Orlando Weekly October 07, 2015

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FREE | OCT. 7-13, 2015

COME OUT WITH PRIDE GUIDE INSIDE!


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orlando weekly ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

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OCT. 7-13, 2015

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

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Publisher Graham Jarrett Associate Publisher Leslie Egan Editor Erin Sullivan Editorial Arts & Culture Editor Jessica Bryce Young Associate Editor Ashley Belanger Staff Writer Monivette Cordeiro Calendar Editor Thaddeus McCollum Digital Content Editor Colin Wolf Interns Marissa Mahoney, Ashley Rivera Mercado, Bernard Wilchusky Contributors Rob Bartlett, Jenn Benner, Jeffrey C. Billman, Rob Boylan, Justin Braun, Teege Braune, Patrick Cooper, Jason Ferguson, Christopher Garcia, Hannah Glogower, Matt Gorney, James Greene Jr., Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Audrey Kristine, Seth Kubersky, Bao Le-Huu, Nick McGregor, Cameron Meier, Jeff Meyers, Dave Plotkin, Richard Reep, Steve Schneider, Yulia Tikhonova

Let freedom bleed Sigh, we [Libertarians] were making real gains in local politics and then this freak show happens (“Libertarian Party of Florida chairman resigns, accuses candidate of goat sacrifice and eugenics,” Oct. 2) and lowers us to the level of the two major parties.

Advertising Senior Multimedia Account Executive Dan Winkler Multimedia Account Executives Allison Daake Lindsey Hahn, Scott Navarro, Ian Quinn, Michelle Rogers Marketing and Events Marketing and Events Director Brett Blake Events and Promotions Manager Brad Van De Bogert Promotions Coordinator Rachel Hoyle Marketing/Promotions Interns Kyle Kowalski, Sydnie Blakey, Meghan Brooks Creative Services Creative Services Director Adam McCabe Creative Services Manager Shelby Sloan Graphic Designer Christopher Kretzer Business Business Manager Stacey Commer Circulation Circulation Manager Keith Coville Euclid Media Group Chief Executive Officer Andrew Zelman Chief Operating Officers Chris Keating, Michael Wagner Chief Financial Officer Brian Painley Human Resources Director Lisa Beilstein Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon euclidmediagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, voicemediagroup.com Orlando Weekly Inc. 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, Florida 32801 orlandoweekly.com Phone 407-377-0400 Fax 407-377-0420 Orlando Weekly is published every week by Euclid Media Group Verified Audit Member Orlando Distribution Orlando Weekly is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Copyright notice: The entire contents of Orlando Weekly are copyright 2015 by Euclid Media Group LLC. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Publisher does not assume any liability for unsolicited manuscripts, materials, or other content. Any submission must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All editorial, advertising, and business correspondence should be mailed to the address listed above. Subscriptions: Additional copies or back issues may be purchased at the Orlando Weekly offices for $1. Six-month domestic subscriptions may be purchased for $75; one-year subscriptions for $125.

Troy R. Stull, via Facebook

Democrats and Republicans are clearly well composed, have their shit together, and are doing a wonderful job running this country.

COVER PHOTO BY KARA ROUNTREE

news & features 6 News

30 Remix We take a trip all the way back to the 1980s to put our own spin on the Bramble

A plan is in place to save Constitution Green, and bear hunt monitors are set to keep a watchful eye on the upcoming cull

33 Recently Reviewed

6 This Modern World

film

9 #TravelingWhileTrans

39 Film listings

One woman’s ordeal at the Orlando airport with TSA officials went viral online and started an online conversation about what it means to travel while transgender

11 Proud

Short takes on restaurants we’ve eaten at recently

39 Opening in Orlando Movies opening this week: Big Stone Gap, Pan, Steve Jobs and more

40 Towering tribute

18 Knights Pride

42 Mend to be

19 Passed out What my transition taught me about how the world perceives men and women

21 Come Out With Pride schedule

arts & culture 23 “We aren’t where we need to be” Orlando Museum of Art announces plans to move out of Loch Haven Park

The Walk is a fitting homage to the Twin Towers

music Twin Shadow’s George Lewis Jr. on being shaped by bus accidents, pop ambition and growing up in Florida

43 The kids are all right Failure finds a more engaged audience in young fans who just discovered their Fantastic Planet

Great live music rattles Orlando every night

Two new comics collections from Drawn & Quarterly cut to the quick

calendar

27 Live Active Cultures

46 Selections

This year, warming up with some gentler trick-ortreat spirit before diving into the blood-spattered haunts

48 The Week

Steak and seafood joint the Boathouse really makes a splash with Disney diners

29 Tip Jar 4 Rivers Smokehouse opens in City Hall this week, plus more in our weekly food roundup

This is 100 percent mudslinging. Wyllie tried to blackmail me to force me out of the party, and when he was forced to resign instead, he followed through with his threat.

45 This Little Underground

24 Drawn from life

29 Waterworld

LIBIntOrg, via orlandoweekly.com

43 Picks This Week

A version of Sham 69 brings old-school Oi! to Backbooth and Helmet redeems themselves with powerful focus

food & drink

The problem is the major parties recently created a primary and registration law that prevents small parties from controlling who is a candidate or member. The Libertarians and Greens have been inundated with joke candidates and destructive members they have to fight off – several of whom openly admit they’re GOP or Neo-Nazi operatives. The older parties are now pushing “Top Two,” which will have the effect of making minor party candidates invisible, as has happened in California.

Cinema-oriented events to go see this week

We asked members of the local LGBT community to tell us what they’re most proud of now, and what they think the next battle should be in the fight for LGBT rights

University of Central Florida’s programs for LGBTQ+ students are something to be proud of

John Nutter, via Facebook

Augustus Invictus, via Facebook

49 Down the Road

back pages

Got something to add? Email feedback@orlandoweekly.com.

65 Free Will Astrology

First Words compiles emails, letters and comments from orlandoweekly.com. We reserve the right to edit for length, content and clarity.

65 Lulu Eightball 65 Gimme Shelter 66 Savage Love 67 Classifieds orlandoweekly.com

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Mayor Buddy Dyer, City Commissioner Patty Sheehan and Soil and Water Conservation Supervisor 4 Eric Rollings

City makes plans to save Constitution Green

long attempted to get the city to pay more attention to parks on the city’s less desirable west side, points out that Lake Lorna Doone Park, which sits in the shadow of the Citrus Bowl, “is about the same size as Lake Eola, but half of it is used as a parking lot.” Nobody, he says, seems to want to save greenspace on the poor side of town. “Between Colonial Drive and the 407, and OBT and I-4, all of Parramore essentially, the only park you have is Lake Dot, which is tiny,” he says. “We prioritize green spaces for the east side, but we neglect them on the west side. It’s a tale of two cities.” While Dyer posed for photos with school kids, Sheehan says she’d also heard the complaints, but she says this was a unique opportunity. The city has tried to buy this land in years past but couldn’t afford it. Now that the owners are at the table, the city couldn’t pass up the opportunity to nab the parkland. And, on Friday at least, she wasn’t going to let detractors dampen her spirits about the plan to save Constitution Green. “Some people are never happy,” she says. “If you paved the streets with gold, they’d complain to you about the color.” – Erin Sullivan

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Speak Up Wekiva looking for bear hunt monitors

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n Thursday, Oct. 1, Circuit Court Judge George Reynolds denied a motion for an injunction to stop the state’s first black bear hunt in more than 20 years. Environmental groups, including members of Speak Up Wekiva, traveled to Tallahassee on Oct. 1 to testify in an emergency hearing asking the court to prevent the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission from moving forward with black bear season, scheduled to begin on Oct. 24.

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Among their reasons for making the request, Speak Up Wekiva says, is that the FWC does not have any way to make sure that people hunting bears have appropriate permits to do so, because it doesn’t plan to have check-in points for hunters entering wildlife management areas. The organization also argues that there is no way for the state to accurately know when its “harvest objective” of 320 bears has been reached – and since 2,000 permits have been issued for the hunt, many environmental activists are concerned that the number of bears killed could quickly overcome the objective. Speak Up Wekiva sued the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission earlier this year over its controversial decision to allow a one-week bear season to take place in the first place – it’s the first time in decades that Florida has allowed people to hunt black bears, which are considered a threatened species in the state. Speak Up Wekiva’s suit states that in opening up bear season, the FWC is abdicating its constitutionally mandated mission to preserve the state’s natural resources. The group filed a petition for a temporary injunction against the hunt until the lawsuit could work its way through court,

but Reynolds denied the request, saying the FWC had made a successful scientific basis for the hunt, but that it “could have had some better timing” if it waited to begin the hunt until after an in-progress population study could be completed. Speak Up Wekiva says it is now asking for members of the public to volunteer to be bear hunt monitors while the hunt is ongoing. Monitors will document the hunt by photographing cars taking dead bears off wildlife-management properties and take down license-plate information for each vehicle carrying dead bears so Speak Up Wekiva can ensure that people killing the bears have hunting permits. The organization also wants volunteers to look for cubs that may have been orphaned during the hunt. The organization plans to have wildlife experts at the ready to get orphaned cubs to rehab. “While we remain hopeful that this hunt will be stopped,” the organization states in its call for volunteers, “we ask for volunteers to be prepared to minimize the damage done and protect the Florida black bear from the gross negligence of the FWC.” If you’re interested in being a bear hunt monitor, visit speakupwekiva.com. – ES esullivan@orlandoweekly.com

PHOTO BY ERIN SULLIVAN

arlier this year, downtown residents were in an uproar when they learned that plans were afoot to develop a piece of property that’s served as a city park since the 1980s. The family that owns the property at the corner of Summerlin Avenue and South Street known as Constitution Green – which is home to a few massive old oak trees, one of which is estimated to be about 175 years old – was considering developing it for apartments. The city said it had attempted to purchase the property from the owners, but an acceptable price could not be reached. Petitions were signed, rallies were held and for months, it seemed like nothing happened. Then on Friday, Oct. 2, the city suddenly announced that it had reached a tentative plan to rescue the park – and its giant trees – from the wrecking ball. The city would pay the family that owns the park $3.34 million in cash, which would come from the Community Redevelopment Agency funding and turn over a half-acre parcel located just south of downtown (and valued at about $2.5 million) to make up the difference. The deal still must be confirmed by the City Council later this year. The tone of the press conference announcing the deal was upbeat – City Councilwoman Patty Sheehan, Mayor Buddy Dyer and Soil and Water Conservation Supervisor 4 Eric Rollings gathered under the old oaks and mugged for the cameras. “It’s a great opportunity for the city” to preserve one full block of green space in a densely developed downtown corridor, for less than market value, Sheehan points out. But that doesn’t mean that everybody was thrilled by the news. Political activist Doug Head, who has


NEWS & FEATURES

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#TravelingWhileTrans One woman’s ordeal at the Orlando airport with TSA officials went viral online and started an online conversation about what it means to travel while transgender BY MON IVETTE COR D EI R O

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fter enjoying the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal late last month, Shadi Petosky was traveling back home when Transportation Security Administration officers at the Orlando International Airport detained her for an “anomaly” in her body scan. If you’ve been to a commercial airport post-9/11, you’ve probably passed through a full-body scanner like the one that Petosky had to walk through. Critics have objected to their use, citing privacy concerns because they allow TSA agents to look at images of passengers’ bodies through their clothing; others say the scanners are critical to national security. But for people who are transgender or gender-nonconforming, something as simple as passing through the scanner can have humiliating consequences. Petosky, who is a transgender woman and a writer, began tweeting her experience after she stepped into the machine, where officers select a pink or blue button to scan travelers based on the gender the officer perceives them to be. People whose bodies don’t conform to their per-

ceived gender can be subject to additional screenings and pat-downs. On Twitter, Petosky says after the scanner picked up an “anomaly,” she told the officer she was transgender, but an agent told her to “get back in the scanning machine as a man or it was going to be a problem.” Petosky was put in a small room and patted down as police officers and an explosives specialist were called in. Petosky says she left the ordeal sobbing, and she missed her American Airlines flight. A spokesperson for the airline said she was immediately rebooked for the next available flight at no charge, but Petosky says after asking American Airlines employees for a boarding pass, employees told an Orlando police officer to escort her from the airport. The officer refused and told the employees to give her a ticket. “I don’t think my body is an anomaly,” she wrote in a viral tweet. “I like tons of people with my body. Can there be more buttons?” Mark Howell, a spokesman for the TSA, says the agency released a statement about

with disgust and asked, “What are you?” It got so bad, Casey says he chose to drive 10 hours back to his home for the holidays instead of getting on a plane because it was less stressful. “At this point I get through more easily because I have transitioned,” he says. “The reason the awful interactions have gone down have a lot to do with the privilege of having health care and the access to financial resources for surgery.” Another important aspect of why Casey’s incidents with the TSA have stopped is because his documents now match his gender identity. Changing your name and other documents can be cost-prohibitive, and some state and federal agencies require people to get a court order or surgery, which some transgender people may not want to have. “I think it’s important to connect this particular issue to broader structural systems of violence trans people, especially trans women and trans women of color, face daily,” he says. “This is a particularly public example of the surveillance scrutiny trans people face, but it’s part of a much larger experience.” Gina Duncan, who is the transgender inclusion director for Equality Florida Action, says she reached out to Petosky after the incident and has spoken with TSA officials about reviewing their guidelines. As more people start expressing themselves as gender-neutral or gendernonconforming, this same situation could become exacerbated, she says. “I think we’re seeing that while the TSA can say they follow guidelines, the tone and enforcement of those guidelines has been heavy-handed, and overzealous people have been involved,” Duncan says. “People should not have to fear flying or go through this demeaning process. Shadi’s story has shined a light on this situation.” For many Orlando police officers, LGBT liaison Lt. James Young is the first person who introduces them to terms such as “gender expression” or “transgender.” He says his diversity training teaches officers how to interact with LGBT people in a way that respects their privacy and puts them at ease. Young says he and Duncan are organizing a training seminar at Valencia College to make sure local public safety officers are educated on the issues. “We cover all the basics to ensure we’re following our philosophy of treating everyone with respect and dignity,” he says. “As society changes, our job as police officers is to keep up with those changes.”

the incident. “Our officers are trained to properly screen members of the transgender community,” the statement says. “TSA takes all potential civil rights violations very seriously and conducted a review of the incident. After examining closed circuit TV video and other available information, TSA has determined that the evidence shows our officers followed TSA’s strict guidelines. Supervisory personnel and a Passenger Support Specialist participated in the screening to ensure guidelines were met.” Howell also included information about how officers are trained to screen transgender passengers. “Transgender persons will be screened as he or she presents themselves at the security checkpoint,” according to the guidelines. “The advanced imaging technology used to screen passengers has software that looks at the anatomy of men and women differently. … You may request a private screening or to speak with a supervisor at any time.” Petosky’s incident with TSA officials was picked up by multiple media outlets and sparked a conversation online called #TravelingWhileTrans. Many transgender and gender-nonconforming people shared that they had also felt violated and embarrassed through the TSA screening process, and often, it invalidated their identity in front of strangers. The sentiment isn’t unusual – 17 percent of transgender people report facing harassment from airport staff and TSA officials, and 11 percent reported they were denied equal treatment, according to the National Transgender Discrimination Survey. Logan Casey was waiting for his flight at the airport when he saw Petosky’s situation on social media. Casey, who is a transgender man and a political science doctoral candidate at the University of Michigan, suddenly felt on edge about his surroundings and shared his experiences online. Casey says before his physical transition a few years ago, he would still wear a binding undershirt that would show up on the scanner as additional material. Agents gave him an enhanced pat down, but didn’t understand when he explained why he wore it. As part of their gender presentation, some trans men will wear prosthetic penises, which are vital for them, but set off scanners. In one instance, Casey’s bag was flagged, and he was forced to explain to agents why he was carrying hormone medication. Another time after Casey opted out of a body scan and was being patted down by a male guard, the guard looked at him orlandoweekly.com

mcordeiro@orlandoweekly.com ●

OCT. 7-13, 2015

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I mean, I’m going to inject myself with this life-changing drug, and you aren’t even going to tell me what I’m doing? It’s hard to find qualified doctors to work with. I once had some dude, when I went to get treatment for anxiety, ask me if I had a strap-on. I mean, that’s just fucking creepy, dude.

Andie Tarkenton, student

We asked members of the local LGBT community to tell us what they’re most proud of now, and what they think the next battle should be in the fight for LGBT rights INTErvIEWS By ASHLEy BELANGEr, MONIvETTE COrDEIrO, THADDEUS MCCOLLUM, ASHLEy rIvErA MErCADO, ErIN SULLIvAN, BErNArD WILCHUSky, J ESSICA BryCE yOUNG

What are you most proud of, when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT community? There’s a good sense of community, strong community here. There’s also a lot of support groups, if you are looking, and just a very supportive atmosphere for the LGBT community. Now that marriage has been legalized for gay couples, what’s the next battle the gay community needs to tackle? Well, maybe I’m a little bit biased because I’m trans, but definitely a lot of medicalrelated things. I can’t get insurance, a job or anything to help fund my transition. Just things like that. I’m not really treated like a human most of the time when people know that I’m trans – so overall, we need more education.

Andie Tarkenton

public accommodations or housing in our state simply for being lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender. We can end that by electing pro-equality state leaders who are ready to move Florida forward. The recent rash of violence and murder of transgender persons, particularly trans women of color, is an epidemic that must also be addressed by our community and our elected leaders. Education and inclusion are key to helping people understand that trans lives matter.

Carlos Guillermo Smith, government affairs manager, Equality Florida and What are you most proud of, candidate for when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT Florida House community? I think the thing I’m happiest about with District 49

PHOTOS OF KALEB ALEXANDER AND ANDIE TARKENTON BY KARA ROUNTREE

kaleb Alexander, student and local writer

the LGBT community in Orlando is the immediate access people have to services, through places like the Center and the Zebra Coalition. You can get assistance you need, if you need it. And because there’s so many people in the area, and so many schools, it’s easy to feel like you have a community here, and feel like you belong.

kaleb Alexander

Now that marriage has been legalized for gay couples, what’s the next battle the LGBT community needs to tackle? I think my main struggle is with healthcare, making that more inclusive and overall better. Because sometimes it’s just really difficult to maintain, to get insurance to cover your medical necessities. For some reason, you have to keep saying you are genetically female to get some things covered. And having more open-minded doctors – it’s a very small market. In Orlando, there are, like, three doctors who can work with me, and none of them is …. None of them have ever even instructed me on how to inject myself.

What are you most proud of, when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT community? I’m proud of how well organized we are in comparison to other Carlos Guillermo Smith parts of the state and counBrendan try. Orlando has its own LGBT O’Connor, editor, chamber of commerce, our own media Bungalower.com outlets, local advocacy groups and LGBT service providers. As a community, we’ve What are you most proud of, always made sure that we support and care when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT for one another … and our pride shows. community? I’m most proud of our ability to rally Now that marriage has been legal- around members of our community who are ized for gay couples, what’s the next in need. There are fundraisers and BALLS battle you think the LGBT commu- for days, and people generally show up en nity needs to tackle? force and help each other out. I love that! We need to stand together with our allies Like Blue Star’s Barber Fund charity, which and demand that lawmakers pass the FL she started to help her friend who was dealCompetitive Workforce Act to finally ban ing with advanced cancer, and now it’s a anti-LGBT discrimination once and for all. It’s still legal to deny someone employment, CONTINUED ON PaGe 12 orlandoweekly.com

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the community, but the other thing I like about it is that they have an art gallery where people who identify as queer can display and sell their art. I think that’s really important. Everything that happens in our lives isn’t political, and I think it’s important to celebrate those sides of ourselves.

legitimate nonprofit. Our ability to rally and effect change is something that a lot of us forget about. Now that marriage has been legalized for gay couples, what’s the next battle the LGBT community needs to tackle? I get worried when I hear the word “battle,” because I think that treating the movement in that way generally causes our pleated-pants opposition to rally together and knee-jerk-react back in our gay faces. But I think our next big cause du jour should be gender issues. Marriage, trans-rights, equal pay ... it’s all about those archaic gender roles that have forced people into thinking us vs. them. I think all of us queers have to just keep shaking those cis bushes until we get all the fruit out in the open.

ized for gay couples, what’s the next battle the gay community needs to tackle? I think it’s very apparent that the transgender community needs to catch up next and is on its way, hopefully, to move at a swifter pace than everything else has. With the way things have been lined up with gay marriage being accepted and the gay community becoming one of service, I think transgender is definitely on the radar and is the next “normal.” I would definitely like to see transgender individuals accepted and have a place of comfort in the community.

Brendan O’Connor

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PHOTO OF BRENDAN O’CONNOR BY ROB BARTLETT; PHOTO OF DR. MARTHA BRENCKLE BY BERNARD WILCHUSKY

Now that marriage has been legalized for gay couples, what’s the next battle you think the LGBT community needs to tackle? I think we’re going to feel some backlash from gay marriage. There’s already talk about how this isn’t a democracy, how the Supreme Court just decided to do that when they didn’t randy ross, have the right – of course candidate for that isn’t true, yes they City Council, did have the right to District 4 do that. What I try to explain to people What are you is that democracy most proud of battle for the third issue, which is underis limited. If everywhen it comes to standing the transgender community. Our thing is majority Orlando’s LGBT job as gay people is to help in that education Dr. Martha Brenckle, votes, majority percommunity? and understanding. associate professor of I think what I’m rhetorical theory, University spective, minorities never get their rights. most proud of is that of Central Florida We need a justice syswe have found a way Unique Mark Michael, UCF to be a voice and have pre-med student What are you most proud of about tem that recognizes randy ross that, that does take care a seat at the table. I didn’t Orlando’s gay community? come out until I was 36 years What are you most proud of How we’ve pulled together to influence of minority votes. We need more workplace old in 2002, and when I look at when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT laws. The Equality Florida group is wonthe differences between back then and community? derful: They do social as well as political protections, so you can’t be fired just events, and that involves quite a few people. for being gay. I would like to see every- now, there’s been a huge transformation. As a student and professional who has I’m also proud of things that have hap- where that it’s possible to get all the rights We don’t have to fight quite as hard as we attended various universities, I have found used to. There’s still battles, especially with that Orlando has become more accepting pened, such as the Zebra Coalition. They that are due to you. the transgender community and such, to be of the LGBT community; UCF specifically have a house on Mills Avenue, which was fought, but we’ve already had some huge has a specific area called Pride Commons a matter of raising money in the commuaccomplishments, especially with nity. They recognized that LGBQT+ youth Blue Star, performer and where LGBT students and allies can the marriage equality issue. ... I is really highly at risk. Many of them interact in a safe environment. I owner of performance think we’re finally getting to get kicked out of their homes – study and hang out there all space the venue a place where people are yes, that still happens a lot! of the time. – and have nowhere to What are you most taking us seriously. go. Covenant House is Now that marriage proud of, when it a great group, but let’s has been legalized comes to Orlando’s Now that marriage face it: It’s Catholic, for gay couples, LGBT community? has been legalized so it’s not the most what’s the next I think I’m just for gay couples, comfortable place battle the gay comreally proud of the what’s the next for anyone in the gay munity needs to way that Orlando battle the gay comcommunity to go. tackle? has accepted the munity needs to Now we have Zebra Even though [gay marcommunity and the tackle? I think there are three House, and they work riage] has been legalized, constant growth of Unique Mark Michael with homeless youth the upcoming election will it. I’ve been here for things that are critical. I and they get them on have a massive effect on the 15 years, and watching have been a victim of domestic their feet, back in school LGBT community. If we elect somethe community grow and abuse, and a lot of people think it’s Dr. Martha Brenckle if they need to, give them become more of a communi- normal for a man to be hitting a man or a one who is for equality, there’s a higher a place to live, work with drug ty of service rather than a, “hey woman to be pulling another woman’s hair. chance we will have more Democrats in and alcohol issues, do career counselwe’re gay, accept us” kind of thing has It’s a huge issue in the LGBT community, Senate but the opposite can be said if a ing – all kinds of different workshops. They become a natural progression of good peo- and it doesn’t know gender or sexual orien- Republican who is anti-LGBT is elected. are an incredible group. ple doing good things and finally becoming tation. Sometimes, there isn’t a place to go I’m trying to get a lot of my friends to regRight across the street is the Center. recognized for the good things that they do, if you’ve been a victim, and so many people ister to vote, but a lot of them don’t see the are caught in the middle. Also critical is impact they can make. What I like is that, yes, they do rapid health instead of being recognized for being gay. the rising number of HIV cases. I think the testing for HIV, and they deal with all kinds of health issues and political concerns in Now that marriage has been legal- LGBT community is already tackling the


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Audrey Bergquist, Orlando Weekly contributor, cosmetology student

Blue Star

PHOTO OF PATTY SHEEHAN BY MONIVETTE CORDEIRO; PHOTO OF BLUE STAR BY ASHLEY RIVERA MERCADO

What are you most proud of when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT community? That our community includes people like Gina Duncan, who helped make “gender identity” a protected category under the city’s human rights ordinances. I’m very proud that Orlando added that, but at the same it didn’t prevent trans men from being discriminated against and roughed up at Wally’s, nor did it prevent a trans woman from being detained by the TSA because they considered her body to have “an anomaly.” Now that marriage has been legalized for gay couples, what’s the next battle the gay community needs to of City Hall conducted by the mayor. That tackle? was an amazing day, and for someone who’s I think the gay community as a been doing this for a long time, I honwhole should tackle its own estly never thought I’d see that issues with intersectionality in my lifetime. There’s been a next. While marriage is a lot of things that have hapvery important issue, it is pened over the course of not the only issue in the the 15 years since I’ve community. More than been on council, and it’s 20 trans women were just been really exciting murdered this year in to be a part of that. the U.S. That is more than any other year Now that marriage on record, and there’s has been legalized nearly a whole quarfor gay couples, ter left. The majority of what’s the next battle Audrey Bergquist them were women of color. the LGBT community As much as LGBTQ issues and needs to tackle? #BlackLivesMatter have dominated I think transgender rights headlines this year, there has been very lit- and inclusion are an important aspect. tle mention of the trans women who were Something that we’ve worked on in the slain in the national dialogue. city is to include transgender people in all our nondiscrimination protections, so I think that’s going to be the Patty Sheehan, next big thing. I think with Orlando City Caitlyn Jenner’s advocacy Commissioner, and her going through District 4 the transition, it helps educate people. When What are you you know someone and most proud of you see what they’ve when it comes to actually been through Orlando’s LGBT before and after transicommunity? tion, it does make a huge How far we’ve come difference in people from just starting out being able to relate. But we talking about nondiscrimPatty Sheehan still don’t have employment ination and having a 4-3 split protections in all the states and on City Council and having it women still don’t have equal pay, so be very, very contentious, to now – we’re talking about marriage rights and there’s still a lot to be done to promote fairbasically most of the council being very ness and inclusion for everyone. supportive of the amicus brief and then having a wedding ceremony on the steps CONTINUED ON PaGe 15

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Trina Gregory-Propst (left) with her wife

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Trina Gregory-Propst, owner of Se7en Bites Bakery

example. … Let’s cheer each other on and lift each other up instead of tearing each other down. There are so many possibilities if we help one another. … Life is not a competition. We all have something unique and special to offer. Appreciating our differences is a great place to start.

What are you most proud of when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT community? I am most proud of how we as a gay com- Akeem Woods, comedian munity support each other and our business endeavors, and how we What are you most proud of, really have become a tribe. when it comes to Especially the women in Orlando’s LGBT comthe gay community. ... I munity? am proud to be a supI guess its diverporter and sponsor sity. I guess it’s how for Equality Florida. many different types And I never lose an of people we have: opportunity to share black, white, gay, with all of our cusstraight. And how tomers how proud I we all come togetham to be in business er for the most part. with my wife – someSo I guess it would be thing I may have felt the diversity I’m most less than safe saying two proud of in Orlando in Akeem Woods years ago when it wasn’t general. We have so many legal and would be concerned people come here because it’s if it would affect my business. Our such a tourist place, that we have Pride event has really blossomed, and the people from all over the country and differfoundation layers of this event are so much ent countries and all that stuff. So I think to be proud of. The City Beautiful is filled it’s just cool to have that many people all with beautiful people who care about what interact together. happens here. Now that marriage has been legalNow that marriage has been legal- ized for gay couples, what’s the next ized for gay couples, what’s the next battle you think the LGBT commubattle the LGBT community needs nity needs to tackle? to tackle? I’m happy it got legalized. It’s awesome. I have a very strong opinion on this. It’s I’m not happy because now I can’t blame called kindness. As a whole community the government for me being alone. Now we need to treat each other with as much kindness and respect as we are asking from CONTINUED ON PaGe 16 the world around us. Let’s set our own orlandoweekly.com

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I’m like “Oh no, it’s my fault!” But the next big battle? I don’t know. I guess I’ll say less discrimination. Because even though gay marriage is legal and everything, it’s still not equality, because you can’t – like if two dudes are walking down the street holding hands, it’s still socially weird. Most people are going to look at you weird, or they’re going to say something. So I think just general acceptance. I don’t think that’s a legal thing, I think that’s a people thing.

Billy Manes, editor, Watermark What are you most proud of, when it comes to Orlando’s LGBT community? I think that there was a sudden growth in our LGBT community that nobody really expected, and that goes for all of Florida. The fact that Florida was the first Southern state to pass marriage equality was very important, and the fact that there is a sort of a quilt of support organizations in this state and in this community that take care of LGBT-centric issues, is pretty inspiring. And that we haven’t given up the fight yet

just because we got marriage. Now that marriage has been legalized for gay couples, what’s the next battle the gay community needs to tackle? There are several fronts right now. I think the most important, at least to me, are workplace fairness and housing fairness and general bills that are in the pipeline that are trying to reduce discrimination on any level. It’s exciting to know that we were able to get the pomp and circumstance, but it’s the circumstance that really matters right now, and the fact that you can be fired from your job for being gay. Or be refused anything for being gay. Even looking gay. It’s disheartening. So I think that the fact that there are people who are fighting on that level is amazing. Those are the people that I am supporting right now. Also, the elephant in the room, then, is the trans issue, and so much of that has been spoken of, you know, in the wake of the Caitlyn Jenner outing, if you will. But there’s a lot of codification that has to happen on these issues for people who are in need of living their authentic lives, and I hope to see us move forward. And I hope to be part of it. feedback@orlandoweekly.com

Billy Manes

PHOTO OF BILLY MANES BY ASHLEY BELANGER

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University of Central Florida’s programs for LGBTQ+ students are something to be proud of By Bernard Wilchusky

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underrepresented students.” Programming sponsored by the SJA includes: the Lavender Celebration, an annual graduation ceremony for LGBTQ+ students; the Lavender Lunch, a backto-school kickoff luncheon held at the beginning of each semester; LGBTQ+ History Month, which features a series of events throughout October; the Alliance Mentoring Program, which pairs students with LGBTQ+ staff or faculty mentors; the Q Guide, an online document detailing the various services available to alphabet students and staff; a speakers bureau, which invites LGBTQ+ individuals from the local community to speak with students; 17 gender-neutral bathrooms; and Affinity Groups, biweekly meetings for students to discuss issues ranging from the gender spectrum to LGBTQ+ spirituality to queer people of color, according to the SJA website. In addition to being a place where students can study, socialize and relax, Pride Commons is one of three major Safe Zones on campus. Safe Zones are areas staffed by faculty or student coordinators who have received special four-part ally training from SJA that acquaints them with the concerns of LGBTQ+ students. Individuals who complete the training are presented with a placard they can place outside of their door to indicate that they’ve been taught how to be sensitive to common LGBTQ+ issues. “Our Safe Zone series is a four-part training series that teaches how to become more inclusive in your classroom and offices,” Andrade says. “It starts from very basic stuff in LGBTQ+ 101, where we go over some

Photo by bernard wilchusky

here’s nothing particularly special about Room 171 at the University of Central Florida. If it weren’t for the four rainbow flags emblazoned on its entryway, one might easily mistake it for any other student lounge. But to the students inside, Room 171 is more than just a place to relax: It’s a home away from home, a space where LGBTQ+ students are free to be themselves without exception or reservation. “I went to three different high schools, two public and one private, and none of them really had any spaces like this,” says Taylor Robbins, a sophomore biology major. “This is the first time I’ve been a part of a community like this, where there was something I felt was relevant [to me].” Room 171 (aka Pride Commons) is one of several outreach initiatives sponsored by the university to show support for its alphabet students. These initiatives are coordinated and developed by the office of Social Justice and Advocacy, a student-faculty organization that advocates for multicultural and LGBTQ+ students alike. Its efforts are spearheaded by Justin Andrade, the LGBTQ+ services coordinator for the SJA. “My position is responsible for LGBTQ advocacy on campus, which could be anything from policy inclusion to inclusion practices of housing, health services, to anything directly dealing with LGBTQ students, to ensure that we’re being as inclusive as possible,” Andrade says. “We want to be sure that different offices, departments and administrators have LGBTQ students at the forefront of their minds when dealing with

terminology and some basic history to start the dialog on LGBTQ+ inclusion efforts, and then branches off to advocate training, which deals with trans students; a workshop dealing with students coming out; and GOLD, which is our Gender, Orientation, Language and Diversity workshop, where we spend some time breaking down the differences in biological sex and gender identity.” Beyond the efforts of the SJA, groups like Counseling and Psychological Services center (CAPS) offer therapy and support groups for gay, lesbian and transgender students. These weekly services are held in groups of six to 10 and are led by one to two certified counselors. “We offer a Questioning and Coming Out group to students who are working on coming out and the early stages of the process, who are working on self-acceptance, family concerns and the cultural norms that are shifting for them during this process,” says Robert Dwyer, the support group coordinator and a counselor at CAPS. “And then there’s the Trans Support group, which is a place where students can discuss their concerns and be supportive of one another.” Dwyer says that the most common issues he helps students cope with are feelings of isolation, depression and anxiety. He says that attendance at the questioning group has fallen, and at the same time attendance at the trans support group has risen – a trend he says began around four years ago. “We’re wondering if there are other places on campus where students are being supported, and whether coming out is a less relevant concern for students who are coming to counseling,” he says. “Meanwhile, our trans support group, which used to be more fledgling and inconsistently attended, is so popular that we’re almost running out of space.” Support for trans students now extends to the housing process, which allows students to indicate a preferred name that will be filed with the registrar and used on most university documentation. Housing works closely with trans students to ensure that they are placed in a safe, trans-friendly environment. “We don’t have a specific process or accommodation for students who identify as gay or lesbian,” says Meredith Varner, the assistant director of UCF Housing and Residence Life. “Within our housing application, we do ask the question if their gender identity is different than their legal sex on record: If they answer yes to that question, we send them a follow-up email that connects them with two staff members who will talk with them about where they are in their process, where they might want


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to live, who they might want as housemates – we do our best to find safe and appropriate roommates for these people, not anyone who’s transphobic or wouldn’t understand what they’re going through.” While efforts by the SJA, CAPS and housing have done much to accommodate LGBTQ+ students – enough to earn UCF four (out of five) stars on the Campus Pride Index for gay-friendly schools – Andrade admits that gaps remain in the university’s services when dealing with trans students. Public regulations prevent housing from pairing trans students with members of the opposite sex, and the medical center is able to fill – but not write – prescriptions for medications used in sexreassignment therapy. A report compiled by the SJA detailing coverage gaps for trans students is currently under review by the campus administration. “I really wish that there were more resources that they were actually able to give,” says Johns, a trans woman who requested that her first name remain unpublished. “A lot of the stuff that would matter to me they can’t do, or they’re not allowed to do, like hormone treatment. It’s kind of what I expected. I’m not upset about it, but I did expect [these services] to focus on gay and lesbians, rather than gender issues.” Overall, gay and lesbian students said they were satisfied with the type of resources the school offered them, and by their experiences with the student body at large. The most common complaint? Connecting romantically with other LGBTQ+ students. “The students here are all nice, but maybe that’s just our generation,” says Thomas Fanek, a first-year accounting major. “I don’t ever see anyone getting harassed. I feel pretty normal. The only thing is dating: because we make up such a small part of the population, so it’s difficult to figure out whether someone you’re interested in is interested back.” feedback@orlandoweekly.com

What my transition taught me about how the world perceives men and women By kaleB alexander

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ou know what I miss the most about having breasts? People offering me free drugs (also: nipple sensation). I was born genetically female, and I lived that way for 16 years. By the time I was 17, I realized I wasn’t comfortable with this body, this voice, these breasts. I wanted to be masculine – I wanted to be a man. It’s difficult to articulate how it feels to be treated as somebody different than who you feel you are inside – to feel that so strongly and to have none of your invisible desire to be somebody else recognized. Every social interaction chipped away at my identity. I felt like I was screaming into a void, but nobody even noticed that my mouth was open. So I decided it was time for my body to match my identity. I got my first binder – a tight-fitting garment that flattens the breasts – a month after I turned 17. A week before I turned 18 I was on hormone replacement therapy. A year later, two weeks after I turned 19, I went to Fort Lauderdale and had my top surgery. Suddenly, dudes stopped offering to smoke me out or give me this extra Xanax that they “just had laying around.” Because I went from being perceived as female to being perceived as male almost overnight. It was sheer bliss, and it did wonders for my self-esteem and desire to live (suddenly I had one).

that women’s opinions are often devalued, as if a person is intellectually inferior simply because she has a vagina. I see that women are constantly being judged – if a woman wears too much makeup, she’s a harlot or she’s ugly; she shows up sleepy and in sweatpants, people ask her what’s wrong. I am also keenly aware of how lucky I am that my maleness has given me the ability to burp and spit and look how I want and behave how I want without (much) judgment. But my experience has given me a rare perspective – as somebody who’s been perceived as both a cis-woman and a cis-man, I know what it’s like on both sides of the fence. We’re a culture in transition (if you’ll excuse the pun), in terms of how we perceive people based on gender, and the first step in any transition is awareness. But I don’t miss people telling me that I “couldn’t” do things – instead of, “Oh no, honey, you can’t do that!” I get, “Hey, don’t do that.” It seems like a minor difference, but it’s often the little details that construct the foundation of the gender gap that we need to bridge. Overall, I’m stoked to be without my breasts. Going for a jog is so much easier without them, and despite the fact that people don’t try to give me free stuff anymore for no reason other than the fact that they were attached to my chest, I don’t miss them. I do miss the convenient storage they provided, though – boobs are the best pocket ever. Store your money, phone, weed and a lighter. Who needs a purse when you’ve got a sizable rack?

I also discovered that I had inherited something very valuable – male privilege. I could ride my bike without being harassed and walk around downtown at night in short shorts without lewd comments. I could show up to most places smelling and looking like shit and nobody would say anything. When I was a girl, I would ride my bike and get shouted at; men would stop and offer me a ride if I was walking with a backpack on. All of a sudden, men stopped approaching me and attempting to barter for my attention with objects (drinks, drugs, coffee, etc.). For a brief period after my surgery, I felt isolated and alienated. Socializing was always difficult for me, but at least when I was a girl it was more likely that someone would talk to me. Then I realized that I was finally able to be alone – I had the privilege of social invisibility, and I could exist in public without comment. I could walk alone at night and be in a bar without fear (unless I’m perceived as homosexual, then I experience discrimination). I can exist in public without a man feeling entitled to my attention. The thing with privilege is that it’s subtle – to the point where I’ve almost forgotten how it was to be perceived and treated as female. I had lived as a girl for 16 years, in a gray area of confusion for three, and for the past three I have lived openly as a male, so my experiences are limited in some ways – but that doesn’t mean I have forgotten, or that I take my new-found freedoms lightly. I know that women are not treated fairly – that people automatically assume that a woman is less informed or less in charge than her male counterparts. I recognize

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JORDin SPARkS

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he rainbow flags are posted around downtown Orlando, and plans are in motion for the 2015 edition of Come Out With Pride, Orlando’s biggest, most colorful and most sensational celebration of the city’s LGBT community. From Oct. 8 through Oct. 10, downtown Orlando will host daily Pride events, the biggest of which is the all-day festival and parade at Lake Eola Park, which draws thousands of people each year. This year’s festival is going to be larger than ever, with two stages featuring musicians and entertainers (Orlando Gay Chorus, the Central Florida Sounds of Freedom Band and Color Guard, VarieTease, and tons more) from 1 p.m. through 8:30 p.m. The festival concludes with a fireworks celebration over Lake Eola at 9 p.m. – then it’s time for the after-party!

OCt. 8 Come Out With Pride Launch Party Celebrate the launch of Orlando’s annual Come Out With Pride with food, music, a silent auction and more. Thursday, 7 p.m.; The Veranda at Thornton Park, 111 N. Summerlin Ave; free; 407-872-8454; comeoutwithpride.com.

OCt. 9 Pride on Church Street Enjoy live entertainment from Amy & Freddy, NYC’s Red, Hot & Funny Bob the Drag Queen, Beth Sacks, and our very own Ginger Minj & the Minx. Friday, 8 p.m.; Hamburger Mary’s, 110 W. Church St.; 321-319-0600; free; hamburgermarys.com.

PHOTO BY STANDA MERHOUT

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Come Out With Pride Parade This annual event is more than just a parade – it’s the most colorful celebration that takes place in Orlando all year long. Politicians, entertainers, local celebs and businesses march amidst floats, rainbow flags and balloons, and drag queens blow kisses to the thousands of people lining the streets to watch the spectacle. This year’s parade grand marshal is Ginger Minj from Ru Paul’s Drag Race. 4 p.m.; Lake Eola Park; free; comeoutwithpride.com.

Zebra Run A 5k race to support the Zebra Coalition’s mission to provide a safe, supportive and healthy environment for LGBT youth. 7:30 a.m.; Lake Eola Park, North Rosalind Avenue and East Washington Street; $20-$32; zebrayouth.org.

Come Out With Pride H20 DJ Dee Martello and DJ Edil Hernandez will spin while you dance and watch the fireworks over Lake Eola in the evening. 5 p.m.; Lake Eola Park, East Central Boulevard and North Eola Drive; $10; comeoutwithpride.com

Big Gay Brunch The party before the parade! In conjunction with Come Out With Pride 2015, Big Gay Brunch, sponsored by Orlando Weekly, will feature an amazing brunch spread from Tim Webber Events, bottomless mimosas and a Bloody Mary bar, plus DJs and live performances. Eat, drink and come out with pride. Benefiting Pride Gives Back. 11 a.m.; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $35-$40; 407-704-6261; orlandoweekly.com.

Come Out With Pride Dinner and Fireworks After the Come Out With Pride Parade and festival, catch the fireworks over Lake Eola. You can check out the fireworks for free, but if you want a spot at a table, you’ll have to pay $75 or more. 7 p.m.; Lake Eola Park, North Rosalind Avenue and East Washington Street; free$200; comeoutwithpride.com.

Pride Festival All day long, check out tents from Come Out With Pride sponsors, merchandise from vendors, food trucks, entertainment on two stages and more. Noon; Lake Eola Park; free; comeoutwithpride.com.

Come Out With Pride Official After-Party Celebrate Pride with the Footlight Players, DJ Brianna and a live concert from Jordin Sparks. Worried about parking near Lake Eola Park? Park your car at Parliament House, and beginning at 2 p.m., you can take a free shuttle to the festivities downtown. 10 p.m.; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; $10-$15; 407-425-7571; parliamenthouse.com.

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“We aren’t where we need to be” Orlando Museum of Art announces plans to move out of Loch Haven Park By Je ssica Bryce you n g

PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHER GARCIA

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press conference at Orlando Museum of Art last Tuesday, Sept. 29, promised to be fairly straightforward, if not pro forma. The press release advised that OMA director and CEO Glen Gentele and Ted Brown, chairman of the OMA’s Strategic Planning Committee, would “discuss the Museum’s newly approved goals and institutional vision, including – but not limited to – OMA’s presence within Orlando and its surrounding communities.” As a handful of media representatives seated themselves in the SunTrust Auditorium, a constantly looping bit of music was audible. After a couple of minutes, “What is this soundtrack?” one reporter asked; another replied, “It sounds like something ominous is going to happen.” What it was was a loop from Kraftwerk’s “Trans-Europe Express,” one of the most influential singles ever recorded, a synthy paean to futurism that has become aural shorthand signaling modernity. An apt background, then, for the release of “Forward to 100: Reimagining the Orlando Museum of Art in the 21st Century,” the final conclusions of the Board of Trustees’ yearlong strategic planning study. That person moved to anxious anticipation by the music wasn’t wrong, though. The aura of mystery evoked by the music, if not the press release, resolved itself when Gentele and Brown announced plans to seek a new “container” for the museum’s collections. In other words, as stated on page 33 of the report, “Loch Haven Park is not viewed as the ideal location for the future of the Orlando Museum of Art.” Or, as Brown put it more bluntly a few minutes into his address, “We aren’t where we need to be.” Brown said that OMA would seek space in Orlando’s “urban core,” i.e. downtown, noting that of 65 million annual visitors to Orlando, so few as to be a statistically negligible number visit the museum. The planning board concluded that as public transit options improve and as the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts becomes more established, Orlando’s downtown is the best place to develop a

cultural district – something of a knock on Loch Haven, which the city of Orlando website calls “the region’s premier cultural park.” “All great cities have great art museums, and we are working in that direction. But relationally, what is around the museum is important,” said Gentele. The museum hopes to increase from its current 19,000 square feet of gallery space to 45,000-50,000 square feet of usable exhibition space, as well as more parking, larger educational facilities, more space for collection vaults and fabrication, a bar and café, a glass-blowing institute and “a five-star restaurant experience,” all desires that are incompatible with the current building and land footprint. Gentele called “Forward to 100” a “vision plan with strategic initiatives.” In addition to the goal of a new home, the board wants to focus on more diverse audiences. “We know … there are half a million Hispanics that were not here in the ’60s and the ’70s. We know as well that there’s a huge influx of Asian population into Central Florida,” Brown said. “That is the future of Orlando, and that is something that we embraced in this report: getting to a place where all of these citizenry come enthusiastically to share in this very unique commodity called art.” While museum visitors have apparently been lily-white, the museum has at least made strides in diversifying its exhibitions. Both iterations of the Florida Prize in Contemporary Art, an initiative created on Gentele’s watch, have featured an equable mix of male and female artists, with a significant concentration of artists of Hispanic or Latino heritage. Both Gentele and Brown stressed that this announcement marked the commencement of a yearlong feasibility study, and that within a year they hoped to have a solid plan for what would probably be a 10-year process. Addressing the question of why they would announce their intentions so far ahead of time, Brown said that “the only way to be held accountable to your vision is to tell people your vision … and we want to be accountable.” jyoung@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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Two new comics collections from Drawn & Quarterly cut to the quick By Jessica B ryc e you n g

so Beaton wears it, though it’s annoyingly reductive. Sure, there’s quirk in the way she applies modern-day perspective to historical events, and in her loose, scribbly line, but do not be deceived: There’s also the deep and broad knowledge of world events only a bluestocking history major would possess, and those innocuously wiggly sketches manage to depict utterly specific emotions, evoking reaction with a millimeter’s precision while looking like a dashed-off doodle. For people of a certain bent, Beaton’s “Hark! A Vagrant” has been an addiction since its inception in 2007. Once it found a home on the web, it became a regular stop on their Internet daily rounds (though with an irregular publishing schedule, there’s no knowing when a new comic will be up). Beaton’s mix of obscure historical detail, literary obsessions, Canadian arcana and pop-culture noodlings attracts a surprisingly large following, most of whom will no doubt purchase Step Aside, Pops – who’d predict that a collection of riffs on sea captains, the Brontë sisters, Danton and Robespierre, Nancy Drew and Ida B. Wells would catch fire? But it does. Like all the best jokes, it’s impossible to explain why a multi-page ramble through the life of a minor character in a Janet Jackson video from 1986, or a series of “continuations” from scenes depicted in antique stock art, or even just Napoleon huffily explaining that he’s not really that short, is funny – you have to see it to feel it. Sure, you can see a lot of it for free online, but for those moments when you’re away from the Wi-Fi, Step Aside, Pops exists to keep you entertained. There’s even a helpful index, so you can flip right to your favorite character, from Achilles to Zeus.

KILLING AND DYING by Adrian Tomine | Drawn & Quarterly | 123 pages STEP ASIDE, POPS by Kate Beaton | Drawn & Quarterly | 168 pages

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n Adrian Tomine’s latest collection of graphic short stories, Killing and Dying, broken people navigate clumsily through their lives. Whether revving wheels that seem permanently stuck in the mud or trudging away from an emotional car crash, gingerly checking themselves for injury, Tomine’s characters do eventually arrive at some form of peace or at least stasis – or some of them do, anyway. Tomine has been writing and drawing Optic Nerve since the age of 16; Killing and Dying is the latest hard-bound collection of stories from the Optic Nerve series, and it continues its tradition of quiet devastation captured in minimal lines. The clarity of Tomine’s cool, spare drawings is matched by the sharpness of his observations; he has a phenomenal ability to create fully realized characters in fully realistic situations, often killingly painful, though sometimes lightened with a redeeming moment or two of joy. The title story, about a teenage girl with a stutter who wants to do stand-up, catalogs every cringe, every pain, every fragile hope with staggering economy. Killing and Dying seems to have been dictated by that still small voice in the night – the one that tells you what a fuck-up you are and then, in the next breath, tells you it’ll all be OK.

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uirky is a word that sets my teeth on edge, and yet I can’t argue with its inevitable application to Kate Beaton’s comics. That adjective denoting a blend of oddball and endearing fits, and

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the crispness of their best installments; pacing is closer to Serling’s later hour-long scripts than his 30-minute classics. But the scenes’ themes are so sound that (after editing) I’d be eager to see a repeat broadcast.

KEN LUZADDER IN REALMS OF THE UNTOLD

Adventures in Charity

BY SETH KUBERSKY

This year, warming up with some gentler trick-or-treat spirit before diving into the blood-splattered haunts It’s always disorienting to come home after a long trip, but returning from Europe to Orlando in October can be downright disturbing. It isn’t that I didn’t appreciate the severed limb (complete with gore-spattered selfie stick) that Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights media team left festering on my doorstep; but in the wake of school shootings and Syrian bombings, I’m not feeling my usual bloodthirsty self yet this season. So I was grateful last weekend to warm up with some untold adventures of a less graphic nature, to get into the trick-or-treat spirit before tackling the haunted houses.

PHOTO BY NICK BANIEWICH

Realms of the Untold

Picture, if you will, a small theater in the heart of Ivanhoe Village, standing in the shadow of imminent demolition and redevelopment. You’ve just crossed over into the Venue, where Dark Side of Saturn productions has staged playwright-director Corey Volence’s six tales of the strange and supernatural that travel directly from … the Realms of the Untold. I grew up watching midnight reruns of The Twilight Zone on a tiny black-and-white TV in my bedroom, and reading Stephen

King under the covers. Apparently I’m not the only one, since Volence (writer of the 2013 Orlando Fringe hit Key of E) has lovingly laced his eerie anthology with allusions – from the pitch-perfect Serlingesque interstitial voice-overs to nods to John Carpenter and the late Vic Morrow. But even if you don’t know H.P. Lovecraft from The Outer Limits, these six “episodes” include enough clever conceits, sharp dialogue and impassioned performances to merit tuning in. The cast is led by Ken Luzadder, who stars as an aging actor who owes his career to Satanic assistance; a professor driven mad by a glimpse at Cthulhu’s home reality; and a colonel who loses his cool during a nuclear emergency. Luzadder exhibits impressive range in the roles, but he’s hampered by accents that interfere with intelligibility. Likewise, Jan Taylor Hendricks tears her heart (and ours) out with an agonizing monster monologue, but her Blanche DuBois dialect distracts. John Reid Adams is ideally unctuous as various oily incarnations of Evil, and Chaz Krivan and Monica Titus are sitcom-worthy as a Buffy-meets-American Pie couple contemplating “doing it” for the first time in forever. Finally, while the cast capably apes the amped-up acting styles of the 1960s scifi dramas they are paying tribute to, Miles Berman’s too-small role as a stoned soldier offers refreshingly modern relief. Volence captures the tone of those shows, but not

Last Saturday, Halloween came early to Lake Buena Vista, as nattily dressed Dapper Day devotees descended on Disney’s Hollywood Studios by day and an Adventurers Club reunion invaded the Holiday Inn on 535 in the evening. Seven years after the beloved interactive watering hole at the heart of Pleasure Island was shuttered, Adventures in Charity is still keeping the Kungaloosh spirit alive with their sold-out annual event. A cocktail hour (serving frosty re-creations of the Club’s signature drink), silent auction and VIP after-party were all on the agenda, but the main event was a multi-hour cabaret featuring many fan-favorite Club performers, who also happen to be among Orlando’s best theater professionals. Karl Anthony Ockstadt and Allison DeCaro hosted in character as pompous professor Otis T. Wren and the club’s piercing president, Pamelia Perkins, introducing a cavalcade of AC veterans, each of whom belted a tune or two and took to the couch for a Q&A session catching the crowd up on their careers. Alumni included Jay T. Becker, John Connon, Glen Gover, Mary Thompson Hunt, Meghan Moroney, Eric Pinder and Sheila Smith Ward, with Jim “Fingers” Roberts returning on piano and founding member Kris Truelsen phoning in from Toronto as “the Colonel.” It was great to hear some of the old songs and skits again (though Disney’s lawyers forbade them from using copyrighted material); even better to see how much the ex-Adventurers Club cast continues to contribute to Orlando arts; and best of all to help raise more than $13,000 for area causes like A Better Life Pet Rescue, Zebra Coalition and Central Florida Community Arts. But I was also reminded of the insular in-jokes and inappropriate repeat guests that contributed to the Club’s demise, and my after-party visit to its original location only reinforced how hard it is to go home again. The former Pleasure Island’s new Indiana Jones-inspired Hangar Bar was filled to capacity without even the option to wait, while Morimoto Asia has replaced Mannequins’ rotating dance floor with unexceptional sushi and spotty service at extravagant prices. And exiting Disney Springs’ new parking garage? That’s a tale more terrifying than anything old Rod ever wrote. skubersky@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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tip jar

[ restaurant review ]

by Faiyaz Kara

The soft opening for Baoery, Greg Richie’s Asian gastropub in his old Cityfish space, is slated for Wednesday, Oct. 14. As you can guess, bao (those tasty steamed buns) will be prominently featured. Barbecue pork belly bao, Korean fried chicken bao, and shellfish bao are just a few buns to expect. Other dishes on the menu include ramen bowls, short rib, duck, and fish tacos; small plates featuring dumplings, shishito peppers, calamari and the like; and burgers, banh mis and, yes, dessert bao as well. Norman Van Aken (Norman’s at the RitzCarlton) will open a restaurant in historic Mount Dora in early 2016. He’s known as the founding father of New World cuisine, so you can bet the promised “refined rustic cuisine” of the yet-to-be-named restaurant will incorporate Floribbean influences.

Waterworld

oPenInGS The Orlando City Hall location of the 4 Rivers Smokehouse chain opens this week … Look for Smiling Bison’s Sanford location (on Magnolia Avenue) to open next week … Chutney’s Indian Restaurant has opened on Turkey Lake Road … Gardell Brothers Brick Oven Pizza (by Mike & Molly actor Billy Gardell) has opened in Hunter’s Creek … Sky Candy, a local producer of organic cotton candy in various whimsical flavors, has opened inside the Soda Fountain in College Park … Look for Hotto Potto to move into a new plaza on Semoran near Old Cheney Highway … Se7en Bites will expand into a larger space up Primrose Drive next May.

Steak and seafood joint really makes a splash with Disney diners By FAIyAz KARA THe BoaTHoUSe 1620 E. Buena Vista Drive, Lake Buena Vista | 407-939-2628 | theboathouseorlando.com | $$$$

PHOTOS BY ROB BARTLETT

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tep inside the Boathouse and you’d think that CEO Steve Schussler (Rainforest Café, T-Rex, Yak & Yeti) was out to build the theme restaurant to end all theme restaurants. Even amid the teeming throngs of tourists and the constant construction in Disney Springs, the Boathouse (styled here in bombastic allcaps: BOATHOUSE) is hard to miss. A soaring phallus masquerading as a lighthouse tower pointedly marks the entry into Schussler’s monstrous house of boating paraphernalia and seaside eats. The place is enormous – three distinct dining rooms, a centerpiece bar area, outside seating, a stage for live music, and a gift shop the size of which befits a shopping mall more than a restaurant. The only thing missing, I remarked to my dining comrade, was a full-fledged ride, but that certainly didn’t stop us from taking in the ridiculous spectacle. The metaphoric splash Schussler undoubtedly wanted to make? Consider it achieved. Diners are submerged in a world of nautical porn – dream boats, outboard motors, fish trophies, vintage ship throttles – and just when you think it’s all a little too

overwhelming, the unmistakable sounds of Christopher Cross crooning “Sailing” drowns your ears. Beneath the blast of an AC vent, we were seated in close proximity to the stage, where a couple of musicians were readying their set. The only thing more chilled than we were was the lobster cocktail ($18), served on ice. The pound-and-a-quarter cucaracha del mar gave us cause to crack and slurp, which ultimately helped to refocus our attentions onto the food. In addition to feeling good about eating local and sustainable middleneck clams ($15) from Cedar Key, Florida, we thoroughly enjoyed their subtly sweet flavor. Also subtly sweet were the soft Parker House rolls that admirably filled the gap between starters and mains. I was really looking forward to the yellowedge grouper ($33) as my entree, but it was only after the impeccably broiled spice-rubbed fish was devoured that I learned it was on Seafood Watch’s “Avoid” list. Had I known beforehand, I wouldn’t have ordered it. I guess the label on the top of the menu reading “thoughtfully sourced products” is just that – a label. Nevertheless, the buttery succotash of roasted corn, avocado, blistered tomatoes and jalapeños on which the grouper lay was stellar. Was it worth the regret we felt afterwards? Nope. Given the Boathouse is managed by

Gibsons Restaurant Group out of Chicago, it’s no surprise they carry a superior line of USDA Prime steaks. Gibsons, in fact, is the only restaurant group to have their own USDA certification, and the 14-ounce New York strip ($48) easily lived up to expectations. (One gripe: no ribeyes on the menu.) Now, for $48, I would’ve expected an accompaniment or two, but not so. Steaks are served a la carte here, so we ordered a side of roasted new potatoes ($8) though, in actuality, the steak stood on its own. Neither the Key lime pie in a Mason jar ($9) nor the double chocolate bundt cake ($10) impressed us; the former lacked bite and the latter was overly saturated with berry coulis. Service for the most part is polished and professional, though some of the busboys need a rudimentary course on how to clear tables in a less disruptive way. On our way out, a man donned in captain’s garb standing at the entrance to a boat ramp caught my eye, and that’s when I saw it – the full-fledged ride I jokingly said the restaurant needed. Seems guests of the Boathouse can take a ride in amphibious cars called Amphicars for a mere $125. The lyrics I heard Christopher Cross warble just an hour before rang true: Fantasy – it gets the best of me.

EVENTS The Rockin’ Burger Block Party at the Epcot Food & Wine Festival will feature the cast of ABC’s The Chew from 7-9 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 8. Ticket prices range from $99 to $199 … SerbFest celebrates its 10th anniversary with all things Serbian this weekend, Oct. 9-11, at St. Petka Serbian Orthodox Church in Longwood … The 14th annual Taste of Thailand Festival is Sunday, Oct. 11, at the Wat Florida Dhammaram monastery in Kissimmee … The fourth annual Winter Park Wine & Dine is 6-9 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 14, at the Winter Park Farmer’s Market. The event features more than 40 restaurants and merchants; tickets are $45. Got restaurant dish? Send tips to jyoung@orlandoweekly.com

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– each one also marries fantastically with sweet bourbon. It took just a bit of experimenting to find the right proportions. And in the end, in a finale familiar to anyone who dabbles in cocktail mixology, a dash of clear, faintly bitter Luxardo Maraschino (a liqueur distilled from sour cherry pits) was the thing that tied it all together. This lesssweet Bourbon Bramble, poised between summer and fall flavors, is just right for weather that’s in the same in-between spot. Start with the proportions here, but taste and adjust; the sweetness of both the bourbon you choose and the fruit you buy will vary. jyoung@orlandoweekly.com

classIc • • • •

In a shaker filled with ice, shake together the first three ingredients. Strain mixture into a rocks glass filled with crushed ice, mounded into a peak. Drizzle blackberry liqueur over the ice for a streaked effect. Garnish with a slice of lemon and two blackberries.

the bramble By Jessica Bryce young

SERVING THE AUTHENTIC

GYRO SANDWICH WE ALSO HAVE A WIDE VARIETY OF VEGETARIAN SELECTIONS AND AUTHENTIC MEDITERRANEAN BEER AND WINE

CATERING AVAILABLE // FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK! 435 E. MICHIGAN STREET 407.422.BLUE (2583) 30

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alternate liquors – this recipe calls for bourbon, but I also had success with rye, aged rum (try Grander, which has a whiskey-like vibe) and even tequila. It was very easy to simply swap in another spirit for the gin and call it a day, but I wanted to take it further. Pimm’s, another British summer talisman, announced a limited-edition blackberry and elderflower version of their herbal liqueur a couple of years ago and it’s now available in the U.S.; it’s a worthy addition to your bar arsenal, useful as a supporting player or simply mixed with club soda or tonic over ice. Summery as all these flavors are – lemon and sugar, blackberry and elderflower

remIx • 1 1/2 ounces bourbon • 1 ounce Pimm’s Blackberry & Elderflower • 1/4 ounce Luxardo Maraschino • 1/2 ounce fresh-squeezed lemon • 1/2 ounce simple syrup • fresh blackberries Muddle two large berries at the bottom of a cocktail shaker, then add ice and bourbon, Pimm’s, Luxardo, lemon juice and simple syrup. Shake, then strain into a rocks glass over crushed ice.

PHOTO BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

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sweetness – the Bramble is a far superior drink. Compared to the Cosmo’s machined simplicity and rigid samey-sameness, the Bramble, basically a gin sour with a drizzle of blackberry liqueur, offers a shaggy variability, seasonality and an endearing patriotism (gin and blackberries being fetishes of British summer). When I laud the Bramble’s variability, I mostly mean that it’s easy to screw around with. (Cosmos are pointless to remix. Vodka tastes of nothing, so it’s a cocktail with no backbone; its only character comes from the mixers.) In fall a young girl’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of brown spirits, and the Bramble adapts extremely well to

n this column I put a new twist on a classic cocktail each month. Those classics usually date from the very early part of the 20th century, having evolved around the Jazz Age, with its need to disguise poor-quality liquor and its wider drinking audience, due to relaxed mores against women drinking spirits. So it may seem like a stretch to call a cocktail from the 1980s a classic, but the Bramble is undeniably one. The Bramble was first mixed by Dick Bradsell at his trendy London bar, Fred’s Club, in 1984. It’s often compared, in fact, to another 1980s “classic”: the Cosmopolitan. While they share some traits besides vintage – easy drinkability, pinkness,

2 ounces gin 1 ounce fresh lemon juice 1/2 ounce simple syrup 1/2 ounce crème de mûre (blackberry liqueur)


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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

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

$10 or less $10-$15 $15-$25 $25 or more

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

Gopal Ji Sweets Some wonderful vegetarian dishes are to be had at this Indian resto, but populist sentiment has seen all but one of the “sweets” jettisoned. The menu may soon include meat dishes, but until then, do yourself a favor and sample their outstanding “chaat” items, like bhel puri, chole bhatura and veg samosas. Mains like masala bhindi (okra) and aloo saag (creamy spinach with potatoes) are properly spiced and simply delightful, but beware parched naan. If it’s a sweet you crave, consider rich kulfi faludi essenced with rose water. 4642 S. Kirkman Road, 407-730-8800; $$

Yard House Yard House takes the principle of “something for everyone” very seriously: Drinkers can choose from 140 beers on draught or scores of cocktail choices, and the huge menu reads like a cross between an issue of Bon Appetit and a stoner’s fever dream. Making a choice can be overwhelming, both because there are so many dishes and because they all sound fantastic, but you probably can’t go too far wrong. Yard House’s kitchen staff is skilled; everything is competently executed (but their menu developers are the real geniuses). 8367 International Drive, 407-351-8220, $$$

Tom + Chee Nestled into a strip mall in Lake Buena Vista with at least seven other chains, Tom + Chee’s menu is full of gourmet grilled cheese sandwiches, creamy and chunky tomato soups, “Mac & Chee” and grilled cheese donuts. (Yes, really.) If sweet-salty-savory is your thing, order the Barbara Blue, a griddled glazed doughnut with blueberry compote, ham and brie oozing out the sides. 12533 State Road 535, 321-395-4930, $

Red Robin For years, we’ve heard the “Red Robin … YUMMMMM!” jingle on Central Florida television, but we’ve been deprived of those bottomless fries until the opening of the I-Drive 360 complex. Our perfect chain-resto meal: a Blue Moon beer CONTINUED ON PaGe 34

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shake (Belgian white ale, vanilla soft serve, orange juice and Cointreau), sautéed ’shroom burger (keep a stack of napkins handy), and Towering Doh! Ring (a stack of eight cronuts with sauces). 8167 International Drive, 407-574-2295; $$

Bavaro’s Pizza Napoletana & Pastaria Not your average pizza and pasta joint, this Winter Springs hotspot draws them in for Neapolitan-style pies and housemade, hand-cut tagliatelle and ravioli. The star is the Neapolitan-made brick oven, which churns out perfectly blistered pizzas, be it your basic margherita or the weighted and eggy carciofi con uovo. A stellar Bolognese sauce highlights the tagliatelle, and to end without sampling either the cannoli or tiramisu would be a mistake. 1468 Tuskawilla Road, Winter Springs, 321-422-3600; $$$

Union Burger The better burger movement gets the Canadian treatment at this Lake Nona outpost of this Ontario-based chain, but don’t blame Canada for the subpar poutine served here, or the overdone burgers and dogs. Shakes veer on the sweet side, but locals will appreciate Cigar City brews and Quantum Leap wines. 9680 Narcoossee Road, 407-745-4510; $

Mark’s Caribbean Cuisine UCF-area jerk joint isn’t in the tidiest of strip malls, but the Jamaican fare is neat-o. Yes, the jerk chicken is top-notch, but the supremely tender oxtail stew is what regulars come back for. Plush cuts of goat in a heady curry gratify, as does traditional ackee and saltfish. Servers are friendly, but don’t expect to be wowed by the decor. 10034 University Blvd., 407-699-8800; $

Korea House The Colonial Drive outpost of Korea House is just as meat-centric as its Longwood counterpart. All-you-can-eat Korean barbecue is the clear choice for most patrons – given the quality of meat and the relatively low AYCE price, it’s easy to see why. Not up for barbecue? Stir-fries and soups, like mandu-guk with dumplings and rice cake in beef broth, will make happy fun dance in your tummy. 4501 Colonial Drive, 407-896-5994; $$

Two Chefs Seafood Oyster Bar Don’t let the casual decor fool you – there’s some worthy NOLA-inspired fare to be had here. The deep experience of the chefs clearly shows in plates of fried chicken, baked oysters and roasted duck hash. Do yourself a favor and order a side of stellar charred okra, then reward yourself with superlative endings of banana bread pudding and praline cheesecake. 743 N. Magnolia Ave., 407-270-4740; $$ n

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FULL SAIL UNIVERSITY

LATEST INNOVATIVE SPACES & CREATIVE PLACES ATHonors FULLAccomplished SAIL UNIVERSITY 6 Annual HallUNVEILED of Fame Celebration Alumni th

and look forward to valuable exchange of of the on-campus Full Sail User Experience Full Sail University is excited to celebrating its sixth Sail (UX After Hunter M. Via, Film Editor that liesSupervising ahead.” Lab).earning her degree, Charity beganknowledge announceNow the addition of three new year, Full Lab University’s annual Hall of Fame celher career in the working Through this new areastudio designed for for the A.C.E. innovative areas on campus. In these new ebration graduates famed Audio Recording in the field of editing Treehouse Puts Down Rootsforonepisodstudents, FullWestlake Sail enters the forefront ofStudiosTheWorking spaces, students arerecognizes encouraged to find who have made outstanding contributions asvideo a studio manager and analytically engineer whereCampus ic television and film for over a decade, helping game companies inspiration, gain real-world experience, andto their respective industries. Previous inductees her clients included Mariah Carey, Ringo Hunter has worked on notable shows and scientifically understand the elements explore the latest technology right on their The Treehouse recently opened its doors include GRAMMY-winning mix engi- Starr, and Marilyn Manson. She then suchnewest as the social EMMY award-winning behind player behavior. The lab will campus. neer Leslie Brathwaite, director of Saw as the gathering spot on series the transitioned into the world of tour man- Arrested Development and Golden Globe feature play test stations for both PC and Full Sail campus, offering an intimate caféII, Saw III, and Saw IV Darren Lynn Bous- agement and production coordinator and Full Sail and Studioanimator Collaborate award-winning series The Shield. In Xbox consoles, a control center dedicated style ambience that features a stage, seating man,Maker and senior and founding has toured with Sublime, the Pussycat 2010, Hunter earned an A.C.E. Award for to metrics tracking and video feed analysis for 60 people, and a modern art installation to Launchmember REBL HQof the Call of Duty game series Dolls, and Aerosmith. his work on the pilot of the critiand observation. Additionally, the lab designed to resemble theepisode trunk and canopy Maker Studios, global leader in Chance the Glasco. Carlton Lynn, GRAMMY-Winning Mixof acally acclaimed AMC series, The Walking will contain a full physiology suite with huge tree. short-form video, has recently partnered Full Sail welcomed VIP guests, facul- and Recording Engineer Dead. of its proximity to classrooms, all of the tools needed for physiological Because with Full Sail to open REBL to HQ.special Located ty, and students events held Duringlike hiselectrical 20-year heart, careermuscle in the musicthe space caters mostly to musical assessments in a brand-new with professional aroundfacility campus during the week of Hall Ric Viers, Sound Designer, Author, industry, Carlton has worked and neuron activity in players. This with anperformances, open mics, club gatherings, soundstages, REBLCrowds HQ provides students of Fame. gathered for educational impressive and diverse array of artists, Sound Effects Producer, and Founder of panels,opportunities special guesttoappearances, collaboration brings UX testing to over and guest lectures, while keeping the focus with real-world participate conproducers, writers, and musicians, in- Blastwave FX certs and the launch of REBEL HQ 5,000 – a play testers annually, including Full on fostering community. on professional productions, as well as cluding Aretha Franklin, Sean “Diddy” Ric is credited with location and sound new on-campus, studio collaborationSail be- students and graduates and the gaming Treehouse recently hosted Doug study development, production and Combs, Carlos Santana, and Pink. Carlton The work that includes hundreds of productween Full Sail and Maker Studios. community at large. the renowned bassist best distribution for online short-form video. received his first GRAMMY for Best R&BWimbish, tions for nearly every major television “By collaborating with Wargaming. known for with Sugarhill Records Full SailFULL and Maker will develop and SAIL HALL OF FAME CLASS 2014: Album, and was honored again in 2012 network.hisAswork founder of Blastwave FX, net onwhen the new Full Sail User Experience and the Grammy Award winning rock collaboratively offer coursework in online he won a GRAMMY for Best Gos- Ric has written books about sound effects Howe, Creative Director/PartLab, we will have the opportunity to not band Living Color. Before giving a solo video to aNathaniel global student base through pel Album. and location audio, and runs the Detroit ner of Design and Animation Firm Naonly open the doors to new educational performance, Doug had an opportunity Full Sail’s award-winning online learning thaniel James Tim Naylor, Co-Founder at Creature Art Chop Shop – the world’s largest producer experiences for our students, but we will to meet with students and discuss his platform. The curriculum provides Working as a freelance director and de- & Mechanics of sound effects libraries for motion picalso have the ability to affect positive in the industry. instruction on best practices in content signer in Los Angeles, Nathaniel Howe With over 15 years of experience in com-experiences ture, television, and video games. in the ever-evolving industries of Located in Winter Park, Florida, Full creation and optimizing online videoconcepts change creates custom-tailored and puter graphics and a wide variety of skill Located in Winter Park, Florida, Full Sail andexperiences, gaming,” saidTim Dr.has Shawn creators’ ability to attract styleframes, artaudiences. directs designers technology and sets and worked onSail University is an educational leader is ancareers educational for Full Sailof Course Director for those pursuing withinleader the animators, and collaborates with aStafford, di- a number big-budget Hollywood filmsforUniversity Wargaming.net Partners with In Full SailNathaniel those pursuing careers within the enterMethods & The User Experience, and entertainment and media industry. verse range of clients. 2013, including Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead an EMMY Lab award for developing tainment and media industry.workshop, Founded in Director of Research for F.I.R.E (Full Sail In hisFounded in 1979 as a recording to Create earned User Experience Man’s Chest, and Transformers. thesupport “Everyday Explorers” as ahas recording the school Institute for Research Entertainment). school rapidly workshop, grown to offer With the of online gaming advertising current role asinco-founder at Creaturethe1979 campaign for National Geographic. has rapidly and grown to offer associate’s, “We are honored to announce this graduate degrees, both powerhouse Wargaming.net, Full Sail Art & Mechanics, Tim develops next gen-undergraduate and master’s degrees, both on partnership Wargaming.net, campus and online. UniversityCharity is proudLomax, to announce the launch erationalongside digital creature technology foron bachelor’s, Production Coordnator for The Eagles World Tour the entertainment industry. campus and online.

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FILM LISTINGS Butterflies & Bulldozers Film about the global dilemma of economic growth vs. species preservation. It is also a story about the rights of nature and the rights of people and one about the difficult choices we all have to make. Wednesday, 2 p.m.; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386-506-4475; smponline.org. Cult Classics: Shaun of the Dead Take car. Go to Mum’s. Kill Phil. Grab Liz, go to the Winchester, have a nice cold pint, and wait for all of this to blow over. Tuesday, 9:30 p.m.; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $8; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde This 1931 silent film is about a man who takes a potion that turns him from a mild-mannered man of science into a homicidal maniac. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386-506-4475; smponline.org. FilmSlam ’15 A monthly indie film showcase and competition open to Florida filmmakers and students. Sunday, 1 p.m.; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $5; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Finders Keepers Recovering addict and amputee John Wood finds himself in a stranger-than-fiction battle to reclaim his mummified leg from Southern entrepreneur Shannon Whisnant. Through Thursday. Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Finding Noah Join a group of archaeologists, theologians and explorers as they embark on a dangerous expedition up Mount Ararat’s desolate summit. Thursday, 7 p.m.; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com. Freak Show Horror Film Festival Features independent horror movies from around the world, celebrities and industry parties. Friday, 7 p.m.-1 a.m., Saturday, 11-1 a.m. and Sunday, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.; Wyndham Orlando Resort, 8001 International Drive; $10-$60; 407-494-3327; freakshowfilmfest.com. Grandma Elle Reid (Lily Tomlin) has just gotten through breaking up with her girlfriend when her granddaughter Sage unexpectedly shows up needing $600 before sundown. Through Thursday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Halloween Horror Flicks Three classic slasher movies – A Nightmare on Elm Street, Friday the 13th and Halloween – with free popcorn. Thursday, 8 p.m.; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org.

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies Extended Edition Enjoy an exclusive introduction from director Peter Jackson as well as the never-before-seen extended edition of the film. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com.

OPENING IN orlando PAN

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Extended Edition Enjoy an exclusive introduction from director Peter Jackson as well as the extended edition of the film. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com. Popcorn Flicks in the Park: The Thing From Another World Scientists at an Arctic research station discover a spacecraft buried in the ice. Thursday, 8 p.m.; Central Park, Winter Park, North Park Avenue and West Morse Boulevard, Winter Park; free; enzian.org. Saturday Matinee Classics: The Haunting One of the most highly regarded haunted house films ever produced, Robert Wise’s film weaves the dark tale of a questionably sane young woman and a sinister house which holds a terrifying past. Saturday, noon; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $8; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Scanners After a man with extraordinary telepathic abilities is nabbed by agents from a mysterious rogue corporation, he discovers he is far from the only possessor of such strange powers. Saturday, 11:59 p.m.; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Sleeping With Other People Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie star as two romantic failures whose years of serial infidelity and selfsabotage have led them to swear that their relationship will remain strictly platonic. Opens Friday. Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org.

By Ste v e S c h n e i de r

Opening this week Big Stone Gap Ashley Judd plays an Appalachian spinster whose social profile takes a sudden upturn. Hey, remember when you could say “spinster”? Well, the movie is set in 1978, so that kinda makes it OK, sorta. Related question: Remember Ashley Judd? (PG-13)

Wednesday Night Pitcher Show: The Faculty Frodo goes to high school and finds out the teachers are not what they seem. Wednesday, 8 p.m.; Eden Bar at the Enzian, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; free; 407-629-1088; enzian.org.

He Named Me Malala Prequels and sequels to Disney movies usually suck, but tell me you’ve never wondered how Simba’s dad navigated his own ascension to the throne. That’s what we’ll learn in He Named Me Mufasa, the thrilling story of … no? OK, try this one on for size: Foodies who love learning about the history of their favorite dishes will salivate over He Named Me Marsala, in which … still no, huh? Shit! Why is it so hard to make a joke about this movie? Ah, screw it. Let’s just dwell on the horrifying novelty of kids getting shot in the head simply because they dared to go to school, and then thank our lucky stars it could never happen here. (See? Should have laughed while you had the chance!) (PG-13)

The Who in Hyde Park Film of the Who’s 50th anniversary concert. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.; multiple locations; $15.98; fathomevents.com.

Pan I swore off Joe Wright movies after his lousy Pride & Prejudice, but I guess there are some people out there who might be interested in his explanation of how Peter Pan became Peter Pan. I mean,

The Walking Dead Watch Party Watch The Walking Dead with your fellow necrophiles. Sundays, 9 p.m.; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060.

they’re probably the type of people who like hearing how magic tricks are performed and insist on taking backstage tours of everything, but they’re out there. (Sometimes, they make it to grad school and write term papers about “demystifying” stuff.) As far as I’m concerned, there’s only one retconned origin story worth a damn, and that’s Santa Claus Is Coming to Town. And you, Mr. Wright, are no Rankin-Bass. (Alert to your mother: Contains Hugh Jackman.) (PG) Steve Jobs Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire advanced the proposition that a single person’s financial windfall should make you forget all about the institutionalized poverty he left behind, and Aaron Sorkin’s script for The Social Network was based on the idea that entrepreneurship works better when it isn’t in the hands of stupid people who are under the age of 40. So I don’t know what to expect from their collaborative portrait of fallen Apple Steve Jobs. On the one hand, Jobs is enough of an icon of look-theother-way capitalism that Boyle might have his face tattooed on his inner thigh; on the other, the movie only charts Jobs’ accomplishments up to the age of 43, which should pin the needle on Sorkin’s “get off my lawn” meter. Now, as for star Michael Fassbender: Shouldn’t he be in a movie about Wang? (R)

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Towering tribute The Walk is a fitting homage to the twin towers By c a me r o n me i e r

The Walk

HHHHH

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hilippe Petit preaches freedom, independence, even civil disobedience – all in the name of artistic expression. He’s the type of guy who doesn’t just talk the talk, but walks the walk, literally. The Frenchman’s greatest walk, of course, came in 1974 when he strung a cable between the towers of the brandnew World Trade Center, making high-wire history and astounding New Yorkers. His illegal feat was chronicled in the 2008 documentary Man on Wire and is now the subject, in narrative-fiction form, of The Walk. Though Man on Wire is good, the new Robert Zemeckis film is slightly better. And to understand why, one can turn to Woody Allen. A character in that director’s masterpiece, Zelig, says that when a man changes appearances, you have to see it. You can’t just read or hear about it. Although that film deals with absurdist fiction, the same principle holds true for a real-life marvel: a man walking a wire across a 140-foot span 1,350 feet in the air. And since the actual walk was never captured in moving images, it is perfect fodder for cinematic spectacle. Zemeckis may be no Allen, but he’s no slouch either. The vastly underrated director has helmed such masterpieces as Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Forrest Gump. He understands the visual power of cinema and realizes that, if he uses all the specialeffects tricks in his repertoire, he can bring “the walk” back to life.

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Although the film was shot in 2-D and converted to 3-D, the conversion is extraordinary and contains even a few gimmicky but fun “made you jump” moments. The lighting and color palette (especially in the early scenes of France) are stunning too, as is the well-researched art direction. It’s just a shame that almost everything else had to be so flat. Instead of shooting a drama, Zemeckis opted for his usual mix of Spielbergian fantasy mixed with comedy-caper. That adds energy and whimsy, even intermittent magic that’s suitable for the entire family, but the film is disappointingly short on realistic drama and a true sense of danger. Told almost entirely by Petit (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), in both voice-over and stagey addresses to the camera, the story sometimes feels contrived, and the accents are often muddled and distracting. GordonLevitt is acceptable, as is Ben Kingsley as Petit’s mentor, but many of Petit’s friends aren’t fully fleshed out. Most disappointing is the only female, Petit’s girlfriend (Charlotte Le Bon), who is an astonishingly beautiful, empty shell. But perhaps Zemeckis was fine with the supporting cast’s one-dimensionality, as this film really belongs to just three characters: Petit and the two towers. As his friends remark, Petit was the one who first gave the towers their humanity and made New Yorkers see them as more than monoliths of mortar and steel. He gave them an aesthetic soul. And with this loving tribute to not just a great piece of performance art but also the buildings that made that art possible, Zemeckis has given us a magical, if flawed, tribute to the fallen symbols of Americana. feedback@orlandoweekly.com


FIlM

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OCT. 7-13, 2015

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MUSIC

Mend to be Twin Shadow’s George Lewis Jr. on being shaped by bus accidents, pop ambition and growing up in Florida drum machines. But the accident allowed Lewis to complete a cycle of reconnection that began in 2014 after his father, George Sr., spent several months in a mental hospital, giving George Jr. and his mom space to repair their relationship. “When you’re in a very vulnerable place like I was, laying in bed for a couple of months, it draws a lot of people back into your life,” Lewis says. “It was nice that I had already started working on mending those relationships, so that when the accident happened, I had a lot of support from a lot of people. I look down at my hand constantly, and although it’s not fully healed yet, the recovery went a lot faster because of those connections.” During the break, Lewis also compiled the free Night Rally mixtape from five years of archival material recorded over “late nights, mornings after no sleep, the bad decisions, the good ones, the sobering solitude, the mistakes, the ideas lost and the singing out of key.” Which was a brave move for an artist that considers ambition, practice and craft the cornerstones of pop stardom – not to mention one who pillories those who cling to their indie identity and bemoan the supposed sell-outs among us. “People should project what’s inside of them outward in a more rehearsed and trained way,” Lewis says. “I have so many projects in my head, and I want to tackle them one by one here in the next year. I’m taking a little bit of a break on writing right now, but I still feel like I’m always working in some way to get more people to hear my music.”

TwIn SHadow with lolawolf 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 7 | The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thesocial.org | $22-$25

a

s the main man in Twin Shadow, George Lewis Jr. has cultivated a reputation for front-and-center bravado. He’s put himself on the cover of all three of his albums, which quickly evolved from hazy bedroom tinkering (2010’s Forget) to slick dance rock (2012’s Confess) to big-tent pop (2015’s Eclipse). His leather jackets and well-coiffed looks evoke an image of the libidinous lover boy that women (and men) can’t resist. He’s written hooks for Billy Idol and Eminem, appeared in Grand Theft Auto V, worked with Levi’s and Urban Outfitters, and willingly jumped from indie powerhouse 4AD to major-label Warner Bros. Records. In short, Lewis embodies the term “careerist.” While his trajectory still points up, 2015 brought Lewis and Twin Shadow back down to earth. In April, the band’s two tour buses were involved in a horrific crash in heavy fog outside of Denver, seriously injuring several members and forcing Lewis to have reconstructive hand surgery. Although the band stuck by a TV appearance on Late Night With Seth Meyers less than three weeks after the accident, the ongoing hospitalization of drummer Andy Bauer prompted the cancellation of shows in May, June and July. Bauer can walk again, but he still wasn’t able to appear on Twin Shadow’s current tour, which prompted Lewis to reconfigure the tunes with samplers and

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orlando weekly ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

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Now, if you’re from Florida, you might think we’re burying the lede by not mentioning Lewis’ roots in the state; although he was born in the Dominican Republic, lived for 10 years in Brooklyn, and now resides in Los Angeles, most of his childhood was spent outside Sarasota. “Every time I tour in Florida, I get a little closer to where I grew up,” Lewis says. “Orlando’s the closest show to my hometown, Venice, so I feel it’s going to be a high-school reunion.” Lewis says he’s also learned to let go of some of the tendencies he developed as the prototypical Florida teenager: the

musically inclined outsider surrounded by rich old folks and rednecks. “I spent so much of my life being such a music snob,” he says. “Coming from a smaller town, what you seek out defines you when you’re young.” Chalk it up to another self-realization arrived at in the wake of that bus accident: “On this tour, I’m taking in for the first time in a long time what other people are listening to,” Lewis says. “I’ve been letting the people I love lead the way into something new.” music@orlandoweekly.com

PHOTO BY MILAN ZRNIC

By Nick McGreGor


MUSIC

Great live music rattles OrlandO EVErY nIGHT

The rot Guts Slick on a thick buzz and rattle around the intense noisy clatter of Orlando noise freaks the Rot Guts, opening for intriguing new act Secret Tracers, who perked our ears at Earth last month. 9 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 7, at Will’s Pub, $5

The Thing You might recognize them best for recently backing artists like Sonic Youth and Neneh Cherry, but this unearthly trio conjures more spellbinding sonics when left to their own devices, as you’ll soon see for yourself. 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 8, at Timucua White House, free

case Work Orlando’s favorite dreamy indie boy band returns to up the spectacle at Will’s Pub for the weekend with party-starter Michael Parallax. 9 p.m. Friday, Oct. 9, at Will’s Pub, $5

The kids are all right

T. Hardy Morris

“I think we were pretty interested in not being too of this moment when we were making Fantastic Planet,” says Andrews Failure finds a more engaged audience in young fans who just about the band’s seemingly timeless sound. “We definitely have some ’90s in us for discovered their Fantastic Planet sure, but I think some of it gets obscured By JaSoN FerGuSoN or it’s not as obvious in some of our music.” Thanks to that timelessness (and, honalt-rock boom, so their 2014 reunion (after FaIlUre with Hum, Torche 6:30 p.m. Sunday, 17 years of absence) could have – should estly, to the fact that Failure was never Oct. 11 | House of Blues, 1490 E. Buena Vista have – followed that same script. An all that popular during their initial run), Blvd., Lake Buena Vista | 407-934-2583 | acrimonious collapse fueled by creative Failure’s string of reunion gigs in 2014 has hob.com/orlando | $23 burnout, drug-addled conflict and general turned into a critically acclaimed 2015 popular indifference gets paved over by album – The Heart Is a Monster – and he ongoing and seemingly unending years of critical reassessment (their 1996 another tour that has the once-estranged cycle of band reunions has, for most Fantastic Planet album is routinely hailed members acting like a brand-new band. “What I’m noticing now is that for the music fans, become a predictable as a lost alt-rock/space-rock masterpiece), pantomime of pent-up nostalgia yielding word-of-mouth praise (the band is rou- people who did see us [at the first reunion increasingly unrewarding returns. After a tinely name-checked by bands ranging shows], they’re like me and you. They’ve decade (or a few decades) of absence, that from Pelican and Cave In to Speedy Ortiz), got busy lives, careers, kids probably,” one band you loved so much back then and individual successes (bassist Greg Andrews says. “They maybe don’t go to finally gets back together, so you dutifully Edwards in Autolux, guitarist-vocalist see the same band play a show in the same cough up the ticket price to see them at Ken Andrews as a producer-engineer for calendar year twice. [But] the new fans are a venue they would have never played in the likes of Chris Cornell and Paramore). still coming and they’re the ones who are their heyday, squinting your eyes and ears Except in Failure’s case, a funny thing hap- interested in ‘I wonder what the set’s going the entire time in a feeble attempt at time pened on the way to the reunion circuit: to be like tonight’ and ‘Is Kellii going to play travel, only to realize that the band is older, kids. Not the band members’ kids, but, like, the same way that he did last year or last month or whatever.’ They’re kind of just the crowd is older, you’re older and, no The Kids. “I’ve met a bunch of people who dis- more into it and more engaged. matter how objectively good the show is, it “So right now I feel like we’re just doing didn’t give you anything new and it didn’t covered Failure like in the last maybe two make you young again. And then, to make years through just like a friend sharing what any ... not new band but a band who’s matters worse, the band decides to release some music or something,” Andrews says. been around, but maybe not for 20 years, is some new music, compounding those “They just thought that we were a band doing. That’s going out and trying to build that had started maybe in 2010 or some- your fan base one person at a time.” emotions ... only this time in your home. Failure was first active during the ’90s thing. Until they saw our pictures, I guess. music@orlandoweekly.com

One of the country’s best at grunging up Southern rock, T. Hardy Morris will torch the stage before Drive-By Truckers motor out to finish up the night. 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10, the Plaza Live, $25-$35

Sick of it Sundays karaoke cover Band Go make your own racket at Will’s Pub for this enthusiastic revival of pop punk karaoke night Sick of It Sundays with a full backing band. 10 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 11, at Will’s Pub, $5

PHOTO BY RYAN DALY

T

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Danzig Danzig resuscitated their “Blackest of the Black” tour name for the first time in five years and is working on a new covers album called Skeletons with a fall release date – so basically we’re all doomed to rock out this night to blistering covers, oh shucks. 7:15 p.m. Monday, Oct. 12, at Hard Rock Live, $25.50-$35.50

rick Springfield Go sing along to “Jessie’s Girl” and maybe complete the square after by dropping into House of Blues around 7 p.m. in Disney Springs to catch the chorus of Our Lady Peace’s “Superman’s Dead.” Why-ee-yi-ee-yi-ee. 5:30 p.m., 6:45 p.m., 8 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 13, at Epcot, price of admission ●

OCT. 7-13, 2015

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MUSIC

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

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MUSIC

Sham 69 BY B AO L E - H U U

Heads up, fam. TLU breaks next

week to make room for a juicy blowout of the music section covering some emerging local scenes that should be on your radar. We’ll hook back up the week after.

PHOTO BY JEN CRAY

THE BEAT

It’s big news any time a legendary first-wave Oi! band comes to play your town. When it’s Sham 69, however, things get a little shaded. You see, they’re one of those bands with a convoluted and contentious history involving infighting and shifting alliances that’s resulted in multiple touring groups claiming the same name. If you’ve got an especially investigative interest in rock & roll soap operas and a shitload of free time, look it up. The Sham 69 that came here (Sept. 26, Backbooth) is the “Tim V” version. As opposed to the so-called “original 1977 line-up” that features three OGs, this one’s historical bona fides boast original guitarist Neil Harris, longtime drummer Ian Whitewood and singer Tim V, whose official affiliation began in 2007 as a replacement for the notoriously elusive Jimmy Pursey, who of course now fronts the 1977 line-up. Not confused enough yet? Well, the band that showed up here didn’t even contain all the aforementioned. Their publicist confirmed with me that Harris had medical issues that precluded him from touring and Whitewood was actually refused a visa, but both are still official members. So in terms of seniority, all we’re left with is the post-millennial Tim V. I’m cross-eyed at

When the crowd’s there and the spirit’s right, sometimes that’s all you need. this point, so I’ll let the punk-rock scholars debate the legitimacy of all that. It was reason enough, though, to go out and maybe catch a distant vignette of history and run with the bootboys for a night. This was a true skinhead scene, which evokes lots of bad connotations around here because of the white-power hijacking of the subculture back in the ’80s. But from the telltale signs and the familiar faces I saw, this was a gathering of more traditional heads. To hopefully further dispel some of the negative baggage, please note that Tim V stopped the whole show at one point because a girl in the front row lost her glasses. The violence and merrymaking halted, a search ensued and the specs were located and returned. See? Fucking sweethearts. What can I say? It was a competent performance and a fun show. We’re not talking Emerson, Lake & Palmer here. This is rock & roll at its most rowdy and rudimental. So when the crowd’s there and the spirit’s right, sometimes that’s all you need. Now if you’ll excuse me, I gotta go order me some Oxbloods.

I am unquestionably a Helmet fan. But several reasons conspired to make me walk into their latest show (Sept. 26, the Social) with less than fanatical attitude. First, the focus was the 20th anniversary of Betty. While that album’s in what is widely considered their prime early era, not everything old is necessarily classic. And Betty’s no Meantime. More than that, though, some anemic performances over the past decade or so had me half-resigned to the prospect that they’re on their denouement. In fact, during this show, bandleader Page Hamilton alluded to a dismal appearance 10 years ago at this very club where he was completely fubar. But this time, at a show completely their own (no openers even), in an up-close venue, Helmet sounded absolutely virile, their controlled fury a respectable, concentrated brute once again. For the first 45 minutes, they powered straight through Betty without pause or audience address. Played by a powerfully focused band, the album is much more convincing live. After concluding the album, they opened up the set list into a more typical concert, complete with Hamilton’s famously surly humor. I would’ve if I had to, but I’m glad I’ve no reason this time to pan a band as good or important as this. Now I need to go dig up my old Helmet T-shirt. Since pride is no longer past tense when it comes to that name, I think it’s time to dust off that bad boy again. baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 7-13, 2015

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OUR PICKS FOR THE BEST EVENTS THIS WEEK

Wednesday, 7

Literary Death Match LITERARY Cast off whatever good manners you usually put on when attending a literary event and get ready to howl for blood, because at Literary Death Match, four writers enter and one writer leaves. Look on with wonder and terror as Kristen Arnett, Erica Dawson, Kristin Harmel and David James Poissant slash and batter each other with their words; in fact, the audience is encouraged to “get rowdy,” so don’t just look on, talk some smack while the writers put the smackdown on each other. Two-time U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins (a man who understands the violence of fictitious action) will thunder down judgment from above, thumbs-up or -downing the writers as if they were a band of vying gladiators in the colosseum. You may feel a tiny bit of remorse for your fierce participation in this bookish bashfest, but stifle it: The price of admission supports local publisher Burrow Press. – Jessica Bryce Young

THE MOUNTAIN GOATS

7 p.m. | Mad Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St. | burrowpress.com | $12-$15 Thursday, 8

Wednesday, 7

Death Grips

DEATH GRIPS

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

MUSIC A funny thing about the Mountain Goats: Many of the indie folk-rock band’s songs that appeal to people most are the ones full of angst and frustration and rage that seems to come from a deeply personal place – yet the majority of the band’s 12 albums aren’t as deeply personal as you might think. Instead, a lot of the material written and sung by John Darnielle, the band’s founder and only constant member, consists of stories about fictional characters. For instance, 2001’s All Hail West Texas is a concept album about “seven people, two houses, a motorcycle and a locked treatment facility for adolescent boys.” Likewise, 2002’s Tallahassee – memorable, in part, for the unforgettably brutal anthem “No Children” – is about characters he calls the “Alpha Couple” who live in a fallingdown house that represents their crumbling marriage. In more recent Mountain Goats albums – notably We Shall All Be Healed and The Sunset Tree – Darnielle does go deep, mining his past for songs about growing up with drug-addicted friends and his abusive stepfather. The newest album, Beat the Champ, is a little bit of both. The songs are imaginative accounts about the pro wrestlers Darnielle admired when he was a child. Though the stories are fictional, there’s an element of the personal here, too – for the young Darnielle, wrestling was an obsession, and during a particularly difficult time in his life, he says wrestling was “an avenue of escape for me.” The melding of the personal with the impractical is what gives the album the anxiety and tension we’ve grown to know and love in Darnielle’s best work. Tonight, we expect him to throw himself into his characters with nothing less. – Erin Sullivan

7 p.m. | The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave. | 407-648-8363 | thebeacham.com | $20-$30

8 p.m. | The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thebeacham.com | $20-$25

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The Mountain Goats

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THE MOUNTAIN GOATS PHOTO BY LISSA GOTWALS

Future-primitive art-rap provocateurs Death Grips are possibly the most mysterious and provocative force on the popular music landscape today. A throat-grabbing head-on of rap and industrial noise, their music alone is undeniable. But once you factor in their striking, conspiratorial style, you’ve got a bona fide shock to the system. Between undermining their major label by leaking their album online and booking high-profile gigs that they never actually planned on playing (Lollapalooza), their wild reputation for operating on their own shadowy terms has mapped the thin, evasive line between shenanigans and full-on aggression. Their last big grenade was famously bailing on a major tour with Nine Inch Nails last year by suddenly disbanding. Luckily, that stunt didn’t stick and they returned to active tour duty this year to bring us what should be the most hotly anticipated concert of 2015. You know, so long as it happens. – Bao Le-Huu MUSIC


Saturday, 10

Saturday-Sunday, 10-11

Zombietoberfest

Winter Park Autumn Art Festival

Resist the temptation to do nothing but catch up on The Walking Dead in advance of the Season 6 premiere on Sunday. Or at least take a break between episodes to head over to the Audubon Park Garden District for its annual Zombietoberfest celebration. One of the bigger events that APGD throws each year, the festival draws a sizable crowd of living dead enthusiasts for a zombie walk, live music and a costume contest. This year, there will also be a competitive scavenger hunt that starts at 2 p.m. Gather a team and race through the businesses of the district to collect items and solve the mystery of how to cure the zombie outbreak. Regardless of who wins, though, the zombie outbreak is scheduled for 8 p.m., as zombie volunteers of all ages stumble through the streets in a big undead horde. Just leave the shotgun at home; no one thinks it’s funny. – Thaddeus McCollum

EVENTS

The cream of Florida’s artistic crop flock to Central Park this weekend for the 42nd annual Winter Park Autumn Art Festival. More than 180 artists were selected to showcase their work in a variety of formats ranging from painting to ceramics to 3-D mixed media, a new category for the festival. Entertainment is in abundance with an eclectic mix of musical talent playing throughout the day, such as the UCF Flying Horse Big Band, a jazz ensemble that reworks some of the greats from the Beatles and Van Morrison, and many Park Avenue restaurants will be in attendance to provide festivalgoers with some grub as they walk around Central Park. Even though it’s an autumn festival, this is still Florida, so things are going to get hot. If you want to cool down with a brew, Florida Distributing Co. has you covered with a beer garden where you can sample some of their seasonal beers. – Marissa Mahoney

EVENTS

9 a.m.-5 p.m. | Central Park, North Park Avenue and West Morse Boulevard, Winter Park | 407-644-8281 | winterpark.org | free

Saturday, 10

Tuesday, 13

Until Netflix unleashes new episodes of Black Mirror, intrigued audiences should realize “I am one of you” and join like-minded sci-fi fans at the Enzian. Because if there was ever a person you should let scrape the insides of your mind, it’s director David Cronenberg. His provocative commentary on human psychology and how it’s impacted by futuristic technology reveals with a trembling hand the truer terror of our buried thoughts exhumed to consume us (in full gory detail). Add the campiness of Cronenberg’s unusual eye, and it’s impossible to break gaze with the screen. The first real glimpse of his steady hand holding a magnifying glass to humanity and all its society-advancing self-mutilation was in his 1981 breakout film, Scanners. (Although this cult classic was more like an evil genius idly creating a fire through the magnifying glass, exploding heads, bursting veins and setting bodies ablaze.) Go scan it again – the outdated technology adds a fresh smirk to relieve some tension. – Ashley Belanger

In light of the mania surrounding the upcoming Star Wars Episode VII and Disney’s announced Star Wars-themed lands, not to mention the inescapable fact that Fanboys Have Taken Over The World, this show in which one actor performs the entire original trilogy by himself in just 75 minutes ought to be a popular draw. Canadian actor Charlie Ross has toured his One Man Star Wars Trilogy from fringe festival to fringe festival since its debut in 2001, racking up more rave reviews than Tosche Station has power converters. Fellow fringe-fest stalwart T.J. Dawe (multiple awardwinner and longtime fan favorite at the Orlando Fringe) directs this six-night run of Ross’ “side-splitting romp through a galaxy far, far away.” This is the show you’re looking for. – JBY

Scanners FILM

WINTER PARK AUTUMN ART FESTIVAL, “ROMEO WAITS,” BY KATE CARNEY

WINTER PARK AUTUMN FESTIVAL

11:59 p.m. | The Enzian, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland | 407-629-0054 | enzian.org | $9-$11

One Man Star Wars Trilogy THEATER

2-10 p.m. | Audubon Park Garden District, East Winter Park Road and Corrine Drive | apgardens.com | free; $6-$10 to participate in the scavenger hunt

ONE MAN STAR WARS TRILOGY

7:30 p.m. | various times through Sunday, Oct. 18 | Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave. | 844-513-2014 | drphillipscenter.org | $35-$55

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 7-13, 2015

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tHe week

THEWEEK

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

Wednesday, OCT. 7-Tuesday, OCT. 13 COmpiled By THaddeus mCCOllum

Wednesday, OcT. 7

ConCerts/events Death Grips 8 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $20-$25; 407-648-8363. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Smash Mouth Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Eugene Snowden’s Ten Pints of Truth 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. For Today, Fit for a King, Gideon, Phinehas, Silent Planet 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $18; 407-999-2570. [MUSIC] Ghost see page 52 The Imperial’s Acoustic Soundcheck With Lauren Lester 9 pm; The Imperial at Washburn Imports, 1800 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-228-4992. New Kingston, NoNeed 8 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $7-$10; 407-322-7475. Parachute, Emily Hackett 7:30 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $25. Reggae Night with Hor!zen and DJ Red I 10 pm; The Caboose, 1827 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-898-7733. Secret Tracers, Manic & the Depressives, the Rot Guts 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5.

Clubs/lounges Acoustic Wednesdays 8:30 pm; Rogue Pub, 3076 Curry Ford Road; free; 407-985-3778. 48

orlando weekly ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

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The Geek Easy Open Mic 7:45 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-332-9636. Mac and Cheese Wednesday 10 pm; Independent Bar, 70 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-839-0457.

opera/ClassiCal The Met Live in HD: Il Trovatore 6:30 pm; Soprano Anna Netrebko’s dramatic and vocal skills are on full display in her next new role at the Met — Leonora, the Verdi heroine who sacrifices her own life for the love of the gypsy troubadour. multiple locations; $24; fathomevents.com.

One Hit Wonder Wednesdays 10 pm; The Patio, 14 W. Washington St.; free; 407-354-1577.

ConCerts/events

Themed Trivia Wednesdays 9:30 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060.

Booty & the Browns, Buffy, Manic & the Depressives, Fat Sun 10 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $3-$5 suggested donation; 407-270-9104.

Trivia Nation 8 pm; Frank and Steins, 150 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; 407-412-9230. Trivia with Doug Bowser 7:30 pm; Hamburger Mary’s, 110 W. Church St.; free; 321-319-0600.

Thursday, OcT. 8

Chase Rice 7 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $28-$38; 407-351-5483. Dave Sheffield Jazz Trio 9 pm; Winter Park Beer Company, 1809 E. Winter Park Road; free.

Dog Fashion Disco, Psychostick, Gargamel!, SML8, Nation of Decay 6:30 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $18-$22; 407-322-7475. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: The Pointer Sisters Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Kylesa, Inter Arma, Indian Handcrafts, Irata 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$17; 407-246-1419. Leisure Chief 10 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.

The Thing 7:30 pm; Timucua White House, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; free; 407-595-2713. Twenty One Pilots, Echosmith 6 pm; House of Blues, Downtown Disney West Side, Lake Buena Vista; SOLD OUT; 407-9342583.

Clubs/lounges Cards Against Humanity Night 7 pm; Paddy’s of Winter Park, 1566 West Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park; free. Indiecent Thursdays 10 pm; Independent Bar, 70 N. Orange Ave.; contact for price; 407-839-04357.

The Mountain Goats, Blank Range 7 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $20$30; 407-648-8363.

Think Tank Trivia 8 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.

Open Mic Jazz 8 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364.

You Can’t Sit With Us Ladies Night 11:45 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free-$3; 407-999-2570. cOnTInued On page 51

PHOTO BY ESTER SEGARRA

Twin Shadow, Lolawolf 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $22-$25; 407246-1419.

Bearaoke 8 pm; Stonewall Bar Orlando, 741 W. Church St.; free; 407-373-0888.


THE WEEK

ORLANDO

Feast on the 50 Have you ever wanted to go to a drinking event on the 50-yard line of a stadium? That’s weird, because that’s exactly what this event is. Caterers and restaurants set up a spread of tastings and libations for you to snack your way around. Proceeds benefit Florida Citrus Sports Foundation programs. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday; Orlando Citrus Bowl, 1 Citrus Bowl Place; $20-$25; floridacitrus sports.com Big Gay Brunch Party with OW before the Pride Parade. Feast on a full breakfast buffet from Tim Webber Events, or just go the liquid lunch route with bottomless mimosas and a bloody mary bar. If you see us stumbling around the parade route later, it’s probably because we were here. 11 a.m. Saturday; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $35-$40; orlandoweekly.com

LEFTÖVER CRACK PHOTO BY ASH THAYER

Come Out With Pride H2O Every year, Come Out With Pride sets up a pop-up club on the International Bridge at Lake Eola. Enjoy shade, drinks, music and dancing, and also shade. You’ll also get a prime viewing spot for the fireworks show at 9 p.m. 5-10 p.m. Saturday; International Bridge, Lake Eola Park, East Central Boulevard and South Osceola Avenue; $10; comeoutwithpride.com

Fashion of Cocktails This bartending competition is part of Park Avenue Fashion Week, so you should at least wear a shirt with a collar to blend in. Taste cocktails made by some of the area’s hottest bartenders, then vote for your favorite. 6-9 p.m. Monday; Park Social, 358 N. Park Ave.; $10; parksocialwinterpark. com

OCT 11

FAILURE & HUM

OCT 13

OUR LADY PEACE

JON PARDI WITH OCT BROTHERS B OSBORNE 15

Leftöver Crack Nov. 6 at Backbooth New Found Glory, Yellowcard, Oct. 16 at House of Blues John Cleese & Eric Idle, Oct. 17 at Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts Halsey, Oct. 17 at House of Blues Langhorne Slim & the Law, Oct. 17 at the Social

Bronze Radio Return, Oct. 28 at the Social Meat Puppets, Oct. 28 at Will’s Pub Desaparecidos, Oct. 29 at the Social Chvrches, Oct. 30 at House of Blues Two Cow Garage, Matt Woods, Oct. 30 at Will’s Pub

Ed Schrader’s Music Beat, Nov. 7 at Will’s Pub Minus the Bear, Nov. 7 at the Social Mary J. Blige, Nov. 7 at CFE Arena Public Image Ltd., Nov. 7 at the Plaza Live Deafheaven, Nov. 11 at the Social

Cannibal Ox, Oct. 18 at Backbooth

Pepper, Oct. 31 at the Plaza Live

Matt Pond PA, Oct. 19 at the Social

Metric, Nov. 1 at House of Blues

Orlando Beer Festival, Nov. 14 at Festival Park

Plain White T’s, Oct. 21 at the Social

The Growlers, Broncho, Nov. 4 at the Social

Skylar Spence, Nov. 19 at the Social

Joey Bada$$, Oct. 22 at Venue 578 John Hodgman, Oct. 23 at the Plaza Live Passafire, Oct. 23-24 at the Social Orlando Zombie Ball, Oct. 24 at Venue 578 Gang of Four, Oct. 27 at the Social

Electric Daisy Carnival, Nov. 6-7 at Tinker Field Leftöver Crack, Nov. 6 at Backbooth Sufjan Stevens, Nov. 6 at the Dr. Phillips Center Suicide Girls: Blackheart Burlesque, Nov. 6 at the Beacham

Slow Magic, Nov. 12 at the Social

Emily Kinney, Nov. 20 at the Social The Wizards of Winter, Nov. 21 at the Plaza Live Nobunny, Nov. 22 at Will’s Pub The Front Bottoms, Nov. 24 at the Beacham Jim Gaffigan, Nov. 27 at Hard Rock Live

Dustin Lynch, Dec. 3 at House of Blues Lucero, Dec. 4 at the Social Mac Miller, Dec. 5 at Hard Rock Live Glass Animals, Dec. 7 at the Beacham A John Waters Christmas, Dec. 8 at the Plaza Live Silverstein, Senses Fail, Dec. 8 at the Beacham Quintron & Miss Pussycat, Dec. 11 at Will’s Pub The Delta Saints, Dec. 11 at Backbooth

OCT 16

NEW FOUND GLORY & YELLOWCARD

OCT 18

ANTHONY HAMILTON

OCT 25

STREETLIGHT MANIFESTO

OCT 29

TRAPT

OCT 30

CHVRCHES

NOV 1

METRIC

NOV 7

ANDREW MCMAHON & NEW POLITICS

Michael McDonald, Dec. 15 at Hard Rock Live Matisyahu, Dec. 16 at the Plaza Live

SPECIALS • OFFERS • UPDATES

House of Blues® Downtown Disney® West Side

JJ Grey & Mofro, Dec. 31 at House of Blues

1490 E. BUENA VISTA DR. LAKE BUENA VISTA, FL 32830 407.932.2583 HOUSEOFBLUES.COM/ORLANDO

Orgy, Jan. 8 at West End Trading Co. Colin Hay, Jan. 30 at the Plaza Live

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SATURDAY, 10

Autechre

Groundbreaking British techno duo Autechre caused warped hearts to stop with their two-hour 2013 release Exai, as if the twisted manipulators hit pause on each fan’s internal beat, so the notion that they were touring North America this year basically floored serious fans, who likely gripped their chests as they sank to their knees in gratitude. That sounds like a lot of hype, but their perverse electronica has stunned for decades, especially in a live setting. It’ll soon be validated by this unique show’s spectacular build-up. – Ashley Belanger

MUSIC

8 p.m. | The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thesocial.org | $17-$20

cOnTInued FrOM page 48 FrIday, OcT. 9

ConCerts/events Bonz, A.M.M., Everybody Panic!, the Adolescent Theory, No Self, Sugarless, Dakota Black, Embrace the Pain 6:30 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $13-$16; 407-322-7475. Chus and Ceballos 10 pm; Tier Nightclub, 20 E. Central Ave.; $20-$30; 407-317-9129. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: The Pointer Sisters Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321.

Here Come the Mummies 8 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $22.50$35; 407-228-1220.

6 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $20-$45; 407-872-0066. Smallpools, Phoebe Ryan, Machineheart 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $18-$20; 407-246-1419.

Jupiter Groove, Crystal Dagger 8 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; $5; 407-636-3171.

Clubs/lounges

Leisure Chief 9 pm; The Smiling Bison, 745 Bennett Road; free; 407-259-8036.

DJ BMF 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.

Mango Beats 10 pm; Debbie’s Bar, 1422 State Road 436, Casselberry; free; 407-677-5963.

Footloose 80s Night Midnight; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free; 407-999-2570.

Michael Parallax, Case Work 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5. Mushroomhead, Mortiis, September Mourning, Unsaid Fate, Amerakin Overdose

Nerdy Karaoke 8 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-332-9636.

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Wall Street Plaza Block Party 11 pm; Wall Street Plaza, Wall and Court streets; free; 407-849-0471. saTurday, OcT. 10

ConCerts/events 12th Planet, Sliink 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $15-$40; 407-504-7699. Amateur Engines, Coma Club, Hammy Sagar, Captains of April, Florida Rooms 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $5; 407-270-9104. Autechre, Cygnus, Rob Hall (DJ Set) 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $17-$20; 407-246-1419. Christian Arango 10 pm; Peek Downtown, 50 E. Central Blvd Suite B; $15. The Company 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.

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Die Young, Bishop, Axis, Close the Casket 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570. Drive-By Truckers, T. Hardy Morris 8 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $25-$35; 407-228-1220. Earth Entertainment HipHop Showcase 8 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; $10; 407-636-3171. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: .38 Special Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Erin Rianna Wagoner, Zoya Zafar 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Ghost, Purson 6:30 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $27.60-$32.60; 407-648-8363. John Denver Tribute 7:30 pm; Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, 201 S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford; $23-$30; 407-321-8111.

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Levity, the Getbye, Azzitizz, Stone Clover 9 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $8; 407-673-2712. Moonmen From Mars, the Woolly Bushmen, American Party Machine 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5. Orlando Philharmonic: The Hot Sardines 2 & 8 pm; Bob Carr Theater, 401 W. Livingston St.; $21-$62; 407-849-2020. Rhythm Dragons, Orange Squeeze, more 8 pm; Bombshell’s Tavern, 5405 Edgewater Drive; $5; 407 730 3999. Sterling Schroeder & the Chosen Ones 9 pm; Paddy’s of Winter Park, 1566 West Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park; free.

Clubs/lounges DJ Cliff T 10 pm; Aero, 60 N. Orange Ave.; free; 321-245-7730.

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[MUSIC] Danzig see page 55


tHe week

DJ M-Squared 9 pm-2 am; The Groove, CityWalk at Universal Orlando; $7; 407-224-2166. Midnight Mass Dance Party Midnight; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free; 407-999-2570. Red2 7 pm; Tsar, 611 E. Church St.; free.

Eat to the Beat Concert Series: .38 Special Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Ese, Clem McGillicutty and the Burnouts, the Jodones, more 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $6; 407-270-9104.

sunday, OcT. 11

ConCerts/events Adult Life, Former Planets, R-Dent, Filthy Deniros 7:30 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $5-$8; 407-322-7475. Ancient Sun 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Centerfolds, Something More, more 8 pm; Bombshell’s Tavern, 5405 Edgewater Drive; $10; 407-730-3999. [COMEDY] Lavell Crawford see page 57

Claude Bourbon 7:30 pm; Timucua White House, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; free; 407-595-2713.

Failure, Hum, Torche 6:30 pm; House of Blues, Downtown Disney West Side, Lake Buena Vista; $23; 407-934-2583. Fatal Offense, False Narrative, Entombed in the Abyss, more 4 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570. Flying Horse Big Band Concert 1 pm; Central Park, Winter Park, North Park Avenue and West Morse Boulevard, Winter Park; free; 407-823-1500. Scott Dickinson Trio, Paul Chong-You Quartet 3 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $20; 407-704-6261.

Sick of It Sundays Presents: Karaoke Cover Band 10 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5. Soft Rock Sunday With Sean Holcomb 7 pm; The Imperial at Washburn Imports, 1800 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-228-4992. Surfin Serf, Wizard Apprentice, Crit, Sean Shakespeare & TKO 4 pm; The Space Station, 2539 Coolidge Ave.; free.

Clubs/lounges An Tobar Trivia 6 pm; An Tobar, 600 N. Lake Destiny Drive, Maitland; $5; 407-267-4044. Not Your Grandpa’s Bingo 7 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171. Tropical Sundays with DJ Frankie G 10 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $5-$15; 407246-1419.

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opera/ClassiCal Pixar in Concert 3 pm; This visually stunning, highdefinition, multi-media family show features montages of memorable clips from every one of Pixar’s 14 films, all accompanied by a live symphony orchestra. Walt Disney Theater, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $35-$55; 844-513-2014; drphillipscenter.org. UCF Symphonic Band & Concert Band Concert 7 pm; A free concert from the student musicians at UCF. Timber Creek High School, 1001 Avalon Park East Blvd.; free; 407-823-1500; music.ucf.edu.

Tuesday, OcT. 13

ConCerts/events Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Rick Springfield Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Everyone Leaves, the Tiny Ugly Germs, the Holed-Outs, Cargo Cult 8 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; donations accepted; 407-270-9104. The Groove Orient 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.

Clubs/lounges

Jazz Tuesdays 7:30 pm; The Smiling Bison, 745 Bennett Road; free; 407-898-8580.

Ivanhoe Trivia Knight 6 pm; The Hammered Lamb, 1235 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-704-3200.

Our Lady Peace 7 pm; House of Blues, Downtown Disney West Side, Lake Buena Vista; $24; 407-934-2583.

Soul Shakedown Tuesday With DJ BMF 10 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free.

Randal Branham 7 pm; The Woman’s Club of Winter Park, 419 S. Interlachen Ave., Winter Park; $10-$15; 407-620-5649.

Total Request Tuesdays with DJ Deron Martin 7 pm; Stonewall Bar Orlando, 741 W. Church St.; free; 407-373-0888.

Reformed Whores 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $8; 407-999-2570.

Twisted Tuesday 9 pm; Pulse, 1912 S. Orange Ave.; contact for price; 407-649-3888.

Trevor Hall 7:30 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $17-$27.50; 407-246-1419.

cOnTInued On page 56

MOnday, OcT. 12

ConCerts/events Danzig, Superjoint, Veil of Maya, Prong, Witch Mountain 7:15 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $25.50-$35.50; 407-351-5483. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Rick Springfield Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. In Between Series: D003Y 7 pm; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free. Jazz Meets Motown 7 pm; Bohemian Hotel Celebration, 700 Bloom St., Celebration; free. Landon Pontius, Kristopher James, Cameron Moreau 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570. Reggae Mondae with Kash’d Out 10 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Those Manic Seas, Radicalized Youth, Lions After Dark, Thee Wilt Chamberlain 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5. Trevor Hall 7:30 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $17-$27.50; 407-246-1419.

Clubs/lounges Live Acoustic Music 8 pm; Winter Park Beer Company, 1809 E. Winter Park Road; free. Noche Latina 9 pm; Pulse, 1912 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-3888. Rock Band Jam Night 8:30 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-673-2712. White Trash Bingo with Doug Ba’aser 10 pm; Stonewall Bar Orlando, 741 W. Church St.; free; 407-373-0888.

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[MUSIC] Kylesa see page 48

cOnTInued FrOM page 55

ThEaTEr And Then There Were None Ten guilty strangers are trapped on an island, each confronted by the evidence of a murder from his or her past that was never prosecuted. Thursday, 7:30 pm, Friday, 8 pm, Saturday 2 & 8 pm and Sunday 2 pm; IceHouse Theatre, 1100 N. Unser St., Mount Dora; $9.50-$19.50; 352-383-4616; icehousetheatre.com. Beauty and the Beast Jr. The stage version of the Academy Award-winning animated tale. Thursday-Saturday, 7 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; Historic State Theatre, 109 N. Bay St., Eustis; $5-$10; 352-3577777; baystreetplayers.org. Defending the Caveman A witty, insightful monologue about the way men and women relate to each other. Wednesday-Friday, 7:30 pm, Saturday, 5 & 8 pm and Sunday 3 pm; Clermont Performing Arts Center Black Box Theater, 3700 S. Highway 27, Clermont; $36-$42; 352-394-4800; clermontperformingarts.com. Into the Woods One of Sondheim’s most popular works, this is a creative, immersive, fully staged show in an intimate space. Fridays, Saturdays, 7:30-10 pm, Sundays, 3-5:30 pm and Monday 7:30-10 pm; Central Christian Church, 250 W. Ivanhoe Blvd.; $15-$18; 407-937-1800; cfcarts.com.

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Joe’s NYC Bar A unique, interactive and improvisational theater experience that transports the audience to a bar in Brooklyn, New York. Sunday, 3 pm; St. Matthew’s Tavern, 1300 N. Mills Ave.; $17-$25; wanzie.com. Julian Bond: Music, Magic, Tricks and Treats A spooky theatrical potpourri of original music, parody songs and haunting magical illusions. Friday-Saturday, 7:30 pm; Footlight Theatre, The Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; $25-$30; 407-425-7571; wanzie.com. La Cage aux Folles Amiddleaged gay couple agree to hide their relationship when their son returns home with his fiancée’s ultra-conservative parents. Thursdays-Saturdays, 8 pm, and Sundays, 2 pm; Garden Theatre, 160 W. Plant St., Winter Garden; $25-$33; 407-8774736; gardentheatre.org.

Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St.; $15-$60; 407-4471700 ext.1; orlandoshakes.org. One Man Star Wars Trilogy Canadian actor Charles Ross performs a one-man show that covers the entire Star Wars trilogy. Opens Tuesday, 7:30 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $35-$55; drphillipscenter.org. Phantasmagoria VI: The Darkness Returns A tapestry of macabre and whimsical horror. Fridays-Sundays, 8 pm; Mandell Theater, Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St.; $15-$35; 407-447-1700; phantasmagoriaorlando.com. Playwrights’ Round Table Workshop All writers are welcome to bring any piece they’re working on, from a ten minute short to a full length work. Sunday, 1 pm; Sleuths Mystery Dinner Theater, 8267 International Drive; free; 407-363-1985; theprt.com.

The Marvelous Wonderettes Musical that takes place at a 1958 high school prom. Wednesday-Thursday, 2 pm, Friday, 7:30 pm, Saturday, 2 pm; Winter Park Playhouse, 711-C Orange Ave., Winter Park; $30-$40; 407-645-0145; winterparkplayhouse.org.

Realms of the Untold This macabre short-play anthology, in the style of Tales from the Crypt, is made up of six dark stories. Thursday-Saturday, 7 pm; The Venue, 511 Virginia Drive; $15; 407-412-6895; thevenueorlando.com.

Monty Python’s Spamalot This saucy musical parody tells the legendary tale of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Wednesday-Friday, 7:30 pm, Saturday, 2 & 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; Lowndes

Television’s Greatest Hits: A Musical Revue This nostalgic trip down memory lane features 21 entertainers performing over 50 of your favorite television theme songs. Friday-Saturday, 8 pm and


tHe week

Sunday, 3 pm; Breakthrough Theatre of Winter Park, 421 W Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park; $20; 407-920-4034; breakthroughtheatre.com. Wait Until Dark Blind and alone, Susy is trapped between murderous competing drug smugglers. Thursday-Saturday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2:30 pm; Athens Theatre, 124 N. Florida Ave., DeLand; $18-$23; 386736-1500; athensdeland.com. You Can’t Take It With You A story of young love within a delightfully eccentric family. Fridays-Saturdays, 7:30 pm, Sundays, 2:30 pm, Saturday 2:30 pm, Mondays, 7:30 pm; Mad Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St.; $18-$38; 407-2978788; madcowtheatre.com.

Cristela Alonzo Cristela has appeared on Conan, Last Comic Standing and Live at Gotham. Friday, 6:30 & 9:45 pm, Saturday 6 & 9:45 pm, Sunday, 6 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $20; 407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com. Early Show A more experimental show featuring improvised musicals and more extended formats based on audience suggestions. Saturdays, 11:30 pm; SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $7-$10; 407-6480001; sakcomedylab.com. Jeff Jones, Clay Robertson Wednesday, 7 pm; Bonkerz Comedy Club, 9700 International Drive; $10; 407996-9700; bonkerzcomedy.com. Kevin White, Will Hagaman Friday, 7 pm; Bonkerz Comedy Club, 1618 N. Mills Ave.; $10; 407-930-6568; bonkerzcomedy.com.

King of the Hill Seven professional ensemble members compete in a series of improv scenes and games. Saturdays, 9:30 pm; SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $12-$15; 407648-0001; sakcomedylab.com. Lavell Crawford Best known as Huell from Breaking Bad. Sunday, 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $23; 407-351-5483; hardrock.com/orlando. Terry T. Harris, Akeem Woods As seen on Comic View. Oct. 9-10, 7:30 pm; Bonkerz Comedy Club, 10749 E. Colonial Drive; $10; 407-629-2665; bonkerzcomedy.com.

danCE Bolshoi Ballet: Giselle The young peasant girl Giselle dies when she learns that the man she loves, Albrecht, has betrayed her. Against her own will, she joins the wilis, vengeful spirits, who now turn against Albrecht and cOnTInued On page 59

PHOTO BY KRISTIN DONNELLY

[MUSIC] Reformed Whores see page 55

You Still Can’t Reading Reading of a sequel to You Can’t Take It With You, set in the New York City brownstone where the Sycamores lived so riotously in the 1930s. Sunday, 7 pm; Mad Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St.; free; 407-2978788; madcowtheatre.com.

ComEdy

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[MUSIC] Mushroomhead see page 51

cOnTInued FrOM page 57

condemn him to dance until he dies of exhaustion. Sunday, 12:55 pm; multiple locations; $18; fathomevents.com. Emerald City Cabaret Presents: Nightmare Emerald City Burlesque brings the bizarre, eclectic and sometimes comical to this show, which invites the audience to take a step into the subconscious as the dancers perform renditions of their own nightmares. Friday, 9:30 pm; The Venue, 511 Virginia Drive; $15-$20; 407-412-6895; thevenueorlando.com. The Les Vixens Big Ass Burlesque Show A postmodern neo-burlesque experience featuring the best in rock & roll burlesque. Sunday, 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$20; 407-246-1419; thesocial.org.

arT openings/events Capen-Showalter House Opening An open house to celebrate the re-opening of the Capen-Showalter House. Sunday, 1 pm; Albin Polasek Museum and Sculpture Gardens, 633 Osceola Ave., Winter Park; 407-647-6294. Grand Opening After-Hour Henao Center’s Grand Opening After-Hour with music by DJ Dennis Mero. Saturday, 10:30 pm; Henao

Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $5; 407272-0317; henaocenter.com. Halloween Art Show Annual group show of Halloweenand fall-inspired art. Opens Wednesday, 7 pm, through Oct. 31; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free; 407-362-1864; dandelioncommunitea.com. Josh Garrick’s Timeless Event benefits Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central Florida. Saturday, 7-10 pm; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $50; 407-272-0317; henaocenter.com. Keep Her Safe The UCF Art Gallery presents an evening of awareness to stop campus sexual assault. Thursday, 7 pm; UCF Art Gallery, 12400 Aquarius Agora Drive; free; 407-823-3161. Luisa Basnuevo: Paintings Paintings by Cuban-born artist Luisa Basnuevo. Opens Friday, 6:30-8:30 pm, through Nov. 13; Anita S. Wooten Gallery, 701 N. Econlockhatchee Trail; free; 407-582-2298; valenciacollege.edu. Public Dedication of Richard Hall Jr. Lifecast The unveiling of a public art sculpture of Tuskegee Airman Richard Hall Jr. Friday, 5 pm; Hannibal Square Heritage Center, 642 W. New England Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-539-2680.

Return of the Dead Art inspired by The Walking Dead and all things dead. Opens Saturday, 8 pm, through Nov. 20; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060. Winter Park Autumn Art Festival Saturday-Sunday; Central Park, Winter Park, North Park Avenue and West Morse Boulevard, Winter Park; free; 407-644-8281; autumnartfestival.org.

Continuing tHis week Art Legends of Orange County: The Art of Hal McIntosh Through Nov. 29; Albin Polasek Museum and Sculpture Gardens, 633 Osceola Ave., Winter Park; $5; 407-647-6294; polasek.org. Assembled New artwork by Kimberly Mathis. Through Nov. 2; Stardust Doubleleg Gallery, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-408-4953. Beauty A group art show promoting a new vision of beauty. Through Oct. 21; Thai Purple Orchid Café and Grocery, 9318 E. Colonial Drive; free; 407-203-3891; thaipurpleorchidcafe.com. Best of DTO Orlandoans submit snapshots of their favorite things about downtown. Through Sunday; CityArts Factory, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-6487060; orlandoslice.com. cOnTInued On page 60

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[FILM] Scanners see page 47

cOnTInued FrOM page 59

Celebrating 50 Years: Maitland Civic Center Through Jan. 3, 2016; Art & History Museums - Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; $3; 407-5392181; artandhistory.org. Celebrating A&H’s Artist-inResidence Program See the work of three noted artists who once called MAC home, Milton Avery, Elysia Mann and Marydorsey Wanless. Through Nov. 8; Art & History Museums - Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; $3; 407-5392181; artandhistory.org. Couture Culture An exhibit which at once idealizes and deconstructs the notion of fashion and beauty. Through Nov. 7; Snap Space, 1013 E. Colonial Drive; free; snaporlando.com. Enduring Documents: Selected Photographs From the Permanent Collection Through Jan. 3, 2016; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-6462526; cfam.rollins.edu. esherick to NAKASHIMA Work that blurs the boundaries between art, sculpture and furniture. Tuesdays-Sundays, 10 am-5 pm; Modernism Museum Mount Dora, 145 E. Fourth Ave., Mount Dora; $8; 352-385-0034; modernismmuseum.org. Fashionable Portraits in Europe Through Jan. 3, 2016; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, 60

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Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu. Gallery Talks Wednesday, 1:30-2 pm; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; price of admission; 321363-4406; omart.org. Happy Hour Tour of the Alfond Inn Wednesday, 5:30 pm; The Alfond Inn, 300 E. New England Ave., Winter Park; free; 407998-8090; cfam.rollins.edu. Harold Garde: From MidCentury to This Century Through Jan. 3, 2016; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $8; 407896-4231; omart.org. Introducing Zora Neale Hurston Books by and about Hurston, fine art posters, Zora! Festivalrelated materials and memorabilia from the release of the Zora Neale Hurston stamp. Through Jan. 15, 2016; Zora Neale Hurston National Museum of Fine Arts, 227 E. Kennedy Blvd., Eatonville; donations accepted; 407-6473307; preserveeatonville.org. Jess T. Dugan: Every Breath We Drew Photographic portraits exploring gender, sexuality and identity. Through Jan. 3, 2016; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu. Lydia Lunch: So Real It Hurts Surveys the sweep of Lunch’s career from her days as a teenage runaway and instigator

of No Wave to the present. Through Oct. 9; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; avalongallery.org. Metamodern Using the modern movement’s vocabulary to question content of style and its relationship in history. Through Dec. 6; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $8; 407-896-4231; omart.org. Mid-Florida Quiltmakers: Commemorations and Connections Through Jan. 18, 2016; Hannibal Square Heritage Center, 642 W. New England Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-539-2680; crealde.org. Saltimbanques A new collection of works by Chad Pollpeter. Through Sunday; Redefine Gallery, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060; redefinegallery.com. The Sum of Many Parts: Quiltmakers in Contemporary America Through Jan. 18, 2016; Crealde School of Art, 600 St. Andrews Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-671-1886; crealde.org. Surfaces Collaborative works from Angela Brooks and Gabriel Collazo.Through Nov. 4; The White Wall Gallery, 999 Douglas Ave. #2221, Altamonte Springs; free; 407682-5343; thewhitewall.com. Witness: Picturing Social Justice This exhibit presents the work of three very different cOnTInued On page 62


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visual artists: Sue Thompson, Keith Kovach and Rama Masri Zada. Through Friday; UCF Art Gallery, 12400 Aquarius Agora Drive; free; 407-8233161; arts.cah.ucf.edu.

EvEnTs 2nd Annual Orlando Couples Cook-Off Semi-Finals No. 1 Fast-paced, hands-on cooking competition designed to give couples the opportunity to test their skills for the chance to win prizes. Friday, 6:30-9:30 pm; Aggressive Appliances, 617 Mercy Drive; $150 per couple; 407-719-5190; orlandodatenightguide.com. Avalon Oktoberfest A beer garden for the adults, root beer garden for the kiddies, German food, music and a street festival. Saturday, 6 pm; Avalon Park, 3702 Avalon Park East Blvd.; free; eventsatavalonpark.com. Big Gay Brunch The party before the parade! In conjunction with Come Out with Pride

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2015, The Big Gay Brunch feature an amazing brunch spread from Tim Webber Events, bottomless mimosas and a Bloody Mary bar, plus DJs and live performances. Saturday, 11 am; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $35-$40; 407704-6261; orlandoweekly.com.

Come Out With Pride H20 DJ Dee Martello and DJ Edil Hernandez spin while you dance and watch the fireworks over Lake Eola in the evening. Saturday, 5 pm; Lake Eola Park, East Central Boulevard and North Eola Drive; $10; comeoutwithpride.com.

Come Out With Pride Launch Party Celebrate the launch of Orlando’s annual Come Out With Pride celebration with food, music, a silent auction an more. Thursday, 7 pm; The Veranda at Thornton Park, 111 N. Summerlin Ave.; free; 407-8728454; comeoutwithpride.com.

Come Out With Pride Official After-Party Celebrate Pride with the Footlight Players, DJ Brianna and a live concert. Saturday, 10 pm; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; $10-$15; 407-425-7571; parliamenthouse.com.

Come Out With Pride Dinner and Fireworks After the Come Out With Pride Parade, catch the fireworks over Lake Eola. You can check out the fireworks for free, but if you want a spot at a table, you’ll have to pay $75 or up. Saturday, 7 pm; Lake Eola Park, North Rosalind Avenue and East Washington Street; free-$200; comeoutwithpride.com.

orlando weekly ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

Come Out With Pride Parade Saturday, 4 pm; Lake Eola Park, North Rosalind Avenue and East Washington Street; free; comeoutwithpride.com. The Daily City Food Truck Bazaar - Orlando Food trucks from all over fill the south parking lot at Fashion Square. Sunday, 6-9 pm; Orlando Fashion Square, 3201 E. Colonial Drive; various menu prices; thedailycity.com.

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[EVENT] Zombietoberfest see page 63


tHe week

DRIP’s Underground Vampire Bar Performance art group DRIP creates a safe haven for vampires and their human friends. Fridays, Saturdays, 8 pm-midnight; DRIP, 8747 International Drive; $35-$79; 347-855-3747; ilovedrip.com. Epcot International Food and Wine Festival Embark on a culinary adventure celebrating 20 years of culture and cuisine. Through Nov. 16; Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321; epcot.com. Fall Garden Festival Orange County Master Gardeners’ fall garden and plant festival, with plant vendors, a garden shop, guest speakers and children’s activities. Saturday, 9 am-4 pm; Orange County Extension Office, 2350 E. Michigan St.; free; 407-254-9200. Fashion of Cocktails Bartending competition where guests and judges get to vote on their favorite cocktail. Monday, 6-9 pm; Park Social, 358 N. Park Ave., Winter Park; $10; 407-636-7020; parksocialwinterpark.com. Feast on the 50 Enjoy unlimited food and drink from caterers and restaurants around Orlando on the 50-yard line of the football field. Thursday, 5:30-8:30 pm; Orlando Citrus Bowl, 1 Citrus Bowl Place; $20-$25; 407-423-2476; floridacitrussports.com.

event featuring local designer boutiques. Friday, 11 am-2 pm; The Alfond Inn, 300 E. New England Ave., Winter Park; $100; 407646-6724; bagladiesbrunch. wishcentral.org. Pride on Church Street Enjoy live entertainment from Amy & Freddy, NYC’s Red, Hot & Funny Bob the Drag Queen, Beth Sacks, and our very own Ginger Minj & the Minx. Friday, 8 pm; Hamburger Mary’s, 110 W. Church St.; free; 321-319-0600. Serb Fest Cultural festival featuring live Serbian music, folklore mini concerts and Serbian food and dishes. Friday, 7-11 pm, Saturday, 11 am-11 pm, Sunday, 11 am-8 pm; St. Petka Serbian Orthodox Church, 1990 Lake Emma Road, Longwood; free; 407-831-7372; serb-fest.com. Taste of Altamonte Take a stroll around the lake while sampling tastes from local restaurants, including coffees, BBQ, seafood, pasta and more. Monday, 6-9 pm; Cranes Roost Park, 274 Cranes Roost Blvd., Altamonte Springs; $30-$35; 407-5718863; altamonterotary.org. Taste of Thailand Food Festival Thai cultural festival with food, cultural displays, traditional costumes and dances, and live music. Sunday, 11 am-3 pm; Wat Florida Dhammaram, 2421 Old Vineland Road, Kissimmee; $12; 407-397-9552; watflorida.com.

Growl-O-Ween The Daily City’s annual pet costume contest takes place as part of the Food Truck Bazaar. Sunday, 6-9 pm; Orlando Fashion Square, 3201 E. Colonial Drive; free; foodtruckbazaar.com.

Tasty Tuesdays Food trucks take over the parking lot behind the Milk District. Tuesdays, 6:30-10 pm; The Milk District, East Robinson Street and North Bumby Avenue; various menu prices; facebook.com/ tastytuesdaysorlando.

Hometown Harvest This fall-themed event offers free pumpkin painting for kids, a hayride, live country music and line dancing by the Winter Springs Senior Line Dancers. Saturday, 5 pm; Winter Springs Town Center, 158 Tuskawilla Road, Winter Springs; free; winterspringsfl.org.

Tic Toc Thrift, Vintage and Vinyl Market A weekly pop-up market with merchandise, fine art, performers, outdoor film screenings, lots of vintage items and a huge selection of vinyl records. Wednesdays, 3-10 pm; True Serenity, 1100 Montana St.; free; 321-4451021; apartmente.com.

Make-A-Wish Bag Ladies Brunch A premier fashion

Tinker Afternoon Spend an afternoon at Familab for

your perfect chance to get those finishing touches done on your costume. Saturday, 1 pm; Familab, 1355 Bennett Drive, Longwood; free; 407406-5946; familab.org. The Ultimate Ladies Night With Rock Hard Revue A wild ladies night party with male dancers. Friday, 10 pm; Bikkuri Sushi, 1915 E. Colonial Drive; $20-$22; 407-5011932; bikkurisushi.com. Wine & Wit: Roasting Mark NeJame Impower’s fundraiser includes live entertainment, great wine and food, exciting silent auction and a local celebrity roast. Saturday, 6 pm; Orlando Executive Airport, 400 Herndon Ave.; $150; 407215-0095; impowerfl.org. Zebra Run A 5k race to support the Zebra Coalition’s mission to provide a safe, supportive and healthy Central Florida community for youth. Saturday, 7:30 pm; Lake Eola Park, North Rosalind Avenue and East Washington Street; $20-$32; zebrayouth.org. Zombietoberfest A zombiethemed day of activities. Saturday, 6 pm; Audubon Park Garden District, East Winter Park Road and Corrine Drive; free; apgardens.com.

LEarning Deborah Lipstadt Presentation on Current Antisemitism Dr. Deborah Lipstadt speaks about the new antisemitism. Thursday, 7:30 pm; Congregation of Reform Judaism, 928 Malone Drive; $18-$36; 407-645-0444; lipstadtinorlando.com. Mummies of the World The largest collection of mummies ever assembled. ongoing; Orlando Science Center, 777 E. Princeton St.; $27; 407-514-2000; osc.org. Nerd Nite Orlando XXXII An evening of entertaining yet thought-provoking presentations – all while the audience drinks along in a casual cOnTInued On page 64

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tHe week

[THEATER] You Can’t Take It With You see page 57

cOnTInued FrOM page 63

bar atmosphere. Thursday, 7-9 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-490-2531; orlando.nerdnite.com. Orlando Remembered A showcase of items highlighting people, places, and events of Orlando’s history. ongoing; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; $12; 407-836-8500; thehistorycenter.org.

CiviCs Orlando and Winter Park Solar Co-op Meeting Learn more about the Orlando area’s first solar co-op group. Monday, 7 pm; Herndon Library, 4324 E. Colonial Drive; free. Your Rights When Interacting With Law Enforcement An informative session about the rights of community members when interacting with local law enforcement. Thursday, 6:30 pm; Hiawassee Branch Library, 7391 W. Colonial Drive; free; firedupflorida.org.

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Parcels: MFAs in Progress Readings from Jamie Poissant, Jordan Page Redmond, Sabrina Napolitano and Shauna Basques. Sunday, 7:30 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-623-3393. There Will Be Words Flash Fiction Spooktacular Eight writers have only 500 words or less to scare the hell out of you. Tuesday, 7 pm; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; therewillbewords.com. Wine & Conversation: Malvin Williams-Tyson Malvin Williams-Tyson reads from and discusses her new book, A White Man’s Woman. Thursday, 6 pm; Writer’s Block Bookstore, 124 E. Welbourne Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-385-7084; writersblockbookstore.com.

FamiLy

Echo’s Corner: Jabari Clay Unplugged (Love vs. Lust Edition) Spoken word night and afterparty. Friday, 8:30 pm; Cafe Annie, 131 N. Orange Ave.; $10-$12; 407-420-4041.

BAM! It’s a Picture Book: The Art Behind Graphic Novels Features today’s leading and best graphic artists of the illustration world. Through Nov. 1; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $8; 407-896-4231; omart.org.

Literary Death Match Four writers read their own work for seven minutes or less, and are

Fancy Nancy A musical based on the popular children’s book series. Saturday, 2 &

LiTErary

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then judged by three all-star judges. Wednesday, 8 pm; Mad Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St.; $12-$15; 407-297-8788; functionallyliterate.org.

5:30 pm; Orlando Repertory Theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; $14-$20; 407-8967365; orlandorep.com. Free Family Days Make your own crafts, get a tour and check out the museum’s open house. Sunday, noon; Mennello Museum of American Art, 900 E. Princeton St.; free; 407-2464278; mennellomuseum.com. Orphie and the Book of Heroes Adaptation of Greek mythology for children. Sunday, 2 & 5:30 pm; Orlando Repertory Theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; 407-896-7365.

sporTs B3 Runners Group Multiple distances and skill levels with beer after. Wednesdays, 6:25 pm; Bikes Beans & Bordeaux, 3022 Corrine Drive; free; 407-4271440; bikesbeansand bordeaux.com. Color Therapy Yoga Stretch, relax and awaken your visual senses in the Community Room. Sunday, 11 am; Artegon Marketplace, 5250 International Drive; donations accepted; 407-351-7718; artegonmarketplace.com. Yoga in Lake Eola Park This weekly yoga group meets either near Panera Bread or at the northwest corner by the amphitheater. Everyone is welcome. Sundays, 11 am; Lake Eola Park, 195 N. Rosalind Ave.; $5 suggested donation. n


By R o B B R E ZS N y

lulu E ig ht B a l l

By EMily FlaKE

avoid a comparable scenario. Fighting for your cause is good only if it doesn’t wreak turmoil and bewilderment. If you want to avoid an outcome in which both sides lose, you’ve got to engineer a result in which both sides win. Be a cagey compromiser.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) If I warned you not to trust anyone, I hope you would reject my simplistic fearmongering. If I suggested that you trust everyone unconditionally, I hope you would dismiss my delusional naiveté. But it’s important to acknowledge that the smart approach is far more difficult than those two extremes. You’ve got to evaluate each person and even each situation on a case-by-case basis. There may be unpredictable folks who are trustworthy some of the time, but not always. Can you be both affably openhearted and slyly discerning? It’s especially important that you do so in the next 16 days. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) As I meditated on your astrological aspects, I had an intuition that I should go to a gem fair I’d heard about. It was at an event center near my home. When I arrived, I was dazzled to find a vast spread of minerals, fossils, gemstones and beads. Within a few minutes, two stones had commanded my attention, as if they’d reached out to me telepathically: chrysoprase, a green gemstone and petrified wood, a mineralized fossil streaked with earth tones. The explanatory note next to the chrysoprase said that if you keep this gem close to you, it “helps make conscious what has been unconscious.” Ownership of the petrified wood was described as conferring “the power to remove obstacles.” I knew these were the exact oracles you needed. I bought both stones, took them home and put them on an altar dedicated to your success in the coming weeks. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) George R. R. Martin has written a series of fantasy novels collectively called A Song of Ice and Fire. They have sold 60 million copies and been adapted for the TV series Game of Thrones. Martin says the inspiration for his master work originated with the pet turtles he owned as a kid. The creatures lived in a toy castle in his bedroom, and he pretended they were knights and kings and other royal characters. “I made up stories about how they killed each other and betrayed each other and fought for the kingdom,” he has testified. I think the next seven months will be a perfect time for you to make a comparable leap. What’s your version of Martin’s turtles? And what valuable asset can you turn it into?

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) We all go through phases when we are tempted to believe in the factuality of every hostile, judgmental and random thought that our monkey mind generates. I am not predicting that this is such a time for you. But I do want to ask you to be extra skeptical toward your monkey mind’s fabrications. Right now it’s especially important that you think as coolly and objectively as possible. You can’t afford to be duped by anyone’s crazy talk, including your own. Be extra vigilant in your quest for the raw truth. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do you know about the ancient Greek general Pyrrhus? At the Battle of Asculum in 279 BCE, his army technically defeated Roman forces, but his casualties were so substantial that he ultimately lost the war. You can and you must

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Galway Kinnell’s poem “Middle of the Way” is about his solo trek through the snow on Oregon’s Mount Gauldy. As he wanders in the wilderness, he remembers an important truth about himself: “I love the day, the sun … But I know [that] half my life belongs to the wild darkness.” According to my reading of the astrological omens, now is a good time for you, too, to refresh your awe and reverence for the wild darkness – and to recall that half your life belongs to it. Doing so will bring you another experience Kinnell describes: “an inexplicable sense of joy, as if some happy news had been transmitted to me directly, bypassing the brain.” SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) The last time I walked into a McDonald’s and ordered a meal was 1984. Nothing that the restaurant chain serves up is appealing to my taste or morality. I do admire its adaptability, however. In cow-loving India, McDonald’s only serves vegetarian fare that includes deep-fried cheese and potato patties. In Israel, kosher McFalafels are available. Mexicans order their McMuffins with refried beans and pico de gallo. At a McDonald’s in Singapore, you can order McRice burgers. This is the type of approach I advise for you right now. Adjust your offerings for your audience.

Orange County Animal Services has the perfect pooch for you. Meet Sugar (animal Id: a245433)! She’s a 7-year-old dog who loves attention and treats. Sugar cannot get enough time outside enjoying the Florida sunshine. She knows how to walk on a leash, sit on command and she gets along with other dogs. During the month of October all dog adoption fees are waived when the microchip is registered onsite for $9.95. Having an up-to-date, registered microchip is the best way to reunite with your pet if they are ever lost. If you’d like to microchip your personal dog or cat, you can do so in the clinic for $15, Monday through Friday from 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. orange County animal Services is located at 2769 Conroy road. Visit ocnetpets.com for more information.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You have been flirting with your “alone at the top” reveries. I won’t be surprised if one night you have a dream of riding on a Ferris wheel that malfunctions, leaving you stranded at the highest point. What’s going on? Here’s what I suspect: In one sense you are zesty and farseeing. Your competence and confidence are waxing. At the same time, you may be out of touch with what’s going on at ground level. Your connection to the depths is not as intimate as your relationship with the heights. The moral of the story might be to get in closer contact with your roots. Or be more attentive to your support system. Or buy new shoes and underwear. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) I haven’t planted a garden for years. My workload is too intense to devote enough time to that pleasure. So eight weeks ago I was surprised when a renegade sunflower began blooming in the dirt next to my porch. How did the seed get there? Via the wind? A passing bird that dropped a potential meal? The gorgeous interloper eventually grew to a height of four feet and produced a boisterous yellow flower head. Every day I muttered a prayer of thanks for its guerrilla blessing. I predict a comparable phenomenon for you in the coming days. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) The coming days will be a favorable time to dig up what has been buried. You can, if you choose, discover hidden agendas, expose deceptions, see beneath the masks, and dissolve delusions. But it’s my duty to ask you this: Is that really something you want to do? It would be fun and sexy to liberate so much trapped emotion and suppressed energy, but it could also stir up a mind-bending ruckus that propels you on a healing quest. I hope you decide to go for the gusto, but I’ll understand if you prefer to play it safe.

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photo by pawsitive shelter photography

CANCER (June 21-July 22) The editors of the Urban Dictionary provide a unique definition of the word “outside.” They say it’s a vast, uncomfortable place that surrounds your home. It has no ceiling or walls or carpets, and contains annoying insects and random loud noises. There’s a big yellow ball in the sky that’s always moving around and changing the temperature in inconvenient ways. Even worse, the “outside” is filled with strange people that are constantly doing deranged and confusing things. Does this description match your current sense of what “outside” means, Cancerian? If so, that’s OK. For now, enjoy the hell out of being inside.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) If I could give you a birthday present, it would be a map to your future treasure. Do you know which treasure I’m referring to? Think about it as you fall asleep on the next eight nights. I’m sorry I can’t simply provide you with the instructions you’d need to locate it. The cosmic powers tell me you have not yet earned that right. The second-best gift I can offer, then, will be clues about how to earn it. Clue #1. Meditate on the differences between what your ego wants and what your soul needs. #2. Ask yourself, “What is the most unripe part of me?” and then devise a plan to ripen it. #3. Invite your deep mind to give you insights you haven’t been brave enough to work with until now. #4. Take one mediumsized bold action every day.


B Y D A N S AVA G E I’m a gay man who is ready to start cheating on my boyfriend. We’ve had a wonderful 3.5-year-long relationship full of respect, affection, support and fun. I love everything about our relationship, and our sex life was great … until he moved in eight months into the relationship. At that point, he lost all interest. I’ve tried everything: asking what I can do differently, being more aggressive, being more passive, suggesting couples therapy, getting angry, crying and breaking up twice. When I bring up an open relationship, he just goes quiet. I’ve moved past most of the anger, frustration, hurt, embarrassment and sadness. But I won’t accept a life of celibacy. I would like to get some discreet play on the side. I don’t want to get caught – but how should the conversation go if (when) I do? I’m leaning toward something like this: “I’m sorry it came to this and I know we agreed on monogamy, and I gave you monogamy for 3.5 years, but part of agreeing to monogamy is the implicit promise to meet your partner’s sexual needs. Everything else about our relationship is wonderful, but we couldn’t fix this one thing, so instead of continuing to push the issue, this is what I decided to do.” Good enough? Can’t Help Exploring Another Tush

The speech you’re planning to give after you get caught is lovely, CHEAT, but you should give it before you get caught. Tell your boyfriend you love him and that you have no desire to leave him. But while your relationship is wonderful in many ways, it’s not sexual in any way. And while you’ll settle for a companionate relationship, you’re not willing to settle for a sexless existence. Rather than being threatened by your occasional, discreet and safe sexual adventures, your boyfriend should be grateful for them. Because those sexual adventures, and your boyfriend’s acceptance of them, will make it possible for you to stay together. Hopefully he’ll see that the men you’ll be fucking on the side aren’t a threat to your relationship but its salvation. If your boyfriend can’t see that, if he insists that your relationship remain monogamous and sexless (wouldn’t that technically mean he’s the only person you don’t have sex with?), give breaking up another try. The third time might be the charm. I’m a woman in a hetero marriage. My husband and I enjoy skimming the Craigslist “casual encounters” section. We recently stumbled on an ad posted by a male friend. The ad was soliciting gay mutual BJ/HJ, with the stipulation that the first one to come (the loser?) gets fucked in the ass by the other (the winner?). Other than the concept of winners and losers during sex, I’ve got no issues. The thing that gnaws at my conscience is this: Our friend is a young guy, bi-curious and impulsive. I worry about our friend’s risky behavior. Do I say something? I care about this guy, but I don’t want to come off as “mommy” or “creepy.” Dude’s Extremely Risky Plan Elevates Stress

My first impulse was to tell you to mind your own business because you don’t actually know if your friend is taking foolish risks. He could be using condoms, taking Truvada and carefully vetting his play partners. But if I spotted a friend’s

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dick on Craigslist in an ad that left me the least bit concerned for his safety, I would say something. I don’t mind coming off as “mommy,” and if looking out for your friends is “creepy,” then I’m a creep. I’d go with something like this: “I spotted your ad – and your cock – on CL. What you’re looking for sounds hot. But I hope you’re being safe: using condoms, being choosy, taking Truvada. And speaking from experience, getting fucked right after you come sounds sexy in theory, but it’s not much fun in reality. So I hope you’re taking a refractory-period-length break – maybe for ice cream? – before the loser gets fucked.” I’m a gay man in my late 20s, and I can’t get fucked. I have tried to train my ass, but the largest thing I can place inside remains a small butt plug. If I try anything bigger, the pain is unbearable. I’ve always been a very anxious person, and it’s clear my anxiety goes right to that area. Sometimes, after trying to place something larger inside me (using tons of lube, of course), I will get a hemorrhoid. Since those are horrible, I think my mind has started to associate any type of anal play with getting hemorrhoids. The problem is that I feel like I’m a bottom. Yes, I will top guys, and I don’t mind it, but I find that the men to whom I’m most attracted want to fuck me, which is something I would like. I feel like my relationships/hookups are all negatively affected by my inability to get fucked. Determined Efforts Fully Enrage Anal Tissues

“Anxiety and fear can definitely make those muscles tighten up. And unfortunately, worrying about pain during sex makes it worse,” says Charlie Glickman, sexuality educator and author of The Ultimate Guide to Prostate Pleasure (makesexeasy.com). “His hemorrhoids are probably caused by the anus squeezing really hard and trapping blood in the arteries inside the anus.” So what can you do to alleviate your anxiety, fear and squeezing? “The first thing for him to do is use a salve on the skin around and inside the anus,” says Glickman. “Apply it after washing, and it doesn’t take much. It’s like putting lip balm on dry lips. Cocoa butter or coconut oil work well. I also like the golden seal and myrrh formula by Country Comfort. Apply it twice a day.” Give those balms some time to work before you start exploring again. Then breathe deeply, take it slow and play with your cock. “Arousal helps,” says Glickman, “so he should be sure to include cock pleasure before going near his anus. It’ll also help if he explores external anal massage without going inside. That can help his body unwind the tension and let go of the flinch response. … Look for the anal massage how-to videos on eroticmassage.com.” Enjoy a few dozen orgasms with your ass in play but not the focus and you’ll begin to associate anal stimulation with pleasure and victory, not pain and hemorrhoids. Then you can give penetration another go: taking time to warm up, using lots of lube, pivoting to something else if it’s too painful. On the Lovecast: Fox News on transgender issues. Fair and unbiased? Listen at savagelovecast.com.

mail@savagelove.net


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Legal/Public Notices NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. – PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON OCTOBER 23RD, 2015 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED. 900 S. KIRKMAN ROAD, ORLANDO, FL 32811 – AT 8:00 AM: 1102 – D. AUSTIN, 1205 – J WHITE, 1407 – H. TAYLOR, 1415 – B. DINKINS, 1417 – M. HANES, 1511 – D. ROBINSON, 1605 - KAIROS PRISON MINISTRIES, 1605 – L. GRIFFITH, 1616 – G. RICHARDS, 2112 – J. CHOPSKI, 2118 – R. THOMPSON, 2329 – Y. JOSEPH, 2411 – S. FARMER, 2419 – T. SLOAN, 2507 – A. COOPER, 2512 – N. MOURA, 2608 – D. DURIEUX, 2709A – R. KENDRICK, 3107 – J. MENDEZ, 3110 – F. FLOWERS, 3117 – R. MCCLOUD, 3204 – J. MATTHEWS, 3308 – K. LOFTIN, 3408 – M. DALTON, 3411 – J. ERWIN, 3514 – E. CALIXTE, 3531 – V. MOORE, 4105 – T. CADE, 4121 – E. SLOAN, 4125 – J. GAGLIO, 4314 – J. ADAMS, 4409 – R. RUISE, 4415 – T. COUNCIL, 4605 – S. BUTLER, 5102 – P. KONSTANTINE, 5105 – T. YAMBO, 5109 – K. ELIZZA, 5111 – L. NAPOLEON, 5117 – A. SADRACK, 7117 – L. MOSBY, 7120 – L. TRUJILLO, 8105 – G. DILONE, 5602 RALEIGH ST – ORLANDO, FL 32811- AT 8:10 AM: 0028 – C.TAFUNA, 0041 – H. PRYOR, 0048 – O.MCFARLENE, 0058 – S.DORZIL, 0068 – R.ALEXANDER, 0069 – E. GRAY, 0070 – C.COOMBS, 0082 – J. BROWN, 0088 – B. THOMAS, 0090 –W. RUCKER, 0120 – O.LAWRENCE, 0128 –L. SEE-TEITELBAUM, 0130 – C. BROWN, 0139 – M.JOSEPH, 0169 – C.SIMMONS, 0172 – S.EDWARDS, 0182 – M. RIVERA CORIANO, 0191 – R.CARSON, 0222 – D.GENTRY, 0228 – E.WONG, 0233 – A.YOUNG, 0249 – M. VARGAS, 0255 – V.SILVA, 0273 – C.ROSS, 0301 – N.CHAVIS, 0324 – S. DAVIDON, 0344 – J.CHAPMAN, 0393 – P.MCWHORTER, 0397 – T.BARTO, 0403 – D.SYLVESTER, 0406 - U. S. JESCO, 0406 – S.OLVERA, 0418 – M.BLACKWELL, 0419 – E.MILLS, 0432 – P.DIEUJUSTE, 0436 – K.WILLIAMS, 0438 – J. DOS SANTOS, 0460 – J. MC CRIMMON, 0476 – M.DAUGHTRY, 0494 – C.TIBBETTS, 0529 – J.MCNANY, 0537 – L.MARTINEZ 5401 L.B. MCLEOD RD – ORLANDO, FL – 32811 – AT 8:20 AM: 1104 – D.SHINE, 1115 –D. JONES, 1136 - EMERALD FOREST HOMEOWNER ASSOCIATION, 1136 – A. BOBB, 1151 – C.TURNER, 1175 – M.CALDERON, 2265 – D.HILTONEN, 2266 – K.HAIR, 2284 – R. MCKNIGHT, 2286 –D. HAYES, 2290 –T. AWOLARU, 2321 –A. FOULADGAR, 2338 – M.SMITH, 2342 – A.MARC 4508 S. VINELAND RD – ORLANDO, FL 32811 – AT 8:30 AM: 0033 – R.ROSARIO, 0112 –J. WALDEN, 0302 – J.WALDEN, 0313 – J.WALDEN, 0504 – J.WALDEN, 0611 – A.ENGRAM, 0704 – T. ALSTON, 0714 – C. ROSS, 0814 – C.FRANCIS, 0821 – J.HUNTER, 837 – D.GIL, 0848 – D.BRABEC, 0903 – K.MCCREE,

0922 – L.GOODE, 0923 –C. BROWN, 1021 –K. MORRIS, 1030 – T.ENGRAM, 1031 –T. BURNS, 1037 – L.HARRIS, 1106 –K. COSTA, 1109 - H & H CLEANING SERVICES INC, 1109 –H.HARSHMAN, 1133 – E.NORTON, 1135 – C.KELLY, 1224 – T.PETERSON, 1231 – J.WILSON, 1325 –S. SIMS 5900 LAKE HURST DR – ORLANDO, FL 32819 – 8:40 AM: A016 – D.BUTTS, A018 – K. FREEMAN, C177 –J. CAVANZO, C181 – N.HOWARD JR, C189 –T. BRYAN, D095 - KEVIN STEYER, MCFADDENS IRISH PUB ORLANDOIRISH LLC, D095 – K.STEYER, D097 - GAP INC.OUTLEET, D097 – S. FOUNTAIN, D112 –R. ELLIS, D116 – J. OQUENDO, D156 –A. ROJO, D158 –B. RIVERA, D173 – A. PRESTON, D174 – S. THOMAS, E223 – E. HEDBLOM, E246 – B.BUCHANAN, E250 – G.GARCIA, H068 – L.MOSS 1800 TEN POINT LN – ORLANDO, FL 32837 – 8:50 AM: 0121 – C.TORRES, 0156 – D.MIRANDA, 0208 – S.ROGERS, 0284 – J.ROJAS, 1012 – M.COIRA COLON, 1034 – E.MARTIN, 1051 – T.VICARUDDIN, 1061 – L.VILLEGAS, 1063 – L.VILLEGAS, 1067 – M. SAYAGO, 2023 –T. DEJESUS, 2030 – A. CHOUKAIRE, 2049 – R.PEREZ VELIZ, 2053 – T. OVIEDO, 2056 – S.PIPER, 2075 – J. SALDARRIAGA, 3011 – M.BRADFORD, 3030 – D. ROSADO, 4004 – N. DOKES, 5013 – K. LOUIS NOEL, 5020 – C.CENTURION, 6002 – L. MORGAN, 7092 – L. MADAUS, 7094 – U. FIGUEROA, 7108 – E. SANTOS SR, 7125 –N. CRUZ PADILLA 2783 N. JOHN YOUNG PKWY – KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – 9:00 AM: 1012 – J. KISSOON, 1019 – K.ROGERS, 1053 –C. SKENES, 11005 – M. HYSON, 11007 –A. RIVERA, 11009 – D.BURROWES, 11023 – M.DAVIS, 1107 – M.METELLUS, 1110 – G.ANDERSON, 11214 –J. HEREDIA, 1211 – A.SANTIAGO RIVERA, 12112 – R.WHITE, 12116 – D. RIVERA ROUSS, 12217 – E.VELOZ, 12404 – A.TORRES, 201 – M.BROWN, 307 – A.PHILLIPS, 308 – M. KNIGHT, 463 – B.ALEXANDER, 506 – R. RAMJIT, 508 - S.W.A.T TRAINING ACADEMY, 508 – J. RODRIGUEZ, 594 – F.MORA-LARGACHA, 712 –I. PEREZ 951 S. JOHN YOUNG PKWY – KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – 9:10 AM: 1006 – K.GROSSETT TATE, 1027 –R. KING, 1106 –S. BOOTHE, 1108 – S. WEED-SANDERS, 1130 – J. STRIPPOLI, 1219 – A.TORRES, 1233 – E.FRANCIS, 1301 – W.SHOCKLEY, 1309 – G.SERRANO, 1311 –L. SANTOS, 1426 – E.PEREZ, 1519 – S.CALLAGHAN, 1524 - IP Freely LLC, 1524 - M, FREDERIKSEN, 1540 – F.BURGOS, 1543 – J.JAIME, 1601 – A. SANTIAGO, 1625 – K.THORNTON, 1700 – F. DIAZ, 1708 – G.CRUZ, 1712 – G.JOHNS, 1714 – J.EUSTACE, 1801 –L. DEL VALLE, 1808 – D.DIAZ, 2021 –J. LEBRON, 2044 – N.ORTIZ, 2069 – M.VIVALDI, 2116 – R.JEWELL, 2140 – M.COLIN FELIX WILLIAMS, 2165 – S. MCKENZIE, 2223 – T.BLAKE, 2251 – D.PEREZ, 2303 – N.CHIN, 2355 – H.PENDELTON, 2400 – P.RODRIGUEZ, 2404 – B.PEREZ 227 SIMPSON RD - KISSIMMEE, FL 34744 – 9:20 AM: 040 – L.ORTIZ, 069 – D.SILVA, 074 – D.IRIZARRY HERNANDEZ, 078 – A.ORTIZ, 081 – C.GONZALEZ, 087 – D.LOIZ ALICEA, 102 – M.RODRIGUEZ GONZALEZ, 222 – E.PRATTS, 236 – G.KOROUREK, 269 – L.BARRETO, 322 – Y.DAVILA, 354 –N. LEGGETT, 420 – G.GOTAY QUINTANA, 445 – M.VASQUEZ, 508 – C.DENISAR, 527 – E.JOHNSON, 531 –S. NELSON, 541 – J.MONTALVO, 546 – M.MUHAMMAD, 566 – M.ORTIZ, 568 – S.MCSWEENEY, 702 – R.FEEZER SCOTT, 707 – S.GOMEZ, 717 – J.QUINONES, 718 –K. LEE, 721 – A.WATSON, 848 – D.DIAZ, 850 –Y. REYES, 863 – M.RIVERA, 867 – S.LABEREE, 872 – J.QUINONES, 881 – L.WILLIAMS, 882 – H.HIGGS, 892 – C. FULLWOOD, RV13 – A.MOHAMUD 1051 BUENAVENTURA BLVD – KISSIMMEE, FL 34743 – 9:30 AM: 01115 – N.ARROYO, 01116 – R. NARVAEZ, 01127 – T.VANDEVER, 01201 –C. LUGO RIVERA, 02108 – L.FELICIANO, 02118 – S.KUYAVA, 02222 – E.VALENTIN, 02423 – M.OTTUSO, 02610 – M.ABRIL, 03108 – A.AYALA, 03110 – M.ZURITA, 04122 – J.MALDONADO, 04143 –C. RODRIGUEZ, 04149 –L.PENA, 04202 – J.PEREZ, 04410 –J. RUBIO,04525 – A.COTTO, 04525 - RAISING KNOWLEDGE ACADEMY, 05123 - MITCHELL, ANTHONY, 05126 – M.BROWN, 05142 –M. MORA, 05162 – J.DIAZ, 05223 – A.TORRES, 05230 –J. TROCHE, 05259 – E.CARABALLO CRUZ, 05310 –N. ROSERO, 05342 – B.WELLS, 21061 – J.HARDY, 21621 –G. RAMIREZ,

PUBLIC CASH AUCTION Winter Park iStorage–3400 Forsyth Rd Winter Park Florida 32792 on Monday October 19th 2015 at 4:00PM, will auction per FL.ST. 83.806. The following units are delinquent in rent and fees: Arthur Egan- Household items Bert Egan- Household items Jose Cuevas- Clothes-household items Seda Limon- Boxes

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: October 29thth, 2015 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 9:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1101 Marshall Farms Rd, Ocoee 34761 (407) 8770191 #D277-Vincent Derilien-scrap metal #248-Charles Parris lll-House Hold #H446Francesco Carnevale-Office Furniture and Files #C193-Christopher Miller-Household Items #E298-Cynthia Rossi-Household items #E335-Jacqueline Salter-Household Items #A051-Enu Nwamu-boxes and clothes #F369-Tonisha Lewis-Household #C205 Marc Whaley-Household items #A006-Timothy McCandless- pads and household #B090-Angel Byer-Household items #D265-John Seise-Clothing and tools #B077-Deborah Wright-Furniture and Appliance #C207-Shauna Morrison-Storing queen bed, 2 night stands, and dresser #E331-Deborah Wright-3 bedroom house #G425-Deborah Wright-Household Goods #A013-Deborah Wright-Household Goods #G408-Brittany Thames-household items #A007-Gary Landry-Household #C224Juan Penaloza-Household Goods #B101Daniel Estrada-Clothes and baby furniture. 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5603 Metrowest Blvd. Orlando, Fl. 32811 (407) 445-0867 #08025 Gregory Davis hsehold/personal, #06071 Diana Morris hsehold goods, #05085 Steve Pietrofesa Audio Studio Eqpt, #06074 Kathryne Hodges sofas, boxes etc, #05019 Delroy Steele hsehold goods,#06093 QuickWarp LLC/Freddy Suarez boxes, bags,tools,#02140 Maryann Jones boxes, #01053 Andy Calandrino hsehold goods, ##02173 Monica Murray hsehold goods, #02103 Dana Mahadeo hsehold goods, #03022 Betuna Laplace hsehold goods, #06103 Christine Kynett hsehold/personal items etc, #03014 Samantha Loreus hsehold furniture,,items,,etc, #05036 Brittne Wynn washer & dryer, #02046 Brian Siganoff boxes, #02265 Nekeia White hsehold goods, #07035 Steven Madaus hsehold items, #01027 Debbie Soares hsehold furniture, items etc, #02188 Darius Wright hsehold furniture, items, boxes, etc #08015 Damon Calloway big tables w/chairs, couple power wheels, 2 bar stools,etc 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5592 L. B. McLeod Rd. Orlando, Fl. 32811 (407) 445-2709 #361 Christina Anderson – household items #887 Asha Jiawan – household items #886 William Van III – Clothing and shoes #381 Jeannie Anderson – Household items #607 Lazaro Grueiro - household items #507 Steven Brooks – household items #300 Sylvia Hamilton – household items #680 Deandre Rue – household items #136 George Ojeda- household items #043 Wanda Williams- household items #673 Darren Deltwas- household items #333 Jonathan Blomquist- boxes, clothes #057 Anthony Taylor- household items #749 Allen Stone- household items #884 Nancy Palazzolo- boxes 1:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at 3501 Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL. 32839 (407)839-5518 #2116- John Bradley (Household Goods) #2012- Taira Tuck (Household Items) #3088- Rita Wooden (Furniture, Boxes)#4084- Yadira Arvelo (Furniture, Boxes, Household Goods) #2015 – Evelyn Valentine (Household Goods) #3110 – James Sellers (Household Items, Boxes, Books) #3091 – LaDeitra Rountree (Household Goods, TV, Clothes) #3056 – Shawanda Jones (Household Goods)#3032 – Daniel Jimenez (Household goods) #1008 – Edward Carpenter (Household goods) #4109 – Michelle Mcmillan (Personal goods) #1083 – Zinet Muedini (Household Goods)#4010 – Jason Scott (Furniture, Boxes) #4055 – Jason Scott (Household Goods) #2090 – Ian Mackenzie (Household Goods) #4087 – Anthony Stewart (Household Items) #2071 – Ryan Rashad (Double Dresser, Wooden mirror nightstand, TV, Stereo, Punching, bag, clothes, movies, Surround sound) #1102 – Brittani Faith Bevill (Household Items, 1 Bedroom apartment) #1101 – Eric Lamont King (Totes) #4074 – Shandel Brummitt (Household Items)#1032 – Marco Stephens (Household Items) #3155 – Shanna Harkness (2 Bedroom house no appliances extra bed) 3:00p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1420 North Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804 (407) 650-9033 #778 Rosetta Adkins-Household Goods #762 Eugenio Ma Ruffat-Household Goods #380 Shaleemah Hamilton-Household Goods #418 John

Kaufman-Furniture #804 Monica UriasHousehold Goods #715 Shalanda BrooksHousehold Goods, Electronics, Bicycles #577 Kelly Greene- Furniture 4:00p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1001 Lee Rd. Orlando. Fl. 32810 (407) 539-0527 #1137-Eric Barrett-General merchandise #2090-Jane Rost-Household #3011-Christalynn Mcelwee-Household goods #1121-Shekia Lynch-Household items #3106-William Lindemann-Furniture #1111-Samuel Vazquez-Housegold items #2099-Jason Molohon-Household goods #2070-Chanena Thorne-Furniture #3077-Antwanette Ancrum-Furniture #1139-James Carter-Household items #3063-Jasmine Rogers-Household items #2085-Matthew Teal-Household items #2031A-Baresha WilliamsClothes #4091-Darren Cochran-Clothes #1138-Brandon Philbrick-Household items #2021-Gale Hodges-Household. 10:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storagefacility located at: 610 Rinehart Rd. Lake Mary, FL 32746 (407)-333-4355 #0218 Megahee Fredrick-Household Goods #0647 Victor Fonseca-Household Goods #151 Redale Benton-Flores-Household Goods #1027 Chris Nickle-Household Goods #0866 Christa M.Ewards-Household Goods #0152 William Datig-Household Goods The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: October 28th, 2015 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 11971 Lake Underhill Rd. Orlando, Fl. 32825 (407) 380-0046 #124 Pressure King Inc. – tools, pressure washing equipment, tubs, misc. #325 Judith Shingledecker – household goods, electronics, furniture, boxes. #1015 Alfred Doherty - furniture, boxes, household items. #1112 Aldo Facchinei – furniture and household goods. 2:00p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 13125 S. John Young Pkwy. Orlando, Fl. 32837 (407) 240-0958 #1048-Florence FranklinHousehold items,#450-Dalila RheaFurniture,#977-Maria Sanchez-Household items,#935-Justino Goitia-Home items, #241-Andrew Howard-Small 2 bedroom house, #649-Casey Pasciucco-Household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 7-13, 2015

ORLANDO WEEKLY

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A4 Legal/Public Notices NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE – PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE FOLLOWING TENANTS WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH TO SATISFY RENTAL LIENS IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE FACILITY ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. CONTENTS MAY INCLUDE KITCHEN, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS, BEDDING, TOYS, GAMES, PACKED CARTONS, FURNITURE, TOOLS, TRUCKS, CARS, ETC. THERE’S NO TITLE FOR VEHICLES SOLD AT LIEN SALE. OWNERS RESERVE THE RIGHT TO BID ON UNITS. Lien Sale to be held online ending Wednesday October 28, 2015 Viewing and bidding will only be available online at www.storagetreasures.com, beginning at least 5 days prior to the scheduled sale date and time. PERSONAL MINI STORAGEFORSYTH 2875 Forsyth Rd Winter Park, Fl 32792 AT 10:00AM #558 Steve Palmer; #578Evan J Roberts; #561Rickey L. Horvath;#501David Dupuis;#486Curtis T. Walker;#481Kevin Ishmael; #446Heather D. Hyde;#438Janitra F Williams;#437Brittany A Sanchez; #409Susan M Good;#322Jolea E. Caro;#313Kelvin Guadalupe;#258Lee Roy Johnson Jr.#235Jeffrey Smart;#208Susan M. Suarez;#49Ronald A. Persaud PERSONAL MINI STORAGE COMMERCIAL (FSI) 39413959 Forsyth Rd Winter Park, Fl 32792 At 10:15AM #C18Laurence E. Fosgate Jr. MICHIGAN MINI STORAGE 200 W. MICHIGAN ST ORLANDO, FL 32806 AT 11:00AM: #0089Carlton, Janice Sistrunk; #0135Geil, Kevin PERSONAL MINI STORAGE LAKE FAIRVIEW 4252 N ORANGE BLOSSOM TR. ORLANDO FL 32804 AT 12:30PM: #33Ogilvie, Stephanie Victoria; #140Coats, Brandon Lamar L; #193Sparks, Tasheika Alecia; #196McCrary, Mario Antoine; #290Mcpherson, Millie M; #374Kinnitt Cheek, Verlinda; #483Dorner, Joyce Johnson; #626Mccune, Valerie A; #634Avila, Joaquin; #845Richards, Edward; #847Payne, Lejerian Mwaquis; #857Hodge, Rashawnda Lanette L; #912Truitt IV, Andrew Jackson; #968Whipple, Mark; #996Hall, Margaret Jean; FAIRVIEW MINI STORAGE 4211 N. N ORANGE BLOSSOM TR. ORLANDO FL 32804 AT 12:30 PM: #B25Edouard, Edesse (1995 Nissan 240SX JN1AS44D4SW011427) (2003 Nissan Xterra 5N1MD28T73C641354) (1994 Nissan 240SX JN1AS44D9SW007406) #C3Trepte, Paul PERSONAL MINI STORAGE WEST 4600 OLD WINTER GARDEN RD. ORLANDO FL 32811 AT 2:00PM: #71Gina Gelin; #75Georgette D Gardner; #86Lenet Desir; #100Miriam Diaz Cordova;#112Gary Price; #130David L Brown; #141Latoya D Bridges; #151Jemker Nesmon;#161Princess L Walker; #207Miguel Rodriguez; #263La Rona C Williams; #319Darlene Revere;#367Great Property Services C/O Gregory L Smith; #404Kareem R McGregor; #440Aphiena Shaki S JohnsonMorrison; #470Jovanni A Mincy; #485Yolanda D Fairconeture;#491 Sydney O Umah; #537Jennifer J Yon; #551Tammara L Stephens; #588Henry A King;#648Michael A Siddons; #717BAnthony D Martinez Black 2000 GMC Yukon VIN#3GKFK16T3YG130457;

Public Notice Self Storage Zone /Powers Drive, 2650 N Powers Dr., Orlando, FL 32818 here by gives PUBLIC notice of the disposal for the default of lease agreement, pursuant to Florida statutes Section 83.801-83.809 on the following individuals: All items are House Hold Goods unless otherwise stated. Unit 454 Patricia Doolgar Unit 825 Vivian Lightner Unit 766 Trenessa Williams Unit 438 Monica Young Unit 400 Curtisicia Renee Waller Unit 444 Shawn Robbs Unit 124 Millie Mclean/Millie Ann Mclean Unit 807 Kenna Koren Unit 633 Paula M Keaton Unit 427 Marceline Jean-Louis Unit 27 Alyson Beraza Unit 718 Gerda Jolidier Unit 125 Jacqueline Ritchie Unit 177 Jacqueline Ritchie Unit 335 Ezella Williams The undersigned will be auctioned on line at www.storagebattles. com until, Tuesday October 20, 2015 at 2:00 PM . Said property has been stored and is located at Self Storage Zone, 2650 N. Powers Drive, Orlando, FL 32818.

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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 2015-DR-2898 IN THE MATTER OF THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS FOR THE PROPOSED ADOPTION OF A MINOR CHILD. – AMENDED NOTICE OF ACTION AND OF PETITION AND HEARING TO TERMINATE PARENTAL RIGHTS PENDING ADOPTION TO: Wendi Ann Barnard Current Residence Address: Unknown YOU ARE NOTIFED that an action to terminate your parental rights pending adoption has been filed against you in the above-captioned matter, and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on Attorney Christine E. Arendas, whose address is 1516 E. Colonial Dr., Suite 202, Orlando, FL 32803, on or before November 4, 2015 and file the original with the Clerk of this Court at Seminole County Courthouse, Domestic Relations Division, 301 North Park Avenue, Sanford, Florida 32771, either before service on the Attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the petition. There will be a hearing on the Petition to Terminate Parental Rights Pending Adoption on November 16, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. (Eastern Standard Time) before the Hon. Michael J. Rudisill at Seminole County Courthouse, 301 North Park Avenue, Court Room G, Sanford, Florida 32771. UNDER SECTION 63.089, FLORIDA STATUTES, FAILURE TO FILE A WRITTEN RESPONSE TO THIS NOTICE WITH THE COURT OR TO APPEAR AT THIS HEARING CONSTITUTES GROUNDS UPON WHICH THE COURT SHALL END ANY PARENTAL RIGHTS YOU MAY HAVE REGARDING THE MINOR. You are the biological mother of a minor male child born on August 21, 2009 at Winter Park, Florida. You are described as being 45 years old; Caucasian; 5’1”; 124lbs; hazel eyes and brown hair. WITNESS my hand and seal this 25th day of September, 2015. MARYANNE MORSE CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Barbara Anderson Deputy Clerk In accordance with the AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT, if you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator, at 301 N. Park Avenue, Suite N301, Sanford, Florida 32771, telephone (407) 323-4330 ext. 4227 or 830-8919 ext. 4227, within 2 working days of your receipt of this Notice; if you are hearing impaired, call (TDD) -800-955-8771; if you are voice impaired, call VOICE (v) 1-800-955-8770.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR, SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA IN RE TATE OF: CASE NO.: 2015-CP-001701-FA-P LONNA L. RICKSTREW, PROBATE DIVISION Deceased. – The administration of the estate of Lonna L. Rickstrew, deceased, whose date of death was July 25, 2014, is pending in the Circuit Court for Seminole County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 301 North Park Avenue, Sanford, Florida 32773. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is 2015. Attorney for Personal Representative: Personal Representative: CIPPARONE & CIPPARONE, P.A.1540 International Parkway, Suite 1060 Lake Mary, Florida 32746 /s/ Tammy T. Sheffield Telephone: (321) 275-5914 Tammy T. Sheffield Facsimile: (321) 275-5931/s/ Paul C. Cipparone Paul C. Cipparone Florida Bar No.: 84084 PCipparone@cipparonepa.com

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● OCT. 7-13, 2015

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR, ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. IN RE ESTATE OF: CASE NO.: 2015-CP-2077. PROBATE DIVISION. IN RE ESTATE OF:LLOYD E. GUISE, JR., Deceased. – The administration of the estate of LLOYD E. GUISE, JR., deceased, whose date of death was December 6, 2014, is pending in the Circuit Court for Orange County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 425 N. Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32801. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is Sept 30, 2015. Attorney for Personal Representative: CIPPARONE & CIPPARONE, P.A. 1540 International Parkway, Suite 1060 Lake Mary, Florida 32746 Telephone: (321) 275-5914 Facsimile: (321) 275-5931/s/ Paul C. Cipparone Paul C. Cipparone Florida Bar No.: 84084 PCipparone@cipparonepa. com. Personal Representative: /s/ Debbie Mooty. Debbie Mooty.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE – PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE FOLLOWING TENANTS WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH TO SATISFY RENTAL LIENS IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE FACILITY ACT, SECTIONS 83-806 AND 83807. CONTENTS MAY INCLUDE KITCHEN, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS,BEDDING,TOYS, GAMES,BOXES,BARRELS, GAMES, PACKED CARTONS, FURNITURE, TRUCKS, CARS, ETC. THERE IS NO TITLE FOR VEHICLES SOLD AT LIEN SALE. OWNERS RESERVE THE RIGHT TO BID ON UNITS. LIEN SALE TO BE HELD ONLINE ENDING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2015 AT TIMES INDICATED BELOW. VIEWING AND BIDDING WILL ONLY BE AVAILABLE ONLINE AT www. storagetreasures.com, BEGINNING 5 DAYS PRIOR TO THE SCHEDULED SALE DATE AND TIME! PERSONAL MINI STORAGE EDGEWATER - 6325 EDGEWATER DR ORLANDO, FL 32810 - AT 12:30 PM: 0230 ANDA CATRINA SIMMONS; 0428 TOMIKA LAWANNA JOHNSON; 0536 DOSICHELL SIDAIR ROBERT MICHAEL RADFORD, ASSURED & ASSOCIATES; 0721 SHANIKA K LEWIS; 0729 STANLEY RAYLAN STEVENS; 1202 TAMMY MCKEVITT CANO; 1216 SHARON DENISE VOLLEY; 1217 THOMAS ERNEST BROWN; 1728 WILLIAM M BRYANT; 1734 TODD ANTHONY CAMERY; 1805 MICHELLE RAE SULLIVAN EWING. PERSONAL MINI STORAGE FOREST CITY ROAD - 6550 FOREST CIY ROAD ORLANDO, FL 32810 - AT 1:30 PM: 1045 CORNELIUS SANTEZ HENSON JR, 1054 ADAM D’WAYNE CLARK, 1086 IVETTE PUERTA, 1096 ANGELA REYNOLDS, 1119 KIM WILLIAMS, 1127 BAILEY EDMONDS, 1101 FRANK MEGAHEE, 2022 LINDA MCKNIGHT, 2039 AUTUMN JENINE FRANKLIN, 2053 STEPHEN ANTHONY BLAIN, 2076 RICHARD ANTHONY RENTZ, 3070 KATRICE OCTAVIA BROOKINS, 3159 DIANA LYNN RELIFORD, 3168 LADONNA JOHNSON, 3209 MICHAEL ANGELO REESE JR, 3218 IVETTE PUERTA, 4022 ROXRAY SAYLES, 4025 KIARA HOWARD, 4066 MAGGIE ANITA DUNCAN, 4070 ARTHUR LEE HARRELL, 4096 YOLANDA WASHINGTON, 5025 LISA MARIE HILL, 5042 DAHLIA ROBINSON, 5062 GEORGE GOLDSTEIN, G&P ELECTRICAL LLC, 6002 ANGEL VARGAS RIVERA, 6015 TALITHA BURKE, 6019 ALTROVESIA LECHELLE GRACE, 7002 ROSE LOUIS.

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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA. CASE NO.: 2015-DR-2898 IN THE MATTER OF THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS FOR THE PROPOSED ADOPTION OF A MINOR CHILD. – AMENDED NOTICE OF ACTION AND OF PETITION AND HEARING TO TERMINATE PARENTAL RIGHTS PENDING ADOPTION TO:Jose Antonio Maldonaldo a/k/a Jose Antonio Maldonado Last known Residence Address: 550 Via Del Oro Drive, # 101, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714 3016 Dreyfushire Blvd., #BV, Orlando, FL 32822 YOU ARE NOTIFED that an action to terminate your parental rights and for a Final Judgment of Adoption has been filed against you in the above-captioned matter, and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on Attorney Christine E. Arendas, whose address is 1516 E. Colonial Dr., Suite 202, Orlando, FL 32803, on or before November 4, 2015 and file the original with the Clerk of this Court at Seminole County Courthouse, Domestic Relations Division, 301 North Park Avenue, Sanford, Florida 32771, either before service on the Attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the petition. There will be a hearing on the Petition to Terminate Parental Rights Pending Adoption on November 16, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. (Eastern Standard Time) before the Hon. Michael J. Rudisill at Seminole County Courthouse, 301 North Park Avenue, Court Room G, Sanford, Florida 32771. UNDER SECTION 63.089, FLORIDA STATUTES, FAILURE TO FILE A WRITTEN RESPONSE TO THIS NOTICE WITH THE COURT OR TO APPEAR AT THIS HEARING CONSTITUTES GROUNDS UPON WHICH THE COURT SHALL END ANY PARENTAL RIGHTS YOU MAY HAVE REGARDING THE MINOR. You are the legal father of a minor male child born on 08/21/2009 at Winter Park, Florida to W.A.B., and the Petitioners describe you as being 44 years old; Hispanic; 6’ tall; 280-300 lbs.; brown eyes, bald head. WITNESS my hand and seal this 25th day of September, 2015. MARYANNE MORSE CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: __/s/ Barbara Anderson______________ Deputy Clerk In accordance with the AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT, if you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator, at 301 N. Park Avenue, Suite N301, Sanford, Florida 32771, telephone (407) 323-4330 ext. 4227 or 830-8919 ext. 4227, within 2 working days of your receipt of this Notice; if you are hearing impaired, call (TDD) 1-800-955-8771; if you are voice impaired, call VOICE (v) 1-800-955-8770 Notice of Public Sale: – Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on October 23, 2015 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Services, 1425 W Taft Vineland Rd, Orlando, FL, will sell the following vehicles and/or vessels. Seller reserves the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. Seller reserves the right to refuse any or all bids ; 2012 Honda, Vin#2HGFB2F57CH564975; 2001 Chevrolet, Vin#2CNBE13C316920294; 2010 Toyota, Vin#1NXBU4EE5AZ371265; 1999 Dodge, Vin#1B4HR28Y9XF638363; 2006 Motor, Vin#LFGTCKPM561002757; 2002 Mitsubishi, Vin#4A3AA46G62E056203; 2004 Pontiac, Vin#3G2JB12F84S169563; 2000 Nissan, Vin#JN1CA31D5YT702289; 2001 Toyota, Vin#4T1BG28K61U766701; 2000 Chevrolet, Vin#1G1JC1243Y7250653; Self Storage Zone/University, 11583 University Blvd, Orlando Fl., 32817 hereby gives notice that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below To enforce a lien imposed on said property under the Florida Self Storage Facility Act Statutes Florida Section 83.801-83.809…The under signed will be auctioned online at www.storagebattles.com until Oct 20th,2015 @ 2:00pm. Said property has been stored and is located at Self Storage Zone 11583 University Blvd Orlando Fl 32817. Unit A005 – Ray Crampton Jr ( Household ), Unit D055 – David E Leblanc (Household Goods), Unit D469 – Robert Delacruz (Household), Unit C661 – Rachel Mumford (household), Unit C675- David Steward (MVP Coaching USA ) ( Sporting Goods), Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash only. All purchased items are sold as is, where is, and must be removed at the time of sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between owner and obligated party.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR OSCEOLA COUNTY FLORIDA VENTURES TRUST 2013-I-H-R BY MCM CAPITAL PARTNERS, LLC, ITS TRUSTEE, PLAINTIFF, vs.DAVID M. KORPI, et al., Defendants CASE NO:2015-CA-002037-MF NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE is hereby given that pursuant to the Final Judgment of Foreclosure entered in the cause pending in the Circuit Court of the Ninth Judicial Circuit, in and for Osceola County, Florida, Case No. 2015CA-002037 in which, VENTURES TRUST 2013-I-H-R BY MCM CAPITAL PARTNERS , LLC ITS TRUSTEE, is the Plaintiff, and David M. Korpi:Jodi G. Korpi; Association of Poinciana Villages, INC., and Unknown Tenants in Possession, are Defendants, and all unknown parties claiming to have any right, title or interest in the property herein described on the following described property in Osceola County, Florida: Lot of The V17, Block 2158, Poinciana, Neighborhood 1, Village 5, according to the map or play thereof, as recorded in Plat Book 3, Page(s) 144 through 158, inclusive, of the Public Records of Osceola County, Florida. Property Address: 731 Pincon Ln, Kissimmee, FL 34759 Together with an undivided percentage interest in the common elements pertaining thereto, the Clerk of Osceola County, will offer the above-referenced real property at public sale to the highest and best bidder for cash at 11:00a.m. on the 9th day of November, 2015, in, Suite2602/ Room 2600 of the Osceola County Courthouse, 2 Courthouse Square, Suite 2600/Room #2602, Kissimmee, Florida 34741. Any person claiming interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale. Dated this 10th day of September, 2015. CAMERON H.P. WHITE, Florida Bar No.: 021343, cwhite@southmilhausen.com, JASON R. HAWKINS, Florida Bar No.: 11925, jhawkins@southmilhausen.com, South Milhausen, PA, 1000 Legion Place, Suite 1200, Orlando, Florida 32801, Telephone: (407) 539-1638, Facsimile: (407) 539-2679, Attorneys for Plaintiff. If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contactCourt Administration at Two Courthouse Square, Suite 6300, Kissimmee, Florida 34741, Telephone:(407) 3432417 within two (2) working days of your receipt of this Notice of hearing; If you are hearing or voice impaired, call 1-800-9558771. CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true and correct copy of the foregoing was electronically filed with the Clerk of the Court and furnished sent via U.S. mail to David M. Korpi, 405 Monterey, Avenue, PAcific Grove, CA 93950: Jodi G. Korpi, 12 Thomas Owens Way, #100, Monterey, CA 93940 and Association of Poinciana Villages, Inc. c/o Rockell Brown, Regestered Agent, 401 Walnut Street, Kissimmee, FL 34759


A5 ORLANDOWEEKLY.COM/JOBS Agile Software Development Manager – Orlando, FL. – Manage agile software development process. Write high level & detailed design specifications for enhancements. Manage & verify ongoing quality assurance. Prioritize product roadmaps. Work w/DevOps to translate metrics into performance & scalability plans. Write, test & execute acceptance test scripts. Telecommuting within MSA may be available. Req’s: Bachelor’s degree in Comp. Sci. or Information Technology & 2yrs. exp. working within an agile development environment. Apply to Edutainment Media, Inc. dba Skill Director via srogers@skilldirector.com.

Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning Technician – Full training and the best rates in town are paid. This is physical work and there are sales involved, but if you are good, the compensation can be very rewarding. We are a very strong company with a great reputation and we enjoy an excellent rating with the Better Business Bureau. Full Training Provided. Call Michael:407 677 0464

CASTO is in search of a P/T Marketing Coordinator. Duties include promoting Winter Park Village through marketing and advertising campaigns. Some nights and weekends occasionally required. Direct marketing and graphic design experience a plus. Visit http://castoinfo.com/ for more information. Resumes may be sent to ssoulsby@castoinfo.com.

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Culinary (Line Cook) Disney 6122301

Assistant Supervisor, Janitorial Reedy Creek Improvement District 6120583

Window & Door Installers (Subcontractors) FAS Windows & Doors 6124739

Benefits Administrator Stetson University 6120020

who can pour a drink, keep a beat & look good doing it | Apply in person Wednesday October 14th Thursday October 15th 2pm to 7pm Saturday, October 17th Noon to 5pm Located at 8371 International Drive Suite 70 Orlando, FL | 407-930-6739 For more info: CowgirlsOrlando@gmail.com WILLING TO TRAIN THE RIGHT PERSONALITY. WEAK AT HEART NEED NOT APPLY. GRAB YOUR BOOTS AND LEAVE YOUR HEELS AT HOME

Assistant Store Manager Full Time Christopher & Banks 6122063

Director of Security Paramount Hospitality Management 6124978

Warehouse Worker FAS Windows & Doors 6124740

Faculty Instructors - Audio Production and Music Sequencing Technologies The Los Angeles Film School 6124006

PM Cook Four Points By Sheraton Orlando Studio City 6122614

Evening Beverage Server Drury Hotels 6124973

Sheetfed Press Operator Central Florida Press 6120320

Guest Service Agent Drury Hotels 6124972

Lab Coordinator Compass Research 6124726

Salon Chair Rental Rustic Industrial French design 10 chair salon has a few chairs to rent! Located in Winter Park just between 436 and 17-92. A very warm elegant salon with lovely clientele just away from the crowded downtown area. Very roomy work space with a relaxed atmosphere and incredibly comfortable sinks your clients will enjoy not to mention a large parking lot to accommodate clientele. We are strictly a hair salon but have great neighbors down the way at New York nails for mani pedis! J and Company Hair Studio is a must visit to truly appreciate the space you would be renting. Please email if interested in seeing jandcompanyhairstudio@gmail. com. If you stop by please ask to speak to the owner, Jennifer. Orlando’s best kept secret!

Assistant Manager Qdoba 6104144

Irrigation Technician Seminole State College of Florida 6124971

Technical Training Team Lead Full Sail University 6124725

Activities Staff Daily Management Resorts Inc. 6124968

Maintenance Handyman & Landscaper Benada Aluminum Products, LLC 6120128

Maintenance Technician Daily Management Resorts Inc. 6124967

Front Desk Supervisor Courtyard Orlando & Residence Inn Orlando Lake Nona 6119286

COWGIRLS ROCKBAR ORLANDO NOW HIRING! Female Bartenders Servers Hostesses

Traveling Construction Project Superintendent - Regional Fi Companies 6119830

Property Manager:- FT position. for Results Real Estate Partners in Central Florida. 24 months of Property Management Experience required. Contact Vincent Wolle at 407-647-0200 or fax resume to 407-647-0205.

Start your Humanitarian Career at One World Center and gain experience through international service work in Africa. Program has costs. Info@OneWorldCenter.org

National Account Manager GeoTel Communications 6124966

Sales & Marketing Solutions edgefactory 6120030

Appointment Setter - Telesales $50,000 - $70,0000 Leads On Demand, Inc. 6123006

Foreman - Steel Fabrication Shop Rebah Fabrication, Inc. 6119257

Account Representative Resell CNC 6116803

HCM / HRIS Implementation Consultant Fairsail 6124962

Construction Manager (Construction Management Administrator) Reedy Creek Improvement District 6122700

Junior Marketing Manager Vial Momentum, Inc. 6120428

Store Operations Associate Mitsukoshi 6123718

Developer Village Farms International, Inc. 6119977

Business Development Specialist US Equity Advantage 6124535

Teller - Sebring Harbor Community Bank 6123704

Targeted Case Managers and TCM Program Coordinators Behavioral Support Services 6123020

Sales Assistant WKMG Local 6 ClickOrlando.com 6123708

Receptionist - SoDoLocation Orlando Orthopedic Center 6124477

Drywall Installation Maintenance Technicians ComRes Ind., Inc 6120404

Financial Service Representative - Floating - Part Time Martin Federal Credit Union 6119926

Tellers McCoy Federal Credit Union 6120121

Behavioral Analyst - Board Certified Behavioral Support Services 6124479

Administrative Office Assistant ComRes Ind., Inc 6120124

Sales Coordinator Courtyard Orlando & Residence Inn Orlando Lake Nona 6119269

Fitness Coach Bombshell Fitness 6123715

Human Resources Director Dermatology Billing Associates 6120120

Staff Auditor Saltmarsh, Cleaveland & Gund 6116578

Client Services Project Coordinator Cathedral Corporation 6119978

Education Specialist Community Coordinated Care for Children, Inc 6120125

Collector l Orlando Federal Credit Union 6124486

News Director WKMG Local 6 ClickOrlando.com 6116561

Business Development Associate Fairsail 6123429

Human Resources Manager Essendant 6124475

orlandoweekly.com

OCT. 7-13, 2015

Cable Contractors - Paid Training - Orlando National Broadband 6119973

Room Service Operator - JW Marriott Orlando, Grande Lakes The Ritz Carlton & JW Marriott, Grande Lakes 6119937

Teller / CSR - Oak Ridge Road Harbor Community Bank 6120426

Best Sales Position in America SoftRock 6123702

Marketing Coordinator Casto 6123699

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