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4 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.comNEWS+VIEWS 7 ICYMI Biased voting law, 15-week abortion ban, sneaky migrant relocation, a ban on diversity training and other dirty Florida tricks 11 Informed Dissent Leave it to Ron DeSantis to use overt racism and abject dehumanization as a political strategy CULTUREARTS+ 12 (City) beautiful noise Orange County Regional History Center presents a visual history of maverick concert promoter Figurehead 19 Live Active Cultures Joe Walsh is back with a new theatrical venture and a new version of a show he premiered 15 years ago DRINKFOOD+ 21 Pak it up Kabab King plates Pakistani dishes worthy of a royal fanfare 21 Tip Jar Small bites of local food news MUSICFILM+ 29 On (small) Screens Streaming premieres this week: Snabba Cash, The Munsters, Meet Cute and more 31 This Little Underground The newest Jim and the Sea Dragons album covers surf songs originslly recorded by French bands in the early 1960s PAGESBACK 32 Selections of the Week Our picks of the best things to do and see this week, plus plenty of event listings 35 Free Will Astrology Your horoscope for the week of Sept. 21 27 39 Classified advertisements Florida Group Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor in Chief Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Managing Editor Matthew Moyer Digital Content Editor Alex Galbraith Calendar Coordinator Kristin Howard Editorial Interns Ariadna Ampudia, Valerie Garza, Gabby Macogay Contributors Gianna Aceto, Rob Bartlett, Melissa Perez Carrillo, J.D. Casto, Ida V. Eskamani, Jacquelin Goldberg, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Sarah Kinbar, Seth Kubersky, Jim Leatherman, Matt Keller Lehman, Bao Le-Huu, Anthony Mauss, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Nicolette Shurba, Eric Tegethoff DirectorAdvertisingofSalesJeff Kruse Multimedia Account Exec Dan Winkler Classified Rep & Multimedia Account Manager Jerrica Schwartz Sales Department Administrator Rachel Gold Creative Services Production Manager Daniel Rodriguez Business Director of Operations Hollie Mahadeo
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Above: Matt Gorney of Bad Afro Experience at the History Center’s ‘Figurehead: Music and Mayhem in Orlando’s Underground’ exhibition. Cover: Bad Afro Experience onstage at Below Zero in 1987. Photos by Jim Leatherman.
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The state, the Republican National Committee and the National Republican Senatorial Committee took the case to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker ruled that parts of the law were intended to discriminate against Black Floridians, a key voting bloc for Democrats. Walker’s March 31 ruling chronicled what he described as the state’s “grotesque history of racial discrimination,” saying that “when all of the evidence is viewed together, a coherent picture emerges.” The law placed additional restrictions on ballot drop boxes, such as limiting their use to the hours of early voting and requiring they be staffed by election supervisor’s employees. Also, the law included placing restrictions on providing food and water to people waiting in line at polling places.
Legal wrangling continued this week over an attempt to halt a new Florida law that prevents abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Lawyers for the state filed a 40-page document urging the Florida Supreme Court to reject an emergency motion by seven abortion clinics and a doctor that would effectively put the 15-week law on hold while a legal battle plays out. Lawyers for the clinics and the doctor, Shelly Hsiao-Ying Tien, filed the emergency motion Aug. 31. The privacy clause plays a key role in their arguments that the law (HB 5) should be blocked.
Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday said he expects more flights to transport undocumented immigrants to out-of-state “sanctuary” communities, as questions continued to swirl about a pair of flights this week that sent about 50 people from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. With support from other Republicans, DeSantis framed the controversial flights as a protest against the Biden administration’s handling of the Mexico border and as protecting Floridians from people transporting drugs into the United States. Florida lawmakers put money in the state budget this year for DeSantis to transport undocumented immigrants. “There’s also going to be buses, and there will likely be more flights,” DeSantis said Friday afternoon. “But I’ll tell you this, the Legislature gave me $12 million. We’re going to spend every penny of that to make sure that we’re protecting the people of the state of Florida.”
Voting-rights groups filed a series of challenges to the law, with the cases consolidated by Walker. Plaintiffs argued that lawmakers imposed the drop-box changes after Black voters increased their use of the boxes for mail-in ballots. The law also established new restrictions on third-party voter registration groups, a move the plaintiffs contended was targeted at Black Floridians who are more likely to sign up to vote through such organizations.
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» AG Moody again targets privacy clause in fight over proposed 15-week abortion ban
The law (HB 7), which DeSantis signed April 22, spurred fierce debates before passing during this year’s legislative session. The employment-related part of the law lists eight race-related concepts and says that a required training program or other activity that “espouses, promotes, advances, inculcates, or compels such individual (an employee) to believe any of the following concepts constitutes discrimination based on race, color, sex, or national origin.” As an example of the concepts, the law targets compelling employees to believe that an “individual, by virtue of his or her race, color, sex, or national origin, bears personal responsibility for and must feel guilt, anguish, or other forms of psychological distress because of actions, in which the individual played no part, committed in the past by other members of the same race, color, sex, or national origin.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis and Attorney General Ashley Moody are appealing a federal judge’s ruling that blocked part of a new state law that placed restrictions on how race-related issues can be addressed in workplace training — a law DeSantis dubbed the Stop Wrongs To Our Kids and Employees Act, or “Stop WOKE Act.” Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker last month issued a preliminary injunction, agreeing with three businesses and a consultant that the workplace-training restrictions violate the First Amendment. At least three other pending federal lawsuits challenge part of the law placing restrictions on how race-related issues can be addressed in public schools and higher education. Walker’s preliminary injunction did not address the education issues.
» State of Florida presses forward on battle to prevent diversity workplace training
» DeSantis vows to continue his controversial migrant relocation program
“This (Supreme) Court has long held, and consistently reaffirmed, that the Florida Constitution’s Privacy Clause protects the right to abortion prior to viability,” the emergency motion said. “And this court has made clear that any law that implicates the fundamental right to privacy — as HB 5 unquestionably does — is presumptively unconstitutional.”AttorneyGeneral Ashley Moody’s office contended that the clinics and the doctor have not shown “irreparable harm” needed to temporarily block the law, an assertion that echoed a decision by a panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal. Lawyers for the clinics and the doctor dispute the appellate court’s conclusion on irreparable harm. Moody’s office also disputed arguments that the 15-week limit violates a privacy clause in the state Constitution that has long served as the linchpin for abortion access in Florida. If justices ultimately agree, they would reverse more than 30 years of legal precedent that have helped protect abortion rights in the state.
» DeSantis administration and national GOP groups push to hold on to racist Florida elections law
The flights Wednesday mostly involved Venezuelan migrants and included about 10 children. DeSantis’ decision to launch the flights spawned international headlines and drew harsh criticism from Democrats and immigrant advocates. President Joe Biden accused Republicans of “playing politics with human beings.”
“What they’re doing is simply wrong,” the president said at a Congressional Hispanic Caucus event Thursday evening. “It’s un-American. It’s reckless.” Massachusetts Senate President Karen Spilka described the flights as “tantamount to a form of human trafficking
Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody and Gov. Ron DeSantis are busy, busy, busy this month defending their biased voting law, underhanded migrant relocation, ban on diversity training in the workplace, and other dirty tricks you may have missed.
for pure political games,” according to the State House News Service. DeSantis rejected as “false” reports that the migrants — who were moved Friday from Martha’s Vineyard to a military base on Cape Cod — were lured onto the flights in Texas with promises of housing and jobs.
Arguing that the ruling was an “insult” to Republican state leaders, lawyers for Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration and national GOP groups this week tried to convince an appeals court to overturn a federal judge’s ruling that parts of a 2021 Florida elections law were intended to discriminate against Black voters. The Republican-controlled Legislature and DeSantis approved the election-law changes as GOP leaders across the country pushed to revamp voting laws after former President Donald Trump’s loss in 2020. While Florida had a relatively smooth 2020 election, Republicans said changes were needed to help ensure future elections would not have issues such as fraud.
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But I’m still shocked that overt racism and abject dehu manization is a viable national political strategy, that the media is treating it like a legitimate policy dispute instead of minor-league fascism.
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A BATTLE ROYALE OF BULLYING
I know all of that. And I should know better.
Mostly, though, I’m shocked at the realization of how much more there is to come — of all of the new layers of depravity we’ve yet to mine. If this advances DeSantis’ career, try to imagine what’s next. I can’t — and that terrifies me.
PHOTO BY GAGE SKIDMORE
We’re supposed to demand an explanation for why DeSantis chartered planes to ship migrants who’d never stepped foot in Florida from Texas to Massachusetts. (“Most of them are intending to come to Florida,” DeSantis said Friday, with no evidence that’s true.) We’re supposed to won der why DeSantis paid $615,000 to a charter plane company that happens to be a big GOP donor.
Leave it to Ron DeSantis to utilize overt racism and abject dehumanization as a national political strategy
We’re supposed to insist on a federal investigation into why Florida’s agents in Texas lured the migrants onto the planes with promises of housing and jobs (they aren’t legally allowed to work); why they instructed them to register their change of address with the wrong government agency, which would ensure that they’d be slated for deportation; and especially why Department of Homeland Security agents listed the migrants’ mailing addresses as random homeless shelters all over the country, knowing the migrants would have to check in with the ICE office nearest whatever address the DHS agents put down, even if it was thousands of miles away, or face permanent removal.
And the New York Post was Johnny-on-the-spot with the headline DeSantis craved: “Liberals Deport Migrants.” (Details never were the Post’s thing, either.)
It’s certainly not about finding a solution to the coun try’s decades-old immigration problems, because lord knows DeSantis hasn’t offered any (or at least anything worth dis cussing).It’sabout DeSantis preening for the conservative media.
I thought by now I’d lost my ability to be shocked by the latest political outrage. Not just surprised, but genuinely aghast and shaken to my core, like I was when George W. Bush’s team lied the country into war, or when the Trump administration threw kids into cages, or when Donald Trump incited a mob to storm the Capitol — or like I still am that no senior official went to prison for any of those events.
I also know that the ostensible point of this affair isn’t the actual point. It’s not about transferring the burden migrants impose on border states — or even Florida, where the migrants are still free to go if they choose, and those whose families live there likely will. It’s not about forcing the Biden administration to get “tougher” on border-crossers; border agents are already making nearly 2 million apprehen sions a year.
We’re supposed to get hung up on the details, which to DeSantis are beside the point.
supposed to point out that they’re not illegal immigrants, that seeking asylum is not illegal, that the migrants can legally remain in the country at least until their asylum hearing, and that they escaped a socialist South American country DeSantis claims to despise.
I know that this wasn’t just a political stunt. It was also a trap. DeSantis knew when he sent the migrants to Martha’s Vineyard — not Boston, like his goon in Texas reportedly promised — with a few personal effects, the small island of 20,000 people, accessible only by plane or boat, wouldn’t be able to accommodate them. So after Martha’s Vineyard resi dents cared for them for two nights — volunteers even gave them new cellphones — the state offered them the choice to move to Joint Base Cape Cod, where they’d be provided shel ter and humanitarian aid. They took it.
Leave it to Ron DeSantis to prove me wrong.
Don’t get me wrong. I know that flying Venezuelan asylumseekers to Martha’s Vineyard was designed to piss me off. DeSantis’ entire political brand is built on owning the libs. We — the media, the elite, the non-MAGAs — are supposed to huff about the inhumanity, and the laws he might have bro ken, and how this recalls the Reverse Freedom Rides. We’re
BY JEFFREY C. BILLMAN
We’re supposed to make DeSantis a martyr of the liberal outrage machine. (An FBI search warrant would do him bet ter than a truckload of Viagra.)
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Other far-right governors are doing the same trick. Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas bused migrants to the Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., where Vice President Kamala Harris lives, as if the Secret Service is going to let them in. Both he and DeSantis say they’re going to keep shipping migrants to liberal cities, because human beings escaping economic squa lor and political turmoil are nothing but pawns in service of theirNotambition.coincidentally, both are likely entrants in the 2024 Republican presidential primary, which is shaping up to be the Dickhead Olympics, a battle royale of bullying and asshol ery, a race to the bottom to win over Trump’s fanbase.
t’s long been said that those who forget history are condemned to repeat it. And the Orange County Regional History Center has been steadfast in its fight against that particular curse, evidenced by affecting exhibitions on the Pulse nightclub shooting and the Ocoee massacre. In the case of their newest exhibition unveiled last week, Figurehead: Music and Mayhem in Orlando’s Underground, the optimal outcome is both to make people aware of this vibrant period of Central Florida’s nightlife history and maybe even encourage a few museumgoers to perhaps take a few tips from Figurehead’s improvisatory playbook and repeat a “mistake” or two.
Scene maker Shayni Rae:
From the years 1985-2001, Figurehead — named after a particularly bleak Cure song from Pornography (with This Mortal Coil’s just-as-bleak “Velvet Belly” being the runner-up) — was a force to be reckoned with among independent promoters in Central Florida, luring amazing touring acts to the City Beautiful, while fostering a strong core of local worthies as well. Though nominally presided over by the Tony Wilson-esque (with all the good and notso-good that implies) Faherty, Figurehead does seem to have been a family affair, as evidenced by the oral histories you can access via mock payphones throughout.
(CITY) BEAUTIFUL NOISE
Figurehead the exhibit chronicles the highs and lows of maverick concert promotional group Figurehead through a visually dazzling and carefully constructed exhibition of concert posters and flyers carefully collected over the years by “head Figure” Jim Faherty. The poster designs are jaw-dropping, courtesy of a small corps of Orlando artists and designers who created a unified visual identity and aesthetic up there with 4AD and Factory — both influences Faherty readily cops to — using abstract imagery that promises much in the way of musical “shock of the new.” For many, the exhibition will be somewhat revelatory in discovery: This went on in our backyard? For others, it’s a sort of high-school reunion, each poster conjuring up memories of forgotten nights out, some hearing gladly lost in the service of bold new music.
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Are you surprised to see some of your work fostering the music community in Orlando end up in a historical archive?
The team at the Center did just a tremendous job with their execution of the whole show design. In theory, you know, Jim donated a bunch of paper flyers, and they really took that and went deep and created something that I think, for somebody who either was part of the scene or was not, is a really visceral experience.
I had come from Cleveland and the first concert I went out to was the Butthole Surfers and Bad Afro Experience.
… “I’m going to see the Butthole Surfers at a place called the Beach Club?” I thought I was really going to be frustrated. But what did happen was a really fantastic, eclectic crowd. Immediately I could see that there was a legitimate music scene here.
A big part of why things were so interesting then is that there were a lot of creative artists there … without that wealth of talent in Orlando it couldn’t happen. It was a capsule of time that I think is really impressive. And after leaving the Sapphire and going to more small clubs around the country, it was noticeable that we were doing something a bit above and beyond what the normal 500-capacity club was doing.
Rather than being one-and-done, History Center staff express interest in using Figurehead as a launching point for more deep dives into unchronicled areas of Orlando music history. Keep an ear out.
Shayni Rae is an important part of the Figurehead story — and, indeed, the story of alternative music in Orlando — as the co-owner of iconic downtown concert hotspot Sapphire Supper Club (now the Social) with Faherty. When the Sapphire opened in 1994, Rae was at the forefront, making sure both musicians and audience had a unique experience, and an extensive cocktail menu, every time. More than just just a series of shows, Rae and Faherty were trying to create a scene.
BY MATTHEW MOYER
The exhibition is artfully arranged and material thoughtfully explained every literal step of the way. By dint of volume, it becomes a veritable avalanche of alternative music coming straight for you: Lydia Lunch, Elliott Smith, Seven Mary Three, Modest Mouse, Bauhaus, Sonic Boom, Bad Afro Experience, Matchbox 20, Sam Rivers, Belly (with Radiohead opening!), Henry Rollins, Sonic Youth all jostle for space on posters and live photographs from the shows — many provided by our own Jim Leatherman (we say pridefully).
“The legacy of Figurehead was really about creating a community, one that was that driven by arts, music, culture and friendship.”
The exhibition will be up through September 2023, augmented by a robust slate of programming — the weekend before going to press we caught a lively talk from Insomniac zine publisher and WPRK alum Israel Vasquetelle, punctuated by a Q+A with a number of young folks picking his brain on publishing and hip-hop history.
At the time, what were your impressions of the Orlando music scene and how have they changed looking through the lens of this exhibit?
Orange County Regional History Center presents a visual history of maverick concert promoter Figurehead
I
One hundred percent. Jim is the figurehead, but the figurehead of an entity that had a lot of moving parts — especially when you’re basically building a scene and a cultural network, in an organic sense before the internet, before Pitchfork, before cell phones … It’s important that we had a lot of different viewpoints. And the graphic artists, I mean, Thomas Scott and Jeff Matz are two of the best graphic designers in the country. So it took a lot of different people to make it work.
When we opened the Sapphire it was my idea to do a supper club. I grew up around the jazz scene and, you know, alternative music just means that it’s an alternative to the mainstream. So we were doing every single type
Jim Faherty and Shayni Rae at the ‘Figurehad’ opening event | Photo by Jim Leatherman
Jim has taken pains to stress that Figurehead was a collaborative enterprise.
There were a lot of very creative people pitching in to make Figurehead.
Was it important from the start to have a strong visual identity for Figurehead?
The biggest thing, honestly, for me was that we had a big committee helping me out with this, with the artists and the bands and the fans. People helped me with the sound and loading in the bands. It’s such a big friendsand-family thing, helping however they could. There were so many hands reaching out to make these shows happen. Now everything’s very singular, one person trying to do it. It was a big group. It wasn’t just Jim taking the lead. It was like Jim with 30 people to pull off one show.
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of music there and we just couldn’t be knowledgeable in every single genre. So we had to work with many people to bring these ideas to us. Because of that, we were successfully open to a lot of different and new ideas because so much of it was new to all of us.
Elliott Smith. That was a big one. We had worked with him a couple of times, and just a really, really fantastic artist and probably one of my favorite shows.
The two biggest influences were Factory and 4AD. I went to see Cocteau Twins in 1983. And the guy who did that show was a huge influence. So I went to see the Cocteau Twins and he had a program — and this is basically a punk band — of the music he’s playing, the music videos he’s playing, he’s playing the Fall, Nick Cave, the Buzzcocks. Now he’s doing releases, and then the posters are all hand-done by all these artists. I got to interview the Cocteau Twins. I got to meet the artists that actually made the posters. And I said, “That’s what I want to do. When I start doing shows in Florida I want to do that exact thing. I want to have artists do these amazing posters. I want the artists involved.” I emulated Factory Records. Have you seen 24 Hour Party People? That’s how I was back in the day.
Did you ever think that your life’s work would end up in a museum?
I was so appreciative of the artists that made those posters. I had this ridiculously huge party house downtown in Delaney Park and I had a music room with all flat files. I had a bin for flyers and I would just make it a habit every show to keep multiple copies of every flyer and poster. I kept everything from every show because I really wanted to have a history for myself. Even if I got senile, I’d remember I did a Camper Van Beethoven show
“Head Figure” Jim Faherty: “Ninety percent of the shows I did, I lost money. But I had a great day job, so I could lose money on the Flaming Lips or whatever, because I just want you to have fun.”
And the Sam Rivers picture by Jim Leatherman was super impressive. One of my highlights of shows at the Sapphire was working with Sam.
First and foremost, Jim Faherty wants you to know that he’s still, in fact, with us. “At the opening, I just kept hearing ‘it’s a celebration of his life,’” exclaims Faherty. “Stop saying that! I’m still alive!” Indeed, he’s poised to open a new artists’ market in Sanford very soon. After that, he wants you to know that Figurehead was so much more than one person, and Orlando music is so much more than Figurehead. All that aside, Faherty seems pleased
Were there any particular posters that spurred memories?
with how the Figurehead exhibition turned out, and how it accurately chronicles years of booking shows through pay phones, losing money happily, driving to cities all around Florida just to staple posters to telephone poles (barely back in time for his day job the next morning), and making it all up as they went along.
It’s creepy. Wait, that’s not the right word … Look, I donated 10,000 posters and pieces but I never saw the entire exhibit before it opened. I was never involved in the narrative or the final selections, they wouldn’t let me go through it. But I’m so proud of it. It’s amazing, it’s really kind of unbelievable.
How did you manage to save all of them over the years?
The legendary Sonic Youth show at the Sapphire in 2000 | Photo by Jim Leatherman
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But as far as more prominent names, I mean, we were able to do interviews with Jason Ross from Seven Mary Three, Henry Rollins, Robert Pollard from Guided by Voices, Rob Thomas of Matchbox 20, Lydia Lunch, Jonathan Richman …
We were lucky enough to get a grant from Florida Humanities to do some things through the end of the year and we’re trying to expand our viewpoint of the music community here in Orlando. We’re doing a program this weekend that’s centered around local hip-hop culture, which is not something that’s really focused on in the exhibit, but that’s an important part of the Orlando music community. There’s several other areas, dance music being one of the main ones, that I would love to get some people who are involved in that to speak to us and be involved in some of our programming.
The exhibition is going to be up for about a year. How will you be further exploring it during the run?
the design work of the posters: Thomas Scott, Jeff Matz, Scott Sugiuchi, Greg Reinel and Klaus Heesch. They were not the only ones that did posters, but I think those were the individuals that Jim leaned on the most as far as his design work.
And with Jim being involved with Dante’s [pre-Pulse club] and owning it for a period of time — which was just prior to Pulse taking over the space — I thought, “Hey, this guy would be interesting to talk to.” Also I knew a little bit about him in terms of his name getting thrown around
Historian Jeremy Hileman:
He told us stories about when he promoted the Dead Kennedys show in 1985, and all these things here that he had done, and that’s great for our oral history collection … but it just so happened that he brought in a few items to show us. Eventually, he went through his collection and donated several hundred posters and pretty much the entire discography of his Figurehead record label.
Would you mind naming some of the other people you interviewed …
“It’s been really inspirational to us to be able to talk to these people who really made it happen. We hope that this is some small reflection back of the work that they did.”
This all started from our work on the One Orlando Collection at the History Center of items that pertain to the Pulse nightclub tragedy. Each year, for the last five years after the tragedy, the History Center hosts an exhibition that showcases some of those items. For our fourth year … one of the things that we really wanted to find out more about was the history of the building.
A sampling of Figurehead gig poster art | Images courtesy the Orange Country Regional History Center
We were able to speak to Shayni Rae, who worked with Jim over the years, with both Figurehead and when they were co-owners of the Sapphire Supper Club. She was a hugeWeresource.alsotalked to Michael McRaney, who was a local musician who played many Figurehead shows and then went to work for Jim and then eventually run Foundation, booking both the Social and the Beacham.
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quite a bit, as far as music history locally. We were able to get a hold of him to do an oral history, and we talked about Dante’s and then he had so many stories related to his work as a promoter.
What was the initial genesis of this exhibition?
Rock & roll is an enterprise that trades on myth-making and larger-than-life figures — and that includes Jim Faherty and a fair amount of the creatives in and around Figurehead. So give exhibit curator Jeremy Hileman and the hard-working staff at the History Center credit for getting the names, dates and timeline untangled from a haze of late-night memories. The History Center used Faherty’s donation of posters and ephemera along with extensive oral history-style interviews to tell the story of a singular sector of Orlando nightlife. If Hileman and the Center have their druthers, this is just the beginning.
I would say the main focus going forward would be building out our programming and featuring some of those things and allowing people the opportunity to present or be involved that don’t necessarily fit cleanly into the Figurehead story, but using that as a springboard to cover Orlando music a little more comprehensively.
Pretty quickly once we started getting this material we’re like, “How do we showcase this in some way?” I think that it would have been a disservice to just slap the posters up on a wall and call that an exhibit. So we were able to gather these oral histories and quotes and photos from Jim Leatherman — which was a huge hit. I don’t think that we could have properly told this story without his photos.
We interviewed five people who were contributors to
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But Walsh does have one clear message to send to his many supporters: “I’m doing great.”
You can see that ethos reflected on stage starting with their inaugural production of Michel Marc Bouchard’s Lilies: or the revival of a romantic drama, running through Sept. 24 at Theatre South Playhouse. Walsh presented the play’s U.K. premiere with Wild Oats 15 years ago, and he says he wanted to revive the queer Quebecois prison drama because “what I’m very interested in is finding the beauty in places of harshness or ugliness, and really try ing to empower that beauty and use theater to remind us that beauty and humanity can be foundWalshanywhere.”sayshewas originally afraid the script might have aged poorly, but after asking friends to reread it, he decided the same-sex love story between schoolboys not only remained relevant, but that it is “really interesting and important to tell that story now and to offer conversation around it, especially as we’re liv ing in a state with the ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill.”
The new name pays tribute to the safety lamps always left onstage in darkened theaters, which Walsh calls “a sign of hope [and] always a sign that theaters were going to come back … so it’s an image that really has become close to my heart.” The ghost light’s values of “hope, safety and community” are what Walsh and his collaborators — including associate director James Tuuao, who joined us for our chat — say they’re building their new company around. Walsh says one of their top priorities is col laborating with others to “create safe spaces as a community … to build further conversation [and] ways of discussing the needs as theater changes … so that as a group, we can help make theater practice better for the participants.”
Tuuao, a veteran Disney dancer-choreogra pher from California who began working with Walsh on last year’s Godspell, vouches that Walsh “has always been really great at opening the floor and opening the table to voices, and letting them be heard.”
Looking past this first production, Walsh says Ghost Light is looking to build an educa tion program, which could include a musical theater writing course and a workshop in act ing through song. They’re also “exploring all the options” of becoming a nonprofit orga nization, and recently held a fundraiser that attracted the talents of nearly 20 top Central Florida singers.
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For Walsh, what Ghost Light produces is ultimately less important than how they get there. “It’s all about the process and not the product. When you start to open your eyes up to the process being the center of the experi ence instead of the product, you really open yourself up to those moments that make it all worth it,” summarizes Walsh. “I’ve often found that when the process is good: When the pro cess is sound, when the process is collaborative, and you’re allowing everyone in the room to have a voice in the product, the product does follow suit. But it’s not the focus.”
“The outpouring of support has been over whelming,” Walsh says. “If there’s anything that I want to say, it’s ‘thank you.’ Thank you to this community; thank you to my friends; thank you to my colleagues, the actors. It truly has been unbelievable to feel that much support for myself and for the work that we’ve been doing.”
BY SETH KUBERSKY
After getting Garden Theatre’s On Your Feet on its feet, Walsh spent two weeks directing a Disney revue at a summer camp in New York, where he “caught up on the shows, caught up with some friends, and that really felt like my break.”Rather than rehashing the past, Walsh was here to talk about the future, in the form of his new artistic venture, Ghost Light Theatricals. The company is a spiritual successor to Wild Oats Productions, a U.K.-based troupe Walsh founded in 2005 with Rob Archibald, Alexander Rudd and Kevin James.
The cast of nine includes John E. Palmer and Ryan Ball as the unjustly imprisoned Simon Doucet, with Bob Brandenburg and Nicholas Querino as his old friend turned bishop Jean Bilodeau, and Michael Morman in multiple roles. “We found some brilliant artists that really know how to connect with not only the material, but with each other, and they relate so well to each character within the play,” says Tuuao.Walsh calls the ensemble a “wonderful and open group of actors,” saying, “Everyone came in ready to be part of an experience where we talked about ourselves, and we use the lens of ourselves and our experiences to create these characters. … I think we’re really finding a very unique new perspective to this work, because everyone is bringing themselves into the room and into the table.”
“It was so wonderful to launch this company with such love,” says Walsh about this the show of support, which Tuuao calls “really eye-open ing … because we all have our own individual stories with Joe, but to hear it in a full room … it was really nice to be able to celebrate that for Joe, and also for the theater.”
How is Joe Walsh? With his new artistic venture, Ghost Light Theatricals, opening Lilies at Theater South Playhouse, he’s doing great.
Ever since the controversial departure of artistic director Joseph C. Walsh from the Garden Theatre, the most frequently asked question in the arts community has been, “How is Joe?” During his three-year tenure, Walsh diversified the offerings at Winter Garden’s city-owned stage to critical and audience acclaim, and his exit sparked a wave of staff resignations. When I recently sat down with him for an interview at a cafe directly across Plant Street from his previous theatrical home, he remained as silent regarding that situation as he has all summer.
skubersky@orlandoweekly.com
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tip jar
BY FAIYAZ KARA
BY FAIYAZ KARA
Kabab King plates Pakistani dishes worthy of a royal fanfare
pay a king’s ransom to enjoy the classic dish either. Also worth ordering are pliant cubes of boti kebab ($13.99). They’re as infernally hot as they are plush, but what impressed us was their flavor. The chunks are marinated in a blend of spices prior to being blazed in the tandoor.Butit’s
not only about the beef at Kabab King. There are plenty of vegetarian, chicken and seafood items to indulge in — the chicken seekh kebab stuffed in a paratha ($7.99) made an ideal lunchtime roll, while their chaats, or street nibbles, are snacks worth considering, though don’t ponder too long. The Karachi special chaat ($6.99) with papdi (fried flour crackers), chickpeas, potato, onion and rice vermicelli, along with yogurt and tama rind chutney, was at once tangy and fiery, and sweet and crunchy.
uttered as my dining partner and I sucked the marrow out of the bones and dunked shreds from a sizable, sesame-specked Afghani naan ($3.99) into that redolent liquid. There were grunts, plenty of them, and that said it all, I suppose. In Pakistan, laborers line up in the wee hours to get their hands on this nourish ing, rousing and utterly gratifying dish. It gets them through the day, as does nihari ($14.99), another slow-cooked stew, this one with soft morsels of beef shank. It’s heavy on the ginger and cinnamon, in the best way possible. It’s got all the warming feels and, unlike the paya, has a thicker gravy thanks to the addition of atta flour. It’s Pakistani fare at its absolute finest.But our royal feast didn’t stop there. Admittedly, I’m not the biggest fan of gajar halwa ($4.99), the dessert of grated carrot and cardamom cooked with milk, ghee and sugar and topped with shaved almonds, but I could not get enough of Kabab King’s version. Interestingly, the dish was created by a cook in the royal kitchen of Mughal emperor Akbar in the 16th century, so it’s fitting it’s served here. We enjoyed it with not one but two cups of kadak chai ($1.99) because the bold, milky brew, like most everything we sampled here, was just that good.
But it lacked the sort of comfort cooked into two dishes we absolutely could not wait to feast on. One was paya ($17.99) — goat trot ters cooked for eight hours in a thin, fragrant gravy. It’s a glorious dish and, honestly, I can’t say enough about it. In fact, nary a word was
UrbanOPENINGS+CLOSINGS:Turban, a fast-casual Indian restaurant by the owners of Curry Mantra on I-Drive and Divine Indian Cuisine in Kissimmee, will open the first week of October in the old U Roll Sushi space at 100 E. Pine St. downtown … Hen & Hog, the concept by Mason Jar Provisions owner A.J. Haines, has soft-opened in the Manzano’s Deli space at 221 W. Fairbanks Ave. in Winter Park. The menu features an ambitious assortment of comfort items — brisket and gravy sandwiches, smashburgers and chicken liver pâté with peach-pepper jelly, to name but a few … New York-style bagel chain The Bagel Shop has opened in the old La Rima Cafe space at 211 W. Fairbanks Ave. … Norigami, the sushi and hand roll bar from David Tsan (Soupakase), will open next month inside the Plant Street Market in Winter Garden … Yugiri Ramen Project, the ramen pop-up by former Kabooki Sushi Sand Lake chef de cuisine Mike Evans, will open a stall inside Henry’s Depot Nov. 1 … Crisp & Green opens Oct. 1 inside Winter Park Village, offering salad bowls, grain bowls and açai bowls … Look for Peach Valley Cafe to open its Maitland outpost at 1221 S. Orlando Ave. in early October … Popular Latin joint La Granja has opened its ninth Orlando-area locale, this one near UCF at 4650 N. Alafaya Trail … Cleveland-based chain Barrio Tacos will open in Waterford Lakes Town Center (with a full bar) next month … Kissimmee’s FL Bakery has opened a branch at 1654 N. Semoran Blvd. (Pro tip: They make bacon donuts) … Recent restaurant closures: Thai Farm Kitchen and El Vic’s Kitchen in College Park have shuttered, and after 13 years in the business, Uncle Kenny’s BBQ in Clermont has closed.
PHOTO BY MATT KELLER LEHMAN
[ food + drink ]
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fkara@orlandoweekly.com KABAB KING 11352 S. Orange Blossom Trail kababkingfl.com407-640-6046$$
O
rlando’s Curry Corridor — a twomile strip of Orange Blossom Trail from West Taft-Vineland Road to Whisper Lakes Boulevard — hosts a wealth of restaurants, grocery stores and meat markets specializing in the food of the Indian subconti nent. Some are Indian, quite a few are Bengali, while others, like the subject of this week’s review, are Pakistani. Kabab King, inside the Waterbridge Downs Shopping Village, can trace its royal lineage to … Atlanta, where the original Kabab King reigns. Needless to say, kebabs are the restau rant’s crown jewels and — this being a Pakistani, not Indian, restaurant — beef is a much-regaled protein here.
The reverberant hiss of sizzling chapli kebabs ($12.99) got our attention as we entered the spacious and spartan dining room. The sound served as a sort of aromatic fanfarade for the fattened patties of seasoned minced beef, crunchy with ground coriander and pomegranate seeds. A platter of smokin’ seekh kebabs ($13.99), spiced cylinders of beef jacked with cilantro, were also worth trumpeting, and we didn’t
PAK IT UP
The space, by the way, was once home to “Kabob King” (note the “o”) but got new man agement, a new chef (Yogi Patel, who once ran Wawa Curry in Kissimmee) and a new name earlier this year, and we’re better off for it. Simply put, Kabab King rules.
PalmNEWS+EVENTS:BeachMeats and Juju will collaborate on an all-Japanese wagyu omakase featuring prized Matsusaka beef Friday and Saturday, Sept. 23 and 24, at 5:30 p.m. Cost is $260 ($340 with sake pairing) … Smokemade Meats will pop up at the Whippoorwill Beer House Saturday, Sept. 24, at 6 p.m. and again at Wally’s on Sept. 30 during the Orlando Parking Lot Party Z Asian Vietnamese Kitchen along with nonprofit WorldOrlando and the TastyChomps food blog will host a fundraising dinner Oct. 17 in support of Afghan refugees in need. Proceeds will go to the State Department’s International Visitor Leadership Program helping those in Afghanistan and other countries. Individual tickets are $50 … One more week left to enjoy the perks of Orlando Burger Week. A host of restaurants across the city are offering up $7 burgers through Sept. 28. Visit orlandoburgerweek.com for details.
Apple Cider Mule 1 1/2 oz Tito’s Handmade Vodka 3 oz warm spiced apple cider 1 oz ginger beer Add all ingredients to a mug and garnish with a cinnamon stick.
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Snabba Cash — Jens Lapidus’ Stockholm Noir books keep yielding hit Swedish streaming series. This latest concerns a wannabe tech magnate who makes the mistake of turning to the Mob for funding. On the bright side, I bet they can actually do something about her student loan. (Netflix)
The Munsters — Look, a project like this is bound to be divisive. Some of us look at the advance clips and are beguiled by the supersaturated vaudeville of it all. Others think that when a Grandpa with a mustache is the most promising thing about a Munsters reboot, it’s time to apologize to John Schuck. But there’s one thing I think we can all agree on: That Rob Zombie is a lucky guy indeed to have married into such an endless wellspring of talent. (Netflix) by Steve Schneider
Raven’s Hollow — What if while Edgar Allan Poe was still a West Point cadet, he had stumbled across a murder that seemed to involve an entire mysterious town? Well, we’d probably have heard about it by now, I’d wager. But one of my favorite movies has H.G. Wells chasing Jack the Ripper in a time machine, so I’m hardly in a position to criti cize. (Shudder)
29 minutes. That’s a nice change of pace from the Peter Jackson approach of making 29 minutes feel like 19 years. (Netflix)
Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story — Ryan Murphy once again teams with his muse, Evan Peters, this time to tell the story of the notori ous cannibal killer from the perspective of his victims. Give it three weeks until HBO Max follows suit with a themed cooking competition. (Netflix)
Star Wars: Andor — Diego Luna returns to the role of Cassian Andor in a series that shows what the Rebel leader was doing in the years before Rogue One. A prequel to a spinoff? This is how we live now, nerds. (Disney+)
The Perfumier — Talk about multitasking: A cop strikes up an alliance with a crooked perfume maker to win the heart of the guy she likes and regain her vanished sense of smell. If I were her, I’d be worried less about the Love Potion No. 9 and more about the Omicron BA.5. (Netflix)
Fortune Seller: A TV Scam — This riches-toprison doc profiles Italy’s Wanna Marchi and her daughter, Stafania Noble, who took to the tube to hawk personal totems they said would bring the buyer good fortune, but which were actually worthless. And thus was the groundwork laid for Peloton. (Netflix)
Only for Love — A series’ worth of joy and heartbreak ensues when a bunch of Brazilian musicians try to interweave romance with their working relationships. Gosh, and it always looked so easy for their heroes, El Mac de Fleetwood. (Netflix)
A Jazzman’s Blues — Writer-director Tyler Perry’s story of racial identity and illicit love is based on the first script he ever wrote, a full 27 years ago. So why is he saying now is the perfect time to finally be putting it in front of audiences? Maybe he just couldn’t think of a way to get Madea on the Artemis. (Netflix)
PREMIERES TUESDAY:
PHOTO BY GUSTAV DANIELSSON/NETFLIX
PREMIERES MONDAY:
11 Minutes — It’s the fifth anniversary of the Las Vegas shooting that claimed the lives of 58 attendees of the Route 91 Harvest Music Festival, so here comes a docuseries retro spective to fully explore that tragic incident of “lone-wolf violence.” They were going to call it “the unavoidable outcome of a wide spread culture of gun fetishization and toxic masculinity,” but they only had four episodes. (Paramount+)
Athena — In the third feature by filmmaker Romain Gavras, the killing of a 13-year-old boy by the local police turns a French housing proj ect into a war zone. Watch carefully for some of the footage to turn up in a Brian Kilmeade exposé called Portland Under Siege. (Netflix)
PREMIERES WEDNESDAY:
Thai Cave Rescue — Mere weeks after Ron Howard’s Thirteen Lives raised awareness of the Wild Boars’ ordeal in the Tham Luang Nang Non cave, here comes a genuine Thaimade version that relied on the kids them selves as creative consultants. Oh, really? And what makes those arrogant little shits think they can tell their story better than Hollywood? (Netflix)
The Dreamlife of Georgie Stone — Nineteen years in the life of the Australian transgender activist are consolidated into an illuminating
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Meet Cute — Kaley Cuoco plays a woman who uses a time machine to keep tinkering with a date she went on, until she’s built the foundation for the perfect relationship. Given that the date was with Pete Davidson, her neighbors had better expect some rolling brownouts. (Peacock)
[ film + tv ] ON (small) SCREENS IN ORLANDO Streaming premieres you won’t want to miss
Shadowland — An Atlantic story about QAnon becomes a docuseries that examines the beliefs of that loony bunch, plus the tenets of the anti-vaccine crusade and some other conspiracy theories that are finding particu lar traction among women. Right, because the easiest way to win over a woman is by reassuring her that her concerns are all in her head. (Peacock)
Lou — A reclusive Allison Janney has to sac rifice her privacy in order to help a neighbor (Jurnee Smollett) rescue her daughter from kidnappers. Good for her: It’s so much easier to just give them your Wi-Fi password and tell them to knock themselves out. (Netflix)
PREMIERES FRIDAY:
The Kardashians — “I’m the Marilyn and the Jackie” says Kim K. in the trailer for Season 2, as she prepares to infamously defile Monroe’s dress at the Met Gala. But wait — if she’s also the Jackie, does that mean we’ll get to see Pete Davidson’s brains blown out all over her law books? Dare to dream! (Hulu)
Who’s Talking to Chris Wallace? — The col lapse of CNN+ has sent Wallace up to the big leagues at HBO Max. (At least it’s the big leagues for now, until Warner Bros. Discovery turns the place into a 24/7 vending platform for Dyson vacuums.) Wallace’s guests this go-’round include James Patterson, Alex Rodriguez, Shania Twain … and Tyler Perry, who will tie this entire week together by revealing once and for all what Madea was doing during the Portland riots.
PREMIERES THURSDAY:
A Trip to Infinity — Scientists from various disciplines share their theories of what “infin ity” is and how it can be measured. Your job is deciding whether they sound more like Spinal Tap confronting the end of their career or a kid trying to win an argument. (Netflix)
The second season of Swedish noir hit Snabba Cash premieres Thursday on Netflix
Super/Natural — Executive producer James Cameron and narrator Benedict Cumberbatch reveal the “super powers” possessed by some of the planet Earth’s most extraordinary ani mals. Hang around after the credits to see the She-Hulk twerk with a hippo. (Disney+)
The Real Bling Ring: Hollywood Heist — They’ve had their story told by the Lifetime network and Sofia Coppola, and now the young thieves who stole from some of L.A.’s richest and dumbest stars get to speak for them selves in a three-part docuseries. Hey, remem ber when Paddy Chayefsky showed a crime ring getting rewarded with its own TV show and we all thought that was the height of freewheeling absurdity? Good times. (Netflix)
The Girls at the Back — When one of them is stricken by cancer, a bunch of BFFs decide to spend their group vacation living out their most fervent desires. I sure hope this isn’t one of those “It was just something that happened at camp”-type scenarios. Because if so, the cancer part would be kind of a downer. (Netflix)
30 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com THE MAGIC FLUTE STEINMETZ HALL MAINSTAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS ARE ON SALE NOW AND START AT $99! (407) 839-0119 ext. 0 | www.DrPhillipsCenter.org www.OperaOrlando.org OPERA ON THE MAINSTAGE
Did you know there’s such a thing as French surf rock? Like Serge Gainsbourg said, moi non plus. Thankfully, local instrumental band Jim and the Sea Dragons are well-versed in and have imported some on new album Sous les Paves, la Plage! Surf scene vet Jim Colby went across the pond and all the way back to pre-Beatles France for inspiration this time out, covering surf songs originally recorded by French bands in the early 1960s. The 12-song album is a well-done collection of tubular gallops with a romantic Gallic edge. It’s a twist both lively and lovely on music nostalgia, and it’s up on Bandcamp.
CONCERT PICKS THIS WEEK
LOCAL RELEASES
baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com
Surf scene vet Jim Colby went across the pond and all the way back to pre-Beatles France for inspiration for the newest Jim and the Sea Dragons album, covering surf songs originally recorded by French bands in the early 1960s
Clutch, Helmet, Quicksand, J.D. Pinkus: With their devout fanbase here, Clutch need only show up and people will come in droves. And yet, expect the room to be even hotter than usual since the blues-metal titans are coming off one of the longest recording lulls in their illustrious career with fresh new album Sunrise on Slaughter Beach, released just last week. Furthermore, with fans this loyal, Clutch could fill out the rest of the roster with smooth-jazz openers and the crowd would still be lit. Instead, they’re coming with an absolutely maxedout bill studded with heavy underground stars like alt-metal icons Helmet, intelligent hardcore heroes Quicksand and Butthole Surfers bassist and weirdo-rock lifer J.D. Pinkus. This is a Dagwood sandwich of rock. (6 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 27, House of Blues, $35-$80)
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Trash the Cow 2: It’s nice to see one of the Milk District’s best music rooms back open again. It’s also nice to see that homegrown band Trash Cinema (the phoenix that’s risen from the ashes of grunge revivalists Yogurt Smoothness) is booking some rock shows there. In this second edition of the Trash the Cow showcase that they anchor, they’ll be joined by some underthe-radar area bands like garage punks the Speed Spirits, glammy rockers Character
Witness and melodic indie rockers Linqo. (9 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 22, Iron Cow, free)
Sunny Day Real Estate, The Appleseed Cast: As of this writing, the reunited Sunny Day Real Estate have not broken up … yet. But their first tour in over a decade will still be very young when they come to town. Should all hold, though, we’ll be witnessing these emo gods on only their sixth performance since reforming. Considering how things went after their previous reunion tour, this may be the last chance to catch them in a very long time. So go see how very serious and angsty we all were in the 1990s. Tourmates the Appleseed Cast, who used to come here frequently, will also be a noteworthy blast from the past. (7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 22, House of Blues, $35-$85)
BY BAO LE-HUU
Nigel John is well-known as one of Orlando’s most intelligent and conceptual DJs. Under the guise of shadowy alter ego Kurt Rambus, he’s produced some of the most honed and distilled electronic music to come out of our scene. Fresh new single “HERT,” the first Rambus release in two years, is perhaps his most limber and liquid track yet, which is apt since the piece was created for a dancer friend. This time, the minimalist Kurt Rambus mystique rides a sleek electro slither with all the classic bass, clicks and cowbell. It’s an aerodynamic midnight drive that keeps the funk dark. “HERT” is available on Bandcamp.
JIM COLBY OF THE SEA DRAGONS | PHOTO BY SARA DAWSON
Captured! By Robots, Call In Dead, Pariah: When it comes to gimmicks, it’s pretty tough to top Captured! By Robots. Although the California metal act is a three-piece stage show, only one of them’s human. Bad-tempered frontperson Jay Vance rages about social ills while flanked by two animatronic androids that he made
himself to play guitar (GTRBOT666) and drums (DRMBOT 0110). So visualize the Rock-a-fire Explosion, only with more of a Terminator aesthetic, playing grindcore. No, I’m not kidding and, yes, you must see this before you die. It’s as stunning and hilarious as it sounds. Local support will be punk band Call In Dead and death-metal group Pariah. (8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 22, Will’s Pub, $13)
Cherry Cheeks
Panic PressureUnderground:Kitten
PRESSURE KITTEN, FRIDAY NIGHT AT IRON COW
Boundary-pushing local Latinx theater troupe Descolonizarte Teatro heads to the intimate Timucua Arts space to perform two Latin American plays. La Maestra “ex plores the ‘legal’ violence that plagues our countries” and El Delantal Blanco “presents us with a lesson and a warning: ‘Not everything is what it seems.’” Adventurous theater in an adventurous performance space makes for a great evening out. The plays will be presented in Spanish with English subtitles. 7:30 p.m., Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave., timucua.com, $25. — Matthew Moyer
Sometimes it seems like David Spade has always been here, and always will be, a permanent feature in an ever-shifting comedy landscape. This fall marks 32 years since Spade first rose to fame as a Saturday Night Live rookie in 1990. He somehow managed to distinguish himself in an era that also featured people like Dana Carvey, Chris Farley, Phil Hartman, Norm Macdonald and Adam Sandler, no mean feat. Spade’s snarky, sarcastic style was basically the precursor to social media, a cliché long since run into the ground by an endless stream of imitators, all of whom lacked the chops and the charm of this OG smartass. He left the show in 1996 and has stayed busy ever since, with numerous TV and movie gigs, including Tommy Boy and the iconic Joe Dirt. But, at his core, he’s a stand-up comedian, and you can “catch him inside” on Friday. 8 p.m., Steinmetz Hall, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave., drphillipscenter. org, $45-$85. — Shelton Hull
Descolonizarte Teatro
TUESDAY, SEPT. 27
poignant lyrics over a calming harp track. Still, there’s an electric energy to their music that often demands no less than a Lizzie McGuire-style “This Is What Dreams Are Made Of” rump shake. Go see this band live while you have the chance. It’s what our (and Welch’s) pop patron saint Stevie Nicks would have you do. 8 p.m., Amway Center, 400 W. Church St., amwaycenter. com, $36.50-$116. — Melissa Perez-Carrillo
Florence + the Machine
Standing out from the pack by dint of lurking in the shadows, new Orlando industrial-rock trio Pressure Kitten are a welcome addition to the more eldritch corners of our local music scene. The brainchild of scene veterans Taylor Bulloch, J.A. Swendsen and I.M. Dean, Pressure Kitten deal in eerie and over-the-top electroindustrial with the kind of guitar lines that gave that extra oomph to 1980s Visage fodder like Skinny Puppy’s “Tin Omen” and Ministry’s “Thieves.” Live, the band are a surprising mix of Alien Sex Fiend theatrics and Chemlab, with showmanship liberally employed and enjoyed: pulsing lights, smoke machines, bones hanging from the microphone stand, Bulloch and Swendsen’s deathrock makeup. The Panic DJs, led by DJ NM, will keep the party going long after the carnage ceases. 9 p.m., Iron Cow, 2438 E. Robinson St., facebook.com/ironcowsushilounge, $5. — MM
One of our own, Cherry Cheeks of Portland via the City Beautiful, comes back to haunt us with bone-chilling riffs and unapologetically personal sentiments this week. Cherry Cheeks can be sampled on compilations alongside egg-punk royalty like Mark Cone, Landline and CCTV, and on previous tours with Australian lo-fi punk rockers Gee Tee. But the stellar self-titled album Cherry Cheeks bestowed upon their devoted disciples in 2021, via fellow Orlando expat enterprise Total Punk, opens with “Shell,” plunging into Rebel territory (as in Ben Wallers of Country Teasers) and never lets up. Heavy local support comes from comrades Problem Pack, Cabo Boing and
HEAR IT. SEE IT. LIVE IT. 22-HRCSE-03770 - ORL WEEKLY SELECTIONS BANNER AD_21-75 x 1-578_V3.indd 1
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FRIDAY, SEPT. 23
The queen is coming. I repeat, the queen is coming. Florence and the Machine and their beaming cathartic melodies are coming to Orlando, just as Florence Welch floats down from the heavens in her whimsical and witchy garb every night on stage. At this point, the indie-baroque pop band is an institution and deserves all the flowers — flowers that Welch will then carefully place in her hair while belting out
PHOTO BY MATTHEW MOYER
David Spade
Someday Honey 8 p.m., Tuffy’s Music Box, 200 Myrtle Ave., Sanford, free.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 22
Featuring the greatest hits from Sondheim’s most iconic shows, including West Side Story, Into the Woods, Sweeney Todd and Com pany. 8 p.m., Orlando Shakes, 812 E. Rollins St., $35, 407-447-1700.
WEDNESDAY,MUSIC SEPT.
Music in the Library: Viva Mexico Folklore 2 p.m., Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd., free, 407-835-7323.
Sunny Day Real Estate, The Appleseed Cast 7 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, $35$85, 407-934-2583.
Volac 10 p.m., Elixir, 9 W. Washington St., $10-$20, 407-985-3507.
Captured! By Robots 8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $13.
David MacKenzie’s Mind Meld Quintet 8 p.m., Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park, $25.
21 DaniLeigh 7 p.m., The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave. $23, 407-6488363.
Karol G, Agudelo888 8 p.m., Amway Center, 400 W. Church St., $36.50-$725, 800-745-3000.
Heather Desanctis, Arion Waters, Claire Vandiver 9 p.m., West End Trading Co., 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford, $10-$12, 407-322-7475.
Ordinary Boys: A Tribute to The Smiths 8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $15.
Dead Poet Society, Brkn Love 7 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $17-$20.
Five tasting courses paired perfectly with an enchanted elixir and accompanied by Hocus Pocus trivia. All ages. 6 p.m. Sunday, Spellbound Cafe, 208 W. Howry Ave., DeLand, $69, cafe1111.facebook.com/spellbound-
hisBobbynew-generationrecentlyGrammy-nominatedplatinum-selling,artist.Lucas,giventhehonorific“theMasterP”bypeerShmurda,hasn’tjustcalledtourandmostrecentalbum
Jack White, Cat Power 7 p.m., Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd., $55-$125, 407-3515483.
Ch 83. 8 p.m., St. Matthew’s Tavern, 1300 N. Mills Ave., —stmatthewstavernofficial,facebook.com/$7.
Tonight! A Celebration of the Music of Stephen Sondheim 8 p.m., Orlando Shakes, 812 E. Rollins St., $35, 407447-1700.
The Orlando Big Band Boo! Concert
Noizu, Caleb Dent B2 B Dre Mendez, Ed Alexander 9 p.m., The Vanguard, 578 N. Orange Ave., $9.99-$49.99.
Off With Their Heads, Busy Weather, Debt Neglector, Suck Brick Kid
Tonight! A Celebration of the Music of Stephen Sondheim 8 p.m., Orlando Shakes, 812 E. Rollins St., $35.
Sundown Sessions: Steve Krone 7 p.m., Lil Indie’s, 1036 N. Mills Ave., free.
Eddie Marshall’s Blue Bamboo Big Band 3 p.m., Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park, $25-$35, 407-636-9951.
EVENTS
Live music, weird vendors, free skateboarding area, kids activities, beer, food, fun. Noon Sunday, Swan Brewing, 115 W. Pine St., Lakeland, free, facebook.com/lakelandpunkflea. n
Hip-hop star Joyner Lucas is bringing his ADHD tour to Orlando this week and this is the sole Florida date for the
Shwayze, Cloud9 Vibes 7 p.m., Cafe DaVinci, 112 W. Georgia Ave., DeLand, $20, 386-873-2943.
Stick to Your Guns, Kublai Khan TX, Belmont, Koyo and Foreign Hands 7 p.m., The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive, all ages, $22, 407-704-6261.
In this workshop, published indie author Zero will cover the process of getting your book printed and maybe even put on store shelves. Noon Saturday, Joybird Books, 3018 Corrine Drive, free, 407-951-5436, joybirdbooks.com.
Submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com
Mom Jeans, Free Throw, Just Friends, Small Crush 5 p.m., The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave., $27.50, 407-648-8363.
Like Father, Philos, Kevin Schlereth, Taylor James, Shy Dog Mountain Resort
Punks for Pets Volume 2: Zapachi, Gillian Carter, The RushmoreFLSh-Booms, 8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $10.
SUNDAY, SEPT. 25 Cristoph 6 p.m., Elixir, 9 W. Washington St., $10-$15, 407-9853507.
Enjoy a concert of all your spooky musical favorites. A family-friendly
Simon Laskey 7:30 p.m., Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave., $25, 321-234-3985.
The Basics of Beekeeping
Verivery 7:30 p.m., The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave., $55-$80, 407-228-1220.
C-Kan, MC Davo, Dharius 7 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, $35-$55, 407-934-2583.
Sundown Sessions: Proxima Tide 6 p.m., Lil Indie’s, 1036 N. Mills Ave., free.
Lakeland Punk Rock Flea Market: Vol. 5
WEEK
Saturn Quartet 8 p.m., Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park, $25, 407-636-9951.
Oktoberfest! Live authentic polka music from 4-8 p.m., German beer offerings and more. 11 a.m., Hourglass Brewing Longwood, 480 S. Ronald Reagan Blvd., Longwood, free, 407-262-0056.
ADHD as a cutesy tagline. Lucas has been very upfront about living with ADHD. “Instead of the condition being a weakness, I made ADHD into my strength and channeled my creativity into music,” Lucas told an interviewer from the Grammys. When a man can freestyle-rap forward and backward during a live radio session, that’s a talent you don’t want to miss. 7 p.m., The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave., foundation-presents. com, $30. — MM
CHECK OUT OUR EVENT CALENDAR! WWW.HARDROCKLIVEORLANDO.COM 407-351-LIVE 6/2/2022 2:53:10 PM
8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $10-$12.
Featuring record sale, vintage and craft vendors, Frenchman Street Food vegan food truck, free drinks and street skate provided by Daytona Board Store. Noon, Night Shift Merch, 400 Parque Drive, Ormond Beach, free.
Amok! Amok! Amok! A Hocus Pocus Themed Food and Drink Tasting
SATURDAY, SEPT. 24 Beth McKee and her Funky Time Band 8 p.m., Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park, $20, 407-636-9951.
MONDAY, SEPT. 26 Barns Courtney, Ramona Flowers 7 p.m., The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave., $25, 407-246-1419.
Tonight! A Celebration of the Music of Stephen Sondheim
WEDNESDAY–TUESDAY, SEPT. 21-27
Dance Party with DJ Kool Mike Ski 8 p.m., Orlando Elks, 12 N. Primrose Drive, $10.
Whitey Morgan and the 78’s 6 p.m., The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave., $25, 407-648-8363.
The Vanguardians: Bass Edition 2.0 OG Nixin, Computa, Evalution, Jared Torres, Rude Reed. 9 p.m., The Vanguard, 578 N. Orange Ave., $10-$24.99, 570-592-0034.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 27 Clutch, Helmet,Quicksand,JDPinkus 6 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, $35$80, 407-934-2583.
ONE OK ROCK, You Me at Six, Fame on Fire 6:30 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, , $32.50-$80, 407-934-2583.
orlandoweekly.com ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 33
Maisie Haney
Tonight! A Celebration of the Music of Stephen Sondheim 8 p.m., Orlando Shakes, 812 E. Rollins St., $35, 407447-1700.
Night Shift Party Weekend: Intoxicated,Wharflurch,RyanThorne
Winter Park Honey visits the library to help you get started in beekeeping. Learn about equipment, safe habits and the best type of hive for your needs. Part of the Sustainability Series sponsored by the Friends of the Orange County Library System. Registration required. Noon Friday, Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd., free, 407-835-7323, attend.ocls.info.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 23
Warm Frames, Preying Man Tease, Bacon Grease 8 p.m., LMGA Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave., $10, 407-270-9104.
Indie Publishing 101 With Zero the Writer
Circuit Church: Izntrik, Naked Horse, Golden Beasts 7 p.m., The Nook on Robinson, 2432 E. Robinson St., free.
Syoma Klochko Presents: A Protean Assemblage 8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $5.
A unique sonic experience combining a sound bath of crystal singing bowls and Tibetan bells with a modular synthesizer. Relax. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Timucua Arts Foundation, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave., $25-$35, 321-234-3985, timucua.com.
6:30 p.m., Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive, $14$16, 407-766-6264.
Joyner Lucas
event. 7:30 p.m., Ritz Theater Sanford, 201 S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford, $23-$30, 407-321-8111.
Energy Wheel
Latin Jazz and Art Festival The Rico Monaco Band with special guest star Tito Puente, Jr. 5 p.m., Lake Concord Park, 95 Triplet Lake Drive, Casselberry, free.
34 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Even when your courage has a touch of foolhardi ness, even when your quest for adventure makes you a bit reckless, you can be resourceful enough to avoid dicey con sequences. Maybe more than any other sign of the zodiac, you periodically outfox karma. But in the coming weeks, I will nevertheless counsel you not to barge into situations where rash boldness might lead to wrong moves. Please do not flirt with escapades that could turn into chancy gambles. At least for the foresee able future, I hope you will be prudent and cagey in your quest for interesting and educational fun.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Here are six tips for making the most of your next three weeks, Libra. No. 1: Be proud as you teeter charismatically on the fence. Relish the power that comes from being in between. No. 2: Act as vividly congenial and staunchly beautiful as you dare. No. 3: Experiment with making artful arrange ments of pretty much everything you are part of. No. 4: Flatter others sincerely. Use praise as one of your secret powers. No. 5: Cultivate an open-minded skepticism that blends discernment and curiosity. No. 6: Plot and scheme in behalf of harmony, but never kiss ass.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You are an extra authentic Aquarius if people say that you get yourself into the weird est, most interesting trouble they’ve ever seen. You are an ultra-genuine Aquarius if people follow the twists and pivots of your life as they would a soap opera. And I suspect you will fulfill these potentials to the max in the coming weeks. The upcoming chapter of your life story might be as entertaining as any you have had in years. Luckily, imminent events are also likely to bring you soulful lessons that make you wiser and wilder. I’m excited to see what happens!
orlandoweekly.com ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 35
CANCER (June 21-July 22): I’m getting a psychic vision of you cuddled up in your warm bed, surrounded by stuffed ani mals and wrapped in soft, thick blankets with images of bunnies and dolphins on them. Your headphones are on, and the songs pouring into your cozy awareness are silky-smooth tonics that rouse sweet memories of all the times you felt most wanted and most at home in the world. I think I see a cup of hot chocolate on your bedstand, too, and your favorite dessert. Got all that, fellow Cancerian? In the com ing days and nights, I suggest you enjoy an abundance of experiences akin to what I’ve described here.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): For 15 years, Leo cartoonist Gary Larson created “The Far Side,” a hilarious comic strip featuring intelligent talking animals. It was syndi cated in more than 1,900 newspapers. But like all of us, he has had failures, too. In one of his books, Larson describes the most disappointing event in his life. He was eating a meal in the same dining area as a famous cartoonist he admired, Charles Addams, creator of “The Addams Family.” Larson felt a strong urge to go over and introduce himself to Addams. But he was too shy and tongue-tied to do so. Don’t be like Larson in the coming weeks, dear Leo. Reach out and con nect with receptive people you’d love to communicate with. Make the first move in contacting someone who could be important to you in the future. Be bold in seeking new links and affiliations. Always be respectful, of course.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “Love your mistakes and foibles,” Virgo astrolo ger William Sebrans advises his fellow Virgos. “They aren’t going away. And it’s your calling in life — some would say a superpower — to home in on them and finesse them. Why? Because you may be able to fix them or at least improve them with panache — for your benefit and the welfare of those you love.” While this counsel is always relevant for you, dear Virgo, it will be especially so in the com ing weeks.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn poet William Stafford wrote, “Saying things you do not have to say weakens your talk. Hearing things you do not need to hear dulls your hearing.” Those ideas are always true, of course, but I think it’s especially crucial that you heed them in the coming weeks. In my oracular opinion, you need to build your personal power right now. An important way to do that is by being discriminating about what you take in and put out. For best results, speak your truths as often and as clearly as possible. And do all you can to avoid exposing yourself to trivial and delusional “truths” that are really just opinions or misinformation.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Here are five tips for getting the most of the next three weeks. No. 1: Use your imagination to make everything seem fascinating and wonderful. No. 2: When you give advice to others, be sure to listen to it yourself. No. 3: Move away from having a rigid conception of yourself and move toward having a fluid fantasy about yourself. No. 4: Be the first to laugh at and cor rect your own mistakes. (It’ll give you the credibility to make even better mistakes in the future.) No. 5: Inspire other people to love being themselves and not want to be like you.
Build up a comfortable speed. Fill your lungs with the elixir of life. Praise the sun and the wind. Sing your favorite songs. Swing your arms all the way forward and all the way back. Forward: power. Backward: power. Glide and coast and flow with sheer joy. Cruise along with confidence in the instinctive skill of your beautiful body. Evaporate thoughts. Free yourself of every concern and every idea. Keep rambling until you feel spacious and vast.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In a poem to a lover, Pablo Neruda wrote, “At night I dream that you and I are two plants that grew together, roots entwined.” I suspect you Pisceans could have similar deepening and interweaving experiences sometime soon — not only with a lover but with any treasured person or animal you long to be even closer to than you already are. Now is a time to seek more robust and resilient intimacy.
freewillastrology.com
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In 1946, med ical professionals in the U.K. established the Common Cold Unit. Its goal was to discover practical treatments for the familiar viral infection known as the cold. Over the next 43 years, until it was shut down, the agency produced just one use ful innovation: zinc gluconate lozenges. This treatment reduces the severity and length of a cold if taken within 24 hours of onset. So the results of all that research were modest, but they were also much better than nothing. During the coming weeks, you may experience comparable phenomena, Taurus: less spectacular out comes than you might wish, but still very worthwhile.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Poet Mary Oliver wrote, “There is within each of us a self that is neither a child, nor a servant of the hours. It is a third self, occasional in some of us, tyrant in others. This self is out of love with the ordinary; it is out of love with time. It has a hunger for eter nity.” During the coming weeks, Scorpio, I will be cheering for the ascendancy of that self in you. More than usual, you need to commune with fantastic truths and transcendent joys. To be in maximum alignment with the good fortune that life has prepared for you, you must give your loving attention to the highest and noblest visions of your personal destiny that you can imagine.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Here’s a sce nario that could be both an invigorating metaphor and a literal event. Put on roll erblades. Get out onto a long flat surface.
36 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com
38 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com
Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Orlando FL 32839 407.488.9093@12:00PM
Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: October 11th, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 2631 E Semoran Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 (407) 408-7437 Darlene Randall-Household items.. The auction will be listed and ad vertised on www.storagetreasures.com.
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Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on October 11, 2022 at the locations indicated: Store 1317: 5592 L B McLeod Rd Orlando, FL 32811, 407.720.2832 @ 2:00 PM- Nacherie Wilcox, 2 beds, 2couch, washer, dryer,
Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: October 11th, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the follow ing: 1:00 PM Extra Space Storage 610 Rinehart Rd. Lake Mary, FL 32746 (407) 333-4355 Alexis Gutierrez- Boxes, Nicola Wright- Appliances, Boxes, Furniture. The auction will be listed and advertised on Purchaseswww.storagetreasures.com.mustbemadewithcash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction.
individuals listed below at the location indicated: October 11, 2022, at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 11920 W Colonial Dr Ste 10, Ocoee FL 34761, 407-794-6970. Marie Mosby- Household items, Tyshaun Holiday- barber chairs. The auction will be listed and advertised on Purchaseswww.storagetreasures.com.mustbemadewithcash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction.
Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
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orlandoweekly.com ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022
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Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those indi viduals listed below on October 7, 2022 at the location indicated: Store 8840: 11261 Narcoossee Rd. Orlando Fl 32832 @ 1:15 P.M: Latoya Williams households goods, bedroom set, miscellaneous. Amelia Cundi, boxes and TV. Glenn Davis, Households goods. Tosha Taylor, Boxes, bins The auction will be listed and ad vertised on www.storagetreasures.com.
Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction.
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Custom Creations LLC: furniture, bins, tumblers, TVs Store 8778: 3820 S Orange Ave Orlando FL 32806, 321.270.3440 @ 1:00 PM Yahaira Colon Torres Bedroom set boxes. Store 8931: 3280 Vineland Rd Kissimmee FL 34746, 407.720.7424 @ 1:30 PM: Kia Phillips- furniture ; Andrew Figueroa-Bedroom set, Twin mattress, box spring, couch, love seat, table, tv, boxes ; Jamie Mcclinsey- household items, boxes, furniture ; Joshua Reyesking/queen bed 2 sofas dining table few boxes. The auction will be listed and ad vertised on www.storagetreasures.com.
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/William Armstrong – Bags, cloths, Shoes, Totes/ Cierra Harris – 1 bedroom/ Misha Williams –Couch, Bed, Boxes, Tables, Lamps / Christopher HendersonHousehold goods /Cheryl Johnson- 6 bags,4 suit cases, big screen Tv /Saprin Saintil – 2 Bedroom Apartment Store 8612 1150 Brand Ln Kissimmee, FL 34744 (407) 414-5303 @12:30 PM Renee’s
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Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated:12915 Narcoossee Rd. Or lando, Fl 32832 407-501-5799 on 10/07/22 @ 12:00PM Hector Jacobo-household goods. The auction will be listed and ad vertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction.
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Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 5603 Metrowest Blvd Orlando, FL 32811 on 10/12/22 at 12:00 PM: Dana Thomas: household goods, art supplies, photos; Jean Pierre Rosalva: household goods; Samuel Melchioretto: tv and tires; Senat Lucsonne: household goods; Shannon Roberts: table, washer/ dryer, deep freezer, boxes; Stephanie Magin Pooley: housegoods; Thiago Berte: housegoods & tools. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
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Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated October 11, 2022 at the time and location listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 1451 Rinehart Rd Sanford, FL 32771 (407) 9154908 Erica Menefee -3 bed room house, Michelle Montanez -boxes, bed, Terona Troutman Thomas -A few boxes, kendale Hamilton -8 -6ft long glass showcase. The auction will be listed and advertised on Purchaseswww.storagetreasures.com.mustbemadewithcash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction.
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Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: October 11, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00 PM Extra Space Storage 831 N. Park Avenue Apopka, FL 32712 (407) 450-0345 Victoria Lynn Boubelikhousehold goods, clothing.-Mary Ligon Ezell-household goods, clothes, boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on Purchaseswww.storagetreasures.com.mustbemadewithcash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to comlete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
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Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: October 12th, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage 11971 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando FL 32825, 4075167913: Austin Adams: furniture. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: October 13, 2022 at the times and locations listed below: The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage 12709 E Co lonial Dr, Orlando FL 32826, 4076343990: Julissa Rodriguez: safe, bed, totes, Ciera Marie Young: lap top, furniture, boxes Jonathan Ted Gambrell: boxes, luggage, desk, toolbox Terral Merritt: handbag, paintings, totes. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 11071 University Blvd Orlando, FL 32817, 3213204055: Em ily Kostelnik- bed set, drs set 2 couches. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:45PM Extra Space Storage 9847 Curry Ford Rd Orlando, FL 32825, (407) 495-9612: Alyssa Bodnar-Household goods. The auction will be listed and ad vertised on www.storagetreasures.com.
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Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
freezer, clothes. Shane Lee, Electronics, Kitchen appliances/cookware, Clothing, shoes, Books. David Garcia, Couch, Small Items. Jason Morales, furniture. Lucimar Pereira Arruda, Household items. Shevinia Hunter, Clothes. Theo dore Hedden, studio apt. Full. Churaun Smith, 2 living room sets. Gia McQueen, House Hold Goods. David Rivero, Trailer. Store 1333: 13125 S John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL 32837, 407.516.7005@ 10:00AM Eric Rosario-personal items, Ruedean Lattimore-household items, Isabel Hernandez- home items, Candace Flink-home items, Israel Burgosfurniture Store 7057: 13597 S. Orange Ave Orlando FL 32824, 407.910.2087 @ 10:30 AM- Raquel Rosa: 4 bedroom house, household items- Nelson Clive: bags, misc items- Shuntel Markel Sheppard: household goods. Store 7143: 6035 Sand Lake Vista Dr, Orlando FL 32819, 407.337.6665 @ 11:00 AM: David Rosato-Clothing, personal items and boxes; Cody Allen Stevens-House hold Goods; Ashanti Norris- 2 suitcases, folding rocking chair, cooler, storage bin; Helen A Fair- Papers, books, documents and personal items; Helen A Fair MPapers, books, documents and personal items; Jessica Gibbons-Clothes tv etc; Jessica Givbons- Clothes tv etc; Nina Andres- boxes, mattress, dresser. Store 7306: 408 N Primrose Dr. Orlando FL 32803, 321.285.5021 @ 12:15 PM –Alexis Hill- Bags, books, totes, toys, pictures, lamps; Curtis Roberts III- clothes, tools, kitchenware, knickknacks Store 7590: 7360 Sand Lake Rd Orlando, FL 32819, 407.634.4449@ 11:45AM William Gardnerking bed, sofa; James Messenger- Home goods; Antonio Gilliam- Household things, furniture; marisol yepes- house goods; Courtney Laux- 1 month furniture; Gian Torres- Few personal items. Store 8136: 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail
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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 DEPART MENT. PICTURE IDENTIFICATION IS REQUIRED.
khairiya.bryant@myflfamilies.com CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal)
JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/HIGBEE CASE NO: DP20-321, IN THE INTEREST OF Minor Children: K. B. DOB: 05/25/2016, C. A. DOB: 07/05/2020 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: Tyrone Davis Address Unknown: A Petition for Ter mination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above referenced children. You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable judge Heather Higbee on October 27, 2022, at 9:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michi gan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. For this hearing, all parties shall participate IN PERSON. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEAR ING CONSTITUTES A CONSTRUCTIVE CONSENT TO THE TPR PETITION OF THE CHILD(REN) AND COULD RESULT IN THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD(REN). WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 31st day of August, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: George Lytle, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 985465 Orlando, FL 32801
Legal, NoticesPublic
Address Unknown: A Petition for Ter
5. Cellphones with misc. Items 40 Blk of W. Washington St.
21-27, 2022
(CourtCLERKGeorge.Lytle@myflfamilies.com,OFCOURTBy:/s/DeputyClerk.Seal)
(CourtCLERKSacha.Dixon@myflfamilies.comOFCOURTBy:/s/DeputyClerk.Seal)
6. Cellphones 1000 Blk of Plymouth Ave
8. Cellphone 5000 Blk of Commander Dr.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 / TYNAN CASE NO: DP20534, IN THE INTEREST OF Minor Child: S. R. DOB: 08/24/2014. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: Stephanie Cruz Address Unknown: A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regard ing the above referenced children. You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable judge Greg A. Tynan on October 11, 2022, at 9:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michi gan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. For this hearing, all parties shall participate IN PERSON. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEAR ING CONSTITUTES A CONSTRUCTIVE CONSENT TO THE TPR PETITION OF THE CHILD(REN) AND COULD RESULT IN THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD(REN). WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 25th day of August, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: Sacha C. Dixon, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 1017790 Orlando, FL 32801
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE, STATE OF FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION CASE NO.: 2022-CP- 002725-0. IN RE: THE ESTATE OF MARGARITA GARCIA NEGRON, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the Estate of MARGARITA GARCIA NEGRON, deceased, whose date of death was June 1, 2022, is pending in the Circuit Court for Orange County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 425 North Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida, 32801. The names and addresses of the Personal Representative and the Personal Representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the Decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the Decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITH STANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECE DENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is 9/21/2022. Attorney for Personal Representative: /S/ Coren J. Meeks, Esq., Florida Bar Number: 091856, MEEKS AND CEELY, P.L., 311 East Rich Avenue, DeLand, Florida 32724m Telephone: (386) 734-0199, Fax: (386) 469-0091, E-Mail:
– THRU THURSDAY, 9:00 AM TILL
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1001 Lee Road Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 489-3742, October 4th, 2022 @ 12:00 PM:Susan Brown: piano & house hold items, Brandy Power: household items. The auction will be listed and ad vertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction.
2. Tools 4500 Blk of 36th St.
APPEAR AT THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEAR ING CONSTITUTES A CONSTRUCTIVE CONSENT TO THE TPR PETITION OF THE CHILD(REN) AND COULD RESULT IN THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD(REN). WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 1st day of September, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: Sacha C. Dixon, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 1017790 Orlando, FL 32801
10.TrailCellphone with misc. Items 9000 Blk of Jeff Fuqua Blvd
9. Tools, Cellphone N Orange Blossom
FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTI TUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD.
11. Bag 500 Blk of Lake Ave
17. Currency 1200 Blk of W. South St. FOR INFO CALL (407) 246-2445, MONDAY
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 October 6th, 2022 and will continue until all locations are done. U-Haul Moving and Storage at Maitland Blvd, 7815 North Orange Blossom Trail, Or lando, FL 32810; AA3772A RENEE SMITH $4,758.40, W12 redfin property masters llc $3,752.20, D44 MARGARET MILATZ $685.70, A14 Darcie Concepcion $638.00, L57 Deborah Daniels $320.15, A21 kemar porter $429.60, U87 Margaret Collines $466.00, B35 Dawn Hebbert $564.80, A16 Rashaw Griffin $440.20, A13 Zaryia Stephens $374.00, U78 diamante taylor $270.65, B74 Cheryln Hicks $1,017.80, B62 deanna PATTERSON $671.20, L55 KATH LEEN Schweiger $643.40, W10 RICARDO LEWIS $3,075.70, D60 elismari quintana $351.25 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Apopka, 1221 E Semoran Blvd, Apopka, Fl 32703; 1336 Juana Rodriguez $384.35, 1170 Miguel Hernandez $1,269.60, 1139 tamera harris $911.80, 1051 JOSEPH MEDINA $837.70, 1184 TERENCE MC
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 Circuit Judge Heather Higbee on Wednesday, October 19, 2022 at 9:00 a.m.at the Juve nile 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.
September 2022 DESCRIPTION, FOUND PROPERTY:
4.AveCellphone 9000 Blk of Jeff Fuqua Blvd
7. Clothing 4000 Blk of International Dr.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 / TYNAN CASE NO: DP19-642, IN THE INTEREST OF Minor Child: N. S. DOB: 06/16/2014. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: Tariq Bagley Address Unknown: A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regard ing the above referenced children. You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable judge Greg A. Tynan on October 18, 2022, at 10:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michi gan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. For this hearing, all parties shall participate IN PERSON. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 3/TYNAN. CASE NO.: DP20-493 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: A.R. DOB: 09/15/2014. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Brandy Bennett Villegas (Address Unknown) A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable General Judge Greg A. Tynan on October 11, 2022 at 9:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. The Hearing will be conducted in person. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TER MINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 23rd day of August, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: Stacy McDuffie, Esq., Florida Bar No.: 0056020, Senior Attorney for State of Florida, Department of Children and Families Children’s Legal Services, Stacy. mcduffie@myflfamilies.com, By: /s/ CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, Deputy Clerk (Court Seal)
coren@meeksandceely.com
orlandoweekly.com
mination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above referenced children. You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable judge Heather Higbee on October 27, 2022, at 9:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michi gan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. For this hearing, all parties shall participate IN PERSON. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEAR ING CONSTITUTES A CONSTRUCTIVE CONSENT TO THE TPR PETITION OF THE CHILD(REN) AND COULD RESULT IN THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD(REN). WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 31st day of August, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: George Lytle, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 985465 Orlando, FL 32801
3. Bag, Cellphone 2700 Blk of S Orange
14.Rd.Electronics 6200 Blk of International
NOTICE3:00PM
OF AUCTION SALE The Bronze Kingdom LLC (unit A7, G8) at Ready Spaces ORS LLC, located at 2507 Inves tors Row Suite 100, Orlando FL 32837, will be sold to the highest bidder at www. storagetreasure.com on September 23rd at 5:00PM to satisfy the owner’s lien for rent in accordance with FL law. All content sold “as is” and by unit only. Seller neither warrants title to any items sold and does not make any express or implied warranties to any item sold.
13.AveCellphone 5700 Blk of Lake Underhill
12. Cellphone 300 Blk of N. Glenwood
CLAIN $1,227.70, 1250 JOSE SANTANA $1,314.60, 1006 joann myers $885.35, 1002 Barbara Antley $721.10, 1103 Militsa Sheppard $684.90, 1108 ESTEBAN FELICIANO $1,166.20, 1334 Mystery Room $381.90, 1296 Zachery Rainwater $1,259.53 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Altamonte Springs, 598 West Highway 436, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714; AA2269G ANDREW ONJUKKA $454.25, AA2528C Cresta Pillsbury $454.25, C106 Jennifer Sweeney $1,341.50, C132 Mar queshia Dean $1,309.52, B129 MARITZA BROWN $748.76, AA4805H Charline Rodriguez $2,774.60, A110 Weinfrid Lundor $1,131.25, C139 JOHN O’NEILL $950.40, B109 Marisol Lozada $1,261.82, AA8880F Yazmary Franco $2,132.80, AA6337F Yazmary Franco $2,111.10, AA4031K Stephen Allison $1,127.90, AA8028H Alexandra Smith $1,577.00, AA4811K Alexandra Smith $1,577.00, AA4101E Charline Rodriguez $2,774.60 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Semoran Blvd, 2055 State Rd 436, Winter Park, Fl 32792; 1691 XIOMARA SANCHEZ $518.85, 1098 VALLAN NEAL $381.76, 1168 Marisol Yureidini $551.48, 2703 Jasmine James $385.27, 1008 MILTON MONTESDEOCA $972.54, 1248 LEONARDO SANTANA $782.36, 1667 KINAYA TATUM $427.85, 1670 KAITLYN PARKE $690.46, 1417 Jennifer Colon $371.76, 1183 AMMON POWELL $908.17, 1074 Trinity Torres $734.66, 1116 LEONARDO SANTANA $782.36, 1683 Micah talley $576.01 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Longwood, 650 North Ronald Reagan Blvd, Longwood, FL 32750 B048 Anthony Martinez $463.20, E015 Joseph Barbosa $479.10, A012 Ray mond Lopez $1,516.92, B035 Carlos Perez $598.75, E074 Quelladin cintron $558.88, A095 Joshua Fox $585.60, B057-58 Eboni Carty $942.32, E012 Jacqueline Gonzalez $363.85, C041 Christopher Mills $582.95, E073 Larhanda Jones $292.02 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Lake Mary Blvd, 3851 S Orlando Drive, Sanford, Fl 32773; 2702 Jeffrey Bey $307.15, 1325 mystery room $638.92, 2205 Phylicia Farrell $585.72, 0001 Angele Torres $1,038.05, 1447 brandon hughes $436.51, 2221 JESSICA HARRIS $910.43, 0005 Johnny Jones $1,250.95, 1724 alfred jimenez $363.78, 2803 Stephanie Deon $323.38, 2552 Elizabeth Washburn $461.80, 1469 ANGEL CARTER $399.14, 1474 destiny hassel $436.51, 1571 Scott Hornbuckle $311.92, 2431 Michael Keller $604.24, 1061 Mark Denis $1,092.33, 1520 EVELYN RODRIGUEZ RODRIGUEZ $478.47, 1611 PATRICIA LINDEMAN $717.66, 1437 MICHAEL MAIOLO $318.52, 1217 Flint Chaffee $670.72, 1049 Antonio trammell $541.90, 1426 Gordon Grandison $550.95, 1152 Orlando Pagan $1,078.50, 1466 ANGEL CARTER $399.14, 1015 Sergio Rocha $623.60, 5046 Alexander Bankert $1,079.06, 1406 Martina cortez $663.80, 2213 DALE COWELL $761.06, 1091 Mys tery Room $730.19, 2121 Stephanie Deon $324.73, 1720 mystery room $335.40, 5062 Tyree Holmes $745.06, 1414 haley pryor $957.37, 1563 vernetta walker $541.22, 1250 SARAH FOLAN $455.82, 1645 jasmine jackson $830.57, 1290 rodrasha taylor $511.46, 1245 Damian Brown $1,016.58, 1288 darrell coffee $541.22, 1607 robert rosado $705.61, 1405 dave Blair $670.72, 1495 Kevin Kennett $313.27, 1411 robert rosado $663.01 U-Haul Mov ing & Storage of Sanford, 3101 S Orlando Drive, Sanford, FL 32773; 1649 Robert Carvell $438.07, 1372 DAWN DUVALL $623.60, 1534 TYESHA BOUIE $879.20, AA5359N steven johnson $1,427.30, 1432 Repoleon Porchia JR $449.40, 0119 Tony Posey $921.94, AA0770B steven johnson $1,427.30, AA1093H Jason Campbell $1,534.35, 1946 ROBERT COCHRAN $373.48, 0171 Katrina Boyd $716.85, 1932 Joeseph Holden $431.90, AA4444G Andrew Bays $2,827.35, 1723 Lois Miller $424.16, 1366 DANIEL PEREZ
1. Bags with electronics, clothing and misc. Items N Westmoreland Drive
Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA.
Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1420 North Orange Blossom Trail Orlando FL, 32804 (407) 312- 8736, on 10/11/2022 @ 12:00PM: Sharon ReidMicrowave, Bags, Totes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/HIGBEE CASE NO: DP20-321, IN THE INTEREST OF Minor Children: K. B. DOB: 05/25/2016, C. A. DOB: 07/05/2020 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: Willie Brinson
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. YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR. WIT NESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 8th day of September, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: Khairiya C. Bryant,, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 23221 khairiya.bryant@myflfamilies. com CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal)
Orlando,cosoRepresentative:becky@meeksandceely.com.,Secondary:Personal/S/AngelUlisesTronGarcia,5510GolfClubParkway,FL32808.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/HIGBEE CASE NO: DP22191 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: L.B. DOB: 03/17/2022. NOTICE OF ACTION TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: MARY GRACE BERNIER, ADDRESS UNKNOWN.
(CourtCLERKGeorge.Lytle@myflfamilies.com,OFCOURTBy:/s/DeputyClerk.Seal)
WEEKLY
15.Dr. Bicycles 30 Blk of Westmoreland Dr.
16. Bicycle 6000 Blk of International Dr.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR OR ANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DI VISION: 07/HIGBEE CASE NO: DP 21-049 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: D. B. DOB: 05/06/2020. NOTICE OF ACTION TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: TONYA BLAND, ADDRESS UNKNOWN. WHEREAS a Pe tition 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 Circuit Judge Heather Higbee on Friday, September 23, 2022 at 9:15 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 speci fied. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTI TUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE 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. YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR. WIT NESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 19th day of August, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: Khairiya C. Bryant,, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 23221
40 ORLANDO ● SEPT. ●
(CourtCLERKSacha.Dixon@myflfamilies.comOFCOURTBy:/s/DeputyClerk.Seal)
Esmeraldo Romero, B113 Laura Roark, D104 Trevor Bertran, C141 Brackston Helms, B159 Tyson Davis, C197 Toja Burton, C160 Alec Ringdahl, D126 Stephan Von, D222 Nicole Dupre, B185 Daniel Martinek, B215 Kirnesha Reese, U-Haul Ctr Alafaya 11815 E. Colonial Dr, Orlando Fl. 32826 10/04/2022: 1509 Julissa
Notice of Public Sale: Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell, to satisfy lien of the owner, at public sale by competitive bidding on www.stor agetreasures.com ending on October 14th, 2022 at 11:00 am for units located at: Compass Self Storage 2435 W SR 426 , Oviedo, FL 32765 Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the time of sale. All goods are sold as is and must be removed at the time of purchase. Compass Self Storage reserves the right to refuse any bid. Sale is subject to adjournment. The personal goods stored therein by the following may include, but are not limited to general household, furniture, boxes, clothes and appliances . 0007 – Morgan Brothers, Inc 0041 –Peter Andre Bernard 0045 – Peter Andre Bernard 0171 – Thomas Yensco 0175 –Thomas Yensco 0185 – Thomas Yensco 0192 – Thomas Yensco 0341 – Tiana Woods 0392 – Mike Skelly.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY
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/
info.com/Orlando-FL-storage-units/www.personalministorage.formore Michigan Mini-200 W Michigan St Orlando, FL 32806-at 10:30am: 12 Lill Lamones 63 Dexter Jones Jr 72 Miquisha paul 116 Laura Cervantes, Bao’s Castle Personal Mini Storage Forsyth-2875 Forsyth Rd Winter Park FL, 32792-at 10:00 am: 76 Linda Ramirez Santos 132 Jennifer Ren Horn 208 Barbara Pickett 209 Trevor Ian Hay 260 Cori Jackson 321 Patricia Priddy 332 Danny Floyd Key Jr. 340 Ferdinand Gonzalez 409 Moriah Maney 505 Christy Ortiz 549 Calus Jr Saint Georges 558 Inawa Naydayad Personal Mini Storage West-4600 Old Winter Garden Rd Orlando, FL 32811–at 11:30am: 73 Jesse S. Walker 181 Samuel Demming Jr 231 Earnst Sanders 226
Notice is hereby given that Mindful Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following times and locations: October 12th, 2022 9:30am Mindful Storage facility: 900 Cypress Pkwy. Kissimmee, FL 34759 (321) 732-6032 The personal goods stored therein by the following: #1128-Households, #1057- Households, #K220-Households, #J203-Households, #2219-Furniture, #2209- Furniture, #2206-Households, #2143-Households, #2106-Households, #2092- Households. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Mindful Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Stanley Celestin 0346 Torianna Ricketts 0364 Angel Augustin 0372 Cornelius
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below on October 07, 2022 at the loca tions indicated: Store 8460: 4390 Pleasant Hill Rd Kissimmee FL 34746 (407) 429-8867 @ 12:15 PM: Monica Sharmila Vernon Table, Mattress, and boxes, Edgardo Ayala twin mattress bunk bed queen mattress couch tumpline broken down dressers nice size & tool box, Lamont Reaves Flat screen tvs bed room sets washer n dryer home appliances, Janna Patrick Household items, Eva Leonard beds table chairs HHG couch, Matthew Longs Bedroom set and furniture alongside with clothes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
Carole Yvonne Kaiser 413 Greg Remado Thomas 430 Guerinaud Bernardin 433 Anthony Petterson 443 Delic Ann Rascoe 478 Alzono Smith 491 Tyqueria Lashon Rivers 553 Robert Leon White 586 Shan nece N. Telfer 613 Terica Shacon Holmes 628 Zelphry Warrin Ishman 634 Teresa Denmark 635 Tamara Latoya Wilson 713 Paula Staelens 1964 Chevy Pickup Vin: 4C254T108935 Personal Mini Storage Lake Fairview-4252 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804-at 11:00 am: 0280
TRAILER 20222HGFE2F57NH53392920203TYAZ5CN7LT00177820213CZRU6H33MM7470532016KNADM4A31G66782652018JTEZU5JRXJ51885022006KMHDN46D66U27422420175N1AZ2MG4HN11689120185NPD84LF0JH32520520165XYPK4A57GG048609/KIA/HYUN/NISS/HYUN/TOYT/KIA/HOND/TOYT/HOND.
am: 101 Tori Blake 324 James Thomas
331 Lee Anthony Johnson 406 Jescina Odette Adams 521 Kevin Jeff Donjoie 731 Jeannette Lee Valentin 741 Jorge Palma 932 Omari Meeks 1033 Jovan Donovan
ACEVEDO $1,230.62, AA4037A Savanah Echevarria $2,746.65, 1617 Renata Fanara $353.30, 1818 BRENDON DERIVAL $619.80, 1064 Angel Jurado $623.60, 1712 Chris Bibeault $405.60, 1754 Imuran Charlemagne $879.20, AA8897K sandra Benda $1,006.05, AA4635A Latichia Macon $1,455.35, 1709 Brandon Hardy $608.47, 1849 KELLY BRADLEY $619.80, AA2125A Jason Campbell $1,534.35, 1068 lawanda Tillmon $555.88, 1540 OB TALLEY $344.30, 0103 DENISE THOMAS $456.11
OCTOBER 9, 2022 20181HGCV1F13JA18818820041C3EL55R74N283821CHRYHOND
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION
Personal property of the following ten ants will be sold for cash to satisfy rental liens in accordance with Florida Stat utes, 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, October 4th, 2022 at times indicated below. Viewing and bidding will only be available online at www.storagetrea sures.com beginning at least 5 days prior to the scheduled sale date and time!
am: D32 Benedicto Lopez Barthelemy Personal Mini Storage Edgewater-6325 Edgewater Dr Orlando, FL 32810-at 11:30
U-Haul Moving and Storage of Sanford on Rinehart Road, 1811 Rinehart Road, Sanford, Fl 32771; 3047 Walter Washing ton Jr $2,557.64, 2147 Walter Washington Jr $2,969.88, 4139 shiquita alexander $607.10, 2155 ALEXISC FORD-ST FLAVIEN $516.44, 1038 Willeana Murray $486.84, 4079 Mystery Room $644.24, 4156-57 Barbara Rosenwinkel $660.07
Henry 1205 Jeffrey Carl Crowson 1206 Leeonna Robinson 1310 Samantha De Jesus 1409 Emily Anton 1812 Latrice Brit ton 2130 Yachira Pabon, 2021 homemade trailer Personal Mini Storage Forest City Rd-6550 Forest City Rd Orlando, FL 32810at 12:00 pm: 1002 Nyesha Aikens 1048 Ferron Burke 1071 Jennifer S Harris 3116 Wesley Whitaker 3163 Michael Reese, Jr. 3244 Charmaine Jackson 4034 Ai’Niya Bradford 5050 Guemsnel Maurepas 5052 LaQuinda Scott 6045 Devon Thomlinson.
ADAM AYED ENTERPRISES LLC reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all NOTICE20203CZRU6H56LM71137320175NPE24AF4HH45406520125NPDH4AE6CH0803602007KNAFG526977113643bids.KIAHYUNHYUNHONDOFPUBLICSALE
Also visit
ADAM AYED ENTERPRISES LLC gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 10/7/2022, 09:00 am at 9712 RECYCLE CENTER RD ORLANDO, FL 32824- 8146, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes.
: NEW GEN ERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the fol lowing dates, 08:00 am at 2603 OLD DIXIE HIGHWAY KISSIMMEE, FL 34744, pursu ant 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.
Notice Of Public Sale
or all 20165V8VA5327GM60955220011JJV532W11L7749682015WA1CGAFE1FD02770620185TDKZRFH4JS53659320083N1BC11E48L442684bids;/NISS/TOYT/AUDI/WABASH/VANGUARDBOX
FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCK ERS 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, SEC TIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8:00am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. U-Haul Ctr Goldenrod 508 N Goldenrod Orlando Fl. 32807 10/04/2022: 506 Judith Turney, 721 Cooper Craig, 725 Rafael Escorcia, 738 Eric Gilghrest, 102 Craig Levine, 509 Alba Garcia Rivera, 101 Criag Levine, 225 Nicole Salzman, 1217 Jose Alvarez, 1300 Chandrea Anderson, 6001 Demaris Ruiz, 322 Julian Pelaez, 106 Darius Thomas. U-Haul Ctr Orange ave 3500 S. Orange ave. Orlando Fl. 32806 10/04/2022: 1605 Jean Faustin, 1103 Martin Ifedebe, 1830 Isis-Stone Peters, 2202 Eboni Townsend, 1815 Rod Smith, 2018 Sabrina Vaughn, 1304 Qushaun Mickle, 2407 Ray Amburgey, 1701 Tonya Roberts, 1831 Shani Heslop, 1521 Helenikka Williams, 1931 Nivia Lampkin. U-Haul Ctr Baldwin Park 4001 E Colonial Dr. Orlando Fl. 32803 10/04/2022: C158
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell, to satisfy lien of the owner, at public sale by competitive bidding on www.storagetreasures.com ending on October 14th, 2022 at 11:00 am for units located at: Compass Self Storage 3498 Canoe Creek Rd St. Cloud, FL 34772. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the time of sale. All goods are sold as is and must be re moved at the time of purchase. Compass Self Storage reserves the right to refuse any bid. Sale is subject to adjournment. The personal goods stored therein by the following may include, but are not limited to general household, furniture, boxes, clothes and appliances, unless other wise noted. A114- Karla Leon A298- Gina Carlo A336- Lisa Stine A337- Lisa Stine B102- Adrian De Jesus B127- Jonathan Davila B155- Jorge Torres C133- James Tate C174- John Cento.
orlandoweekly.com ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY 41
Boles 0419 Khristoffe Mccalla 0808
Notice of Public Sale: Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on October 7th, 2022 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
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCK ERS 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, SEC TIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8:00am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul of CTR Haines City: 3307 US Hwy 17-92 W, Haines City, FL 33844 10/11/2022 F0676 Jeanne Sherif, G0732 Keriston Gay, G0781 Takijah Rasheed, A0134 Martin Reid, H0905 Einezre Jones, G0799 JOSE SANCHEZ, A0082 Ambiorix Crisostomo, F0624 Allen Moore, G0712 Eric Davis, A0056 Alexis Watkins, F0616 James or Janice Copeland, E0522 Allen Moore. UHaul Moving & Storage of Four Corners:
Michel’le Tyler, 1625 Vitor Cantalejo, 2372 Toni Holland, 2197 Natalie Noboa, 2407 Fidela Torres, 2233 Edwin Olguin, 1903 Atnia Avila, 1245-49 Lasandra Smithinnis, 2196 Jose Mato, 2337 Ashley Taylor, 2376 Kaylea Nicholas, 1748 Emilio/Yullie Velez, 1620 Kayla Higgs, 2023 Tynnel Phillips, 1872 Devion Jackson, 2178 Christopher Hay, 2213 Lasandra Smithinnis, 1636 Lasandra Smithinnis, 1546Amy Quisen berry Faustine, 1520 Laquesha DuBose, 1605 Steven Gindlesberger, 2111 Derrick Campbell, 2284 Travis Kollman, 2211 Lasandra Smithinnis, 2397 Brian Paulino, 2014 Ashley Reyes.
OCTOBER 14, 2022 20174T1BF1FK2HU380285TOYT
Lin’Zay Stevenson 0846 Crystal Wood 0863 Christian Hill 0991 Brandon Mills Fairview Mini Storage-4211 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804-at 11:00
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:
Martinez Ramirez De, 1019 Riddick Bowe, 1504 Daniyel Rodriguez, 1609 COrban Arana, 1700 Jennifer Ducharme, 1436 Riddick Bowe, 1415 Elizabeth Yates, 1903 Saber Moldaliev, 1523 Ana Rivera, 1128 Seyi Adeyemo.
20143VWLL7AJ8EM368996VOLK
Notice of Public Sale
Notice of Public Sale: Personal Property of the following tenants will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash to. Contents may include household items, luggage, toys, furniture, clothing, commercial equipment, etc. Auction to be held at Compass Self Storage, 203 Neighborhood Market Rd Orlando, FL 32825 on October 14th, 2022 at 11:00 am 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. All goods are sold as is and must be removed at the time of pur chase. Sale is subject to adjournment. 120-Connor Tinglum 1046-Angelo Ortiz 2082-Cinamon Toon
or all bids. OCTOBER 9, 2022 20021HGCG165X2A044345HOND OCTOBER 13, 2022 2006WDBRF52H06F73212320041G1ZT52834F140957CHEVMERZ OCTOBER 14, 2022 20201GCPTEE12L1121888CHEV
Notice of Public Sale: Personal Property of the following tenants will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash to. 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 October 14th, 2022 at 11:00 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. All goods are sold as is and must be removed at the time of purchase. Sale is subject to adjournment. #1723- Donald Ohler #2311-Camille Gayles #1704-Tracy Taylor #1245-Tina Serrano #2512-Melanie Gomez #1811-Jeremy Sharritt.
8546 W Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy, Kissimmee, FL 34747 10/11/2022 1316
NOTICE OF SALE
THE GREEK CORNER IS HIR ING! – Servers full or pt, Line cook full or pt, Prep cook full or pt We are busy! Apply in person
SeminoleCityCityOrlandoOrlando6529883HealthHealth6529779ofWinterGardenofWinterGarden6529012401kGeneration401kGeneration6529011CHEPCHEP6528946HisandHersRoofingHisandHersRoofing6528933StateCollege
TrajectorTrajector6528730FloridaServicesServices6528728
42 ORLANDO WEEKLY ● SEPT. 21-27, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com
Orange Ave Orlando,
City of Casselberry City of6530107Casselberry
Architectural Designer & Planner to pre pare scale drawings; meet with clients to review, discuss architectural drawings & concepts, plan & design layouts of structural architectural projects; prepare presentations & drawings for the clients in 2D CAD, 2D & 3D; inspect construction work on site to ensure its adherence to the design plans; estimate material requirements & costs, & present design & plans to clients; research & explore the use of new materials, technologies, & products to incorporate into designs & plans; plan or design structures such as residences & office buildings; develop marketing materials, proposals, or presentations. Master’s degree in Architecture or US equiv. Required. 3 yrs. of work exp. required. Written resumes only to: Archenics Metro Group, 5401 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 440, Orlando, FL 32819; Attn: Mr. Joshi.
OPERATIONS RESEARCH ANALYST:
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: 2018 Toyota VIN: 3MYDLBYV7JY328089
Rollins6530088College
32804 GO ORLANDOJOBS.COMTO & ENTER THE JOB NUMBER IN KEYWORD FIELD TO LOCATE THIS POSTION PIB Land PIB OrangeOrangePolkPolkGreatInsuranceJobs.comGreatInsuranceJobs.comUniversalUniversal6530443LandOrlandoOrlando65304416530434CountyBoardofCountyCommissionersCountyBoardofCountyCommissioners6530420WaltDisneyWorldResortWaltDisneyWorldResort6530419FullSailUniversityFullSailUniversity6530417CaribeRoyaleOrlandoCaribeRoyaleOrlando6530413CityofOrlandoCityofOrlando6530408CountySheriff’sOfficeCountySheriff’sOffice6530407YMCAofCentralFloridaYMCAofCentralFlorida6530405 Give Kids The World Give Kids The World
NoticesPublicEmployment
TECHNOLOGY ServiceNow, Inc. is accepting resumes for the following position in Orlando, FL: Technical Support Engineer (58223410647): Manage and resolve chal lenging issues for ServiceNow partners and customers. Develop subject matter expertise within the technical support department. Telecommuting permitted. Email resume to servicenowresume servicenow.comsUS@ or mail resume to ServiceNow, Inc., Attn: Global Mobility, 2225 Lawson Lane, Santa Clara, CA 95054. Resume must include job title, job ref. #5822-3410647, full name, email, & mailing address. No phone calls. Must be legally-authorized to work in U.S. without sponsorship. EOE. 1600 N FL SeminoleSeminoleFloridaFlorida6530395VirtualSchoolVirtualSchool6530351TTECTTEC6530261CountySheriff’sOfficeCountySheriff’sOffice6530247CORNERSTONEHOSPICEANDPALLIATIVECARECORNERSTONEHOSPICEANDPALLIATIVECARE6530244OrlandoWeeklyOrlandoWeekly6530182UniversityofCentralFloridaUniversityofCentralFlorida6530181MAAMAA6530144LYNX(CentralFloridaRegionalTransportationAuthority)LYNX(CentralFloridaRegionalTransportationAuthority)6530143EmbassySuitesOrlando-LakeBuenaVistaSouthEmbassySuitesOrlando-LakeBuenaVistaSouth6530111
Legal,
SC Data Center
TECHNOLOGY
Orange County Clerk of Courts Orange County Clerk of Courts (RC) Rollins College (RC) of Florida State College of
ServiceNow Inc is accepting resumes for the following positions in Orlando, FL: Senior Technical Support Engineer (ref# 5823-3309161): Manage and resolve challenging issues for ServiceNow partners and customers. Telecommuting permitted. Email resume to servicenow servicenow.com.resumesUS@ Or mail resume to ServiceNow Inc, Attn: Global Mobility, 2225 Lawson Lane, Santa Clara, CA 95054. Resume must include job title, job ref. # 5823-3309161, full name, email & mailing address. No phone calls. Must be legally authorized to work in U.S. without sponsorship. EOE.
20203FA6P0LU1LR10396120011FM5K8GCXMGA68104FORDFORD
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Preston’s Towing. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates, 07:00 am 605 E Donegan Ave, Kissimmee, FL 34744, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. 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: 10/10/2022
The following vehicles will be sold at Public Sale for cash to satisfy lien pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on October 7, 2022 at 9:00 am at National Towing and Re covery, 6408 Old Cheney Hwy., Orlando, FL. (407) 273-5880 2013 1FMDU32E9VUA8765219971FMRU15W93LA146712003ZAM57YTA6K132839120192MEBM75F9JX70423419883N1AB7APXDL682433NISSMERCMASEFORDFORD
To be sold at auction at 8:00 am. on October 12, 2022 at 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC
NOTICE OF SALE
Formulate and apply mathematical mod eling and other optimizing methods to develop/interpret information that assists management with decision making and policy formulation; collect and analyze data; collaborate with decision makers to identify and solve variety of manage ment problems; define operational problems; study and analyze alternative courses of action; observe current op erations and prepare recommendations; work with SAP and Buildertrend. REQS: 64 mos of exp in the position or 64 mos of management consulting. Must have exp with SAP and Buildertrend. Mail resume, Attn. Thiago Davila, Mikele International Group LLC, 4210 L B McLeod Road, Suite 101, Orlando, FL 32811.
2015JF1ZNAA11F87077272013WAUFFAFC0DN01836020093A8FY48989T5970642015WBA3A5G56FNS887372003WBADT63423CK4150520083FAHP07Z08R166782FORDBMWBMWCHRYAUDTOYT 10/21/2022
Seminole
RCG Global Services seeks Sr Delivery Managers in Orlando, FL. Manages proj ect resources and 3rd parties to deliver web and mobile e-commerce software application projects. 50% domestic travel to client sites required. Apply@ www. jobpostingtoday.com #67276
Inc. SC Data Center Inc. PerformanceTheTheOrlandoJobs.comOrlandoJobs.com65287006528680MallatMilleniaMallatMillenia6528601EnergyAirInc.EnergyAirInc.6528460FoodGroup / PFG Performance Food Group / PFG KinderCareKinderCareGEICOGEICO6528457LocalOfficeLocalOffice6528376LearningCompaniesLearningCompanies6527167ServTronics,Inc.ServTronics,Inc.6527164GreatInsuranceJobsGreatInsuranceJobs6526147AAANationalOfficeAAANationalOffice6525453