies of all court documents in this case, including orders, are available at the Clerk’s office. You may review these documents upon request 30 days from date of first publication. You must keep the Clerk of the Circuit Court’s office notified of your current address. Future papers in this lawsuit will be mailed to the address on record at the Clerk’s office. Dated: 10/10/19. TIFFANY MOORE RUSSELL Clerk of the Court & Comptroller. By: /s/ Nicole Evans, Deputy Clerk, As Deputy Clerk. 425 N. Orange Avenue, Room 350, Orlando, Florida, 32801.

AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $49/ MONTH! Call for your fee rate comparison to see how much you can save! Call: 855569-1909. (AAN CAN) BECOME A PUBLISHED AUTHOR! We edit, print and distribute your work internationally. We do the work… You reap the Rewards! Call for a FREE Author’s Submission Kit: 844-511-1836. (AAN CAN) COMPUTER ISSUES? FREE DIAGNOSIS by GEEKS ON SITE! Virus Removal, Data Recovery! 24/7 EMERGENCY $20 OFF ANY SERVICE with coupon 42522! Restrictions apply. 866-9961581 (AAN CAN) Denied Social Security Disability? Appeal! If you’re 50+, filed for SSD and denied, our attorneys can help get you approved! No money out of pockets! Call 1-844-218-7289 (AAN CAN) DISH TV - Over 190 Channels Now ONLY $69.99/mo! 2yr price guarantee, FREE Installation! Save HUNDREDS over Cable and DIRECTV. Add Internet as low as $14.95/mo! Call Now 1-800-373-6508 (AAN CAN) Need Help with Family Law? Can’t Afford a $5000 Retainer? Low Cost Legal Services- Pay As You Go-As low as $750$1500- Get Legal Help Now! Call 1-844-821-8249 Mon-Fri 7am to 4pm PCT (AAN CAN) https://www.familycourt direct. com/?network=1 Orlando + Daytona Beach Florida Vacation! Enjoy 7 Days and 6 Nights with Hertz, Enterprise or Alamo Car Rental Included - Only $298.00. 12 months to use 855-898-8912. (AAN CAN) Struggling With Your Private Student Loan Payment? New relief programs can reduce your payments. Learn your options. Good credit not necessary. Call the Helpline 888-670-5631 (Mon- Fri 9am-5pm Eastern) (AAN CAN)

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/DOHERTY, WESTGATE ADVOCACY CENTER, CASE NO.: DP19-67 IN THE INTEREST OF: I.N. DOB: 07/25/2017. NOTICE OF ACTION, TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Danielle Sweat, 385 E Cleveland Street, Apopka, Florida 32703A. 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 Patricia A. Doherty on October 31, 2019 at 9:30am. 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 24th day of September, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of:DeShayla M. Strachan, Esquire, Florida Bar #.: 1002639. Children’s Legal Services, Deshayla.strachan@myflfamilies.com. By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/DOHERTY, WESTGATE ADVOCACY CENTER, CASE NO.: DP17-91 IN THE INTEREST OF:D. M. DOB: 10/20/2002, D. M. DOB: 10/20/2002. NOTICE OF ACTION, TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Dania Elisaint, address unknown. 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 Patricia A. Doherty on November 1, 2019 at 9:30am. 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 27th day of September, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of: Audrea Ashcraft, Esquire Florida Bar #.: 101358. Children’s Legal Services, audrea. ashcraft@myflfamilies.com. By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION: 03/CRANER CASE NO.: DP18-544 IN THE INTEREST OF: J.E. DOB: 02/21/2014, minor child. SUM-

MONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. To: ISRAEL ENGLISH, 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 A. James Craner, at 10:00 a.m., on the 14th day of NOVEMBER, 2019, 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 (THESE CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD (OR CHILDREN) NAMED IN 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 30th day of September, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of: Nancy A. Robak,, Attorney for the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 400 West Robinson Street, Ste. N211, Orlando, FL 32801, (407) 317-7643. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURTBy: /s/ Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/DOHERTY, WESTGATE ADVOCACY CENTER, CASE NO.: DP18-135 IN THE INTEREST OF: K.M. DOB: 03/25/2015 NOTICE OF ACTION, TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Brandy Brock, address unknown. 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 Patricia A. Doherty on Tuesday, November 12, 2019 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 2nd day of October, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of: Audrea Beth Ashcraft, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 101358 Children’s Legal Services, audrea. ashcraft@myflfamilies.com. (407) 563-2380 By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/DOHERTY, WESTGATE ADVOCACY CENTER, CASE NO.: DP05-356 IN THE INTEREST OF: Z.J. DOB: 6/9/2019 NOTICE OF ACTION, TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Shameara Jackson, address unknown. A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the abovereferenced child(ren). You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Patricia Doherty on Monday, November 25, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL

orlandoweekly.com

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 3rd day of October, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of: Deshayla Strachan, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 1002639 Children’s Legal Services, deshayla.strachan@myflfamilies. com. (407) 563-2380 By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal)

Notice of Sale Personal Property of the following tenants will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy a rental lien in accordance with Florida Statute and the Florida Self Storage Facility Act, Sections 83.806 and 83.807. Unit #’s 1347 – Richard Aldrich, A.K.A. Richard Earl Aldrich, 1428 – Michayla Rank, A.K.A. Michayla Raeanne Rank, 2144 – Steven Beaudoin, A.K.A. Steven M Beaudoin, 2214 – Kwame Laster, A.K.A. Kwame Bakiiza Laster. Contents may include household items, luggage, toys, furniture, clothing, commercial equipment, etc. Auction to be held at Compass Self Storage, 14120 E. Colonial Dr. Orlando, FL 32826 on November 6, 2019 at 12:00 pm or thereafter. Viewing at time of sale only. The owners or their agents reserve the right to bid on any unit and also to refuse any bid. Compass Self Storage #112, 14120 E. Colonial Dr., Orlando, FL 32826 407-3812980 Office 407-381-2697 Fax css112@compassselfstorage. com, compassselfstorage.com. 10/9, 10/16

OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Legal, Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/DOHERTY, WESTGATE ADVOCACY CENTER, CASE NO.: DP16-378 IN THE INTEREST OF: V.M. DOB: 02/18/2019 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Robert Snell, 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 Patricia A. Doherty on Thursday, November 14, 2019 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 10th day of October, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of: DeShayla M. Strachan, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 1002639 Deshayla.strachan@myflfamilies. com Children’s Legal Services, (407) 563-2380 By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA, JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/DOHERTY, WESTGATE ADVOCACY CENTER, CASE NO.: DP16-378 IN THE INTEREST OF: V.M. DOB: 02/18/2019 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA To: Jolene Marroquin, 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 Patricia A. Doherty on Thursday, November 14, 2019 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

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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 10th day of October, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of: DeShayla M. Strachan, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 1002639 Deshayla.strachan@myflfamilies. com Children’s Legal Services, (407) 563-2380 By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 03/CRANER. WESTGATE SERVICE CENTER. CASE NO.: DP18-509. In the Interest of: R.M.M. DOB: 08/19/2018. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS. TO: Christiana Harvey, Address Unknown. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, has filed a Petition to terminate your parental rights and permanently commit the following child(ren) for adoption: R.M.M., born on 08/19/2018. A copy of the Petition is on file with the Clerk of the Court. You are hereby commanded to appear on October 29, 2019, at 11:00 a.m., before the Honorable A. James Craner, Juvenile Division, Courtroom 5, at the Orange County Courthouse, Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, FL 32806 for an ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact Court Administration, at 425 N. Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32801, telephone (407) 836-2303 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida

this 24TH day of September, 2019. This summons has been issued at the request of Jennifer McCarthy, Esq., Florida Bar No.: 0086793, Children’s Legal Services, State of Florida, Department of Children and Families 882 S. Kirkman Road, Ste. 200, Orlando, FL 32811, 407-579-9480, jennifer.mccarthy@ myflfamilies.com CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal) LOST OR ABANDONED PROPERTY FOUND OR RECOVERED WITHIN THE CITY LIMITS OF ORLANDO, FLORIDA. PROPERTY NOT CLAIMED WILL EITHER BE SURRENDERED TO THE FINDERS OR RETAINED FOR USE BY THE DEPARTMENT. FLORIDA PICTURE IDENTIFICATION IS REQUIRED. OCTOBER 2019 DESCRIPTION, FOUND LOCATION: 1. back pack w/ electronics Major Boulevard / S Kirkman Road 2. Tools 800 blk N Orange Avenue 3. Phones 1300 blk Lescot Lane 4. Bag w/ Tools & Electronics N Westmoreland Drive / W Concord Street 5. Bag w/ Misc. Items 4000 Blk Conroy Road 6. Bag w/ Clothing 900 blk W Colonial Drive 7. Bag w/ Electronics 1600 blk Osprey Avenue 8. Tools 1600 blk Tulane Street 9. Electronics 6000 blk Carrier Drive 10. Lawn Equipment 5230 Merimont Court 11. Bike 700 blkTerrace Boulevard 12. Bike 5000 blk Radebaugh Way 13. Bike 5000 blk Radebaugh Way 14. Money 900 blk W Jackson Street 15. Money 1200 blk E Anderson Street 16. Money 6100 blk Carrier Drive FOR INFO CALL (407) 246-2445, MONDAYS – THRU- THURSDAYS, 9:00 AM TILL 3:00 PM Notice of Public Auction for monies due on storage units located at U-Haul company facilities. Storage locations are listed below. All goods are household contents or miscellaneous and recovered goods. All auctions are hold to satisfy owner’s lien for rent and fees in accordance with Florida Statutes, Self-Storage Act, Sections 83.806 and 83.807. The auction will start at 8:00 a.m. on November 7, 2019 and will continue until all locations are done. U-Haul Moving and Storage of Maitland, 7803 North Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32810; A12 Timothy Turner $451.44, A05 Tiffany Peddie $310.79, D63 William Perry $478.92, C11 John Brown $536.70 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Apopka, 1221 E Semoran Blvd, Apopka, FL 32703; 1184 Lorenzo Weathers $1286.80, 1190 Brandy Gilliland $1338.08, 1002 Ethel Tarver $1417.67, 1303 Charles

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

Powers Weathington $927.44, 1082 Gabriel Young $454.16, 1157 Kelly Stephenson $427.08, 1296 Kristopher Phillips $1352.70 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Altamonte Springs, 598 West Highway 436, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714; A109 Brittany Braxton $832.02, A110 Dan Meyers $832.02, B115 Courtney Perez $671.45, B107 Todd Tucci $805.36, B132 Terrelle Coates $858.48 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Semoran, 2055 N Semoran Blvd, Winter Park, FL 32792; 1410 Robert Fadeley $466.25, 1361 Reginal Welch $419.27, 1244 Erik Brunson $639.85, 1191 Kenneth Martin $1049.51, 1553 Randy Sanchez $522.38, 1034 Timothy Jordan $527.23, 2291 Sarah Irwin $779.23, 1371 Shayne Sutton $490.58, 1508 Robert Soni $534.38, 2779 Jeffrey Saia $378.56, 2470 Luis Galvis $486.76, 1078 Luis Barreto $597.23, 1045 Kevin Correia $357.20, 1183 Dorothy Brantley $517.31, 1676 John Chase $1168.61, 1051 Chaitra McCormick $287.90 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Longwood, 650 N. Ronald Reagan Blvd, Longwood, FL 32750; B022 Amir Gipson $961.40, B081 Cheryl Osberg $351.92, E044 Starisha Thomas $407.78, B01718 Steve Boyt $683.95, C047 Jenny Hazen $1121.68, D009 Richard Sears $675.19, D015 Cheryl Osberg $475.99, A015 Malia Grollman $741.32 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Lake Mary, 3851 S Orlando Ave, Sanford, FL 32773; 2025 Julie Dimeglio $378.56, 1607 Michael Ayala $613.28, 2338 Faith Crocker $537.99, 1411 Luis Perez $653.28, 1268 Tammy Howard $476.50, 2596 Lyric Pittman $327.77, 1270 Lauren Giles $357.20, 5082 Katrina Boyd $699.95, 1408 Ronald Richardson $490.61, 5008 John Saxon $655.96, 2081 Adrienne Bullard $327.77, 1492 Barbara Alonso $397.20, 2442 Jeffrey Sandoval $273.92, 1053 Margret Virgil $589.70, 1423 Gennorris Jones $1068.89, 2405 Wilbert Gordon $742.44, 2443 Johnny Corona $622.62, 1653 Donna Bors $479.96, 2360 Toya Jackson $893.05, 1120 Anita White $1127.46, 2227 Johnny Corona $698.64 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Rinehart, 1811 Rinehart Road, Sanford, FL 32771; 3057 Shamiel Crayton $423.80, 3056 Antonio Webb $903.20, 3169 Daniel Habibe $1424.07, 1062 Yanique Roberts $336.77, 4052 Travis Shore $785.60, 3133 Benjamin Fries $538.40. 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, MISCEL-

LANEOUS 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 8am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul Ctr Kirkman-600 S Kirkman Rd- Orlando 11/6/19 3080 Brooke Gaitr 5020 Recovery Truck TT8430E Lindsey Denike 3014 Edsel Tenorio 1050 Beth Gillotte 8018 Kenyetta Patterson 1020 Sherline Ulysse 2111 Mohanad Alif 4044 Jeannette Ojeda 1019 Diana Camacho 3021 Duane Phillips 8017 Teresa Rogers 4049 Glenn Hutchinson 1098 Kellyn Correa 6045 Michael Adderlini 3036 Brenda Fredrick 8011 Mike Sanderleaf 5035 Homer Hartage 1065 Duane Phillips 3003 Frederick Dauley 6026 Carianne Abraham Uhaul Ctr Orange Ave-3500 S Orange Ave- Orlando 11/6/19 1938 Nancy Duckworth 1104 Gaylene Boardman 1807 Jordan Mercer 1913 Shirley Baez 2012 Recovery Truck TT1810D Tyrek Evans 1445 Christopher Leone 2306 Melissa Grider 1501 Shawn Collins 1421 Lakesha Thompson 1509 Sade Code 1270 Christina Batista 1405 Racquel Cliatte 1628 Dara Bennett 1834 Reginald Harden 1021 Joanne Patterson Uhaul Ctr Baldwin Park- 4001 E Colonial Drive- Orlando 11/6/19 C141 Brackston Helms B213 Bernie Wilerson A121 Fernando Bouffard B204 Bernie Wilkerson B138 Bernie Wilkerson C167 Lesline Powe Barton B194 Bernie Wilkerson B212 Bernie Wilkerson D231 Torrance Williams B160 Ann Gallagher C177 Ann Gallagher Uhaul Ctr Goldenrod- 508 N Goldenrod Rd- Orlando 11/6/19 1310 Carmelo Berrios 307 Connie Johnson 314 Reinaldo Cortes 431 Elizette Merville 725 Giovanni Gonzalez 709 Jannessa Hammerle 412 Raymond Rivera 407 Samantha Sputts 312 Carmen Solano 221 Adrain Robinson. 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 8am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul Ctr Clermont- 13650 Granville Ave- Clermont 11/13/19 2108 Michael Harrison 1051 Susan Wagner Thornton 1205 Christopher Nichols 3061 Toni Toschlog 1116 Theresa Scaver Uhaul Ctr Ocoee-11410 W. Colonial Drive- Ocoee 11/13/19 2522 Ryan Sarjoo 1515 Bernice

Duncan 2604 Shawn Davis 1003 Elaine Boyd 3307 Frank Kutsukos 1573-1577 Dwayne Ferguson 1009 Anjaune Walters 1608 Antonio Jones 3472 Elaine Boyd 2324 Milagros Urquiaga 3483 Elaine Boyd 3314 Joshua Lilienthal 2549 Jessica Steele Uhaul Ctr Four Corners- 8546 W Irlo Bronson Memorial HwyKissimmee 11/13/19 1324 Stacy Garrity 1520 RafaelGuzman 1314 Xavier Henriquez 1437 Helvis Lestradw 1330 Shirley Hollingshead 1639 Lorainn Milan 1548 Vanusa Lennon Uhaul Stg Haines City- 3307 Hwy 17-92 W- Haines City 11/13/19 A0011 April Davidson H0904 Luis A Gonzalez A0077 Megan Parrish A0064- 65 Jarrod Swearengin G0796 Jesus Rivera G0737 Tihesha Pritchard A0095 Luke Samuel G0740 Lauren Garner Uhaul Ctr Hunters Creek-13301 S. Orange Blossom Trail- Orlando 11/13/19 2111-12 Recovery Truck TT4096E Angela Ruiz 2090 Rick Emandi 2617 Shelanda Flowers 3417 Lorie Watts 3021 Timothy Erickson 1607-15 Recovery Trcuk DC2443L Alison Andrew 2610 Adriana Sanchez 1302 Evelyn Ramirez 2223 Crystal Hughes 3052 NTD Software Solutions 1009 Amirs Santos 1729 Philip Barnhart 1203 Kenneth Johnson 2082 Juanita Figueroa 3615 Jenecie Vergara 3033 Gerardo Barroeta 1058 Enid Hernandez 1311 Anita Long 3241 Gergory Manigate 1307 Egna Mogollon Uhaul Stg Gatorland- 14651 Gatorland Dr- Orlando 11/13/19 579 Kyle Spittle 764 Holly Eckenroth 311 Andres Leberle 893 Dewayne Hicks 515 La’toya Andrews 1085 Kimberly Rodriguez 552 G&L Recycling Corp Gilberto Rodriguez 445 Nicolle Viera 978 Hector Marcano 731 Kimberly Butler 709 Otto Wilkerson III 447 Theresa Peterson 1072 Noelia Colon 1084 Juan Suarez. 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: 2006 Toyota VIN# 5TDZA23C26S476164 2002 Chevy VIN# 1GCEC14W62Z311657 2007 Chrysler VIN# 3A4FY58B97T549662 2005 Honda VIN# 1HGCM66535A076032 2014 Kia VIN# KNDJP3A58E7039347 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on October 30, 2019 at 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 Tuesday, November 5, 2019 at times indicated below. Viewing and bidding will only be available online at www.storagetreasures.com beginning at least 5 days prior to the scheduled sale date and time! Also visit www.personalministorage.com/Orlando-FL storage-units/ for more info. Michigan Mini-200 W Michigan St Orlando, FL 32806-at 10:30am: 22-Jamie Purdue/PGP Property Solutions Personal Mini Storage Forsyth-2875 Forsyth Rd Winter Park FL, 32792-at 10:00 am: 512 Efrain Ortiz Jr 380 Dion Omarr Redmon Jr Personal Mini Storage Lake Fairview- 4252 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804- at 11:30 am: 850 Trimissa Anntoinette McCullough 968 Emanuel Montrel Glenn Personal Mini Storage Edgewater- 6325 Edgewater Dr Orlando, FL 32810-at 11:30 am: 0103 Tiarra Lashay Brunson 0223 Kristina Lynn Cook 0623 Tiffany Norkiesha Kirkland 0641 Elroy Nathaniel Francis Jr 0732 Nicole Erin Fitch 0918 Ramona Y Clark 0958 Sabrina Nicole Costopoulos 1132 Jermaine Demetrius Bryant 2005 HD XL883 Sportster 883 VIN 1HD4CAM155K427816 1229 Charlotte Ann Bruce 1327 Franquelin Jimmy Ocean 1414 Anthony Scott Wolfe 1421 Anthony R Brawner 1543 Latrice Monika Britton 1743 Carolyn Santiago 2309 Darnell S Pickett 1986 Chevy Corvette VIN 1G1FP87F7GN142947 2403 Travis Spencer White Personal Mini Storage Edgewater Annex- 6212 Edgewater Dr Orlando, FL 32810- at 11:30 am: 6212 Karren Jermain Gilzen Vibes Reggae Arena Personal Mini Storage Forest City Rd-6550 Forest City Rd Orlando, FL 32810-at 12:00 pm: 1005 Shanquinette Shanquera Hancock 1108 Nickolas K WestfallBlake 1118 Maxene Jeanlouis 3159 Byron A Manzanarez 3177 Brazilia Eteria Shane Towns 3252 Sharise Shantay Laster 3265 Manuel Perez Jr. 3274 Vincenzo G Siciliano 4053 Kelvin Leanard Lewis 4055 Coral Renee Davis 4056 Destiny Rashad Holley 5058 Tiffany Lanette Smith. Viewing and bidding for the location listed below will only be available online at www.StorageAuctions.com beginning at least 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 West4600 Old Winter Garden Rd Orlando, FL 32811-at 11:30 am: 15 Clayton Lamar Williams 115 Jannaka Breanda Byron 217 Christine Mozelle 231 Kathy Louise Gagel 260 Tomon Kevrin Stanley 411 Chelsea Simone Bohler 433 Kendra Victoria Durham 476 Vince Delrenard Brown 498 Andrew Gordon Kerr 506 Antawian Jabbar Green 508 Nettie Sherese Smith 511 Kendayshia Laeshirreah Cunningham 523 Brittany Clarissa Willis. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Orange Co. Inc. will sell at public lien sale on October 24, 2019, the personal property in the belowlisted units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 09:30 AM and continue until all units are sold. PUBLIC STORAGE # 25893, 3725 W Lake Mary Blvd, Lake Mary, FL 32746, (407) 495-1274 Time: 09:30 AM 1022 - Murgan, Daniel; 1026 - Jones, Synthia; 1050 - Gregory, Clarissa; 1057 DeSaix, Nicole; 1075 - Francis, Rossy; 1119 - Nazario, Gilberto; 1148 - Schwertfager, Matthew; 2014 - Whitaker, Lomicia; 2069 Mrabi, Hassan; 2071 - Matthews, Mark; 2158 - Callahan, Michelle; 3068 - Mekarski, Joleen; 4005 - Redwine, Keith; 4011 - Reed, Christopher; 4012 - Reed, Christopher; 4021 - Turpin, Caroline; 4026 - Lawson, Joshua; 4031 - Ortiz, Violeta; 4040 - Haag, Nathan; 5001 - Myricks, Kiwana; 5028 Swilley, William; 5029 - Showers, Nicole; 5034 - Gazard, Mia; 5048 - Mountian, Matthew; 5059 - Kling, Christian; 5077 - Brown-Samuels, Gabrielle; 5134 - Weitzel, Troy; 7007 - Irizarry Torres, Jorge; 7119 Black, Alexis; 7145 - Callahan, Jeff PUBLIC STORAGE # 25842, 51 Spring Vista Dr, Debary, FL 32713, (386) 202-2956 Time: 09:45 AM 00113 - Figueroa, Travis; 00280 - Dean, Heather; 00289 - PORTER, MARK; 00302 Resto, Maribel; 00324 - Strickland, Shelby; 00425 - Richard, Jeremy; 00427 - Poper, Franklin; 00429 - Gray, Cathie; 00435 - Jackson, Darrell; 00442 - Knighton, Allen; 00505 - Wood, Danielle; 00507 Joseph, Wade; 00533 - Padgett, Ruby; 00550 - Kohler, Geneen; 00576 - Corkery, AMBER; 00577 - Knox, James; 00587 - Diossa, Hugo; 00589 - Gligora, Sheri; 00593 - Rivera, Saskia; 00596 - Saunders, Aaisha; 00607 - chapman, mark; 00610 - Frankiewicz, Rachel; 00617 - Brody, Kaitlin; 00618 - Weaver, Karen; 00704 Morris-Murray, Kathy; 00724 - Lee, Kayla; 00725 - Page, Michael; 00742 - Gonzalez, Efrain; 00744 - Taylor, William; 00750 - Page, Michael; 00757 - Glass, Nicholas; 00769 - White, Shane; 00783 Mooney, Roxie; 00787 - Head,

Keith; 00793 - Covertt, Raymond; 00911 - Cortes, Edwin; 00913 Myers, Angela PUBLIC STORAGE # 25438, 2905 South Orlando Drive, Sanford, FL 32773, (407) 545-6715 Time: 10:00 AM A003 - Griffin, Robert; A011 - Ryan, Angela; A013 - Cauley, Philip; A015 Bailey, James; A018 - Gopher, Sara; A027 - Smith, Sherree; A034 - Merthie, Bernard; A040 - Shaw, Daniel; B010 - Hudson, Robert; B012 - Morgan, Michael; C004 - Ainsworth, Tammy; C006 - Jones, Dana; C007 - Bradley, Terrica; C010 - Walker, Jacqueline; C018 - Peters, Deondra; C036 Rivera, Francisco; C046 - Brown, Franceska; C049 - Prine, Dale; C052 - Rodriguez, Joe; D001 Thomas- Session, Tymiera; D003 - Cotto, Rey; D006 - Trevarthen, Craig; D011 - Franklin, Jacqueline; D020 - iris, sonia; D029 - Smith, Veronica; D034 - Barfield, Latrell; D035 - HARTSFIELD, MIKALYIA; D061 - Davis-James, Carmen; D077 - Stokes, Lawrence; D080 - Bennett, India; D084 - Moore, Carolyn; D093 - Harris, Randy; D097 - Walker, Jason; D105 Bradley, Trenise; D114 - Owens, Illya; D116 - Jenkins, Shanice; E016 - Freeman, Sharon; E017 Mccray, Tomeka; E027 - Mayhew, Lashanda; E033 - Allen, Dawn; E046 - Wilford, Roscoe; E048 Bowen, Sharron; E071 - Burke, Theresa; E075 - boatwright, ken; E078 - Cotto-Santiago, Yanitza; E080 - Dunlap, Elizabeth; F004 - Jones, Josie; F008 - Lyles, Margaret; F018 - Debore, Bruce; G002 - Cruce, Dianne; H014 Crouse, Michael; H018 - Byrd, Shawn; H027 - Acosta, Enid; H040 - Brown JR, Haskell; I003 - Dixon, Robert; I006 - Serra, Jazmin; I011 - Gillespie, Henry; I020 - Medina, Jose; I023 - Lara, Gabriel; I026 - Mckinzie, Ashley; J116 - Burns, Shakira; J209 - Bell, Marquise; J218 - Galante, Joseph; J417 Perez, Anthony; J424 - Callahan, Devin; J501 - Champion, Jayson; J518 - Lopez, Freddy; J522 Steward, Laura; J615 - Martinez, Valarie; J617 - Edwards, Gareth; J904 - Jenkins, James; P059 Dantzler, Lonnell; P067 - Hackney, Tayanna PUBLIC STORAGE # 24326, 570 N US Highway 17 92, Longwood, FL 32750, (407) 505-7649 Time: 10:15 AM A110 - shull, Jennifer; A113 - Zawodnik, Brittany; A123 - Brown, Jerleen; A128 - Singleton, Kelvin; A137 - Dellamotta, Melissa; B241 - Hartman, Bryan; C301 - Pirollo, Lawrence; C308 Dickson, Michelle; C311 - Brunn, Valerie; C314 - Burke, Susan; C341 - Greene, Heather; D401 Cooke, Joseph; D404 - McNair & Associates PA ., .; D438 - LBjUG, LLC Watkins, Nathaniel; E012 - Farley, April; E018 - Rumble, Gina; E027 - Garcia, Aidan; E030 - Hosein, Renee; E032 - Roth, Kelly; E075 - O’Connor, Ricardo; E095 - Gonzalez, Rafael; E097 - Canerossi, Ann; E098 - Seal, Hannah; F604 - Valmyr, Kevinsly;

F637 - Hall, Mark; F646 - Haughn, Nickoll; F648 - Allen, Alfred; F658 - Copeland, Phillip; F660 - Harper, Troy; F666 - Cooper, Heather; F688 - Martini, Kimberley; F689 - Bivens, Michael; G008 - Weber, Danny; G027 - Trivett, Pamela; G028 - Coon, Feechjee; G030 - Raynor, Pamela; G093 - Riner Jr, Justin; G094 - Wimberly, Paul; H802 - Smith, Kristy; H808 Sears, Ron; H824 - Seymour, James; H834 - buchanan, Jeffrey; H836 - Sergeant, Jane PUBLIC STORAGE # 23118, 141 W State Road 434, Winter Springs, FL 32708, (407) 5120425 Time: 10:30 AM A002 - Simonson, Mark; D136 - Alexander, Steven; D146 - GRANGER, WILLIAM; E164 - Rios, Walter; E170 - Green, LaVonte; H228 Caldwell, Christian; H245 - Griffith, Cara; I251 - Williams, Kamaria; I253 - Hamilton, Wade; J294 Speed, Arlene; J318 - THYSELL, EDWARD; J352 - Thomas, Aaron; J389 - Alexander, Sellina; K414 - Cruz, Billie; K420 - Deem, Kathleen; K427 - Nelson, Corey; K446 - Raef, Jeffrey; K453 Melendez, Ernesto; K462 - Fisher, Elizabeth; L486 - Spillman, Kevin; L494 - Perez, Michael; L497 Paradis, Jackie; R546 - Schwartz, Kimberley; S574 - Tanner, Denise; S579 - Mickelson, Mark; S590 Hodges, Barbara PUBLIC STORAGE # 07030, 360 State Road 434 East, Longwood, FL 32750, (407) 392-1525 Time: 10:45 AM 1104 - Harper, Amy; 1313 - Ellington, Jaronte; 1314 Dunham, Apostle; 1513 - Jones, Denise; 1703 - Tanzer, Fred; 1814 - Adams-Brown, Tasmaria; 1824 - Lopez, Alejandro; 2106 Bennett, Savannah; 2110 - Miro, Clara; 2215 - Harper, Amy; 2216 - Tossie, Shydonna; 2220 - Tossie, Shydonna; 2322 - Simpkins, Steve; 2610 - Gourdeau, Breanna; 2622 - Quintero, John; 2701 Torres, Wilfredo; 2724 - Scher, David; 3111 - Oser, Daniel; 3207 Marlette, Marleen; 3212 - Graham, Hilmer; 3219 - Servider, Nicholas; 3416 - Narvaez, Elena; 3506 Ragin, Joanie; 3511 - Casella, Jaclyne; 3515 - Salgado, Nilda; 3601 - Haboain, Anthony; 3608 Palmer, Samantha; 3617 - Byrd, Kathlyn; 3625 - Tossie, Shydonna; 3725 - Manley, Terry; 3727 sheets, gregory PUBLIC STORAGE # 24328, 7190 S US Highway 17/92, Fern Park, FL 32730, (407) 258-3060 Time: 11:00 AM A125 - Ware, Ivan; B203 - Harmon, Wendy; B220 - Hutley, Derek; C315 - Hunt, William; C328 - Campbell, Crystal; C341 - Holmes, Ernesto; C346 Dixon, Malessa; D407 - Hayes, Michael; D465 - Smith, James; E509 - Soto, Alsiri; E524 - Guthrie, Robert; F608 - Fiorino, Micheal; F640 - Britt, Vickie; G744 - Davis, Justin; H811 - Conley, Stacey; K021 - Franklin, Jonathan PUBLIC STORAGE # 25455, 8226 S US Highway 17/92, Fern Park, FL 32730, (407) 258-3062 Time: 11:15 AM A108 - Mcduffie, Janet;

A109 - C and F Land Maintenance Fellgren, Corey; A141 - Hood, Timberley; A155 - Bates, Debbie; B220 - SHARKLEY, JACK; B222 - Stasney, Traci; B225 - Moffitt, Ellen; B232 - Reid, Dellon; B253 Koritko, Weston; B279 - Anderson, Charles; C307 - Woodham, Kimberly; C308 - Costa, Frankie; C314 - Woodham, Kimberly; C315 - Merkle, David; C337 - Pinto-Lewis, Yhorgos; C338 - Palen, Kendra; C357 - Cheek, Amy; C361 - Taylor, Matthew; C374 - Rogers, Rebecca; C383 - Colce, Sebastian; C402 - Reyes, Fernando; D418 Lowe, Adlena; D450 - Pile, Justin; D485 - MODKINS, KANISHA; E557 - Glenn, Abbie; E570 - Wilson, William; F673 - Ashe-Lane, Ericka; G704 - Grace, Philip; G733 - Pinto-Lewis, Yhorgos; G744 Duque, Sebastian; H809 - Reyes, Alejandro; P018 - VAZQUEZ, AGUILAR PUBLIC STORAGE # 08729, 5215 Red Bug Lake Road, Winter Springs, FL 32708, (407) 495-2108 Time: 11:30 AM 0354 Torres, Vannessa; 0385 - Castro, Suzette; 0483 - Rosado, Francisca; 0497 - Roush, Jason; 0522 - Holmes, Elizabeth; 1040 - House, Angi; 2052 - Hall, Lisa; 2055 Moler, Jeff; 2070 - Welsh, Wendy; 2080 - Syldor, Judevenson; 2104 - Daye, Donnalee; 2114 - Rodney, Marcus; 2116 - Diaz, Amanda; 3014 - Morales, Jacquelyn; 3017 Jones, Gayle PUBLIC STORAGE # 28076, 1131 State Road 436, Casselberry, FL 32707, (407) 505-6401 Time: 11:45 AM B010 - Martinez, Eva; B042 - Swetich, Melissa; C020 - Armstrong, Kelly; C036 - Jones, Elias; C066 - Brown, Barbara; C081 - Ramos, Jorge; C120 - Putrim, Jeannine; C123 - Bryant, Taylor; D002 - Alls, Sandra; D005 Cannon, Paul; D008 - Poindexter, Jerry; D050 - Fitts, Robert; D058 - Adkins, Kathleen; D061 - Haines, Linda; E002 - Rodriguez Velez, Carla Michelle; E014 - Knuth, Maria; E016 - Hadley, Paul; E037 - Purkey, Felicia; E038 - Glunt, Cindy; E041 - Mills, Andrea; E057 - Rose, Gene; E062 - Williams, Megan; E064 - Thomas, TaCamry; E099 - Agosto, Luriam; F002 Brown, Lirann; F011 - Kine Thompson, Brian; F038 - Appleton, Felicia; G015 Brent, Robert; G020 - Coleman, Raymond; G037 - McGhee-Bey, Khaleel; G052 - Bridge, Mikeal; G065 - Daverat, Georges; G070 - Maldonado, Alfonso; G074 Barker, Michael; H029 - Vidot Gonzalez, Cherleene; H035 - Perkin, Larina; I010 - Miller, Shron; I030 - Engel, Stephanie; J007 - Bucher, Scott; J027 - Donnelly, Kyle. Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each

orlandoweekly.com

space purchased is required. By PS Orangeco, Inc., 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080. Notice of Public Sale: Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on November 1st, 2019 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Of Central Florida, INC, 630 E Landstreet Rd, Orlando, FL 32824, will sell the following vehicles and/or vessels. Seller reserves the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. Seller reserves the right to refuse any or all bids; 19UUA76508A043366 2008 ACURA 1FDXE45P44HB18553 2005 FORD 1FTCR10A7VTA32886 1997 FORD 1FTNE242X2HB57263 2002 FORD 1FTPW12584KA12032 2004 FORD 1G1AK55F577389317 2007 CHEVROLET 1G4HP54K05U282093 2005 BUICK 1G4HR52K9WH499522 1998 BUICK 1GCDM19X53B121076 2003 CHEVROLET 1HGCG5643XA145524 1999 HONDA 1HGEM22934L080403 2004 HONDA 1HGES16572L080098 2002 HONDA 1J4GS48K26C160677 2006 JEEP 1UYVS2537H6008122 2017 UT Trailer 2C3CCABG7JH253919 2018 CHRYSLER 2C4RDGAG5CR193479 2012 DODGE 2C4RDGEGXCR312413 2012 DODGE 2T1KR32E13C164456 2003 TOYOTA 3C4NJCCB1KT616412 2019 JEEP 4T1BE46K18U789706 2008 TOYOTA 4T1BF1FK6GU247608 2016 TOYOTA 4T1BF1FK9CU054475 2012 TOYOTA JM1BJ225820581471 2002 MAZDA JT3GN86R310198602 2001 TOYOTA JTNBE46K173013693 2007 TOYOTA JYARJ12E16A003099 2006 YAMAHA KMHDH4AE0DU883247 2013 HYUNDAI MD2JGJ406FC255804 2015 KTM WDBWK56F15F052558 2005 MERCEDES-BENZ

OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Legal, Public Notices NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Orange Co. Inc. will sell at public lien sale on October 28, 2019, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 09:30 AM and continue until all units are sold. PUBLIC STORAGE # 07031, 1355 State Road 436, Casselberry, FL 32707, (407) 574-4516 Time: 09:30 AM 1326 - thompson, scarlet; 1815 Antonietta, James; 2117 - Salako, Chantal; 2236 - Cooley, Kollonnie; 2502 - Gonzalez, Alyse; 3104 Thurman, Dianne; 3215 - Coriano, Liani; 3323 - Ryan, Shawn; 3431 - Sykes, Tevin; 3522 - Schmel Ill, John; 3728 - Delgado, Jose PUBLIC STORAGE # 27221, 1625 State Road 436, Winter Park, FL 32792, (407) 545-3653 Time: 09:45 AM A001 - Heard, Katherine; B007 - Hamilton, Matthew; B014 - Larson, Randall; B048 - Mitchell, Tristan; D032 Dougherty, Jay; E030 - Byrtus, Ryan; E073 - Lespinace, Jephte; E086 - Rock, Ray; E106 - Matos, Grimaldi; E133 - Delmedico, Anthony; E153 - Marrone, Michael; E214 - Stevens, Dr. Damion PUBLIC STORAGE # 24105, 2275 N Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 545-2541 Time: 10:00 AM 1334 - Betances, Janine; 2043 - Richmond Il, Fabian; 2214 - Pew Mortgage Research Lavalle, Aneurin; 2286 - Santiago- Caraballo, Shanelle; 2319 - Mackin, Stacey; 2327 - Hayes, Kari; 2338 - Scott, Joe; 2398 - McDaniel, Zachary; 3002 - Thomas, Lakesha; 3072 - Marshall, Andera; 3234 - Dennis, Rosie; 3251 - Strickland, Katrina; F399 Jonathas, Blonide; F434 - Guzman Salcedo, Jose; F441 - Wilson, James; F448 - Rosado, Miguel; H550 - Macdonald, Frances; H580 - Roman, Wendaly; H581 - Lank, Joshua; I680 - Walton, Lovie PUBLIC STORAGE # 25973, 250 N Goldenrod Rd, Orlando, FL 32807, (407) 901-7489 Time: 10:15 AM A046 - Baez, Jennifer; A070 - Plovetskyi, Bohdan; A079 Simmonds, Aisha; A084 - Kenneth, Uma; A168 - Doyle, Cedric; A197 - Degante, Jose; A241 - Brown, Brenda; A251 - Miranda, Jan; B314 - Keaton, Archie; D443 - Fontanez, Betzaida; D447 Cuyler, Keon; E502 - Squire, Solomon; E512 - Rowley, Niubys; F555 - Gutierrez, Miguel; F565 - Garcia, Maria De los angeles; F572 - Sczesny, Marcel PUBLIC STORAGE # 25781, 155 S Goldenrod Rd, Orlando, FL 32807, (321) 247-6790 Time: 10:30 AM 1122 - Ferran Palmero, Alexander; 1127 - Vega, Jose; 1203 - Lebron, Elizabeth; 1244 - Carrasco, William; 1256 - Mercedes De Maldonado, Lourdes;

50

1311 - Vasquez, Keith; 1320 - Martinez, Allan; 1325 - Eaton, Wendy; 1341 - Mzee, Jaffer; 1345 - Park, James; 1371 - Lopez, Gene; 1423 - Padilla, Norma; 1426 - Mendez, Juan; 1434 - Bush, David; 1441 Urra Gonzalez, Jose; 1700 - Newlan, Cynthia; 1745 - HEREDIA, JULIO; 2047 - Lewis, Ashlie; 2412 - MILNER, EBONY; 2449 - King, Michele; 2488 - Barber, Norma; 2600 - Cruz, Jessica PUBLIC STORAGE # 25897, 10053 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando, FL 32825, (407) 901-6126 Time: 10:45 AM 0106 - Tucker, Edric; 0506 - Betancourt, Alex; 0517 - Torres, Michael; 0801 Saavedra, Jose; 2029 - Nunez, Pedro; 3094 - Crespo, Gabriel; 4079 - Cook, Elliott; 6021 - Ginigeme, Urian; 6025 - Sallee, Brittany; 6035 - Rivera, Caroline PUBLIC STORAGE # 25851, 10280 E Colonial Dr, Orlando, FL 32817, (407) 901-2590 Time: 11:00 AM 1300 - Gachette, Bernie; 2015 - Borbon, Luis; 2017 - Johnson, Michaele; 2032 - Johnson, Michaele; 2045 - REYES, MADELINE; 2428 - deverney, corey; 2430 - Lackey, Leslie; 2527 - McGinnis, Karla; 2530 - Johnson, Michaele; 2558 - Khalil, Mourad; 2625 - REYES, MADELINE; 2631 - Daniels, Ronnie; 2683 - Bradford, Nicole; 2684 - Cancel, Vanessa; 2700C - Rodriguez, Jasmine; 2731 - Johnson, Michaele PUBLIC STORAGE # 08765, 1851 N Alafaya Trail, Orlando, FL 32826, (407) 513-4445 Time: 11:15 AM 0203 - Lenon, Amaris; 2080 - Wade, Kenneth; 2085 Abraham, Alivia; 2125 - Rivera, Jorge; 4012 - Hunter, Tamela; 4029 - Mckenzie, Terrell; 4076 Jackson, Kwame; 5046 - Holmes, Orbie; 6047 - Serrano, Claribel; 7006 - Arango, Olga; 9002 Rickey, Christopher PUBLIC STORAGE # 08711, 3145 N Alafaya Trail, Orlando, FL 32826, (407) 613-2984 Time: 11:30 AM 1198 - Torres, Eduardo; 2261 - Murphy, Morgan; 5053 - Espy, Melody; 5114 - Chester, Royisha; 5119 - Malave, Erwin PUBLIC STORAGE # 08720, 1400 Alafaya Trail, Oviedo, FL 32765, (407) 487-4695 Time: 11:45 AM 0112 - Pineda, Joshua; 0197 - Burkett, George; 0208 - Lee, Tecompency; 0213 - Johnson, Jeffery; 0268 - Cheveres, Alma; 0274 - Roberts, Shawn; 7037 - Rodriguez, Johnathan; 7068 - Bailly, Keith; 7092 - Johnson, Asia; 9035 - Velez, Raul PUBLIC STORAGE # 25974, 1931 W State Rd 426, Oviedo, FL 32765, (407) 901-7497 Time: 12:00 PM A030 - Poveromo, Dawn; C101 - Berment, Karla; C112 - Phillips *, Antony Bryan; C200 - Blakley, Daniel. Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax exempt status, original

RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Orangeco, Inc., 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE To satisfy the owner’s storage lien, PS Orange Co. Inc. will sell at public lien sale on October 25, 2019, the personal property in the below-listed units, which may include but are not limited to: household and personal items, office and other equipment. The public sale of these items will begin at 09:30 AM and continue until all units are sold. PUBLIC STORAGE # 08327, 5602 Raleigh St, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 930-4816 Time: 09:30 AM 0044 - Richardson, Dominick; 0095 - ELLIS, CYNTHIA; 0102 - Denson, Porter; 0138 - TROUTMAN, JOHAN; 0142 - Swanigan, Erica; 0162 Garcia, Cruz; 0199 - Andrews, Tytionnia; 0206 - Baker, Yolanda; 0207 - Mompremier, Anntte; 0212 - Cunningham, Kharisma; 0213 Calderon, Angel; 0214 - Stokes, Lawrence; 0222 - Gandy, Kristin; 0241 - josue, myrlene; 0252 Ngsaye, Jasmine; 0254 - Marc, Marcgenson; 0256 - Dunchie, Lucretia; 0262 - harden, carla; 0263 - St Ange, Tammara; 0272 - Neita, Rena; 0300 - Miller, Ka-Sim; 0305 - Cosme, Chassity; 0319 - Fort, Lynette; 0330 - Francisco, Bruna; 0360 - Ingram, Dorothy; 0393 - Neal, Dana; 0400 - Fulmore, William; 0409 - Newsome, Audrey; 0437 - Brown, Keishawnda; 0451 - Brantley, Walter; 0468 Barber, Donald; 0477 - O’Rourke, Georgette; 0478 - Graham, Andra; 0479 - Ivery, Curtis; 0515 - Paul, Esther; 0559 - Peterson, Rannie; 0570 - Sims, Tyrone PUBLIC STORAGE # 07001, 900 S Kirkman Road, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 986-7703 Time: 09:40 AM 1203 - Brave, Camille; 1208 - Mills, Diann; 1307 Gulfstream 650 Alvarado, Anned; 1417 - Perry, Christina; 1605 McCallum, Gianna; 2101 - Mcneal, Wendy; 2218 - Permenter, David; 2301 - Ginlack, Tenille; 2412 Winters, Zachary; 2506 - Johnson, Jerlin; 2601 - Hood, Kandia; 2608 - Klatt, Heather; 2701 - Grace, Margarite; 2705 - HARLey, Alliyah; 3408 - Fisher, Michael; 3411 Morgan, Rachel; 3413 - Smith, Adonica; 3612 - Lowe, Iesha; 4504 - mitchell, alfred; 4521 - Benson, Christell; 5105 - Urizar, Carlos; 6110 - Hernandez, Paulette; 7104 RITCHIE, LARISSA; 7119 - Mazur, Carolyn; 8108 - Collings, Martin; 8109 - Stanley, Chanel PUBLIC STORAGE # 20136, 3900 W Colonial Drive, Orlando, FL 32808, (407) 374-5979 Time: 09:50 AM A003 - Summerlin, Shelia; A022 - Henley, Leenisha; A023 - Cedieu, Joseph; B006 Mcknight, Chiquita; B044 - Warren, James; B048 - Gardner, Bryon; B050 - Kerr, Andrew; B076 - Jenkins, Shawnta; C012 - Johnson, Bernard; C024 - Swaby, Nashon;

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 16 - 22, 2019 ● orlandoweekly.com

C028 - Carson, Stephanie; C055 - Fabiano, Stephannie; C071 - Green, Conswayla; D016 Peterson, Anthony; D045 - Green, Jerome; D066 - Jones, Tymesha; D089 - Green, LaToya; D124 Copeland, Jesse J; D146 - Divine Orders International Ministries Inc Elmore, Dena; F018 - Wheeler, Takisha; F048 - Decrescenzo, Anthony; P010 - Johnson, Reggie; P011 - Crew, Frank PUBLIC STORAGE # 25813, 2308 N John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL 32804, (407) 603-0436 Time: 10:00 AM A004 - Donaldson, Keyshon; B010 - Roberts, Stephen; B012 - Woodson, Kenyatta; B030B - Dixon, Qunisha; B033B - Miller, Michelle; B034A - Middleton, Kenneth; B042 Shepard, Akilah; B060 - ADAMS, SHARON; B062 - Bierd, Maria; B064 - Harmeling, Jacob; B070B - PE, Win; B101 - ousley, Jeanne; C004 - Stanley, Steven; C063 Briola, John; D009 - SHEARS, RASAAD; D025 - Hatch, Precious; D031 - Martin, Demetrius; D045 - Horton, Aaron; D058 - Toledo, Kiria; D060 - Doston, Melinda; D061 - Wallace, Keisha; D084 - Richardson, Emmanuel; D112 - Jones, Martha; D133 - Fuller, Minnie; E010 - IceRam Enterprises Mareci, Joseph; E012 - Bell, Ronnetter; E072 - Roberts, Patrick; E094 - Pineiro, Manuel; F002 Shabazz, Rahmaan; F022 - Heise, Angelique; F034 - Davis, Lashira; F057 - ADAMS, SHARON; F114 Boyd, Latasha PUBLIC STORAGE # 24107, 4100 John Young Parkway, Orlando, FL 32804, (407) 930-4381 Time: 10:10 AM A113 - Simmons, Carlton; A115 - Cobb, Britney; A124 - Waskoski, Georgia; A127 Smith, Chivas; A142 - SANDERS, RONALD; A157 - ELY, BRITTANY; B209 - MCCLINTON, EDWARD; B230 - shermanta, decutra; B251 - Williams, Daniel; B256 - Doyle, Donte; B259 - DAVID, ANTONIO; C350 - Mercado, Richard; C355 - Dreamlife Center Johnson, Stephen; C357 - Fletcher, Svetlana; D417 - Fletcher, Svetlana; D419 - DYSON, CHANNON; E003 - Robinson, Raven; E004 Mc Queen, Jewell; E005 - Mathis, Glenn; E022 - Powell, Tiniciea; E026 - Rodgers, Imani; E054 AMSTUTZ, CARLETTA; E065 - Rivera, Markier; E110 - Brown, Latanya; E115 - Strong, Aketa; F619 - Johnson, Ericka; F647 Harris, Tangela; G701 - Vasques, Miguel; G706 - Pagan, Annel; G724 - Gabriel, JodyAnne; H817 Palmer Jr, Rudolph; J914 - Dreamlife Center Johnson, Steve PUBLIC STORAGE # 08723, 1241 S Orlando Ave, Maitland, FL 32751, (407) 495-1863 Time: 10:20 AM 0248 - Vilalobos, Edward; 0377 - Strait III, James; 5001 - Saunders, Jansella; 7015 Redinger, Lelie PUBLIC STORAGE # 08767, 1842 W Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park, FL 32789, (407) 494-2918 Time: 10:30 AM 2038 - James, Sabrina; 3077 - Cossom, Kevin; 3185 - Morales, Eddie; 3186 -

Abad, Cheryl PUBLIC STORAGE # 08762, 1023 N Mills Ave, Orlando, FL 32803, (407) 505-7981 Time: 10:40 AM 1003 - Cicero, Kelly; 2099 - Valdes, Luisa; 3053 - Hall, Whitney; 4033 - Orlando Family Physicians Borja, Carmen; 4067 Myers, Thomas PUBLIC STORAGE # 08769, 653 Maguire Blvd, Orlando, FL 32803, (407) 955-4627 Time: 10:50 AM 0201 - Rath, Mark; 0514 - Kinsey, Heather; 0606 OLIVIER, JUSTIN; 0625 - Orwick, Michelle; 1001 - Martinez, Jairo; 1044 - Cunningham, Caroline; 2079 - Fernandez, Charles; 3063 - Edlin, Raymond; 3088 - Masters, Whitney; 3120 - Carter-Grimes, Charles. Public sale terms, rules, and regulations will be made available prior to the sale. All sales are subject to cancellation. We reserve the right to refuse any bid. Payment must be in cash or credit card-no checks. Buyers must secure the units with their own personal locks. To claim tax-exempt status, original RESALE certificates for each space purchased is required. By PS Orangeco, Inc., 701 Western Avenue, Glendale, CA 91201. (818) 244-8080. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: AATR ORLANDO gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 11/01/2019, 09:00 am at 9712 RECYCLE CENTER RD ORLANDO, FL 32824- 8146, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. AATR ORLANDO reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. WA1L2AFP5GA021250 2016 AUDI NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates, 08:00 am at 10850 COSMONAUT BLVD ORLANDO, FL 32824, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. NOVEMBER 1, 2019 1B3HB28B27D569144 2007 DODGE NOVEMBER 2, 2019 1HGCG1659XA040925 1999 HONDA 3FAHP07Z06R180758 2006 FORD NOVEMBER 3, 2019 WBAAA1302H2320047 1987 BMW 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. 2006 HONDA

VIN# 2HGFG21586H700320 2006 NISSAN VIN# 1N4AL11D66C221876 2000 HONDA VIN# 1HGCG3259YA003490 To be sold at auction at 8:00AM on October 28th, 2019, at 2809 N FORSYTH RD., WINTER PARK FL 32792 Around The Clock Towing inc.

Employment Apple Inc. has multiple openings for the following in Orlando, FL: ASIC Design Engineer (REQ#4221396) Collab w archtctre team to dfn, anlyz, & doc micro-archtctre specs of the HW dsgn blcks. Refer REQ# & mail resume & transcript(s) to: Apple Inc., ATTN: D.W., 1 Infinite Loop 104-1GM, Cupertino, CA 95014. Apple is an EOE/AA m/f/ disability/vets. F/T Marketing Manager in Maitland, Florida- Lim Law, P.A. Test new marketing mediums and measure the cost per lead and closing of leads across test marketing; manage all social media marketing with regular posts and updates; propose and manage marketing programs to generate new customers and existing client awareness of company’s unique propositions; ability to network professionally and proficiently at several networking opportunities each week; research, analyze, and monitor financial, technology, and demographic factors to capitalize on market opportunities and minimize effects of competitive activity; and assist with special projects as requested as well as perform duties required. Requirements: Bachelor’s Degree in Marketing or Mgmt. and minimum 3 years’ experience as Marketing Manager or in the Marketing field. Proficient in Microsoft Office including word, excel, and powerpoint. Resumes to: info@lim.law or Mail to: Lim Law, P.A., Attn: Nancy Weiss, 159 Lookout Place, Ste. 101, Maitland, Florida 32751 TECHNICAL/ENGINEERING ServiceNow, Inc. has the following positions available in Orlando, FL: Sr. Technical Support Engineer (5823): Manage and resolve challenging issues for the ServiceNow platform. Send resume by mail to: ServiceNow, Inc., Attn: Global Mobility, 4810 Eastgate Mall, San Diego, CA 92121. Must reference job title and job code 5823.




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