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How mucH do orlando’s mayoral and city council candidates know about running tHe city? let’s test tHem and see. By MOnivETTE CORdEiRO and ERin Sullivan
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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, 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
FREE | OC T. 21-27, 20 15
I wish you had given more credence to Darren Soto’s candidacy (“Vocal minority,” Oct. 14), not just as an “actual Puerto Rican.” I went to Tallahassee this past spring as a citizen lobbyist against the proposed 24-hour waiting period for an abortion law (HB 633/SB 724). Sen. Soto was on one of the committees (Judiciary) that had to pass on this bill and correctly predicted that it would be found unconstitutional due to Florida’s unique privacy concerns. He knows his constitutional law. Plus, he plays in a roots rock band.
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B. Schwartz, via orlandoweekly.com
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Boricua bulletins
What we Puerto Ricans would love to happen in Puerto Rico is that the federal government go there and make an audit to see where the money is. SIMPLE: THE MONEY IS IN POLITICIANS’ POCKETS. They are the ones who have stolen the money.
COVER DESIGN BY ADAM MCCABE
news & features 6 Orlando Weekly’s Political Pop Quiz™! HO
30 Film Listings P6
Paulo Disdier, via orlandoweekly.com
Cinema-oriented events to go see this week
W CH DO OR and City Council How much do Orlando’sMUmayoral LANDO’S MAYORAL KNOW AB Rotten Apple AND CITY OUTthe RUNN candidates know about running city? Let’s test COUNCIL ING TH E CITY? LE CAND AT BY MONIV T’S TESteve ES mediocre ST THEMJobs isIDa ET TE CORDEIR them and see. AND SEE. O AND ER IN SU
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arts & culture
19 “Loathsome and wonderful all at once” Although he thinks Florida has gotten a bad rap in the news lately, John Hodgman is looking forward to his return
20 New directions Orlando Philharmonic music director Eric Jacobsen makes his debut
23 Live Active Cultures Last weekend, 31 days’ worth of art openings and events were squeezed into just 31 hours
food & drink 25 Chin music Seito Sushi’s renaissance, and Baldwin Park’s restaurant scene, has Jason Chin’s fingerprints all over it
25 Tip Jar The Smiling Bison opens in Sanford, Frank & Stein’s Winter Park closes, plus more in our weekly food roundup
26 Bar Exam
The waiting is the hardest part
look into the man behind
LLIVAN the Mac
All Sundays have been the worst. All of them (“Facing Halloween Horror Nights with no early access and no line-skipping is the scariest challenge of all,” Oct. 14). Going to HHN on Sunday is the worst thing anyone can do. The worst crowds are on Sundays, too. Saw a lot of people trying to mess with actors. Also something that I noticed was that they are treating Express lines like a front-of-the-line kind of thing. Universal does not want to let Express wait even 10 minutes. Express is meant to be a shorter wait time, but for some reason they don’t want them to wait at all ... which means the regular lines have to wait double the time, making the regular line move much, much slower than years before.
music 32 Picks This Week Great live music rattles Orlando every night
32 Hello, God, it’s me, Hopsin Quirky rapper Hopsin loses faith but soldiers on for the hell of it
33 This Little Underground
calendar 38 Selections 40 The Week 41 Down the Road
Josh, via orlandoweekly.com
back pages
The Guesthouse erases all vestiges of the old Peacock Room
63 Free Will Astrology
28 Recently Reviewed
63 Lulu Eightball
Got something to add? Email feedback@orlandoweekly.com.
63 Gimme Shelter
First Words compiles emails, letters and comments from orlandoweekly.com. We reserve the right to edit for length, content and clarity.
Short takes on restaurants we’ve eaten at recently
film 30 Opening in Orlando Movies opening this week: Jem and the Holograms, The Last Witch Hunter, Rock the Kasbah and more
64 Savage Love 65 Classifieds orlandoweekly.com
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Political pop quiz questions and answers 1. What is the millage rate for the city of Orlando? Answer: The millage rate – that is, the amount per $1,000 used to calculate property taxes – is 6.65 mills. That is, $6.65 per $1,000 in taxable property value.
How much do Orlando’s mayoral and City Council candidates know about running the city? Let’s test them and see. By Monivette Cordeiro and erin Sullivan
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f you aren’t aware that there’s about to be a city election in Orlando on Nov. 3, you can hardly be blamed. The election wasn’t supposed to even happen this year – it was originally scheduled for April 5, 2016, three weeks after Florida’s March 2016 presidential primary election. Earlier this year, though, Orange County Supervisor of Elections Bill Cowles sounded the alarm – what if it was too confusing for voters to have two elections so close to one another? What if they didn’t show up at the polls, thinking they’d already had an election? He urged the city to schedule its election to happen on primary day, or reschedule for a later date in 2016. Instead, the Orlando City Council voted in May to move city elections to Nov. 3, giving people just six months to raise money and pull campaigns together if they wanted to run for one of the four seats up for grabs: that of Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer and city commissioners Tony Ortiz (District 2), Patty Sheehan (District 4) and Sam Ings (District 6). Despite the truncated elections schedule, all of the incumbents except for Ortiz face challengers who say the old guard has got to go. Now the election is just 15 days away. Do you know where your candidate stands on the issues? Are you ready to vote? Don’t worry if you’re having a hard time keeping up – we’ve got you covered with our Political Pop Quiz™, an on-the-spot exam of 11 random and relevant questions that gauge what the candidates know (or think they know) about the inner workings of Orlando. To our readers: Happy voting! To all our candidates: Good luck. If you get elected, don’t fuck it up.
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2. What is the average homeless population in Orlando? Answer: Trick question. The answer is that it changes, and an accurate count is difficult to come by. We were looking for candidates to be able to talk credibly about the homelessness problem in Orlando, and we give extra credit for knowing that a recent count turned up 100 homeless veterans living on the streets of the city. 3. What is the tallest building in Orlando? Answer: The SunTrust Center, standing at 441 feet. 4. Is there such a thing as “too much” development downtown? Answer: There is no right or wrong answer to this question, but we were looking for candidates to tell us how they feel about
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t’s been a little painful, if entertaining, to watch the three candidates vying for mayor take shots at one another over the past few weeks. Frankly, we’re glad this election is almost over. First things first: Everybody in this race has a nickname. Mayor John “Buddy” Dyer is seeking a fourth term as mayor, and
focusing on downtown development versus neighborhoods in other parts of the city. 5. What is the daily ridership goal for SunRail? Answer: SunRail has a first-year goal of getting 4,300 passengers daily. It hasn’t quite reached that goal, and in July, ridership dipped to 3,700 people per day. Extra credit for thoughts on how to improve public transportation in the city. 6. A tree is about to fall over outside your house, and it’s on the city’s part of the property. Who do you call? Answer: The city’s Parks Department. 7. Talk for a moment about the property-tax rate. Is the current rate appropriate for the level of services the city provides? Answer: This is another one with no specific answer, but we hope to hear that candidates know that the city of Orlando raised property tax rates by 17.7 percent last year, which translates to one additional dollar per thousand dollars of a property’s value. See millage rate question for more detail.
he’s got two challengers for the seat. Businessman and veteran Neil “Paul” Paulson and medical student “Sunshine” Linda Marie Grund have both qualified to run, and they have mainly been attacking Dyer for the city’s decision to increase the property tax rate by 17.7 percent in 2014; that rate was adopted again in September for the 2015-2016 fiscal year. It was the first property-tax increase since 2008, and it raised taxes by one dol-
8. What is the status of the long-awaited Creative Village in downtown Orlando? Answer: In 2015, the state Legislature failed to grant $57 million in funding to help UCF develop a campus in downtown Orlando, which was to be a hub of the Creative Village. While the project is not dead, it has dragged on forever. UCF is now seeking private funding sources to keep its critical portion moving forward. 9. Who appoints the city’s Citizen Police Review Board? How do you think the process could be improved? Answer: The mayor recommends candidates, who are then approved by the City Council. 10. Where does Orlando rank among the top 50 American metro areas in terms of median wage? How could your economic policies make life more affordable for the average citizen? Answer: Last. And we really do hope candidates have some solid ideas for increasing affordability. BONUS: How many seats is the Orlando City Soccer Club’s new stadium supposed to contain? Answer: 25,500.
lar per thousand dollars in property value, and it has given Paulson and Grund plenty of fodder upon which to base their criticism of the mayor. Dyer, who has raised about $373,000 for his campaign so far, recently accused Paulson of trying to buy the election after Paulson loaned his own campaign $610,000 of his own personal money. Paulson denies Dyer’s CONTINUED ON PaGe 9
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claim (his campaign treasurer’s report does indicate that Paulson’s campaign is primarily self-funded), and he also disputes an Orlando Sentinel story that alleges that a charity he runs – Help for Vets, Inc. – raises red flags when it comes to fundraising and structure. The Sentinel also took Paulson to task for using partisan campaign material in a nonpartisan race – something prohibited in nonpartisan races. Paulson says his attorney told him that particular statute was not being enforced. “Mr. Dyer has broken that statute before, and done much worse, like being indicted,” he says, then proceeds to criticize the newspaper. “I would compare the Sentinel to the National Enquirer, but I don’t think it would be fair to the Enquirer.” Grund has distinguished herself in this expensive race by taking in no contribution money because she says it allows her to be completely transparent to voters. If elected, she says part of her platform would focus on preserving the wetlands near her home. “The current makeup of
the political process means someone like George Zimmerman could win this election because of name recognition, which brings in money,” she says. “You lose touch with citizens and are influenced more easily.” Dyer says it’s a serious responsibility to be not only mayor, but also a leader for the region on issues like same-sex marriage, establishing a domestic partnership registry and supporting a living wage for workers. He says his opponents focus solely on the tax hike and have lost sight of other issues. “I’m passionate about the city,” he says. “My opponents haven’t touched on city building or their vision for the future of the city. We’ve had a great last 10 years in terms of building consensus and collaboration and have moved the needle on so many issues, like growth. We’re recognized as the city of the future and the most sustainable city in the Southeast United States.” 1. What is the millage rate for the city of Orlando? Dyer: 6.5. No, it’s 6.65. There’s a lot of numbers
Paul Paulson
flying through your head all the time. Grund: Six-something. It’s higher than what it should be. Paulson: It’s raised up now to 6.65, but it used to be 5.65. It went up one with Mr. Dyer. 2. What is the average homeless population in Orlando? Dyer: I know that we have a little over 100 homeless veterans left. We are making a real effort to end homelessness among our veterans by the end of the year. We have reduced that population by over 60 percent. It’s hard to quantify that population because the point in time count is rarely accurate. Grund: Too many. I think one is too many. Everyone in Orlando should have a home. Paulson: That’s a tough question because how would you be able to do a census of them? A lot of them live in the woods in East Orlando, and they’re difficult to count. I think that’s the best answer, that we just don’t know. 3. What is the tallest building in Orlando? Dyer: SunTrust. Grund: The Vue. Paulson: Probably SunTrust. It’s pretty tall. 4. Is there such a thing as “too much” development downtown? Dyer: There is such a thing as bad development for downtown. We want to encourage downtown, but we want to have the right type of development, like transit-oriented development that would take advantage of SunRail and more affordable units. We promoted getting a grocery store, movie theaters in downtown. We’re recently in the process of buying Constitution Green, which could have been an exam-
ple of bad development if we had allowed them to take down the tree. Grund: Yes. We need to have green space. I think green space is important to downtown and the residents that live there. Paulson: Yes, when it impacts neighborhoods and we divert money from them to build an opulent downtown. We’ve reached that point. That’s the difference between Mr. Dyer and myself. We could have development if funded by donations, like the Dr. Phillips Center and also the new soccer stadium, which will be funded by private enterprise. We have an old arena that we borrowed $150 million from the state, and then Mr. Dyer imploded it and now it’s just sitting as vacant land, which we owe money on even though it’s gone. There are a lot of problems with the downtown venues, and we’ve neglected the neighborhoods. 5. What is the daily ridership goal for SunRail? Dyer: 4,300. Grund: I have yet to ride SunRail, so that’s on my to-do list. I know the numbers were down and they’ve had to alter it. Paulson: More. The problem is at nighttime, it’s not producing the ridership. The schedule has to be flexible and adjusted to ridership. It hasn’t been producing enough money to pay for it, so we’ve been subsiding it. SunRail isn’t the only solution; we need to have a mix of transportation systems, like Lynx, Lyft and Uber, which needs to be expanded. 6. A tree is about to fall over outside your house, and it’s on the city’s part of the property. Who do you call? Dyer: If it’s my tree, I’m responsible for it. Grund: Orlando
Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer
Utilities Commission. Paulson: The landowner is responsible for the tree if it’s on his property. I know city code enforcement requires the tree to be removed if it won’t come back to life. The city has an arborologist who will come and tell us which type of tree we will have to replant. It’s complicated. 7. Talk for a moment about the property tax rate. Is the current rate appropriate for the level of services the city provides? Dyer: Yes. We have made substantial cuts to the city’s budget while I’ve been mayor. We have reduced the overall number of employees by 350 people and increased police and fire employees by 175. When we went through the recession our property tax collections were $137 million and they were reduced to under $100 million. We did not want to raise the millage rate through the recession but with property tax caps and wanting to make sure we did not touch public safety, we raised the millage rate, and still did not collect the same as 2009.
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If we didn’t raise rates, the only place we could have started cutting was the public safety budget, and we did not want to do that. Grund: We could always do better. We could look at how we could do things at a lower cost with exceptional service. My charge is that buildings are being built, but I don’t necessarily see services being increased throughout the city that the residents would actually use. For example, I have yet to go on SunRail or to the performing arts centers, and it’s not that we can’t have those things, but when we have issues that need to be addressed, like a homeless population of more than one, and leaders who are increasing their pay, I don’t think that’s a good direction to go. I do understand it’s important to provide services, and the mayor doesn’t act alone in the budget, but you are leading the way in setting the pace for what you believe the best strategy is. Paulson: No. It’s too high because Mr. Dyer raised it by 17.7 percent. He has approved a budget
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with the council to keep that tax hike for next year. Mr. Dyer and the budget have benefited from a 14 percent natural increase because property values went up. There should be enough money in the revenue fund to pay for everything, but the problem is that Mr. Dyer has not balanced the budget. About 24 percent of the budget is for interdepartmental things that’s not accounted for. That’s over $250 million. Additional money could be taken from OUC in the form of dividends so we don’t have a tax increase. I will appoint a blue-ribbon committee to go through the budget and rank what programs are working and which are not. 8. What is the status of the long-awaited Creative Village in downtown Orlando? Dyer: We have a meeting of the board of governors two days after the election to bring the UCF/Valencia campus master plan to get approval. We’re currently installing the horizontal infrastructure and utilities, but have developed the School of Emerging Media, city labs and other structures. When the student housing and parking garage breaks ground, we will also be breaking ground on private residential property that will house the culinary school. A lot should happen in the next year. Grund: On hold. I know they’re trying to get funds. I think they were trying to get some of the tourist dollars. It’s obviously not moving as fast as it could, or should be. Paulson: We didn’t get the money from the state Legislature. I think Gov. Scott vetoed $50 10
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million. The future will tell us. Right now it’s a project that doesn’t have the funding. 9. Who appoints the city’s Citizen Police Review Board? How do you think the process could be improved? Dyer: The mayor makes recommendations to the City Council, and the Council approves them. I think we have a pretty good process in place. Grund: The mayor. I think having more voices at the table could improve it. Paulson: I believe the mayor does, but I think there’s also input from the community and police department. I think the process could be improved when we work on retraining the minds of law enforcement officers to be more sensitive and have greater communication skills. 10. Where does Orlando rank among the top 50 American metro areas in terms of median wage? How could your economic policies make life more affordable for the average citizen? Dyer: If we’re not the lowest, we’re right at the bottom. It’s something we certainly need to improve on. The city has adopted a living wage policy for its employees and for contractors who work with the city. We have to look at other measures for income equality as well. One that is in control of the government is transportation, so
expanding Lymmo, Lynx and SunRail for people who already have incomes are able to access jobs, daycare and educational opportunities is also important. Grund: Not high enough. My answer has always been people drive the economic engines in any community if you provide an environment they will want to live, work, play and stay in. Paulson: We’re close to the bottom. I can’t give you the exact number, but the problem is we’re largely a service industry that depends on people to work in hotels and amusement parks, often times at minimum wage. The bad thing is Orlando has lost a lot of higher-paying jobs when the Navy base closed in 1989. We’ve also had some issues with Department of Defense jobs. I have connections in Washington, D.C., and I will make it my priority to bring highpaying defense jobs and light manufacturing jobs to Orlando. BONUS: How many seats is the Orlando City Soccer Club’s new stadium supposed to contain? Dyer: That hasn’t been determined yet because
“Sunshine” Grund
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they have to finish the architectural plans, but they have increased size from 19,500 roughly to somewhere between 25,000 and 27,000 pending on the plans. Grund: Not enough. My son loves soccer. Paulson: One for each person that goes there. We don’t want people to be sitting on each other.
City Council, district 4 ommissioner Patty
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Sheehan is facing off in District 4 against Navy veteran and business owner Aretha Olivarez and Randy Ross, a community activist and TV talk-show host. Olivarez and Ross accuse the 15-year incumbent of being a “career politician” who is out of touch with many of the problems faced by her constituents, but Sheehan contends her opponents are ignoring other issues to focus on the city’s 17.7 percent property-tax hike, and that constituents have understood why the city raised the rate. According to the latest campaign finance reports from September, Sheehan leads the pack in fundraising, with $48,890 in contributions; Olivarez and Ross have pulled in $10,538 and $10,010 respectively. Sheehan says she wants to keep her focus on quality-of-life issues she thinks are important to people, like sidewalks, urban chickens and preserving Constitution Green, while still concentrating on bringing smarter technology to save the city money, like composting programs and supercritical water oxidation. “I put my heart and soul into every race,” she says. “I believe that people get
into public life for two reasons: Either they want to be somebody or help somebody. There’s a difference between being a politician and a public servant, and I believe I’m a public servant.” Ross, who qualified in the race by petition, says Sheehan’s urban chickens and composting projects show she isn’t listening to her constituents, who are more concerned with the tax hike. He has previously concentrated on community fundraisers for a variety of issues, including homelessness and domestic abuse. Ross, who was arrested for a false insurance claim earlier this year, says he’s put his skeletons out front and is ready to talk about the real issues. “I bring passion to the table,” he says. “I know I’m not perfect. I’ve had my flaws and mistakes, and I’ve learned from those. I’m going to win this race, and I’m winning it on the ground.” Olivarez, who ran in 2012 against Sheehan, says she’s always felt a call to run. If elected, she would like to focus on homelessness, affordable health care and creating a living wage for the residents of Orlando. Incumbents get comfortable, she says, and Olivarez is hungry to learn. “I love helping people,” she says. “I want to make a difference at the local level … Orlando is very beautiful, but I think we’re behind on things we should have.” 1. What is the millage rate for the city of Orlando? Olivarez: You’d think I know this since I got my real estate license once. I think it’s a little over 6 mills. Ross: One of the most important things I should know, and I’m blanking. I know the increase from the previous millage rate was
17.7 percent. Just say Randy had a brain fart. Sheehan: 6.65 2. What is the average homeless population in Orlando? Olivarez: I just worked with Rethink Homelessness, and they gave us the number. I can’t remember, but I know it’s huge. It’s bad. Ross: I know we have 10,000 homeless students between Osceola, Orange and Seminole counties. I don’t know if I know the answer to that. Sheehan: There is way too many. I’ve heard anywhere from 1,500 to 5,000. That’s a moving target. 3. What is the tallest building in Orlando? Olivarez: The SunTrust building. Ross: That’s the SunTrust building. That doesn’t matter as much as knowing the homeless population, though. Sheehan: The courthouse. 4. Is there such a thing as “too much” development downtown? Olivarez: Yes. Ross: Yes. As related to development, there’s not a ton you can do in District 4. You’re not going to be able to build a plant or more hotels. Anything that’s going to be built is going to be torn down and then built back where it was. The only reason there’s a big fight over Constitution Green is because this particular commissioner allowed the votes for all the buildings to go up around it. The city should have bought that land a long time ago and designated it a park that they owned, not something they leased from these private property owners. Sheehan: I think there CONTINUED ON PaGe 12
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needs to be a balance, especially with what’s happening with Constitution Green and that building that was proposed by Lake Eola. I don’t think we have too much development, but I think we’re going to have to find that balance. Unfortunately, we’re going to be forced to do some growth in order to keep up with our budget because of these tax caps on homes and commercial property, which I don’t think was a good idea. Downtown is beautiful, but we have developed it so much with the high rises. I think we need to stop because now we don’t have safe places for people to walk or for bike riders. 5. What is the daily ridership goal for SunRail? Olivarez: I don’t know the exact number, but I’m sure it’s very low. Ross: Anything I say to you would be uneducated, but I will tell you it’s not hitting the goal that they wanted it to hit. Part of that is the ridership time zone because people want it accessible to them, and as a city, we’re not really prepared for public transportation. I
think that’s where SunRail has a consistent challenge. Sheehan: I think it’s around 1,500. 6. A tree is about to fall over outside your house, and it’s on the city’s part of the property. Who do you call? Olivarez: The city, of course. Ross: That’s happened to me before. I have a number written down at my house that’s for the Public Works Department, so I would call them and hopefully they would help me through the problem. Sheehan: Andy Kittsley, the urban forester for the city. Or the Parks Department, if you don’t know him. 7. Talk for a moment about the property tax rate. Is the current rate appropriate for the level of services the city provides? Olivarez: It could not be, like for the homeowners and businesses that are suffering, but for people who rent apartments, I’m sure it’s OK. It depends on who you’re asking if it’s appropriate. The homeowners may say it’s too high, renters not so much. And that
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also depends on where in Orlando you live. Ross: No. What I want to know is how do you get $52 million in the hole and need a 17.7 percent tax increase to recoup? That doesn’t happen because you budgeted wrong. That happens because they projected home values to go a certain way and they didn’t. If every two, three years we need to look at the millage rate and say it’s not quite where it needs to be, then propose raising it slightly to let people digest it. I think it could have been done over periods of time, and the solution does not always rest with money. Sheehan: Yes. There’s no way to maintain an ISO rating of 1 for fire and a police response time of three minutes or less unless you have a fully funded police and fire department, and I’m proud of what we do. When we average it out, each citizen is paying about $40 a month, less than what they pay for their cable bill. I don’t think it was too much, especially since people are now paying less than they paid in 2009. We need to be fair, but we also need to pay our fair share. 8. What is the status of the long-awaited Creative Village in downtown Orlando? Olivarez: I’ve been seeing a lot of stories on that. The last thing I heard was people talking about the gentrification it could cause in the Parramore area. Ross: Two articles came out recently, with one saying they were going to delay it, and the other said they were going to scale it back, so assuming the most recent one is the correct one, I think it’s a great thing that UCF is going to become a part of downtown.
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Sheehan: Gosh, that’s just been tough. By partnering with UCF, we thought that would be a way to really get it jump-started. There was a $15 million appropriation, and darn it if the governor didn’t veto it. I mean, that’s the difficulty in Parramore, getting those catalytic projects to start redevelopment, and Creative Village is intended to be one. The soccer stadium we were able to come back from because the owner said he would pay for it and do it privately. But you know, we don’t have that kind of money lying around to help UCF.
District 4 Commissioner Patty Sheehan
thing that’s an 9. Who appoints the issue, I’m certainly city’s Citizen Police Review Board? How do not aware of it. I think we should appoint good peoyou think the process ple and work on diversity. could be improved? Olivarez: I know for 10. Where does sure they’re appointed by Orlando rank among City Council, but they are looking at people who they the top 50 American metro areas in terms have relationships with, people who they think will of median wage? How could your economic be fair. I think the process policies make life more could be improved by asking African-Americans and affordable for the averHispanics to be the majori- age citizen? Olivarez: At the botty on the board because we are the first ones to get our tom. It’s sad, isn’t it? I think that we defihouses raided and the nitely have to cuffs slapped on increase the our wrists. minimum Ross: wage. I’ve People applied have to one, been so I talking know about it’s the making commisthe minision. At mum wage the city Aretha Olivarez $15, but we and county need to have level, I think stipulations so that it’s jaded and dicthe living wage is $18 or tated by commissioners’ $19 by the time they finish. party affiliation, which That’s what I want to only brings in people that fight for, and hopefully keep their same ideas. City Council will agree to Sheehan: All of the that. My policies can help boards are appointed by having more entrepreby the mayor, and basineurs start and grow their cally approved by the City businesses here and asking Council. If there’s some-
bigger businesses to come here. I would also make sure that local contractors get the job instead of outsourcing the jobs. Ross: I saw a report that put Orlando way down, like in the lower third. You have a city based on an industry of tourism and service, and those jobs don’t necessarily pay as well as medical professions, law professions. I’m not going to be one to tell you I want to force a company to pay a certain amount of money, but at the same time, we can pay more. You can’t live in downtown on a serviceindustry salary. Sheehan: I don’t know what our ranking is in there. I know there’s been talk now of raising that, which I support. I don’t think if you’re working 40 hours a week you should be making less than $30,000 a year. The only groups that have come to me recently about pay concerns and stuff like that is our 911 operators, and I think we should be paying them higher and not losing people to Orange County. BONUS: How many
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seats is the Orlando City Soccer Club’s new stadium supposed to contain? Olivarez: I’m not into soccer, so I’m going to take a wild guess and say it’s in the thousands. Ross: Originally, it was going to be 19,000 seats. I think now it’s going to be between 24,000 and 27,000 seats. Sheehan: I think it’s around 30,000 seats.
City Council, district 6 is opponents call
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City Commissioner Sam Ings “Silent Sam,” because they say he doesn’t speak up enough for the community he represents. The veteran law enforcement officer, who has served the district
since 2006, they say, makes feel-good appearances but is rarely in touch on the important issues. “In this district, he hasn’t said anything, he hasn’t done anything, and that’s why we call him Silent Sam,” says Lawanna Gelzer, community activist and president of the National Action Network’s Central Florida Chapter. Gelzer is one of four people who’ve qualified to challenge Ings for his seat. “We also call him Spending Sam because he’s always overspending his budget.” Gelzer and others all seem to think that District 6 – which is a mix of poor neighborhoods, industrial zones and touristy areas around I-Drive – needs more of a voice in city government. “Commissioner Ings is basically invisible in the district, outside of I-Drive,” says candidate Marcus
Robinson, who’s running his third campaign against Ings. “When it comes down to functional things in the community, as a city commissioner, he’s basically invisible. The only time he’s out there is if they’re giving out some turkeys or book bags to kids.” And what does the district need? According to all of the candidates, business development, economic opportunity, crime reduction and jobs that pay a living wage. “There is no opportunity for people here,” says Nathan Chambers, a community organizer who says that while some regions of the city have experienced unprecedented growth, many District 6 neighborhoods (like Washington Shores, or Carver Shores) have languished. “If we can clean up Ivey Lane and Washington Shores and help small businesses, and
help people get business plans and help them create opportunity, the more people we can get to work. The more people we get to work, the more we reduce crime.” And it’s not just work the district needs, says Ka’Juel Washington, a law professor at Florida A&M University – people need a fair wage. “I think it’s important that we fight for $15,” Washington says. “And one way we can do that is through government contracting. Anybody who has a city contract, or who wants to build a venue with us, everyone they hire needs to pay a minimum wage of $15 an hour. Some people don’t agree with that, and that’s fine – you shouldn’t have to go out of business, if you don’t support it. You just can’t do business with us.” There’s no shortage of ideas among the challeng-
ers for improving people’s lives, but what about the incumbent? His campaign called us to ask us if he could do the interview via email. We replied that we were only doing interviews in person or over the phone, and we were told he’d get back to us. The day we went to press, the campaign sent us a statement: “I have built strong relationships and partnerships with businesses to expand their companies in District 6, which has increased opportunities and jobs for many residents,” it reads. “Many developers have invested in our district because they see the potential and they are still investing in District 6. As Commissioner of District 6, I have consis-
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District 6 Commissioner Sam Ings
tently demonstrated to the residents what I have done. The evidence of what I have accomplished for District 6 can be seen from new retail stores and businesses, to new housing developments and new programs for seniors and children throughout our District. I am the only candidate with a proven track record. District 6 residents
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should keep the progress by re-electing the only candidate experienced to lead and proven to serve.” 1. What is the millage rate for the city of Orlando? Chambers: I believe it is 19. Gelzer: It’s close to 7. Robinson: Off the top of my head, I don’t know. But I know it went up. Washington: Is it 17.7? I’m not quite sure. 2. What is the average homeless population in Orlando? Chambers: I’m not sure, but it seems too high right now. Different things create homelessness – it could be divorce, it could be loss of income, it could be anything. Most people are a flip of the coin away from being homeless, so we have to show some respect for humanity and make sure we are providing a permanent place for them, as well as creating temporary living for people who need help getting back on their feet. Gelzer: I don’t know. Robinson: I know that there are 6,300 people on the waiting list for affordable housing, and I can guarantee you that a lot of those 6,300 people on the Orlando Housing Authority’s waiting list are part of that number. They may not all count as homeless, but if you have a waiting list of 6,300, that in itself is too much. Washington: I know it’s high. I’m at the homeless shelter two days a week, and the Coalition for the Homeless is flooded. 3. What is the tallest building in Orlando? Chambers: I think it’s the SunTrust. Gelzer: I think the SunTrust is the tallest building. 14
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Robinson: Last I thought, it was the courthouse. Washington: If it’s not the Bank of America building, then it’s probably the Centroplex building. 4. Is there such a thing as “too much” development downtown? Chambers: It’s not too much development, but as a real estate broker, there’s demand and supply. In downtown there’s high demand for land we have, and we should not be giving away 100 percent tax incentives to investors. … We need a big enough tax base to create revenue for our city, so why give away so many incentives? Gelzer: Absolutely. I have a problem with who is getting to develop in Orlando and who is benefiting from it. A prime example: How can the city sell the Orlando Police Department headquarters for $13 million, then turn around and take out a bond to build a new police headquarters for $60 million? It does not add up to me. I believe in development, but who is really benefiting from it? Not the community, not the city – it’s big developers and special interests.
Robinson: When I ran in 2004, I said to the editorial board of the Orlando Sentinel that the development they have planned for downtown is just going to make downtown too congested. I thought it was too much for downtown. … And everything else, except for International Drive, is neglected when it comes to development. In District 6, especially, in the black section of District 6, you have a commissioner who hasn’t even created a plan for development. I came up with a plan, called the Southwest Economic and Poverty Plan. Washington: Downtown, maybe not. Because it is a downtown, and I understand what they are trying to do: Attract people downtown to shop, eat, attend the bars and all of that. There may be too much development than City Hall can afford, subsidizing through taxing. City Hall cannot afford that type of development. 5. What is the daily ridership goal for SunRail? Chambers: I’m not CONTINUED ON PaGe 16
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sure of the ridership, but I think it fills a need. The city is growing, and any sort of mass transportation is helpful. I am always for mass transportation. Gelzer: I know it’s decreasing, and it’s going to continue to decrease, because it’s north to south, but you have not improved the east to west transportation. How can somebody come in from another county on SunRail, then it’s going to take them two hours to get to another destination from there? Robinson: Low? Low. They should really take advantage of the nightlife in downtown Orlando. Washington: I don’t know the ridership goal for SunRail, but I think we have an issue with ridership. 6. A tree is about to fall over outside your house, and it’s on the city’s part of the property. Who do you call? Chambers: I would call the city, but which department I’m not sure. Most of the trees planted are in the easement, so they are the city’s responsibility.
Gelzer: [One lady that happened to] had to pay for the city’s portion of a tree because of the way it fell. It was an incident on the east side. That was wrong, because an elderly lady living on a fixed income did not have the right kind of coverage. But I think it depends on where you live. Robinson: If I’m the city commissioner, I work for you. You can call me and say, “Commissioner Robinson, I have a tree down.” The commissioner’s assistant should then take down the information and get in touch with whatever department it is and let them know to contact you within 24 hours. … Then I’m going to follow up. That’s the job of our city commissioner. Washington: The first thing I do is call the utilities, in case it’s about to hit a power line. Then I call the Parks Department. 7. Talk for a moment about the property tax rate. Is the current rate appropriate for the level of services the city provides? Chambers: The present tax rate,
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Chambers: I’m not really sure what’s going on with that. Gelzer: It’s going to be an empty lot for a while. Why did you blow up the original arena? That was $93 million we lost. What was wrong with putting the soccer stadium there? The list goes on and on. The reason there’s so many delays is that the community is waking up and they don’t believe Gelzer: this is going Absolutely Ka’Juel Washington to be good for not. And the the community, reason we are it’s going to be jobs. in a deficit in the We aren’t buying that crap. first place is bad business Robinson: First they deals by the City Council. want to figure out what We were spending money UCF wants to do. The and hoping for the econoCreative Village has had my to catch up. Robinson: The property- many facelifts. Washington: All you tax increase was based on see over there is a banmismanagement of the ner around an empty lot. I budget. What they could don’t know what the have done, instead of raisstatus is. ing the property tax, is – last I checked, we still 9. Who appoints the had a double A rating in city’s Citizen Police municipal bonds – asked Review Board? How do for more bonds. you think the process Washington: That’s could be improved? a sticky issue. I know at Chambers: I think it’s the time they increased appointed by the mayor. the rate, 29 or 30 cities And I think that’s fine, as were considering doing long as they are doing the the same thing. So some right thing by citizens. of the rationale was tryGelzer: I believe in an ing to balance the budget. But the question is, where independent review board. We’ve done the research. does the money go once it’s collected? Are people No matter who is elected, getting a return on their they always side with the police department. … investment? They may We’ve got a problem in this not be. Do the roads city. We have spent $4.5 look nice? The greenways? I know in my area million settling excessiveforce cases, we’ve spent a [Washington Shores] I’d lot of money. We can’t conhave to say there is not tinue to have this going on enough return on investin our community. ment. Robinson: The Citizen Review Board is appointed 8. What is the status by the mayor. But I think of the long-awaited the board should be an Creative Village in independent body. downtown Orlando? the increase, I’m against it. The reason why I’m against it is because we have to look into the budget to see where we can cut without hurting any department. Police and fire, we cannot cut. But before we increase things 17.7 percent – that is a major increase – we need to see where we can cut. … for services, well, it’s not the greatest.
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Lawanna Gelzer
Washington: My understanding is the commissioners get to appoint people. 10. Where does Orlando rank among the top 50 American metro areas in terms of median wage? How could your economic policies make life more affordable for the average citizen? Chambers: I think we are 14th. What we need to do is, I’m for $15 an hour for minimum wage increase. It’s very difficult for a single mom to have two jobs and have kids and try to get by. We need a better standard of living in this town. Gelzer: I might want to say we’re 50. But I’ll stick with between 35 and 45. You have to work with legislators to increase the living wage. We have got to do a livable wage. There’s no way in a serviceindustry job we can expect people to make it these days. We need to sit down and recognize that we have a problem. But we have politicians who do not realize how difficult it is to live on minimum wage. Robinson: We’re last. I was part of that walk for poverty on Labor Day, with Eric Gray. We are dead
last in wages, we are number one in tourism. It’s a slap in the face, actually. Yet the machine keeps growing. Washington: I am all for the fight for $15. That gives everybody a living wage. We have to do better than we are doing. … My economic development plan is all about can we get city contracts to have a clause where if you hire people, you have to hire them at this set wage. We are going to be building all this stuff – Creative Village, police headquarters and other things further down the road – and when you hire somebody, we want you to hire them at a living wage. Orlando ranks pretty low, and that’s one of the first things I’d try to do. BONUS: How many seats is the Orlando City Soccer Club’s new stadium supposed to contain? Chambers: I am not sure. Gelzer: Between 24,000 and 25,000. Robinson: 23,000. Something like that. They should have just played at the Citrus Bowl. Washington: I thought it was about 20,000. feedback@orlandoweekly.com
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“Loathsome and wonderful all at once” Although he thinks Florida has gotten a bad rap in the news lately, John Hodgman is looking forward to his return BY JE SSICA BRYCE YOU N G John hodgman: VaCaTionland 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 23 | Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave. | 407-228-1220 | plazaliveorlando.com | $25-$36
PHOTO BY BEX FINCH
J
ohn Hodgman works a lot. He’s published three books. He’s in FX series Married. He’s still on The Daily Show (chiding those who fear change – as symbolized by Trevor Noah – not to worry, there’s still an old white man on the show). He was in Pitch Perfect 2 this year. He’s a PC (or was, to Justin Long’s douchey Mac). He’s resumed his column as “Judge John Hodgman” in the New York Times. And now another stand-up tour. Where does he get off calling that tour “Vacationland”? Well: It was once Maine’s state motto, and it still appears on Maine license plates – and Hodgman has, in the last year, relocated to Maine.
“My wife loves the state of Maine more than any other place or human in the world,” so Hodgman recently purchased a home in Brooklin, Maine. He notes that he has thus moved “from Brookline [Massachusetts, where he was raised] to Brooklyn to Brooklin.” But we all know that Florida is the true Vacationland – just look at our tourism numbers! – and Hodgman doesn’t disagree. In Maine, “the water is so cold it will try to murder you … even on land, it’s full of animals and people that hate you. Unless that’s your idea of a vacation, Maine is not the place to be. … Florida is warm and has pleasant beaches and water that does not try to kill you.” In our interview, Hodgman fondly recalls two previous trips to Central Florida. When he was a teenager, “we performed Pirates of Penzance at a Florida high school; I was the Pirate King, which I still am in my daily
life. We were taken to some place by a manmade lake, from which you couldn’t even see a castle, and sang to like seven elderly people.” (The reporter suspects Hodgman has somehow conflated the Villages with Lake Buena Vista, but concedes that frankly, it’s all pretty much the same.) As a teen wandering the Magic Kingdom, Hodgman says, he was overwhelmed, thinking, “‘This is loathsome and wonderful all at once! Everything is fake, even the things that don’t need to be fake!’ and I loved it,” he marvels. “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea? Attraction, they call it; terrifying machine is what I call it. Where I come from, robots and water don’t mix. Robot fish, robot clams – I got so freaked out that it haunted me for years. I had a recurring fear that I would trip and fall into the lagoon. I’m getting goosebumps right now.” The other visit (to Coral Springs) was just a few years ago, with fellow Daily Show correspondents Al Madrigal and Adam Lowitt. “We were a little nervous about who was going to show up in the middle of the week, and whether they would accept that it was not a Daily Show-themed show.” But, echoing the pleased surprise of the dozens of out-of-town comics who’ve been here for the Orlando Indie Comedy Fest, he says, “It was one of the greatest shows of my life.” orlandoweekly.com
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Hodgman is best-known in his various personae: the deranged billionaire, the expert on all world knowledge, the aforementioned PC. We’d like to say that in Vacationland, he’s going to be himself, but rather than dropping out of character, it seems he’s just trying on a new one (“bewildered Maine resident”). Hodgmaniacs will turn out for this show, though, no matter who he is that day – any fan of the man would be incapable of resisting him in a “one-human show” about “cairns, river witches, junkyards and death.” Also to be discussed: “The evolutionary purpose of the weird dad mustache; how to decide which small animals you should love as members of your family and which you should kill with traps and poison; and city buses, which, let’s face it, can pretty much end up going ANYWHERE if the driver goes crazy or just has a soul full of mischief. It’s terrifying.” Hodgman also wants people to know that he will hang around to “sign things and chat” after the show. Things like books and tour posters, we ask? “Things,” he says. So, yes, you can purchase a print of the tour poster and have it signed, but apparently he’s also cool with signing your coffee mug or pet tortoise or whatever. Or maybe a robot clam, if you’ve got one. jyoung@orlandoweekly.com OCT. 21-27, 2015
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dIvIng In: 5 qUeSTIonS for erIC JaCoBSen What’s the most used app on your phone? Besides the utilitarian ones: iTunes, then Instagram. What book are you currently reading? Infinite Jest. Which means it’s a good chance I’ll be “currently” reading it for a year. What’s your cocktail of choice? We’re moving right into prime Sazerac season! What are the last three things you bought? A gift for my new niece (one week old); a case of kombucha; pappardelle alla lepre (pasta with hare ragù). given the choice, beach or pool — and why? I love swimming in a pool. It was my prime pastime for years. But there is absolutely nothing like the ocean. I grew up with a small fear of the ocean and therefore I push myself to swim far out when I’m at a beach. It doesn’t rid me of the fear, but it does give me the illusion of control over myself.
New directions Orlando Philharmonic music director Eric Jacobsen makes his debut By Jessica B ryc e you n g
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concerts and working with the orchestra, but also finding new audiences and keeping current listeners energized – what happens with Jacobsen’s other projects: the Knights, Brooklyn Rider, Silk Road Ensemble? He’s even part of the second show of the Accidental Music Fest season Dec. 4, playing cello in an ensemble performing music by Steve Reich, Julia Wolfe and Michael Gordon. He’s not superhuman, after all. “No, I’m not superhuman,” Jacobsen laughs, then says he plans to continue taking part in other projects unless or until it’s not possible. “The current plan is that everything will stay tight and good. Orlando is my family, Brooklyn Rider is my family … as I see it right now, everything fits.” His enthusiasm for Orlando is boundless. “The trajectory of this city is upwards and growing more than most,” he declares. “I think the Philharmonic is a part of that, in terms of growth musically and artistically. It gives me pride.” “It’s so ripe. It feels so ripe and so right to be there. I already feel pride that this group I’m with is helping the city to grow.” Maybe Jacobsen’s approach to the OPO is akin to his philosophy of swimming in the ocean (see above): Rather than give in to any small fears, jump in and push yourself to swim as far out as you can. jyoung@orlandoweekly.com
PHOTO BY DARIO ACOSTA
fter a yearlong search, the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra has a new music director, and what a breath of fresh air he is. Conductor and cellist Eric Jacobsen brings to Orlando the fluency in modern and avant-garde musics that a younger cadre of local classical fans has craved (yes, they exist) – he’s a founding member of modern string quartet Brooklyn Rider and leads the innovative New Yorkbased chamber orchestra the Knights. He’s also just 33, a Brooklynite, a foodie and a digital native who tweets, Instagrams and makes Vines (good ones – take a look). That’s not to say he can’t kick the hell out of traditional repertory, though. Raised by a professional violinist and a flutist, he
was steeped in the classical canon from birth. (His family didn’t bother buying a CD player until the 120-disc Jascha Heifetz collection came out.) Jacobsen’s official debut concert is a four-piece program that includes works by Beethoven, Tchaikovsky and Ravel, and thus is unlikely to alienate the grayest heads in the season ticketholder circle, but it’s the fourth piece on the program, a world premiere by Gabriel Kahane called Freight & Salvage, that has us on the edge of our seats. “Gabe is known as a singer-songwriter and a classical composer – the doublesided nature of Gabe does lend itself to a communication to a younger audience and, let’s say, [gives him] a first audience with classical music listeners,” says Jacobsen of the program. As for finding and serving those new fans, Jacobsen is optimistic. His five-year OPO contract means he’ll have “time to marinate.”
orlando PHIlHarMonIC MUSIC dIreCTor deBUT 8 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 24-25 | Bob Carr Theater, 401 W. Livingston St. | 407-770-0071 | orlandophil.org | $21-$62
“The formula to bring in a younger audience is not necessarily solidified,” he says. “Two things go on: ‘We should play this music because it’s great’ and a parallel, not necessarily conflicting, view: ‘We should try to rejuvenate constantly.’ We always want younger people to see what this music is.” As the popularity of a current crop of festivals that combine modern classical performers with indie bands – like Big Ears, Ecstatic Music or Orlando’s own Accidental Music Festival – proves, part of appealing to young audiences is exploring new venues as well as new compositions by living composers. The OPO’s recent purchase of the Plaza ties directly into that aim, and Jacobsen is excited about it. “When I was applying for this position, it was right after the Plaza had been purchased. How cool is it that an orchestra has a stage that is so versatile? … I’m into the low-fi, high-quality.” Jacobsen divulges that the OPO will present Mozart’s two-act opera The Magic Flute at the Plaza “in six months or so.” “A place like the Plaza inspires a particular vision. You see the orchestra. You see the interaction. It’s the beauty of honesty.” So, with all the goals of a new music director on the agenda – not just programming upcoming seasons, conducting
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ARTS & CULTURE
BAT BOY: THE MUSICAL
BY SETH KUBERSKY
PHOTO BY PATTY WOLFE
Last weekend, 31 days’ worth of art openings and events were squeezed into just 31 hours I’ve said September is my favorite month for Orlando arts, but this October is proving strong in both quality and quantity. Last weekend alone saw 31 days’ worth of openings and events squeezed into barely 31 hours. It began Thursday at City Hall’s Art Legends of Orange County kickoff, where Terry Olson hosted local pioneers Texann Ivy Buck and Hal McIntosh to share stories of the Winter Park Sidewalk Art Festival’s early days. Hours later, Pine Street was packed for CityArts Factory’s 6th annual Dia de los Muertos/Monster Factory event, featuring eerie arts and creepy crafts. Friday followed with the funniest show seen yet in the Dr. Phillips Center, as Monty Python founders John Cleese and Eric Idle opened the two-night Orlando leg of their Together Again at Last … for the Very First Time tour. Friends for 52 years, the silly septuagenarians reminisced about working with David Frost and Marty Feldman; re-created their “Bookshop” and “Memory Lesson” skits; and screened rare clips, like a “Red Riding Hood” spoof filmed for German television. You haven’t lived until you’ve heard Idle lead a full house of sophisticates in a rousing sing-along of “Sit on My Face” and “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.”
And we haven’t even gotten to the third edition of Cole NeSmith’s Creative City Project, which drew overwhelming crowds to downtown Orange Avenue on Saturday for free performances from the Orlando Ballet, Central Florida Community Arts, Cirque du Soleil and many more. The outpouring of interest in every imaginable arts genre – from Jeff Feree’s musical seesaw to Joshua Glenn Wilson’s ColorVox vocal video game to Mary Thompson Hunt’s Conversation Campfire – made me wonder why events like this can’t take over downtown on a monthly (or at least quarterly) basis. In the midst of all that, I somehow managed to see two of the more ambitious theatrical presentations to hit Orlando in this (or any) October. Up first was opening night of Bat Boy: The Musical at the Abbey, the latest collaboration between Gen Y producer Aaron Safer and director Kenny Howard. Lovingly ripped from the long-lost pages of the trashy Weekly World News, Bat Boy turns tabloid tales of a chiropteran child into a mocking mashup of My Fair Lady, Young Frankenstein and Edward Scissorhands, with healthy dollops of Grand Guignol and incestual bestiality added for good measure. Keythe Farley and Brian Flemming’s script is funny but flimsy, with obvious plot twists, and the score by Laurence O’Keefe (composer of Gen Y’s recent Heathers: The Musical) has a few killer tunes – “Hold Me, Bat Boy,” “Comfort and Joy,” “Three Bedroom House,” “A Joyful Noise” –
that are reprised a few too many times. Fortunately, Howard’s all-star cast nails every nutty nuance, infusing the thin book with batty secondary business and exuberantly executing William Marchante’s ballroom-burlesque choreography. Ricky Cona is fiendishly fantastic in the title role, icky yet adorable with his opera-worthy voice and ever-twitching fingers. He’s more than matched by Rebecca Fisher’s powerhouse performance as his adoptive (or is she?) mother, and Jennafer Newberry as his perky semi-sister, Shelley. The cross-dressing, quick-changing ensemble, featuring David Lee and OW’s own Adam McCabe, earns applause as an entire town of addled rednecks. Their dialects may be dubious, but their vocal harmonies (musical directed by John DeHaas) are delightful; too bad the hard-rocking band buried most of their lyrics on opening night. The Abbey’s postage-stamp stage, which seemed adequate for Cabaret, feels claustrophobically cramped this time. But between designer Bonnie Sprung’s pop-upbook backdrops, Michael Wanzie’s goofy/ gory props and Kyla Swanberg’s costumes – which could start a riot at a Furry convention – Bat Boy will fulfill your kinky camp-fest quota in the absence of any area Rocky Horror Show stagings this season. Speaking of horrorshow, the next night saw me at DRIP’s I-Drive theater for producer Jeremy Seghers’ immersive production of A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess’ seminal exploration of ultraviolence versus moral choice. Star Anthony Pyatt Jr. was excellent as Alex, bringing a youthful vulnerability and lighthearted looseness that Malcolm McDowell lacked in Stanley Kubrick’s cinematic version; he was even able to infuse Burgess’ insipid original ending (wisely excised from the film) with emotional resonance. Brett Carson also excelled as a pickled priest preaching for free will, and fight director Jason Skinner was the show’s second star; his vicious violence smashed the fourth wall, thrillingly spilling into the audience. With so many strong elements, it’s a shame Seghers’ innovative approach was severely undermined by the lackluster location. DRIP’s awkward seating, industrial lighting and awful acoustics made me nostalgic for the bad old days when Orlando Fringe happened in abandoned storefronts. Mix in some iffy accents, overbearing vinyl-sourced background music and the text’s Russian-based “nadsat” slang, and I was only able to understand the dialogue because I already knew it by heart. It’s wonderful having Seghers’ boundary-busting vision back in town; next time, I hope he finds a venue worthy of it. skubersky@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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Food & drInk
tip jar
[ restaurant review ]
by Faiyaz Kara
Norman Van Aken’s yet-to-be-named Mount Dora restaurant now has a chef de cuisine – Camilo Velasco of Barnie’s CoffeeKitchen. Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts hosts a farm-to-table Fall Harvest Farmers’ Market from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29, in the college’s Cafe Technique. Hari Pulapaka of DeLand’s Cress restaurant will be an invited speaker and will stage a cooking demo and book signing for his Dreaming in Spice. Morimoto Asia in Disney Springs is now serving lunch Monday through Friday from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Duck ramen, here we come. Cows ’n Cabs celebrates its fifth anniversary Saturday, Oct. 24. The Western-themed event features more than 20 local restos (like 4 Rivers Smokehouse, Soco, Osprey Tavern, Slate and Tapa Toro, to name a few) with proceeds going to benefit the Community Food & Outreach Center and Elevate Orlando. Tickets are $110 per person, $140 for VIP.
Chin music
BB Junction hosts a Halloween Food & Beer Pairing Dinner with Bradenton’s Motorworks Brewing 6 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28. Cost for the three-course meal is $27 per person.
Seito Sushi’s renaissance, and Baldwin Park’s restaurant scene, has Jason Chin’s fingerprints all over it By FAiyAz KARA SeITo SUSHI 4898 New Broad St. | 407-898-8801 | seitosushi.com | $$$
PHOTOS BY ROB BARTLETT
l
ong before his now-popular Osprey Tavern opened its doors, local restaurant impresario Jason Chin spent a decade nurturing, molding and steadily improving Seito Sushi into the slick joint it is today. Much like Baldwin Park’s dining scene, Seito Sushi languished for most of those years, but things seemingly took a turn for the better once Austin Boyd (Dragonfly Sushi, Norman’s Orlando) joined the team in late 2014. Since then, Seito Sushi appears refreshed and revitalized, and their dishes ever more Japanese (or “New Japanese”; so says the menu). The trickle-down buzz from Osprey Tavern across the street certainly hasn’t hurt, as Seito appears as popular and bustling as ever. Waiting an inordinately long period before our orders were taken gave us plenty of time to appreciate the Japanese illustrations on the squarish bill of fare, but the izakaya menu was what drew our notice. Small-plate items, like slices of chimichurritorched wahoo ($12) over a wasabi-avocado puree, are featured on the weekend-only menu. The wahoo, as it turned out, was beyond oishii. Really. Order this. Bo ssam
bao buns ($10) with smoky pork belly, fried oysters, kimchi and lettuce were marvy too, but what of the ssamjang? The spicy paste was all but absent, which just made for dry bites. A veggie ramen ($12) is listed as an izakaya item (yes, the ramen trend has officially become entrenched), but we looked to the main menu and opted for shoyu ramen ($14) instead, and it’s a choice I’d make again in a heartbeat. A soothing broth fashioned from roast chicken and soy is liquid gold, with house-made noodles, cuts of grilled chicken thigh, slow-cooked egg, corn and carrots the proverbial nuggets. A side of shishito peppers ($6) graced with nori and bonito flakes are a complement to anything, in my opinion, but I especially enjoyed them in between sloshes of ramen. Save for soft and mealy bigeye tuna, the moriawase (chef’s selection) of sashimi ($30) – gossamer slivers of branzino, Faroe Island salmon, Norwegian mackerel, hamachi, Deer Creek oysters and sweet tamago – otherwise proved to be a wise choice. The “Distinguished Gentleman” ($16), comprised mainly of lobster, American wagyu and truffle aioli, was like surf and turf in a roll. Our server could’ve been a little less blasé and a little more refined, though the same could be said of dessert. Take the “bananas Foster” ($7), for instance: One server pre-
sented us with a bowl of vanilla ice cream, and another spooned cooked bananas into the bowl. Really? I could understand if the other server were there to perform a tableside flambé, but spooning bananas into a bowl? C’mon. Sure, ginger liqueur and black sesame dress up the dessert, but the tepid and mushy bananas made it an utter bore. Five-spice French toast ($6) carried nary a whiff of one spice, let alone five, in the brioche, so I’ll say this: Come for the sushi and izakaya; don’t stay for dessert. Requisite craft cocktails, along with a decent wine, sake and beer list, might keep Baldwin Parkers slaked, but it’s Chin who keeps them thirsty for more. With Osprey Tavern and the renewed Seito Sushi, he’s single-handedly injected new life into the gastronomic heart of Baldwin Park. It might be premature to say a resurgence is underway in this decade-old neighborhood, but Jack’s Steakhouse is also hopping onto the chef-driven trendwagon by rebranding itself to Provisions & Buzz Co. (look for it Nov. 5). In recent years, restaurants along New Broad Street have failed to impress me, but I get a sense this might change in the near future. Baldwin Park, this could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
oPenInGS The long-awaited NOVA Restaurant in Ivanhoe Village opens next month in the space that once housed Brian’s Restaurant and Elliot’s Public House … Jack’s Steakhouse in Baldwin Park will soon be known as Provisions & Buzz Co. Expect the rebrand to roll out to the public Nov. 5 … The Smiling Bison in Sanford has opened … Pepe’s Cantina is open now in Hannibal Square … Hinckley’s Fancy Meats has filled Local Roots’ display case inside East End Market with locally farmed artisan meats. Owner Matt Hinckley was a former chef de cuisine at Michelin-starred Public in NYC … Remember Chili Daddy’s on East Michigan Street? Well, that popular chili purveyor is setting up shop inside the Dancing Pigs Deli on South Orange Avenue. Classic Texas Red will be available every day along with one other chili, which will rotate daily. CloSInGS Frank & Stein’s Winter Park on Fairbanks Avenue has gone the way of Shipyard Brewing and Strollo’s Cucina Due … Flying Fish Café on Disney’s Boardwalk will close Jan. 31 for extensive renovations … Brown’s Deli in Maitland has closed. Got restaurant dish? Send tips to dining@orlandoweekly.com
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Food & drInk
The Guesthouse Address/phone/web: 1321 N. Mills Ave.,
Dog-friendly? Y
N
407-630-6574
Bag hooks? Y
After work or after hours? Both
Bathrooms: nightmare or not bad?
Beer/wine or liquor too? Both
Not bad at all
Check all that apply:
TVs? Y
fancy cocktails make ’em strong and keep ’em coming wine list (5 choices or more)
beer: the usual suspects
N DJs? Y Loud music or background music?
Three songs/bands we heard here: Beirut, Neutral Milk Hotel, Kurt Vile
wide selection of bottles and cans (more than 15) wide selection on tap (more than 15)
Games? Check all that apply: pinball
SERVING THE AUTHENTIC
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) 26
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N
video
Smoking allowed inside? Y Outside drinking? Y
N
N
pool darts other: _________
Essay question: Why should I drink here? All vestiges of the old Peacock Room are erased at the Guesthouse, Mills 50’s newest, chillest hangout. The many hanging plants (and the nifty palm-print wallpaper in the restrooms) give it a fern-bar feel; the lighting’s soft glow and the cushion-strewn couch pick up on that pick-up vibe. The walls, ceiling and floor are all dark, and the flickering candles and hanging globes give this bar the most flattering lighting ever. You’ll feel like you’re floating as you sit at the bar, quaffing carefully shaken craft cocktails. Don’t miss the Army-Navy, a gin-based wonder.
PHOTO BY JessICA BRYCe YOuNG
GYRO SANDWICH
N
Indie rock, volume depending on time (louder later)
craft beer
Food? Y
N
Food & drInk
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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG
$$$$ $$$$ $$$$ $$$$
$10 or less $10-$15 $15-$25 $25 or more
The price range generally reflects the average cost of one dinner entree. Bakeries, ice cream shops, etc. reflect relative cost for one person. Search hundreds more reviews at orlandoweekly.com
Slate It’s a “see and be seen” kind of place, but chef Dominic Rice serves up seasonal dishes that, for the most part, are competently executed. Oak-fired pizzas (a necessity, it seems, for any new joint worth its weight) are worth a look, as is the gnocchi with short rib Bolognese. A heavy-handed spice rub marred delicate tilefish, but succulent flatiron steak served with crisp green beans, marble potatoes and smoked butter is nice. Sticky toffee pudding makes for a saucy ending. Decent wine and cocktail list. Open daily. 8323 Sand Lake Road, 407-500-7528; $$$
The Boathouse Giant house of boating paraphernalia and seaside eats is the proverbial anchor in the restaurant makeover at Disney Springs. Just as vast is the selection of seafood and steak items offered at inflated prices. Lobster cocktail and middleneck clams from Cedar Key make a nice start, but consult Seafood Watch prior to ordering the catch of the day. Steaks are stellar; desserts (like Key lime pie in a Mason jar and berry-coulis-saturated chocolate bundt cake) are not. Open daily. 1620 E. Buena Vista Drive, Lake Buena Vista, 407-939-2628; $$$$
Gopal Ji Sweets Wonderful vegetarian dishes are to be had at this Indian resto, but all but one of the “sweets” has been jettisoned and the menu may soon include meat. Until then, do yourself a favor and try their outstanding chaat items, like bhel puri, chole bhatura and veg samosas. Mains like masala bhindi (okra) and aloo saag (creamy spinach with potatoes) are properly spiced and simply delightful. 4642 S. Kirkman Road, 407-730-8800; $$
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; to end without sampling either the cannoli or tiramisu would be a mistake. 1468 Tuskawilla Road, Winter Springs, 321-422-3600; $$$ n
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FIlM
OPENING IN orlando
The LasT wiTch hunTer By Ste v e S c h n e i de r
Opening this week Jem and the Holograms A friend of mine works in an office with a lot of millennials, which is why she was recently afforded the delightful experience of hearing one of her coworkers query if the Jem and the Holograms movie is “based on something old.” (Why, yes it is. Know what’s even older? The back of my hand!) Meanwhile, fans of the mid-’80s cartoon series are worrying that the movie will stray too far from canon. Sounds like a perfect storm of cross-demographic dissatisfaction comin’ right atcha. As for supporting players Juliette Lewis and Molly Ringwald, I’m sure they’re just glad to be here (i.e., anywhere). (PG) The Last Witch Hunter Having directed the bomb Sahara, Breck Eisner should be box-office poison. But being Michael Eisner’s kid, he still gets “attached” to a variety of largely hypothetical projects, including dreaded remakes of Escape From New York and The Karate Kid. One picture he actually saw to the finish line is The Last Witch Hunter, in which Vin Diesel plays an immortal hero tasked with stopping a coven of crones bent on ravaging New York. Wow, the best elements of Highlander II and Ghostbusters II, all in one package; Eisner’s a shoo-in to direct that Maid to Order reboot now. (PG-13) Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension Jesus, they’re still making these? Well, sort of: Paramount swears Ghost Dimension is the final chapter in the found-footage franchise (I know, I know: Tell it to Robert Englund). More significantly, your options for catching the flick are going to be narrower this Halloween season, since a number of chains have refused to show a feature that’s going to be available on VOD only 17 days later. Hey, it’s still twice the production schedule on these things! (R) Rock the Kasbah So this is why Obama wants us to stay in Afghanistan forever: so burned-out rock managers like Richie Lanz (Bill Murray) can scour the country for fresh new talent. I don’t know if I’m seeing the Murray of today as an Idolmaker type, though; sure, the Murray of the Jerry Aldini era would have filled the bill nicely, but that was well before he discovered Wes Anderson and oxycodone. And while Barry Levinson has done some fine work, I don’t know if he has the directorial voltage to shock Murray back to life at this late stage – certainly not enough to compete with the single greatest music manager ever depicted on film, Howie Gold’s Guy Friesch in Fear of a Black Hat. (Watch it again!) (R) 30
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FILM LISTINGS After Winter, Spring Seen through the eyes of family farmers in southwest France, this film is an intimate portrait of an ancestral way of life under threat in a world increasingly dominated by large-scale industrial agriculture. Wednesday, 2 pm; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386-506-4475; smponline.org. A Brilliant Young Mind A film about a widowed mother and her autistic son, a math prodigy. Opens Friday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Cult Classics: Night of the Creeps Alien brain slugs turn teenagers into zombies in this horrorcomedy cult classic. Tuesday, 9:30 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $8; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Dracula Double Feature Special screening of both the English and Spanish versions of the 1931 horror classic. Sunday, 2 & 7 pm; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com. Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: The Story of the National Lampoon The hilarious story of The National Lampoon from its subversive and electrifying beginnings as the magazine for the counterculture to its rebirth as a Hollywood power. Opens Friday, Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Ed Sheeran: Jumpers for Goalposts Concert film of the popular musician’s appearance at Wembley Stadium. Thursday, 7:30 pm, Saturday-Sunday, 12:55 pm, Monday, 7:30 pm; multiple locations; $18; fathomevents.com. El General A screening of the documentary El General with an introduction by the director, Natalia Almada. Followed by a Q&A. Saturday, noon; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; free; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Gimme Shelter A harrowing documentary of the 1969 Rolling Stones tour that culminates in the tragic concert at Altamont, in which the security was provided by the
FIlM
Hell’s Angels. Wednesday, 7:30 pm; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386-506-4475; smponline.org.
Jobs FlIcks Steve Jobs is a polarizing figure, even for
The Howling A psychiatrist sends a werewolf-attack survivor to a colony filled with werewolves, because science? Saturday, 11:59 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org.
those enrapt in his latest iGadgets and still trying to scratch the original iPod apple sticker off of their ’98 Prius. He is one of the few meta-nerds that has garnered a following not just for his contributions to the tech industry but also for his personal penchant for turtlenecks, totally screwing over partner Steve Wozniak and just being kind of a dick. Here are some other films that take on Apple’s iconic former leader.
Kids Halloween Party: Monster House Bring your little ghouls to the Enzian for this event featuring a film screening, lunch, a costume contest and games. Sunday, 11 am; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $18; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Meet the Patels Documentary about an Indian-American who travels to India in search of love. Through Thursday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org.
iSteve
Movie Classics on Magnolia Presents Frankenstein The original 1931 classic, starring Boris Karloff. Thursday, 7:26 pm; Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, 201 S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford; $5; 407-321-8111; wdpac.com.
Rotten apple
Organ Spooktacular & Silent Movie The Central Florida chapter of the American Guild of Organists presents a silent film scored by a live organist. Tuesday, 7 pm; Orlando Lutheran Towers, 300 E. Church St.; free; cfago.org.
By dav e r i ed el
Orlando Film Festival Annual film festival with screenings, speakers panels, parties and more. Schedule and films to be announced. Oct. 21-25; Cobb Plaza Cinema Café, 155 S. Orange Ave.; $20-$50; orlandofilmfest.com Sleeping With Other People Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie star as two romantic failures whose years of serial infidelity and self-sabotage have led them to swear that their relationship will remain strictly platonic. Through Thursday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Wednesday Night Pitcher Show: A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors One of the best of the series, this one takes place in a psychiatric ward where teenagers learn they have special powers in the dream world and team up to take out Freddy Krueger. Wednesday, 8 pm; Eden Bar at the Enzian, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; free; 407-629-1088; enzian.org.
Written in three days and shot in five, iSteve is the first full-length film from Will Ferrell’s Funny or Die online comedy outlet, a parody of the trials and tribulations of Jobs’ trek through the highs of “Silicon Mountain” and the lows of “Silicon Valley.” As the first biopic released after Jobs’ death from cancer in 2011, it is enjoyably sacrilegious and irreverent. The virtual-reality sex scene is super hawt. – D.T. Buffkin
steve Jobs is a mediocre look into the man behind the Mac
steve Jobs
HHHHH
G
ive screenwriter Aaron Sorkin and director Danny Boyle credit for making a biopic that skirts tradition. Give them demerits for the Aaron Sorkin-ness of it all, the non-Danny Boyle-ness of it all. Sorkin has written a screenplay that resembles a three-act play – he did start his career as a playwright, after all. And he has filled it with all the things Sorkin fans love. There’s the rapid-fire dialogue in which each character speaks in the same voice, sometimes even speaking the same sentences in the same scene (“I don’t know what that means” is a big one). There is the blocking that dictates the actors must almost always be on the move (in those moments Boyle channels his inner Thomas Schlamme, director of many episodes of The West Wing, but thankfully leaves out the hot spots). Most exhaustingly, Sorkin deploys the writerly contrivance of setting all the action moments before Big Events – the product launches of the Macintosh in 1984, the NeXT computer in 1988 and the iMac in 1998. You know what’s perfect for ramping up the tension, kids? When the main character has a finite amount of time to resolve a bunch of
JobS Written while Jobs was on medical leave for pancreatic cancer, this 2013 bio-fiction follows Steve Jobs’ life from the Los Altos garage days through his re-hiring and the iconic “Think Different” commercial. The first image of the movie, the introduction of the iPod in 2001, is the last chronological moment, assuming you know the story of Apple’s mid-aught innovation and market domination. And, like that first iPod, Ashton Kutcher’s haircut and presentation feels pretty clunky. – Matt Stieb
personal and professional problems before he has to talk to thousands of punters about his latest gizmo! Steve Jobs focuses on Jobs (Michael Fassbender, who looks and sounds nothing like the Apple co-founder but gives a decent performance) and his shitty personal relationships with his daughter Lisa, her mother Chrisann (Katherine Waterston), his put-upon employee Joanna (Kate Winslet), Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak (Seth Rogen) and Apple guru Andy Hertzfeld (Michael Stuhlbarg). Learn about Jobs’ feelings about his two adoptions, his biological father, his treatment of the Apple II team, his dismissal from Apple, his terrible parenting skills and his complete lack of empathy. Or don’t. Few of the moments in this movie happened the way they’re rolled out here – what are the odds that every intimate crisis a person has ever had will need to be ironed out in the 40 minutes before a product launch? Or before three product launches? It isn’t all bad. Rogen is a charming Wozniak, and there’s a dynamite scene in the movie’s NeXT section between Fassbender and Jeff Daniels, who plays former Apple CEO John Sculley. If there had been more moments like the Jobs/Sculley scenes and fewer like all the others, Steve Jobs would be much, much better. As it is, it’s pretty humdrum.
Steve JobS: the LoSt IntervIew I’m not sure which is more nauseating: the idea of sitting through 70 minutes of Steve Jobs prattling on about the advantages of a yet-to-be-realized iLife – which is rapidly consuming every aspect of organic culture – or knowing that Mark Cuban helped make this Urkel-circle-jerk a reality. – DTB
Steve JobS: one LaSt thIng This PBS profile from 2011 explores the difficult visionary through interviews with Apple co-founder Ronald Wayne, Steve Wozniak, Pixar co-founder Alvy Smith and others. Jobs himself weighs in on his legacy, speaking in 2004, a year after he was first diagnosed with cancer. – MS
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MUSIC
Great live music rattles OrlandO EVErY nIGHT
Big Sean Celebrate UCF’s Homecoming weekend with this blowout featuring Big Sean on his boldest and best record yet, 2015’s Dark Sky Paradise. 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 21, at CFE Arena, $25
Matt Butcher & the Schoolyard Band We adored old-soul folk songwriter Matt Butcher early on as an Orlando local, but it seems he found the band he needed when he moved to Nashville in 2012, and though we miss him, we’d miss out much more without stellar 2014 offering The Kids Are Gone. 9 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 22, at Will’s Pub, $7
Obliterati Experimental freak act Obliterati puts on an indulgently wild show, and rumor has it their newest punk-fueled material gives intense frontwoman Lisa Bugayong extra excuse to staple your eyelids to your forehead. 9 p.m. Friday, Oct. 23, at Spacebar, $5
Hello God, it’s me, Hopsin Quirky rapper Hopsin loses faith but soldiers on for the hell of it
Cheap Trick Basically the flipping best reason we want you to want to leave the house this week. Thanks, WMMO! 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 24, at Orlando City Hall, free
By ChriS PArker FUnk VolUMe 2015 ToUr wITH HoPSIn, dizzy wright, Jarren Benton, dJ Hoppa 6 p.m. Friday, Oct. 23 | The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thebeacham.com | $22.50-$25
Streetlight Manifesto Eclectic, energetic New Jersey ska band Streetlight Manifesto always attracts an excitable crowd to dig into their distinct grooves. 6 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25, at House of Blues, $19
“I
ATB (Anthony Cole, Thomas Wynn, Brian Chodorcoff) Three of the area’s finest country and soul musicians blend together for this surely rich night of free music. 10 p.m. Monday, Oct. 26, at Lil Indies, free
Pre-Pre-Fest Orlando 2 Rad Florida acts featured include Look Mexico, Dikembe, Gatorface, plus some imports like Swain, Timeshares and WOAHNOWS. Bonus: cover sets by the Pauses doing the Breeders and Teen Agers doing the Get Up Kids. If you’re missing out on the Fest in Gainesville, this is basically the best way to make up for it. 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 27, at Will’s Pub and St. Matthew’s Tavern, $15
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PHOTO BY FUNK VOLUME
just don’t care no more,” says 30-year old rapper Hopsin, explaining the impetus for the provocative, God-doubting track “Ill Mind of Hopsin 7” off his new album, Pound Syndrome. “As I get older, I get more mature. I see life from a different perspective and it’s just like, ‘Why not?’” In the video, he wanders a parched desert while intoning equally bereft and searching lyrics. “Is this where I belong? Is it wrong to not believe in right and wrong,” he asks, before ultimately turning his back on the Christian faith he fervently embraced all too recently. “My gut feeling says it’s all fake … I’ll be damned if I put my own pleasures aside for an afterlife that isn’t even guaranteed.” God and rap have never been close. (Maybe it was that phase when it kept saying it was gonna bust a cap in someone’s
ass.) That hardly inhibits Hopsin. From his clothes and white contacts to his musical choices, he’s always charted his own path. “‘Ill Mind 7’ is a gospel record in a way, but it doesn’t feel like gospel because it’s done in my way,” he says, still weighing his blasphemy. “God is maybe a thing kids never heard a rapper even mention, other than saying ‘ohmigod,’ so at least I put the thought in their minds.” The song’s the product of a spiritual crisis the author of gold-selling singles “Sag Your Pants” and “Ill Mind of Hopsin 5” has grappled with the past year. The Los Angeles-based performer even went so far as to announce he was going to quit rap in December before backing away from that decision this year. It follows an incident in late January 2014 when a disillusioned Hopsin walked out the back door of the venue without performing, spending the show sitting at a construction site. He recounts the event on Pound Syndrome track “Fort Collins,” featuring his friend and label/tour-mate Dizzy Wright. Wright convinced Hopsin to stick with it. “It took a lot of time to get what I have,
so many years, and he just didn’t want to see all that work go to waste,” Hopsin recalls. “He just made me see it from a different perspective. So everybody had made an album for 2015, so I just decided to make another one as well. I didn’t want to be the weakest link on the label.” The main issue seems to be one of disgust for his peers and what radio endorses. “It’s just that the mainstream world is very sided towards bullshit music,” he says, citing the Auto-Tune boom. “If it was me with my control over it, I would just be, ‘I don’t care, if this guy can’t rap, he will not be played’ … because that would keep rap alive. If Dr. Dre worked at a radio station, I can’t see this bullshit getting through.” Hopsin has taken time during this past year to heal himself and balance the work/ life demands that amplified his frustrations. He’s trying to compartmentalize his life to keep it away from the backdraft of this Hopsin character he’s created. Wearing that mask for weeks at a time can be exhausting. “It’s equivalent to a male doing a porno scene and you have to do a scene that day where you fuck 20 women. You bone hard the first two or three women, then it’s like 17 more women coming through, better keep that boner up,” Hopsin laughs. “It’s like, ‘Ohmigod, it’s starting to hurt. Can I stop please?’” It’s sort of Hopsin’s personal take on “No Sleep Till Brooklyn.”
MUSIC
Failure BY B AO L E - H U U
Our music community has always
been extraordinary in its support of its own in times of need, and this is definitely one of them. Bryan Raymond – a guitarist in elite local heavy band Junior Bruce – was in a very bad motorcycle accident on Oct. 12. The good news is that his condition, though critical, is stable enough for surgery. The bad is that he’ll need many because his body is completely shattered. Besides a talented musician, Bryan’s a devoted father, a hell of a gardener, and just a good guy. So please send some strength, love and – if you can – financial help his way (donate at gofundme.com/ y56bck74).
PHOTO BY JEN CRAY
THE BEAT
Although often irresistably sweet, there’s something intellectually cheap about culture revivals. One noble result that sometimes comes of them, however, is the chance to correct history with some perspective. So while the ’90s revival is in full moon, the time’s ripe for overlooked bands like Failure and Hum to reunite, bring the original golden flame back to life and make a renewed case for their place in the canon. Both groups have the somewhat canceling honor of being both critically esteemed but popularly forgotten. Hum and especially Failure mostly slipped through my personal net as well, so this concert was almost as much discovery for me as it was for the kids. And apart from the warm-up from new-school underground titans Torche, their joint show
This is a band gunning hard to get back in the game. (Oct. 11, House of Blues) was a big, choice slab of atmospheric ’90s heaviness. With a consistent and deliciously palpable fog of space drone, Illinois’ Hum proved deeper and greater than just their minor 1996 hit, “Stars.” They weren’t much to look at, what with the anti-image adopted in certain alternative corridors of the decade. But with long, beefy sonics and crushing beauty, their sound was unmistakably, impressively there. L.A.’s Failure has been especially serious in their ambition. Theirs is no basic reunion. With the release of their first new album in almost two decades (The Heart Is a Monster) over the summer, this is a fullon comeback campaign. Producing an album as well-received as it’s been and playing live with no sign of rust after this much time would be proof enough of their will. But on stage, they came fresh with splash and vigor, giving their clarified and progressive space rock the wings of swank visual displays and an enhanced lighting rig. Failure isn’t reentering the arena just to collect retroactive propers. This is a band gunning hard to get back in the game. DeYarmond Edison is an early 2000s Wisconsin band you may not have heard of but whose splinters you probably have. From the cinders of their 2006 dissolution emerged the phoenixes Bon Iver,
Megafaun and Field Report. That last one is the vehicle for Chris Porterfield, who just made his first Orlando appearance solo (Oct. 15, the Social). Field Report – which is less impressionistic than Bon Iver and less outlandish than Megafaun – is definitely the most poporiented of the three brother bands. That said, Porterfield’s indie-folk songs also sigh a hushed Northern kind of beauty, blowing down cool, lonely and yearning like a Great Lake breeze. That their muted shimmer translated with little loss in shine even without a full band shows that the music’s center of gravity is the quiet power of Porterfield’s voice. The performance of headliner Noah Gundersen, however, was a mindchanging revelation. Musically and emotionally, this Seattle singer-songwriter paints in subdued hues. On record, the huddled bedroom vibe can sometimes be so subtle as to be barely there, on the verge of evaporating like an early morning reverie. But live, it’s a very different experience. Music that seemed pleasant but ephemeral was revealed to be deep and sweeping when played at volume and with powerful intent by a good, well-furnished band. What often receded into the wallpaper – gentle edges of gospel, soul and country – sprang to sudden life and purpose. And it culminated in one of the most enveloping soft shows I’ve seen in ages, a polished, full-mast and gorgeous performance that will forever change the way I hear his recordings. baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com
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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 to their as a studio manager and engineer whereCampus ic television and film for over a decade, inspiration, gain real-world experience, and helping video game companies analytically 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” 1979 as a recording workshop, the school Institute for Research in Entertainment). the school has rapidly grown to offer With the of online gaming advertising current role as co-founder at Creature 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. orlandoweekly.com
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OUR PICKS FOR THE BEST EVENTS THIS WEEK
Wednesday, 21
A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors With a screenplay by series creator Wes Craven and then-unknown Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption, The Walking Dead), it’s not surprising that the third installment of the Nightmare on Elm Street series is often considered one of the best. The film touches on subjects a little deeper than the usual raging hormones and teenage angst that slasher flicks tend to address, like mental illness, addiction and recovery, and the travesty that was the media’s portrayal of tabletop roleplaying games in the ’80s. But don’t worry: There are still plenty of raging hormones, and the substantially increased budget for this iteration of the series resulted in some set pieces and stylish killings that are hard to forget. Just remember: Don’t. Fall. Asleep. – Thaddeus McCollum
FILM
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS
8 p.m. | Eden Bar at the Enzian, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland | 407-629-1088 | enzian.org | free
Saturday, 24
Thursday, 22
Necromancy: A Dark Art Event
Joey Bada$$
8 p.m. | Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave. | 407-872-0066 | venue578.com | $25-$115
38
ART In what may be the event of the season for fans of gothic and macabre art, Gods & Monsters is putting on an exhibit featuring art from some of the brightest – er, darkest – talents in the field. The night is anchored by art and a personal appearance from horror legend Clive Barker, best known as the writer and director of Hellraiser, the 1987 film that launched a series about the sadomasochistic adventures of the extradimensional Cenobites. You’ll also find works by comics artist Ben Templesmith (30 Days of Night, the criminally underrated Fell), local painter Vaughn Belak and West Memphis Three member Damien Echols. Drinks flow in the Offworld Lounge, and a performance by gothic fetish burlesque act Defenz Mechanizm caps the evening. – TM
JOEY BADA$$
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8 p.m. | through Nov. 20 | Gods & Monsters, Artegon Marketplace, 5250 International Drive | godmonsters.com | free
JOEY BADA$$ PHOTO BY GARY ASKEW
There’s no way you spun Joey Badass’ debut studio album B4.DA.$$ and didn’t immediately nestle into its old-school bump. The young rapper gets criticized for borrowing too heavily from his influences, but the chewy listen at last properly introduced the rising hip-hop star, no matter what growing pains you might prescribe for any stylistic lack on the otherwise critically praised release. Joey Badass is exactly the kind of young star we ought to prop up, so go get a piece of his mind and if you’re real gung-ho, spring for the VIP meet-andgreet. – Ashley Belanger MUSIC
Saturday, 24
Sunday, 25
Orlando Zombie Ball
FOREIGN DISSENT - KAMIKAZE GIRLS
You needn’t be one of the walking dead to enjoy the Orlando Zombie Ball, but you may well be shambling like one by the end of the night. This Halloween dance-stravaganza features the turn-of-the-century steampunk stylings of theatre troupe Phantasmagoria, spooky-good beats from DJ performance artist Power Infiniti and some straight-up circus madness courtesy of Cirque USA. We’re talking fire dancers here, people; we’re talking about people hanging from the ceiling dressed in mad costumes and contorting their bodies in ways that boggle the imagination. If that’s not your bag (it should be, you party pooper), throw your mask or toga or whatever onstage for the $1,000 costume contest, test your courage in the haunted scare zone or tune in to one of the 13-plus DJs and performers who’ll keep you howling at the moon all night long. And believe us, there will be plenty of howling, thanks to the open bar. – Bernard Wilchusky
EVENTS
7 p.m. | Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave. | 407-872-0066 | orlandozombieball.com | $35-$45 Monday, 26
Foreign Dissent 2 With a talent pull that’s national and beyond, the Fest (Oct. 30-Nov. 1, Gainesville), over its 14 years of existence, has become the region’s monolith of punk-rock festivals. Organizing satellite shows that take advantage of the band influx around it has become a cottage industry unto itself. Orlando pop-punk promoter Punching Babies distinguished itself in the rush last year with Foreign Dissent, a nowannual themed showcase that features fresh international faces that travel from especially far away to play the Fest. For this second edition, Foreign Dissent has assembled a delegation of seven overseas acts, more than half of them making Orlando debuts. Bands include Astpai (Austria), Great Cynics (UK), Wonk Unit (UK), Überyou (Switzerland), Kamikaze Girls (UK), Irish Handcuffs (Germany) and the debut of Bad Accent, a German outfit also featuring members of notable area bands Teen Agers and Dikembe. Come see this night of sweet, anthemic discovery become a tradition. – Bao Le-Huu
GANG OF FOUR PHOTO BY LEO CACKETT
MUSIC
with Astpai, Great Cynics, Wonk Unit, Überyou, Kamikaze Girls, Irish Handcuffs, Bad Accent | 7:30 p.m. | Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. | willspub.org | $8-10
The Mystery Meat A pirate-themed car meet? Sure, why not. The fourth annual incarnation of this massive automotive event encourages attendees to dress up as pirates, or even costume their cars. Pit your sweetest ride against other attendees in drag or auto-x races, à la Top Gear, or just spectate as gearheads bring their custom rides to the burnout box and peel out safely for the enjoyment of all. Special exhibition cars way fancier than yours show off on display and on the track. This year marks the first time the event is held at Orlando Speed World, as it finally got too big for the meager racing and parking options available downtown, but it’s not like downtown needed more cars in it anyway. – TM
EVENTS
9 a.m. | Orlando Speed World, 19164 E. Colonial Drive | v2labevents.com | $10 Tuesday, 27
Gang of Four MUSIC It’s OK to feel conflicted about the restructured Gang of Four that released this year’s What Happens Next on the back of guitarist Andy Gill, the only remaining original member still in the lineup. We have no idea how our favorite post-punk lashings from Entertainment! will translate live under this new crew, since original vocalist Jon King’s fierce delivery factors hugely into the band’s legendary appeal. But any invested fan cannot deny the mega-influential guitarist remains a huge draw, even if the new record made you shrug instead of shoulder into the shred. – AB
with the New Regime | 8 p.m. | The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave. | 407-246-1419 | thesocial.org | $25
GANG OF FOUR
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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. 21-Tuesday, OCT. 27 COmpiled By THaddeus mCCOllum
Wednesday, OcT. 21
ConCerts/events Big Sean, Dan + Shay 8 pm; CFE Arena, 12777 N. Gemini Blvd.; $25; 407-823-6006. Cimorelli 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $22-$100; 407-228-1220. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Air Supply 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. Funk You, Meiuuswe 9 pm; Red Lion Pub, 3784 Howell Branch Road, Winter Park; $5; 407-677-9669. The Imperial’s Acoustic Soundcheck With Day Joy 9 pm; The Imperial at Washburn Imports, 1800 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-228-4992. Keys N Krates, G Jones, Big Makk, Dvnk Sinatrv 9 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $15; 407-648-8363. The New Sam Rivers’ Rivbea Orchestra 10 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $7-$10. Nuka Waves, Free Pizza, Kudzu 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; contact for price; 407-270-9104. Plain White T’s, Matt McAndrew, Beta Play 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $25; 407-246-1419.
Clubs/lounges Bearaoke 8 pm; Stonewall Bar Orlando, 741 W. Church St.; free; 407-373-0888. 40
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Curtis Earth Trivia 7:30-10 pm; Rogue Pub, 3076 Curry Ford Road; free; 407-985-3778. Mac and Cheese Wednesday 10 pm; Independent Bar, 70 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-839-0457. One Hit Wonder Wednesdays 10 pm; The Patio, 14 W. Washington St.; free; 407-354-1577. Red Carpet Karaoke 8 pm; Muldoon’s Saloon, 7439 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-657-9980. Themed Trivia Wednesdays 9:30 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060. Trivia Night 7 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-322-7475. Trivia with Doug Bowser 7:30 pm; Hamburger Mary’s, 110 W. Church St.; free; 321319-0600.
opera/ClassiCal The Met Live in HD: Otello Wednesday, 6:30 pm; Verdi’s masterful Otello matches Shakespeare’s play in tragic intensity. Director Bartlett Sher probes the Moor’s dramatic downfall with an outstanding cast. multiple locations; $24; fathomevents.com. Thursday, OcT. 22
ConCerts/events Barb Wire Dolls, the Howlezz, Rex Alfred, Yellow Day Union, Horror Punks in 21 Disfunction, Love Destruction 7 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $10; 407-687-8840. The Bastard Suns, Yugoskavia, General Tso’s Fury 8 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $6-$9; 407-322-7475.
Belmont & Jones 8 pm; The Smiling Bison, 745 Bennett Road; free; 407-259-8036. Bright Light Social Hour, Firekid, Me Chinese, Someday River 8 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $12$15; 407-648-8363. The Bug, False Punk, Golden Pelicans, Gross, the Menstruals 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $5-$7; 407-2709104. Dave Sheffield Jazz Trio 9 pm; Winter Park Beer Company, 1809 E. Winter Park Road; free. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Fuel Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. I Woke Up Early For My Funeral 10 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171.
Joey Bada$$, Denzel Curry, Bishop Nehru 7 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $25; 407-872-0066. Kasondra Rose & the Sleepless, Madeline Sonya, Alison Sherberg 9 pm; Red Lion Pub, 3784 Howell Branch Road, Winter Park; $5; 407-677-9669. Lane 8 9 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $12$15; 407-246-1419. Leisure Chief 10 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Lounge Diggaz 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Matt Butcher and the Schoolyard Band, Mike Dunn & the Company 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $7.
cOnTInued On page 43
PHOTO BY CHINO LEMUS
Reggae Night with Hor!zen and DJ Red I 10 pm; The Caboose, 1827 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-898-7733.
[MUSIC] Ricky Martin see page 47
THE WEEK
ORLANDO
Back to the Future
Barley and Vine As if the special release of Funky Buddha’s Last Snow bombers wasn’t enough to bring you to Barley and Vine, they’re going to be viewing all three Back to the Future movies in the beer garden. If you’re feeling (Mc)fly, then bust out your best Back to the Future outfit for the costume contest. They’ve also got Funky Buddha Doc Brown on tap and film-inspired food for you to munch on. 5 p.m. Wednesday; Barley and Vine Biergarten, 2406 E. Washington St.; barleyandvineorlando.com West End Trading Co. Take a trip out to Sanford’s favorite drinking hole, West End Trading Co., as they celebrate the day Doc, Marty and Jennifer arrive in the future. The entire trilogy plays out on the front bar screen, then it’s time for DJ Code Blue to crank out the jams for the rest of the night. 6 p.m. Wednesday, West End Trading Co., 202 S. Sanford Ave., drinkatwestend.com
The Geek Easy Not only will the Geek Easy be viewing Back to the Future II on the exact day that Doc, Marty and Jennifer arrive, but they’ll also be celebrating the special release of the comic Back to the Future: Untold Tales and Alternate Timelines. Drink specials and raffle prizes are also on tap at this shindig. 6 p.m. Wednesday, The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; mygeekeasy.com
L
The Cloak & Blaster The twisted minds at Cloak & Blaster aren’t messing around with their Back to the Future appreciation party. Wear you best ’50s prom attire, drink some of their 1.21 gigawatts of alcohol, chomp on some themed food and win a raffle while you’re at it. You might want to take a picture at their photo station ’cause your recollection of this party could be a little fuzzy. 6 p.m. Wednesday, The Cloak & Blaster, 875 Woodbury Road; cloakandblaster.com
Emily Kinney Nov. 20 at the Social Plain White T’s, Oct. 21 at the Social
Metric, Nov. 1 at House of Blues
Joey Bada$$, Oct. 22 at Venue 578
The Growlers, Broncho, Nov. 4 at the Social
John Hodgman, Oct. 23 at the Plaza Live Passafire, Oct. 23-24 at the Social Cheap Trick, Oct. 24 at Orlando City Hall Orlando Zombie Ball, Oct. 24 at Venue 578 Gang of Four, Oct. 27 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 Pepper, Oct. 31 at the Plaza Live
Electric Daisy Carnival, Nov. 6-7 at Tinker Field
Orlando Beer Festival, Nov. 14 at Festival Park
A John Waters Christmas, Dec. 8 at the Plaza Live
Skylar Spence, Nov. 19 at the Social
Silverstein, Senses Fail, Dec. 8 at the Beacham
Emily Kinney, Nov. 20 at the Social
Leftöver Crack, Nov. 6 at Backbooth
The Wizards of Winter, Nov. 21 at the Plaza Live
Sufjan Stevens, Nov. 6 at the Dr. Phillips Center
Nobunny, Nov. 22 at Will’s Pub
Suicide Girls: Blackheart Burlesque, Nov. 6 at the Beacham 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
The Front Bottoms, Nov. 24 at the Beacham Spiritual Rez, Nov. 25 at the Social Jim Gaffigan, Nov. 27 at Hard Rock Live We Were Promised Jetpacks, Nov. 28 at the Social Dustin Lynch, Dec. 3 at House of Blues Lucero, Dec. 4 at the Social
The Delta Saints, Dec. 11 at Backbooth Michael McDonald, Dec. 15 at Hard Rock Live Matisyahu, Dec. 16 at the Plaza Live Leon Russell, Dec. 18 at the Plaza Live
Orgy, Jan. 8 at West End Trading Co.
Slow Magic, Nov. 12 at the Social
Glass Animals, Dec. 7 at the Beacham
Colin Hay, Jan. 30 at the Plaza Live
orlandoweekly.com
TRAPT
OCT 30
CHVRCHES
NOV 1
METRIC
NOV 6
PABLO ALBORAN
NOV 13
KIP MOORE
NOV 14
KANY GARCIA
NOV 19
ELI YOUNG BAND THE WONDER YEARS & MOTION CITY SOUNDTACK
SPECIALS • OFFERS • UPDATES
House of Blues® Downtown Disney® West Side
Ani DiFranco, Jan. 15 at the Plaza Live Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Jan. 20 at the Dr. Phillips Center
OCT 29
NOV 20
JJ Grey & Mofro, Dec. 31 at House of Blues
Mac Miller, Dec. 5 at Hard Rock Live
STREETLIGHT MANIFESTO
A MCMAHO & NOV ANDREW NEW POLITICS 7
Quintron & Miss Pussycat, Dec. 11 at Will’s Pub
Deafheaven, Nov. 11 at the Social
OCT 25
1490 E. BUENA VISTA DR. LAKE BUENA VISTA, FL 32830 407.932.2583 HOUSEOFBLUES.COM/ORLANDO ●
OCT. 21-27, 2015
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SATURDAY, 24
Central Florida Veg Fest EVENTS With the Central Florida Veg Fest approaching its 10th anniversary, it’s going to be a pretty big dill. If you carrot all about veganism or healthy living, then this is the event for you. The Veg Fest has only gotten bigger each year, so please, romaine calm when you get to the Orlando Festival Park and see the plethora of vendor tents and food stands. Local favorites like Dandelion Communitea Café and Drunken Monkey Coffee Bar will be on the premises with their delicious vegan dishes. Veg Fest will also have many musical acts dropping the beet all day, such as Raspberry Pie who at 1 p.m. will be “laying the dunk on some sweet, sweet funk!” When you’ve hit maximum belly capacity, take a break from eating and catch one of Veg Fest’s education programs or take a quick yoga class with Warrior One Power Yoga. This festival is going to be huge, so get ready to turnip, veg out and leave in peas. Kale yeah! – Marissa Mahoney
10 a.m.-6 p.m. | Orlando Festival Park, 2911 E. Robinson St. | cfvegfest.org | free, $5 parking
cOnTInued FrOM page 40
Open Mic Jazz 8 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364. Polyenso, Arcadence, Former Traits, Sleeping Sons 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570.
PHOTO BY LIZ WEST
Yordano 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $40-$80; 407228-1220.
Board Game Night Noon; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-332-9636.
Indiecent Thursdays 10 pm; Independent Bar, 70 N. Orange Ave.; contact for price; 407-839-04357.
Cards Against Humanity Night 7 pm; Paddy’s of Winter Park, 1566 West Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park; free.
Latin Night 9 pm; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; contact for price; 407-425-7571.
Earth Trivia - Simon Time 7 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171.
Open Mic Night 8 pm; Natura Coffee & Tea, 12078 Collegiate Way; free; 407-482-5000.
Clubs/lounges
Geek Trivia 9 pm; Cloak and Blaster, 875 Woodbury Road; free.
Bears In The City Presents: Thirsty Thursday Bearaoke 9 pm-1 am; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; free; 407-425-7571.
Homegrown Open Mic Night YouTube Sessions 8-11 pm; Rogue Pub, 3076 Curry Ford Road; free; 407-985-3778.
You Can’t Sit With Us Ladies Night 11:45 pm-3:30 am; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free$3; 407-999-2570.
opera/ClassiCal Lisa de la Salle 7:30 pm; French pianist Lise de la Salle makes her Winter cOnTInued On page 44
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tHe week cOnTInued FrOM page 43
Park debut. Tiedtke Concert Hall, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; $35; 407-646-2000; bachfestivalflorida.org.
Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Fuel Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Emily Kopp, Evan Taylor Jones, Live Hart 7:30 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $5; 407-999-2570.
Mango Beats 10 pm; Debbie’s Bar, 1422 State Road 436, Casselberry; free; 407-677-5963.
Wet Nurse, the Welzeins, Thee Wilt Chamberlain 9 pm; St. Matthew’s Tavern, 1300 N. Mills Ave.; free.
Milka, Fighting the Silence 9 pm; Red Lion Pub, 3784 Howell Branch Road, Winter Park; $5; 407677-9669.
Clubs/lounges
FrIday, OcT. 23
ConCerts/events Big Ron Betts 9 pm; The Smiling Bison, 745 Bennett Road; free; 407-259-8036. Dr. K & Friends Blue Jazz 8 pm; Chef Eddie’s, 595 W. Church St.; free; 407-595-8494.
Flying Sharks, Spasm, O.S.F., Spicoli, Skatter Brainz 7 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $10-$13; 407-322-7475. Hopsin, Dizzy Wright, Jarren Benton, DJ Hoppa 6 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $22.50-$25; 407-648-8363.
Obliterati, Common Man 9 pm; Spacebar, 2428 E. Robinson St.; $5; 407-228-0804. Passafire, Lionized, Backbeat Soundsystem 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15; 407-246-1419. Rocket 88, the Legendary JC’s 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10.
Curtis Earth Trivia 8 pm; Winter Park Beer Company, 1809 E. Winter Park Road; free. DJ BMF 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. DJ Cliff T 10 pm; Aero, 60 N. Orange Ave.; free; 321-245-7730. Fame Fridays 10 pm; Ember Bar and Restaurant, 42 W. Central Blvd.; $10; 407-448-0216. Footloose 80s Night Midnight; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free; 407-999-2570. MarsRadio’s Upstairs Suite: Deep & Chilled Out Sessions 10 pm-2 am; Kush Ultra Lounge and Hooka Bar, 23 S. Court Ave.; $10; 407-834-5874. The Patio Friday Night 9 pm; The Patio, 14 W. Washington St.; free; 407-354-1577. Platinum Friday 4 pm; Pulse, 1912 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-3888. Thornton Park District’s Friday Night Live 5 pm; Thornton Park, Summerlin Avenue and Washington Street; Uberbahn 9 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060. Wall Street Plaza Block Party 11 pm; Wall Street Plaza, Wall and Court streets; free; 407-849-0471.
opera/ClassiCal CFCArts Symphony Orchestra: Thriller 8 pm; Concert featuring spooky music classics. Calvary Assembly of God, 1199 Clay St., Winter Park; $10; 407-937-1800; cfcarts.com. saTurday, OcT. 24
ConCerts/events Arturo Sandoval 8 pm; Walt Disney Theater, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $20-$329.49; 844-513-2014. Charles Neville (the Neville Brothers), Gent Treadly 9 pm; Red Lion Pub, 3784 Howell Branch Road, Winter Park; $10-$15; 407-677-9669. Cheap Trick 4 pm; Orlando City Hall, 400 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-246-4279. The Company 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Tiffany Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. cOnTInued On page 46
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Film Speak: Halloween 10 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-623-3393. Inner Circle 9 pm; Majestic Event Center, 801 N. John Young Parkway; $35; 321-279-5330. The Mud Flappers 9 pm; The Hourglass Brewery, 255 S. Ronald Reagan Blvd., Longwood; free; 407-719-9874. Oak Hill Drifters 9 pm; The Smiling Bison, 745 Bennett Road; free; 407-259-8036. Passafire, Lionized, Backbeat Soundsystem 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15; 407-246-1419. Pentimento, Better Off, A Will Away, Bad Year, Levity 6:30 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570. Propeller Anime’s Ninth Anniversary: Hoshizuku Kid, dj-Jo, O_Super, Boy Without Batteries 8 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-332-9636.
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The Original Vintage Saturdays 9 pm; Vintage Lounge, 114 S. Orange Ave.; free-$10; 877-386-7346.
The Toasters, Askultura, Control This!, Caffiends, Yugoskavia 7:30 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$13.
Saturday With the Beat 10 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; $10-$20; 407-648-8363.
Tsar Lounge Grand Opening: Kimball Collins 9 pm; Tsar, 611 E. Church St.; free. Warren Haynes, Justin Townes Earle, ChessBoxer 8 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; SOLD OUT; 407-228-1220.
Clubs/lounges DJ Cliff T 10 pm; Aero, 60 N. Orange Ave.; free; 321-245-7730. DJ M-Squared 9 pm-2 am; The Groove, CityWalk at Universal Orlando; $7; 407-224-2166. DJ Stranger Jazz/Funk Brunch 11 am-2 pm; Ethos Vegan Kitchen, 601-B S. New York Ave., Winter Park; free; various menu prices; 407-228-3898. MarsRadio’s Upstairs Suite: Deep & Chilled Out Sessions 10 pm-2 am; Kush Ultra Lounge and Hooka Bar, 23 S. Court Ave.; $10; 407-834-5874. Midnight Mass Dance Party Midnight; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free; 407-999-2570.
Red2 7 pm; Tsar, 611 E. Church St.; free.
opera/ClassiCal CFCArts Symphony Orchestra: Thriller 8 pm; Concert featuring spooky music classics. Calvary Assembly of God, 1199 Clay St., Winter Park; $10; 407-937-1800; cfcarts.com. Masterpiece Moments at Mead 6:30 & 7:30 pm; Enjoy the fall weather with the Baroque Chamber Orchestra and the Maitland Symphony Orchestra for concerts of masterpiece musical selections. Mead Garden, 1300 S. Denning Drive, Winter Park; free; 407-623-3342; pamaitland.org. Orlando Philharmonic Music Director Debut 8 pm; New Orlando Philharmonic Music Director Eric Jacobsen and the orchestra embark on their musical journey with two concerts featuring Van Cliburn silver medalist Joyce Yang and a banquet of masterpieces spanning four centuries. Bob Carr Theater, 401 W. Livingston St.; $21-$62; 407-849-2020; drphillipscenter.org.
PHOTO BY TONY FIRRIOLO
Randy’s Pickin’ Parlor: The Gibson Brothers, Balsam Range, Blue Highway and more 11 am; Clermont Performing Arts Center Festival Grounds, 3700 S. Highway 27, Clermont; $25-$65; 352-394-4800.
The Supervillains, the Adolescent Theory, Rick Haze, Bothering Dennis, Summerlong 7 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $9-$12; 407-322-7475.
tHe week sunday, OcT. 25
ConCerts/events Ancient Sun 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Brendan Nolan, the Dunn Deal 2:30 pm; Villa ConRoy, 1521 W. Ivanhoe Blvd.; $12 suggested donation.
114 S. Park Ave., Sanford; free; 407-328-4848.
Ricky Martin 7:30 pm; Amway Center, 400 W. Church St.; $24-$126; 800-745-3000.
Not Your Grandpa’s Bingo 7 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171.
Streetlight Manifesto 6 pm; House of Blues, Downtown Disney West Side, Lake Buena Vista; $19; 407-934-2583.
Clubs/lounges
Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Tiffany Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321.
Acoustic Open Mic with Chris Dupre 9 pm; Muldoon’s Saloon, 7439 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-657-9980.
The Getbye 9:30 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060.
An Tobar Trivia 6 pm; An Tobar, 600 N. Lake Destiny Drive, Maitland; $5; 407-267-4044.
Heckfire, Howling Midnight 9 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5.
The Beacham Top 20 7 pm; The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave.; 407-648-8363.
Marty Morell and Russ Little 7:30 pm; Timucua White House, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; free; 407-595-2713.
Bingo After Dark 10 pm; Waitiki Retro Tiki Lounge, 26 Wall Street Plaza; free; 407-481-1199.
Native Suns, Field Fires, the Hindenberg Experience,
Blues Jam hosted by Doc Williamson 5 pm; The Alley,
Open Mic at the Falcon 3 pm; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060. Tropical Sundays with DJ Frankie G 10 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $5-$15; 407246-1419.
opera/ClassiCal Orlando Philharmonic Music Director Debut 2 pm; New Orlando Philharmonic Music Director Eric Jacobsen and the orchestra embark on their musical journey with two concerts featuring Van Cliburn silver medalist Joyce Yang and a banquet of masterpieces spanning four centuries. Bob Carr Theater, 401 W. Livingston St.; $21-$62; 407-849-2020; drphillipscenter.org. cOnTInued On page 48
PHOTO BY LYNN GOLDSMITH
[MUSIC] Lisa de la Salle see page 43
Everlost 4 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570.
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4453 Edgewater Drive; free; 407-412-6917.
MOnday, OcT. 26
ConCerts/events ATB (Anthony Cole, Thomas Wynn, Brian Chodorcoff) 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.
Memento Mori 10 pm; Independent Bar, 70 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-839-0457.
Circa, Palmer Reed, John Williams 8 pm; Olde 64, 64 N. Orange Ave.; free; 321-245-7730.
Rock Band Jam Night 8:30 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-673-2712.
Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Dennis DeYoung (Original Member of Styx) Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Eidola, Makari, Nomad, I Met a Yeti 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570. Foreign Dissent 2.0: ASTPAI, Great Cynics, Überyou, Kamikaze Girls, Irish Handcuffs, Bad Accent 7:30 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $8-$10. Jazz Meets Motown 7 pm; Bohemian Hotel Celebration, 700 Bloom St., Celebration; free. Reggae Mondae with Kash’d Out 10 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-6498540.
Clubs/lounges Bears in the City Bearaoke 9 pm-1 am; Bar Codes, 48
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Tuesday, OcT. 27
ConCerts/events DJ McChicken, Ca$per, Darkfiasco, Mr. Bongos, Lotus Cloud, 5tylo 9 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; free; 407-270-9104. Eat to the Beat Concert Series: Dennis DeYoung (Original Member of Styx) Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321. Gang of Four, the New Regime 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $25; 407-246-1419. The Groove Orient 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Hotel Books, Bad Luck, Until We Are Ghosts, Motives, Sea of Surrender, So it Goes 6:30 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570.
Jazz Chamber Group Concert Series: Concert II 8 pm; UCF Rehearsal Hall, 4000 Central Florida Blvd.; free; 407-823-1500. Jazz in the Courtyard with the DaVinci Jazz Experiment 7-9 pm; Cafe DaVinci, 112 W. Georgia Ave., DeLand; free; 386-873-2943. Jazz Tuesdays 7:30 pm; The Smiling Bison, 745 Bennett Road; free; 407-898-8580. Pre-Pre-Fest: Look Mexico, Dikembe, Gatorface, TeenAgers and more 5 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$15.
Clubs/lounges Drunken Trivia with Mike G. 8 pm; Graffiti Junktion College Park, 2401 Edgewater Drive; free; 407-377-1961. Geek Trivia Tuesdays 7 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; free; 407-332-9636. Sanford Game Night 6-9 pm; La Sirena Gorda Cabana, 118 S. Palmetto Ave., Sanford; free; 407-504-9452. Soul Shakedown Tuesday With DJ BMF 10 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free. Total Request Tuesdays with DJ Deron Martin 7 pm; Stonewall Bar Orlando, 741 W. Church St.; free; 407-373-0888. cOnTInued On page 51
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[MUSIC] Eat to the Beat: Tiffany see pages 44
cOnTInued FrOM page 48
Trivia Nation 7 pm; East Coast Wings & Grill SoDo, 3183 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-930-9464. Trivia Tuesday with Doug Ba’aser 5-9 pm; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; free; 407-425-7571. Twisted Tuesday 9 pm; Pulse, 1912 S. Orange Ave.; contact for price; 407-649-3888.
ThEaTEr Bakersfield Mist Stephen Sachs’ new comic drama that asks what makes art – and the people who create it – truly authentic. Wednesday, 2 & 7:30 pm, Thursday-Saturday, 7:30 pm and Sunday, 2 pm; Orlando Shakespeare Theatre, 812 E. Rollins St.; $21-$46; 407-4471700; orlandoshakes.org. Bat Boy: The Musical A musical comedy-horror show about a half boy/half bat creature who is discovered in a cave. Wednesday-Friday, 8 pm, Sunday, 4 pm,Monday-Tuesday, 8 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $30; 407-7046261; abbeyorlando.com. Bathhouse: The Musical Follows young Billy at his first day at the baths. He’s looking for love, but soon realizes the other patrons are looking for something a little more temporary. Fridays-Sundays, 7:30 pm; Footlight Theatre, The Parliament House, 410
N. Orange Blossom Trail; $18-$20; 407-425-7571; bathhousethemusical.com. Confessions From Behind the Window An improvised show in which audience members make suggestions to members of the the Rollins Improv Players to help them create a show about a personal event that has shaped their lives. WednesdayFriday, 8 pm and Saturday, 2 & 8 pm; Rollins College, Fred Stone Theatre, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; Free; 407-646-2145. Hair Flower Power comes to life with a vitality, a timelessness and a philosophy that bridges generations and cultures. Friday-Saturday, 8 pm and Sunday, 2 pm; Theatre UCF, 4000 Central Florida Blvd.; $20; 407-8231500; theatre.ucf.edu. A Haunting Cabaret A classy cabaret featuring hauntingly beautiful songs and music from radio, stage and screen. Monday-Tuesday, 7:30 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $22; drphillipscenter.org. Journey to the West The Wah Lum Kung Fu and Tai Chi Temple presents a martial arts production of the famous Chinese tale in a brilliant display of kung fu, tai chi, weaponry, dragon dancing and live music. Saturday, 7 pm; Winter Park High School, 2100 Summerfield Road, Winter Park; $15-$20; 407-275-6177; wahlum.com.
La Cage aux Folles A middleaged 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. Phantasmagoria VI: The Darkness Returns Live performers, fantastical dance, explosive stage combat, large scale puppetry, aerial performance and haunting storytelling combine to create a tapestry of macabre and whimsical horror. Mondays, Fridays-Sundays, 8 pm; Mandell Theater, Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St.; $15-$35; 407-447-1700; phantasmagoriaorlando.com. Sleepy Hollow, A Musical Tale Three modern-day children find themselves right in the middle of all the odd characters, traditions, ghosts and goblins of Sleepy Hollow. Friday-Saturday, 8 pm and Sunday, 3 pm; Breakthrough Theatre of Winter Park, 419A W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; $20; 407-920-4034; breakthroughtheatre.com. Sweet Charity Working as a dancer-for-hire in Times Square, Charity sings, dances, laughs and cries her way through a series of bad relationships, much to the audience’s amusement. cOnTInued On page 52
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[FILM] Movie Classics on Magnolia Presents Frankenstein see page 31
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Friday-Saturday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2 pm, Monday, 7:30 pm; Valencia College Performing Arts Center, East Campus, 701 N. Econlockhatchee Trail; $15; 407-582-2900; valenciacollege.edu. You Can’t Take It With You A story of young love within a delightfully eccentric family. Thursday-Monday, 7:30 pm; Mad Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St.; $18-$38; 407-2978788; madcowtheatre.com.
ComEdy Chonda Pierce: Lauging in the Dark Christian comedian. Tuesday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $12.50; fathomevents.com. Comedy at the Caboose Hosted by Apollo Replay. Thursdays, 8 pm; The Caboose, 1827 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-898-7733. Comedy Open Mic Comedy open mic hosted by Shereen Kassam. Wednesdays, 7:30 pm; Paddy’s of Winter Park, 1566 West Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-951-8706. Copper Rocket Comedy Jam Hosted by Heather Shaw. Sundays, 8:30 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171; copperrocketpub.com.
Drunken Monkey Open Showcase Comedy open mic. Fridays, 8 pm; Drunken Monkey Coffee Bar, 444 N. Bumby Ave.; free; 407-893-4994; drunkenmonkeycoffee.com. Duel of Fools SAK All-Stars making it all up on the spot. Thursdays-Saturdays, 7:30 pm; SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $12-$15; 407-6480001; sakcomedylab.com. Early Show SAK favorites perform 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. Gorilla Theatre This show features four professional improvisers directing each other in improvised scenes, games and songs to fit their chosen theme for the evening. Fridays, 9:30 pm; SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $12-$15; 407648-0001; sakcomedylab.com. Jack’s Open Mic Comedy Night Open mic comedy night hosted by Myke Herlihy. Tuesdays, Thursdays, 9 pm; Jack’s Pub & Grub, 5494 Central Florida Parkway; free; 407-787-3886. Jamie Kilstein Vegan musician and comedian. Sunday, 7 pm; First Unitarian Church of Orlando, 1901 E. Robinson St.; $15; 407-898-3621.
John Hodgman Evil genius from The Daily Show. Friday, 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $25-$36; 407-2281220; plazaliveorlando.com. Karl Anthony, Mike Lee Live stand-up. Friday, 7 pm; Bonkerz - Segafredo, 1618 N. Mills Ave.; $10; 407-9306568; 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; 407-6480001; sakcomedylab.com. Open Mic Comedy With Craig Norbert Comedy open mic for aspiring comedians. Sundays; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-9753364; austinscoffee.com. Orlando Punslingers Halloween Party A comedy game show for word-nerds. Contestants tell puns to win the favor of the audience and the coveted Golden Pun-Gun. Monday, 7:30 pm; SAK Comedy Lab, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $5; 317-441-4215; sak.com. Steve Netta, Zenneth Nevers Live stand-up comedy. FridaySaturday, 7:30 pm; Bonkerz - Boardwalk Bowl, 10749 E. Colonial Drive; $10; 407-6292665; bonkerzcomedy.com.
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danCE Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater: Revelations, Chroma, Grace, Takademe Described by the New York Times as “one of the great works of the human spirit.” Thursday, 7 pm; multiple locations; $18; fathomevents.com. Cinderella Preps Dance Company presents a performance of a ballet based on the classic fairy tale. Saturday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; Athens Theatre, 124 N. Florida Ave., DeLand; $14-$18; 386-7361500; athensdeland.com.
ing battles and community fellowship. Witness high level B-boys and B-girls compete for the title and cash prizes. Saturday, 7 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $15-$20; 407704-6261; abbeyorlando.com.
arT openings/events ART420 An art event that celebrates the artistic expression of cannabis’ impact on society and the human experience. Saturday, 11 am-6 pm; 89 Event Center, 805 S. Kirkman Road; free; artfourtwenty.com.
So You Think You Can Dance Live Tour Stars of the television show dance on stage. Saturday, 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $38.50-$98.50; 407-3515483; hardrock.com/orlando.
A Brush With Light and Sound Art by Glenn Grishkoff and Brian Ransom about surviving cancer and using sound to heal. Wednesday, 6-8 pm; UCF Art Gallery, 12400 Aquarius Agora Drive; free; 407-823-3161; arts.cah.ucf.edu.
Temple Rock Vol. 2: The Yin Yang Edition A celebration of hip-hop culture through break-
The Future Is Now A Back to the Future-themed art show and party. Wednesday, 8 pm;
Redlight Redlight, 2810 Corrine Drive; free; 407-893-9832; redlightredlightbeerparlour. com. Imagination II: Mermaids A workshop led by fantasy artist Toni Taylor on how to create your own mermaids. Sunday, 1 pm; Gods & Monsters, 5250 International Drive; $50. Kathleen Chenet Demonstration The artist gives a demonstration of oil painting techniques. Saturday, 1 pm; Sanford Library, 150 N. Palmetto Ave., Sanford; free; sanfordseminoleart.com. Lecture and Tour With Margaret Denny Dr. Margaret Denny delivers a lecture about photographer Gertrude Käsebier on Thursday and leads a tour of the museum’s current photography exhibit. Lecture Thursday, 6 pm, Tour Friday, 11 am; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu.
Local Art Night A night devoted to local artists, performers and musicians. Thursday, 8 pm; DRIP, 8747 International Drive; $5; 347855-3747; ilovedrip.com. Mariam Paré The quadriplegic artist, who paints using her mouth, displays her talents and talks about overcoming tragedy. Saturday, 11 am-2 pm; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $8; 407-896-4231. Necromancy: A Dark Art Event One night only art event featuring art from masters of the gothic and horror genres like Ben Templesmith and Menton3, an appearance by horror legend Clive Barker and a performance from cybergoth fetish dancer Defenz Mechanizm. Saturday, 8 pm; Gods & Monsters, 5250 International Drive; free; godmonsters.com. Open Studios Featuring work by the Time Waste Management crew, Picture Garden’s reading room and the next Is it Over Yet? zine release. Saturday, 6-10 pm;
A Place Gallery, 649 N. Mills Ave.; free; isitoveryet.org. Yuri Maiorov and Chad Pollpeter One-night exhibition of art from two different local artists. Saturday, 6-11 pm; Fine Framing & Art Gallery, 5699 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-8502200; fineframingandart.com.
Continuing tHis week 100 Years of Hannibal Square: Historic and Contemporary Photographs of West Winter Park Exhibition Through Feb. 21, 2016; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; $8; 407-8368500; thehistorycenter.org. Animalia: Henry Horenstein Through Feb. 7, 2016; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386506-4475; smponline.org. Art Legends of Orange County: The Art of Hal McIntosh Through Nov. 29; Albin Polasek Museum and
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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 Through Wednesday; Thai Purple Orchid Café and Grocery, 9318 E. Colonial Drive; free; 407-203-3891; thaipurpleorchidcafe.com. The Bride Elect – Gifts From the 1905 Wedding of Elizabeth Owens Morse TuesdaysSaturdays, 9:30 am-4 pm and Sundays, 1-4 pm; Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art, 445 N. Park Ave., Winter Park; $5; 407-6455311; morsemuseum.org. Celebrating 50 Years: Maitland Civic Center Through Jan. 3, 2016; Art & History Museums - Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; $3; 407-5392181; artandhistory.org. cOnTInued On page 56
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Celebrating A&H’s Artist-inResidence Program Through Nov. 8; Art & History Museums - Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland; $3; 407-5392181; artandhistory.org. Couture Culture 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 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, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu. Halloween Art Show Through Oct. 31; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free; 407-362-1864; dandelioncommunitea.com. Harold Garde: From MidCentury to This Century Through Jan. 3, 2016; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $8; 407896-4231; omart.org. 56
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Introducing Zora Neale Hurston 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 Through Jan. 3, 2016; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu. Luisa Basnuevo: Paintings Through Nov. 13; Anita S. Wooten Gallery, 701 N. Econlockhatchee Trail; free; 407-582-2298; valenciacollege.edu. Mary Whyte: A Portrait of Us Through Jan. 3, 2016; Mennello Museum of American Art, 900 E. Princeton St.; $5; 407-2464278; mennellomuseum.com. Metamodern Through Dec. 6; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $8; 407896-4231; 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. Midway: Portrait of a Daytona Beach Neighborhood, 1943 Through Jan. 15, 2016; Yvonne Scarlett Golden Cultural & Educational Center, 1000 Vine St., Daytona Beach; free; smponline.org.
Neighborhood ‘99: Midway Revisited Through Jan. 15, 2016; Yvonne Scarlett Golden Cultural & Educational Center, 1000 Vine St., Daytona Beach; free; smponline.org. Oddities Through Nov. 13; Redefine Gallery, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060. On Assignment: Robert Snow – At Sea With OCEARCH Through Feb. 7, 2016; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386506-4475; smponline.org. Past Perfect A group exhibition and sale. Through Oct. 31; Arts on Douglas, 123 Douglas St., New Smyrna Beach; free; 386428-1133; artsondouglas.net. Return of the Dead Art inspired by The Walking Dead and all things dead. Through Nov. 20; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060. Sanford Art Walk Friday, 6-9 pm; Downtown Sanford, Sanford Avenue and First Street, Sanford; free; 407-3232774; sanfordartwalk.com. Second Nature: Brad Temkin – A Survey Through Dec. 18; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386-506-4475; smponline.org. Selections From the Harry C. Sigman Gift of European and American Decorative Art Tuesdays-Thursdays,
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Saturdays, 9:30 am-4 pm and Sundays, 1-4 pm; Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art, 445 N. Park Ave., Winter Park; $5; 407-6455311; morsemuseum.org. 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 Through Nov. 4; The White Wall Gallery, 999 Douglas Ave. #2221, Altamonte Springs; free; 407-6825343; thewhitewall.com. Tiffany Lamps and Lighting From the Morse Collection Through Jan. 20, 2016; Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art, 445 N. Park Ave., Winter Park; $5; 407-6455311; morsemuseum.org. Tongue-Tied Through Nov. 14; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; avalongallery.org.
Two Points on a Plane: The Paintings of Charles Hinman Through Jan. 10, 2016; Museum of Art DeLand – Downtown, 100 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $10; 386-7344371; moartdeland.org. UCF Faculty Show Through Oct. 30; UCF Art Gallery, 12400 Aquarius Agora Drive; free; 407-823-3161; 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 and the title of Orlando’s Top Culinary Couple. Couples compete in one of two qualifying rounds. Two winners from each semifinal cookoff advance to the finals Nov. 14, 2015. Friday, 6:30-9:30 pm; Aggressive Appliances, 617 Mercy Drive; $150 per couple; 407-719-5190; orlandodatenightguide.com.
Avalon Park Spooktacular A costume parade, hay rides and more. Saturday, 5-9 pm; Avalon Park Sports Fields, 3680 Avalon Park Blvd.; free; 407-658-6565. Back to the Future at Barley and Vine Screenings of the whole trilogy in the biergarten, a costume contest, and food and beer specials. Wednesday, 5 pm; Barley and Vine Biergarten, 2406 E. Washington St.; free; barleyandvineorlando.com. Back to the Future Enchantment Under the Sea Party Themed food and drink, a photobooth backdrop, raffles and giveaways. Prom attire encouraged. Wednesday, 6 pm; Cloak and Blaster, 875 Woodbury Road; free; www. cloakandblaster.com. Back to the Future Party Celebrate the day that Doc and Marty arrive in the year 2015. Wednesday, 6 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-322-7475.
Bears Night Out Join the bears for a monthly gathering at the Bear Den at Parliament House. Happy hour drink prices until midnight, games, prizes and new furry friends are in store every month! Friday, 10 pm-2 am; Parliament House, 410 N. Orange Blossom Trail; free; 407-425-7571; wanzie.com. Celebration Oktoberfest Live music, pumpkin painting and regularly scheduled falling leaves. Friday, 5:30-10 pm, Saturday, 5-10:30 pm; Celebration Town Center, 610 Sycamore St., Celebration; free; 407-566-1202; celebrationtowncenter.com. Central Florida Veg Fest This annual celebration of vegan and vegetarian living has a little bit of everything, from workshops on healthy, sustainable living to animal rescue organizations to speakers to vendors selling eco-friendly products. Saturday, 10 am-6 pm; Festival Park, 2911 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-381-5310; cfvegfest.org.
Cows ‘n Cabs Country-themed event that supports two local charities: Community Food and Outreach Center and Elevate Orlando. Mingle with chefs and philanthropists while chowing down on bites from 20 highend restaurants and plenty of wine. Saturday, 7-10 pm; Central Park’s West Meadow, North Park Avenue and West Morse Boulevard, Winter Park; $110-$500; cowsncabs.com.
beverage offerings. Food and drink tickets sold separately. Through Nov. 16; Epcot, 200 Epcot Center Drive, Lake Buena Vista; price of admission; 407-824-4321; epcot.com.
DRIP’s Underground Vampire Bar Performance art group DRIP creates a safe haven for vampires and their human friends. Sip “blood” from the bar, watch dancers enjoy “blood” baths, take a “blood” shower, witness human sacrifices and enjoy live music and a full theatrical show. Fridays, Saturdays, 8 pm-midnight; DRIP, 8747 International Drive; $35-$79; 347-855-3747; ilovedrip.com.
The Foodie Expo Hosted by Food Network star Emily Ellyn, with cooking demos by Cutthroat Kitchen winner Chef Manny FD, a sushi class by Teresa and Robert of SusHi Eatstation, live music, food trucks, a petting zoo and presentations on sustainable living concepts, raising animals and growing your own vegetables. Saturday, 11 am; Good Neighbors Farmers Market, 1101 Lloyds Lane, Oviedo; $15-$100.
Epcot International Food and Wine Festival Embark on a culinary adventure celebrating 20 years of culture and cuisine with the finest wine and
Halloween Ghost Investigation Investigate 10 haunted locations in Downtown Sanford.
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Festival Calle Orange All-day Latin street festival with 40 bands on four stages. Sunday, 11 am; Downtown Orlando, Orange Avenue and Central Boulevard; $15; power953.com.
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[FILM] Cult Classics: Night of the Creeps see page 30
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Break into teams with your friends and be part of a real paranormal investigation led by your Lead investigator in documented haunted locations. Saturday, 8 & 10 pm; La Sirena Gorda Cabana, 118 S. Palmetto Ave., Sanford; $15.00; 407-2857741; meetup.com/riphunters. Halloween Horror Nights 25 On select nights from Sept. 18 through Nov. 1, Universal Studios unleashes ghouls, zombies, creepy clowns and more on the masses who flock to visit the professionally designed haunted houses, scare zones and creepy experiences. This year, Jack the insane clown is back to host the event for its 25th anniversary. Through Nov. 1, 5 pm; Universal Studios, 6000 Universal Blvd.; $49.99-$76.99; 407-363-8000; halloweenhorrornights.com. Haunt Around the Hood Check out the bars and businesses of Ivanhoe Village and get drink samples at each stop. Wednesday, 7 pm; Ivanhoe Village Main Street, Orange Avenue between New Hampshire and Princeton streets; $10-$15; drinkaroundthehood.com. Howl-O-Ween Dog walk and costume contest to benefit Franklin’s Friends of Central Florida, an organization that supports animal-related charities around the area. Saturday, 9 am-noon; Secret Lake Park, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive, 58
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Casselberry; $20; 260-6937387; franklinsfriends.info. IZEAFest A three-day interactive event designed to educate, inform and connect social media enthusiasts. Meet the world’s top brands and creators in a collaborative, fun and open setting. Learn how to grow your traffic, build your brand and make more money online. Thursday-Saturday; Walt Disney World Swan and Dolphin Resort, 1500 Epcot Resorts Blvd., Lake Buena Vista; $299-$399; 800-227-1500; izeafest.com. Jack in the Park A benefit for the Special Olympics with live music, a full open bar, auctions and raffles, and an exciting blackjack tournament. Saturday, 7 pm; Rachel D. Murrah Civic Center, 1050 W. Morse Blvd., Winter Park; $125; 407-623-3342; specialolympicsflorida.org. Lake Nona Farmers Market Shop local and benefit wildlife at this unique market. Vendor fees from the market support Back To Nature’s efforts to rescue, raise, rehabilitate and release injured and orphaned wildlife and house non-releasable animals. Saturdays, 9 am-1 pm; Laureate Park Lake Nona, Tavistock Lakes Boulevard; free; 321-217-6654; btnlakenonafarmers market.weebly.com. Masquerade Recycled Fashion Show Garments created out of 95 percent recycled materials, designed by Starz Vision Production’s LaVette Foster.
Saturday, 6:30 pm; The Venue, 511 Virginia Drive; $16; 407-4126895; thevenueorlando.com. Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party On select nights though Nov. 1, the Magic Kingdom hosts a Halloween party and guests are encouraged to dress in costume and go trick or treating around the park. Through Nov. 1, 7 pm; Magic Kingdom, Walt Disney World Resort, Lake Buena Vista; $68; 407-824-4321. Mount Dora Craft Fair This massive annual craft fair, now in its 31st year, attracts more than 200,000 visitors and 350 vendors lining the streets of quaint downtown Mount Dora. Saturday-Sunday, 9 am-5 pm; Downtown Mount Dora, East Fifth Avenue and North Donnelly Street, Mount Dora; free; 352-217-8390; visitmountdora.com. The Mystery Meat Bring a car to compete in drag and auto-x races, or just spectate. Sunday, 9 am; Orlando Speed World, 19164 E. Colonial Drive; $10; v2labevents.com. Oktoberfest Billed as Central Florida’s “most authentic” Oktoberfest, this party features German food, beer and music, folk dancing and kids activities. Saturday, 2 pm; German American Society of Central Florida, 381 Orange Lane, Casselberry; $5; 407-834-0574; orlandogermanclub.com. cOnTInued On page 61
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An Old Town Halloween Old Town gets spooky for the season. Fridays, Saturdays, 7-11 pm; Old Town, 5770 W. Irlo Bronson Highway, Kissimmee; free; 407396-4888; myoldtownusa.com. Orlando Girl Geek Dinners Join for convo, food and drinks. All women welcome. Friday, 7 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; 407-623-3393; orlandogirlgeeks.com. Orlando Zombie Ball The party to die for returns this year, and it’s going to be bigger, scarier and it’ll have an open bar all night long (select brands only). There will be a haunted scare zone, live performances from Phantasmagoria, a costume contest with a $1,000 prize and more. Saturday, 7 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $25-$40; 407-872-0066; orlandozombieball.com. Owloween A family-friendly Halloween event with animals, live music, a costume contest
and more. Saturday, 2-6 pm; Back to Nature Wildlife Refuge, 10525 Clapp Simms Duda Road; free; 407-5685138; btnwildlife.org. PBR Pumpkin Carving Party Bring your own pumpkin to carve, and get entered into a contest to win prizes from PBR. Wednesday, 6 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org. A Petrified Forest One of Central Florida’s most popular haunted scare trails, featuring two scare trails. Walk a single trail or do both – if you’re really into the experience, you can even purchase a ticket for a backstage tour. Thursday-Saturday, 7:30 pm; A Petrified Forest, 1360 State Road 436, Altamonte Springs; $15; 407-468-6600. Pumpkin Carving Contest Carve a pumpkin at West End to win a bar tab. Tuesday, 5 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-322-7475.
Shallow Grave Shallow Grave offers two unique haunted attractions with highly immersive scare zones around every corner. Thursday, 7:30-10 pm, Friday, 7:30 pm-midnight, Saturday, 7:30 pm-midnight; The Shallow Grave, 701 42nd St. NW, Winter Haven; $17$40; theshallowgrave.com. Shepherd’s Hope Famous Faces Masquerade Ball The best masquerade ball in town with costume contests, live entertainment, fine wine and spirits, and more. Proceeds benefit Shepherd’s Hope. Saturday, 6:30-11 pm; Loews Royal Pacific Resort, 6300 Hollywood Way; $250; 407-876-6699 x230; shepherdshope.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 from Apartment E’s massive collection. Wednesdays, 3-10 pm; True Serenity, 1100 Montana St.; free; 321-445-1021; apartmente.com.
LEarning 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. 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 City of Sanford Citizens Academy A 10-week class about local government city functions, services and activities. Registration required. Wednesdays, 6 pm; Sanford City Hall, 300 N. Park Ave., Sanford; free; 407-688-5019; sanfordfl.gov/citizensacademy. Fleet Farming Swarm Ride Visit farmlettes and learn about urban farming on this three- to four-mile guided
bike ride. Every other Sunday, 2-5 pm; East End Market, 3201 Corrine Drive; free; 321-2363316; fleetfarming.com. Know Your Rights Workshop A workshop on how to take action on community concerns you care about. Thursday, 6:30 pm; Hiawassee Branch Library, 7391 W. Colonial Drive; free; firedupflorida.org.
LiTErary Craig Chapman: Real Food Real Kitchens: New York Cookbook The UCF grad debuts his new cookbook which takes you in to the lives and homes of families from all five boroughs of New York City to learn how to make their traditional family recipes. Sunday, 11 am-1 pm; Bookmark It, 3201 Corrine Drive; free. Diverse Word Spoken word open mic. Tuesdays, 8 pm; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free; 407362-1864; dandelioncommunitea.com.
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Draft Punk Creatives Workshop Workshops from Joe Snyder and Rachel Finley. Thursday, 8 pm; The Milk Bar, 2424 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-4954. Echo’s Corner: #PinkedOut Featuring Eccentrich Party featuring a spoken word performance. Friday, 8:30 pm; Cafe Annie, 131 N. Orange Ave.; $10-$12; 407-420-4041. iDeclare: Changes The first anniversary of this reading, performance and art series. Friday, 8 pm; The Space Station, 2539 Coolidge Ave.; free. Open Mic Poetry and Spoken Word Poetry and spoken word open mic. Wednesdays, 9 pm; Austin’s Coffee, 929 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-975-3364; austinscoffee.com. Susan Carol McCarthy Susan McCarthy discusses her latest novel, A Place We Knew Well, about the Cuban Missle Crisis. cOnTInued On page 62
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[MUSIC] Arturo Sandoval see page 44
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Sunday, 2-4 pm; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-8368500; thehistorycenter.org. Susan Rukeyser & Pat Spears The authors read and discuss their work over wine. Friday, 6-8 pm; Writer’s Block Bookstore, 124 E. Welbourne Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-385-7084; writersblockbookstore.com. There Will Be Verse Tournament of Champions Eight past champions compete head-to-head until only one is left standing. The winner of this tournament will have a poetry chapbook published in 2016. Tuesday, 8 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-6233393; therewillbewords.com.
FamiLy 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. Magic Treehouse: A Ghost Tale for Mr. Dickens Jack and Annie must conjure up the ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future to inspire Mr. Dickens. Thursday-Friday, 10:15 am & noon, Saturday, 2 & 4:30 pm, Monday-Tuesday, 10:15 am & noon; Margeson Theater, Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 62
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812 E. Rollins St.; $9-$15; 407447-1700; orlandoshakes.org. Orphie and the Book of Heroes Spunky and curious Orphie, a young girl in Ancient Greece, sets out to save the famous storyteller Homer and his Book of Heroes. SaturdaysSundays, 2 & 5:30 pm; Orlando Repertory Theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; $14-$20; 407896-7365; orlandorep.com. Zoo Boo Bash Kids trick or treat in the wildest neighborhood around. Saturday, 9 am-3 pm and Sunday, 9 am-3 pm; Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens, 3755 N. U.S. Highway 17-92, Sanford; 407-3234450; centralfloridazoo.org.
sporTs B3 Runners Group Multiple distances and skill levels with beer after. Wednesdays, 6:25 pm; Bikes Beans & Bordeaux, 3022 Corrine Drive; free; 407-427-1440; bikesbeansandbordeaux.com. Brew Mile A 1-mile race where you have to chug a beer every quarter mile. Saturday, 7 pm; Wall Street Plaza, Wall and Court streets; $65-$105; 407849-0471; brewmile.com. Orlando Magic vs. Memphis Grizzlies Basketball. Friday, 7 pm; Amway Arena, 600 W. Amelia St.; $10.25$1,037.50; 407-849-2020.
Orlando Magic vs. New Orleans Pelicans Basketball. Wednesday, 7 pm; Amway Arena, 600 W. Amelia St.; $9.25-$1,037.50; 407-849-2020. Orlando Roller Derby Orlando’s Straight Jackettes take on the Rolling Renegades from Sarasota. Sunday, 4:30-7 pm; Semoran Skateway, 2670 Cassel Creek Blvd., Casselberry; $8-$10; 425-281-4707. Orlando Solar Bears vs. Norfolk Admirals Ice hockey. Thursday, 7 pm , Saturday, 7 pm; Amway Arena, 600 W. Amelia St.; $12.25$44.75; 407-849-2020. Savage Race An insane obstacle course race through mud, water and fire. Saturday-Sunday, 8 am; 17951 Hamilton Road, 17951 Hamilton Road, Dade City; $69-$140; savagerace.com. Yoga at CityArts An hour of of fluid, dynamic, lighthearted vinyasa flow surrounded by fine art. Saturday, noon; CityArts Factory, 29 S. Orange Ave.; $10; 407-648-7060. Yoga in Lake Eola Park This weekly yoga group, which is taught by a rotating band of yogis, meets either at the northeast corner of the park 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
be ready if you are too preoccupied with old friends and familiar teachers. So please make room for surprises.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) According to the online etymological dictionary, the verb “fascinate” entered the English language in the 16th century. It was derived from the Middle French fasciner and the Latin fascinatus, which are translated as “bewitch, enchant, put under a spell.” In the 19th century, “fascinate” expanded in meaning to include “delight, attract, hold the attention of.” I suspect you will soon have experiences that could activate both senses of “fascinate.” My advice is to get the most out of your delightful attractions without slipping into bewitchment. Is that even possible? It will require you to exercise fine discernment, but yes, it is. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) One of the largest machines in the world is a “bucket wheel excavator” in Kazakhstan. It’s a saw that weighs 45,000 tons and has a blade the size of a four-story building. If you want to slice through a mountain, it’s perfect for the job. Indeed, that’s what it’s used for over in Kazakhstan. Right now, I picture you as having a metaphorical version of this equipment. That’s because I think you have the power to rip open a clearing through a massive obstruction that has been in your way. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock did a daily ritual to remind him of life’s impermanence. After drinking his tea each morning, he flung both cup and saucer over his shoulder, allowing them to smash on the floor. I don’t recommend that you adopt a comparable custom for long-term use, but it might be healthy and interesting to do so for now. Are you willing to outgrow and escape your old containers? Would you consider diverging from formulas that have always worked for you? Are there any unnecessary taboos that need to be broken? Experiment with the possible blessings that might come by not clinging to the illusion of “permanence.”
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In the coming weeks, you will have a special relationship with the night. When the sun goes down, your intelligence will intensify, as will your knack for knowing what’s really important and what’s not. In the darkness, you will have an enhanced capacity to make sense of murky matters lurking in the shadows. You will be able to penetrate deeper than usual, and get to the bottom of secrets and mysteries that have kept you off-balance. Even your grimy fears may be transformable if you approach them with a passion for redemption. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) New friends and unexpected teachers are in your vicinity, with more candidates on the way. There may even be potential comrades who could eventually become flexible collaborators and catalytic guides. Will you be available for the openings they offer? Will you receive them with fire in your heart and mirth in your eyes? I worry that you may not
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Are you an inventor? Is it your specialty to create novel gadgets and machines? Probably not. But in the coming weeks you may have metaphorical resemblances to an inventor. I suspect you will have an enhanced ability to dream up original approaches and find alternatives to conventional wisdom. You may surprise yourself with your knack for finding ingenious solutions to long-standing dilemmas. To prime your instincts, I’ll provide three thoughts from inventor Thomas Edison. 1) “To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk.” 2) “Just because something doesn’t do what you planned it to do doesn’t mean it’s useless.” 3) “Everything comes to those who hustle while they wait.” SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Some unraveling is inevitable. What has been woven together must now be partially unwoven. But please refrain from thinking of this mysterious development as a setback. Instead, consider it an opportunity to reexamine and redo any work that was a bit hasty or sloppy. Be glad you will get a second chance to fix and refine what wasn’t done quite right the first time. In fact, I suggest you preside over the unraveling yourself. Don’t wait for random fate to accomplish it. And for best results, formulate an intention to regard everything that transpires as a blessing. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) “A waterfall would be more impressive if it flowed the other way,” said Irish author Oscar Wilde. I appreciate the wit, but don’t agree with him. A plain old ordinary waterfall, with foamy surges continually plummeting over a precipice and crashing below, is sufficiently impressive for me. What about you? In the coming days, will you be impatient and frustrated with plain old ordinary marvels and wonders? Or will you be able to enjoy them just as they are? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Years ago, I moved into a rental house with my new girlfriend, whom I had known for six weeks. As we fell asleep the first night, a song played in my head: “Nature’s Way,” by the band Spirit. I barely knew it and had rarely thought of it before. And yet there it was, repeating its first line over and over: “It’s nature’s way of telling you something’s wrong.” Being a magical thinker, I wondered if my unconscious mind was telling me a secret about my love. But I rejected that possibility; it was too painful to contemplate. When we broke up a few months later, however, I wished I had paid attention to that early alert. I mention this because I suspect your unconscious mind will soon provide you with a wealth of useful information, not just through song lyrics but other subtle signals, as well. Listen up! At least some of it will be good news, not cautionary like mine. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) When I advise you to GET NAKED, I don’t mean it in a literal sense. Yes, I will applaud if you’re willing to experiment with brave acts of self-revelation. I will approve of you taking risks for the sake of the raw truth. But getting arrested for indecent exposure might compromise your ability to carry out those noble acts. So, no, don’t actually take off all your clothes and wander through the streets. Instead, surprise everyone with brilliant acts of surrender and vulnerability. Gently and sweetly and poetically tell the Purveyors of Unholy Repression to take their boredom machine and shove it up their humdrum.
photo by pawsitive shelter photography
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Terence was a comic playwright in ancient Rome. He spoke of love in ways that sound modern. It can be capricious and weird, he said. It may provoke indignities and rouse difficult emotions. Are you skilled at debate? Love requires you to engage in strenuous discussions. Peace may break out in the midst of war, and vice versa. Terence’s conclusion: If you seek counsel regarding the arts of love, you may as well be asking for advice on how to go mad. I won’t argue with him. He makes good points. But I suspect that in the coming weeks you will be excused from most of those crazy-making aspects. The sweet and smooth sides of love will predominate. Uplift and inspiration are more likely than angst and bewilderment. Take advantage of the grace period! Put chaos control measures in place for the next time Terence’s version of love returns.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) More than any other sign, you have an ability to detach yourself from life’s flow and analyze its complexities with cool objectivity. This is mostly a good thing. It enhances your power to make rational decisions. On the other hand, it sometimes devolves into a liability. You may become so invested in your role as observer that you refrain from diving into life’s flow. You hold yourself apart from it, avoiding both its messiness and vitality. But I don’t foresee this being a problem in the coming weeks. In fact, I bet you will be a savvy watcher even as you’re almost fully immersed in the dynamic flux.
Looking for an adorable kitty? Orange County Animal Services has an adorable 1-year-old kitten who’d make the perfect house cat. Meet Shadow (animal Id a332561). Shadow enjoys eating treats, cuddling, playing with toys and using scratching posts. Shadow’s a little shy at first, but she will warm up in no time. Orange County Animals Services is waiving the adoption fees for all cats and kittens now through the end of the month. All of our feline friends are sterilized, vaccinated and microchipped before they go home with new families. you can visit Shadow at orange County animal Services, 2769 Conroy road, ocnetpets.com.
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B Y D A N S AVA G E I’m a straight guy, married for 16 years, kids in school. My wife cannot find a way to be intimate with me. We’ve had therapy individually and together. I nearly divorced her, but we decided to stay together – we do love each other, and the economics and child-rearing favor it. After I asked for a divorce, she fucked the shit out of me for the first time in 10 years. That was the last time she fucked me. She’s “broken” – her word, not mine, and her final answer. When the subject of affairs came up in the past, she said, “I wouldn’t blame you.” I could jack off only so many times before I cracked. I went online and met a very sexual woman with a strictly NSA thing for married men, and we fucked. I plan on doing it again. I know this could go all kinds of bad ways, but divorce just isn’t realistic. We had that one conversation, but we do not have an explicit understanding. I don’t want to head into my 50s with 10-plus years of celibacy behind me and decades of celibacy ahead of me. But I want to keep my marriage. Which kind of idiot am I? Help Understanding Boundary-Breaking Yearnings
If I were required to answer particular types of questions based on the percentage of the mail they constitute, I would answer two questions like yours every week, HUBBY. The majority of the mail I receive is from unhappy people in sexless marriages they either don’t want to end or can’t afford to end. So which kind of idiot are you? The most common kind, I’m afraid. I’m going to take a break from questions like these because I’m sick of the subject and my regular readers must be, too. But for you, HUBBY, and one last time, here’s my advice for people in your situation: Do what you gotta do to stay married and stay sane. Have a convo with the wife about the accommodation you require – permission to get it elsewhere – to stay in the marriage. Reassure her that you’re prepared to spend the rest of your life with her while emphasizing that you refuse to be celibate for the rest of your life. So every now and then, for your own sanity, and for the greater good, you’re going to have sex with other women. You’ll do it discreetly, rarely and NSA-ly, but you’re gonna do it. If this isn’t something your wife can accept, then your only other option is divorce. These are things I (28, gay, male, single) did last night, and they show how fucked up I am. 1) I hooked up with a guy off Craigslist. It was lame, he wasn’t cute, I was bored. 2) I came home and went on Tinder (which says I’m looking for an LTR, despite that hookup). I saw a guy from the gym – but he didn’t swipe right, and I was devastated. 3) I went online and sold a pair of my used undies. I don’t know what I’m doing with my life. I could use some advice. I’m sure what you say won’t be nearly as bad as what the voice inside my head is yelling at me. What Is My Life?
1) I hooked up with this dude once, and it happened so fast – and it was so sleazy – that I had to fish his driver’s license out of his wallet when he was in the shower because I couldn’t remember his name. And that sleazy hookup led to a relationship
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so good that I wound up marrying sleazy hookup dude. Twice. So in my experience, and the experiences of millions of other people in LTRs with people they fucked the first time they met, hooking up isn’t proof that someone isn’t looking for an LTR. So that underwhelming hookup doesn’t make you a hypocrite, OK? 2) Gym dude isn’t into you – just like you weren’t into the dude you hooked up with last night. Are you into every dude you see at your gym? No. Do you swipe right on every dude you see on Tinder? No. So you got rejected quickly and impersonally, but you’ve dished out that kind of rejection, too. Don’t be a hypocritical baby about it, OK? 3) You made an underpants perv very happy, and you made yourself a little money. Nobody was lied to or misled, no one got hurt and the total amount of joy in the world ticked up slightly. You have nothing to be ashamed of, OK? One eventful night does not an out-of-control sleazebag make. But if you feel out of control, take things slower. Resolve to be a bit choosier about who you hook up with, remind yourself to be grown-up about rejection when it comes your way, and refrain from kink-shaming yourself the next time you make an underpants perv’s day. I’ve come into professional contact with a respected and successful artist. She is a woman in her 60s; I am a man in my 40s. I’m really attracted to women who are strong, talented and smart. She’s all that, and funny. I’ve never been attracted to someone that much older than myself. Nobody bats an eye when a guy gets with a woman who is 20 years younger, but how do I pursue her without her thinking I have some creepy fetish? I’m pretty average, I have an unusual but boring job, and I don’t have any kinks or fetishes to speak of. I’ve gone out of my way to make her feel special on several occasions, but it has only caused her to remark on my great customer service – and not in a flirty way. How can I let her know that I want to move into something else besides a professional relationship without creeping her out? She Makes A Real Turn-on
Set aside the age difference, and how you met, and those sexist and dehumanizing double standards. (An older man with a younger woman is an attractive guy with game, an older woman with a younger man is a fetish object with no self-respect.) Set all that aside, SMART, and what do we have left? Person A is attracted to Person B; Person A doesn’t know how Person B feels, so Person A has to hit on Person B. Even if Person A does their best to mitigate the risks of creeping out Person B the risk cannot be entirely eliminated. Your best bet is to be unambiguously direct with her (“I think you’re great, and I’d love to take you out on a date”) and to invite her to be unambiguously direct with you (“If you’re not interested, just say no – I’m a grown-up and I can handle rejection”). And if she’s squicked out by the age difference or wonders if you’re a fetishist, urge her to Google the term “sapiosexual.” On the Lovecast, get kinky with Mollena Williams, aka the Perverted Negress: savagelovecast.com.
mail@savagelove.net
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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA CIVIL ACTION – CRESCENT PLACE AT LAKE LOTUS CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, Inc. Plaintiff v. Case No. 2015-CA-001164-16-C JUAN CAMILO RUEDA, DENISSE RUEDA,HSBC BANK NEVADA, N.A., et al. Defendants Notice of Foreclosure Sale Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to a Final Summary Judgment of Foreclosure dated September 18, 2015 entered in Civil Case No. 2015-CA-001164 of the Circuit Court of the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit in and for Seminole County, Florida, I will sell to the Highest and Best Bidder for Cash beginning at 11:00 a.m. on the 19th day of November, 2015 at the Seminole County Courthouse, 301 N. Park Avenue, Room S-201, Sanford, Florida, the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to-wit: Condominium Unit No. 204, in Building 10, of Crescent Place at Lake Lotus Condominium, a Condominium according to the Declaration of Condominium thereof, as recorded in Official Records Book 6169, Page 787, of the Public Records of Seminole County, Florida: together with all appurtenance thereto, an undivided interest in the common elements of the said declaration. Any person claiming an 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 the 18th day of September, 2015. Brian O. Cross, Esq.Goede, Adamczyk, DeBoest & Cross, Esq. 8950 Fontana del Sol Way, Suite 100 Naples, FL 34109 Telephone: (239) 331-5100 Fax: (239) 260-7677 Attorneys for Crescent Place Condominium Association, Inc. 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 Court Administration, Seminole Civil Courthouse, 301 N. Park Ave., Suite N301, Sanford, Florida, 32771-1292, (407) 665-4227 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03/TURNER/CAC CASE NO.: DP14-290 IN THE INTEREST OF: L.N. DOB: 11/29/2005, M.N. DOB: 08/02/2007, Children SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA To: Matthew Nelson: Address unknown, WHEREAS, a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child; you are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Thomas W. Turner, on November 12, 2015 @ 10:00 a.m. at the Orange County Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 E. Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY/ADJUDICATORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD (OR CHILDREN) NAMED IN THE PETITION. Pleadings shall be copied to Stephanie Evans, Attorney for the State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 609 N. Powers Drive, Bldg. B, Suite 324, Orlando, Florida 32818, Stephanie.evans@myflfamilies.com. WITNESS my hand at the Clerk of said Court and the Seal, this 7th day of October, 2015. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT (Court Seal) By: (Signed) Deputy Clerk.
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.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No.: 2015-CP-001988 IN RE: ESTATE OF MADGELENE KINSLOW ASHBY, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of MADGELENE KINSLOW ASHBY, Deceased, whose date of death was July 18, 2015, is pending in the Circuit Court for SEMINOLE County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 301 North Park Ave., Sanford, Florida 32771. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the Decedent and other persons having claims or demands against Decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served and 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 SO FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 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 October 14, 2015. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Michelle D. Ashby, 100 Bush Blvd., Sanford, FL 32773. ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Meghan McShane-Davis, Florida Bar No. 28128, McShane & McShane Law Firm, P.A., 836 N. Highland Ave., Orlando, FL 32803 Telephone:(407) 648-1500.
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 is hereby given that the undersigned, Commercial Business Funding Corporation of 174 W Comstock Ave, STE 105, Winter Park, FL 32789, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: CBF FUNDING It is the intent of the undersigned to register “CBF FUNDING” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 16 of October, 2015. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, DC Restaurant Management Group, LLC, of 1624 SE Federal Highway, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: Dinallo’s It is the intent of the undersigned to register Dinallo’s with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 10/15/15
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 29th, 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 1800 ten point ln – orlando, fl 32837 – 8:50 am: 1054 – d.Rodriguez Torres, 5033 – s.Minor 227 SIMPSON RD - KISSIMMEE, FL 34744 – 9:20 AM: 539 – m.Warwick, 703 – J. chaviano 1051 buenaventura blvd – kissimmee, fl 34743 – 9:30 am: 02603 –j. Beres 903 South Semoran Blvd- Orlando, FL 32807 - C084 – F. Madden, D058 – s. Sanchez, D173 – d. Smith.
NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 2003 Ford VIN# 1FMPU17L13LA57377 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on November 4, 2015, at 2250 East Irlo Bronson Memorial Hwy Kissimmee, Fl Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC
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The following items are lost or abandoned property found in Orange County. Item, Location Found Cell Phone (2 Alcatel), S OBT Cell Phone (Samsung),S OBT Cell Phone (HTC), S OBT Cell Phone (Samsung),Riviera Dr Green Canoe, Lone Tree Ln I-Pad, Orange Ave I-Pad Mini, Orange Ave I-Phone, Orange Ave I-Phone, Rock Spring Rd I-Phone, Vineland Ave Play Station 3, Rio Grande Ave Tablet (LG), Orange Ave US Currency,West Colonial Drive Property not claimed will be disposed of per Florida State Statutes Chapter 705. For more information call 407 317-7570 M-F 8am to 5pm
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Pursuant to Florida Statute 713,585, lienor/Autopoint Sales and Services,1455 W. Landstreet Rd,Orlando/FL,32824,will sell at public sale at lienor’s address on November 02,2015 at 5 PM for cash to satisfy a claim of lien the following car :96 Honda, vin # 1HGCD563XTA052204. Said vehicle may be redeemed by satisfying the lien prior to sale date.You have the right to a hearing at any time prior to sale date by filing a demand for hearing in the circuit court. Owner have the right to recover possession of vehicle by posting in accordance with FS 559,917. Any proceeds in excess of the amount of the lien will be deposited with the Clerk of Circuit Court in the county where the vehicle is held.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8 am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul Ctr Kirkman-600 S Kirkman RdOrlando 11/04/15: 1050 Maxine Pringle, 1055 Martin Aguilar, 3040 Staci Yarn, 3055 Rishard White, 3071 Fresnel Florvil, 4028 Marcus Laws, 4050 Mauro Silva, 6022 Ryan Farouk, 6023 Jose Volpato, 6046 Steve Servis, 8017 Helen Hill Uhaul Ctr Orange Ave- 3500 S Orange Ave-Orlando 11/04/15:1007 Rodreena Macdonald, 1071 Isaiah Boone, 1162 Cy Monroe, 1413 Patrick Skiffington, 1629 Corey Lyons, 1824 Christopher Cruz, 1836 Ashli Slife, 1928 Stanley A Florence, 2115 Carolyn Temple, 2125 Recovery AV1972F Kris Harkey Uhaul Ctr Baldwin Park- 4001 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 11/04/15: B160 & C177Ann Gallagher, D209 Tonia Ahmed, D213 Matthew Steed Uhaul Ctr Goldenrod-508 N Goldenrod Rd-Orlando 11/04/15: 207 Jackie McGriff, 305 Dominick Quinones, 322 Daniel Perez, 419 Sheila Wright, 537 Anthony Martinez, 538 Felix Alomar, 729 John Cummings.
NOTICE OF SALE – The following vehicle will be auctioned off at A Reliable Towing, 2500 Forsyth Rd F7, Orlando FL 32807, on November 7th 2015 at 9:00 am: 02 Chrysler vin: 3C8FY68B22T236875
Notice of Public Auction for monies due on storage units located at U-Haul company facilities. Storage locations are listed below. All goods are household contents or miscellaneous and recovered goods. All auctions are hold to satisfy owner’s lien for rent and fees in accordance with Florida Statutes, Self-Storage Act, Sections 83.806 and 83.807. The auction will start at 8:00 a.m. and others will follow on November 5, 2015 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Maitland, 7815 North Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32810; B66 Lemond Williams $560.96; O126 Deloris Bocco $1,403.52 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Apopka, 1221 East Semoran Blvd, Apopka, FL 32703; 1170 Julie Pollick $870.60; 1296 Carmen Paris $993.08 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Altamonte Springs, 598 West Highway 436, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714; C134 Eily Duran $764.60 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Longwood, 650 N Ronald Reagan Blvd, Longwood, FL 32750; A038 Mark Kelley $358.00; B006 Charles Cutshall $513.20; E004 Philip Vanderau $507.80 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Lake Mary, 3851 S Orlando Ave, Sanford, FL 32773; 1296 Johnnie Payne $205.55; 1324 Kimberly King $347.00; 1405 Teresa Troutman $496.80; 2213 Delana Wynn $614.80 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Rhinehart, 1811 Rhinehart Road, Sanford, FL 32771; 1091 Tyrone Brown $706.57; 2092 Tonette Wilson $322.89; 2106 Randy Costa $465.00; 2169 Ike Williams $679.00; 4111 Cory Dipasquale $481.05.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8 am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul Ctr Ocoee-11410 W. Colonial Drive-Ocoee 11/11/15: AA0178A Verrica Jackson, 1201Devin Sims, 1542 Melissa Arias, 3316 Larry Casey, 3550 James Clarke Uhaul Stg Haines City-3307 Hwy 17-92 W-Haines City 11/11/15: F0650 Teresa Ball, G0754 Sergio Lopez, G0760 John Pabon Uhaul Ctr Hunters Creek-13301 S. Orange Blossom Trail -Orlando 11/11/15: 1203 Rois G Narvaez, 1250 Howard Portious, 1309 Nelson Succes, 1337 Jonathan Albarracin, 2027 Debbie Rendell, 2054 Tracey Boass, 2084 Recovery BE3056Y Marie Zambaty, 2148 Amanda Arroyo, 3058 Krystal Fines, 3167 Venus Curiel, 3418 Anderson Guerrier Uhaul Stg Gatorland-Orlando 14651 Gatorland Dr- Orlando 11/11/15: 259 Kelvin Gonzalez-Melendez, 311 Andreas Leberle, 410 Latonya Mutter, 516 Ronald Reyes, 550 Kimberley Layne, 742 Angel Magdaleno
NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 1995 Honda VIN# JHMCD5638SC021789 1972 Ford VIN# 2K91F141299 2008 Hyundai VIN# 5NPET46C28H358673 1992 Toyota VIN# 2T1AE94A5NC178450 1995 Oldsmobile VIN# 1G3NL55M4SM302862 2000 Toyota VIN# 4T1BG22K3YU755903 2005 Mazda VIN# JM1BK32F451329291 2005 Ford VIN# 2FAFP71W95X145456 1996 Nissan VIN# JN1CA21D9TT113538 2004 Chrysler VIN# 2C3HD46R34H594660 2002 Ford VIN# 1FMDU74E72ZA20437 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on November 4, 2015, at 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC
NOTICE OF CLAIM OF LIEN AND PROPOSED SALE OF VEHICLE – Manny’s Transport & Towing Inc. 4839 Patch Rd. Orlando, FL 32822 Ph. (407)468-4381. Sale Date: 11/03/2015 10:00am 1996 International 1HSHEAHN5TH295118 1997 Nissan JN8AR05S7VW128961 1999 Mercedes 4JGAB72E2XA108605 We have the right to refuse any and all bids.
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Notice of Public Sale: – Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on November 6, 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; 2009 Mazda, Vin#4F2CZ06G49KM02323; 2002 Honda, Vin#2HGES16532H555596; 2003 Ford, Vin#2FAFP71W43X181584; 2001 Chrysler, Vin#3C8FY4BBX1T697916; 2003 Chevrolet, Vin#1GNDS13S432195132; 1999 Mercury, Vin#4M2XV11T6XDJ07386; 1993 Pontiac, Vin#1G2HX53L4P1262582; 2012 KIA, Vin#KNAFU4A23C5533244; 2007 Kawasaki, Vin#JKAZX4J67A069792; 2001 Dodge, Vin#3B7HC13Y51G717315; 1995 Jeep, Vin#1J4FT27P4SL628736; 2005 Ford, Vin#1FTPW14514KD46951; 2007 Toyota,Vin#JTNBB46K273012741; 1983 Chevrolet, Vin#1G1AP87H1DN124192; 2000 Lincoln, Vin#1LNHM87A8YY803314; 1999 Chevrolet, Vin#1GNDM19W5XB112978; 2001 Acura, Vin#19UYA42681A007347; 1997 Cadillac, Vin#1G6KD54Y0VU263022; 2003 Honda, Vin#1HGCM72763A026879; 1997 Jeep, Vin#1J4GZ58SXVC740047; 1989 Mazda, Vin#JM1FC3318H0542238;
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ORLANDOWEEKLY.COM/JOBS Engineer: Siemens Energy, Inc. seeks Proposal Engineer, Orlando, FL facility. Resp for conducting proposal development & negotiations according to SWP’s standards specific in the management system. Reqd: Bach deg in Mech Eng or related field & 4 yrs of exp working in the wind power industry. Prior exp must incl: wind turbine proposal development & negotiations; technical knowledge of both geared & direct drive wind turbine technology; providing sales support; scheduling & planning proposal processes; experience of wind turbine certification process requirements for industry standard certification bodies. Approx 20% travel reqd. Offer of employment with Siemens is conditioned upon the successful completion of a background check and drug screen, subject to applicable laws and regulations. Mail resumes to: Brett Sanchez, Siemens Energy, Inc., 4400 Alafaya Trail, MC Q1-240, Orlando, FL 32826. Please ref BS/PL. If offered employment must have legal right to work in U.S. EOE. Financial Director (Orlando). Maintain fin, accounting, admin. & personnel services; administer & monitor fin system; prep fin stmnts, payroll, etc, Bachelor’s degree in Bus Admin; 2 yrs exp. Fax resume OTK Kart USA Corp 407-438-7739 Hospitalist Physician: FT positions for Central Florida Inpatient Medicine to work in busy Hospital in Central Florida. M.D. And Florida Medical License Required. Contact Dr. Nagda at 407-647-2346 or fax resume to 407-647-5431
PAID IN ADVANCE! Make $1000 A Week Mailing Brochures From Home! No Experience Required. Helping home workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity. Start Immediately! www.MailingHelp.com (AAN CAN)
AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get started by training as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800-725-1563 (AAN CAN.)
PARTICIPANTS WANTED FOR RESEARCH STUDY Young men & women are wanted for a study on health-related behaviors. Participants must be ages 18-20. Earn up to $200 if eligible! Visit http://depts. washington.edu/uwepic/ or email Project EPIC at UWepic@uw.edu for more information.
Machine Operator Pro Image Solutions 6125010
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!
National Accounts Director Universal Orlando 6123437
Start your Humanitarian Career at One World Center and gain experience through international service work in Africa. Program has costs. Info@OneWorldCenter.org
ELECTRICIAN Pro Image Solutions 6125008
Culinary Chef Assistant- Full-Time, (Lead Line Cook) Walt Disney World Walt Disney World Resort 6123433
Bus Driver- Full Time, Walt Disney World Walt Disney World Resort 6123430
Fire Protection Engineer City of Orlando 6123359
Pricing Analyst - Business Development Universal Orlando 6123083
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Reservations Activations Agent Hilton Grand Vacations 6127733
Special Events Coordinator, Corporate Office - YMCA of Central Florida YMCA of Central Florida 6127771
Sandwich Makers, Cashiers, Prep Cooks Earl Of Sandwich Earl Enterprise 6124988
Faculty Instructors, Entertainment Business The Los Angeles Film School 6127917
Teller - Lake Placid Harbor Community Bank 6127767
SERVER, HOST, LINE COOK, BUSSER, MERCHANDISE SALES - Planet Hollywood Earl Enterprise 6124989
Trades Tech II Orange County Public Schools Food Service 6127915
Executive Producer-Special Projects WKMG Local 6 ClickOrlando.com 6123015
Bellperson-Embassy Suites Lake Buena Vista South Embassy Suites Orlando - Lake Buena Vista South 6127913
STEM Majors Entry Level Opening LabAnswer 6052574
Customer Service Representative Benada Aluminum Products, LLC 6127911
Communicator (911 Dispatch) Reedy Creek Improvement District 6127681
Case Manager RN St. Cloud Regional Medical Center 6123105
Fueling Supervisor TBI Airport Management 6119768
Cable Contractors - Technician - Hiring Central Florida Cable Communications 6119766
Coordinator, Career Development (PartTime) Seminole State College of Florida 6123013
Revenue Analyst Diamond Resorts International 6127763
Inventory Control Specialist / Inventory Clerk Village on the Green 6119842
Provider Recruitment Specialist Community Coordinated Care for Children, Inc 6122998
Sampler Sales Agent - Orlando Diamond Resorts International 6127657
Reporting Specialist - Entry Level - $11 to $12 per hour Total Marketing Concepts 6122996
Director of Quality Management Compass Research 6127749
Paramedic (Part-Time and Full-Time Overnight positions available) Wet n Wild 6122992
Regional Corporate Outreach Representative Columbia Southern Education Group 6121930
Shift Leader Qdoba 6104146
Room Attendant DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at Seaworld 6127715
Reservations/Revenue Coordinator Caribe Royale Orlando 6127713
Laboratory Techinician Silver Springs Citrus, Inc. 6127748
Cooks Qdoba 6104141
Sales Associate / Photographer Part-time Colorvision International, Inc. 6127719
Custodian / Housekeeper, Dr. P. Phillips YMCA Family Center YMCA of Central Florida 6119365
GIS Engineer GeoTel Communications 6121265
Maintenance HVAC Technician Village on the Green 6119841
Valet Supervisor - Renaissance Orlando at SeaWorld . Marriott International 6122725
Front Office Staff - FT St. Cloud Regional Medical Center 6127704
Retail Sales Consultant Merritt Island FL (North Brevard Fl) AT&T 6127679
Intake and Placement Program Manager IMPOWER (Intervention Services, Inc) 6127668
Banquet Manager Embassy Suites Orlando - Lake Buena Vista South 6122623
Administrative Assistant DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at Seaworld 6127667
Call Center Representative - Technician My Florida Regional MLS 6127663
Digital Account Executive WKMG Local 6 ClickOrlando.com 6127555
Chauffeur - Concierge on Wheels Destination MCO 6119935
Food & Beverage Attendant-The Gaylord Palms Resort & Convention Center Marriott International 6127729
Travel Consultant Genesis Tours 6122618
Security Officer- Part Time Merlin Entertainments 6123051
Concierge - Vacation Planner Florida Dolphin Tours 6122730
Receptionist Art & Frame Direct 6127416
Hourly Family Members - Buca di Beppo Earl Enterprise 6124990
Certified Pharmacy Tech - Various Locations, Orlando Health Orlando Health 6127414
Youth & Education Sales Representative Merlin Entertainments 6123046
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OCT. 21-27, 2015
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ORLANDO WEEKLY
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