Northeast Florida’s News & Opinion Magazine • Jan. 30-Feb. 5, 2013 • 124,542 Readers Every Week • Stay Hungry – Stay Foolish
Are concerts at Metropolitan Park too loud?
P. 7 Two buddies aim to take book to TV
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Inside
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17 Volume 26 Number 44
EDITOR’S NOTE How you can be a part of Folio Weekly. p. 4
Brevity is the soul of these animated and liveaction films nominated for Oscars. p. 20
NEWS Are Metropolitan Park concerts too loud and too vulgar? p. 7
MUSIC London trio rides its minimalist musical permutations to massive international success. p. 26
BUZZ St. Augustine Alligator Farm, collecting bicycles for kids, background checks for ice cream truck operators, the annual homeless count. p. 7 BOUQUETS & BRICKBATS Gabriel House executive director Edward Asher, Gov. Rick Scott and Principal Shana Adams and Saint Clair Evans Academy. p. 8 DEEMABLE TECH What is a podcast? p. 10 THE SPECKTATOR The similarities between Kareem-Abdul Jabbar and Lance Armstrong. p. 10 ON THE COVER A guide to our new website and how you can be a part of it. p. 11 OUR PICKS Willie Nelson, Wounded Warrior Project concert benefit, The Capitol Steps, “Draw Your Heart Out” First Wednesday Art Walk, Pre-International Noise Conference and WWE Smackdown. p. 17 SPORTSTALK MaliVai Washington remembers his Davis Cup experience. p. 18 MOVIES “Warm Bodies”: Clever premise and one-liners reanimate this standard zom-rom-com. p. 19
Gainesville indie rockers Holopaw carve a niche touring for an album recorded in St. Augustine Beach. p. 27 Johnny Winter emerged from a difficult decade and overcame addiction with the help of a new manager. p. 28 ARTS Roderick Borisade and Aaron Hazouri created “Buddy and Bird” to teach children lessons about diversity and friendship. p. 35 BITE-SIZED Tossgreen offers a fun, healthy, fast-casual dining experience. p. 44 BACKPAGE The right training regimen will keep owners and pets happy. p. 55 MAIL p. 5 FILM LIST p. 21 LIVE MUSIC LISTING p. 29 ARTS LISTING p. 36 THE EYE p. 40 HAPPENINGS p. 42 DINING GUIDE p. 45 FREEWILL ASTROLOGY p. 50 I SAW U p. 51 CLASSIFIEDS p. 52 NEWS OF THE WEIRD p. 54 Cover illustration by Paul T. Fenn
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Editor’s Note
Website Is a Two-Way Street
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4 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
ack in the golden age of journalism, allknowing reporters researched and wrote their stories, which magically appeared in newspapers or were delivered as sacrosanct on radio or television. The process lived behind a hazy screen where few had access. The public’s only peek was through wisecracking, hardnosed Hollywood depictions of reporters. Information only traveled in one direction — from the media to consumers. Of course, many fewer avenues to publishing existed, and they were controlled by a powerful few. Then came the Internet, and the game changed — although much of the media were slow to realize it. Now, anyone with a WiFi connection can reach an audience. Finally, the great and powerful Oz-like media have learned to include consumers in the process. Through social media and other tools, journalists ask their followers to suggest people to interview for specific stories, provide eyewitness accounts on breaking news, give feedback on early versions of stories and more. Alternative media like Folio Weekly have always valued and invited readers to take part through writing letters, columns, essays and stories. With the launch of the new folioweekly.com, we have even more ways to engage interaction. We’ll now be publishing all of our stories online, and each one will give readers the opportunity to comment. We want to create a safe atmosphere for thoughtful and civil conversation, so please refrain from name-calling, inappropriate language and downright stupidity. Folio Weekly reserves the right to remove comments that violate the basic rules of humanity. And there will be more content on folioweekly.com than just what appears in print. We’ll feature new stories, reviews, photos and more every day, including a bunch of blogs: The Flog, Playing Around, The Specktator, Bite-Sized, Deemable Tech and Sportstalk. Read more about them on page 11. You, too, can write a story or blog for consideration on our site. It could be a reported story, an interview with a local musician, an essay, a Backpage Editorial — whatever interests you. Local photography and artwork give Folio Weekly its unique look and feel. The new website is designed to showcase images with a simple and slick photo gallery presentation. We shoot photos of people at events around Northeast Florida for The Eye, and now we will be able to feature even more online. But you can also upload photos to folioweekly.com
to be presented in our galleries. If you organized or attended an event, post your photos for everyone to enjoy. A new feature of the site is called What Do You Think? We will pose questions about local news and events throughout the week and seek your feedback. We will comb through the comments, stories, blogs and photos online and print the best of them in Folio Weekly to create a more robust and interactive publication. Folio Weekly prints the most complete calendar listings in Northeast Florida. That’s one reason why so many readers make a habit of picking us up each week. We put a lot of work into gathering that information. Now, we’re asking you to help us improve and expand our calendar by submitting events online. We will be phasing out email submissions, so this will be the best way to get your event listed in print, though we’ll still have to edit our calendars based on space. However, posting your event on our searchable online calendar means it will get even more exposure. And, you can upload photos to go with it. If you attach highresolution photos (200 dpi and at least 8 inches wide), we can consider them for print in Folio Weekly. In order to contribute any of this content to folioweekly.com, you will need to create an account and log in. Please use your real name and give us some contact information so that we can get in touch if we want to publish something you posted. All stories, blogs, photo galleries and events posted by our users will be submitted for approval by our staff before they appear online. The new website also makes it easy for you to share content through Facebook, Twitter, Google+ or email. If you follow us on various social media channels (facebook.com/ thefolioweekly, twitter.com/folioweekly), and we hope you do, you can take part in even more conversations about Northeast Florida news and events. Of course, you can still contact us by email or through the good old-fashioned postal service. You might be surprised to know that we still get a fair amount of physical mail; in fact, three letters in this week’s Mail had stamps on them. But we invite you to join us in our digital transformation. We hope you use and enjoy our website all week, in addition to picking us up at your favorite location each Wednesday. And best of all, our website has the right price — free, just like our printed issues. Denise M. Reagan dreagan@folioweekly.com twitter.com/denisereagan
Right to Carry Saves Lives
The gun control advocates are always quoting off-the-wall and unsubstantiated statistics demonizing guns in their attempt to try to convince fellow Americans that private gun ownership is at the root of violent crime. Nothing could be further from the truth. Thirty-five states have enacted right-tocarry legislation allowing law-abiding citizens to carry a concealed weapon. In these 35 states, homicide rates declined after citizens were permitted the means of self-defense. A massive study by John Lott of the University of Chicago showed that armed citizens deter violent criminals. His study indicated that in states where residents can acquire concealed-weapons permits, the rates of murder, assault and burglary fall dramatically. Women have been the primary beneficiaries of this trend. In 1987, the Florida Legislature passed a concealed-weapons law. Did it turn Florida into the “Gunshine” state? Did licensees go out and commit crimes? Did crime increase? No, no and no, and the statistics proved it. In 1987, Florida’s murder rate was 36 percent above the national average. By 1991, it had fallen to 4 percent below the national average. The handgun-control people refuse to admit it, but the right to carry a gun saves lives. The greatest fear of violent criminals isn’t police or prison but the possibility that a victim could be armed. Norman R. Dunn Sr. Jacksonville
Real School Security
As expected, in the wake of the Connecticut school massacre, the leftists are clamoring for strict gun control. Instead, they should turn their attention to details of real school security. The gunman gained access to the school interior by shooting out the glass in a door. Have their security people never heard of polycarbonate plastic? General Electric manufactures it under the trademark Lexan. Many years ago, in a catalog for, among other things, security lights, it was stated that a one-quarter-inch-thick pane of polycarbonate plastic would be enough to stop a .22 caliber revolver bullet. Probably, a one-half-inchthick pane could stop a 9mm pistol round. Much thicker panes are available; these might be able to stop rifle bullets. Even if the bullet completely penetrated, the plastic would not shatter; the bullet would make only a small hole in it. If that pane had been sufficiently thick polycarbonate, the killer would never have entered the school in the first place. Replacing all window and door glass with polycarbonate would not only provide complete security, but also make buildings much more energy-efficient. To facilitate faster police response, school officials should have special radio telephones. The phones could broadcast directly on police radio frequencies to call for rescue. William C. Urban Jacksonville
Congratulate Governor for Drug Testing
In the Jan. 9 issue of Folio Weekly, you gave brickbats to Gov. Rick Scott for “costing” taxpayers more than $900,000 in his fight to require drug-testing for welfare recipients and state employees. He should have received bouquets! I did not vote for him, but I strongly support his stand on requiring drug-testing for welfare recipients. Anyone receiving taxpayer dollars should be required to submit to drug and alcohol testing, as they should not have enough money to buy drugs or alcohol from welfare benefits. If they can afford to do that, we are paying them too damn much in welfare benefits. The legal fees are a very small drop in the bucket compared to what the waste in welfare benefits costs taxpayers. Bouquets to Gov. Scott for having the courage to take a stand against what is wrong! Steve Whitmarsh Jacksonville
Learn About the Fair Tax
Thanks very much for making space for a Fair Tax submission [“The Fair Tax Is Good for America,” Jan. 16], even if it was the Backpage Editorial, where a large percentage of readers probably never go. It’s particularly important to put ideas like the Fair Tax in front of would-be voters — even for creative types in arts and entertainment to understand the economy (which may lead to an understanding of how much money is able to flow into arts and entertainment so they have a viable lifestyle other than “starving artist”). I would bet most of your readers complain a good bit about lobbyists and dirty, corporate money influencing politicians to create the socio-political world they see around them. But almost none of them realizes that it is the 72,000-page IRS system that enables that entire process. That is how it got to be 72,000 pages. But if you want an unlimited government — the opposite of the founding vision for America — in which the government can give you everything, you will have a government big enough to take it all away. This was predicted in the 1770s. Tom Vogler St. Augustine
Tide Is Turning for Gay Rights
Another month, another issue of Folio Weekly in which Mr. William H. Shuttleworth gets all fussy because not enough people follow his Bible without question or simply do not interpret it the same way he does. As if unquestioning belief in the Bible, and adhering to his particular take on it, is somehow mandatory. I could go on and on about Shuttleworth’s childish scare tactics, threats about his God raining down destruction, just because Mr. John Delaney insists gay people should be treated with the same dignity and respect as everyone else. I’m pretty sure not hating gays enough has been cited as the causes of the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting and Hurricane Sandy by plenty already (without any proof, of course).
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Mail If the Christian God allowed these tragedies, for that reason, the correct response is all too clear. Again, push for the anti-discrimination measure that failed in Jacksonville, and nationally get gay marriages recognized in every state. Such a sadistic, sociopathic being is to be defied, not worshipped. Mr. Shuttleworth, feel free to convince us all otherwise. Luckily, the majority of Americans seem to share my outlook. Acceptance of gay marriage is still more than 50 percent. Plus, with [the legalization of] gay marriage winning on ballots in the last election, a president openly in favor of gay marriage re-elected, failures of candidates backed by the National Institute for Marriage, and election of openly gay and bisexual lawmakers, it is clear that the pendulum has shifted. But do go on, calling the American electorate “uninformed masses.” Because insulting the people you need to convince to vote with your interests is always a sound strategy. For gay rights advocates like me, that problem is no longer as profound. In fact, there is little more I need to say on this subject. All I need do is sit back, watch the tide turn against whiny homophobes even more, and savor their misery. Jeremy Racicot Jacksonville
Vegan Diet and the Flu Epidemic
The flu epidemic has invaded 48 states, overwhelming medical facilities, exhausting vaccine supplies and killing 29 children and thousands of seniors. Both the problem and solution to this disaster hinge on how we relate to animals raised for food. Indeed, 61 percent of the 1,415 pathogens known to infect humans originate with animals. The more recent, contagious and deadly viruses among them include Asian, dengue fever, Ebola, H5N1 (bird), HIV, SARS, West Nile and yellow fever. The 1918 pandemic “Spanish” flu killed 20 to 50 million people worldwide, and the World Health Organization predicts more pandemics in the future. Today’s factory farms are virtual flu factories. Sick, crowded, highly stressed animals in contact with contaminated feces and urine provide ideal incubation media for viruses. As these microbes reach humans, they mutate to defeat the new host’s immune system, then propagate by contact. Each of us can help end animal farming and build up our own immune system against the flu by replacing animal products in our diet with vegetables, fruits and whole grains. These foods don’t carry flu viruses or government warning labels, are touted by every major health advocacy organization, and were the recommended fare in the Garden of Eden.
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• In the Jan. 16 news story “Farm to Glass,” the definition of GMO should have read “genetically modified organisms.” • The Jan. 23 music story about Krewella, “Dubstep in Da ’Ville,” ran the wrong byline. It was written by Kara Pound.
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NewsBuzz
News
See More of You Later, Alligators The St. Augustine Alligator Farm & Zoological Park plans to add 10 acres to expand the popular attraction. The City Commission voted unanimously to rezone the property. A public hearing and second reading of the ordinance was held Jan. 28. One of the installations in the new area will be a kids’ zip line. The current zip line carries visitors over toothy alligators. Zipliners older than 10 must be of a certain height – anyone shorter than 4 feet, 9 inches tall is considered a “snack” by an alligator. Alligator Farm officials said they’d also improve parking and build a 50-foot native vegetative buffer abutting residential land.
Re-Cycling Got a spare bicycle, a helmet or lock cluttering up the garage? St. Johns County Fire Rescue and Gears for Years are trying to collect 100 bikes to give to local children. Bicycles of all sizes are accepted and don’t have to be in working order to be donated. Donations are accepted all day and evening hours at county fire rescue stations. In May, Gears for Years’ bicycle assembly workshop will open. Kids will be paired with bikes and volunteers who’ll teach them how to assemble, maintain and safely use their bikes. Those interested in volunteering time and skill to Gears for Years can go to gearsforyears.org or call (407) 205-9407.
Who’s Selling Kids Ice Cream – or Cutting Their Hair? City Councilmember Don Redman has introduced legislation requiring background checks on ice-cream truck operators to keep children safe. The bill would bar registered sex offenders, predators and people the state considers habitual traffic offenders. Councilmember John Crescimbeni quipped to a reporter that barbers also come into contact with children, so maybe barbers should have background checks. Redman is a barber.
No Longer Homeless When the annual count of Northeast Florida’s homeless began last week, Michael Cochran remembered what it was like to sleep on the streets, in sheds and under trees. In the late ’80s and early ’90s, Cochran was homeless himself. Cochran, 60, is special projects manager for Ability Housing of Northeast Florida, a nonprofit that provides affordable rental housing to those who are homeless or at risk of being homeless and adults with disabilities. Last year’s count estimated there were 4,500 homeless in Jacksonville. This year’s count was taken Jan. 25.
Gavin Rossdale of Bush played an hour-long set at the Big Ticket music festival on Dec. 2 in Metropolitan Park. The concert, which lasted until almost midnight, was the subject of complaints from residents who live across the river. Photos: Cassidy Roddy
The Day the Music Didn’t Die
Are Metropolitan Park concerts too loud and too vulgar?
A
few days after the December Big Ticket concert in Metropolitan Park rattled their windows, shocked their sensibilities and tried their patience, a group of St. Nicholas and South Shore residents sat down with Jacksonville City Councilmember Don Redman. Their homes, on the St. Johns River directly across the water from the park, were ground zero for 16 hours of incessant loud music from multiple stages and f-bombs exploding in their ears, according to the residents. The concert didn’t end until midnight on Sunday. “It was too loud, too long and too vulgar,” said Ginny Myrick, a Jacksonville City Councilmember from 1986 to 1994, who lives in St. Nicholas. Some members of the South Shore Neighborhood Association were again shocked when they learned that Redman had introduced a bill to eliminate all 12 ticketed concerts exempted from the noise ordinance at Metropolitan Park. “It was too extreme. We don’t know where that came from,” said Kathy Moore, a member of the South Shores group. But the tempest has ended, at least for now, after the City Council voted unanimously on Jan. 22 to withdraw Redman’s bill. Council President Bill Bishop appointed a committee to look into the issues surrounding Metropolitan Park concerts. Councilmember Denise Lee asked to chair the committee. Suggestions have ranged from lowering the volume to redirecting the speakers to booking more family-friendly entertainment. Redman told The Florida Times-Union he had introduced the bill as a way of forcing attention on the concerns of the residents. He did not respond to calls and emails from Folio Weekly. David DeCamp, a spokesperson for Mayor Alvin Brown, said the administration is looking into alternatives to solve the problems. “We specifically are interested in practices in other cities that have similar venues,” DeCamp said. “As you know, Mayor Brown has worked hard and increased Jacksonville’s role as a destination for sports and entertainment and has continued to support events that bring such investment to benefit the city.” Kathy Moore, with the South Shores
Neighborhood Association, was among those who had met with Redman and complained about the Big Ticket and Welcome to Rockville concerts, especially the vulgar language that infiltrated her home. Still, she is pleased with the decision to withdraw the bill and the fact the neighborhood’s concerns were brought out in public. “It is terrific. It created discussion,” she said. “Now maybe the committee can look at alternatives and put some parameters on it. It was silly to eliminate all 12. I am not disappointed, I’m pleased.” She said she was forced to take her 3-year-old twins in the house because of the vulgar language. Myrick had earlier asked Redman and the mayor’s office to withdraw the bill. She offered to help draft new language in the bill to resolve the controversy. “I am happy with the outcome and am anxious to work out something which is agreeable to all parties,” she said. “I think a compromise is very doable with some oversight put in place, probably in the ordinance and the contracts, which recognize the surrounding neighborhoods need to be protected and respected.”
Helen Ashmead, who lives in the St. Nicholas area, said her main concerns are the foul language and the concerts that rock the area until late at night, especially on Sundays. “The concerts add to the environment of the city,” she said. “I am against banning all concerts.” Robert Goodman, a longtime Jacksonville disc jockey, said concerts are responsible for jobs of dozens of people, from those who set up the stages to vendors. Local hotels and restaurants also benefit from the shows. “Concerts bring massive revenues to the city,” Goodman said. There were eight ticketed events last year in Metropolitan Park, including The Big Ticket on Dec. 2 with an estimated 7,500 attending; Welcome to Rockville, also with an estimated 7,500 fans on April 29, and Fun Fest on May 11 and 12, with 15,000 attending, according to the city of Jacksonville. Other ticketed events were nonmusical programs, like World of Nations and the annual Southeast U.S. Boat Show. Lisa Thomas, who used to live in St. Nicholas, said the music from across the St. Johns River was not a problem. She said the music could be heard outside, but not inside.
An estimated 7,500 rock fans crowded into Metropolitan Park for the Big Ticket on Dec. 2.
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News “The school was the loudest,” Thomas said of nearby Bishop Kenny High School. The roar of jets before a Jaguars game and fireworks from the stadium, directly across the street from Metropolitan Park, were much louder than any concerts from the park. “The loudest thing I’ve ever heard is when U2 played at the stadium,” she said. “I look at it in a positive manner. I got to hear U2 for free.” Another former St. Nicholas resident, Ben Jones, said he had no trouble dealing with the music from concerts or the jets flying over EverBank Field prior to the Jaguars games. He said the loudest concerts were when Michael Jackson and U2 performed in the stadium. “It’s not that intolerable,” Jones said. “I am pretty much for leaving things the way they are.” This is not a new problem for those living on the edge of the river. In 1997, residents of St. Nicholas started a grassroots group, Citizens for Amphitheater Awareness, and were able to stop a plan by the John Delaney Administration to build a 20,000-seat amphitheater in Metropolitan Park. At that time, the main objection was noise from the concerts. Jacksonville has a long, bumpy musical tradition. Elvis Presley appeared here several times, beginning in 1955. On his next visit,
a judge warned The King that if he did his famous hip-gyrating movements, he’d go straight to jail. He complied that time, and would go on to make a total of eight appearances in Jacksonville. On the tail of Hurricane Dora, The Beatles played a 30-minute concert in the Gator Bowl on Sept. 11, 1964. The performance was originally scheduled to be racially segregated, but The Beatles refused to play until they received an assurance from the promoter that the audience would be mixed. “We never play to segregated audiences, and we aren’t going to start now. I’d sooner lose our appearance money,” said John Lennon, quoted on beatlesbible.com. The Jacksons Victory Tour came to the Gator Bowl for three appearances July 21-23, 1984, selling out all three shows to a total of 135,000 screaming fans. Most of the residents who talked with Folio Weekly attend events at Metropolitan Park and no one expressed any concerns about some of the signature events, like Jacksonville Jazz Festival and Spring Music Festival. Myrick said she would like to see more family-friendly shows, but Goodman said those don’t draw enough fans to be successful. Ron Word rword@folioweekly.com
Dave King (second from left), lead singer of Flogging Molly, performed at The Big Ticket.
Bouquets & Brickbats Bouquets to Edward Asher, retiring after 15 years as executive director at Gabriel House of Care, used primarily for those Mayo Clinic patients undergoing cancer treatments or organ transplants who live outside the area. During his time there, Asher expanded Gabriel House from a four-bed to a 29-bed facility. Brickbats to Gov. Rick Scott for failing to take any responsibility for the problems of the 2012 general election. Scott says he now supports restoring early voting days and restricting the ballot length, but he said it was not his bill and he didn’t have anything to do with its passing. Scott signed the bill and refused to add more early voting days before the election. His administration also defended the bill in court, costing taxpayers $500,000 in legal fees. Bouquets to Principal Shana Adams and Saint Clair Evans Academy for receiving a $10,000 “Share the Good” grant from Seeds of Change in support of community-based gardening and sustainable farming. Saint Clair Evans Academy, formerly Moncrief Elementary School, was one of 12 schools selected from more than 13,000 entries. The academy plans to use the grant to expand its garden and establish a curriculum teaching students gardening and healthful eating habits. Seeds of Change was founded in 1989 by passionate gardeners with a vision to make organically grown seeds available to gardeners and farmers. 8 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
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NewsBuzz DEEMABLE TECH What Is a Podcast?
Q: How do I “subscribe” to a podcast? Are you going to mail it to my house or drop it off next to the newspaper? Forgive me for sounding stupid, but I don’t understand. A: You don’t sound stupid at all. If I didn’t know what it was, I might assume a podcast was something out of an old sci-fi/horror B-movie. A podcast is a broadcast to your media player. Almost any gadget that can play music or videos can receive a podcast, including most MP3 players, smartphones and tablets. Subscribing to a podcast is similar to using On Demand on your TV; you can listen or watch the podcast when and where you want to. To subscribe to a podcast, you need a program called a podcatcher, like iTunes. In iTunes, search for the name of the podcast you’re looking for. iTunes will pull up the podcast listing, and you can click “subscribe” to have the podcast automatically downloaded to your computer or your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch. If you have a smartphone or media player that isn’t made by Apple, you must use a program like DoubleTwist to sync your device with iTunes, or you can use a different podcatcher like Pocket Casts or Stitcher for Android or Juice for Windows, Mac or Linux. Some podcatcher apps do not have searchable directories. In that case, you’ll need to know the RSS feed address of the show you’re looking for. The RSS feed is a specially formatted web page that podcatchers can read. For example, our RSS feed is dmbl.co/pod. Subscribing to the shows you love helps the shows to grow; the more subscribers a show has, the higher it’s listed in the iTunes podcast directory, which means more listeners will find the show and start listening. Now, go subscribe to Deemable Tech’s podcast, and then check out all of the other great shows out there!
ASK DEEMABLE TECH A QUESTION Ray Hollister and co-host Tom Braun answer technology questions on their podcast (deemable.com). They also answer questions each week on their blog at folioweekly.com/deemable. Call (904) 3723336 or email them at questions@deemable.com.
THE SPECKTATOR
Florida Forum Cancels Tour de Lance The Women’s Board of Wolfson Children’s Hospital announced Lance Armstrong would not participate in The Florida Forum as scheduled. A hospital spokesperson said, “The decision [to cancel] was mutual,” and NBA Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar will, ahem, fill his shoes. There’s no need to be disappointed, though — since the two world-class athletes have so much in common, attendees might not even notice the difference: They’ve both changed their birth names, have five kids, wrote best-selling books, survived cancer, practice yoga and follow Tony Hawk on Twitter. For more amazing coincidences, as well as Jabbar’s comments on Armstrong’s fall from grace, check out The Specktator blog on folioweekly.com/specktator.
READ THE SPECKTATOR BLOG Kerry Speckman shares her unique and sometimes twisted observations of local people and events at folioweekly.com/ specktator. Contact her at thespecktator@aol.com.
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A DIGITAL REVOLUTION
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THE HOMEPAGE Folio Weekly’s new homepage is a simpler, easier-to-navigate face for the site. The new site will feature everything from the print edition, plus much more digital-only content.
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Our Picks WRESTLING WWE SMACKDOWN
It’s performance art in the ring when the WWE Superstars return to Northeast Florida. The scheduled card features Alberto del Rio vs. The Big Show (pictured) for the World Heavyweight Championship. WWE bills The Big Show as the “world’s largest athlete” … judge his true athletic prowess yourself when you go. Sheamus, Randy Orton, Kane and Daniel Bryan are also scheduled. The Spandexed men aren’t alone up there: The WWE Divas are in on the action, too. 8 p.m. Feb. 5 at Veterans Memorial Arena, 300 Randolph Blvd., Downtown, $15-$95, 1-800-745-3000. ticketmaster.com
POLITICAL SATIRE THE CAPITOL STEPS
Whether singing “When Bush Come to Shove,” “Obama Mia” or “If I Tax a Rich Man,” the Capitol Steps satirists always aim for bipartisan comedy. The current troupe includes more than two dozen performers and five pianists presenting hits from the latest effort: “Take the Money and Run – for President.” One thing’s for sure: Washington will continue to give the Capitol Steps plenty of material. 7:30 p.m. Feb. 5-7, 8 p.m. Feb. 8, 2 and 8 p.m. Feb. 9, and 2 and 5:30 p.m. Feb. 10 at FSCJ’s Wilson Center for the Arts, 11901 Beach Blvd., Southside, $34-$46, 632-3373. artistseriesjax.org
EXPERIMENTAL PRE-INTERNATIONAL NOISE CONFERENCE
Expect beautiful noise at the Pre-INC, as sound artists show off their latest productions in homemade electronics, modified keyboards and guitars and no-input mixers. The local Pre-INC (along with ones in Atlanta, Orlando and Gainesville) leads up to the 10th annual INC, held Feb. 6-9 in Miami. Jamison Williams (pictured), an experimental saxophonist and curator of the local event since 2009, expects 20 to 30 sound artists, including Gainesville’s Ironing and Nicholas David, Tampa’s Nequam Sonitus and local artists Faker, The Glyph and others. 8 p.m.2 a.m. Feb. 2 at Burro Bar, 100 E. Adams St., Downtown, free, 677-2977.
FIRST WEDNESDAY ART WALK DRAW YOUR HEART OUT
Artists show off their creations and their talent while they work at February’s First Wednesday Art Walk. For the “Draw Your Heart Out” event, Downtown Vision partners with AIGA Jacksonville for Atomic Sketch. Fourteen downtown venues participate with artists producing new works ranging from $5-$50. Proceeds benefit AIGA Jacksonville’s high school mentoring program. 5-9 p.m. Feb. 6 spanning more than 30 galleries, museums and businesses, across 15 blocks, headquartered at Hemming Plaza, Downtown. For an event map, go to downtownjacksonville.org/marketing
COUNTRY WILLIE NELSON & FAMILY
The rare musician truly worthy of being called a legend, Willie Nelson releases “Let’s Face the Music and Die” on March 5. The new album features original music, Nelson standards and other classics. Nelson, an activist for biofuels and the legalization of marijuana, underlined the latter point while recycling a song title for his 2012 autobiography: “Roll Me Up and Smoke Me When I Die.” The country icon turns 80 in April. 8 p.m. Feb. 8 at The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Downtown, $48-$64, 355-2787. floridatheatre.com Photo: David McClister
CONCERT BENEFIT WOUNDED WARRIOR PROJECT
Outlaw bluegrass band Grandpa’s Cough Medicine (pictured) joins Black Drum, In Whispers, Marion Crane and five other bands volunteering time and talent to raise funds for the Wounded Warrior Project. The nonprofit organization seeks to “enlist the public’s aid for the needs of injured service members.” Other performers include Edelweiss Piraten, Wes Cobb, The Tom Bennett Band, JacksonVegas and The Embraced. Proceeds benefit WWP. All ages until 9 p.m.; 18 and older until close. 3 p.m.-1 a.m. Feb. 2 at Landshark Café, 1728 Third St. N., Jax Beach, $10; free with military ID, 246-6024. woundedwarriorproject.org JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 17
Sportstalk
MaliVai Washington (pictured) and Jim Courier led the U.S. to a 4-1 victory over Brazil in a 1997 Davis Cup matchup. Washington says playing Davis Cup “made me more mentally tough.”
Duval’s World Tennis Stage
MaliVai Washington remembers his Davis Cup experience
T
he first weekend of February brings the most important sporting event to town since the Super Bowl. Davis Cup tennis is a series of matches between some of the best men’s players the United States and Brazil have to offer. For fans of world-class tennis, this is a once-in-alifetime opportunity. Davis Cup matches are played in a bestof-five series over three days. The first-round match on Feb. 1 features two singles matches, in which Brazil’s No. 1 player will play the second-best American, and vice-versa. Feb. 2 features a doubles match between the two pairs. And Feb. 3? The 1s, then the 2s, square off in singles play. Watching this on TV doesn’t really do justice to the spectacle and the athletic accomplishment. As the saying goes, you just have to be there to appreciate it. Fortunately, 13,000 fans will be able to watch at Veterans Memorial Arena. If you’re a fan of great tennis or international competition, don’t just sit there. If you just watch it on the Tennis Channel, you’ll regret your failure to act. Guaranteed. For one thing, everyone who’s anyone in the history of this great sport has competed. The most acclaimed American competitor: John McEnroe, who owns or shares 20 Davis Cup records. Rene Lacoste, whose shirts have filled my closet since the Ronald Reagan era, is just one of the many players who forged his reputation in international team play. Andy Roddick, Andre Agassi, Arthur Ashe — three more names even non-fans of the sport know — likewise distinguished themselves in Davis play. READ THE BLOG For more of AG Gancarski’s thoughts on Northeast Florida sports, go to folioweekly.com/sportstalk.
Another great tennis player with Davis Cup experience lives closer to home. Ponte Vedra Beach resident MaliVai Washington competed in 1997 for the U.S. team when they last played Brazil, teaming with Jim Courier for a 4-1 win. Washington described visiting Brazil to play that formidable squad in front of a boisterous home crowd. “Brazilians are very passionate about their football and their tennis,” said Washington, who founded the MaliVai Washington Kids Foundation. “When I played against Brazil in 1997, Gustavo Kuerten was on the team. At the time, Gustavo was Brazil’s No. 1 player. The 18 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
DAVIS CUP TENNIS 1:30 p.m. Feb. 1 & 2, 11:30 a.m. Feb. 3 Tickets: $40-$180 for individual sessions; $90-$500 for three-day packages 1-888-484-8782, ticketmaster.com or usta.com/ daviscup; tickets can also be purchased at the arena box office, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday
atmosphere of that Davis Cup tie was electric. That atmosphere is why I played tennis. It was different than any other experience I had in tennis. It helped that I beat Gustavo, and we won as a team that weekend.” For those of you who thrill to such events as the World Cup, this is your chance to see the tennis equivalent of that level of competition, but like any play on the highest plane, it comes at a price. Washington replaced Agassi in 1997 at a low point in Agassi’s career, but it turned out to have career implications. “In 1997, I replaced Andre Agassi on the Davis Cup team in Brazil. I proceeded to injure my knee in Brazil, which turned out to be the beginning of the end of my career, as I never fully recovered from the injury.” Despite the consequences of that injury, Washington wouldn’t trade the experience. “I thought playing Davis Cup made me a better player. It made me more mentally tough. I felt that if I could play and succeed in Davis Cup, it would carry over into the rest of the year. I wish I could have played more.” Courier, the ageless constant as a former player and the captain of the current team, receives nothing but respect from Washington. “Jim was my teammate in 1997 in Brazil. He had a great work ethic then, and Jim is able to bring that to the team now. He has a lot of experience to draw on for his guys. He has accomplished everything there is to achieve in professional tennis and that can be so valuable in Davis Cup.” Last week, Courier announced the U.S. roster for the matches vs. Brazil: John Isner and Sam Querrey along with brothers Bob and Mike Bryan — the most prolific men’s doubles team in Grand Slam men’s tennis history. Washington offered a message to this year’s squad: “Play your heart out. Representing the United States is very special, and it’s an opportunity that most players will never get. Enjoy the moment and win.” AG Gancarski themail@folioweekly.com twitter.com/aggancarski
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R (right), an unusual zombie, saves Julie from an attack and the two form an unlikely relationship in “Warm Bodies,” directed by Jonathan Levine. Photo: Jan Thijs, Summit Entertainmen
Zombie Meets Girl
Clever premise and one-liners reanimate this otherwise standard zom-rom-com WARM BODIES **G@ PG-13
W
hat if zombies were self-aware? That simple premise launches the zombie comedy “Warm Bodies,” as we meet R, a zombie who lives at the airport with a bunch of other zombies, walking around aimlessly and periodically going out to look for people to eat. He and his best friend zombie, M, hang out, exchanging meaningful grunts. R has turned an abandoned airplane into his home, where he hoards his treasures, which include snow globes and an extensive collection of classic vinyl records he listens to in the evenings. R’s life becomes more complicated when he rescues the living Julie instead of eating her during a feeding frenzy, something he’s prompted to do after eating her boyfriend’s brains and taking on the unfortunate fella’s memories. R takes her to his airplane home, and this zom-com becomes a zombie romantic comedy … zom-rom-com! Actually, “Warm Bodies” is mostly a textbook romantic comedy: boy meets girl, boy falls in love with girl, boy can’t be with girl because they’re from different worlds, boy won’t give up and love finds a way to triumph over whatever obstacles are thrown before it — like boy is a walking corpse. Most of the humor in “Warm Bodies” is derived from the narration by R (Nicholas Hoult) — that’s the only way we’re privy to his thoughts, since zombies can’t speak. Rob Corddry (“The Daily Show”) manages some laughs as M, though, despite that limitation. Since zombies are traditionally bad guys in movies, “Warm Bodies” (based on author Isaac Marion’s debut novel) had to come up with a new villain. Here, zombies are divided into two categories: Those who still have their skin and some hope of redemption, and the “bonies” or “skeletons,” nastier outcasts of the zombie world, so far gone they’ve peeled off their skin and become even more superior eating machines. One plus of being a skeleton: They no longer merely lurch, they can move rather quickly. Like any good romance, there has to be at least one uncooperative parent determined to keep the lovers apart. That falls to John Malkovich as Grigio, who is not only Julie’s dad but the leader of a community of survivors who’ve built a giant wall around their homes to keep the zombies out. Grigio believes the only good zombie is one that’s been shot in the head. Falling in love with Julie starts to bring R back to life, something the bonies find
threatening. R and Julie now face two hostile camps — the bonies on one side and survivors on the other, setting the stage for the movie’s ultimate showdown. The clever “Warm Bodies” delivers amusing one-liners and some good physical comedy, but it relies too much on R’s whimsical commentary and its novel or gimmicky premise. Other characters, including Grigio and Julie, are undeveloped stereotypes. The simplistic romance plays out in a straightforward manner. There aren’t many unexpected twists or turns for these star-crossed lovers, and the end is never in doubt. “Warm Bodies” is worth seeing for the humor, but don’t expect much of a storyline. John Hoogesteger themail@folioweekly.com
ZOMBIE COMEDIES Zombie films have been around since movies began, but two-thirds of all zombie movies have been made since 2000. That proliferation has created sub-genres, including the zombie comedy. At the top of the list: “Zombieland” (2009): Woody Harrelson and Jesse Eisenberg star in this road trip comedy set in a land filled with zombies. “Shaun of the Dead” (2004): Simon Pegg (“Hot Fuzz”) wrote and stars in this zombie romantic comedy (hereafter referred to as zom-rom-com) about a man who wants to turn his life around, win back his girlfriend and reconcile with his mother all while living in a town where everyone else has turned into zombies. “Army of Darkness” (1992): Bruce Campbell stars and Sam Raimi directs this early zombie comedy about a man accidentally sent to the year 1300, who fights the undead as he searches for a way to get back to his future. “Dead Snow” (2009): A group of vacationing medical students battle Nazi zombies. Fun! “Slither” (2006): Nathan Fillion and Elizabeth Banks star in this B-movie horror homage about an alien plague that turns smalltown residents into zombies and all manner of mutant monsters. JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 19
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Movies Meet These Shorts
Brevity is the soul of these animated and live-action films nominated for Oscars OSCAR-NOMINATED SHORTS Programs of animated and live-action short films up for an award Feb. 1-13 Sun-Ray Cinema, 1028 Park St., Five Points 359-0047, sunraycinema.com
F
or the second year in a row, Sun-Ray Cinema is presenting two programs featuring the short films nominated for Oscars in the animated short and live-action short categories. Last year’s Academy Award-winner for animated short was “The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore.” “The Shore” took home the Oscar for best live-action short.
“Maggie Simpson in the Longest Daycare”
comes crashing down, and the couple that can’t agree which way is up must find a way put their marriage back together. MAGGIE SIMPSON IN THE LONGEST DAYCARE Director: David Silverman; running time: 5 minutes
countries on Earth. Shot on location in Kabul city by an alliance of Afghan and international filmmakers, it’s a look at the life that continues beyond the headlines of war in Afghanistan. CURFEW
Maggie Simpson of “The Simpsons” spends the day in the Ayn Rand School for Tots. PAPERMAN
ANIMATED SHORTS ADAM AND DOG
Director: Shawn Christensen; running time: 19 min.
At the lowest point of his life, Richie gets a call from his estranged sister, asking him to look after his 9-year-old niece, Sophia, for a few hours. Director: John Kahrs; running time: 7 minutes
Director: Minkyu Lee; running time: 15 minutes
The hand-drawn animation tells the story of the relationship between Adam and the world’s first dog in the Garden of Eden. According to Lee, the short tries to explain the special bond between dogs and mankind. FRESH GUACAMOLE
This black-and-white Disney short follows a lonely, mid-century New York City man, whose destiny takes an unexpected turn after a chance meeting with a beautiful woman on his morning commute. Convinced the girl of his dreams is gone forever, the young man gets a second chance when he spots her in a skyscraper window across the avenue from his office.
DEATH OF A SHADOW
LIVE-ACTION SHORTS ASAD
Director: Tom Van Avermaet; running time: 20 min.
Director: PES; running time: 2 minutes
Director: Bryan Buckley; running time: 18 minutes
In this stop-motion animation, an unseen cook prepares a bowl of guacamole using unusual ingredients such as a grenade, a light bulb and a baseball.
This coming-of-age fable follows a Somali boy as he struggles to survive in his war-torn land, having to decide between a career in piracy or life as a fisherman.
HEAD OVER HEELS
BUZKASHI BOYS
Soldier Nathan died during World War I. A strange collector imprisoned his shadow and gave him a new chance: a second life against 10,000 captured shadows. It is love that guides him, as his purpose is to see Sarah again, the woman he fell in love with before he died. When he discovers she’s in love with someone else, jealousy clouds his mind and pushes him toward a bitter decision, not without consequences. HENRY
Director: Yan England; running time: 21 minutes Director: Timothy Reckart; running time: 11 minutes
Director: Sam French; running time: 28 minutes
After many years of marriage, Walter and Madge have grown apart: He lives on the floor and she lives on the ceiling. In this stop-motion animation, when Walter tries to reignite their old romance, their equilibrium
“Buzkashi Boys” is the story of two best friends — a charismatic street urchin and a defiant blacksmith’s son — who struggle to realize their dreams as they make their way to manhood in one of the most war-torn
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Henry, a great concert pianist, has his life thrown in turmoil the day the love of his life, Maria, disappears mysteriously. He undergoes a series of confusing experiences as he searches for his wife. Nicholas Garnett themail@folioweekly.com
Movies
New Orleans hitman Jimmy Bonomo (Sylvester Stallone) interrogates Marcus Baptiste (Christian Slater) in “Bullet to the Head,” directed by Walter Hill. Photo: Frank Masi, Warner Bros. Pictures
FILM RATINGS **** ***@ **@@ *@@@
FOUR WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL 3:10 TO YUMA 2 FAST 2 FURIOUS THE ONE
NOW SHOWING
ARGO ***G Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Ben Affleck’s Oscar-nominated film is re-released. Affleck directs and stars as CIA operative Tony Mendez, acknowledged as the agency’s top agent when it comes to “exfiltration,” the art of extracting people caught in places they cannot escape. “Argo” succeeds because director Affleck focuses on the journey, not the outcome, to create a taut political thriller. Many familiar faces – John Goodman, Alan Arkin, Kyle Chandler, Bryan Cranston, Victor Garber – deliver strong performances in a film that’s really an ensemble effort. BROKEN CITY *G@@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Amelia Island, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Ex-cop-turned-private-eye Billy Taggart (Mark Wahlberg) is hired by New York City mayor Hostetler (Russell Crowe) to spy on his cheating wife (Catherine Zeta-Jones). Billy is courting disaster when he realizes he’s involved in a much larger scandal.
Washington. The most violent mainstream movie of the year, the big-screen project liberally uses the “N” word, uttered more than 100 times. GANGSTER SQUAD *G@@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency, Carmike Amelia Island, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. The setting is Los Angeles, 1949. Gangster Mickey Cohen (Sean Penn) has cops, judges and other powers-that-be in his back pocket. Police Chief William Parker (Nick Nolte) has had enough, so he empowers detective John O’Mara (Josh Brolin) to go outside the law and take Cohen down. O’Mara’s team includes Jerry Wooters (Ryan Gosling), who’s having an affair with Cohen’s girlfriend, Grace (Emma Stone); streetsmart Coleman Harris (Anthony Mackie) and sharpshooter Max Kennard (Robert Patrick). Director Ruben Fleischer (“Zombieland”) leads an amazing cast through an uninspired, predictable film. HANSEL & GRETEL: WITCH HUNTERS **@@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency, Carmike Amelia Island, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Clay Theater, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. After getting a taste for blood as children, Hansel (Jeremy Renner) and Gretel (Gemma Arterton) have become the ultimate vigilantes, hellbent on retribution. They don’t know they’ve become the hunted – up against an evil far greater than any ol’ witch ... their own past.
BULLET TO THE HEAD **G@ Rated R • Opens Feb. 1 Based on a graphic novel, “Bullet to the Head” is the story of a New Orleans hitman (Sylvester Stallone) and a D.C. cop (Sung Kang) who join their considerable badass forces to hunt the sumbitch who killed their partners. Costarring Christian Slater and Sarah Shahi. Directed by Walter Hill.
A HAUNTED HOUSE **G@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. In a spoof of the “Paranormal Activity” franchise, “The Devil Inside” and other found-footage flicks, a young couple (Marlon Wayans as Malcolm, Essence Atkins as Kisha) moves into their dream house. Turns out, the house isn’t haunted; Kisha is possessed by a demon, but Malcolm is determined not to let the spirit ruin his relationship or his sex life.
DJANGO UNCHAINED ***G Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Clay Theater, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Disturbing and provocative – yet undeniably entertaining – Quentin Tarantino’s award-winning film blends action, comedy and drama with sterling performances by Jamie Foxx, Leonardo DiCaprio, Christoph Waltz and Kerry
THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY **G@ Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd., WGHoF IMAX Set before the events of “The Lord of the Rings,” Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) is approached by the wizard Gandalf the Grey (Ian McKellen) and goes on an adventure to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor. Joining him are 13 dwarves, led by the legendary warrior Thorin Oakenshield.
AREA THEATERS AMELIA ISLAND Carmike 7, 1132 S. 14th St., Fernanddina Beach, 261-9867 ARLINGTON & REGENCY AMC Regency 24, 9451 Regency Square Blvd., 264-3888 BAYMEADOWS & MANDARIN Regal Avenues 20, 9525 Philips Highway, 538-3889 BEACHES Regal Beach Blvd. 18, 14051 Beach Blvd., 992-4398 FIVE POINTS Sun-Ray Cinema@5Points, 1028 Park St., 359-0047 GREEN COVE SPRINGS Clay Theatre, 326 Walnut St., 284-9012 NORTHSIDE Hollywood 14, River City Marketplace, 12884
City Center Blvd., 757-9880 ORANGE PARK AMC Orange Park 24, 1910 Wells Road, (888) AMC-4FUN Carmike 12, 1820 Town Center Blvd., Fleming Island, 621-0221 SAN MARCO San Marco Theatre, 1996 San Marco Blvd., 396-4845 SOUTHSIDE Cinemark Tinseltown, 4535 Southside Blvd., 998-2122 ST. AUGUSTINE Epic Theatres, 112 Theatre Drive, 797-5757 IMAX Theater, World Golf Village, 940-IMAX Pot Belly’s, 36 Granada St., 829-3101
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On the way, Bilbo meets Gollum and takes possession of the twisted creature’s “precious,” the golden ring that figures prominently in Frodo’s adventure in the LOTR’s trilogy. HYDE PARK ON HUDSON **G@ Rated R • Sun-Ray Cinema “Hyde Park,” directed by Roger Michell (“Venus,” “Notting Hill”) concerns a narrow slice of history that hasn’t been given much attention. It’s 1939 and the whole world is watching to see what the ascendant Hitler will do next. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Bill Murray) and his wife Eleanor (Olivia Williams) host the King and Queen of England (Samuel West and Olivia Colman) for a weekend at the Roosevelt home at Hyde Park on Hudson, in upstate New York – the first time ever that a reigning English monarch has visited America. THE IMPOSSIBLE ***G Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. This drama is based on the true story of a family fighting to survive in Thailand after the 2004 tsunami. When the natural disaster strikes, the family is divided: Maria (Naomi Watts) and Lucas (Tom Holland) negotiate the waves together and are rescued by locals, who take them to a nearby hospital. Henry (Ewan McGregor) and the other boys are sheltered at a refugee camp. Maria’s story, highlighted by a great performance from Watts, is the most compelling. JACK REACHER ***@ Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Cinemark Tinseltown, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. A gunman opens fire in a Midwestern city, killing five people. Within hours, the police follow an evidence trail to a former military sniper and make an arrest. Suspect James Barr (Joseph Sikora) doesn’t confess; instead, he asks for homicide detective Jack Reacher (Tom Cruise). Individual action sequences aren’t groundbreaking, but taken as a whole, the movie’s a nifty combination of action and humor. THE LAST STAND ***@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Amelia Island, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Sheriff Ray Owens (Arnold Schwarzenegger) is an aging former LAPD cop who has retreated to the sleepy town of Sommerton Junction after a botched job left him feeling like a failure. When an escaped drug kingpin and his gang are headed straight for Sommerton, the reluctant sheriff and a small group of law enforcement (including Johnny Knoxville of “Jackass” fame) take up arms to fight for their town.
LES MISERABLES ***G Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Amelia Island, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. This big, lavish Hollywood version of an equally extravagant Broadway musical is phenomenal. Anne Hathaway’s rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream” is probably enough to win her a supporting actress Oscar. Sometimes, the best move a director can make is to get out of the way, so kudos to Tom Hooper (“The King’s Speech”) for letting Hathaway shine. LIFE OF PI ***G Rated PG • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. A family from India hitches a ride on a freighter. Pi Patel, a zookeeper’s son, survives an ocean disaster, then forms a surprising, wondrous connection with a fearsome Bengal tiger – named Richard Parker. Surviving on a 26-foot lifeboat, Pi continues his journey in the magical adventure film directed by Ang Lee and based on the novel by Yann Martel. LINCOLN ***@ Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd., San Marco Theatre Daniel Day-Lewis immerses himself in his characters; this is the latest of successful transformations. “Lincoln” focuses on the last four months of the president’s administration as he struggles to end the Civil War and ensure permanent freedom for slaves. The great cast includes Sally Field, Tommy Lee Jones, David Strathairn, Hal Holbrook, James Spader and Joseph Gordon-Levitt. MAMA **G@ Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. After vanishing from a neighborhood, young sisters Victoria and Lilly are found alive in a rickety cabin five years later. The kids are placed with their Uncle Lucas (Nikolaj CosterWaldau) and girlfriend Annabel (Jessica Chastain). Annabel tries to help them live a normal life, but she feels that an evil presence has followed the girls from the cabin. MONSTERS, INC. ***G Rated G • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square Blue behemoth Sully (John Goodman) and one-eyed green guy Mike Wazowski (Billy Crystal) get the 3D treatment. The story of monsters collecting kids’ screams sets up a sequel.
Doc (from left, Christopher Walken), Hirsch (Alan Arkin) and Val (Al Pacino) are three retired ex-gangsters who reunite in “Stand Up Guys,” directed by Fisher Stevens. Photo: Saeed Adyani, Roadside Attractions
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Movies
Revision 1
PARENTAL GUIDANCE **G@ Rated PG • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Old-school Artie (Billy Crystal) and his wife Diane (Bette Midler) look after their three grandkids. The family film elicits a little humor from the supposed generational clash, with a few touching moments. PARKER **@@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Professional thief Parker (Jason Statham) has a unique code of ethics. He’s double-crossed by his crew and left for dead. Assuming a new disguise and forming an unlikely alliance with a woman on the inside (Jennifer Lopez), he’s out to steal the slag his former colleagues just stole. Wait … what? RACE 2 **@@ Rated R • AMC Regency In this sequel to Indian thriller “Race, Ranvir treads the dangerous world of the Indian mafia in Turkey, as he hopes to avenge the death of his lover and partner in crime, Sonia. SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK **@@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency, Carmike Amelia Island, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues,
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The Brothers Grimm might not approve of this latest spin on the classic fairytale that sends Gretel (Gemma Arterton) and Hansel (Jeremy Renner) chasing witches around the world in “Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters,” directed by Tommy Wirkola. Photo: Paramount Pictures MOVIE 43 G@@@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Directed and produced by Peter Farrelly (among 11 others), this series of interconnected short films follow three kids as they search the depths of the Internet for the most banned movie in the world. With outrageous humor – not for the easily offended – the dramedy is carried by an able ensemble cast including Hugh Jackman, Gerard Butler, Seth McFarlane, Kate Winslet, Anna Faris, Jack McBrayer, Jason Sudeikis, Josh Duhamel and Halle Berry, among a slew of Hollywood stars.
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Regal Beach Blvd., San Marco Theatre Everyone’s jumping on this bandwagon – it’s earned eight Oscar nods and already won several other awards. After eight months in a mental institution, Pat (Bradley Cooper) leaves under dubious circumstances. He was there after flipping over his wife’s adultery, but he means to fix the marriage. Problem is, he isn’t allowed to contact her, and he knows his parents (Robert De Niro, Jacki Weaver) are keeping secrets. He meets Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence), a reformed slut who claims she’ll get a message to Pat’s wife in exchange for a favor: She wants Pat to take dance lessons with her. SKYFALL **G@ Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Pot Belly’s “Skyfall” jumps off with a rip-roaring opening gambit. Enjoy it while it lasts – it’s the lone highlight. Bond, an aging, beat-up agent who may no longer be up to the task, is missing and presumed dead after getting shot during a failed mission. STAND UP GUYS **@@ Rated R • Opens Feb. 1 Val (Al Pacino) is released from prison after serving 28 years for refusing to give up one of his close criminal associates. Best friend Doc (Christopher Walken) is there to pick him up, and they team up with another old con artist, Hirsch (Alan Arkin). But one of the trio is keeping a dangerous secret – a former mob boss has put him in an impossible quandary, and his time to find an acceptable alternative is running out. The crime-comedy is directed by Fisher Stevens.
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Schools & Instruction
I redefined my direction as a
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I not only received an excellent
education but also encouragement and training that built my
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self-confidence every day. Nidia Berrios Medical Assistant
TEXAS CHAINSAW 3D **@@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park Leatherface is back, in 3D, sure to excite horror fanatics wanting to see him wreaking another massacre. This time, a young woman seeks her inheritance in Texas, but the chainsaw-wielding maniac awaits. THIS IS 40 **G@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine This “sort-of” sequel follows Pete (Paul Rudd) and Deb (Leslie Mann) as they deal with daughters, financial struggles and fathers. The dramedy, directed by Judd Apatow (Mann’s husband), delivers big laughs, but the dramatic segments boil down to Pete and Deb yelling at each other.
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TWILIGHT SAGA: BREAKING DAWN PART 2 **G@ Rated PG-13 • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency Square The last one! Full of lame dialog, wooden acting, illogical plotlines and cheesy visual effects, but this action-packed finale works. WARM BODIES **G@ Rated PG-13 • Opens Feb. 1 Reviewed in this issue. WRECK-IT RALPH ***@ Rated PG • AMC Orange Park, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Typecast as a villain, Ralph (voiced by John C. Reilly) has reason to feel unappreciated. He’s still smarting from 30 years of being dropped off a building into the mud by Fix-It Felix. Ralph just wants to be the hero. Director Rich Moore balances gamer cool and kid-friendly fun. ZERO DARK THIRTY ***@ Rated R • AMC Orange Park, AMC Regency, Carmike Amelia Island, Carmike Fleming Island, Cinemark Tinseltown, Epic Theatre St. Augustine, Hollywood River City, Regal Avenues, Regal Beach Blvd. Overlong at 157 minutes but still an effective drama, director Kathryn Bigelow’s first film since her Oscar winner, “The Hurt Locker” (2008), will strike a chord with American audiences but notably drags for long stretches, often getting bogged down in drama and detail that’s not entirely relevant. The focus is on CIA operative Maya (Jessica Chastain), who’s stationed in the Middle East and charged with tracking down the 9/11 mastermind. The execution – pun intended – of the mission, from planning to helicopter ride to finding bin Laden to extraction, is perfectly paced by Bigelow, who certainly knows how to generate suspense in her action.
OTHER FILMS
AFTER INNOCENCE A part of UNF’s Movies on the House series, Jessica Sanders’ “After Innocence” (2005) is a gripping, emotionally charged film that follows wrongfully convicted men freed by DNA evidence after decades in prison as they struggle to transition back into society. 7 p.m. Jan. 31 at University of North Florida’s Robinson Theater, 1 UNF Dr., Southside. Free. SUN-RAY CINEMA A follow-up to the documentary “Ride the Divide,” the adventure film “Reveal the Path” examines what it means to live an inspired life using the bicycle as a mechanism to explore, dream and discover. It screens 7 p.m. Jan. 31 at Sun-Ray Cinema, 1028 Park St., Five Points. $15. revealthepath.com
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Also at Sun-Ray Cinema, David Grohl’s homage documentary to the legendary recording studio, “Sound City,” features footage of historic sessions and interviews with rock’s greatest musicians, including Tom Petty, Neil Young and Mick Fleetwood. The Sundance hit screens 9 p.m. Jan. 31. The 1993 comedy “Groundhog Day,” starring Bill Murray starring Bill Murray starring Bill Murray … oh oops … screens 5 p.m. Feb. 2 (yes, that’s Groundhog Day). $7.50. Sun-Ray Cinema, 1028 Park St., Five Points, 359-0047. sunraycinema.com LATITUDE CINEGRILLE “Flight” and “Hotel Transylvania” screen at Latitude 30 CineGrille, 10370 Philips Highway, Southside. Call for showtimes. 365-5555. POT BELLY’S CINEMA “The Master,” “Searching for Sugar Man” and “Skyfall” are shown at Pot Belly’s, 36 Granada St., St. Augustine. 829-3101. WORLD GOLF HALL OF FAME IMAX THEATER “Flight of the Butterflies” is screened along with “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,” “Deep Sea 3D,” “Hubble 3D,” “Galapagos 3D,” “Under the Sea 3D,” “Lewis & Clark: Great Journey West” and “To The Arctic 3D” at World Golf Hall of Fame Village, 1 World Golf Place, St. Augustine. 940-IMAX. worldgolfimax.com
NEW ON DVD & BLU-RAY
HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA The animated monster mash delivers slapstick and fart jokes. Too crude for kids, too crass for grownups. With Dracula (voiced by Adam Sandler), Frankenstein (Kevin James) and Mavis (Selena Gomez), it’s a waste of the cast’s considerable talents. PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 She’s back. Katie Featherston, the first film’s star who had cameos in the next two, returns. It’s the story of a possessed Katie and kidnapped Hunter after they disappeared at the end of “PA2.” Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost direct. SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS Alcoholic screenwriter Marty (Colin Farrell) and his dogkidnapping friend Billy (Sam Rockwell, typically unhinged and funny). Marty is struggling to start a screenplay he’s calling “Seven Psychopaths,” and Billy works with partner Hans (Christopher Walken) to kidnap wealthy people’s dogs then return them a few days later to collect the reward money. Billy and Hans get themselves into trouble when they dognap a Shih Tzu owned by a gangster (Woody Harrelson). Far too often we criticize movies for not trying to do more. Writer/director Martin McDonagh tried to do too much and slightly misfired. There are worse things you could say.
Maria (Naomi Watts) and her oldest son Lucas (Tom Holland) fight for survival after being in the 2004 tsunami in “The Impossible,” directed by Juan Antonio Bayona. Photo: Jose Haro, Summit
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Music
Along with the 2012 album “Coexist,” The xx created an iPhone app to help listeners enjoy the experience of their lyrics and artwork, even if they buy the album online. Photo: Alexandra Waespi
Immersive Exxperience
London trio rides minimalist musical permutations to massive international success THE XX 8 p.m. Feb. 3 The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Downtown Jacksonville Tickets: $26.50 355-2787, floridatheatre.com
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Florida, so we’re really excited. This next tour is all about going to places in which we haven’t spent much time. The warm weather will be nice, too — it’s freezing here [in London]. F.W.: When you, Oliver and Jamie first emerged in 2009, many critics said you were noticeably uncomfortable on stage. Has that changed? R.M.C.: There are always nerves, but that’s healthy — if you reach a point where you don’t have nerves, maybe you should stop. Or maybe you don’t care. We have gotten a lot more confident, but we still care, so it’s taken a long time for us to not be looking at our feet. We’re quite reserved people, but we’ve really learned to love performing. It feels more normal now, although it’s never quite that normal. [Laughs.] F.W.: Do you only write and record music that you’re capable of replicating on stage? R.M.C.: Yeah, that’s something we’ve carried right from the first gig. And it’s really shaped our sound. We didn’t set out to make minimal or simple music; we just wanted it to be playable live. It’s a nice limitation — the music’s own set of rules.
ike its understated band name, London trio The xx traffics in stylishly minimalist indie pop. Over the course of two albums, Romy Madley Croft, Oliver Sim and Jamie xx, all 23 years old, don’t do much more than pluck out deceptively simple guitar and bass lines while conjuring layers of tense percussion from a digital drum machine. But The xx are far from a simple band. Their intriguing blend of American soul, British house, ’80s pop and gauzy electro-rock is instantly recognizable — and powerfully honest. Croft and Sim’s modestly entwined lyrics reflect their lifelong friendship, while the heady, groove-laden swirl of songs like “Crystalised” and “Chained” is impossible to resist. It’s no surprise, then, that The xx has won a coveted Mercury Prize, sold out multiple worldwide tours and emerged as bulletproof darlings of the notoriously fickle independent music press. Folio Weekly chatted with Croft about the band’s self-imposed limitations, introspective nature and desire to create emotional, immersive experiences.
F.W.: Did the high-profile DJ and production work that Jamie scored after “xx” was released in 2009 figure into the development of last year’s album, “Coexist”? R.M.C.: It was still a very organic thing — we were so supportive of him going off and having those experiences, and we were inspired by the music he was listening to. It was a kind of group growth, I suppose.
Folio Weekly: This will be The xx’s first trip to Florida, correct? Romy Madley Croft: Yes, we’ve never been to
F.W.: Do you or Oliver have aspirations for that kind of extracurricular musical success? R.M.C.: Right now, I’m very happy to focus on
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If I heard someone that was influenced by us, I’d probably just like the sound, you know?
the band. But Oliver and I do have aspirations to write for other people. We’ve always loved pop music — big voices like Beyoncé or Rihanna that are completely out of the context of ourselves. F.W.: Major artists like that are crediting The xx as inspirations, so it could certainly happen. R.M.C.: [Laughs.] We’re so involved in our own music that it’s hard to realize what’s going on with it. If I heard someone that was influenced by us, I’d probably just like the sound, you know? But I have noticed that music has gotten a little more emotional and introspective. Maybe people are becoming a bit more open to that because of us. F.W.: You created an iPhone app to go along with “Coexist.” How does technology like that jibe with The xx’s emotional music? R.M.C.: The initial idea came from my concern that people buy albums online and miss that experience of looking through the lyrics and artwork — stuff that we spend a lot of time on. I suppose I wanted to create an immersive experience for people. F.W.: Will there be another three-year gap between “Coexist” and the next album? R.M.C.: We had a month off over Christmas to come back to London and decompress, and I definitely used that time to write, which has made me feel way more inspired and eager to create music than I did after putting out the first album. We want to make a conscious effort to not take so long next time. F.W.: Are you able to fully decompress? Has the success of the band intruded on your personal lives at all? R.M.C.: No, and that’s something I’m very grateful for. We can come back to London and it’s like nothing ever happened, you know? We never get stopped on the street, and that really works for us as people. None of us got into this to be famous. Nick McGregor themail@folioweekly.com
Music
Its new album, “Academy Songs Volume I,” is finished, and Gainesville-based Holopaw has already written two songs for “Volume II.” Photo: Misra Records
Local Love
Gainesville indie rockers carve a niche touring for an album recorded in St. Augustine Beach HOLOPAW with TELEPATHIC LINES 10 p.m. Feb. 14 The Floridian, 39 Cordova St., St. Augustine Tickets: $8 829-0655
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wo summers ago, Gainesville sextet Holopaw recorded its new album, “Academy Songs Volume I,” in a vacation rental on St. Augustine Beach (as Folio Weekly reported in July 2011). The record was financed almost entirely by fans via Kickstarter. And that’s the most extraordinary thing: This humble little Northeast Florida band is one of the most quietly revered indie rock acts in the nation. Holopaw’s first two albums were released on Seattle powerhouse Sub Pop Records, and all four efforts have received copious critical attention. And rightfully so, as Holopaw’s elliptical, singular brand of rock — character-driven, detail-rich lyrics combined with sensual, orchestral instrumentation — definitely demands respect and attention. “Academy Songs” features an intricate storyline set at an all-boys prep school in winter. And its elegantly professional sound certainly matches anything tracked in a high-dollar studio. Folio Weekly chatted with Holopaw guitarist Jeff Hays about the lyrical craft of John Orth, the deceptively laid-back fit of “Academy Songs” and the simple aesthetic of the band. Folio Weekly: We interviewed the band two years ago about the Kickstarter-funded St. Augustine Beach recording of “Academy Songs Volume I.” Where did the concept of this all-boys preparatory school come from? Jeff Hays: From John’s standpoint. Historically, he’s 99.99 percent in charge of the lyrics, so it’s an idea that came together when he started writing these songs. All of our songs are about characters — he has a very narrative style. So it just worked out that this story filled out the way that it did. F.W.: Was the rest of the band responsible for the album’s instrumentation? J.H.: Exactly. John’s usually got an idea for the lyrics and the melody, which is an off-kilter way of writing songs. But then the rest of the band gets together to work on arrangements and musical parts. F.W.: The songs on “Academy Songs Volume I” seem a bit looser than Holopaw’s past work. J.H.: It’s funny you say that. These songs
definitely have a more roundabout, less straight-from-point-A-to-point-B feel. But in some ways, we were more set on these songs when we recorded them than any others. We probably worked on them longer, and we played them live a lot, which in the past wasn’t the case. F.W.: Now that the results are out in the world, do you think you’ll repeat the beachside recording process in the future? J.H.: It’s definitely a better story as a one-time thing, but it was so much fun that I could see us wanting to do it again. [Laughs.] It was so interesting, like, “We’ll have a vacation at the beach, but we’ll also hole ourselves up playing music for a week and a half without taking a break.” So who knows? It was a lot of fun all staying in one house together. I’d love to do it again if we have the opportunity. F.W.: The record’s impressively professional sound quality certainly doesn’t scream, “I was recorded in a beach house.” J.H.: Jeremy Scott, who we know from Gainesville, has a studio in Brooklyn. He basically broke parts of it down and brought them to St. Augustine. But even though we had nice gear, the acoustics were certainly different from a studio. But in some ways — especially with the drums — that helped the ambiance. We were super-psyched on the sound. F.W.: The album’s reviews have been split — some glowing and some scornful. Does criticism bother you? J.H.: I wouldn’t say we don’t care about what’s said about us. But we more or less do this for fun. Making music is an artistic outlet, but a big part of the band is just being able to get together with our friends. We’ve always come at it from that perspective. We have goals, but the other stuff comes after enjoying ourselves. F.W.: Even though Holopaw is such a critically revered band, do band members have day jobs in Gainesville? J.H.: Sort of. I’m probably the only one who has a regular 9-to-5 job. John’s got lots of different art projects going on all the time, one of the members owns a bar here, one works there. … Obviously, we can’t make a living just off of being in Holopaw, but the band does well enough for us to sustain it without being a complete suck on our resources. F.W.: What are Holopaw’s goals for the future? Is there an “Academy Songs Volume II” in you? J.H.: Oh, yeah, two songs have already been written towards “Volume II” — we’ll probably play at least one of them on this tour. And we’ll just keep doing the same thing: writing songs and playing music as long as people still want to listen to it. Nick McGregor themail@folioweekly.com JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 27
Music
Johnny Winter’s 2011 album “Roots” helped his career resurgence, and he’s already begun recording a sequel, “Roots II.”
A New Season
Winter emerged from a difficult decade and overcame addiction with the help of his manager JOHNNY WINTER
© 2013
FolioWeekly
8 p.m. Feb. 14 Ponte Vedra Concert Hall, 1050 A1A N., Ponte Vedra Beach Tickets: $44.50 for first 10 rows; $36.50 for remaining rows. 209-0399, pvconcerthall.com
V WIN TICKETS 1. What is the name of the 1977 album Johnny Winter recorded with Muddy Waters and members of Waters’ band that marked his move from rock-pop into blues? a. “Still Alive And Well” b. “White, Hot and Blue” c. “Nothin’ But the Blues” 2. Between 1984 and 1986, Johnny Winter cranked out three albums for what independent blues label? a. Alligator Records b. Blue Sky Records c. Virgin Records 3. What is Johnny Winter’s highest charting album? a. “Guitar Slinger” b. “Second Winter” c. “Still Alive And Well” 4. What Bob Dylan song did Winter perform at the all-star Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Concert at New York City’s Madison Square Garden? a. “Blowin’ in the Wind” b. “Highway 61 Revisited” c. “Like a Rolling Stone” 5. What was Johnny Winter’s first instrument? a. Clarinet b. Guitar c. Piano How to Enter • Go to folioweekly.com • Take the quiz by noon Feb. 6 • Those with the most correct answers will be entered in a drawing to receive two free tickets • The winner will be announced Feb. 6 on folioweekly.com. 28 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
eteran bluesman Johnny Winter says “the ’90s weren’t a very good decade for me.” A man who is succinct with his words — at least in interviews — certainly doesn’t want to relive that lost decade. Actually, the early half of the 2000s was no laugh riot either for Winter. But then came a turnaround from an unintended source. During sessions for Winter’s 2004 album “I’m a Bluesman,” Paul Nelson, a top session guitarist who had studied under Steve Vai, Mike Stern and Steve Khan, was brought in to play guitar and write a few songs for the album. “The manager was looking for somebody [to cover Winter’s parts] in case Johnny didn’t make it,” Nelson said in a phone interview. Little did Winter’s manager at the time, Teddy Slatus, know that Nelson would not only fill those roles on the album, he would eventually take over as Winter’s manager. It’s been the best thing that could have happened to Winter. At the time, the veteran blues guitarist was in the throes of addiction to antidepressants that dated back to the early ’90s, and his health had been deteriorating for some time. “I’m, like, ‘Something’s wrong with his voice. What’s the matter?’ And it was, ‘Don’t ask,’ ” Nelson recalled. “Then I started noticing stuff, the drugs, the medication they were pumping into him. I was, like, ‘This is not working.’ ” Winter’s decline began in the early 1990s after he began experiencing anxiety problems and panic attacks. To treat the problem, he was prescribed antidepressants and became addicted to the drugs. He was also taking methadone and drinking. Nelson, who considered Winter one of his musical heroes, decided to do something about Winter’s health. “I just started taking the bull by the horns, and I said, ‘you know, I’m just going to start
weaning him off of this stuff,’ ” Nelson said. “It worked. I basically sat there with his methadone and whittled pieces off of his pills for three years without anyone knowing.” Today, Winter is off the pills and alcohol. He even stopped smoking eight months ago. He’s also back to being himself as a musician. He’s playing energetic live shows, and with his acclaimed 2011 album “Roots,” Winter has given fans recorded evidence of his resurgence. The album features Winter (who is joined on the CD by a host of others, including Vince Gill, Derek Trucks, Warren Haynes and Susan Tedeschi) performing songs that helped shape his blues-rooted rocking sound. Nelson, who produced “Roots” (and along with Winter’s touring bassist Scott Spray and drummer Vito Luizzi, played on the album), was the one who came up with the concept for the album. “I said, ‘Let’s do a whole album of songs that you weren’t allowed to do before,’ ” Nelson said, noting that especially in the ’70s, Winter was discouraged from doing blues songs in favor of rock-pop material. “We’ll do one song by each artist. You pick the songs. He goes, ‘Oh, I’d love to do that. I’ve always wanted to play those songs.’ I go, ‘OK, let’s find ones you’ve never recorded before and pick specific artists.’ And he picked all of the songs in 15 minutes.” Winter clearly relished the idea of the “Roots” album. “It was fun to do because it was songs I already knew and had been doing since I was a teenager,” Winter said in a phone interview in December. “I didn’t have to learn anything.” “Roots” was such a success that recording has already begun on a sequel, “Roots II.” Winter and Nelson will be away from the studio for a while as they return to touring. “Roots” has done well, but Winter said he only does a couple of songs from the album, preferring to play material from throughout his career instead. “We do songs from all of the different time periods,” Winter said. That means that the native of Beaumont, Texas, might go back as far as his careermaking self-titled 1969 debut album and touch on his rock-oriented albums of the early ’70s. “It [rock] just wasn’t really what I wanted to do,” Winter said. “I loved blues, and that was what I wanted to be playing. I didn’t want to be a rock star, never wanted to be a rock star. “I’m doing what I want to do now, finally,” he said. Spoken like a man who is happy to have the blues — and his health — after some truly difficult times. Alan Sculley themail@folioweekly.com
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CONCERTS THIS WEEK
THURSDAY JANUARY 31/ FEBRUARY 1
ANTIQUE ANIMALS, LOBO MARINO, THE DEWARS, VINEGAR CREEK CONSTITUENCY DUO Local folk rockers, 9 p.m. Jan. 30, Underbelly, 113 E. Bay St., Downtown, $5, 353-6067. KREWELLA, SPEKTREM Chicago electro group, 9 p.m. Jan. 30, Pure, 8206 Philips Hwy., Southside, $10-$15, (800) 694-1253. CHURCHILL Indie folk band from Denver, 8 p.m. Jan. 30, Jack Rabbits, 1528 Hendricks Ave., San Marco, $10, 398-7496. DEAR RABBIT, M.R.E.O.W. Eccentric one-man band, 8 p.m. Jan. 31, Burro Bar, 100 E. Adams St., Downtown, $5, 677-2977. THE JAUNTEE Improvisational psychedelic jam rock, 8 p.m. Jan. 31, Dog Star Tavern, 10 N. Second St., Fernandina Beach, free, 277-8010. RICKETT PASS, MUDTOWN, LOOKA LOOKA LOOKA Trash-folk and hillbilly punk, 8 p.m. Jan. 31, Phoenix Taproom, 325 W. Forsyth St., Downtown, $5, 798-8222. OPIATE EYES Four-piece experimental band plays One Spark Town Hall preview, 6 p.m. Jan. 31, The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Downtown, free, 355-2787. PEACE ARROW, PERSONNES, A GUST US Post-pop from Gainesville, 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Jan. 31, Underbelly, 113 E. Bay St., Downtown, $3, 353-6067. G. LOVE & SPECIAL SAUCE, SWEAR AND SHAKE Acoustic blues, hip-hop and soul from Boston, 8 p.m. Jan. 31 and Feb. 1, Freebird Live, 200 N. First St., Jax Beach, $25, 246-2473. ED KOWALCZYK Live’s lead singer turned solo rocker, 8 p.m. Feb. 1, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall, 1050 A1A N., Ponte Vedra Beach, $35, 209-0399. PAT TRAVERS, REGI BLUE, KYMYSTRY, CHROME HEART, RIVER CITY KATS Classic rock, 7 p.m. Feb. 1, Brewster’s Megaplex, 845 University Blvd., Arlington, $10, 223-9850. DUDE MAGNETS, MEMPHIBIANS Jacksonville indies, 8 p.m. Feb. 1, Burro Bar, 100 E. Adams St., Downtown, free, 677-2977. PUMPKIN, WARP 9 Los Angeles DJ, 10 p.m. Feb. 1, 1904 Music Hall, 19 N. Ocean St., Downtown, $12-15. JOSH MILLER’S BLUES REVUE, KARL W. DAVIS Blues and roots music, 8 p.m. Feb. 1, Dog Star Tavern, 10 N. Second St., Fernandina Beach, free, 277-8010. APPALACHIAN DEATH TRAP, ON GUARD Northeast Florida rockers, 8 p.m. Feb. 1, Jack Rabbits, 1528 Hendricks Ave., San Marco, $5, 398-7496. TURK282, FOUR FAMILIES, UNIVERSAL GREEN Local bands and hip-hop artist, 9 p.m. Feb. 1, Underbelly, 113 E. Bay St., Downtown, $7, 353-6067. GRANDPA’S COUGH MEDICINE, CANARY IN THE COALMINE Atlantic Beach alt bluegrass band, 10 p.m. Feb. 1, Mojo Kitchen, 1500 Beach Blvd., Jax Beach, $10, 247-6636. WHETHERMAN Folk-rocker from Jacksonville, 8 p.m. Feb. 1, Mellow Mushroom, 9734 Deer Lake Court, Southside, 997-1955. THE RANDALL BRAMBLETT BAND, RON NORRIS, FUNK SHUI Americana singer-songwriter, 8 p.m. Feb. 2, The Standard, 200 Anastasia Blvd., St. Augustine, $15, 342-2187. 20WT, TASTEBUDS, SELF EMPLOYED Jacksonville reggae and jam-rock bands, 10 p.m. Feb. 2, 1904 Music Hall, 19 N. Ocean St., $7, Downtown. PRE-INTERNATIONAL NOISE CONFERENCE Experimental, Feb. 2, Burro Bar, 100 E. Adams St., Downtown, free, 677-2977.
VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV
The Best Live Music in St. Augustine!
“Join us for Blues, Rock & Funk�
January 31 Deron Baker
February 1 & 2 Paper City Hustlers
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G-LOVE & SPECIAL SAUCE
SWEAR AND SHAKE SATURDAY FEBRUARY 2
BIG SOMETHING LUCKY COSTELLO WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 6
SOUL ASYLUM MILES NIELSON &
Canadian rock guitarist and singer Pat Travers (pictured) headlines with support from Regi Blue, Kymystry, Chrome Heart and River City Kats, 7 p.m. Feb. 1 at Brewster’s Megaplex in Arlington.
NICK COLIONNE Energetic jazz and funk artist, 7&10 p.m. Feb. 2, Ritz Theatre, 829 N. Davis St., Downtown, $25, 632-5555. BEN “ONE MAN BAND� PRESTAGE Eccentric beat boxer who plays a cigar box guitar, 8 p.m. Feb. 2, Dog Star Tavern, 10 N. Second St., Fernandina Beach, free, 277-8010. BIG SOMETHING, LUCKY COSTELLO Alternative jam band, 8 p.m. Feb. 2, Freebird Live, 200 N. First St., Jax Beach, $10, 246-2473. CHARLIE HALL, DANIEL BASHTA, THE VESPERS Singer-songwriter and spiritual leader from Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Feb. 2, Murray Hill Theatre, 932 Edgewood Ave. S., Riverside, $16, 388-7807. SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY & THE ASBURY JUKES New Jersey rock band, 8 p.m. Feb. 2, The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Downtown, $35, 355-2787.
THE RUSTED HEARTS, SOLID GOLD THUNDER
TURISAS, SKYLINER Florida metal and power metal, 7 p.m. Feb. 2, Brewster’s Megaplex, 845 University Blvd., Arlington, $12, 223-9850. PAUL GEREMIA Acoustic blues guitar player, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 2, European Street CafÊ, 5500 Beach Blvd., Southside, $15, 399-1740. CHRIS YATES, JENNI REID Country artist from Brunswick, 8 p.m. Feb. 2, Jack Rabbits, 1528 Hendricks Ave., San Marco, $8, 398-7496. GRANDPA’S COUGH MEDICINE, WES COBB, JACKSONVEGAS, TOM BENNET BAND, MARION CRANE, EDELWEISS PIRATEN, IN WHISPERS, THE EMBRACED, BLACK DRUM Locals play Wounded Warrior Project benefit, 3 p.m. Feb. 2, Landshark CafÊ, 1728 Third St. N., Jax Beach, $10, 246-6024. KATH BLOOM, TAMMERLIN Americana folksinger-songwriter, Feb. 2, Underbelly, 113 E. Bay St., Downtown, 353-6067.
FRIDAY FEBRUARY 8
BEEBS
& HER MONEYMAKERS SATURDAY FEBRUARY 9
SHOT DOWN IN FLAMES
AC/DC TRIBUTE S O M E T H I N G D I S TA N T SUNDAY FEBRUARY 10
REEL BIG FISH 5IF 1JMGFST %BO 1
TUESDAY FEBRUARY 12
HATEBREED 4IBEPXT 'BMM %ZJOH 'FUVT 5IF $POUPSUJPOJTU
Mon-
TuesWed-
Men’s Night Out Beer Pong 9pm Free Pool DJ BG ALL U CAN EAT CRABLEGS Texas Hold ’Em STARTS AT 7 P.M. HAPPY HOUR ALL NIGHT KIDS EAT FREE FROM 5 P.M. TO 9 P.M. BUY 10 WINGS GET 10 WINGS FREE 1/2 PRICED APPETIZERS (BAR ONLY) 5 P.M.-CLOSE
Thurs-
DJ BG 1/2 PRICED DRINKS 10 P.M-12. A.M.
Fri-
CUZ N POWERPLAY 9:30pm 1/2 PRICE APPS-FRI (BAR ONLY) 4-7PM DECK MUSIC 5 P.M.-9 P.M.
Sat-
CONFLUENT 9:30pm DECK MUSIC 5 P.M.-9 P.M.
Sun-
Live Music 4pm-8pm
FRIDAY FEBRUARY 15
NORTHE/ DIREWOLVES
The Dog Apollo/On Guard SATURDAY FEBRUARY 16
SONS NOT BEGGARS
KOSTIC LAW, THE LOOLAH JAMES BAND FRIDAY FEBRUARY 22
LOTUS
MOON HOOCH UPCOMING SHOWS
2-27: Everytime I Die,The Acacia Strain, Vanna/Hundreth/ No Bragging Rights 2-28: Zoogma/Sir Charles 3-4: Excision/Paper Diamond/Vaski 3-14: Pinback 3-20: Natty Vibes/Danka 3-25: Minus the Bear/Circa Survive 3-30: Tribal Seeds/Stick Figure 4-11: Umphrey’s McGee/Break Science 4-12: The Duhks 5-5: Donna the Buffalo
JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 29
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THE XX Minimalist indie pop trio from England, 8 p.m. Feb. 3, The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Downtown, $26.50, 355-2787. METH DAD, NETHERFRIENDS, AFTER THE BOMB, BABY! Psychedelic indie rock, 8 p.m. Feb. 3, Burro Bar, 100 E. Adams St., Downtown, $5, 677-2977. H20, TERROR, BACKTRACK & THE CODE ORANGE KIDS Hardcore and punk rock, 8 p.m. Feb. 4, Phoenix Taproom, 325 W. Forsyth St., Downtown, $13, 798-8222. ENGLISH BEAT English ska revival band, 8 p.m. Feb. 5, Jack Rabbits, 1528 Hendricks Ave., San Marco, $20, 398-7496. SOUL ASYLUM, MILES NIELSON & THE RUSTED HEARTS Alternative and pop rock, 8 p.m. Feb. 6, Freebird Live, 200 N. First St., Jax Beach, $20, 246-2473. WE CAME AS ROMANS, CROWN THE EMPIRE, ME & THE TRINITY, I AM THE WITNESS Metal and hard-core rock, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 6, Murray Hill Theatre, 932 Edgewood Ave. S., Riverside, $17, 388-7807.
UPCOMING CONCERTS GHOST FIELDS, DJ RITUAL UNION, EUGLOSSINE Feb. 7, Underbelly BITCH PLEASE Feb. 7, Jack Rabbits JIMMY BUFFETT & THE CORAL REEFER BAND Feb. 7, Veterans Memorial Arena LEON REDBONE Feb. 7, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall JB SCOTT’S SWINGIN’ ALL-STARS Feb. 7, European Street Café San Marco UP UNTIL NOW, HIGHER LEARNING, VLAD THE INHALER, LUMAGROVE, THE FUZZ, KEVIN VELARDE, DUB THEORIST Feb. 7, 1904 Music Hall THIRD ANNUAL DILLA DAY DUVAL: A TRIBUTE TO J DILLA Feb. 8, 1904 Music Hall DOC MOCASSIN, MINE ALL MINE Feb. 8, Jack Rabbits WILLIE NELSON & FAMILY Feb. 8, The Florida Theatre VYIE, FOREIGN TRADE, RAGGEDY ZEUS Feb. 8, Burro Bar BREAD & BUTTER Feb. 8, Mojo Kitchen BROWN BAG SPECIAL Feb. 8, Dog Star Tavern MAS APPEAL, MAL JONES, ARSUN FIST, CZAR BLACK, STILLWATER, _NAMELESS, AL PETE, DIALECTABLE BEATS Feb. 8, 1904 Music Hall
WHETHERMAN Feb. 8, Nippers Beach Grille HIGHER LEARNING, LUMA GROVE Feb. 9, 1904 Music Hall AF THE NAYSAYER, SEA CYCLES Feb. 9, Burro Bar JAKE MILLER, VERS, SWEET LU Feb. 9, Jack Rabbits SHOT DOWN IN FLAMES (AC/DC tribute) Feb. 9, Freebird Live ALEXIS RHODE, BETHANY STOCKDALE, JACOB HUDSON Feb. 9, Murray Hill Theatre HERD OF WATTS Feb. 9, Dog Star Tavern LARRY MANGUM Feb. 9, European Street Café Southside TRACES OF BLUE Feb. 9, Ritz Theatre CHRIS YOUNG, BRINLEY ADDINGTON Feb. 10, Mavericks CHRIS KAHL Feb. 10, Thrasher-Horne Center for the Arts REEL BIG FISH, THE PILFERS, DAN P. (of MU330) Feb. 10, Freebird Live RAPDRAGONS, UNIVERSAL GREEN, J-VILLINS Feb. 10, Burro Bar TORCHE, DARKHORSE SALOON Feb. 10, Jack Rabbits DAVID WILCOX Feb. 10, Original Café Eleven SET FREE, RFUGE, DEBTOR, WITHIN LEVIATHAN Feb. 10, Murray Hill Theatre MURDER BY DEATH, MAN MAN Feb. 11, Jack Rabbits THE GHOSTWRITE, JON CREEDEN, BEAU CRUM Feb. 11, Burro Bar FULL ON ASSAULT, HUDSON FALCONS, GRABBAG Feb. 11, Phoenix Taproom HATEBREED, SHADOWS FALL, DYING FETUS, THE CONTORTIONIST Feb. 12, Freebird Live MURS, PROF & FASHAWN Feb. 12, Jack Rabbits PAN Feb. 12, Burro Bar GRACE POTTER & THE NOCTURNALS Feb. 13, The Florida Theatre FISHBONE, WHOLE WHEAT BREAD Feb. 13, The Standard SCOTT H. BIRAM Feb. 13, Underbelly EMANCIPATOR, RANDOM RAB, TOR Feb. 13, 1904 Music Hall BARB WIRE DOLLS, ASKMEIFICARE Feb. 13, Jack Rabbits JOHNNY WINTER Feb. 14, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall VALENTINE’S DANCE PARTY: DJ RITUAL UNION Feb. 14, Underbelly STEVE MILLER BAND Feb. 14, The Florida Theatre HOLOPAW, TELEPATHIC LINES Feb. 14, The Floridian KUNG FU, THE MAIN SQUEEZE, CHROMA Feb. 14, 1904 Music Hall HARPETH RISING Feb. 14, European Street Café San Marco
30 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
Jazz and blues musician Leon Redbone performs Feb. 7 at Ponte Vedra Concert Hall.
GEOFF RICKLY, VINNIE CARUANA, MATT ARSENAULT, BRIAN MARQUIS Feb. 14, Phoenix Taproom VAGABOND SWING Feb. 14, Dog Star Tavern PETER STEIN Feb. 14, Dog Star Tavern SCOTT COULTER Feb. 15 & 16, Thrasher-Horne Center BATTLE OF THE BANDS Feb. 15, Fletcher High School AURA MUSIC & ARTS FESTIVAL: PAPADOSIO, CONSPIRATOR, PERPETUAL GROOVE, THE HEAVY PETS, DOPAPOD, RAQ, KUNG FU Feb. 15-17, Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park LOVE CHUNK Feb. 15, Mojo Kitchen JESSTA JAMES Feb. 15, Jack Rabbits SOUL GRAVY Feb. 15, Dog Star Tavern RUBY BEACH Feb. 16, Mojo Kitchen KENNY ROGERS Feb. 16, The Florida Theatre DAN ZANES & FRIENDS, ELIZABETH MITCHELL, YOU ARE MY FLOWER Feb. 16, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall VINYL THIEF, ALEX VANS, THE HIDE AWAY, EMOTICON, GARRETT ON ACOUSTIC Feb. 16, 1904 Music Hall MICHAEL CRONIN, SEVEN SPRINGS, JORDAN POOLE, CARLOS SANTIAGO Feb. 16, Murray Hill Theatre EVER ENDING KICKS Feb. 16, Burro Bar NIKKI TALLEY Feb. 16, European Street Café Southside BALANCE & COMPOSURE, THE JEALOUS SOUND, DAYLIGHT, SACRED SUNS Feb. 16, Phoenix Taproom Music for Meows Benefit: LAUREN FINCHAM, ALL NIGHT WOLVES, DIXIE RODEO, SHONI, THE PINZ, FFN, STATUS FAUX, XGEEZER Feb. 16, Jack Rabbits GARRETT ON ACOUSTIC Feb. 16, 1904 Music Hall TROPIC THUNDER Feb. 16, Dog Star Tavern RUBY BEACH Feb. 16, Mojo Kitchen BATTLE OF THE BANDS Feb. 16, St. Augustine High School JIM BRICKMAN Feb. 17, The Florida Theatre CAROLINA CHOCOLATE DROPS Feb. 17, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall JACKSONVILLE BLUES FESTIVAL: MILLIE JACKSON, MEL WAITERS, TK SOUL, LATIMORE, THEODIS EALEY Feb. 17, T-U Center ROAD LESS TRAVELED Feb. 17, Ragtime Tavern SUPERVILLAINS Feb. 17, The Standard JON SNODGRASS, CORY BRANAN Feb. 17, Underbelly CLEAR PLASTIC MASKS, ROBBIE FREEMAN Feb. 17, Burro Bar THE WORLD WE KNEW, AEGAEON, DARK SERMON Feb. 17, Phoenix Taproom THE AIR I BREATHE, FOR ALL I AM, FAMOUS LAST WORDS, SIRENS & SAILORS Feb. 18, Phoenix Taproom WITH THE PUNCHES Feb. 19, Phoenix Taproom DAY JOY Feb. 19, Burro Bar ALAN PARSONS LIVE PROJECT Feb. 20, The Florida Theatre JE DOUBLE F Feb. 20, Burro Bar TOMMY EMMANUEL Feb. 21, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall DAVID RUSSELL, JOHN PEYTON Feb. 21, European Street Café San Marco THOMAS WYNN & THE BELIEVERS Feb. 21, Mojo Kitchen ANTIQUE ANIMALS, FOREIGN TRADE, OPIATE EYES, HOMEMADE Feb. 21, 1904 Music Hall TEENAGE BOTTLE ROCKET, THE QUEERS, MASKED INTRUDER Feb. 21, Jack Rabbits WHETHERMAN Feb. 21, Dog Star Tavern NOTHING BUT WOLVES, DEAD CHANNELS, HURRICANE GUN, PAWN TAKES KING Feb. 21, Burro Bar AARON PARKER Feb. 21, The Standard PETER MULVEY Feb. 21, Original Café Eleven
ROLAND DYENS Feb. 22, The Florida Theatre TRIP LEE Feb. 22, Murray Hill Theatre ’60s Folk Reunion Festival: THE KINGSTON TRIO, THE LOVIN’ SPOONFUL, MELANIE SAFKA Feb. 22, T-U Center CARRIE NATION & SPEAKEASY Feb. 22, Dog Star Tavern COREY SMITH, ADAM EZRA GROUP Feb. 22, Mavericks EVERGREEN TERRACE, JUST LIKE GENTLEMAN, VICES, FROM WHAT REMAINS, BLOW IT UP Feb. 22, Jack Rabbits PROFESSOR KILMURE Feb. 22, Burro Bar CELTIC CROSSROADS Feb. 23, The Florida Theatre PAPERCUTT, HORNIT Feb. 23, The Standard LOTUS, MOON HOOCH Feb. 23, Freebird Live SILENCE, BLUNT TRAUMA, DECISIONS, I AM THE WITNESS, FROM WHAT REMAINS, DECIDED BY FATE Feb. 23, Jack Rabbits DREW HOLCOMB & THE NEIGHBORS Feb. 23, Murray Hill Theatre WILLIE “BIG TOE” GREEN, LITTLE MIKE & THE TORNADOES Feb. 23, European Street Café Southside KILO-KAHN, DENIED TIL DEATH, RUNNING RAMPANT, RULE NO. 6, ZYNC, ALL THINGS DONE Feb. 23, 1904 Music Hall CLOUD 9 Feb. 23, Culhane’s Irish Pub AFROMAN Feb. 23, Brewster’s Roc Bar HONKY SUCKLE Feb. 23, Dog Star Tavern 7TH STREET BAND Feb. 23, Mojo Kitchen FOREIGN TRADE, THE DEWARS Feb. 23, Burro Bar THE HIT MEN Feb. 24, The Florida Theatre CONSIDER THE SOURCE, S.P.O.R.E. Feb. 24, 1904 Music Hall BADFISH (Sublime tribute), THE SHEFFIELD CREW Feb. 24, The Standard LEO KOTTKE Feb. 24, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall THAT ONE GUY, WOLFF Feb. 24, Jack Rabbits DARK STAR ORCHESTRA Feb. 24, Freebird Live STRAIGHT LINE STITCH Feb. 24, Brewster’s Roc Bar CARRIE NATION & THE SPEAKEASY, EVERYMEN, RACHEL KATE Feb. 24, Burro Bar BAD RABBITS, AIR DUBAI Feb. 26, Jack Rabbits JESSE COOK Feb. 27, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall EVERYTIME I DIE, THE ACACIA STRAIN, VANNA, HUNDREDTH, NO BRAGGING RIGHTS Feb. 27, Freebird Live THE AGGROLITES Feb. 27, Original Café 11 HONEY SUCKLE, MUDTOWN Feb. 27, Burro Bar MUSHROOMHEAD Feb. 27, Brewster’s Roc Bar ZOOGMA, SIR CHARLES Feb. 28, Freebird Live COPE, THE MANTRAS Feb. 28, 1904 Music Hall SAM PACETTI Feb. 28, European Street Café San Marco WHETHERMAN Feb. 28, Mellow Mushroom Southside UNIVERSAL GREEN, CHOP, WILLIE EVANS JR. Feb. 28, Underbelly LOUDON WAINWRIGHT III, TAMMERLIN March 1, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall ED ROLAND & THE SWEET TEA PROJECT March 1, The Standard GRANDPA’S COUGH MEDICINE March 1, Dog Star Tavern HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL, THE WHISKEY GENTRY March 1, Burro Bar J BOOG, HOT RAIN March 1, Jack Rabbits SWORN IN March 1, Phoenix Taproom HALL & OATES March 1, St. Augustine Amphitheatre KEB’ MO’ March 2, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall GRANT PEEPLES, SARAH MAC March 2, European Street Café Southside TATER FAMINE, MEMPHIBIANS March 2, Burro Bar
Live Music COL. BRUCE HAMPTON March 2, Dog Star Tavern GREEN JELLY March 2, Brewster’s Roc Bar WHETHERMAN March 2, Green Room Brewing KALIYL, SONS NOT BEGGARS, CAPTIVE March 2, Murray Hill Theatre BRUCE COCKBURN March 3, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall POLYENSO, AUTHOR March 3, Jack Rabbits HE’S MY BROTHER SHE’S MY SISTER, PAPER BIRD, SHAKEY GRAVES, CANARY IN THE COALMINE March 3, Burro Bar BENJAMIN DUNN & THE ANIMAL ORCHESTRA March 3, Murray Hill Theatre EXCISION, PAPER DIAMOND, VASKI March 4, Freebird Live ENGLAND IN 1819 March 4, Burro Bar MOD SUN, CISCO ADLER, PAT BROWN March 4, Jack Rabbits DWIGHT YOAKAM March 5, The Florida Theatre SMALL HOUSES March 6, Burro Bar THE CUSSES, CLOUDEATER March 7, Burro Bar JUDY COLLINS, LEDFOOT March 7, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall DREW NELSON March 7, European Street CafÊ San Marco MOUNT MORIAH March 7, Jack Rabbits BEEBS AND HER MONEY MAKERS, FUSEBOX FUNK March 7, Original CafÊ 11 STELLAR KART, ABANDON, 7EVENTH TIME DOWN March 8, Murray Hill Theatre FREDDY’S FINEST March 8 & 9, Dog Star Tavern 1964 (Beatles tribute) March 9, The Florida Theatre Natural Life Music Festival: MARTIN SEXTON, FIELD REPORT, SWEAR AND SHAKE, SUGAR & THE HI-LOWS, HENRY WAGONS March 10, Metropolitan Park THE HOWLING WIND March 10, Burro Bar PALE FIRE March 11, Burro Bar KISHI BASHI, ELIZABETH & the CATAPULT March 12, Jack Rabbits VICES March 12, Burro Bar GET THE LED OUT (Led Zep tribute) March 13, The Florida Theatre CHRIS TOMLIN March 13, Veterans Memorial Arena WIL MARING, ROBERT BOWLIN March 14, European Street San Marco PINBACK March 14, Freebird Live AARON CARTER, JENNI REID March 14, Jack Rabbits YOUR 33 BLACK ANGELS, THE VELDT March 14, Burro Bar LISA LOEB March 15, The Florida Theatre JUAN SIDDI FLAMENCO THEATRE COMPANY March 15 & 16, St. Augustine Amphitheatre SOUL GRAVY March 15, Dog Star Tavern THE FRITZ, LUCKY COSTELLO March 15, 1904 Music Hall CONVALESCE, ME & THE TRINITY, REFUGE, xHONORx, AFTER ME the FLOOD, SKYBURNER March 15, Murray Hill MIRANDA LAMBERT, DIERKS BENTLEY, LEE BRICE March 16, Veterans Memorial Arena LOOK RIGHT PENNY, MALAYA March 16, 1904 Music Hall YANKEE SLICKERS March 16, Dog Star Tavern AWOLNATION March 16, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall MATCHBOX TWENTY March 17, St. Augustine Amphitheatre STICK TO YOUR GUNS, ROTTING OUT March 18, Phoenix Taproom OTTMAR LIEBERT & LUNA NEGRA March 19, P.V. Concert Hall PEACH KELLI POP, PILLOWFIGHT, SUPER SECRET BAND March 19, Nobby’s RADICAL SOMETHING March 19, Jack Rabbits HONOR SOCIETY March 20, Jack Rabbits NATTY VIBES March 20, Freebird Live JAKE SHIMABUKURO March 20, The Florida Theatre CHUNK NO, CAPTAIN CHUNK!, HANDGUNS, STATE CHAMPS, CITY LIGHTS March 20, Brewster’s Roc Bar PIERCE THE VEIL, MEMPHIS MAY FIRE, LETLIVE, ISSUES March 21, Brewster’s Megaplex ONE NIGHT OF QUEEN: GARY MULLEN & THE WORKS March 22, The Florida Theatre JOHNNY MATHIS March 22, T-U Center HOUSE OF HEROES, THIS ARMISTICE, STEALING VANITY March 22, Murray Hill Theatre BANG TANGO March 22, Brewster’s Megaplex SENTROPOLIS March 22, Dog Star Tavern HAR-DI-HAR March 22, Burro Bar America’s Got Talent Live: ALL STARS March 23, T-U Center THE WONDER YEARS March 23, Brewster’s Roc Bar THE FRITZ March 23, Dog Star Tavern BECOMING THE ARCHETYPE, CITY IN PERIL, SHALLOW ADDICTION March 23, Murray Hill Theatre CHUCK RAGAN, ROCKY VOTOLATO, JENNY OWEN YOUNGS March 23, Jack Rabbits TONY FURTADO March 24, Original CafÊ 11 MINUS THE BEAR, CIRCA SURVIVE March 25, Freebird Live ERIC CLAPTON March 26, Veterans Memorial Arena LINDSAY LOU & THE FLATBELLYS March 28, European Street CafÊ San Marco PAT BENATAR & NEIL GIRALDO, BRYNN MARIE March 29, The Florida Theatre JACKSONVEGAS, WILLIE RANDOLF March 29, Underbelly ADEMA, NERVER March 29, Brewster’s Roc Bar JUSTIN ACOUSTIC REUNION March 30, European Street Southside DR. DAN MATRAZZO & THE LOOTERS March 30, Dog Star BUBBA SPARXXX March 30, Brewster’s Roc Bar MAROON 5, NEON TREES, OWL CITY April 1, Veterans Memorial Arena
JOSIAH LEMING, ONE LOVE, JENNI REID April 1, 1904 Music Hall THE STORY SO FAR, MAN OVERBOARD April 1, Brewster’s HAWK NELSON, THE WRECKING, HYLAND April 2, Murray Hill YES April 3, The Florida Theatre RITA HOSKING April 4, European Street CafÊ San Marco DEFUNK April 5, Dog Star Tavern TAMMERLIN ANNIVERSARY CONCERT April 6, European Street CafÊ Southside MANAFEST, TRICIA BROCK, JE’KOB, DAVID DUNN April 6, Murray Hill Theatre CHICAGO April 7, St. Augustine Amphitheatre EL TEN ELEVEN April 7, Original CafÊ Eleven SCHEMATIC, REKAPSE, ASKER, TREEHOUSE April 10, Jack Rabbits MATT MAHER, CHRIS AUGUST, BELLARIVE April 11, Murray Hill Theatre MURIEL ANDERSON April 11, European Street CafÊ San Marco FOREVER CAME CALLING, HEART TO HEART, TROUBLED COAST April 12, Phoenix Taproom TAB BENOIT April 13, Mojo Kitchen Jax Beach THIRD DAY April 14, St. Augustine Amphitheatre WEIRD AL YANKOVIC April 16, The Florida Theatre Wanee Music Fest: ALLMAN BROS., TEDSCHI-TRUCKS April 18-20, Spirit of Suwannee Music Park TIM GRIMM April 18, European Street CafÊ San Marco DAVID BENOIT, BRIAN CULBERTSON April 19, P.V. Concert Hall BIG FREEDIA April 19, Jack Rabbits CARRIE UNDERWOOD April 20, Veterans Memorial Arena MARY-LOU, TAMMERLIN April 20, European Street Southside FOURPLAY April 21, The Florida Theatre JB SCOTT’S SWINGIN’ ALL-STARS April 25, European Street CafÊ San Marco Welcome to Rockville: LIMP BIZKIT, SKYNYRD, ALICE IN CHAINS, 3 DOORS DOWN, SHINEDOWN, PAPA ROACH April 27 & 28, Metropolitan Park SOILWORK, JEFF LOOMIS, BLACKGUARD, THE BROWNING, WRETCHED April 27, Jack Rabbits GREEN SUNSHINE April 27, Dog Star Tavern AN EVENING WITH JANIS IAN May 1, Ponte Vedra Concert Hall CELTIC WOMAN May 2, T-U Center Gamble Rogers Festival Kickoff: LARRY MANGUM, BOB PATTERSON, JIM CARRICK, CHARLIE SIMMONS May 2, European Street CafÊ San Marco DOUGLAS ANDERSON Guitar Student Recital May 4, European Street CafÊ Southside
DONNA THE BUFFALO May 5, Freebird Live TERRI HENDRIX, LLOYD MAINES May 9, European Street CafÊ San Marco TIM AND MYLES THOMPSON May 11, European Street CafÊ Southside JOSHUA BOWLUS TRIO May 16, European Street San Marco CROSBY, STILLS & NASH May 17, The Florida Theatre THE STEREOFIDELICS May 17, Dog Star Tavern ALAN JACKSON May 17, St. Augustine Amphitheatre Florida Folk Festival Kickoff: DEL SUGGS May 23, European Street CafÊ San Marco STEVE MARTIN & THE STEEP CANYON RANGERS, EDIE BRICKELL May 26, St. Augustine Amphitheatre JB SCOTT’S SWINGIN’ ALLSTARS May 30, European Street CafÊ San Marco ROSEANNE CASH May 31, The Florida Theatre JUSTIN BIEBER Aug. 7, Veterans Memorial Arena BLUE SUEDE SHOES: THE ULTIMATE ELVIS BASH Aug. 10, The Florida Theatre TROPIC THUNDER Sept. 14, Dog Star Tavern
• CLUBS • AMELIA ISLAND, FERNANDINA BEACH
CAFE KARIBO, 27 N. Third St., 277-5269 Live music in the courtyard 6 p.m. every Fri. & Sat., 5 p.m. every Sun. DOG STAR TAVERN, 10 N. Second St., 277-8010 The Jauntee 8 p.m. Jan. 31. Josh Miller’s Blues Revue and Karl W. Davis 8 p.m. Feb. 1. Ben “One Man Band� Prestage 8 p.m. Feb. 2. Karl W. Davis Showcase 8 p.m. every Wed. Spade McQuade every Thur. Working Class Stiff with real vinyl 8 p.m. every Tue. GENNARO’S ITALIANO SOUTH, 5472 First Coast Hwy., 491-1999 Live jazz 7:30-9:30 p.m. every Fri. & Sat. GREEN TURTLE TAVERN, 14 S. Third St., 321-2324 Dan Voll 7-10 p.m. every Fri. Live music every weekend HAMMERHEAD BEACH BAR, 2045 S. Fletcher Rd., 491-7783 Buck Smith and Jim Barcaro every Thur. MERMAID BAR, Florida House Inn, 22 S. Third St., 491-3322 Live local bands for open mic night, 7:30-10:30 p.m. every Thur. O’KANE’S IRISH PUB, 318 Centre St., 261-1000 Dan Voll 7:30 p.m. every Wed. Turner London Band 8:30 p.m. every Thur.-Sat.
Wednesday Richard Smith Thursday The Splinters Friday Cloud 9 Saturday Cloud 9 Sunday Watch the Big Game in the Taproom Atlantic Blvd. at the Ocean "UMBOUJD #FBDI r JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 31
THE PALACE SALOON, 117 Centre St., 491-3332 Wes Cobb 9 p.m. every Wed. DJs every Fri. & Sat. Schnockered 9 p.m. every Sun. Buck Smith Project Band 9 p.m. every Tue. PLAE, 80 Amelia Circle, Amelia Island Plantation, 277-2132 Gary Ross 7-11 p.m. every Thur.-Sat. SLIDERS SEASIDE GRILL, 1998 S. Fletcher Ave., 277-6990 Live music every night THE SURF, 3199 S. Fletcher Ave., 261-5711 DJ Roc 5 p.m. every Wed. Richard Smith every Fri. Live music Tue.-Sun.
ARLINGTON, REGENCY
AJ’S BAR & GRILLE, 10244 Atlantic Blvd., 805-9060 DJ Sheryl every Thur., Fri. & Sat. DJ Mike every Tue. & Wed. Karaoke every Thur. BREWSTERS MEGAPLEX/PIT/ROC BAR/THE EDGE, 845 University Blvd. N., 223-9850 Pat Travers, Regi Blue, Kymystry, Chrome Heart and River City Kats 7 p.m. Feb. 1, Roc Bar. Turisas and Skyliner 7 p.m. Feb. 2. Live music every Wed.-Sat. MVP’S SPORTS GRILLE, 12777 Atlantic Blvd., 221-1090 Live music 9 p.m. every Fri. & Sat. TONINO’S, 7001 Merrill Rd., 743-3848 Alaina Colding 8 p.m. every Thur. W. Harvey Williams every Fri. Dino Saliba every Sat.
AVONDALE, ORTEGA
BRICK RESTAURANT, 3585 St. Johns Ave., 387-0606 Bush Doctors every first Fri. & Sat. Jazz every Fri. & Sat. THE CASBAH CAFE, 3628 St. Johns Ave., 981-9966 Goliath Flores every Wed. 3rd Bass every Sun. Live music every Mon. ECLIPSE, 4219 St. Johns Ave., 387-3582 DJ Keith spins for Karaoke every Tue. DJ Free spins vintage 9 p.m. every Fri. DJs SuZi-Rok, LowKill & Mowgli spin for Chillwave Madness every Mon. ELEVATED AVONDALE, 3551 St. Johns Ave., 387-0700 Karaoke Dave Thrash Wed. DJ 151 spins Thur. DJ Catharsis first & fourth Sat. Patrick Evan & CoAlition Industry every Sun. MOJO NO. 4, 3572 St. Johns Ave., 381-6670 Toots Lorraine & the Traffic 10 p.m. Feb. 1. Live music every Fri. & Sat.
TOM & BETTY’S, 4409 Roosevelt Blvd., 387-3311 Live music every Fri. Karaoke every Sat.
BAYMEADOWS
COFFEE GRINDER, 9834 Old Baymeadows Rd., 642-7600 DJ Albert Adkins spins every Fri. DJs Adrian Sky, Alberto Diaz & Chris Zachrich spin every Tue. DJ Michael Stumbaugh spins every Sat. MY PLACE, 9550 Baymeadows Rd., 737-5299 Out of Hand every Mon. Rotating bands every other Tue. & Wed. OASIS GRILL & CHILL, 9551 Baymeadows Rd., 748-9636 DJs Stan and Mike Bend spin every Feel Good Fri.
BEACHES
(All clubs & venues in Jax Beach unless otherwise noted) BILLY’S BOATHOUSE GRILL, 2321 Beach Blvd., 241-9771 Jimi Graves 5:30 p.m. Jan. 31. Live music Wed.-Sun. BRIX TAPHOUSE, 300 N. Second St., 241-4668 DJ IBay every Tue., Fri. & Sat. DJ Ginsu every Wed. DJ Jade every Thur. Charlie Walker every Sun. CULHANE’S IRISH PUB, 967 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach, 249-9595 John Thomas Group Jazz 6-8 p.m. every Tue. EL POTRO MEXICAN RESTAURANT, 1553 Third St. N., 241-6910 Wilfredo Lopez every Wed. & Sat. ENGINE 15 BREWING COMPANY, 1500 Beach Blvd., Ste. 217, 249-2337 Bread & Butter 8 p.m. Jan. 31. Live music every Thur. FLY’S TIE IRISH PUB, 177 E. Sailfish Dr., Atlantic Beach, 246-4293 Songwriters every Tue. Ryan Campbell every Wed. Wes Cobb Thur. Charlie Walker every Mon. FREEBIRD LIVE, 200 N. First St., 246-2473 G. Love & Special Sauce and Swear and Shake 8 p.m. Jan. 31 & Feb. 1. Big Something and Lucky Costello 8 p.m. Feb. 2. Soul Asylum, Miles Nielson & The Rusted Hearts and Solid Gold Thunder 8 p.m. Feb. 6. Live music every weekend GREEN ROOM BREWING, 228 N. Third St., 201-9283 Whetherman Feb. 2. Live music every Fri. & Sat. ISLAND GIRL CIGAR BAR, 108 First St., Neptune Beach, 372-0943 Clayton Bush Jan. 30. Kevin Ski Jan. 31. Lance Neely Feb. 1. Jimmy Solari feb. 2. Live music every Wed.-Sat. KC CRAVE, 1161 Beach Blvd., 595-5660 Live music every Thur.-Sat.
Atlanta electro and dubstep performer Bitch Please hits the stage Feb. 7 at Jack Rabbits in San Marco. LANDSHARK CAFE, 1728 Third St. N., 246-6024 Grandpa’s Cough Medicine, Wes Cobb, Jacksonvegas, Tom Bennet Band, Marion Crane, Edelweiss Piraten, In Whispers, The Embraced and Black Drum for Wounded Warrior Benefit 3 p.m. Feb. 2 LILLIE’S COFFEE BAR, 200 First St., Neptune Beach, 249-2922 Live music every Fri. & Sat. LYNCH’S IRISH PUB, 514 N. First St., 249-5181 Who Rescued Who Jan. 31. Uncommon Legends every Wed. Ryan Campbell every Sun. Mikee Magners & Dirty Pete every Mon. Split Tone 10:30 p.m. every Tue. MAYPORT TAVERN, 2775 Old Mayport Rd., Atlantic Beach, 270-0801 Karaoke every Fri. & Sat. MELLOW MUSHROOM, 1018 N. Third St., Ste. 2, 246-1500 Dirty Pete Jan. 30. DJ Competition Jan. 31. Yankee Slickers Feb. 1. Ginormous J Feb. 2. Live music every Wed.-Sun. MEZZA LUNA, 110 First St., Neptune Beach, 249-5573 Neil Dixon 6 p.m. every Tue. Gypsies Ginger 6 p.m. every Wed. Mike Shackelford & Rick Johnson 6 p.m. every Thur. MOJO KITCHEN, 1500 Beach Blvd., 247-6636 Grandpa’s Cough Medicine and Canary in the Coalmine 10 p.m. Feb. 1. The Ivey Brothers 10 p.m. Feb. 2 MONKEY’S UNCLE TAVERN, 1850 S. Third St., 246-1070 Wes Cobb 10 p.m. every Tue. DJ Austin Williams Karaoke 9 p.m. every Wed., Sat. & Sun. DJ Papa Sugar 9 p.m. every Mon., Thur. & Fri. NIPPERS BEACH GRILLE, 2309 Beach Blvd., 247-3300 Aaron Kroener Jan. 30. Les B. Fine Jan. 31. Reggae on the deck every Thur. NORTH BEACH BISTRO, 725 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 6, Atlantic Beach, 372-4105 Live music Thur.-Sat. OCEAN 60, 60 Ocean Blvd., Atlantic Beach, 247-0060 Katie Fair every Wed. Javier Perez every Thur. Live music every Fri. & Sat. POE’S TAVERN, 363 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach, 241-7637 Be Easy every Sat. RAGTIME TAVERN, 207 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach, 241-7877 Richard Smith Jan. 30. The Splinters Jan. 31. Cloud 9 Feb. 1 & 2. Billy Bowers 7 p.m. Feb. 6. Live music every Thur.-Sun. THE WINE BAR, 320 N. First St., 372-0211 Kevin Ski Feb. 1. Patrick Evan Feb. 2. Open mic with Cody Nixx Feb. 6
DOWNTOWN
1904 MUSIC HALL, 19 Ocean St., 1904jax.com Pumpkin and Warp 9 10 p.m. Feb. 1. 20WT, Tastebuds and Self Employed 10 p.m. Feb. 2. Hip-hop every First Fri. Open mic every Mon. BURRO BAR, 100 E. Adams St., 677-2977 Dear Rabbit and M.R.E.O.W. 8 p.m. Jan. 31. Raggedy Zeus, Dude Magnets and Memphibians 8 p.m. Feb. 1. Pre-International Noise Conference Feb. 2. Meth Dad, Netherfriends and After The Bomb, Baby! 8 p.m. Feb. 3 DOS GATOS, 123 E. Forsyth, 354-0666 Whetherman Feb. 5. DJ Synsonic spins every Tue. & Fri. DJ NickFresh every Sat. DJ Randall Karaoke every Mon. FIONN MacCOOL’S, Jacksonville Landing, 2 Independent Dr., Ste. 176, 374-1247 Braxton Adamson 5 p.m., Brett Foster Duo 8:30 p.m. Feb. 1. “AA” Duo 8 p.m. Feb. 2. Live music every weekend THE JACKSONVILLE LANDING, 2 Independent Dr., 353-1188 Radio 80 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Feb. 2. Live music every Fri. & Sat.
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KALA, 331 E. Bay St., 356-6455 DJ Paten Locke spins for Audio Zoo every Wed. MARK’S DOWNTOWN, 315 E. Bay St., 355-5099 DJ Roy Luis spins house soulful, gospel, deep, acid, hip, Latin, tribal, Afrobeat, tech/electronic, disco, rarities 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. every Wed. DJ Vinn spins Top 40 every Thur. DJ 007 spins ultra house & top 40 dance every Fri. DJ Shotgun every Sat. MAVERICKS, The Jacksonville Landing, 2 Independent Dr., 356-1110 Bobby Laredo spins every Thur. & Sat. DJs Bryan & Q45 spin every Fri. NORTHSTAR THE PIZZA BAR, 119 E. Bay St., 860-5451 Open mic night 8:30-11:30 p.m. every Wed. DJ SwitchGear every Thur. PHOENIX TAPROOM, 325 W. Forsyth St., 798-8222 Rickett Pass, Mudtown and Looka Looka Looka 8 p.m. Jan. 31. Kelz Law 7 p.m. Feb. 1. H20, Terror, Backtrack & the Code Orange Kids 8 p.m. Feb. 4. Live music every Fri. & Sat. UNDERBELLY, 113 E. Bay St., 353-6067 Antique Animals, Lobo Marino, The Dewars and Vinegar Creek Constituency Duo 9 p.m. Jan. 30. Peace Arrow, Personnes and A Gust Us Jan. 31. Turk282, Four Families and Universal Green Feb. 1. Kath Bloom and Tammerlin Feb. 2. Ghost Fields, DJ Ritual Union and Euglossine Feb. 7. Old Time Jam 7 p.m. every Tue. Fjord Explorer & Screamin’ Eagle every Ritual ReUnion Thursday ZODIAC GRILL, 120 W. Adams St., 354-8283 Live music every Fri. & Sat.
FLEMING ISLAND
MELLOW MUSHROOM, 1800 Town Center Blvd., 541-1999 Wes Cobb Feb. 1. Pierce in Harmony Feb. 2. Live music Wed.-Sat. MERCURY MOON, 2015 C.R. 220, 215-8999 Schnockered 10 p.m. Feb. 8 & 9. DJ Ty spins every Thur. Buck Smith Project every Mon. Blistur unplugged every Wed. WHITEY’S FISH CAMP, 2032 C.R. 220, 269-4198 Karaoke Jan. 30. DJ BG Jan. 31. Cuz N Powerplay 9:30 p.m. Feb. 1. Confluent 9:30 p.m. Feb. 2. Deck music 5 p.m. every Fri. & Sat., 4 p.m. every Sun.
INTRACOASTAL WEST
BRUCCI’S PIZZA, 13500 Beach Blvd., Ste. 36, 223-6913 Billy Bowers Feb. 2. Mike Shackelford 6:30 p.m. every Sat. & Mon. CLIFF’S BAR & GRILL, 3033 Monument Rd., 645-5162 Cupid’s Alley 8 p.m. Feb. 1 & 2. Karaoke every Thur. & Sun. Top 40 music every Mon. & Tue. JERRY’S SPORTS GRILLE & STEAKHOUSE, 13170 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 22, 220-6766 Karaoke Dude every Wed. Live music every Fri. SALSA’S MEXICAN RESTAURANT, 13500 Beach Blvd., Ste. 46, 992-8402 Live guitar music 6-9 p.m. every Tue. & Sat.
MANDARIN, JULINGTON
AW SHUCKS OYSTER BAR, 9743 Old St. Augustine Rd., 240-0368 Open mic with Diamond Dave every Wed. Live music every Sat. CHEERS BAR & GRILL, 11475 San Jose Blvd., 262-4337 Karaoke 9:30 p.m. every Wed. HARMONIOUS MONKS, 10550 Old St. Augustine Rd., 880-3040 Jazz 7-9 pm., Karaoke 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Mon.-Thur.
Live Music Dennis Klee & the World’s Most Talented Waitstaff Fri. & Sat. RACK EM UP, 4268 Oldfield Crossing Dr., Ste. 205, 262-4030 Live music, DJs, Karaoke and open mic
ORANGE PARK, MIDDLEBURG
BLACK HORSE WINERY, 420 Kingsley Ave., 644-8480 Live music 6-9 p.m. every Fri., 2-6 p.m. every Sat. CHEERS BAR & GRILL, 1580 Wells Rd., 269-4855 Karaoke 9:30 p.m. every Wed. & Sat. THE HILLTOP, 2030 Wells Rd., 272-5959 John Michael every Wed.-Sat. PREVATT’S SPORTS BAR & GRILL, 2620 Blanding Blvd., Middleburg, 282-1564 Live music every Fri. & Sat. THE ROADHOUSE, 231 Blanding Blvd., 264-0611 Create the Monster 9 p.m. Feb. 1 & 2. Live music 9 p.m. every Thur.-Sat.
PALATKA
DOWNTOWN BLUES BAR & GRILLE, 714 St. Johns Ave., (386) 325-5454 Local talent every Wed. Live music every Thur. Country music showcase every Fri. Acoustic Circle 2 p.m. every Sat. Blues jam 5 p.m. every Sun.
PONTE VEDRA, PALM VALLEY
ISLAND GIRL CIGAR BAR, 820 A1A N., Ste. E-18, 834-2492 John Austill 8 p.m. Jan. 30. Jimmy Solari Jan. 31. D-Lo Thompson Feb. 1. Aaron Kyle Feb. 2. Live music every Wed.-Sat. LULU’S WATERFRONT GRILLE, 301 N. Roscoe Blvd., 285-0139 The Monster Fool 6 p.m. Feb. 2. Mike Shackelford & Rick Johnson 7-10 p.m. every Fri. PUSSER’S CARIBBEAN GRILLE, 816 A1A N., Ste. 100, 280-7766 SoundStage on the upper deck every Sun. SUN DOG BREWING CO., 822 A1A N., Ste. 105, 686-1852 Live music every Wed.-Sat.
RIVERSIDE, WESTSIDE
HAPPY HOURS, 952 Lane Ave. N., 683-0065 Karaoke 4 p.m. every Sun. HJ’S BAR & GRILL, 8540 Argyle Forest Blvd., 317-2783 Karaoke with DJ Ron 8:30 p.m. every Tue. & DJ Richie every Fri. Live music every Sat. Open mic 8 p.m. every Wed. INTUITION ALE WORKS, 720 King St., 683-7720 Live music every Taproom Tunesday KICKBACKS, 910 King St., 388-9551 Ray & Taylor 9:30 p.m. every Thur. Robby Shenk every Sun. THE LOFT, 925 King St., loftthursdays.com DJs Wes Reed and Josh Kemp spin for PBR Party every Thur. METRO/RAINBOW ROOM PIANO BAR, 859 Willowbranch Ave., 388-8719 Karaoke Rob spins 10 p.m. Sun.-Wed. DJ Zeke Smith spins 10 p.m. Fri. DJ Michael Murphy spins 10 p.m. Sat. MURRAY HILL THEATRE, 932 Edgewood Ave. S., 388-7807 Charlie Hall, Daniel Bashta and The Vespers 7 p.m. Feb. 2. We Came As Romans, Crown The Empire, Me & The Trinity and I Am The Witness 7:30 p.m. Feb. 6 RASCALS, 3960 Confederate Point Rd., 772-7335 Karaoke 8 p.m. every Thur.
ST. AUGUSTINE
A1A ALE WORKS, 1 King St., 829-2977 Deron Baker
Jan. 31. Paper City Hustlers Feb. 1 & 2. Live music every Thur.-Sat. ANN O’MALLEY’S, 23 Orange St., 825-4040 Chelsea Saddler 6:30 p.m. Feb. 1. Amy Vickery Feb. 2. Open mic with Smokin’ Joe 7 p.m. every Tue. CELLAR UPSTAIRS, San Sebastian Winery, 157 King St., 826-1594 The Committee 7-11 p.m. Feb. 1. Deron Baker 2-5 p.m., The Committee 7-11 p.m. Feb. 2. Vinny Jacobs 2-5 p.m. Feb. 3 CRUISERS GRILL, 3 St. George St., 824-6993 Live music every Fri. & Sat. Chelsea Saddler every Sun. HARRY’S, 46 Avenida Menendez, 824-7765 Billy Bowers 6-10 p.m. Jan. 30. Live music every Fri. MARDI GRAS SPORTS BAR, 123 San Marco Ave., 823-8806 Open jam nite, house band every Wed. Battle of the DJs with Josh Frazetta & Mardi Gras Mike every last Sun. MEEHAN’S IRISH PUB, 20 Avenida Menendez, 810-1923 Live music every Fri. & Sat. MI CASA CAFE, 69 St. George St., 824-9317 Chelsea Saddler noon every Mon., Tue. & Thur. Elizabeth Roth 11 a.m. every Sun. MILL TOP TAVERN & LISTENING ROOM, 19 1/2 St. George St., 829-2329 Passerine 9 p.m. Feb. 1 & 2. Bret Blackshear 1 p.m. Feb. 3. Todd & Molly Jones every Wed. Aaron Espisito every Thur. Sam Pacetti 9 p.m. every Mon. Vinny Jacobs 9 p.m. every Tue. MOJO BBQ OLD CITY, 5 Cordova St., 342-5264 Who Rescued Who 10 p.m. Feb. 1. Blues Lightning 10 p.m. Feb. 2 NOBBY’S, 10 Anastasia Blvd., 547-2188 Live music 9 p.m. every Fri. PIZZALLEY’S CHIANTI ROOM, 60 Charlotte St., 825-4100 Dennis Fermin Spanish Guitar 3-6 p.m. every Mon. SCARLETT O’HARA’S, 70 Hypolita St., 824-6535 Chase Rideman 9 p.m. Jan. 30. Battle of the Bands 9 p.m. Jan. 31. Humanzee 9 p.m. Feb. 1. Billy Bowers noon, Chillula 9 p.m. Feb. 2. John Winters noon, Colton McKenna 7 p.m. Feb. 3. Jeremy Austin 8 p.m. Feb. 5. Karaoke 9 p.m. every Mon. THE STANDARD, 200 Anastasia Blvd., 342-2187 Red River Band Jan. 31. The Randall Bramblett Band, Ron Norris and Funk Shui 8 p.m. Feb. 2. Country every Thur. Reggae 7 p.m. every Sun. Indie, dance & electro every Tue. TAPS BAR & GRILL, 2220 C.R. 210 W., 819-1554 Live music every Fri. THE TASTING ROOM, 25 Cuna St., 810-2400 Dennis Fermin Spanish Guitar Band 7:30-11:30 p.m. every Sat. Bossa Nova with Monica da Silva and Chad Alger 5-8 p.m. every Sun. TRADEWINDS, 124 Charlotte St., 829-9336 Hooch Feb. 1 & 2. Mark Hart every Mon.-Wed. Open mic every Thur. Mark Hart & Jim Carrick every Fri. Elizabeth Roth 1 p.m., Mark Hart 5 p.m. every Sat. Keith Godwin 1 p.m., Wade 5 p.m. every Sun. Matanzas 9 p.m. Sun.-Thur.
ST. AUGUSTINE BEACH
AMICI ITALIAN RESTAURANT, 1915 A1A S., 461-0102 Piano bar with Kenyon Dye 5-9:30 p.m. every Sun. JACK’S BARBECUE, 691 A1A Beach Blvd., 460-8100 Jim Essery 4 p.m. every Sat. Live music every Thur.-Sat.
ST. JOHNS TOWN CENTER
AROMAS CIGARS & WINE BAR, 4372 Southside Blvd., Ste. 101, 928-0515 Live jazz every Tue. Beer house rock every Wed. Live music every Thur. Will Hurley every Fri. Bill Rice every Sat.
BAHAMA BREEZE, 10205 River Coast Dr., 646-1031 Clarence Wears every Tue. Selwyn Toby every Wed. Barry O 4 p.m., Laree App 7:30 p.m. every Thur. Laree App 4 p.m., Selwyn Toby 8 p.m. every Fri. Barry O 4 p.m., Laree App 8 p.m. every Sat. Selwyn Toby 4 p.m., Laree App 7:30 p.m. every Sun. BLACKFINN AMERICAN GRILLE, 4840 Big Island Dr., 345-3466 Live music 5-7 p.m. every Wed., 9 p.m.-mid. every Thur.-Sat. JOHNNY ANGELS, 3546 St. Johns Bluff Rd. S., Ste. 120, 997-9850 Harry & Sally 7 p.m. every Wed. Karaoke every Sat. MELLOW MUSHROOM, 9734 Deer Lake Court, Ste. 1, 997-1955 Ryan Crary Jan. 30. Charlie Walker Jan. 31. Whetherman 8 p.m. Feb. 1. CoAlition Feb. 2. Live music every Fri. & Sat. Open mic every Sun. SEVEN BRIDGES GRILLE & BREWERY, 9735 Gate Pkwy. N., 997-1999 Chuck Nash every Thur. Live music 10 p.m. Fri. & Sat. SUITE, 4880 Big Island Dr., 493-9305 Live music from 9 p.m.-mid. every Thur. and 6-9 p.m. every Fri. & Sat. WHISKY RIVER, 4850 Big Island Drive, 645-5571 A DJ spins every Fri. & Sat. WILD WING CAFE, 4555 Southside Blvd., 998-9464 X-Hale Feb. 1. Live music every Fri. Karaoke every Wed.
SAN MARCO, SOUTHBANK
ENDO EXO, 1224 Kings Ave., 396-7733 DJ J-Money spins jazz, soul, R&B, house every Fri. DJ Manus spins top 40 & dance every Sat. Open mic with King Ron & T-Roy every Mon. EUROPEAN STREET, 1704 San Marco Blvd., 399-1740 The John Thomas Jazz Group Jan. 31. JB Scott’s Swingin’ All-Stars Feb. 7. Jazz 8 p.m. every second Tue. HAVANA-JAX CUBA LIBRE, 2578 Atlantic Blvd., 399-0609 MVP Band 6-9 p.m., DJs No Fame & Dr. Doom every Wed. Jazz every Thur. American Top 40 every Fri. Salsa every Sat. JACK RABBITS, 1528 Hendricks Ave., 398-7496 Churchill 8 p.m. Jan. 30. A Way Without, Prideless, Appalachian Death Trap and On Guard 8 p.m. Feb. 1. Chris Yates and Jenni Reid 8 p.m. Feb. 2. English Beat 8 p.m. Feb. 5. Bitch Please Feb. 7 MATTHEW’S, 2107 Hendricks Ave., 396-9922 Patrick Evan & Bert Mingea or Mark O’Quinn every Thur. PIZZA PALACE, 1959 San Marco Blvd., 399-8815 Jennifer Chase 7:30 p.m. every Sat. SQUARE ONE, 1974 San Marco Blvd., 306-9004 Soul on the Square with MVP Band & Special Formula 8 p.m.; DJ Dr. Doom every Mon. DJs Wes Reed & Josh Kemp spin underground dance music for Are Friends Electric 9 p.m. every Wed. DJ Hal spins for Karaoke every Thur. Mitch Kuhman & Friends of Blake every other Fri. DJs Rogue & Mickey Shadow spin every Factory Sat.
SOUTHSIDE
BOMBA’S, 8560 Beach Blvd., 997-2291 Open mic with The Foxes every Tue. & with George every Thur. Live music every Fri. CORNER BISTRO & Wine Bar, 9823 Tapestry Park Cir., Ste. 1, 619-1931 Matt “Pianoman” Hall every Fri. & Sat. DAVE & BUSTER’S, 7025 Salisbury Rd. S., 296-1525 A DJ spins every Fri. EUROPEAN STREET CAFE, 5500 Beach Blvd., 399-1740 Paul Geremia 8 p.m. Feb. 2. Live music every Sat. ISLAND GIRL CIGAR BAR, 7860 Gate Pkwy., Ste. 115, 854-6060 Aaron Kyle Jan. 30. Billy Buchanan Jan. 31. Job Meiller Feb. 1. The Druids Feb. 2. Live music every Thur.-Sat. LATITUDE 30, 10370 Philips Hwy., 365-5555 Howl at the Moon dueling pianos 8 p.m. Jan. 31, Feb. 1 & 2. David Lee, Alabama Blues Brothers, Ronnie McDowell and Cliff Wright 5 p.m. Feb. 1. DJ Jeff Bell every Tue. VJ Ginsu every Sat. PURE NIGHTCLUB, 8206 Philips Hwy., (800) 694-1253 Krewella and Spektrem 9 p.m. Jan. 30 SPECKLED HEN TAVERN & GRILLE, 9475 Philips Hwy., Ste. 16, 538-0811 Rebecca Day 7 p.m. Feb. 1. Live music every Fri.
SPRINGFIELD, NORTHSIDE
SHANTY TOWN PUB, 22 W. Sixth St., 798-8222 Live music every Twin Peaks Fri. SKYLINE SPORTSBAR, 5611 Norwood Ave., 517-6973 Bigga Rankin & Cool Running DJs every Tue. & 1st Sun. Fusion Band & DJ every Thur. DJ Scar spins every Sun. THREE LAYERS CAFE, 1602 Walnut St., 355-9791 Al Poindexter for open mic 7 p.m. Jan. 31 3 LIONS SPORTS PUB & GRILL, 2467 Faye Rd., 647-8625 Open mic every Thur. Woodie & Wyatt C. every Fri. Live music every Sat. TUCKERS HWY. 17 TAVERN, 850532 U.S. 17, Yulee, 225-9211 Live music every Fri. & Sat.
The Gainesville post-pop musician Peace Arrow (pictured) follows Personnes and A Gust Us Jan. 31 at Underbelly in Downtown Jacksonville.
To get your musical group listed here, send the band name, time, date, venue location, street address, city, ticket price, and a contact number we can print, to David Johnson, 9456 Philips Hwy., Ste. 11, Jacksonville FL 32256 or email events@folioweekly.com. Deadline is at 4 p.m. Wed. before the next Wednesday publication.
JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 33
34 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
Arts
Writer Roderick Borisade reads while puppets act out a story from “Buddy and Bird,” a children’s book Borisade produced with artist Aaron Hazouri. Photo: Janina Lentz
Buddy System
Borisade and Hazouri created ‘Buddy and Bird’ to teach children lessons about diversity, friendship BUDDY AND BIRD Book: Copies will be available at buddyandbird.com in February. Blog: buddyandbird.blogspot.com Fundraising campaign: indiegogo.com/buddyandbird Facebook: Visit the “Buddy and Bird” page
W
hen most people think of fundamental issues taught in young children’s books, the ABCs and 123s might come to mind. This is not the case in Roderick Borisade and Aaron Hazouri’s “Buddy and Bird.” Hazouri and Borisade met in graphic design classes at the University of North Florida. Years later, Hazouri was doing freelance illustration, and Borisade was working on his poetry and public speaking, but they both thought they could be doing something more powerful with their talents. They looked back on their own lives and experiences to create Buddy and Bird, semiautobiographical characters that they could use to teach children valuable life lessons. Buddy the dog is like Borisade, who grew up in a lower-class neighborhood; Bird is based on Hazouri, who grew up in an uppermiddle-class neighborhood. “Buddy and Bird” is a book about two kids who meet on the first day of school and are forced to work together — but from that a great friendship is formed. Their octopus teacher, appropriately named Mr. Hands, assigns the students the task of getting to know how the other lives. Buddy is from “the ’hood,” and Bird is from “the ’burbs.” The fence around Buddy’s house is chain-link, while Bird’s is white-picket. Kids in Buddy’s neighborhood spend their time rhyming and
jumping on mattresses, while Bird and his friends skateboard and jump on trampolines. With 1,000 copies sold, Hazouri and Borisade have achieved some local success, but they have yet to take the “Buddy and Bird” message as far as they would like. According to the two men, the ideas of diversity and friendship between people of different backgrounds are not promoted enough in Jacksonville, and they wanted to address that in the book. This time last year, Roderick, who uses the stage name ODD?ROD, released a CD of his poetry, “The Art of Plain English Session II: More Than Just A Poet,” and went on a 40-city college tour performing his poetry and promoting “Buddy and Bird.” “Jacksonville is such a segregated city. You have a white side of town and a black side of town. You have black schools, and you have white schools,” Borisade said. “I’ve traveled now throughout the country and mentioned that at colleges, and they’re, like, ‘Oh my God, really?’” The target audience of the book is children 4 to 8 years old. “By the time they get to middle school, they have already started to fall into those familiar patterns,” Hazouri said. “You can go to middle schools now and see that they’re doing stuff teenagers used to do.” “There’s no fixing the people who are already grown; it’s too late for them. Books and stories like this are necessary because kids are different these days,” Borisade said. “Either you’re going to reach them, or your television is going to reach them.” Hazouri and Borisade are in the process of developing a pilot episode of a “Buddy and Bird” television program that would offer kids an alternative to the typical children’s programming. “Our vision for this is kind of a cross between the old ‘Fat Albert’ show where Bill Cosby would come in and give a little bit of a message, plus a little bit of ‘Sesame Street’ with the puppets and a little bit of an old-fashioned cartoon show with animated characters,” Hazouri said.
starring Michael learned FroM the waltons
journey with us February 6 - March 17
2013 theatre schedule crazy for you
tony award winning show march 20 – may 5
murder among friends h starring loretta swit h
from m*a*s*h may 8 – June 9
? summer surprise ?
Borisade (left) and Hazouri
They would also like to produce educational materials to coincide with the show for class discussion. The program, currently in pre-production, is dependent on raising money for the cause. Hazouri and Borisade estimate that the pilot episode will cost approximately $20,000 to produce, and while they haven’t made much of a dent in this goal yet, they are still working to make the program a reality. Pending their fundraising efforts, they plan on more installments of the “Buddy and Bird” book that are based on Roderick’s poetry and various topics such as bullying, peer pressure, divorce and death in the family. Hazouri does the artwork and builds puppets for occasional live “Buddy and Bird” shows. Aside from “Buddy and Bird,” Borisade still performs his poetry and motivational speaking and Hazouri continues his freelancing and also writes and illustrates his own comic, “The Strange Adventures of Toaster Guy.” “It’s just using what we’ve gone through to create something great to help others,” Roderick said. Nicholas Garnett themail@folioweekly.com
vote for the show you want! June 12 – august 4
dixie swim club
a hilarious southern comedy august 7 – september 15
george wendt
h “norm” from cheers h in a show he will personally select just for us!
september 18– OctOber 20
south pacific
the classic musical returns OctOber 23 – december 1
christmas carole a holiday tradition december 3 - december 24
Dinner is served tableside with a special menu created for each show
904-641-1212 | alhambrajax.com
JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 35
Arts PERFORMANCE
RING OF FIRE The musical revue of Johnny Cash’s legacy is staged for evening and matinee performances Jan. 30-Feb. 3 at Alhambra Theatre & Dining, 12000 Beach Blvd., Southside. $46-$59. 641-1212. alhambrajax.com SHEN YUN The synchronized, classical Chinese dancers spin, flip and twirl in performing many styles and traditions and drawing on the stories of Mulan, General Yue Fei and the Monkey King, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 30 at the Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts, 300 W. Water St., Downtown Jacksonville. $50-$150. 1-888-884-6707. LOST IN YONKERS Neil Simon’s play is performed Jan. 31 and Feb. 1-3, 7-10 and 14-17 at Limelight Theatre, 11 Old Mission Ave., St. Augustine. $10-$25. 825-1164. limelight-theatre.org CLARINDA Atlantic Beach Experimental Theatre presents the Scottish musical play Feb. 1-3 and 8-10 at Adele Grage Cultural Center, 716 Ocean Blvd., Atlantic Beach. $20. 249-7177. FENCES The play, winner of a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and multiple Tony awards, examines the evolution of race relations. “Fences” is staged Feb. 1-3 and 8-10 at Stage Aurora, 5164 Norwood Ave., Ste. A, Northside. 765-7372. stageaurora.org CONVERSATIONS AFTER A BURIAL The comedic play is staged Feb. 1-16 at Players by the Sea, 106 N. Sixth St., Jax Beach. $20. 249-0289. playersbythesea.org MURDER IN THE OLDE CITY This dinner theater whodunit of murder, scandal and love is staged 6 p.m. Feb. 3, 10, 17 and 24 at The Raintree Restaurant, 102 San Marco Ave., St. Augustine. $39.95. 824-7211. THE CAPITOL STEPS The satirical musical group performs at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 5-7, at 8 p.m. Feb. 8, at 2 and 8 p.m. Feb. 9 and at 2 and 5:30 p.m. Feb. 10 at FSCJ’s Wilson Center for the Arts, 11901 Beach Blvd., Southside. $34-$46. 632-3373. artistseriesjax.org THEATER OF THE MIND: STORYTELLING The Tale Tellers of St. Augustine perform “Enduring Love” and “Back in Tyme” 7:30 p.m. Feb. 6 at Limelight Theatre, 11 Old Mission Ave., St. Augustine. $10. 829-8711. DRIVING MISS DAISY The drama, starring Michael Learned of “The Waltons” and Lance Nichols of HBO’s “Treme,” is staged for evening and matinee performances Feb. 6-March 28 at Alhambra Theatre & Dining, 12000 Beach Blvd., Southside. $46-$59. 641-1212. alhambrajax.com THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING The production from A Classic Theatre, based on Joan Didion’s memoir of love and loss, is staged 7:30 p.m. Feb. 7-9 and 2 p.m. Feb. 10 at the Pioneer Theater at Fort Menendez, 259 San Marco Ave., St. Augustine. $20. 800-813-3208, 824-8874. aclassictheatre.org ALMOST, MAINE The mythical town of Almost, Maine, is the site of nine tales of love in this romantic comedy, staged 8 p.m. Feb. 7-9, 14-16 and 21-23 and 2 p.m. Feb. 17 at Amelia Community Theatre, 207 Cedar St., Fernandina Beach. $20. 261-6749.
CALLS & WORKSHOPS
FUNDAMENTALS: ACRYLIC PAINTING Instructor Allison Watson introduces painting to beginners and strengthens skills of intermediate painters on composition for landscape and still life, color theory and techniques in acrylics 1:30-4 p.m. Jan. 30 and Feb. 6 and 13 at the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, 829 Riverside Ave., Riverside. Ages 13 and older. $190. 355-0630. ACTING AUDITIONS Auditions are held for men ages 18-35 for John Logan’s “Red,” 7:15 p.m. Jan. 31 at 1012 Beech St., Fernandina Beach. fltplay@peoplepc.com RIVER CITY SWING PARTY Dancing 7 p.m.-midnight Feb. 1 at Boleros Ballroom, 10131 Atlantic Blvd., Arlington. $12. 721-3399. boleros.cc SALSA DANCING AT BOLEROS BALLROOM MamboJax presents Latin music and dancing, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Feb. 2 at Boleros Ballroom, 10131 Atlantic Blvd., Arlington. $12. 721-3399. boleros.cc LIMELIGHT THEATRE AUDITIONS Auditions for the N. Richard Nash classic “The Rainmaker” are held 2 p.m. Feb. 3. The cast includes five male and two female roles. 11 Old Mission Ave., St. Augustine. 825-1164. HERITAGE SINGERS’ AUDITIONS Auditions are held 6-7 p.m. Feb. 4 and 11 for singers in all voice ranges at South Jacksonville Presbyterian Church, 2137 Hendricks Ave., San Marco. 434-4625. heritagesingjax@aol.com ART FUNDAMENTALS: WATERCOLOR Instructor Robert Leedy holds a four-week session on techniques for painting watercolors from a studio still life or reference photo 1:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m. Feb. 5, 12, 19 and 26 at the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, 829 Riverside Ave., Riverside. Ages 13 and older. $170. 355-0630. JULINGTON CREEK HOMESCHOOL ARTS PROGRAM The Arts League works with homeschool students in the Julington Creek area 6 p.m. Feb. 7 at Hobby Lobby, 9400 Atlantic Blvd., Arlington. $80 for six 2-hour weekly sessions. 677-2787. artleaguejax.org EXCURSIONS INTO THE WILD Artist and environmentalist Jim Draper leads a series of explorations into natural
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“Inflamed” (pictured), a 48-inch-by-60-inch oil on canvas, is among the works in Pam Zambetti’s exhibit “Full Blooms,” with an opening reception held Feb. 6 for First Wednesday Art Walk. The exhibit runs through February at Southlight Gallery in Downtown Jacksonville. habitats, with the first excursion held 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Feb. 9 at Little Talbot Island State Park. Ages 13 and older. Bring a lunch. $115. 355-0630. ART CLASSES FOR CHILDREN Children ages 3-5, accompanied by an adult, participate in “Art for Two,” an infusion of art, movement, literature and music to develop new skills 10:30 a.m.-noon Feb. 9 and March 23 at the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, 829 Riverside Ave., Riverside. $15 per pair. 356-6857. DISCOVERING THE LAYERS Artist Jim Draper leads a gallery discussion related to his exhibit, “Feast of Flowers,” 1 p.m. Feb. 10 and March 24 at the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, 829 Riverside Ave., Riverside. Reservations required. 899-6038. ADVENTURES IN ART Local artist Jan Bialka presents “Four Women Impressionists,” part of the Adventures in Art monthly series from FOCUS Cummer and Friends of the Ponte Vedra Library. The program examines the work of Marie Braquemond, Eva Gonzales, Berthe Morisot and Mary Cassatt, 6:30 p.m. Feb. 12 at the library, 101 Library Blvd., Ponte Vedra Beach. 273-3990. CULTURAL SERVICE GRANT INTENT Duval County arts and cultural organizations interested in applying to the 2013-’14 Cultural Service Grant Program must submit a letter of intent to the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville by Feb. 28. 358-3600. Submit the application online at culturalcouncil.org GREEN ART POSTER CONTEST Concert on the Green is calling all student artists for this year’s poster contest. The deadline for submissions is March 1. No entry fee. Apply online at concertonthegreen.com PONTE VEDRA ART CLASSES The Cultural Center at Ponte Vedra Beach offers workshops in watercolor, acrylic and oils, for artists of all skill levels, with most class series running through late February or early March. 50 Executive Way, Ponte Vedra Beach. 280-0614 ext. 204. ccpvb.org ORANGE PARK WORKSHOP Orange Park Community Theatre offers a spring theater workshop for students in grades 2-8. Classes are held 4:30-6:30 p.m. every Mon.-Thur. through April 21. opct.org THEATRICAL ARTS Classes in theatrical performance, including song and dance, are held Mon.-Fri. at The Performers Academy, 3674 Beach Blvd., Spring Park. Fees vary. 322-7672. theperformersacademy.com MIXED MEDIA ART CLASSES Energetic art classes are held weekly at Studio 121, 121 W. Forsyth St., Downtown, at a fee of $20 per class or $100 for six weeks. 568-2146. teresemuller.com ART THERAPY CLASSES New art classes are held every Tue. 6-9 p.m. at Diversions, 210 N. Laura St., Downtown. $30 includes supplies. 586-2088, email daniel@diversionsjax.com MURRAY HILL ART CLASSES Six-week art classes for adults and kids are offered at Murray Hill Art Center, 4327 Kerle St., Murray Hill. Adult class fee is $80; $50 for kids. 677-2787. artsjax.org DRAMATIC ARTS AT THE BEACHES Classes and workshops in theatrical performance for all ages and skill levels are held Mon.-Fri. at Players by the Sea, 106 N. Sixth St., Jax Beach. Fees vary. 249-0289. BELLY DANCING “Belly Dance with Margarita” is offered 4 p.m. Thur. and 10:30 a.m. Sat. at Boleros Dance Center, 10131 Atlantic Blvd., Arlington. 721-3399. JAZZ MUSICIANS The Jazzland Café seeks musicians who play piano, bass or drums, for a new ensemble being formed. For details, email info@jazzlandcafe.com DANCE CLASSES The Dance Shack offers classes for
several styles of dance, for all ages and skill levels, every Mon.-Fri., at 3837 Southside Blvd., Southside. 527-8694. thedanceshack.com K.A.R.M.A. CLASS A Kindling Auras & Radiating Musical Awareness group vocal session, focusing on mental clarity, visualization, harmonizing and blending, breath and energy control, is held 6-7 p.m. every Fri. at The Performers Academy, 3674 Beach Blvd., Spring Park. Registration is requested, but not required. 322-7672. elementsofonelove@gmail.com JAX CONTRA DANCE A live band and caller lead a night of folk dancing, starting at 8 and 11 p.m. every third Fri. of the month at Riverside Avenue Christian Church, 2841 Riverside Ave., Riverside. $7. 396-1997. ST. AUGUSTINE CHORUS AUDITIONS Auditions for singers for “On Broadway! Act II” are held 6:50-9 p.m. every Tue. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 215 St. George St., St. Augustine. Membership fee: $25. 808-1904. staugustinecommunitychorus.org
CLASSICAL & JAZZ
UNF PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE The chamber concert is performed at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 31 at UNF Recital Hall, UNF Fine Arts Center, 1 UNF Dr., Southside. Free. 270-1771. JAZZ AT EUROPEAN STREET CAFÉ John Thomas Jazz Group musicians perform 8-9:30 p.m. Jan. 31 in The Listening Room, European Street Café, 1704 San Marco Blvd., San Marco. $10. 399-1740. A BENNY GOODMAN TRIBUTE The Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra joins clarinetist Dave Bennett 11 a.m. Feb. 1 at the T-U Center, 300 W. Water St., Downtown. $16-$26. 354-5547. jaxsymphony.org CHRISTINE CLARK AND SCOTT WATKINS The pianists perform 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Feb. 1 at Friday Musicale, 645 Oak St., Riverside. Free. 355-7584. fridaymusicale.com HOWL AT THE MOON Dueling piano players perform 8 p.m. every Thur. and 9:30 p.m. every Fri. and Sat., beginning Feb. 1 at Latitude 30, 10370 Philips Hwy., Southside. 365-5555. howljacksonville.com NEW YORK CHAMBER SOLOISTS ORCHESTRA The orchestra performs with violinist Rachel Barton Pine 8 p.m. Feb. 2 at Flagler College’s Lewis Auditorium, 14 Granada St., St. Augustine. $35. 797-2800. emmaconcerts.com FRANCESCO ATTESTI The pianist performs 7 p.m. Feb. 3 at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, 801 Atlantic Ave., Fernandina Beach. $25. Tickets at Vystar Credit Union and Amelia IslandFernandina Beach-Yulee Chamber of Commerce. AMELIA ISLAND CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL WinterFest 2013 includes The Kruger Brothers’ Hoedown 7 p.m. Feb. 4 at Walker’s Landing, Omni Amelia Island Plantation, Hilary Hahn 7 p.m. Feb. 6 at Amelia Plantation Chapel, 36 Bowman Road, and Julie Coucheron and Elizabeth Pridgen performing Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue” 7 p.m. Feb. 11 at the Palace Saloon, 117 Centre St., Fernandina Beach. Individual tickets: $29-$45; three-concert packages: $99-$149. 261-1779. aicmf.com CONCERTO SHOWCASE CONCERT The concert is performed 9 a.m. Feb. 5 at University of North Florida’s Robinson Theater, 1 UNF Dr., Southside. Free. 620-2878. KOGER/MATTESON JAZZ FESTIVAL The 25th annual festival is held 9 a.m. Feb. 6 at University of North Florida’s Robinson Theater, 1 UNF Dr., Southside. Free. 620-2878. PROMENADE! ART WALK CONCERT Jacksonville University Chamber Strings perform 6 p.m. Feb. 6 at the Jacksonville Public Library’s Music@Main, 303 N. Laura St., Downtown. Free. 630-2665.
Arts through choral music 3 p.m. Feb. 9 at the T-U Center’s Jacoby Hall, 300 W. Water St., Downtown. $15. 353-1636. THOMAS PANDOLFI The pianist performs 2 p.m. Feb. 10 at Flagler College’s Lewis Auditorium, 14 Granada St., St. Augustine. $25. 797-2800. emmaconcerts.com PAUL JACOBS The young chair of the Juilliard Organ Department performs 4 p.m. Feb. 10 at St. John’s Episcopal Cathedral, 256 E. Church St., Downtown. Free. 270-1771. beachesfinearts.org JAZZ IN ST. AUGUSTINE Live jazz is featured nightly at Rhett’s Piano Bar & Brasserie, 66 Hypolita St., St. Augustine. 825-0502. JAZZ IN RIVERSIDE Trumpeter Ray Calendar and guitarist Taylor Roberts are featured 9:30 p.m. every Thur. at Kickbacks Gastropub, 910 King St., Riverside. 388-9551. JAZZ IN MANDARIN Boril Ivanov Trio plays 7 p.m. every Thur. and pianist David Gum plays 7 p.m. every Fri. at Tree Steakhouse, 11362 San Jose Blvd., Mandarin. 262-0006. DINO SALIBA Tonino’s Trattoria hosts saxophonist Saliba 6 p.m. every Sat. at 7001 Merrill Road, Arlington. 743-3848. JAZZ IN ARLINGTON Jazzland features live music 6-9 p.m. every Tue. and 8 p.m. every Fri. and Sat. at 1324 University Blvd. N., Arlington. 240-1009. jazzlandcafe.com
ART WALKS, FESTIVALS & MARKETS
“Tail of Dialogue” (pictured), a piece by Shawn Meharg, is among the works in an exhibit by abstract painters Michelle Armas, Denise Choppin, Christina Foard and Meharg at Stellers Gallery in Ponte Vedra Beach. The exhibit opens with a reception Feb. 8 and continues through Feb. 28. CHAMBER MUSIC BY BRAHMS Jacksonville University faculty members perform at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 8 at Terry Concert Hall, 2800 University Blvd. N., Arlington. $10. 256-7677. THE CLARINET AND ITS MUSIC Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra clarinetist Peter Wright II performs 7:30 p.m. Feb. 8 at Friday Musicale, 645 Oak St., Riverside. 355-7584. fridaymusicale.com
NEW DIRECTIONS VETERANS CHOIR The a cappella group sings soul, gospel and pop at 8 p.m. Feb. 8 at Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, 1100 Stockton St., Riverside. $25. 389-6222. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. CONCERT The Jacksonville Children’s Chorus joins local university and church choirs in the fourth annual celebration of Martin Luther King Jr.
FIRST FRIDAY ART WALK The tour of Art Galleries of St. Augustine is held Feb. 1 and the first Fri. of every month, with more than 15 galleries participating. 829-0065. FIRST WEDNESDAY ART WALK An art walk, featuring 30-40 galleries, museums and businesses and spanning 15 blocks, is held Feb. 6 and the first Wed. of every month in Downtown Jacksonville. An events map is available at downtownjacksonville.org/marketing ORANGE PARK FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Artists showcase their art in an open-air gallery, displaying works of ceramics, metal, glass, painting, sculpture, photography and more, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Feb. 9 and 10, in the Orange Park Mall parking lot, 1910 Wells Road, Orange Park. MID-WEEK MARKET Arts and crafts, local produce and live music are featured 3-6 p.m. every Wed. at Bull Memorial Park, corner of East Coast Drive and Seventh Street, Atlantic Beach. 247-5800. NORTH BEACHES ART WALK Galleries of Atlantic and Neptune beaches are open late, 5-9 p.m. every third Thur. of the month, at various venues from Sailfish Drive in Atlantic Beach to Neptune Beach and Town Center. For a list of participating galleries, call 249-2222. DOWNTOWN FRIDAY MARKET Arts and crafts and local produce are offered 10 a.m.-2 p.m. every Fri. at The Jacksonville Landing, 2 Independent Dr., Downtown. 353-1188. NORTH BEACH ARTS MARKET Arts & crafts, produce, community services and kids’ activities are featured 3-7 p.m. every Sat. at North Beach Park, 3721 Coastal Highway A1A, Vilano Beach (where the wooden walkover crosses A1A). 910-8386.
MUSEUMS
AMELIA ISLAND MUSEUM OF HISTORY 233 S. Third St., Fernandina Beach, 261-7378. “Freedom Comes to
Troy (Eugene Lindsey, right) remains bitter over not being allowed to play in the major leagues, even as his son Cory (Michael L. Ward) wants his own chance to play ball, in “Fences.” The multiple-Tony-winning play is presented Feb. 1-3 and 8-10 by Stage Aurora Theatrical Company on the Northside.
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“Holding On to Heritage” (pictured), a woodcut piece by Annelies Dykgraff, won first prize in the exhibit “R.A.C.E. Respecting Anybody’s Cultural Experience,” juried by NPR host Al Letson. The exhibit is displayed through March 7 at Art Center Premiere Gallery in the Bank of America Tower in Downtown Jacksonville. Fernandina,” a black history exhibit running through March, highlights the achievements of African-Americans. The children’s exhibit, “Discovery Ship,” allows kids to pilot the ship, hoist flags and learn about the history of Fernandina’s harbor. CAMP BLANDING MUSEUM 5629 S.R. 16 W., Camp Blanding, Starke, 682-3196. Artwork, weapons, uniforms and other artifacts from the activities of Camp Blanding during World War II are displayed along with outdoor displays of vehicles from WWII, Vietnam and Desert Storm. CUMMER MUSEUM OF ART & GARDENS 829 Riverside Ave., Riverside, 356-6857. “Feast of Flowers,” Jim Draper’s newest series, celebrating the 500th anniversary of the first European engagement with Florida, continues through April 7. “Cultural Fusion,” an exhibit of archival material about two vital community leaders, Eartha White and Ninah Cummer, continues through April 14. The exhibit “200 Years of Russian Decorative Arts Under the Romanovs” continues through April 27. cummer.org FLAGLER COLLEGE’S CRISP-ELLERT ART MUSEUM 48 Sevilla St., St. Augustine, 826-8530. The exhibit “Planning and Painting in Paradise,” celebrating the 125-year history of Hotel Ponce de Leon, is on display through Feb. 22. flagler.edu/crispellert JACKSONVILLE MARITIME HERITAGE CENTER 2 Independent Drive, Ste. 162, Downtown, 355-1101. The museum’s permanent collection includes steamboats, various nautical-themed art, books, documents and artifacts. JACKSONVILLE UNIVERSITY’S ALEXANDER BREST MUSEUM & GALLERY 2800 University Blvd. N., Arlington, 256-7371. JU’s Biannual Faculty Exhibition runs through Feb. 6. “Pulp Fiction,” an exhibit of work by paper artists Denise Bookwalter, Charles Clary and Lauren Clay, has an opening reception 5-7 p.m. Feb. 21. The exhibit is on display through March 13. KARPELES MANUSCRIPT MUSEUM 101 W. First St., Springfield, 356-2992. “Nursery Rhymes,” an exhibit of original illustrations and manuscripts of classic nursery rhymes, is on display through April 28. The nature photography of Carlos Rodriguez Carreon is on exhibit through Feb. 27. The permanent collection includes rare manuscripts. MANDARIN MUSEUM & HISTORICAL SOCIETY 11964 Mandarin Road, Mandarin, 268-0784. Exhibits regarding
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Harriet Beecher Stowe and the Civil War vessel Maple Leaf are on display, as well as work by Mandarin artists. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART JACKSONVILLE 333 N. Laura St., Downtown, 366-6911. Ian Bogost’s Project Atrium installation continues through March 10. “Slow: Marking Time in Photography and Film” continues through April 7. “First Coast Portfolio: A Juried Art Educators Exhibition” features art from local educators in the First Coast community through March 31. MUSEUM OF SCIENCE & HISTORY 1025 Museum Circle, Southbank, 396-6674. The exhibit “RACE: Are We So Different?” — a traveling exhibit developed by the American Anthropological Association — tells the story of race through the frameworks of science, history and contemporary experiences. The exhibit is displayed through April 28. RITZ THEATRE & MUSEUM 829 N. Davis St., Downtown, 632-5555. “Through Our Eyes” celebrates 20 years of African-American art with the exhibit “20/20 Perfect Vision,” featuring works of 20 artists, through June 30.
GALLERIES
233 WEST KING GALLERY 233 W. King St., St. Augustine, 217-7470. St. Augustine sculptor C.W. Hooper’s work in wood, stone and clay is on display through January. AMIRO ART & FOUND GALLERY 9C Aviles Street, St. Augustine, 824-8460. “Music from the Heart,” by local artist Dick Bozung, with musical folk art inspired by the harmony of the natural world, is held 5-9 p.m. Feb. 1 during First Friday Art Walk. ART GUILD OF ORANGE PARK 2054 Plainfield Ave., Orange Park, 278-4750. “Past Presidents” has an opening reception 5-7 p.m. Feb. 2. The exhibit is on display through Feb. 28. artguildoforangepark.com THE ART CENTER PREMIERE GALLERY Bank of America Tower, 50 N. Laura St., Downtown, 355-1757. “R.A.C.E. Respecting Anybody’s Cultural Experience,” an exhibit examining diversity in the world, continues through March 7. CORK ARTS DISTRICT 2689 Rosselle St., Riverside. “Duval’s Brokn Heartd Ball,” which includes a blacklight art show and live music in the CoRK-yard, is held 7:30 p.m. Feb. 15. “I’m Board 5,” a large group show whose only requirement is artwork done on or with skateboards, is held 6 p.m. Feb. 16.
Arts
Tony Rodrigues (works pictured) is the featured artist through February on the Highway Gallery, a public art project on digital billboards throughout Jacksonville. FIRST STREET GALLERY 216-B First St., Neptune Beach, 241-6928. “Mermaid Magic II,” an exhibit of regional and national artists creating their visions of magical mermaids in painting, photography, clay, glass, metal and jewelry, continues through March 3. firststreetgalleryart.com FLORIDA MINING GALLERY 5300 Shad Road, Southside, 425-2845. Artist Tony Rodrigues is the featured artist through February on the Highway Gallery, a public art project on digital billboards throughout the city. GALLERY725 725 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 5, Atlantic Beach. “Local Exposure,” an exhibit of photography by local amateurs and professionals, continues through March 10. GEORGIA NICK GALLERY 11A Aviles St., St. Augustine, 806-3348. The artist-owned studio displays Georgia Nick’s sea and landscape photography, along with local work from oil painters, a mosaic artist, potter, photographer and author. The gallery opens Feb. 1. georgianickgallery.com ISLAND ART ASSOCIATION 18 N. Second St., Fernandina Beach, 261-7020. “Outside the Box,” a judged show, continues through January. The Nassau County high school students’ art show begins with a reception 1-3 p.m. Feb. 10 and continues through the end of February. islandart.org JACK MITCHELL GALLERY Thrasher-Horne Center for the Arts, St. Johns River State College, 283 College Dr., Orange Park, 276-6750. An exhibit of Lois Greenfield’s work is on display Feb. 11-April 6. thcenter.org JACKSONVILLE MAIN LIBRARY 303 N. Laura St., Downtown, 630-1947. “North East Florida Scholastic Art Awards” exhibits 62 pieces and eight portfolios with gold key honors from more than 700 submissions from students in Baker, Clay, Duval, Nassau, St. Johns and Volusia counties. The exhibit runs through Feb. 24. artandwriting.org LEE ADAMS FLORIDA ARTISTS GALLERY Thrasher-Horne Center for the Arts, St. Johns River State College, 283 College Dr., Orange Park, 276-6750. An exhibit of Ellen Diamond’s work is on display through April 6. thcenter.org LUTHERAN SOCIAL SERVICES 4615 Philips Highway, Southside, 730-8235. The photography and mixed-media exhibit, “America: Visions of My New Country,” works by children attending the Summertime Express youth refugee camp, is displayed year-round in the main lobby. METACUSP STUDIOS GALLERY 2650 Rosselle St., Riverside, (813) 223-6190. The exhibit “200 Nudes,” figure drawings from life by Jeff Whipple, continues through Feb. 12. metacusp.com P.A.ST.A. GALLERY 214 Charlotte St., St. Augustine, 824-0251. Barbara Lutton’s work of florals, abstracts and acrylics is displayed through Jan. 31. PALENCIA FINE ARTS ACADEMY 701 Market St., Ste. 107A, St. Augustine, 819-1584. The academy, a gallery and educational institution, showcases students’ creative process, as well as exhibits. Stacie Hernandez’s works are on display. palenciafineartsacademy.com PLANTATION ARTISTS GUILD AND GALLERY Omni Amelia Island Plantation Resort, 94 Village Circle, Amelia Island, 310-6106. The exhibit “Gallery Squared,” featuring 10-inchby-10-inch wooden boxes painted in different mediums and styles by gallery artists, runs through Feb. 2. PLUM GALLERY 9 Aviles St., St. Augustine, 825-0069. The exhibit “Plum Jam(med)” by assemblage artist Barbara J. Cornett, gourd artist Mindy Hawkins, glassblower Thomas Long, non-traditional painter Deedra Ludwig, figurative artist Sara Pedigo and photographer Theresa Segal, continues through March 31. ROTUNDA GALLERY 500 San Sebastian View, St. Augustine, 209-0430. An exhibit of St. Johns County 4-H youth’s wallhanging quilts opens with a reception held 8:15-9 a.m. Feb. 5. The exhibit is on display through April 18. SEVENTH STREET GALLERY 14 S. Seventh St., Fernandina
Beach, 432-8330. “Visions Over Time,” an exhibit of works by painter and photographer James Widerman, continues through January. SIMPLE GESTURES GALLERY 4 E. White St., St. Augustine, 827-9997. Eclectic works by Steve Marrazzo are featured. SOUTHLIGHT GALLERY 6 E. Bay St., Downtown, 553-6361. The gallery features works by 29 local artists in various media. “Mixed Messages,” an exhibit of works by Eileen Walsh, Austin Moule and EV Krebs, is on display at the UNF ArtSpace at the gallery through Feb. 1. “Full Bloom,” an exhibit of work by Pam Zambetti, is on display during First Wednesday Art Walk, 5-9 p.m. Feb. 6. Belton S. Wall’s exhibit “Hearts” is displayed through March 6 in the One Show Room. SOUTH GALLERY Wilson Center for the Arts, FSCJ South Campus, 11901 Beach Blvd., Southside, 646-2023. “Pearl Divers: West Meets East,” an exhibit of paintings and mixed media by Tony Wood exploring the world of the Japanese pearl divers from a Western perspective, is on display through Feb. 1. ellewis@fscj.edu SPACE:EIGHT GALLERY 228 W. King St., St. Augustine, 829-2838. “Negro Y Blanco,” an exhibit of new work in black-and-white by Anthony Ausgang, opens with a reception held 5-11 p.m. Feb. 1. The exhibit runs through March 29. ST. AUGUSTINE VISITOR CENTER 10 South Castillo Dr., St. Augustine, 825-1000. ”Picasso Art & Arena,” an exhibit showcasing 39 pieces of Pablo Picasso’s work from the Fundación Picasso Museo Casa Natal in Málaga, Spain, is on display through May 11. “Hanging with Picasso” features select works of St. Johns County students hanging alongside Picasso’s work through May. 11. artsalivestjohns.com STEELERS GALLERY AT PONTE VEDRA 240 A1A N., Ste. 4, Ponte Vedra Beach, 273-6065. The opening reception for an exhibit featuring the works of abstract painters Michelle Armas, Denise Choppin, Christina Foard and Shawn Meharg is held 5:30-8:30 p.m. Feb. 1. The exhibit runs through Feb. 28. STUDIO 121 121 W. Forsyth St., Ste. 100, Downtown, 561-2146. This working studio and gallery features works by Mary Atwood, Joyce Gabiou, Terese Muller, Matthew Patterson, Charles Payne, Mary St. Germain and Mark S. Zimmerman, through Jan. 31. Louise Freshman Brown is the featured artist for February and March. ST. AUGUSTINE ART ASSOCIATION 22 Marine St., St. Augustine, 824-2310. A Figure Portrait exhibit of gesture drawings, academic figure studies, formal portraits, busts and people in groups, is on display through Jan. 30. The gallery’s permanent collection features 16th-century artifacts detailing Sir Francis Drake’s 1586 burning of St. Augustine. TAPA THAT 820 Lomax St., Riverside, 383-5650. “Local Artists Presents: An Artful Evening” features original artwork on display at 6 p.m. Feb. 10. artistscomingtogether.com UNIVERSITY OF NORTH FLORIDA GALLERY OF ART 1 UNF Dr., Bldg. 2, Rm. 1001, Southside, 620-2534. “An Altering Role: Works by Cat Snapp & The Bump It Mafia,” a celebration of womanhood in printmaking that highlights the importance of camaraderie not just among women, but among artists of all backgrounds, is on display through Feb. 21. “Recent Acquisitions: Selections from the Wells Fargo Donation, Part 2” is on display through Feb. 21. WHITE PEONY 216 Charlotte St., St. Augustine, 819-9770. This gallery boutique features a variety of handcrafted jewelry, wearable art and recycled/upcycled items. For a complete list of galleries, log on to folioweekly.com. To list your event, send info time, date, location (street address, city), admission price and contact number to print to David Johnson, 9456 Philips Hwy., Ste. 11, Jacksonville FL 32256 or email events@folioweekly.com. Deadline is 4 p.m. Tue., eight days before publication.
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The EYE
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he Museum of Contemporary Arts Jacksonville, CoRK Arts District and Florida Mining Gallery opened their doors Jan. 24-26 for PhotoJax 2013, Jacksonville’s photography festival. A section of Laura Street in front of MOCA was closed off Jan. 25, for the viewing party, #PhotoJax500, an Instagram photo contest. Five hundred photos from Instagram users in Northeast Florida were displayed on TV screens in the street. CoRK Arts District displayed prints of #PhotoJax500 winners, as well as work by local photographers and UNF photography students, at a reception on Jan. 26. Text and photos by Jade Douso 6
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The EYE
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1. Steve Williams, Matilda Anderson 2. Brenda and Kip Kolb 3. Alan Howard, MOCA board chairman, and Marcelle Polednik, MOCA director 4. Jessica Lazzara, Chris Wynne 5. Marisa Yow, Rachel Rossin 6. Leah Duck, Jonathan Duck, Tony Rodrigues
7. Corey Batchelor, Colin Barnes, Brandon Santiago 8. Dustin Davis, Amanda Lenhardt 9. Katie Chellemi, Bronwyn Knight 10. Dwight and Cheryl Williams 11. Leia and Ian Desousa 12. Aaron Levi Garvey, Rachel Rossin, Lance and Jenny Hager-Vickery
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Happenings
Former Secretary of Defense and former CIA director Robert M. Gates appears in Jacksonville as the second of three guests in the Florida Forum Speaker Series, which benefits Wolfson Children’s Hospital. Gates speaks Feb. 2 at the Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts in Downtown Jacksonville.
EVENTS
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VETERANS CAREER FAIR & DIVERSITY JOB EXPO This job fair is held 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Jan. 31 at Osborn Convention Center, 1000 Water St., Downtown. Admission is free. Register at employmentseeker.net ONE SPARK TOWN HALL An update on the big event for April is held 6 p.m. Jan. 31 at The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Downtown. Admission is free. floridatheatre.com FLAGLER FORUM The Flagler College Forum on Government & Public Policy Series continues with columnist Lynn Sweet 7 p.m. Jan. 31 at Flagler College’s Auditorium, 14 Granada St., St. Augustine. Admission is free. 819-6400. flagler.edu BEER-THEMED SILENT AUCTION The fundraiser is held 4-9 p.m. Feb. 1 at Dahlia’s Pour House, 2695 Post St., Riverside. Proceeds benefit runners for the Muckfest Mud Run in March. mwisdom.wix.com/dahliaspourhouse JOHN EDWARD The man who listens to dead people and then tells us about it appears 7 p.m. Feb. 1 at The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Downtown. Tickets are $62.50 and $82.50. floridatheatre.com URBAN EDUCATION SYMPOSIUM The fifth annual symposium, themed Reclaiming Young Black Males for Jacksonville’s Future, is held 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Feb. 2 at Main Library, 303 N. Laura St., Downtown. Dr. John Jackson discusses “Are Single Gender Schools an Answer?” A youth forum is featured. 599-0399. SCHOOL OF THE 16TH CENTURY The annual event is held 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Feb. 2 at Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park, 11 Magnolia Ave., St. Augustine. Demonstrations, training drills, interpretations and 16th century-related displays are featured. Regular folks in non-period clothing (clothing must be made of all natural fibers for safety reasons) may participate in educational and weapons training. A ladies’ needlecraft practice and craft session is offered. fountainofyouthflorida.com COMMUNITY FIRST SATURDAY The monthly event features a bike tour around San Marco Feb. 2. For details, directions and time, go to communityfirstsaturdays.wordpress.com LEVELING THE PLAYING FIELD The new foundation holds a family-oriented football party 2 p.m. Feb. 3 at Godspeed Elite Sports Performance, 11653 Central Parkway, Jacksonville. Games, sports activities, fitness events and food are featured. No alcohol. Tickets are $5. Lonnie Marts and James Coleman formed the foundation to help local at-risk youth. At 6:45 p.m., the party moves inside to watch the big game. 379-9480. levelfieldfoundation.org RECONSTRUCTION IN NORTHEAST FLORIDA Bobbie Fost discusses Reconstruction in the area noon Feb. 6 at Amelia Island Museum of History, 233 S. Third St., Fernandina Beach. Admission is free. 261-7378. ameliamuseum.org COSMIC CONCERTS Laser Pink Floyd: The Best of ‘The
Wall’ 7 p.m., Laser Pink Floyd: Wish You Were Here 8 p.m., Laser Pink Floyd: Dark Side of the Moon 9 p.m. and Laser Pink Floyd: The Wall 10 p.m. Feb. 1 in Bryan-Gooding Planetarium, Museum of Science & History, 1025 Museum Circle, Southbank. Online tickets are $5. 396-7062. moshplanetarium.org FARMERS & ARTS MARKET This market is held 11 a.m.-4 p.m. on the second and fourth Sun. of the month at 2042 Park Ave., Orange Park. Everything is handmade or homegrown. Live entertainment, kids’ activities and food are featured. 264-2635. townoforangepark.com CHOCOLATE TOUR The tour departs 1:30 p.m. every Sat. through February from Old Town Trolley’s Welcome Center, 27 San Marco Ave., St. Augustine. Stops include Aviles Restaurant, Hilton Bayfront, Raintree Restaurant and San Sebastian Winery. Reservations are required; call 829-3800. ST. JOHNS RIVER FARMERS MARKET Local produce, arts and crafts are offered 10 a.m.-2 p.m. every Sat. at Alpine Groves Park, 2060 S.R. 13, Switzerland. 347-8900. FARMERS MARKET OF SAN MARCO Fresh local and regional produce is offered 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m. every Sat. at 1620 Naldo Ave., Swaim Memorial United Methodist Church parking lot, San Marco. Family fun day is the third Sat. 607-9935. ANCIENT OAKS ARTS & FARMERS MARKET An open-air farmers market, noon-4 p.m. Jan. 27 and every other Sun. at Mandarin Community Club, 12447 Mandarin Road. 607-9935.
POLITICS, BUSINESS, ACTIVISM
UNF OSPREY CAREER FAIR University of North Florida’s Career Fair is held 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Feb. 1 at the University Center, 12000 Alumni Drive, Southside. More than 50 employers recruit for internship, co-op, part-time and/or full-time employment. Admission is $10; free for UNF students and alumni. Business attire is required. Bring 15-20 résumés. 620-2955. unf.edu/careerservices SOUTHSIDE BUSINESS MEN’S CLUB Ron Stone, United Way Campaign chair at Mayo Clinic, is the featured speaker 11:30 a.m. Jan. 30 at San Jose Country Club, 7529 San Jose Blvd., Mandarin. Admission is $20 for members, with lunch; $25 for nonmembers, with lunch. Historian Ron Radford discusses St. Augustine Feb. 6. 396-5559.
BOOKS & WRITING
TIM DORSEY New York Times bestselling author Dorsey signs copies of his 15th Serge mystery, “The Riptide UltraGlide,” 7 p.m. Feb. 1 at The BookMark, 220 First St., Neptune Beach. 241-9026.
Happenings SISTERS IN CRIME The Florida Sisters in Crime hold an open house 10:30 a.m.-noon Feb. 2 at Southeast Regional Library, 10599 Deerwood Park Blvd., Jacksonville. Free door prizes, books and snacks. Admission is free. floridasistersincrime.com
COMEDY
MARVIN DIXON Dixon appears 8 p.m. Jan. 30 and 31 and Feb. 1, and 8 and 10 p.m. Feb. 2 at The Comedy Zone, 3130 Hartley Road (in Ramada Inn), Mandarin. Tickets range from $10-$18. Comedy Zone All Stars 8 p.m. Feb. 5. 292-4242. comedyzone.com COMEDY CLUB OF JACKSONVILLE Tireless physical comedian PJ Walsh appears 8:34 p.m. Jan. 31, 8:04 p.m. Feb. 1 and 8:04 and 10:18 p.m. Feb. 2 at the new club, 11000 Beach Blvd., Ste. 8, Southside. Tickets range from $4-$15. 646-4277. jacksonvillecomedy.com THE GYPSY COMEDY CLUB Ricky Reyes and Chris Buck appear 8:30 p.m. Feb. 1 and 2 at 828 Anastasia Blvd., St. Augustine. Tickets are $10 and $12. 461-8843.
NATURE, SPORTS, OUTDOORS
ROWING YOUTH TRY IT DAYS Jacksonville Rowing Club offers two chances to see if you have what it takes to row: 4:30-6:30 p.m. Jan. 31 and 9-11 a.m. Feb. 2 at 5920 Arlington Expressway, Jacksonville. The sessions are free, and include a boathouse tour, guided by coaches and experienced youth rowers. Spring and summer rowing programs are available. 566-7668. For directions and details, go to jaxrow.org MARITIME ARCHEOLOGY DAY The inaugural event is held 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Feb. 2 at Anastasia State Park, 1340A A1A S., St. Augustine. The Florida Public Archeology Network, LAMP of the St. Augustine Lighthouse, Pirate & Treasure Museum, St. Augustine Yacht Club, Fort Matanzas and other groups offer educational, fun and informational booths. Kayak tour, guided walks and seafood are also featured. Amy Hendrickson and Warehouse Blues perform. Admission is free with paid park admission. 461-2033. friendsofanastasia.org JACKSONVILLE GIANTS The local ABA champs take on the Louisiana Gators 7 p.m. Feb. 2 at UNF Arena, 11852 UNF Drive, Southside. For ticket info, go to jacksonvillegiants.com WWE SMACKDOWN They’re all here: WWE superstars The Big Show, Celtic Warrior Sheamus, Apex Predator Randy Orton, Alberto del Rio, Rey Mysterio, Sin Cara, Kofi Kingston, The Miz, Wade Barrett and Divas, 7 p.m. Feb. 5 at Veterans Memorial Arena, 300 Randolph Blvd., Downtown. Tickets range from $15-$95. 800-745-3000. ticketmaster.com MASTER NATURALIST PROGRAM An adult environmental education program is offered 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Feb. 5, 7, 12, 14, 19 and 21 at Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience, 9505 Ocean Shore Blvd., St. Augustine. Cost is $225, which includes field trips, 40 hours of instruction, workbook and, upon completion, registration in the UF FMNP database. To register, go to MasterNaturalist.org NATURE HIKE A park ranger leads a leisurely paced hike to discover the island’s natural communities, 1 p.m. Jan. 26 at Ribault Club, Ft. George Island Cultural State Park, 11241 Ft. George Road, Ft. George Island. Bring bug spray and bottled water. No reservations are necessary and the program is free. 251-2320. floridastateparks.org/littletalbotisland
KIDS
HARRIET TUBMAN & THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD Theatreworks presents this kid-geared drama, about the heroic woman who freed herself and hundreds of other slaves, 10 a.m. and noon Jan. 30 at The Florida Theatre, 128 E. Forsyth St., Jacksonville. Tickets are $7.50 in advance; $8 at the door. 353-3500, 355-2787.
COMMUNITY EVENTS
LGBT WORSHIP SERVICES Services are held 10:30 a.m. every Sun. at First Coast Metropolitan Community Church, 2915 C.R. 214, St. Augustine. 824-2802. WOMEN’S HEALTH SERIES As part of the Jewish Community Alliance’s Women’s Health series, the J Institute presents “Menopause — Understanding Our Changing Bodies” 6 p.m. Jan. 30 at JCA, 8505 San Jose Blvd., Mandarin. Free to JCA members; $5 for non-members. 730-2100 ext. 223. jcajax.org JEWISH ETHICS COURSE The Rohr Jewish Learning Institute offers the course “Living with Integrity: Navigating Everyday Ethical Dilemmas,” conducted by Rabbi Nochum Kurinsky of Chabad @ the Beaches. The six-session course is held 7 p.m. Jan. 30, Feb. 6, 13, 20, 27 and March 6 at The Aaron & Blanche Scharf Chabad Center, 521 A1A N., Ponte Vedra. The course challenges students to articulate their opinions, while providing practical Talmudic wisdom to help navigate through life’s ethical challenges. All JLI courses are open to the public; you don’t need to be affiliated with a synagogue, temple or other house of worship. 543-9301. myJLI.com
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JAX ZOO DISCOUNTS January discounts are $2 Tuesdays, Wacky Wednesdays, $3 Thursdays and $5 Fridays. For coupons and details, go to jacksonvillezoo.org. Discounts cannot be combined with any other offer including Zoo Value promise Tickets. 370 Zoo Parkway, Jacksonville. 757-4463. of benefit OLD TIME JAM Mountain-type folk music is played 7 p.m. every Tue. at Underbelly, 113 E. Bay St., Downtown. Open to players of all skill levels. Admission is free. facebook.com/JacksonvilleOldTimeJam SCRIPTURE STUDY Sessions for a free five-week study are held 6:30 p.m. Feb. 4 and 11 at Hineni Messianic Fellowship, 1797 Old Moultrie Rd., Ste. 102, St. Augustine. 827-9731. hinenimessiah.com CHILDREN’S COMMISSION SEEKING SEASONAL STAFF The Jacksonville Children’s Commission seeks seasonal temporary staff to help provide meal service assistance for organizations participating in the Summer Food Service Program, June 10-Aug. 9. Positions include Site Aide ($7.99 an hour), Site Supervisor ($9 an hour), Site Monitor ($10.14 an hour) and Admin Aide ($9.61 an hour). Applicants must pass background screening on a local, state and federal level, as required by the state of Florida and must be 18 years of age or older. Must have reliable transportation and a Florida Class E driver’s license; must meet standards required to obtain a city of Jacksonville driver’s certification. An online application is required. 630-2489. coj.net
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CLASSES & GROUPS
TM LECTURE A free introductory Transcendental Meditation talk is held 6:30 p.m. Jan. 30 at South Mandarin Library, 12125 San Jose Blvd., Jacksonville. 375-9517. tm.org/jacksonville MEMORY ENHANCEMENT PROGRAM Learn simple strategies that focus on cognitive stimulation, education and socialization. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. every Tue. and Thur. at Christ Episcopal Church, 400 San Juan Drive, Ponte Vedra Beach. 729-9535. DEBTORS ANONYMOUS Debtors Anonymous 12-Step meetings 7 p.m. every Thur. at Christian Family Chapel, Bldg. D, 10365 Old St. Augustine Rd., Jacksonville. 269-8010. LIFEGUARD TRYOUTS St. Johns County Fire Rescue holds tryouts 10 a.m. Feb. 2 at Solomon Calhoun Community Center, 1300 Duval St., St. Augustine. The Marine Rescue Academy is held 6-10 p.m. Feb. 4-7, 12-14, 19-21 and 26-28, and at 9 a.m. Feb. 10, 17 and 24 and March 2 at Marine Rescue Beach Office, 366 A1A Beach Blvd., St. Augustine. For details, call 209-0366 or go to co.st-johns.fl.us/BCCFire_Rescue JAX BEACH LIFEGUARDS The American Red Cross Volunteer Life Saving Corps holds its winter class orientation 9 a.m. Feb. 3 at the Station, Beach Boulevard at the ocean, Jax Beach. For details, call 249-9141. COMBAT MARTIAL ARTS Six-week martial arts classes for men and women are offered 7-8 p.m. every Tue. and Thur. at 4083 Sunbeam Road, Southside. The fee is $40 a month, which includes access to fitness center. 343-6298. YOUNG SURVIVORS Young Survivors Group (those diagnosed with cancer at a young age) meets 7-8:30 p.m. on the first and third Mon. each month at the Women’s Center of Jacksonville, 5644 Colcord Ave. 722-3000 ext. 224 or email mail@womenscenterofjax.org FREE YOGA ON THE RIVER Karen Roumillat, RYT, teaches free gentle yoga 9 a.m. on the fourth Sun. of the month on the boardwalk, weather permitting, at Walter Jones Historical Park, 11964 Mandarin Road, Mandarin. Bring a mat. 287-0452. MARINE VETERANS GROUP The Oldest City Detachment 383 gathers 7 p.m. on first Tue. of the month at Elks Lodge 829, 1420 A1A S., St. Augustine. 461-0139. mclfl383.org VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA The Duval County Chapter No. 1046 gathers 7 p.m. the first Wed. of every month at the Elks Lodge, 1855 West Road, Southside. 419-8821. NAMI SUPPORT GROUP National Alliance on Mental Illness meets 7-8:30 p.m. every first and third Thur. each month at Ortega United Methodist Church, 4807 Roosevelt Blvd., Westside. Admission is free. 389-5556. ortegaumc.org NICOTINE ANONYMOUS (NIC-A) Want to quit smoking or using other forms of nicotine? Nic-A is free, and you don’t have to quit to attend the meetings, held 6:30 p.m. every Wed. at Trinity Lutheran Church, 1415 S. McDuff Ave., Westside. 404-6044. nicotineanonymous.org Q-GROUP ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS This free, open discussion is held 5:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri. at Quality Life Center, 11265 Alumni Way, Southside. alcoholicanonymous.org NAR-A-NON This group meets 8 p.m. every Tue. and Thur. at 4172 Shirley Ave., Avondale. 945-7168.
© 2011
To have your events or club meetings listed here, send us the details: time, date, location (street address and city), admission price and contact number to print to events@folioweekly.com or click the link in our Happenings section at folioweekly.com. Deadline is 4 p.m. Wed. for the next Wednesday publication.
JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 43
Fo
Bite
Sized
Tossgreen emphasizes fresh ingredients regularly cooked or prepared in small batches. Photos: Caron Streibich
All Mixed Up
Tossgreen offers a fun, healthy, fast-casual dining experience TOSSGREEN 4375 Southside Blvd., Southside 619-4356
C
risp. Crunchy. Chewy. Creamy. The possibilities are endless. You’ll never think of salad the same way again. Tossgreen takes healthy to a new level by offering fresh and sustainable made-toorder salads and burritos. Simple instruction signage guides the ordering process. The toughest part is deciding if you’re hungry for a burrito (or tortilla-less burrito bowl) or salad. Salads begin with a leafy green base: iceberg, romaine, mixed greens or spinach. I opted for half-spinach and half-mixed greens. For $5.99, you select five toppings. There are more than 50 vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, “crunch” items and various cheeses. Want more than five? Pony up 49 cents each. I enjoy a mingling of flavors and textures, so my creation included hearts of palm, artichoke hearts, crisp pita chips, julienned carrots, sun-dried tomatoes, chickpeas and herb-roasted chicken, which was moist and flavorful. Tossgreen also offers items you may not typically find on the average bed of lettuce, like jicama (a crunchy, slightly sweet root), red grapes, wasabi peas, toasted coconut, goat cheese and white cheddar. Adding proteins is only 99 cents to $1.99. Options include herb-roasted chicken, steak, roasted shrimp, roasted tofu, bacon, boiled eggs and avocado — we know, it’s a fruit — but it has about 7 grams of protein. Ingredients are placed in a large bowl with your choice of salad dressing, then tossed and chopped, ensuring an even distribution of dressing. With 18 choices, there’s something for the pickiest diner, including ones with food allergies (dairy, gluten, oil). There’s even a simple lime or lemon squeeze, which adds a surprising amount of flavor and minimal calories. I sampled the carrot ginger, but found it
Everything is recyclable or compostable, down to the bowls and plastic drinking cups.
44 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
READ THE BLOG For more coverage of Northeast Florida’s restaurants, go to folioweekly.com/bite-sized.
too sweet and opted for the lemon shallot vinaigrette. A bit bland; I wouldn’t order it again. I made a mental note to try the chipotle ancho vinaigrette. Feeling uninspired? Order a chefdesigned salad. Prices vary, but these concoctions are complete with protein, dressing and mix-ins. For those craving a burrito, select a base of regular or wheat tortilla or bowl. It’s soon copiously filled with brown or white rice, warm fajita-style veggies and black or pinto beans. Again, proteins are extra. There are several sauces that can be added, plus cheese and sour cream. Tossgreen’s emphasis on sustainable green practices is evident everywhere. Some of the locally sourced items, along with their sources, are handwritten on a chalkboard. Everything is recyclable or compostable, down to the bowls and plastic drinking cups. Chicken and steak are all-natural. Offering four flavors of frozen yogurt and assorted mix-ins, Tossgreen wraps up your made-to-order meal with a healthful and tasty dessert. Caron Streibich Folio Weekly Bite Club Host biteclub@folioweekly.com
With more than 50 toppings, customizing your salad is fun.
Dining
DINING GUIDE KEY
Average Entrée Cost: $ = Less than $8 $$ = $8-$14 $$$ = $15-$22 $$$$ = $23 & up BW=Beer, Wine FB=Full Bar CM=Children’s Menu TO=Take Out B=Breakfast Br=Brunch L=Lunch D=Dinner F = Folio Weekly distribution point
AMELIA ISLAND, FERNANDINA BEACH, YULEE
BARBARA JEAN’S RESTAURANT See Ponte Vedra. 960030 Gateway Blvd. 277-3700. $$-$$$ BRETT’S WATERWAY CAFÉ F At the foot of Centre Street, the upscale restaurant overlooks Harbor Marina. Daily specials, fresh Florida seafood and an extensive wine list. FB. L & D, daily. 1 S. Front St. 261-2660. $$$ BRIGHT MORNINGS The small café offers freshly baked goods. B & L daily. 105 S. Third St. 491-1771. $$ CAFÉ KARIBO F Eclectic cuisine, served under the oaks in historic Fernandina, features sandwiches and chef’s specials. Alfresco dining. FB. L & D, Tue.-Sat.; L, Sun. & Mon. 27 N. Third St. 277-5269. $$ CHEZ LEZAN BAKERY F European-style breads, pastries, croissants, muffins and pies baked daily. 1014 Atlantic Ave. 491-4663. $ DAVID’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE The brand-new fine dining restaurant offers Dover sole, Maine lobster, steaks and seafood, served in an upscale atmosphere by an attentive waitstaff. FB. D, nightly. 802 Ash St. 310-6049. $$$$ 8TH STREET DINER F Familiar diner fare and specialties, including Italian Wedding Soup, teriyaki chicken wrap and The Best BLT. CM, D. 17 S. Eighth St. 491-0330. $$ FLORIDA HOUSE INN & RESTAURANT Southern-style fare features fried chicken, shrimp ’n’ grits, burgers and salads, served in this 1850s house in the historic district. CM. FB. L, Thur.-Sun. 22 S. Third St. 491-7251. $$ GENNARO’S RISTORANTE ITALIANO Southern Italian cuisine: pasta, gourmet ravioli, hand-tossed pizzas. Specialties are margharita pizza and shrimp feast. Bread is baked on-site. CM, BW. L & D, daily. 5472 First Coast Highway, Amelia Island, 491-1999. $$ HALFTIME SPORTS BAR & GRILL Owner Jon Walker F Owners John and Bretta Walker offer sports bar fare including onion rings, spring rolls, burgers, wraps and wings. Plenty of TVs show nearly every sport imaginable. BW. L & D, Wed.-Mon. 320 S. Eighth St. 321-0303. $ HAPPY TOMATO COURTYARD CAFE & BBQ F Favorite items include a pulled pork sandwich, chicken salad and walnut chocolate chunk cookie, served in a casual, laidback atmosphere. BW. CM. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 7 S. Third St. 321-0707. $$ JACK & DIANE’S F The casual cafe offers steak & eggs, pancakes, Cajun scampi, etouffée, curry pizza, vegan black bean cakes, shrimp & grits, and hand-carved steaks. FB. B, L & D, daily. 708 Centre St. 321-1444. $$ KABUKI JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE & SUSHI BAR Teppanyaki masters create your meal. 37-item sushi bar. BW. D, Tue.Sun. Amelia Plaza. 277-8782. $$ KELLEY’S COURTYARD CAFE She crab soup, salads, fried green tomatoes, sandwiches and wraps are served indoors or out on the patio. Vegetarian dishes are also offered. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 19 S. Third St. 432-8213. $ LULU’S AT THE THOMPSON HOUSE F Innovative lunch menu offers po’boys, seafood “little plates” served in a historic house. Dinner features fresh local seafood. Nightly specials. BW. L & D, Tue.-Sat., Br. Sun. 11 S. Seventh St. 432-8394. $$ MONTEGO BAY COFFEE CAFE Locally owned and operated, offering specialty coffees, fruit smoothies. Dine in or hit the drive-thru. B & L, Mon.-Sat. 463363 S.R. 200, Yulee. 225-3600. $ MOON RIVER PIZZA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Northernstyle pizza by the pie or the slice. Choose from more than 20 toppings. Owner-selected wines and a large beer selection. BW. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 925 S. 14th St. 321-3400. $ THE MUSTARD SEED CAFE Organic eatery and juice bar offers an extensive menu offers vegetarian, vegan items. Daily specials: local seafood, free-range chicken, fresh
organic produce. CM. B & L, Mon.-Sat. 833 TJ Courson Rd. 277-3141. $$ PEPPER’S MEXICAN GRILL & CANTINA F The family restaurant offers authentic Mexican cuisine. BW, CM. L & D, daily. 520 Centre St. 272-2011. $$ PLAE *Bite Club Certified! The cozy venue offers an innovative, PLAEful dining experience. L, Tue.-Sat.; D, nightly. Omni Amelia Island Plantation Spa & Shops. 277-2132. $$$ SALT, THE GRILL Best of Jax ’12 winner. Elegant dining features a menu offering local seafood and produce, served in a contemporary coastal setting. FB. D, Tue.-Sat. The Ritz-Carlton, 4750 Amelia Island Pkwy., Amelia Island. 491-6746. $$$$ THE SALTY PELICAN BAR & GRILL Chef T.J. Pelletier F The cozy new spot offers waterfront views. Local seafood and produce create signature dishes, like broiled oysters and oyster po’boys. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 12 N. Front St. 277-3811. $$-$$$ SLIDERS SEASIDE GRILL F Oceanfront dining; local seafood, shrimp, crab cakes, outdoor beachfront tiki & raw bar, covered deck and kids’ playground. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 1998 S. Fletcher Ave. 277-6652. $$ THE SURF F Dine inside or on the large oceanview deck. Fresh fish, shrimp, steaks and nightly specials. FB. L & D, daily. 3199 S. Fletcher Ave. 261-5711. $$ TASTY’S FRESH BURGERS & FRIES F Tasty’s offers burgers (Angus beef, turkey or veggie) and fries (like cheese fries, sweet potato fries), along with dogs, shakes, floats and soup. L & D, Mon.-Sat. CM, BW. 710 Centre St. 321-0409. $ TIMOTI’S FRY SHAK F The casual seafood place features local wild-caught shrimp, fish and oysters, along with blackboard specials. L & D, daily. CM, BW. 21 N. Third St. 310-6550. $$ T-RAY’S BURGER STATION F Best of Jax 2012 winner. The favorite local spot serves grilled or blackened fish sandwiches, homemade burgers. BW, TO. B & L, Mon.-Sat. 202 S. Eighth St. 261-6310. $ 29 SOUTH EATS F Part of historic Fernandina Beach’s downtown scene. Award-winning Chef Scotty serves traditional world cuisine with a modern twist. L, Tue.-Sat.; D, Mon.-Sat.; Sun. brunch. 29 S. Third St. 277-7919. $$
ARLINGTON, REGENCY
CLEOTA’S SOUTHERN AMERICAN CUISINE F Locally owned and operated, Cleota’s offers authentic, homestyle Southern cuisine, like fried green tomatoes, fried chicken, shrimp & grits, mac & cheese. Gourmet desserts. L & D, Tue.Sun. TO. 2111 University Blvd. N. 800-2102. $ THE STEAKHOUSE @ GOLD CLUB Chef Gregg Rothang F Best of Jax 2012 winner. The Steakhouse offers daily lunch and dinner specials, wings, wraps, sandwiches, burgers, steaks and seafood; happy hour buffets Thur. and Fri. FB. L & D, daily. 320 Gen. Doolittle Dr. 645-5500. $$ KABUTO JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE & SUSHI BAR Steak & shrimp, filet mignon & lobster, shrimp & scallops, a sushi bar, teppanyaki grill and traditional Japanese cuisine. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 10055 Atlantic Blvd. 724-8883. $$$ LA NOPALERA Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Intracoastal. 8818 Atlantic Blvd. 720-0106. $ NERO’S CAFE F Traditional Italian fare, including seafood, veal, beef, chicken and pasta dishes. Weekly specials are lasagna, 2-for-1 pizza and AYCE spaghetti. CM, FB. L, Sun.; D, daily. 3607 University Blvd. N. 743-3141. $$ REGENCY ALE HOUSE & RAW BAR Friendly service in a nautical setting. Fresh fish, oysters, clams, specialty pastas. BW. L & D, daily. 9541 Regency Sq. Blvd. S. 720-0551. $$ UNIVERSITY DINER F The diner serves familiar breakfast fare and lunch like meatloaf, burgers, sandwiches: wraps, BLTs, clubs, melts. Daily specials. BW. B & L, Sat. & Sun.; B, L & D, Mon.-Fri. 5959 Merrill Rd. 762-3433. $
AVONDALE, ORTEGA
BAGEL LOVE F This spot serves breakfast and lunch sandwiches, wraps, salads, gluten-free baked goods, freshsqueezed orange juice. CM. B & L, daily. 4114 Herschel St., Ste. 121. 634-7253. $ BISCOTTIS F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Mozzarella bruschetta, Avondale pizza, espresso, cappuccino. Daily specials. B, Tue.-Sun.; L & D, daily. 3556 St. Johns Ave. 387-2060. $$$ THE BLUE FISH RESTAURANT & OYSTER BAR F Fresh seafood, steaks and more are served in a casual atmosphere. Half-portions are available. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 3551 St. Johns Ave., Shoppes of Avondale. 387-0700. $$$ BRICK RESTAURANT F Creative all-American fare like tuna tartare, seaweed salad and Kobe burger. Outside dining. FB. L & D, daily. 3585 St. Johns Ave. 387-0606. $$$ THE CASBAH CAFE F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Authentic Middle Eastern dishes – ryders, a variety of pita choices and wraps – are served in a friendly atmosphere. Hookahs
The family-owned Casa Maria serves authentic Mexican cuisine, including the house special tacos de asada, at two locations, Jacksonville Beach and Northside near River City Marketplace (pictured). Photo: Walter Coker available. BW. L & D, daily. 3628 St. Johns Ave. 981-9966. $$ ESPETO BRAZILIAN STEAK HOUSE F Gauchos carve the meat onto your plate from serving tables. FB. D, Tue.-Sun., closed Mon. 4000 St. Johns Ave., Ste. 40. 388-4884. $$$ THE FOX RESTAURANT F A local landmark 50+ years. Ian & Mary Chase serve classic diner-style fare, homemade desserts. B & L daily. 3580 St. Johns Ave. 387-2669. $ GREEN MAN GOURMET F Organic and natural products, spices, teas, salts, BW. Open daily. 3543 St. Johns Ave. 384-0002. $ MOJO NO. 4 F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Beaches. 3572 St. Johns Ave. 381-6670. $$ ORSAY Best of Jax 2012 winner. The French/American bistro focuses on craftsmanship and service. FB. D, Mon.-Sat.; Brunch & D, Sun. 3630 Park St. 381-0909. $$$ SAKE HOUSE #5 JAPANESE GRILL & SUSHI BAR New at Shoppes of Avondale. See Riverside. Sake, BW. L & D, daily. 3620 St. Johns Ave. 388-5688. $$ TOM & BETTY’S F A Jacksonville tradition for more than 30 years, Tom & Betty’s serves hefty sandwiches with classic car themes, along with homemade-style dishes. CM, FB. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 4409 Roosevelt Blvd. 387-3311. $$
BAYMEADOWS
AL’S PIZZA F See Beaches. 8060 Philips Hwy. 731-4300. $ ANCIENT CITY SUBS F Locally owned-and-operated by Andy and Rhonna Rockwell, the St. Augustine-themed sandwich shop serves gourmet subs – toasted, pressed or cold – and salads. CM, TO. Mon.-Sat. 8060 Philips Hwy., Ste. 207 (at Baymeadows). 446-9988. $ BOWL OF PHO The new spot’s varied menu of Vietnamese and Thai dishes has authentic ingredients, prepared fresh, including egg rolls, grilled pork and chicken, lotus root salad, and salted fish fried rice. Boba is also served. L & D, daily. 9902 Old Baymeadows Rd. 646-4455. $$ BROADWAY RISTORANTE & PIZZERIA F Family-owned&-operated NYC-style pizzeria serves hand-tossed, brickoven-baked pizza, traditional Italian dinners, wings, subs. Delivery. CM, BW. L & D, daily. 10920 Baymeadows Rd., Ste. 3. 519-8000. $$ DEERWOOD DELI & DINER F ’50s-style diner serves malts, shakes, Reubens, Cubans, burgers, traditional breakfast items. CM. B & L, daily. 9934 Old Baymeadows Rd. 641-4877. $$ THE FIFTH ELEMENT F Authentic Indian, South Indian and Indochinese dishes made with artistic flair. Lunch buffet includes lamb, goat, chicken, tandoori and biryani items. CM. L & D, daily. 9485 Baymeadows Rd. 448-8265. $$ INDIA’S RESTAURANT F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Extensive menu of entrées, clay-oven grilled Tandoori specialties and chicken tandoor, fish, seafood and korma. L, Mon.-Sat., D, daily. 9802 Baymeadows Rd., Ste. 8. 620-0777. $$ LARRY’S GIANT SUBS F Best of Jax winner. All over town, Larry’s piles ’em high and serves ’em fast. Some Larry’s have B & W and/or breakfast. CM. L & D, daily. 3928 Baymeadows Rd., Ste. 9, 737-7740; 8616 Baymeadows Rd. 739-2498. $ LEMONGRASS F Upscale Thai cuisine in a metropolitan atmosphere. Chef Aphayasane’s innovative creations include roast duckling and fried snapper. BW. R. L, Mon.-Fri.; D, Mon.-Sat. 9846 Old Baymeadows Rd. 645-9911. $$ MANDALOUN MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE *Bite Club Certified! F The Lebanese restaurant has authentic cuisine: lahm meshwe, kafta khoshkhas and baked filet of red snapper. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 9862 Old Baymeadows Rd. 646-1881. $$
NATIVE SUN NATURAL FOODS MARKET F Best of Jax 2012 winner. The organic supermarket offers a full deli and a hot bar with fresh soups, quesadillas, rotisserie chicken and vegan sushi, as well as a fresh juice and smoothie bar. 11030 Baymeadows Rd. 260-2791. $ OMAHA STEAKHOUSE *Bite Club Certified! Center-cut beef, seafood, sandwiches served in an English tavern atmosphere. Signature dish is a 16-ounce bone-in ribeye. Desserts include crème brûlée. FB. L & D, daily. 9300 Baymeadows Rd., Embassy Suites Hotel. 739-6633. $$ ORANGE TREE HOT DOGS Best of Jax 2012. See Intracoastal West. 8380 Baymeadows Rd., Ste. 4. 733-0588. $ PATTAYA THAI GRILLE F Traditional Thai and vegetarian items and a 40-plus item vegetarian menu served in a contemporary atmosphere. BW. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 9551 Baymeadows Rd., Ste. 1. 646-9506. $$ PIZZA PALACE F See San Marco. 3928 Baymeadows Rd. 527-8649. $$ SNEAKERS SPORTS GRILLE F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Beaches. L & D, daily. 8133 Point Meadows Dr. 519-0509. $$ STICKY FINGERS F Memphis-style rib house specializes in barbecue ribs served several ways. FB. L & D, daily. 8129 Point Meadows Way. 493-7427. $$ VINO’S PIZZA F See Julington. L & D, daily. 9910 Old Baymeadows Rd. 641-7171. $
BEACHES
(In Jax Beach unless otherwise noted.) A LA CARTE Authentic New England fare like Maine lobster rolls, fried Ipswich clams, crab or clam cake sandwich, fried shrimp basket, haddock sandwich, clam chowdah, birch beer and blueberry soda. Dine inside or on the deck. TO. L, Fri.Tue. 331 First Ave. N. 241-2005. $$ AL’S PIZZA F Al’s has been serving hand-tossed gourmet pizzas, calzones, salads and Italian entrees for more than 21 years. Voted Best Pizza by Folio Weekly readers from 1996-2011. BW. L & D, daily. 303 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach. 249-0002. $ ANGIE’S SUBS F Subs are made-to-order fresh. Serious casual. Wicked good iced tea. 1436 Beach Blvd. 246-2519. $ BAGEL WORLD F Best of Jax. Cozy spot has a breakfast special (eggs, ham & cheese) and a variety of cream cheese, coffee, juice. B & L, daily. 2202 S. Third St. 246-9988. $ THE BEACH RESTAURANT F Shrimp, fresh fish, chicken, burgers, burritos, Chicago-style pizza are served at this new oceanfront place. L & D, daily. 320 N. First St. 270-8565. $$ BEACHES WINGS & GRILL F New casual sportsbar serves wings, burgers, sandwiches, wraps. Kids eat free Mon. FB, CM. L & D daily. 311 N. Third St., Ste. 107. 853-5004. $$ BEACHSIDE SEAFOOD RESTAURANT & MARKET F Full fresh seafood market has seafood baskets, fish tacos, oyster baskets, Philly cheesesteaks. Dine indoor or out. Beach delivery. CM, BW. L & D, daily. 120 S. Third St. 444-8862. $$ BONGIORNO’S PHILLY STEAK SHOP F South Philly’s Bongiorno clan imports Amoroso rolls for Real Deal cheesesteak, Original Gobbler, clubs, wraps, burgers, dogs. BW, CM. L & D, daily. 2294 Mayport Rd., Atlantic Beach. 246-3278. $$ BONO’S PIT BAR-B-Q F Baby back ribs, fried corn, sweet potatoes, barbecue. BW. L & D, daily. 1307 Atlantic Blvd., Neptune Beach. 270-2666. 1266 S. Third St. 249-8704. $ BREEZY COFFEE SHOP CAFE F The spot has fresh, locally roasted Costa Rican organic coffee, espresso, fresh-bakedin-house muffins, breads, scones, cakes. Vegan options available. CM. B, L, Br., daily. 235 Eighth Ave. S. 241-2211. $
JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 45
ADVERTISING PROOF
BUDDHA THAI BISTRO© This is a copyright protected proof Owner/Chef Guy Boonsanong
F Buddha Thai Bistro serves an authentic Thai menu offering dishes made with fresh ingredients, using tried-and-true recipes. Curries, kra pow, prix pow and Kalua ribs. FB, TO. L & D, daily. 301 10th Ave. N. $$ Produced by ab Checked372-9149. by Sales Rep mp BURRITO GALLERY EXPRESS F Best of Jax 2012 winner. The Gallery’s kid sister is mostly take-out; same great chow, fast service. 1333 N. Third St. 242-8226. $ CAMPECHE BAY CANTINA F Homemade-style Mexican items are fajitas, enchiladas and fried ice cream, plus margaritas. FB. D, nightly. 127 First Ave. N. 249-3322. $$ CASA MARIA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Springfield. 2429 S. Third St. 372-9000. $ CRUISERS GRILL F Best of Jax 2012 winner, serving burgers, sandwiches, tacos, quesadillas and killer cheese fries. 319 23rd Ave. S. 270-0356. $ CULHANE’S IRISH PUB *Bite Club Certified! Four sisters own and operate the authentic Irish pub, with faves Guinness stew, lamb sliders and fish pie. L, Fri.-Sun.; D, Tue.-Sun.; weekend brunch. FB, CM. 967 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach. 249-9595. $$ DWIGHT’S The Mediterranean-style bistro features fresh local seafood, filet mignon, mixed grill and an extensive wine list. D, Tue.-Sat. 1527 Penman Rd. 241-4496. $$$$ ENGINE 15 BREWING COMPANY F Gastropub fare includes soups, salads, flatbreads and sandwiches, like BarBe-Cuban and beer dip. Innovative craft beers made onsite. Daily specials. CM, BW. L & D, Tue.-Sun.; D, nightly. 1500 Beach Blvd., Ste. 217. 249-2337. $ EUROPEAN STREET CAFE F See San Marco. 992 Beach Blvd. 249-3001. $ EVA’S GRILL & BAR Locally owned eatery Eva’s serves a varied menu of Greek, Italian, French, Cajun/Creole and Old Southern-style cuisine, made from all original, classic L & D, Tue.-Fri.; D, Sat. 610 S. Third St. Produced recipes. by ptfCM. FB. Checked by Sales Rep cj 372-9484. $$ THE FISH COMPANY *Bite Club Certified! F Fresh, local seafood is served, including Mayport shrimp, fish baskets and grilled tuna and there’s an oyster bar. L & D, daily. CM, FB. 725 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 12, Atlantic Beach. 246-0123. $$ FLY’S TIE IRISH PUB F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Call for hours and menu. D, Thur.-Sat.; L, Sat.; Br., Sun. 177 Sailfish Dr. E., Atlantic Beach. 246-4293. $$ HOT DOG HUT F All-beef hot dogs, sausages, hamburgers, crab cakes, beer-battered onion rings and French fries. B. L, daily. 1439 S. Third St. 247-3641. $ ICHIBAN F Three dining areas: teppan or hibachi tables (watch a chef prepare your food), a sushi bar and Westernstyle seating offering tempura and teriyaki. FB, Japanese plum wine. L & D, daily. 675 N. Third St. 247-4688. $$ LYNCH’S IRISH PUB Full-service restaurant offers corned beef & cabbage, Shepherd’s pie, fish-n-chips. 30-plus beers on tap. FB. L, Sat. & Sun., D, daily. 514 N. First St. 249-5181. $$ MAMBO’S CUBAN CAFE F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Authentic Cuban cuisine, including ropa vieja, picadillo and lechon asada … and mojitos. FB, CM, TO. L & D, daily. 311 N. Third St., Ste. 103. 853-6360. $$ MELLOW MUSHROOM PIZZA BAKERS *Bite Club Certified! F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Southside. 1080 Third St. N. 241-5600. $ METRO DINER F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See San Marco. 1534 Third St. N. 853-6817. $$ MEZZA LUNA F A Beaches tradition for 20-plus years. Gourmet wood-fired pizzas to contemporary American cuisine. Inside or patio dining. Extensive wine list. CM, FB. D, Mon.-Sat. 110 First St., Neptune Beach. 249-5573. $$$ MOJO KITCHEN BBQ PIT & BLUES BAR F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Traditional slow-cooked Southern barbecue served in a blues bar, like pulled pork, Texas brisket, slow-cooked ribs. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 1500 Beach Blvd. 247-6636. $$ MONKEY’S UNCLE TAVERN F For 25-plus years, Monkey’s Uncle has been serving locals and visitors pub grub, burgers, sandwiches, seafood and wings. Dine inside or out on the patio. FB. L & D, daily. 1850 S. Third St. 246-1070. $ NEW SIAM THAI & WINE This new restaurant serves authentic Thai fare, including pad Thai, prog pow and ram Thai delight, along with an extensive wine selection. BW. L, Mon.-Fri.; L & D, daily. 798 S. Third St. 372-4328. $$ NIPPERS BEACH GRILLE Best of Jax 2012 winner. Chef O’s cuisine features local fare and innovative dishes, served in an island atmosphere. Dine inside or out on the waterfront tiki deck. FB, CM. L & D, Wed.-Sun.; D, nightly. 2309 Beach Blvd. 247-3300. $$ NORTH BEACH BISTRO *Bite Club Certified! Casual dining with an elegant touch, like slow-cooked veal osso buco; calypso crusted mahi mahi with spiced plantain chips. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 725 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 6, Atlantic Beach. 372-4105. $$$ OCEAN 60 Best of Jax 2012 winner. A prix fixe menu is offered. Continental cuisine, with fresh seafood, nightly specials and a changing seasonal menu. Dine in a formal dining room or casual Martini Room. D, Mon.-Sat. 60 Ocean Blvd., Atlantic Beach. 247-0060. $$$ PHILLY’S FINEST F Authentic Philly-style cheesesteaks made
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with imported Amorosa rolls. Hoagies, wings and pizza ... cold beer, too. FB. L & D, daily. 1527 N. Third St. 241-7188. $$ POE’S TAVERN F American gastropub offers 50-plus beers, craft and area selections. Gourmet burgers, handcut fries, fish tacos, Edgar’s Drunken Chili, daily fish sandwich special. L & D, daily. FB, CM. 363 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach. 241-7637. $$ RAGTIME TAVERN SEAFOOD GRILL F The Beaches landmark serves grilled seafood with a Cajun/Creole accent. Hand-crafted cold beer. FB. L & D, daily. 207 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach. 241-7877. $$ ROYAL PALM VILLAGE WINE & TAPAS F Locally owned and operated. Creative tapas selections: warm prosciutto dates, balsamic glaze; pork & black bean empanadas, salsa fresco. 200+ wines, 15 rotating draft microbrew beers. D, Mon.-Sat. 296 Royal Palms Dr., Atlantic Beach. 372-0052. $-$$ SALT LIFE FOOD SHACK F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Specialty menu items include signature tuna poke bowl, fresh rolled sushi, Ensenada tacos, local fried shrimp. Casual, trendy open-air space. FB, TO, CM. L & D, daily. 1018 N. Third St. 372-4456. $$ SNEAKERS SPORTS GRILLE F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Burgers, sandwiches, quesadillas, wings, steak, prime rib and surf n turf. L & D, daily. FB. 111 Beach Blvd. 482-1000. $$ SOUP’S ON JACKSONVILLE Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Riverside. 645 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach. 247-0906. $ SUN DELI F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Classic deli fare and a build-your-own menu: corned beef, salami, pastrami, turkey and liverwurst, and signature creations like the Radical Side. 1101 S. Third St. Mon.-Sat. 270-1040. $ TACOLU BAJA MEXICANA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. This innovative casual place has moved down the street to the former Homestead site – but it’s still serving fresh, Baja-style Mexican fare, with a focus on fish tacos and tequila, plus fried cheese, bangin’ shrimp, and tacos: royale, brisket and verde chicken. Valet parking. L & D, Tue.-Sun. 1712 Beach Blvd. 249-8226. $$ THE WINE BAR The casual neighborhood place has a tapasstyle menu, fire-baked flatbreads and a wine selection. Daily. 320 N. First St. 372-0211. $$
DOWNTOWN
(Jacksonville Landing venues are at 2 Independent Drive) BENNY’S STEAK & SEAFOOD Continental cuisine features fresh fish, lobster, crab, chops, Midwestern beef. Signature dishes include chef’s tuna, Benny’s crab cake, rack of lamb. Dine inside or on the riverview patio. CM, FB. L & D daily. The Jacksonville Landing, Ste. 175. 301-1014. $$$ BURRITO GALLERY & BAR F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Southwest cuisine, traditional American salads. Burritos and more burritos. Onsite art gallery. FB. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 21 E. Adams St. 598-2922. $ CAFÉ NOLA AT MOCA JAX Located in the Museum of Contemporary Art, Cafe Nola serves shrimp and grits, gourmet sandwiches, fresh fish tacos and homemade desserts. FB. L, Mon.-Fri.; D, Thur. 333 N. Laura St. 366-6911 ext. 231. $$ CASA DORA ITALIAN RESTAURANT F For 36 years, owner Freddy Ghobod and Chef Sam Hamidi have served genuine Italian fare: veal, ribeye steaks, seafood, pizza, sandwiches. Homemade-style salad dressing is a specialty. BW, CM. L & D, Mon.-Fri.; D, Sat. 108 E. Forsyth St. 356-8282. $$ DE REAL TING CAFE This casual spot serves an authentic Caribbean lunch buffet as well as a variety of favorite dishes inspired by the Islands. Tue.-Fri. FB. L & D, Tue.-Sat. 128 W. Adams St. 633-9738. $$ FIONN MACCOOL’S IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT Best of Jax 2012 winner. Casual dining with an uptown Irish flair. Fish & chips, Guinness beef stew, black-and-tan brownies. FB, CM. L & D, daily. Jacksonville Landing, Ste. 176. 374-1247. $$ INDOCHINE Best of Jax 2012 winner. Serving Thai and Southeast Asian cuisine in the core of downtown. Signature dishes include favorites like chicken Satay, soft shell crab, and mango and sticky rice for dessert. BW, FB, TO. L, Mon.Fri., D, Tue.-Sat. 21 E. Adams St. 598-5303. $$ JENKINS QUALITY BARBECUE Family-owned-and-operated. Jenkins offers beef, pork, chicken, homemade desserts. L & D, daily. 830 N. Pearl St. 353-6388. $ KOJA SUSHI F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Sushi, Japanese, Asian and Korean cuisine. Indoor and outdoor dining and bar. FB. L & D, daily. The Jacksonville Landing. 350-9911. $$ NORTHSTAR SUBSTATION This place features brick-ovenbaked pizzas, grinders, wings, Philly cheesesteaks, custom sandwiches and fries served in a laid-back setting. FB, 27 beers on draft. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 119 E. Bay St. 860-5451. $ OLIO MARKET F Fresh sandwiches, salads, soups, entrées. In Churchwell Lofts building, Olio partners eclectic tastes with Old World ambiance in a casual renovated space. L, Mon.Fri.; late Art Walk. 301 E. Bay St. 356-7100. $$ SKYLINE DINING & CONFERENCE CENTER Weekday lunch includes salad bar, hot meals and a carving station. L, Sun. upon request. FB. 50 N. Laura St., Ste. 3550. 791-9797. $$ TRELLISES HYATT REGENCY American cuisine includes a breakfast buffet, made-to-order omelet station, a la carte items. Signature entrees: grouper salad, Angus burgers, Reubens, French onion grilled cheese, seafood, steaks. CM, FB. B, L & D, daily. 225 East Coast Line Dr. 634-4540. $$$ ZODIAC GRILL F This spot serves busy Downtowners a variety of Mediterranean cuisine choices and American
favorites, as well as a popular lunch buffet. FB. L & D, Mon.Fri. 120 W. Adams St. 354-8283. $
FLEMING ISLAND
LA NOPALERA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Intracoastal. 1571 C.R. 220, Ste. 100. 215-2223. $ MELLOW MUSHROOM PIZZA BAKERS F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Southside. 1800 Town Center Pkwy. 541-1999. $ MOJO SMOKEHOUSE F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Beaches. FB. L & D, daily. 1810 Town Ctr. Blvd. 264-0636. $$ TAPS BAR & GRILL F See Julington. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 1605 C.R. 220, Ste. 145. 278-9421. $$ WHITEY’S FISH CAMP F The renowned seafood place, family-owned since 1963, offers AYCE freshwater catfish. Also steaks, pastas. Outdoor waterfront dining. Get there by car, boat or bike. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 2032 C.R. 220. 269-4198. $
INTRACOASTAL WEST
AL’S PIZZA F See Beaches. 14286 Beach Blvd. (at San Pablo Rd.) 223-0991. $ AROY THAI FUSION Owner/Chef Vithoon Khamchareon The new restaurant offers a menu of authentic Thai cuisine, including pad Thai, Thai fried rice and a variety of traditional curry dishes. Daily happy hour, FB, TO. L & D, daily. 13475 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 40. 374-0161. $$ BRUCCI’S PIZZA, PASTA, PANINIS F Authentic New Yorkstyle pizza, Italian pastas, desserts; family atmosphere. CM, BW. L & D, daily. 13500 Beach Blvd., Ste. 36. 223-6913. $ CASTILLO DE MEXICO F The authentic, extensive menu includes a weekday lunch buffet. FB. L & D, daily. 12620 Beach Blvd., Ste. 19, Kernan Square. 998-7006. $$ CLIFF’S ROCKIN’ BAR-N-GRILL F Cliff’s features 8-ounce burgers, wings, steak, seafood, homemade pizza and daily specials. FB. L & D, daily. Smoking permitted. 3033 Monument Rd., Ste. 2, Cobblestone Plaza. 645-5162. $$ EL RANCHITO F Latin American cuisine includes dishes from Colombia, Cuba and Mexico. BW, CM, TO. L & D, daily. 14333 Beach Blvd., Ste. 22. 992-4607. $$ GOLDEN CORRAL Best of Jax 2012 winner. Buffet features familiar faves. B, L & D, daily. 14035 Beach Blvd. 992-9294. $ GUMBO YAYA’S This locally owned casual restaurant offers New Orleans/Cajun-style fare, including a variety of po’boys, muffuletta, jambalaya, gumbo and beignets. Low country crab and shrimp boil on weekends; prepared items to go, too. CM. BW. L & D, daily. 14333 Beach Blvd., Ste. 101. 223-0202. $$ iPHO This new, family-owned spot offers curry dishes, noodle bowls and rare beef salad. Everything’s homemade-style. L & D, Thur.-Tue. 13799 Beach Blvd., Ste. 1. 330-0309. $$ ISTANBUL MEDITERRANEAN & ITALIAN CUISINE European cuisine: lamb, beef, chicken dishes, pizza, wraps. BW. L & D, daily. 13170 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 26. 220-9192. $$ JERRY’S SPORTS GRILLE & STEAKHOUSE F The menu includes wings, hamburgers, Ahi tuna and handcut steaks. CM, FB. Daily. 13170 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 22. 220-6766. $ LA NOPALERA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Family-ownedand-operated, serving authentic Mexican cuisine, like tamales, fajitas, pork tacos, in a casual family atmosphere. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 14333 Beach Blvd. 992-1666. $ MAMBO’S CUBAN CAFE & PIZZERIA Popular spot offers a variety of dishes with an authentic Cuban taste: tostones, empanadas, palomilla, pollo al ajillo, lechon asado, zarzuela de Mariscos, plus wraps, pizzas, sandwiches, baked goods. L & D, daily. 13770 Beach Blvd., Ste. 9. 374-2046. $$ MILANO’S RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA Homemade Italian cuisine, breads, pizzas, calzones and specialty dishes. BW, CM. L & D, daily. 12620 Beach Blvd., Ste. 4. 646-9119. $$ ORANGE TREE HOT DOGS F Best of Jax 2012 winner. This casual spot has been serving a variety of hot dogs since 1968. Toppings include onion sauce, chili, slaw and sauerkraut. Personal pizzas, fries and drinks, too. CM. L & D, daily. 13500 Beach Blvd., Ste. 3. 551-3661. $ SALSAS MEXICAN RESTAURANT F Authentic, fresh Mexican fare prepared from scratch with fresh ingredients. Daily specials. Dine indoors or on the large patio outside. FB, CM. L & D, daily. 13500 Beach Blvd., Ste. 46. 992-8402. $$$ SHANE’S RIB SHACK Shane’s serves Southern barbecue: ribs, chopped pork, beef brisket, chicken tenders – all made fresh daily. Sides, too. CM. L & D, daily. 13546 Beach Blvd., Ste. 1. 992-0130. $$ THAI ORCHID Authentic Thai cuisine made with fresh ingredients, including pad Thai, curry dishes and rice dishes. BW. L & D, daily. 12620 Beach Blvd., Ste. 4. 683-1286. $$ TIME OUT SPORTS GRILL F Wings, gourmet pizza, fresh seafood and specialty wraps. FB. D, Mon.-Fri.; L & D, Sat. & Sun. 13799 Beach Blvd., Ste. 5. 223-6999. $$
JULINGTON, NW ST. JOHNS
BLACKSTONE GRILLE The menu blends flavors from a variety of cultures and influences for modern American fusion cuisine, served in a bistro-style setting. FB. L & D, Mon.-Fri.,
Dining GRILL ME! A WEEKLY Q&A WITH PEOPLE IN THE FOOD BIZ
NAME: Al Mansur RESTAURANT: Al’s Pizza, 7 local restaurants BIRTHPLACE: Istanbul, Turkey YEARS IN THE BIZ: 25 FAVORITE RESTAURANT (other than mine): Orsay, Pom’s Signature Restaurant, Maza New American Cuisine FAVORITE COOKING STYLE: Italian, Latin-style FAVORITE INGREDIENTS: Garlic and fresh herbs IDEAL MEAL: One of the aforementioned restaurants with my beautiful wife. WOULDN’T EAT IF YOU PAID ME: I’ll try anything once! CRAZIEST RESTAURANT EXPERIENCE: Sprinklers went off on a busy night at our new St. Augustine place. INSIDER’S SECRET: We’re working on a new-concept restaurant in Neptune Beach. CELEBRITY SIGHTING: John Grisham, Al’s Atlantic Beach CULINARY GUILTY PLEASURE: North Beach Fish Camp’s bread pudding
D, Sat.; Sun. brunch. 112 Bartram Oaks Walk, Ste. 102. 287-0766. $$$ BRUCCI’S PIZZA F See Intracoastal. 540 S.R. 13, Ste. 10, Fruit Cove. 287-8317. $$ PIZZA PALACE F See San Marco. 116 Bartram Oaks Walk. 230-2171. $ TAPS BAR & GRILL F Taps’ chefs prepare every dish: beef, chicken and shrimp, with the freshest ingredients. Large selection of premium beers on tap. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 2220 C.R. 210 W., St. Johns. 819-1554. $$ VINO’S PIZZA F With four locations, Vino’s makes all their Italian and American dishes with fresh ingredients. L & D, daily. 605 S.R. 13, Ste. 103. 230-6966. $ WAKAME JAPANESE & THAI CUISINE F The fine dining restaurant offers authentic Japanese and Thai cuisine, a full sushi menu, curries and pad dishes. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 104 Bartram Oaks Walk, Ste. 108. 230-6688. $$
MANDARIN
AL’S PIZZA F See Beaches. 11190 San Jose Blvd. 260-4115. $ ANATOLIA GRILL & BAR F This Turkish restaurant serves authentic Italian/Mediterranean cuisine, including flatbreads, calzones, pasta dishes, shishkabobs, seafood, wraps, salads. Musakka, falafel and lamb shank are house specialties. BW. CM. L & D, daily. 9825 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 1. 329-1336. $$ AW SHUCKS The seafood place offers an oyster bar, steaks, seafood, wings, pasta. Faves: ahi tuna, shrimp & grits, oysters Rockefeller. Sweet potato puffs are the signature side. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 9743 Old St. Augustine Rd. 240-0368. $$ THE BLUE CRAB CRABHOUSE F A Maryland-style crabhouse featuring fresh blue crabs, garlic crabs, and king, snow and Dungeness crab legs. FB, CM. D, Tue.-Sat.; L & D, Sun. 3057 Julington Creek Rd. 260-2722. $$ BRAZILIAN JAX CAFE F Authentic Brazilian dishes include steaks, sausages, chicken, fish, burgers and hot sandwiches made with fresh ingredients. Traditional feijoada (black beans and pork stew with rice, collards, orange salad and toasted yucca flour with bacon) is served every Sat. TO. B, L & D, Mon.-Sat. 9825 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 20. 880-3313. $$ BROOKLYN PIZZA F The traditional pizzeria serves New York-style pizza, specialty pies, and subs, strombolis and calzones. BW. L & D, daily. 11406 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 3, 288-9211. 13820 St. Augustine Rd., 880-0020. $ CLARK’S FISH CAMP F Clark’s has steak, ribs, AYCE catfish dinners, 3-pound prime rib. Dine in, out or in a creek-view glass-enclosed room. FB. D, Mon.-Fri.; L & D, Sat. & Sun. 12903 Hood Landing Rd. 268-3474. $$ DON JUAN’S RESTAURANT F Authentic Mexican dishes prepared daily from scratch, served in a casual atmosphere. FB, CM. L & D, daily. 12373 San Jose Blvd. 268-8722. $$ ENZA’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT Family-owned, Enza’s offers fine Italian dining, featuring veal and seafood dishes. Daily specials. FB, CM, TO. D, Tue.-Sun. 10601 San Jose Blvd., Mandarin Landing. 268-4458. $$$ GIGI’S RESTAURANT Breakfast buffet daily, lunch buffet weekdays. The Comedy Zone (Best of Jax winner) has an appetizer menu. FB. B, L & D, daily. I-295 & San Jose Blvd. (Ramada Inn). 268-8080. $$ (Fri. & Sat. buffet, $$$) GOLDEN CORRAL See Intracoastal. 11470 San Jose. 886-9699. HALA CAFE & BAKERY F See Southside. 9735 Old St. Augustine Rd. 288-8890. $$ HARMONIOUS MONKS F American-style steakhouse features a 9-oz. choice Angus center-cut filet topped with gorgonzola shiitake mushroom cream sauce, 8-oz. gourmet burgers, fall-off-the-bone ribs, wraps, sandwiches. FB. L & D,
Mon.-Sat. 10550 Old St. Augustine Rd., Ste. 30. 880-3040. $$ LEGRAND’S THE STEAK & SEAFOOD PLACE F Locally owned and operated, LeGrand’s offers aged beef cured onsite in the dry aging room and cut in-house, as well as seafood, chicken and a variety of sides. FB, CM. L & D, daily; Br. Sun. 11290 Old St. Augustine Rd. 268-3663. $$$ MAMA FU’S ASIAN HOUSE MSG-free pan-Asian cuisine prepared to order in woks using fresh ingredients. Authentic Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese and Thai dishes. BW, CM. L & D, daily. 11105 San Jose Blvd. 260-1727. $$ MANDARIN ALE HOUSE 30-plus beers on tap. FB. L & D, daily. 11112 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 19. 292-0003. $$ METRO DINER F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See San Marco. 12807 San Jose Blvd. 638-6185. $$ NATIVE SUN NATURAL FOODS MARKET F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Organic supermarket with full deli and salad bar serving wraps, quesadillas, chopped salads, vegetarian dishes. Fresh juice and smoothie bar. Indoor and outdoor seating. Mon.-Sat. 10000 San Jose Blvd. 260-6950. $ PICASSO’S PIZZERIA F Specializes in hand-tossed gourmet pizza, calzones, homemade New York-style cheesecake and handmade pasta. Fresh local seafood and steaks. BW, CM, TO. L & D daily. 10503 San Jose Blvd. 880-0811. $$ POMPEII COAL-FIRED PIZZA See Orange Park. 9825 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 24, Outback Plaza. 503-2230. $$ RACK ’EM UP SPORTS BAR This cigar & hookah lounge offers bar food and more than 200 beers, imported and domestic. D, nightly. 4268 Oldfield Crossing Dr. 262-4030. $ THE RED ELEPHANT PIZZA & GRILL F This casual, familyfriendly eatery serves pizzas, sandwiches, grill specials and pasta dishes. FB, CM. L & D, daily. 10131 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 12. 683-3773. $$ TANK’S FAMILY BAR-B-Q F Owned and operated by the Tankersley family, this place offers made-from-scratch Southern-style fare, featuring their own sauces. CM, BW. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 11701 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 23. 351-8265. $$ VINO’S PIZZA F See Julington. L & D, daily. 4268 Oldfield Crossing Dr. 268-6660. $ WHOLE FOODS MARKET F 100+ prepared items at a fullservice and self-service hot bar, soup bar, dessert bar. Madeto-order Italian specialties from a brick oven pizza hearth. L & D, daily. 10601 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 22. 288-1100. $$
ORANGE PARK
ARON’S PIZZA F The family-owned restaurant offers eggplant dishes, manicotti and New York-style pizza. BW, CM, TO. L & D daily. 650 Park Ave. 269-1007. $$ GATOR’S DOCKSIDE F For 18-plus years, the sportsthemed family place has served wings, ribs, sandwiches. FB. L & D, daily. 9680 Argyle Forest Blvd. 425-6466. $$ GOLDEN CORRAL Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Intracoastal. 582 Blanding Blvd. 272-0755. $ THE HILLTOP CLUB She-crab soup, scallops, prime beef, wagyu beef, chicken Florentine, stuffed grouper. Chef Nick’s salmon is a hit. FB. D, Tue.-Sat. 2030 Wells Rd. 272-5959. $$ JOEY MOZARELLAS The Italian restaurant’s specialty is a 24-slice pizza: 18”x26” of fresh ingredients and sauces made daily. CM, TO. L & D, daily. 930 Blanding Blvd. 579-4748. $$ PASTA MARKET & CLAM BAR Family-owned-and-operated. Gourmet pizza, veal, chicken, mussels, shrimp, grouper. The pastas: spaghetti, fettuccine, lasagna, calzones, linguini, ravioli, made with fresh ingredients, homemade-style. CM, BW, sangria. 1930 Kingsley Ave. 276-9551. D, nightly. $$ POMPEII COAL-FIRED PIZZA Pizzas are baked in coal-fired ovens. Popular pizzas include Health Choice and Mozzarella. Coal-fired sandwiches and wings, too. BW. L & D, daily. 2134
Park Ave. 264-6116. $$ THE ROADHOUSE F Burgers, wings, deli sandwiches, popular lunches. FB. L & D, daily. 231 Blanding Blvd. 264-0611. $ THAI GARDEN F Authentic traditional Thai fare made with fresh ingredients, served in a relaxed atmosphere. Curry dishes and specialty items include crispy duck, pra-ram, pad Thai, seafood. BW. L, Mon.-Fri.; D, Sat. & Sun. 10 Blanding Blvd., Ste. A. 272-8434. $$
PONTE VEDRA, NE ST. JOHNS
AL’S PIZZA F See Beaches. Open daily. 635 A1A. 543-1494. $ AQUA GRILL Upscale cuisine: fresh seafood, Angus steaks, Maine lobster, vegetarian dishes. Outdoor patio seating. FB. L, Mon.-Sat.; D, nightly. 950 Sawgrass Village Dr. 285-3017. $$$ THE AUGUSTINE GRILLE *Bite Club Certified! Chef Brett Smith’s global cuisine is seasonal and local. Selections include prime steaks, New York strip, lamb and lobster Napoleon. FB, CM. D, nightly. 1000 PGA Tour Blvd., Sawgrass Marriott. 285-7777. $$$ BARBARA JEAN’S RESTAURANT Made-from-scratch, homestyle Southern fare features local seafood – especially crab cakes and she-crab soup. Meat loaf, pot roast, sandwiches and salads, too. L & D, daily. B, L & D, Sat. & Sun. FB, CM. 15 S. Roscoe Blvd. 280-7522. $$-$$$ BRUCCI’S PIZZA F Authentic New York-style pizza, Italian pastas, paninis, desserts. Family atmosphere. CM. L & D, daily. 880 A1A, Ste. 8. 280-7677. $$ CAFFE ANDIAMO Traditional Italian cuisine: fresh seafood, veal, homemade pastas and wood-fired pizza prepared in a copper clad oven. An extensive wine list is offered in a cosmopolitan atmosphere. Dine indoors or out on the terrace. L & D, daily. 500 Sawgrass Village. 280-2299. $$$ LULU’S WATERFRONT GRILLE F On the Intracoastal Waterway, LuLu’s can be reached by car or by boat. Seafood, steaks and pasta dishes with a sophisticated flair. FB. L & D, daily; Sun. brunch. 301 N. Roscoe Blvd. 285-0139. $$ MULLIGAN’S PUB F The Irish gastropub at Hilton Garden Inn offers a variety of favorites and Irish dishes. FB. D, daily. 45 PGA Tour Blvd. 280-1661. $$ NINETEEN AT TPC SAWGRASS In Sawgrass’ Tournament Players Club, Nineteen features more than 230 wines and freshly prepared American and Continental cuisine, including local seafood, served inside or al fresco on the verandah. L & D, daily. 110 Championship Way. 273-3235. $$$ PALM VALLEY FISH CAMP This intimate restaurant, owned by the Groshells, is the real deal – local seafood served by a professional crew, right on the Intracoastal Waterway. Popular items are the shrimp & grits, blackened mahi with tasso gravy and bread pudding. BW. CM. L & D, Tue.-Sun.; D, nightly. 299 N. Roscoe Blvd. 285-3200. $$$ PUSSER’S BAR & GRILLE *Bite Club Certified! F Freshly prepared Caribbean cuisine, including red snapper Ponte Vedra Jamaican grilled pork ribs and barbecued salmon tower. Tropical rum drinks include Pusser’s Painkiller. FB. L & D, daily. 816 A1A N., Ste. 100. 280-7766. L, $$; D, $$ RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE Best of Jax 2012 winner. See San Marco. 8141 A1A. 285-0014. $$$$ 619 OCEAN VIEW Dining with a Mediterranean touch; fresh seafood, steaks and nightly specials. FB, CM. D, Wed.-Sun. 619 Ponte Vedra Blvd., Cabana Beach Club. 285-6198. $$$ TABLE 1 The upscale, casual restaurant has a variety of items, from appetizers to entrées to salads, as well as a wine bar featuring an extensive list of wines by the glass. FB. L & D, daily. 330 A1A N. 280-5515. $$$
RIVERSIDE, 5 POINTS, WESTSIDE
AL’S PIZZA F See Beaches. 1620 Margaret St. 388-8384. $ BLACK SHEEP RESTAURANT Orsay’s sister restaurant serves new American favorites with a Southern twist, made with locally sourced ingredients. Rooftop bar. L & D, daily; Br. Sun. 1534 Park St. 355-3793. $$$ BOLD BEAN COFFEE ROASTERS Chef Adam Burnett F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Artisan-crafted, small-batch roasted specialty coffees from its certified organic roastery and brew bar, including lattes, local pastries, craft beers. BW. 869 Stockton St., Stes. 1 & 2. 855-1181. $ CARMINE’S PIE HOUSE F The Italian eatery offers pizza by the slice, gourmet pizzas, appetizers, classic Italian dishes (calzone, stromboli, subs and panini) and microbrews served in a casual atmosphere. BW, CM, TO. 2677 Forbes St. 387-1400. $$ COOL MOOSE F Classic sandwiches, eclectic wraps and desserts. An extensive gourmet coffee menu with Green Mountain coffees and frozen coffee drinks. B & L, daily. Sun. Br. 2708 Park St. 381-4242. $ COZY TEA CAFE It’s moved down a few spots, and is again serving weekend Indian dinners, along with weekday lunches. 1023 Park St. 329-3964. $$ DERBY ON PARK New owners, new space and new menu. L
& D, Tue.-Sat.; Br. Sun. 1068 Park St. 379-3343. $$ EDGEWOOD BAKERY F Best of Jax 2012 winner. For nearly 65 years, the espresso and pastry café has served fresh breakfast pastries, petit fours and pies, sandwiches, smoothies and soups. B & L, Mon.-Sat. 1012 S. Edgewood Ave., Murray Hill. 389-8054. $ EUROPEAN STREET CAFÉ F See San Marco. 2753 Park St. 384-9999. $ GRASSROOTS NATURAL MARKET Deli Supervisor Nicole Gurgiolo F Organic and natural market with juice & smoothie bar. Wide selection of organic produce, gourmet cheeses, humanely raised meats. Grab-and-go sandwiches, wraps, salads and sides. Craft beers, organic wines. B, L & D, Mon.-Sat. 2007 Park St. 384-4474. $ HOVAN MEDITERRANEAN GOURMET F Dine inside or on the patio. Mediterranean entrées include lamb, and beef gyros. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 2005-1 Park St. 381-9394. $ JOHNNY’S DELI & GRILL F A Riverside tradition, serving 60+ fresh deli and grill items, including hot sandwiches. L, Mon.-Fri. 474 Riverside Ave. 356-8055. $ KICKBACKS GASTROPUB F Best of Jax 2012 winner. This neighborhood spot serves favorites 20 hours a day, every day. 655+ bottled beers, 84 on tap. CM. 910 King St. 388-9551. $$ MONROE’S SMOKEHOUSE BBQ Smoked meats include wings, pulled pork, brisket, turkey and ribs. Homemade-style sides include green beans, baked beans, red cole slaw, collards. BW, CM. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 4838 Highway Ave., 389-5551. $$ MOON RIVER PIZZA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Amelia Island. 1176 Edgewood Ave. S. 389-4442. $ MOSSFIRE GRILL F Southwestern menu with ahi tuna tacos, goat cheese enchiladas and gouda quesadillas. Dine inside or on the patio. FB. L & D, daily. 1537 Margaret St. 355-4434. $$ MY MOCHI FROZEN YOGURT See St. Johns Town Center. 1661 Riverside Ave., Ste. 128. 900-1955. $ O’BROTHERS IRISH PUB F Innovative Irish fare and traditional faves are offered, like lambburger with Stilton crust, Guinness mac & cheese, Shepherd’s pie and fish-nchips – plus 18 beers on tap. L, daily except Mon.; D, daily. CM, FB. 1521 Margaret St. 854-9300. $$ PELE’S WOOD FIRE At this innovative restaurant, Chef Micah Windham uses a wood-fired oven to create traditional, authentic Italian fare with a modern (Hawaiian!) twist. CM, FB, TO. L & D, daily; Br., weekend. 2665 Park St. 232-8545. $$ PERARD’S PIZZA & ITALIAN CUISINE Traditional Italian fare with fresh sauces and dough made from scratch daily. Large selection of gourmet pizza toppings. CM, BW. L & D, daily. 11043 Crystal Springs Rd., Ste. 2. 378-8131. $ PERFECT RACK BILLIARDS Upscale billiards hall has burgers, steak, deli sandwiches, wings. Family-friendly, non-smoking. BW, CM. L & D, daily. 1186 Edgewood Ave. S., Murray Hill. 738-7645. $ SAKE HOUSE #1 JAPANESE GRILL & SUSHI BAR F Japanese grill and sushi bar features sushi, sashimi, katsu, tempura, hibachi and specialty rolls. CM, BW, sake. L & D, daily. 824 Lomax St. 301-1188. $$ SOUP’S ON JACKSONVILLE F Best of Jax 2012 winner. This casual place offers good-for-you soups, sandwiches and salads without the usual fat and salt – hot and cold gourmet seafood and meat dishes, vegetarian, vegan dishes. Take-out fresh/frozen soups. L & D, daily. 1526 King St. 387-9394. $ SUMO SUSHI F Authentic Japanese fare, traditional to entrees and sushi rolls, spicy sashimi salad, tobiko (flying fish roe), Rainbow roll (tuna, salmon, yellowtail, California roll). BW, CM. L & D, daily. 2726 Park St. 388-8838. $$ SUSHI CAFÉ F A variety of sushi, including popular Monster Roll and Jimmy Smith Roll, along with faves like Rock-n-Roll and Dynamite Roll. Sushi Café also offers hibachi, tempura, katsu and teriyaki. BW. Dine indoors or on the patio. L & D, daily. 2025 Riverside Ave. Publix Plaza. 384-2888. $$ TAPA THAT This place puts a modern spin on traditional tapas-style service, using locally/organically grown items as much as possible. Specialties include duck confit spring rolls and Cuban rice & beans cake. CM, BW. L & D, Tue.-Sat. 820 Lomax St. 376-9911. $$ 13 GYPSIES Best of Jax 2012 winner. The intimate bistro serves authentic Mediterranean peasant cuisine, specializing in tapas, blackened octopus, risotto of the day and coconut mango curry chicken. BW. L & D, Tue.-Sat. 887 Stockton St. 389-0330. $$ TWO DOORS DOWN F Traditional faves: hotcakes, omelets, burgers, pork chops, liver & onions, fried chicken, sides and desserts. CM, TO. B & L, Mon.-Fri. 436 Park St. 598-0032. $ TRES LECHES Owner/Chef Irene Mattos-Sweda F The bakery/café offers quiches, arepas, empanadas, cachitos, eggplant lasagna, omelets, sandwiches, and specialty desserts, cakes, pies, tarts and coffee cakes, served in a casual environment. B, L & D, Mon.-Sat. 869 Stockton St., Ste. 6. 551-4375. $$
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ST. AUGUSTINE
A1A ALE WORKS F The Ancient City’s only brew pub taps seven hand-crafted ales and lagers. A1A specializes in innovative New World cuisine. FB. L & D, daily. 1 King St. 829-2977. $$ AL’S PIZZA F New location offering a balcony view overlooking Matanzas Bay. See Beaches. BW. L & D, daily. 1 St. George St. 824-4383. $ ANN O’MALLEY’S F Fresh handmade sandwiches, soups, salads and perfectly poured Guinness. Favorites include Reubens and chicken salad. CM, BW, Irish beers on tap. L & D, daily. 23 Orange St. 825-4040. $$ BARLEY REPUBLIC IRISH PUBLIC HOUSE Irish bar and pub in historic district has burgers, sandwiches, shepherd’s pie, bangers & mash. BW. L & D, daily. 48 Spanish St. 547-2023. $$ BARNACLE BILL’S F For 30-plus years, this family restaurant has served seafood, oysters, gator tail, steak and fried shrimp. FB, CM, TO. L & D daily; 14 Castillo Drive. 824-3663. $$ THE BLACK MOLLY BAR & GRILL Fresh, local seafood, steaks and pasta dishes in a casual atmosphere. FB, CM. L & D daily. 504 Geoffrey St., Cobblestone Plaza. 547-2723. $$ BORRILLO’S PIZZA & SUBS F Specialty pizzas are Borrillo’s Supreme (extra cheese, pepperoni, sausage), white and vegetarian pizzas. Subs and pasta dinners. L & D, daily. 88 San Marco Ave. 829-1133. $ CARMELO’S MARKETPLACE F Authentic New York style brick-oven-baked pizza, fresh baked sub rolls, Boars Head meats & cheeses, salads, calzones, strombolis and sliced pizza specials. BW. L & D, daily. 146 King St. 494-6658. $$ CELLAR 6 ART GALLERY & WINE BAR *Bite Club Certified! Wolfgang Puck coffees, handmade desserts, light bistro-style fare amid local art. BW. Mon.-Sat. 6 Aviles St. 827-9055. $$ CREEKSIDE DINERY Beef, chicken and seafood, with an emphasis on low-country cooking. Outdoor deck with a fire pit. FB. D, nightly. 160 Nix Boatyard Rd. 829-6113. $$ CRUISERS GRILL F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Beaches. 3 St. George St. 824-6993. $ THE FLORIDIAN The downtown restaurant serves innovative Southern fare, made with local farmers’ local food. Signature items: fried green tomato bruschetta, ’N’grits with shrimp, fish or tofu. L & D, Wed.-Mon. 39 Cordova St. 829-0655. $$ HARRY’S SEAFOOD BAR & GRILLE F In a historic, twostory house, the New Orleans-style eatery has fresh seafood, steaks, jambalaya, etouffée and shrimp. FB. L & D, daily. 46 Avenida Menendez. 824-7765. $$ HOT SHOT BAKERY & CAFE F Freshly baked items, coffees and hand-crafted breakfast and lunch sandwiches; Datil B. Good hot sauces and pepper products. B & L, daily. 8 Granada St. 824-7898. $ KINGS HEAD BRITISH PUB F Authentic Brit pub serves fish & chips, Cornish pastie and steak & kidney pie. Tap beers are Guinness, Newcastle and Bass. BW. L & D, Wed.-Sun. 6460 U.S. 1 (4 miles N. of St. Augustine Airport.) 823-9787. $$ THE MANATEE CAFÉ F Serving healthful cuisine using organically grown fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes. B & L, daily. 525 S.R. 16, Ste. 106, Westgate Plaza. 826-0210. $ MEEHAN’S IRISH PUB & SEAFOOD HOUSE F This pub, just south of the old fort, offers burgers, traditional pub fare, seafood and a raw bar, along with signature dishes including steak O’Shay’s, Dubliner chicken and Irish Benedict. CM. FB. L & D, Mon.-Fri.; Br. & D, Sat. & Sun. 20 Avenida Menendez. 810-1923. $$$ MILL TOP TAVERN F A St. Aug institution housed in an 1884 building, serving nachos, soups, sandwiches and daily specials. Dine inside or on open-air decks. At the big mill wheel. FB. L & D, daily. 19 1/2 St. George St. 829-2329. $$ MOJO OLD CITY BBQ F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Beaches. FB. L & D, daily. 5 Cordova St. 342-5264. $$ MOJO’S TACOS F This cozy, casual spot serves double-decker tacos, burritos and salads; they’re known for fresh mahi and shrimp tacos. Beer. L & D, daily. 551 Anastasia Blvd. 829-1665. $ PACIFIC ASIAN BISTRO Chef Mas F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Fresh, artfully crafted sushi, sashimi and classic rolls. Best Chef Mas Liu creates authentic sushi – Crazy Girl (shrimp tempura, asparagus, salmon); Mango Tango (salmon, crab, tuna, flying fish egg, mango sauce). Traditional dishes, too. Sake, BW. L & D, daily. 159 Palencia Village Dr., Ste. 111. 808-1818. $$-$$$ PIZZALLEY’S PIZZERIA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Fresh, prepared onsite, gourmet pizza is offered by the pie or the slice at this restaurant in the historic district. Hot subs, wings and salads, too. L & D, daily. BW. 117 St. George St. 825-2627. $$ THE PRESENT MOMENT CAFÉ F Best of Jax 2012 winner. The cozy café serves organic, vegan and vegetarian dishes, pizza, pastas, hummus and milkshakes – all prepared without meat, dairy, wheat or an oven. Organic BW. TO. B, L & D, Mon.-Sat. 224 W. King St. 827-4499. $ RAINTREE In a Victorian home, Raintree offers fare with contemporary and traditional international influences. Extensive wine list. FB. D, daily. 102 San Marco Ave. 824-7211. $$$ SARA’S CREPE CAFE Crêpes, both traditional European style
48 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
and with innovative twists, are served along with Belgian waffles in the historic district. Dine indoors or out in the openair courtyard. B, L & D, daily. 100 St. George St. 810-5800. $$ SPY GLOBAL CUISINE & LOUNGE In the historic district, Spy features James Bond-themed sushi and Mediterraneaninfluenced global cuisine on the seasonal menu, including fresh – never frozen – Hawaiian seafood. Dine indoors or out on the patio. Upstairs lounge, too. Great selection of chilled sakes. BW, CM. D, nightly. 21 Hypolita St. 819-5637. $$$ THE TASTING ROOM, WINE & TAPAS Owned by Michael Lugo, the upscale contemporary Spanish restaurant fuses innovative tapas with an extensive wine list. L, Wed.-Sun.; D, nightly. 25 Cuna St. 810-2400. $$ YOGURT MOTION This brand-new spot offers a healthful, nutritional cool treat in a non-dairy frozen yogurt (with no table sugar, lactose, chemicals or preservatives) in a variety of flavors. Open daily. 163 Palencia Village, Ste. 102. 610-2220. $
ST. AUGUSTINE BEACH
AMICI ITALIAN RESTAURANT F A family-owned-and-operated Italian restaurant offers traditional pasta, veal, steak and seafood dishes. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 1915B A1A S. 461-0102. $$ CAFÉ ATLANTICO Traditional and new Italian dishes served in an intimate space. Master Chef Paolo Pece prepares risotto alla pescatora, with shrimp, scallops and seasonal shellfish, in a parmesan cheese basket. BW. D, nightly. 647 A1A Beach Blvd. 471-7332. $$$ CAP’S ON THE WATER F The Vilano Beach mainstay offers coastal cuisine – tapas platters, cioppino, fresh local shrimp, raw oyster bar – indoors or on an oak-shaded deck. Boat access. FB. L, Fri.-Sun., D, nightly. 4325 Myrtle St., Vilano Beach. 824-8794. $$ GYPSY CAB COMPANY F International menu features large portions, reasonable prices. FB. L & D, daily. 828 Anastasia Blvd. 824-8244. $$ MANGO MANGO’S BEACHSIDE BAR & GRILL Caribbean kitchen has comfort food with a tropical twist: coconut shrimp and fried plantains. BW, CM. Outdoor dining. 700 A1A Beach Blvd., (A Street access). 461-1077. $$ OASIS RESTAURANT & DECK F Just a block from the ocean, with a tropical atmosphere and open-air deck. Steamed oysters, crab legs, burgers. CM, FB. B, L & D, daily. 4000 A1A & Ocean Trace Rd. 471-3424. $ ORIGINAL CAFÉ ELEVEN F Serving eclectic cuisine like feta spinach egg croissant, apple turkey sandwich, pear-berry salad. Daily chef creations. BW. B, L & D, daily. 501 A1A Beach Blvd. 460-9311. B, $; L & D, $$ PURPLE OLIVE INTERNATIONAL BISTRO F Family-ownedand-operated, offering specials, fresh artisan breads. Soups, salad dressings and desserts made from scratch. BW. D, Tue.-Sat. 4255 A1A S., Ste. 6. 461-1250. $$ THE REEF RESTAURANT F Casual oceanfront place with a view from every table. Fresh local seafood, steak, pasta dishes and daily chef specials. Outdoor dining. FB, CM, TO. L & D daily. 4100 Coastal Hwy. A1A, Vilano Beach. 824-8008. $$ SOUTH BEACH GRILL Located off A1A, the two-story beachy destination offers casual oceanfront dining and fresh local seafood. Dine indoors or out on a beachfront deck. FB. B, L & D daily. 45 Cubbedge Road, Crescent Beach. 471-8700. $ SUNSET GRILLE Seafood-heavy menu, consistent Great Chowder Debate winner. Specialties are baby back ribs, lobster ravioli, coconut shrimp, datil pepper wings. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 421 A1A Beach Blvd. 471-5555. $$$
ST. JOHNS TOWN CENTER
BAHAMA BREEZE ISLAND GRILLE Fresh seafood, chicken, flame-grilled steaks and hand-crafted tropical drinks made with flavorful ingredients inspired by the Caribbean. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 10205 River Coast Dr. 646-1031. $$$ BLACKFINN AMERICAN GRILLE With four dining rooms, BlackFinn offers classic American fare: beef, seafood, pasta, chicken, flatbread sandwiches. Dine indoors or on the patio. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 4840 Big Island Dr. 345-3466. $$$ FIVE GUYS BURGERS & FRIES Best of Jax 2012 winner. Burgers are made with fresh ground beef; wide selection of toppings, including fried onions, jalapeños or sautéed mushrooms. Fries, kosher hot dogs and soft drinks, too. L & D, daily. 4413 Town Center Pkwy., Ste. 401. 996-6900. $ LIBRETTO’S PIZZERIA & ITALIAN KITCHEN F Authentic NYC pizzeria serves Big Apple crust, cheese and sauce, and third-generation family-style Italian classics, fresh-from-theoven calzones, and desserts in a casual, comfy setting. L & D, daily. 4880 Big Island Dr., Ste. 1. 402-8888. $$ MITCHELL’S FISH MARKET A changing menu of more than 180 items includes cedar-roasted Atlantic salmon and seared salt-and-pepper tuna. FB, CM. L & D, daily. 5205 Big Island Dr., St. Johns Town Ctr. 645-3474. $$$ MY MOCHI FROZEN YOGURT Non-fat, low-calorie, cholesterol-free frozen yogurt is served in flavors that change weekly. Toppings include a variety of fruit and nuts. 4860 Big Island Dr. 807-9292. $ P.F. CHANG’S CHINA BISTRO Best of Jax 2012 winner. Traditional chicken, duck, pork, beef and lamb dishes, plus vegetarian plates and gluten-free selections. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 10281 Midtown Parkway, Ste. 137. 641-3392. $$
Dining
The staff at laidback Mellow Mushroom serves a huge assortment of draft beers to go with their pizzas, calzones, hoagies and salads, at three locations, including Tinseltown (pictured). Photo: Walter Coker RENNA’S PIZZA F Renna’s serves New York-style pizza, calzones, subs and lasagna made from authentic Italian recipes. Delivery, CM, BW. 4624 Town Crossing Dr., Ste. 125, St. Johns Town Center. 565-1299. rennaspizza.com $$ SAKE HOUSE #3 JAPANESE GRILL & SUSHI BAR F New location. See Riverside. 10281 Midtown Parkway, Ste. 119. 996-2288. $$ WASABI JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE & SUSHI BAR Authentic cuisine, teppanyaki shows and a full sushi menu. CM. L & D, daily. 10206 River Coast Dr. 997-6528. $$ WHISKY RIVER F Best of Jax 2012 winner. At St. Johns Town Center’s Plaza, Whisky River features wings, pizza, wraps, sandwiches and burgers served in a lively car racingthemed atmosphere (Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s the owner). FB. CM. L & D, daily. 4850 Big Island Drive. 645-5571. $$
SAN JOSE
ATHENS CAFÉ F Serving authentic Greek cuisine: lamb, seafood, veal and pasta dishes. BW. L & D, daily. 6271 St. Augustine Rd., Ste. 7. 733-1199. $$ CRUISERS GRILL F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Beaches. 5613 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 1. 737-2874. $ DICK’S WINGS F NASCAR-themed family style sports place serves wings, buffalo tenders, burgers and chicken sandwiches. CM. BW. L & D, daily. 1610 University Blvd. W. 448-2110. dickswingsandgrill.com $ MOJO BAR-B-QUE F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Pulled pork, brisket and North Carolina-style barbecue. TO, BW. L & D, daily. 1607 University Blvd. W. 732-7200. $$
SAN MARCO, SOUTHBANK
BASIL THAI & SUSHI F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Authentic Thai cuisine at Basil Thai includes pad Thai, a variety of curry dishes and sushi, served in a relaxing atmosphere. L & D, Mon.-Sat. BW. 1004 Hendricks Ave. 674-0190. $$ bb’s F A bistro menu is served in an upscale atmosphere, featuring almond-crusted calamari, tuna tartare and wild mushroom pizza. FB. L & D, Mon.-Fri.; Br. & D, Sat. 1019 Hendricks Ave. 306-0100. $$$ BISTRO AIX F The varied menu features French, Mediterranean-inspired fare, award-winning wines, woodfired pizzas, house-made pastas, steaks, seafood. Dine indoors or out. FB. L, Mon.-Fri.; D, nightly. 1440 San Marco Blvd. 398-1949. $$$ CHECKER BBQ & SEAFOOD F Chef Art Jennette serves barbecue, seafood and comfort food, including pulled-pork, fried white shrimp and fried green tomatoes. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 3566 St. Augustine Rd. 398-9206. $ EUROPEAN STREET F Big sandwiches, soups, desserts and more than 100 bottled and on-tap beers. BW. L & D, daily. 1704 San Marco Blvd. 398-9500. $ THE GROTTO Best of Jax 2012 winner. Wine by the glass. The innovative tapas-style menu at The Grotto offers a cheese plate, empanadas bruschetta and chocolate fondue. BW. 2012 San Marco Blvd. 398-0726. $$
HAVANA-JAX CAFÉ/CUBA LIBRE BAR LOUNGE *Bite Club Certified! F Authentic Latin American fine dining: picadillo, ropa vieja, churrasco tenderloin steak, Cuban sandwiches. L & D, Mon.-Sat. CM, FB. 2578 Atlantic Blvd. 399-0609. $ MATTHEW’S Chef’s tasting menu or seasonal à la carte menu featuring an eclectic mix of Mediterranean ingredients. Dress is business casual, jackets optional. FB. D, Mon.-Sat. 2107 Hendricks Ave. 396-9922. $$$$ METRO DINER F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Historic 1930s diner offers award-winning breakfast and lunch. Fresh seafood and Southern cooking. Bring your own wine. B & L, daily. 3302 Hendricks Ave. 398-3701. $$ THE OLIVE TREE MEDITERRANEAN GRILLE F Homestyle healthy plates: hummus, tebouleh, grape leaves, gyros, potato salad, kibbeh, spinach pie and Greek salad, along with daily specials. L & D, Mon.-Fri. 1705 Hendricks Ave. 396-2250. $$ PIZZA PALACE Dino F All of the Pizza Palace locations feature a variety of homemade dishes made from Mama’s awardwinning recipes, including spinach pizza and chicken-spinach calzones. BW. L & D, daily. 1959 San Marco Blvd. 399-8815. $$ PULP The juice bar has fresh juices, frozen yogurt, teas and coffees; 30 smoothies, with flavored soy milks, organic frozen yogurt and granola. Daily. 1962 San Marco Blvd. 396-9222. $ RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE Best of Jax 2012 winner. Ruth’s serves Midwestern prime beef, fresh seafood, in an upscale atmosphere. FB. D, daily. 1201 Riverplace Blvd. 396-6200. $$$$ SAKE HOUSE #2 JAPANESE GRILL & SUSHI BAR F See Riverside. 1478 Riverplace Blvd. 306-2188. $$ SAN MARCO DELI F Independently owned & operated classic diner serves grilled fish, turkey burgers. Vegetarian options. Mon.-Sat. 1965 San Marco Blvd. 399-1306. $ TAVERNA Tapas, small-plate items, Neapolitan-style woodfired pizzas and entrées are served in a rustic yet upscale interior. BW, TO. L & D, Tue.-Sat. 1986 San Marco Blvd. 398-3005. $$$ VINO’S PIZZA F See Julington. This location offers a lunch buffet. L & D, daily. 1430 San Marco Blvd. 683-2444. $
SOUTHSIDE
AROMAS BEER HOUSE Faves include ahi tuna with a sweet soy sauce reduction, backyard burger, triple-meat French dip. FB. L & D, daily. 4372 Southside Blvd. 928-0515. $$ BISTRO 41° F Casual dining – fresh, homemade breakfast and lunch dishes in a relaxing atmosphere. TO. B & L, Mon.Fri. 3563 Philips Hwy., Ste. 104. 446-9738. $ BLUE BAMBOO Contemporary Asian-inspired cuisine includes rice-flour calamari, seared Ahi tuna, pad Thai. Street eats: barbecue duck, wonton crisps. BW. L, Mon.-Fri.; D, Mon.-Sat. 3820 Southside Blvd. 646-1478. $$
BUCA DI BEPPO Italian dishes are served family-style in an eclectic, vintage setting. Half-pound meatballs are a specialty. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 10334 Southside Blvd. 363-9090. $$$ CORNER BISTRO & WINE BAR F Casual fine dining. The menu blends modern American favorites served with international flair. FB. L & D, Tue.-Sun. 9823 Tapestry Park Circle, Ste. 1. 619-1931. $$$ EUROPEAN STREET F See San Marco. 5500 Beach Blvd. 398-1717. $ FIVE GUYS BURGERS & FRIES Best of Jax 2012 winner. See St. Johns Town Ctr. 9039 Southside Blvd. 538-9100. $ THE FLAME BROILER F Serving food with no transfat, MSG, frying, or skin on meat. Fresh veggies, brown or white rice, with grilled beef, chicken, Korean short ribs. CM, TO. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 9822 Tapestry Park Circle, Ste. 103. 619-2786. 7159 Philips Hwy., Ste. 104. 337-0007. $ GREEK ISLES CAFE Authentic Greek, American and Italian fare, including gyros, spinach pie and Greek meatballs. Homemade breads, desserts. House specialties are eggs benedict and baklava. BW, CM., TO. B, L & D, Mon.-Sat. 7860 Gate Parkway, Ste. 116. 564-2290. $ HALA CAFE & BAKERY F Since 1975 serving house-baked pita bread, kabobs, falafel and daily lunch buffet. TO, BW. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 4323 University Blvd. S. 733-5141. $$ JENKINS QUALITY BARBECUE See Downtown. 2025 Emerson St. 346-3770. $ JOHNNY ANGELS F The menu reflects its ’50s-style décor, including Blueberry Hill pancakes, Fats Domino omelet, Elvis special combo platter. Shakes, malts. B, L & D, daily. 3546 St. Johns Bluff Rd. S., Ste. 120. 997-9850. $ LA NOPALERA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Intracoastal. 8206 Philips Hwy. 732-9433. $ LIME LEAF F Authentic Thai cuisine: fresh papaya salad, pad Thai, mango sweet rice. BW. L, Mon.-Fri.; D, Mon.-Sat. 9822 Tapestry Park Cir., Stes. 108 & 109. 645-8568. $$ MELLOW MUSHROOM PIZZA BAKERS *Bite Club Certified! F Best of Jax 2012 winner. Tossed spring water dough, lean meats, veggies, vegetarian choices for specialty pizzas, hoagies, calzones. FB. L & D, daily. 9734 Deer Lake Ct. 997-1955. $ MONROE’S SMOKEHOUSE BBQ See Riverside. 10771 Beach Blvd. 996-7900. $$ OTAKI JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE F Family-owned with an open sushi bar, hibachi grill tables and an open kitchen. Dine indoor or out. FB, CM, TO. L, Mon.-Fri.; D, nightly. 7860 Gate Parkway, Stes. 119-122. 854-0485. $$$ SAKE SUSHI F Serving sushi, hibachi, teriyaki, tempura, katsu and soups. Popular rolls include Fuji Yama, Ocean Blue, Fat Boy. FB, CM. L & D, daily. 8206 Philips Hwy., Ste. 31. 647-6000. $$ SEVEN BRIDGES GRILLE & BREWERY F Innovative menu of fresh local grilled seafood, sesame tuna, grouper Oscar, chicken, steak and pizza. Microbrewed ales and lagers. FB. L & D, daily. 9735 Gate Pkwy. N., Tinseltown. 997-1999. $$ SOUTHSIDE ALE HOUSE F Steaks, seafood, sandwiches. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 9711 Deer Lake Court. 565-2882. $$ SPECKLED HEN TAVERN & GRILLE F This gastropub serves Southern-style fare; dishes pair with international wines and beers, including a selection of craft , IPA brews. FB. L & D, daily. 9475 Philips Hwy., Ste. 16. 538-0811. $$ 360° GRILL F Latitude 30’s 360° Grill serves familiar favorites, including seafood, steaks, sandwiches, burgers, chicken, pasta and pizza. Dine inside or on the patio. FB. L & D, daily. 10370 Philips Hwy. 365-5555. $$ TASTE FOOD STUDIO TASTE specializes in high-end, higher quality, scratch-made fare, creating upscale dishes with a TASTEfully new twist on global cuisine and American favorites. FB, CM. L & D, daily. 9726 Touchton Rd. 415-2992. $$$ TAVERNA YAMAS Best of Jax 2012 winner. *Bite Club Certified! The Greek restaurant serves char-broiled kabobs,
seafood and traditional Greek wines and desserts. FB. L & D daily. 9753 Deer Lake Court. 854-0426. $$ TOMMY’S BRICK OVEN PIZZA F Premium New York-style pizza from a brick-oven – the area’s original gluten-free pizzeria. Calzones, soups, salads; Thumann’s no-MSG meats, Grande cheeses, Boylan soda. BW. L & D, Mon.-Sat. 4160 Southside Blvd., Ste. 2. 565-1999. $$ TOSSGREEN F The brand-new “fast-casual” restaurant offers custom salads, burritos or burrito bowls from fresh ingredients like fruits, vegetables, 100% natural chicken breast and sirloin, shrimp, tofu, nuts, cheeses, dressings, sauces and salsas. Popular items include Sunshine Shrimp and Chopped Royale. Frozen yogurt, too. CM. L & D, daily. 4375 Southside Blvd., Ste. 12. 619-4356. $ URBAN ORGANICS Local organic co-op has seasonal fresh organic produce. Mon.-Sat. 5325 Fairmont St. 398-8012. $ WATAMI ASIAN FUSION F AYCE sushi, as well as teppanyaki grill items. Rolls include the Jaguar, dynamite, lobster and soft-shell crab. FB, CM. L & D, daily. 9041 Southside Blvd., Ste. 138C. 363-9888. $$ WILD WING CAFÉ F 33 flavors of wings, as well as soups, sandwiches, wraps, ribs, platters and burgers. FB. 4555 Southside Blvd. 998-9464. $$ YUMMY SUSHI F Serving teriyaki, tempura, hibachi-style dinners, sushi and sashimi. Sushi lunch roll special. BW, sake. L & D, daily. 4372 Southside Blvd. 998-8806. $$
SPRINGFIELD, NORTHSIDE
BOSTON’S RESTAURANT & SPORTSBAR *Bite Club Certified! F A full menu of sportsbar faves is served; pizzas till 2 a.m. Dine inside or on the patio. FB, TO. L & D, daily. 13070 City Station Dr., River City Marketplace. 751-7499. $$ CASA MARIA F Best of Jax 2012 winner. The family-owned restaurant serves authentic Mexican fare, including fajitas and seafood. The specialty is tacos de azada. CM, FB. L & D, daily. 12961 N. Main St., Ste. 104. 757-6411. $$ FIVE GUYS BURGERS & FRIES Best of Jax 2012 winner. See St. Johns Town Ctr. 13249 City Square Dr., 751-9711. $ GOLDEN CORRAL Best of Jax 2012 winner. See Intracoastal. 7043 Normandy Blvd. 378-3688. $ JENKINS QUALITY BARBECUE See Downtown. 5945 New Kings Rd. 765-8515. $ JOSEPH’S PIZZA & ITALIAN RESTAURANT F Gourmet pizzas, pastas. Authentic Italian entrees. BW. L & D, daily. 7316 N. Main St. 765-0335. $$ MILLHOUSE STEAKHOUSE F Locally-owned-and-operated steakhouse with choice steaks from the signature broiler, and seafood, pasta, Millhouse gorgonzola, homemade desserts. CM, FB. D, nightly. 1341 Airport Rd. 741-8722. $$ ORANGE TREE HOT DOGS Best of Jax 2012. See Intracoastal West. 840 Nautica Dr., River City Marketplace, Ste. 125. 751-6006. $ SALSARITA’S FRESH CANTINA F Southwest cuisine made from scratch; family atmosphere. CM, BW. L & D, daily. 840 Nautica Dr., Ste. 131, River City Marketplace. 696-4001. $ THE SAVANNAH BISTRO F The varied menu features Mediterranean and French-inspired Low Country fare including crab cakes, New York strip steak, she crab soup and mahi mahi. CM, FB. B, L & D, daily. 14670 Duval Rd. Crowne Plaza Airport. 741-4404. $-$$$ THREE LAYERS CAFE F This cozy place serves lunch, bagels, desserts. Adjacent Cellar serves fine wines. Inside and courtyard dining. BW. B, L & D, daily. 1602 Walnut St., Springfield. 355-9791. $ UPTOWN MARKET *Bite Club Certified! F At corner of Third & Main, serving fresh fare made with the same élan that rules Burrito Gallery. Innovative breakfast, lunch and deli selections. BW, TO. 1303 Main St. N. 355-0734. $$
WINE TASTINGS ANJO LIQUORS 5 p.m. every Thur. 9928 Old Baymeadows Rd., Ste. 1, 646-2656 AROMAS CIGAR & WINE BAR Call for schedule. 4372 Southside Blvd., 928-0515 BLACK HORSE WINERY 3-7 p.m. Mon.-Thur., 2-10 p.m. Fri. & Sat., 2-6 p.m. Sun. 420 Kingsley Ave., Orange Park, 644-8480 BLUE BAMBOO 5:30 p.m. every first Thur. 3820 Southside Blvd., 646-1478 THE GIFTED CORK Daily. 64 Hypolita St., St. Augustine, 810-1083 THE GROTTO 6 p.m. every Thur. 2012 San Marco Blvd., 398-0726 MONKEY’S UNCLE LIQUORS 5 p.m. every Fri. 1850 S. Third St., Jax Beach, 246-1070 OCEAN 60 6 p.m. every Mon. 60 Ocean Blvd., Atlantic Beach, 247-0060 PUSSERS CARIBBEAN Grill 6 p.m. every second Fri. 816 A1A N., Ste. 100, Ponte Vedra Beach, 280-7766 RIVERSIDE LIQUORS 5 p.m. every Fri. 1035 Park St., Five Points, 356-4517
ROYAL PALM VILLAGE WINES & TAPAS 5 p.m. every Mon., Wed. & Fri. 296 Royal Palms Drive, Atlantic Beach, 372-0052 THE TASTING ROOM 6 p.m. every first Tue. 25 Cuna St., St. Augustine, 810-2400 TASTE OF WINE Daily. 363 Atlantic Blvd., Ste. 9, Atlantic Beach, 246-5080 TIM’S WINE MARKET 5-7 p.m. every Fri., noon-5 every Sat. 278 Solana Rd., Ponte Vedra, 686-1741 128 Seagrove Main St., St. Augustine Beach, 461-0060 III FORKS PRIME STEAKHOUSE 5 p.m. every Mon. 9822 Tapestry Circle, Ste. 111, SJTC, 928-9277 TOTAL WINE & MORE Noon-6 p.m. every Fri. & Sat. 4413 Town Center Pkwy., Ste. 300, 998-1740 WINE WAREHOUSE 4 p.m. every Fri. 665 Atlantic Blvd., Atlantic Beach, 246-6450 4434 Hendricks Ave., San Marco, 448-6782 W90+ 5 p.m. every Thur. 1112 Third St. S., Jax Beach, 413-0027 1 p.m. every Sat. 9210 San Jose Blvd., Ste. 4, Mandarin, 503-2348 5 p.m. every Fri. 3548 St. Johns Ave., Avondale, 413-0025
JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 49
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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Wageni ni baraka is a Swahili proverb that means “guests are a blessing.” Not always true, of course. Sometimes guests can be a boring inconvenience or a messy burden. But in the weeks ahead, the proverb is 98 percent correct. The souls who come calling are likely to bestow unusually fine benefits, provide useful clues or missing links. They might inspire you to see things about yourself you really need to know, and they may even present shiny new playthings. Open mind and heart to unexpected blessings. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “I feel my fate in what I cannot fear,” wrote Theodore Roethke in his poem “The Waking.” Try that perspective. Learn more about your destiny by doing what makes you feel brave. Go in the direction of adventures that clear your mind of clutter and mobilize gutsy brilliance. Put your trust in dreams to inspire — sweep aside distracting worries. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): It’s the inaugural Blemish Appreciation Week — for Geminis only. A good way to observe the holiday is to not only tolerate others’ flaws and foibles, but understand and forgive them. Another great way to celebrate? Do the same for your flaws and foibles: Applaud them for the interesting trouble they’ve caused and rousing lessons taught. I’m joking a little, but I’m mostly serious. Be creative and uninhibited as you have fun with human imperfections that usually drive you crazy. CANCER (June 21-July 22): When I turn my psychic vision your way, I see heavy rain and rising water, maybe a flood. It may have metaphorical significance. Maybe you’re inundated with more feelings than you’ve had in a while. Not bad or out-of-control; just deep, enigmatic and brimming with nuance. How to respond? First, announce to the universe you’re glad and grateful to accept this. Second, go with the flow. Third, promise you won’t have premature conclusions about the meaning — let them evolve.
©
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “I want to know more about you” may be the most potent sentence you utter next week. If said with sincere curiosity, it awakens dormant synergies. It disarms those who otherwise become adversaries. It makes you smarter 2012 and works as a magic spell to give access to useful information you couldn’t crack open any other way. To begin imbuing the subconscious with incantatory power, say “I want to know more about you” aloud 10 times now.
FolioWeekly
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): My hotel was nice but the area around it was sketchy. As I returned to my room after going to a convenience store, I met two colorful hookers, with enticingly lyrical sales pitches, and a lively man who proposed I buy some top-grade meth, crack or heroin. I thanked them for the thoughtful invitations but said I wasn’t in the mood. Then I went back to my room to enjoy my strawberry smoothie and blueberry muffin and watched HBO. My experience may have a bit in common with your immediate future. You may be tempted with seemingly exotic, adventurous offers that aren’t good for you. Stick to healthy basics. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): West Coast DJ Shakti Bliss wrote a remarkable status update on her Facebook page. An edited excerpt: “In the past 24 hours, I did yoga in a bathtub, hauled furniture alone in the rain, got expert dating advice from 50 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
an 11-year-old, learned the lindy hop, saw a rainbow over the ocean, had thrift-store clothes stolen from my car by a homeless man, made a magic protection amulet from cardboard, was fed quinoa soup by the buffest 50-year-old South African woman I’ve ever met, bowed to a room full of applause and watched two of my favorite men slow dance together to Josephine Baker singing in French.” I suspect you have days like that next week: packed with poetic adventures. Ready for more stimulation and excitement? SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Thomas Jefferson, third U.S. president, called himself a Christian, but admitted there weren’t others like him. He said he belonged to a sect of one person — him. While he admired the teachings of Jesus Christ, he had no use for supernatural aspects of the stories in the New Testament. So he created his own version of the Bible, using only the parts he agreed with. Now’s an excellent time to be inspired by Jefferson’s approach. Is there a set of ideas appealing in some ways but not others? Tailor it to your needs. Make it your own. Be a sect of one. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Everyone is a damn fool for at least five minutes every day,” wrote Elbert Hubbard. “Wisdom consists in not exceeding the limit.” From my experience, I’d say five minutes is a lowball figure. My daily rate is rarely less than a half-hour. The good news? In the weeks ahead, you have many days when you’re not a damn fool for even five seconds, breaking your all-time records for levels of wild, pure wisdom. Use enhanced intelligence! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Most humans have an absolute and infinite capacity for taking things for granted,” said Aldous Huxley. If that’s true, it’s important you NOT act like a normal human for a few weeks. Taking things for granted is a laziness you can’t afford. Renew your passion for and commitment to familiar pleasures and fundamental supports. Are you fully aware of everyday miracles allowing you to thrive? Express appreciation for reliable nourishing sources. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Poet Jacob Nibengenesabe was a Swampy Cree member, a Canadian First Nation tribe. He wrote shamanic poems from the viewpoint of a magical trickster who could change into creatures. In one poem, the shapeshifter talked about the importance of being sure about what he wanted: “There was a storm once / That’s when I wished myself / to be a turtle / but I meant on land! / The one that carries a hard tent / on his back. / I didn’t want to be floating!” By poem’s end, the shapeshifter decided, “I’ve got to wish things exactly! / That’s the way it is / from now on.” I hope that’s your way from now on. See desires in intricate, exact detail. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): As you sleep, you have at least a thousand dreams every year. If you’re typical, you recall only a few. Does it bother you to be ignorant of the stories your subconscious mind crafts? To be out of touch with what the Iroquois call “the secret wishes of your soul”? It’s a great time to develop a stronger relationship with dreams. It’s high time to explore deeper strata of life’s big mysteries. Rob Brezsny freewillastrology@freewillastrology.com
RIDING YOUR MTB ON PHILIPS HWY. I was stuck in traffic and we kept passing each other, me in an SUV and you on a sweet hardtail Specialized mountain bike. I like your daring in riding down Philips Highway in rush hour. You obviously live dangerously. Bike ride sometime? When: Jan. 22. Where: Philips Hwy. #1182-0130 SECURITY CHECK-IN Long, dark hair, blue jeans, many bags. Beautiful face and smile. Think French speaking. Would love to talk. Disappointed I didn’t see you again. When: Jan. 13. Where: Geneva Airport. #1181-0130 BEAUTY HIDDEN IN THE FOLDS Saw you in the VIP section at Pure and walked up to you when we first locked eyes. I thought you were beautiful. Long-haired brunette dancing with her friends wearing a black dress. I asked you if you were with anyone twice and you told me no. When: Jan. 11. Where: Pure Night Club. #1179-0116 RED LIPS HOTTIE IN THE HARLEY SHIRT Hey girl, I saw you from afar eating that taco and disgusting beer; couldn’t help but wonder who you were. I’ve seen you around town. Maybe I’ll see you at the Terror, H2O show. I love Harley Davidson. When: Jan. 2. Where: Burrito Gallery Downtown. #1179-0116 STARBUCKS, LEATHER JACKET, BEAUTIFUL This is more of a saw you once, then had coffee. You: Wearing awesome black leather jacket, boots that could’ve laced up to your knee, and your hair down. I walked by once, forgot why I was there or who I was meeting. I introduced myself; we spent two hours walking and talking. Will you see me again? When: Jan. 7. Where: Starbucks @ Casa Monica. #1178-0116 D.R. 4 EVER 2008 I saw you in your snap on truck. You are the love of my life. When: January, 2013. Where: Southside. #1177-0116 MOONWALKING BY THE RIVER You: Beautiful blue-eyed blond dressed up like the Thriller video walking down by the river on Christmas day. Me: ’Stophee Davis’ trying to keep up with you and missing your angry mornings. Maybe you’ll let me be your breakfast king one last time? Omelets are waiting. When: Dec. 25. Where: San Marco. #1175-0109 CUTE CHEF You: Cute, short-haired, Spanish man with tattoo down one arm. Me: Leggy, long dark brown hair, with an hourglass body. I’ve jogged by your restaurant every afternoon and seen you a few times and wanted to tell you that though you are taken, you are SEXY. When: Oct. 2012. Where: Soups On @ Riverside. #1175-0109
GOOD LOOKIN’ AND BBQ COOKIN’ You: White coat, black sling backs, and a killer smile looking stylish while you ordered a 90% unsweet/10% sweet tea. Ha. Me: Tall, curly and funny, with an extra jacket. We shared a laugh over a crazy bag lady. Maybe we can meet again for a 90/10? When: Dec. 14. Where: Bono’s @ Town Center. #1170-0109 PUMPKIN SPICE LATTE & FOLIO WEEKLY We sat at the same table and you said you were cold. I let you borrow my jacket and you warmed up. We ended up doing a crossword puzzle together and had a really good time. Maybe do some more sometime? When: Dec. 28. Where: Starbucks @ Southside & Atlantic. #1169-0109 CAUGHT MY EYE AT NEW TOWN CENTER LOOP You: Tall, dark haired, thirty-something guy dining alone on Christmas Eve. Me: Meeting a friend for dinner. We exchanged glances, but nothing more. You’ve got me wondering. When: Dec. 23. Where: The Loop @ Town Center. #1159-0102 I ASKED IF YOUR CAT WAS YOUR DRIVER We were filling up; I saw a cute orange cat behind the wheel. You: Long blond hair, really cute smile. We wished each other a Merry Christmas before you left. Can’t get you off my mind. I’d like to see you again in 2013. When: Dec. 23. Where: Gate Gas Station. #1158-0102 BLUE SMURF! You: Wearing a suit, with piercing, twinkling blue eyes. Me: Coral dress with my twin. I couldn’t tell you if I loved you the first moment I saw you, or if it was the second, third or fourth. But I remember the first moment I saw you walking toward me and realized the world seemed to vanish when I was with you. When: April 20. Where: Cummer Museum. #1168-1225 DAN DEACON CONCERT @ UNDERBELLY You: Comfortably dressed, short brunette. Me: Relatively tall, wearing a beanie and a gray shirt with cats on it. Made eye contact often during Grand Buffet; came close to being human tunnel buddies. Too out of my mind to introduce myself; seemed you were, too. Coffee when we’re back down to earth? When: Dec. 9. Where: Underbelly. #1167-1218 RETURNED MONEY I actually didn’t see you. When I returned from grocery shopping, you put a note in my window: “Found this by your door – guess it’s yours. Merry Christmas. :)” Inside was $40 that dropped from my pocket. Just when I thought there were no decent people left in the world, you restored my faith in humanity. Thank you. When: Dec. 8. Where: Publix @ Beach & San Pablo. #1165-1218
NY GIANT DECORATED CAR You: In a black car with 2 NY Giant decals on back window, front NY plate, NY head rest. Me: In white Hyundai Tiburon with NY front license plate cover, NY decal behind driver window. We exchanged grins of approval. Had to get to work; missed my chance. Maybe we can catch a G-men game. When: Dec. 5. Where: I-95. #1165-1211 COOL WHITE JEEP DRIVER Parked side by side at Marsh Landing Publix, did some groceries, met at the checkout lane. You were next to me again, and left at the same time. Your pants look adorable on you and I noticed you didn’t have a ring. Want to meet? Can’t wait :) When: Dec. 2. Where: Publix @ Marsh Landing. #1164-1211
TIJUANA... DON’T CHA WANNA You come in every Taco Tuesdaze with 3-4 others, always well dressed, you always drink Orange Fanta. You used to talk about my favorite show “Eastbound & Down.” I’m the one with a ponytail if you wanna PRACTICE making little Tobys. When: Nov. 13. Where: Tijuana Flats @ Old Baymeadows. #1158-1127 DUMB ME @ WINN-DIXIE We were in checkout line together, I was wearing an Allen Iverson T-shirt, we talked about you having been a military brat who moved around a lot. We separated to different lines. I should’ve gone with you but I wasn’t thinking. Care for lunch? When: Nov. 5. Where: Winn Dixie @ Beach & St. Johns Bluff. #1157-1127 BREATHTAKING You: Manly beer salesman, mesmerized. Me: New to town, amused. You said I was “breathtaking.” I still am. Let me take your breath away again. Find me? When: Sept. 9, 2011. Where: Whole Foods/San Jose. #1156-1127
YOU GAVE ME DANCE LESSONS Me: Blonde, tall and boots. You: Plaid shirt and boots and doing the electric slide. We chit-chatted and you taught me some dance steps. How about a private lesson??? When: Dec. 1. Where: Crazy Horse. #1163-1211
IT’S UR LUV ISU, there, in our special place, on that special day. U, who are my sunshine, my rain. I want to be with you always for you are my dream come true. It’s ur luv, it just does something to me... You: Sexy, tattooed, bandana-wearing bad boy. Me: Hopelessly in luv <3 <3 When: Every day. Where: Willowbranch Park. #1155-1127
OWL EYES ON YOU You: Brunette working at Target. Me: Redhead in black glasses asking about Barnies coffee. Wish I would have had the courage to kiss you on the spot; maybe we will share a cup one morning. When: Nov. 27. Where: Target @ Beach & Hodges. #1162-1211 BEAUTIFUL BARBER I met you around this time and have loved you since. I know we had something special and hope you thought so, too. If you think you still have any spark left, please contact me through this service. We just both have to be the nice people we really are. When: 2008. Where: Riverside. #1161-1204 I HAVE AND ALWAYS WILL At my friend’s house playing video games like creepy kid. You stormed in, yelling. Your beauty, accent took my breath away. I whispered “Just keep talking.” You stared, smiled. Didn’t know what to do. I fall in love every day thinking about you, my soulmate. You: Beautiful black hair, sweet arm tattoo, beautiful eyes, smile. Me: Tattooed, Screwed Sailor. When: Oct. 17. Where: Florida Club Blvd. #1160-1204 SHORT BUT STUDLY EMT You: EMT working for Liberty, picking up my hospice patient. Me: Blonde nurse who makes small talk with you. We’ve exchanged a few talks here and there but maybe coffee soon? When: Nov. 13. Where: Shands Hospital. #1159-1204
CUTIE WITH THE COFFEE COOZIE You: Cute guy with dark hair, bit of facial hair, coozie for your hot coffee. Me: Friendly, adorable girl with long reddishbrown hair. We bonded over the affordability of $1 coffee in the campus vending machine. You showed me the way to the lids! I was bummed you didn’t get my number. Let’s chat over coffee again, pretty please! When: Nov. 15. Where: UNF. #1154-1127 BLUE CIVIC BY THE CUMMER Girl in blue two-door Civic. We locked eyes while you were turning onto Post. I was on my bike in a blue sweatshirt. What was the stare for? You must’ve liked what you saw. Your smile was so noticeable behind that tint. Let’s chat it up sometime over a drink. When: Nov. 14. Where: The Cummer. #1153-1127 GIRL IN BLACK I saw you at Omni Parking lot on Bay Street. You wore a black shirt, held a gray flag that said 22D. Me: Wearing long-sleeved tan shirt. Our eyes locked a few times. When ISU, I thought of the Hall & Oates song, “Private Eyes.” Looking to meet up somewhere. Please respond! When: Nov. 14. Where: Omni Parking Lot. #1152-1127
GORGEOUS @ LSJH You: Stunning beautiful sandy blonde hair, lost trying to find the cafeteria for orientation. Me: Guy that helped you find your way and got you the packet of papers. Would love you to get lost again, in my arms? When: May 2012. Where: Lakeside Junior High. #1174-0109 YESTERDAY’S Open mic night on Thursday. You: Playing your guitar and singing the sweetest songs. Can’t get your voice out of my head! Me: Baby-faced nerd in the corner with too many pitchers deep to compliment you. You can serenade me any Thursday! When: Dec. 27. Where: Yesterday’s. #1173-0109 LIQUID COFFEE COURAGE I come in to your job for the joe, but stay hoping to catch your name. You: Bearded blue-eyed babe with a pony tail. Me: Red-haired honey latte drinker, with a friend who chatted with you about squash soap. I wish I was bolder, but I’m a shy bean. When: Dec. 29. Where: Bold Bean. #1172-0109 SUN IS SHINING DOWN Looked across to see those beautiful eyes wishing for a new day to see those again as they once were. You are the one and will always be. How many more days can you hold out? Let’s see those eyes again. When: Dec. 24. Where: Jerry’s. #1171-0109
JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 51
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52 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
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News of the Weird Watchers Watching Porn
A leading “adult” search engine reported in December that, over the last seven years, just two of the most popular Internet pornography websites it analyzes have been viewed 93 billion times, which averages to about 13 views for every person on Earth. Given the average viewing time of 11 minutes per visit, the search engine (PornWatchers.com) calculated men (and a few women, of course) have spent about 1.2 million years watching pornography on just those two sites. Noted the search engine in its press release, “Say goodbye” to calling online porn a “niche.” “It’s in every living room on this planet.”
Let’s Hear It for the Birds
Almost-extinct vultures may be making a comeback within the Parsi community of Mumbai, India, after a pain reliever (diclofenac) nearly wiped it out. Parsi’s Zoroastrian religion requires “natural” body disposals (no cremation burial) of© humans and cattle, and bodies This is a copyright protectedorproof have always been ritually laid out for hungry birds, but the community has come to rely on diclopfenac in hospitals and for cattle. When ions, please call your advertising representative at 260-9770. RUN DATE: 111312 NOTW last mentioned this (in 2001), vultures R PROOF IF POSSIBLE AT 268-3655 were dying out from kidney damage caused by drug, and Produced by cs Checked by theSales Repbodies cj were piling up. (Parsis were E OF BENEFIT SUPPORT ASK FOR ACTION exploring using solar panels to burn corpses.) However, according to a November New York Times item, clerics are reporting modest success in weaning Parsis from diclofenac, and the vultures seem more plentiful.
ADVERTISING PROOF
Least Competent Criminals
© 2013
Peter Welsh, 32, and Dwayne Doolan, 31, aren’t the first burglars to try breaking into a building by smashing through an adjoining basement wall, but they may be the clumsiest. Their New Year’s Eve target was Wrights Jewellers in Beaudesert, Australia, but trying to smash the front window failed, as did smashing rear doors, which led to another store. They finally settled on the basement option, but absentmindedly broke through the opposite-side wall and wound up in a KFC restaurant. Undaunted, according to police, they robbed KFC of about $2,600.
FolioWeekly
Stinking Suspicion
Again, a public library has been sued for asking a patron to leave because his body odor drew complaints. George Stillman, 80, filed a $5.5 million lawsuit in October against the New York Public Library for being “humiliat[ed]” by staff at Manhattan’s St. Agnes branch. Stillman said he sees body odor (his and others’) as “challenge[s] to the senses” and “a fact of life in the city.” Actually, he’d also denied he had any body odor at all, but a New York Post reporter, interviewing him about the lawsuit, noted “a strong odor.”
Prosecution Exhibit A
Drunk drivers try to avoid hit-and-run charges by claiming they didn’t realize they hit anything, but their odds drop if there’s a dead pedestrian lodged in the windshield, as with Sherri Wilkins, 51, arrested in Torrance, Calif., in November, 2.3 miles from the crash scene, after other drivers finally persuaded her to stop. Turns out, Wilkins is a “rehabilitated” drug user who was a counselor at a Torrance drug treatment center and claimed to have been sober for 11 years.
This Little Piggy … 54 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013
A Memphis podiatrist told Fox News in November of a rise in women choosing what
may be called a nuclear option — “stiletto surgery” — for uncomfortable, yet irresistible, shoes. Either a shoe must go or a foot, and more choose a foot (or at least a pinky toe), removed or reduced by surgery. The Memphis doctor said he sees as many as 30 patients a month interested in the procedure.
She Did It! No, She Did It!
A vexing legal question was tackled in New York City in December when Diana Williamson was sentenced to three years in prison upon conviction for defrauding Medicaid of $300,000 by writing bogus prescriptions. She asserted “her” innocence, claiming one of her multiple personalities (uncontrollable by others) did the crime. A memorable NOTW “dissociative identity disorder” case was in 2002, when a Montana judge favored a woman, ruling her spontaneous murder confession as one identity was inadmissible since one of her other identities “lawyered up” after a Miranda warning.
Life-saving Augmentation
In November, Eileen Likness, 61, testified she (like two other women we reported on) believes that when she was shot point-blank by an exboyfriend in 2006 in Calgary, Alberta, her life was saved only because the 9mm bullet was slowed as it went through her breast implants. “[They] took the brunt of the force,” she said at ex-boyfriend Frank Chora’s trial; he was eventually acquitted.
Procreation Problem
Wisconsin Circuit Court judge Tim Boyle is the most recent, in December, to try to solve the intractable problem of deadbeat dads who continue to procreate even though unable to even modestly support the children they have had (usually with multiple mothers). Corey Curtis, 44, of Racine, was ordered not to father another child until he proves he can support the nine he’s had, with six women. Incarcerating Curtis with only men would likely prevent No. 10, but it’ll do nothing to help the first nine.
Employee of the Year
In December, car-parts retailer AutoZone fired a worker for taking action widely admired — but prohibited in the workplace because of a fear of liability. Devin McLean and his store manager in York County, Va., were herded into a back room by a gun-wielding holdup man and, being the only witnesses, feared for their lives. But McLean broke free, ran to his truck and got his gun. He could’ve fled but insisted that, morally, he couldn’t leave his colleague. When McLean re-entered, pointing his Glock 40, two things happened: The robber fled and McLean became in violation of AutoZone’s “zero tolerance” policy against employees bringing firearms into the store. Two days later, he was fired.
Whose Best Friend?
In Westfield, Mass., in August, and near Eureka, Calif., in November, families of dog owners drowned trying to save their pets, who’d fallen into a lake and the ocean, respectively. The Massachusetts couple jumped out of their boat in Hampton Ponds State Park to save their terrier; the California couple and their son were swept out to sea after their dog swam too deep into the surf to fetch a stick. Both dogs survived. Chuck Shepherd weirdnews@earthlink.net
Backpage Editorial WEDNESDAY DELIVERY MEANS MORE UPDATES TO LIVE MUSIC CALENDAR
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VALENTINE’S DAY
Feel the love, Feb. 14
FEB. 20 Bob Colgan brought Bella to a seven-week Dog Manners class at the Jacksonville Humane Society. Once Colgan learned how to work with Bella, the blonde Labrador mix transformed from a 50-pound unruly, neurotic nightmare to a well-behaved dog. Photo: Brad Purcell
AD DEADLINE FEB. 13
The Rewards of Good Behavior
FEB. 27
AD DEADLINE FEB. 20
The right training regimen will keep owners and pets happy
J
acksonville is one of the largest cities in the United States, known for its beaches, city life, the Jaguars and love of animals. Animal shelters in Jacksonville are taking proactive steps to become one of the first cities to go “no kill” by 2014. One of the fastest ways to move toward a community without homeless pets is to hold super adoption events. Animal Care & Protective Services, the Jacksonville Humane Society and First Coast No More Homeless Pets held the first super adoption event in July 2012 and adopted out more than 900 pets in three days. The next step is to keep the animals permanently in those loving homes. How does one live happily ever after with the newly adopted family member? In Northeast Florida, one takes them to see Stacy Strickland or Renee Yaple at Jacksonville Humane Society (JHS). Yaple is the JHS behavior manager and Strickland is the lead instructor for the Tiny
Tots, Dog Manners and Canine Good Citizen classes held at the shelter. Both are members of the world’s largest organization of positive reinforcement trainers, the Association of Pet Dog Trainers. The philosophy of this organization is to train without stress, fear or harm to the dog. The two women work like magic with the dogs that come to them for help. They can solve any dog training or behavior issue, as long as the owner is willing to teach and train the dog using APDT methods. The dogs are good pupils, willing to work for a treat. Bella was adopted from JHS as a cute little puppy, but she grew into a 50-pound neurotic, unruly nightmare. Bob Colgan, Bella’s owner, was on his way to return the disorderly canine after she chewed up a very expensive loveseat. Colgan thinks of Bella as his child, and he was distraught with his decision. He loved the blonde Labrador mix, but had reached a breaking point with her disruptive behavior. After a few suggestions from Yaple and Strickland over the phone and committing to attend the seven-week Dog Manners class, Colgan was willing to give Bella one more chance. The first week of class is for people only, and Colgan’s initial reaction to Strickland’s instruction was, “If all that Stacy says in the class comes true, Bella will be speaking French at the end of all this.” The classes teach the dogs fun and safe obedience skills along with tricks and socialization. This type of training is especially effective in rehabilitating a fearful dog. Bella went from being a fearful dog that destuffed a couch to a model citizen in a matter of a few weeks. At graduation, Bob was awarded the Most
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Improved Handler award and Bella won contests for the Longest Sit Stay, Best New Trick and the most puppy push-ups. What’s a puppy push-up? The person asks the dog to sit, down, sit, down simultaneously with hand signals. The dogs love it, because they know the reward at the end of all that work is a high-value treat. Dogs want nothing more than to be paid for a job well done. That’s how Strickland describes her training. People don’t work for free; we go to work to earn a paycheck. Dogs go to work (obeying basic commands or performing tricks) for food, a toy or lots of praise and love. Positive reinforcement training is leading the trend in the dog-training field. It’s been well-documented and proved to be the fastest, most effective and most humane way to train. Strickland and Yaple are two of the best in Jacksonville to introduce this highly recommended method of training for bonding with your canine companion. With continued super adoption events, commitments like Bob’s to keep dogs like Bella permanently in loving homes, and passionate dog trainers, Jacksonville will see a time when there are no more homeless pets. Jessie Miller
Miller is a passionate freelance writer and blogger with a serious love affair for the beach, running, animals and the environment. She lives in Jacksonville with her two shelter-rescued pit bulls.
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Folio Weekly welcomes Backpage Editorial submissions. Essays should be at least 1,200 words and on a topic of local interest or concern. Email your Backpage to themail@folioweekly.com or snail mail it to Denise M. Reagan, Editor, Folio Weekly, 9456 Philips Highway, Ste. 11, Jacksonville FL 32256. Opinions expressed on the Backpage are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the editors or management of Folio Weekly. JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 5, 2013 | FOLIOWEEKLY.com | 55