Orlando Weekly - August 10, 2022

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com


9/04 BERES HAMMOND: SOLID LOVE TOUR 2022

9/05 THE AUSTRALIAN PINK FLOYD: ALL THAT’S TO COME

COMING SOON 8/19

CLASSIC ALBUMS LIVE: LED ZEPPELIN II

9/02

CLASSIC ALBUMS LIVE: QUEEN “NEWS OF THE WORLD”

9/03

STREETLIGHT MANIFESTO: CALM BEFORE THE CHAOS TOUR

9/09

AMY SCHUMER: WHORE TOUR

9/14

LOUD & LIVE PRESENTS SERVANDO Y FLORENTINO: EN TU CIUDAD TOUR 2022

10/23

JOHN PETRUCCI FEATURING MIKE PORTNOY AND DAVE LARUE WITH SPECIAL GUEST MEANSTREAK

10/28

DANIEL HOWELL: WE’RE ALL DOOMED!

10/30

LOUD AND LIVE PRESENTS SANLUIS: ILLUSIONISTA TOUR

11/10

JOE SATRIANI: EARTH 2022-2023 TOUR

11/12

RUSSELL PETERS: THE ACT YOUR AGE WORLD TOUR

11/18

AEG PRESENTS COLE SWINDELL: BACK DOWN TO THE BAR TOUR

11/19

HARD ROCK LIVE & LIVE NATION PRESENT AMON AMARTH WITH SPECIAL GUESTS CARCASS, OBITUARY AND CATTLE DECAPITATION

11/23

EL GRAN COMBO: 60TH ANNIVERSARY WITH SPECIAL GUEST LUIS FIGUEROA

10/03 LIL NAS X: LONG LIVE MONTERO

12/01

OUTBACK PRESENTS TAYLOR TOMLINSON: HAVE IT ALL TOUR

10/06 LOUD AND LIVE PRESENTS FITO PAEZ: LOVE AFTER LOVE TOUR 30 YEARS

12/02

OUTBACK PRESENTS TAYLOR TOMLINSON: HAVE IT ALL TOUR

12/04

SAL VULCANO

10/07 COIN: UNCANNY VALLEY TOUR WITH MILOE

12/08

JASON BONHAM’S LED ZEPPELIN EVENING

10/14 FLAMING LIPS

12/10

LEWIS BLACK: OFF THE RAILS

10/15 MESHUGGAH WITH SPECIAL GUESTS IN FLAMES & TORCHE 10/16 LOUD AND LIVE PRESENTS DIEGO EL CIGALA

2/03/23 KENNY WAYNE SHEPHERD TROUBLE IS...25TH ANNIVERSARY WITH SAMANTHA FISH

10/22 CLERKS III: THE CONVENIENCE TOUR FEATURING KEVIN SMITH

2/25/23 LOUD AND LIVE PRESENTS MELENDI

9/15

LOUD & LIVE PRESENTS SERVANDO Y FLORENTINO: EN TU CIUDAD TOUR 2022

9/16

COLLECTIVE SOUL & SWITCHFOOT

9/17

LOUD & LIVE PRESENTS PRINCE ROYCE: THE CLASSIC TOUR

9/18

THE FIXX

9/21

HARD ROCK LIVE & LIVE NATION PRESENT JACK WHITE: THE SUPPLY CHAIN ISSUES TOUR

9/29

KMFDM

LED ZEPPELIN II AUGUST 19 | 8PM SCAN FOR TICKETS OR CALL THE HARD ROCK LIVE BOX OFFICE AT 407.351.LIVE OR HARDROCKLIVE.COM

JOIN WWW.UNITYBYHARDROCK.COM ORLANDO | UNIVERSAL CITY WALK® TICKETS AVAILABLE HRL BOX OFFICE +1-407-351-5483 Artists, showtimes & prices subject to change. All shows are all ages unless otherwise stated. ©2022 HARD ROCK INTERNATIONAL (USA), INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Florida Group Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor in Chief Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Managing Editor Matthew Moyer Digital Content Editor Alex Galbraith Calendar Coordinator Kristin Howard Editorial Interns Maitane Orue, Nicolle Osorio, Patricia Tolley Contributors Gianna Aceto, Rob Bartlett, Melissa Perez Carrillo, J.D. Casto, Ida V. Eskamani, Jacquelin Goldberg, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Sarah Kinbar, Seth Kubersky, Jim Leatherman, Matt Keller Lehman, Bao Le-Huu, Anthony Mauss, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Nicolette Shurba, Eric Tegethoff

Advertising Director of Sales Jeff Kruse Multimedia Account Exec Dan Winkler Classified Rep & Multimedia Account Manager Jerrica Schwartz Sales Department Administrator Rachel Gold Creative Services Production Manager Daniel Rodriguez Business Director of Operations Hollie Mahadeo Events and Marketing Events & Promo Manager Miranda Hodge Events & Marketing Coordinator Casey Bogeajis

Circulation Circulation Manager Collin Modeste Euclid Media Group Chief Executive Officer Andrew Zelman Chief Operating Officers Chris Keating, Michael Wagner VP of Digital Services Stacy Volhein Director of Digital Strategy Colin Wolf Senior Marketing and Events Director Cassandra Yardeni Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon Controller Kristy Dotson

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Above: illustration by Clay Jones. Cover: design by Daniel Rodriguez

euclidmediagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, vmgadvertising.com Orlando Weekly Inc. Phone 407-377-0400 Fax 407-377-0420 Orlando Weekly is published every week by Euclid Media Group Orlando Distribution Orlando Weekly is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Copyright notice: The entire contents of Orlando Weekly are copyright 2022 by Euclid Media Group LLC. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Publisher does not assume any liability for unsolicited manuscripts, materials, or other content. Any submission must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All editorial, advertising, and business correspondence should be mailed to the address listed above. Subscriptions: Six-month domestic subscriptions may be purchased for $150; one-year subscriptions for $240. Periodical Postage Pending at Orlando, FL

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NEWS+ VIEWS

FOOD+ DRINK

BACK PAGES

7 Your words

23 Gà me with a spoon

30 Selections of the Week

DeSantis suspends state attorney who won’t prosecute people who get abortions and other news you may have missed, plus Tom Tomorrow’s comic

23 Recently reviewed

33 Free Will Astrology

12 Tech crunch

FILM+ MUSIC

Letters to the editor, plus Clay Jones’ comic

9 ICYMI

Did a patent dispute squash Orlando’s early2000s tech industry — or was it all a pipe dream?

15 Informed Dissent

Democrats are playing with fire as they spend money to try to manipulate Republican primaries

ARTS+ CULTURE 18 Process over product

Artist Shannon Rae Lindsey explores the nature of objects at Casselberry Sculpture House

21 Live Active Cultures

Welcome to the high-tech fantasy and hair-pulling frustration known as the Disney MagicBand+

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com

It’s all about the chicken at North Vietnamese noodle joint Gà 2 To in Mills 50 Restaurant rundowns from the last couple of months

27 On (small) Screens

Streaming premieres this week: Day Shift, Dota: Dragon’s Blood, Five Days at Memorial and more

29 This Little Underground

Matt Kamm’s Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord return with “Go Back to Bed,” a four-minute Technicolor fantasy

Our picks of the best things to do and see this week, plus plenty of event listings Your horoscope for the week of Aug. 10-16

37 Savage Love

Dan Savage’s relationship advice, plus ‘Ripley’s Believe It or Not!’

39 Classified advertisements


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AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com


¶ Florida must establish a nonpartisan judicial nominating system In response to your article “Florida urges appeals court to leave abortion ban in place as lawsuit works through courts,” July 15: In the wake of the Supreme Court ruling stripping a halfcentury of abortion rights, the only thing preventing a complete ban on abortion in Florida is the privacy clause in our state constitution. While the state Supreme Court previously ruled that the constitution’s privacy provisions protect a right to abortion, there seems to be no guarantee on our right to reproductive freedom, especially given that the highly partisan right-wing judges in Florida’s state courts will be relied upon to dispense justice and protect the reproductive rights of Floridians. As the majority of Floridians support Roe v. Wade and abortion in general, it can be difficult to ensure that they can trust their own state courts, particularly when they are stacked so heavily to the right. Legislators need to make the judicial nominating process truly nonpartisan and unbiased, in addition to limiting the governor’s influence over nominating committees. To accomplish this, we must increase citizen involvement in the nomination process and ensure that more state judges have diverse experiences and backgrounds; this is the path to making Florida’s judiciary reflective of the diversity of our state. Without re-establishing a nonpartisan judicial nominating system, Florida’s state courts will serve politicians and not the people, and more of our basic freedoms will be stripped. Ensuring fair and independent state courts is the only ‘WE’RE NOT IN KANSAS’

thing stopping politicians from abusing their power and taking away even more of our rights and freedoms. — Elise Mytelka, Winter Park

¶ Insurrectionists are running for office During the January 6th hearings, we’ve heard from former members of the Trump administration and Republican state officials about how Trump and his allies worked together to try and overthrow our democracy because the 2020 presidential election didn’t go their way. Now, they’re working to make sure all of our elections go their way in the future, whether we vote for them or not. Already, Trumpers in office have changed state laws to weaken our freedom to vote and threatened Republican election administrators who won’t go along with them. Now, they’re running candidates for key election administration offices, from secretary of state to county clerk. Should they win their elections this fall, these officials won’t hesitate to overturn future elections if they or their MAGA allies lose. This completely undermines the tenets of our democracy. The only way we’re going to protect our elections is to fight back and make our voices heard. We have to cast our ballots in the upcoming midterm elections. It’s up to us to hold election deniers accountable at the polls and elect democracy defenders up and down the ballot on November 8th. — Elvia Lopez, Orlando BY CLAY JONES

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AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Passion Berry 1 1/2 oz Tito’s Handmade Vodka 1 oz lime soda 3 oz passion fruit juice 1 oz agave or simple syrup (optional) 1/2 oz lime juice 6 blueberries 3 basil leaves

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com

Muddle blueberries and basil leaves in a glass. Add ice and remaining ingredients. Stir and garnish with a basil leaf.


BY ALEX GALBRAITH, COLIN WOLF, AND THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA

DeSantis suspends state attorney who won’t prosecute people who get abortions, 15 other states sign on to lawsuit challenging Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill, the Mad Cow Theatre moveout turns ugly and other news you may have missed. »

DeSantis suspends state attorney for refusing to prosecute people who receive abortions Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has suspended State Attorney Andrew Warren of the 13th Judicial Circuit in Hillsborough County due to “neglect of duty.” While speaking at a press conference in Tampa, DeSantis cited Article IV, Section 7 of the Constitution of the State of Florida for his decision to issue the executive order, and specifically pointed to Warren’s decision not to pursue charges against abortion patients or doctors, as well as his public support of transgender healthcare. “State Attorneys have a duty to prosecute crimes as defined in Florida law, not to pick and choose which laws to enforce based on his personal agenda,” said DeSantis. “It is my duty to hold Florida’s elected officials to the » highest standards for the people of Florida. Last July, Warren called Florida’s 15-week abortion ban “unconstitutional.” “This 15-week ban is an unconstitutional law. The Legislature is hoping courts ignore the Florida constitution. But I’m upholding the law and protecting the fundamental rights of all Floridians,” said Warren. “Today’s political stunt is an illegal overreach that continues a dangerous pattern by Ron DeSantis of using his office to further his own political ambition,” said Warren in a statement. “It spits in the face of the voters of Hillsborough County who have twice elected me to serve them, not Ron DeSantis. In our community, crime is low, our Constitutional rights — including the right to privacy — are being upheld, and the people have the right to elect their own leaders — not have them dictated by an aspiring presidential candidate who has shown time and again he feels accountable to no one. Just because the governor violates your rights, it doesn’t mean they don’t exist.” Besides signaling his support for gender-affirming care and abortion access, Warren has been a consistent critic of DeSantis, and has also stated that the governor’s “antirioting” bill was tearing off “a couple corners of the constitution.” Warren was elected in 2016 and then re-elected by a large margin in November of 2020.

»

Mad Cow Theatre sued by city of Orlando for allegedly taking city equipment Mad Cow Theatre’s removal from their longtime space was always going to be ugly. We didn’t realize it would get this nasty, though. After a years-long fight between the city of Orlando and the theater that rented space from them for a token fee ended in eviction, Mad Cow’s HQ was promised to Orlando Fringe as an incubator space for up-andcoming creatives. Now the city is alleging that Mad Cow took tens of thousands of dollars of city-owned equipment out of the space on their way out the door. The city filed a lawsuit against Mad Cow on July 29 saying that the company lifted more than $30,000 in equipment. The theater was required to leave behind the equipment in the terms of a settlement reached with the city. Orlando agreed to waive nearly $500,000 in delinquent fees on the condition that the theater be left in operable condition. City staff involved in the process told Orlando Weekly July 1, “It was the City and Fringe’s understanding that the equipment necessary to operate the 54 West theater space would be in the theater when Orlando Fringe took over. However, that was not the case.” The city lists everything from ticket scanners to sandbags in its list of missing equipment. Mad Cow leadership has yet to publicly respond to the lawsuit. Fringe executives this week told the Orlando Sentinel that a gutted theater would hinder their plans to open the incubator program by 2023. “In discussions with the city from the beginning, we asked that Fringe enter into a fully functioning theater with working theatrical equipment,” Orlando Fringe director Alauna Friskics said. “We have been complying with the city to determine which equipment is there and what is missing so that we can get the theater open as soon as possible.”

»

“I’m so sick of politicians — and we saw this with COVID — trying to sow fear into the population,” DeSantis said at a news conference this week. “You see some of these states declaring states of emergency, they’re gonna abuse those powers to restrict your freedom. I guarantee to you that’s what will happen.” Declaring states of emergency largely serves to free up sources of funding to help combat the problem of monkeypox. Were Florida to declare a state of emergency, more funds could be allocated to vaccination efforts and keeping people from contracting this particularly painful disease. More than 6,600 cases have been reported in the United States. Florida has more than 500 cases, the third-highest total in the nation.

15 states, D.C. join lawsuit challenging Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill Saying the law will “stigmatize and harm LGBTQ youth,” attorneys general from 15 states and the District of Columbia are seeking to aid challengers to a new Florida law that restricts instruction on gender identity and sexual orientation in Florida public schools. The states and the District of Columbia sought approval this week to file a brief in support of a constitutional challenge filed by the LGBTQ-advocacy groups Equality Florida and Family Equality and other plaintiffs. The law prevents instruction on gender identity and sexual orientation in kindergarten through third grade and requires that such instruction be “age-appropriate … in accordance with state academic standards” in older grades. Republican lawmakers titled the measure the “Parental Rights in Education” bill. Opponents label it the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. The state has asked U.S. District Judge Allen Winsor to dismiss the challenge. But the 15 states and the District of Columbia argue that the case should not be dismissed. They filed a motion Wednesday seeking approval to submit a friend-of-the-court brief. They also attached a copy of the brief. “In short, Florida’s extreme approach implies the absence of a legitimate pedagogical purpose, rendering its restrictions on speech and targeting of a minority highly suspect,” the brief said. “And [the 15] states’ experiences show that reasonable policies are available that include LGBTQ people, foster free speech, and accommodate parents. Florida’s turn, instead, to restricting speech and targeting a minority supplies additional evidence of the act’s unconstitutionality.” The 15 states are California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York and Oregon.

DeSantis refuses to declare monkeypox a public health emergency in Florida After the Biden administration declared monkeypox a public health emergency, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis steadfastly refused any such measures in the state. Under DeSantis’ administration, Florida officials were barred from enforcing protections against coronavirus. Cases and deaths notably spiked in the wake of DeSantis and Florida Republicans’ push to bar vaccination and masking mandates to slow the spread of COVID-19. The death toll from this disease in Florida is higher than the total number of American servicemembers who died in the Vietnam War. DeSantis sees this as a win, noting that the people who managed to go on living didn’t have to live in fear of being asked to wear a small piece of paper over their mouth. orlandoweekly.com

AUG. 10-19, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com


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M

ention patent law at a dinner party and you’re likely to see eyes around the table glaze over. But the patent system undergirds modern U.S. technology — everything from software to the physical mechanics that make smartphones work. In the early aughts, a Florida-based company thought it was going to bring the growing technology economy to Orlando. But two decades and two patent lawsuits later, those dreams have all but evaporated. Around the time boy bands were topping music charts, cell phone technology was on the verge of a revolution. Clunky devices that could double as doorstops were on their way out. Technological breakthroughs meant phones became pocket-sized, and this is where Jeff Parker says his company ParkerVision came into the picture. “We enabled the smartphone to have the high data rates and the worldwide coverage and the reasonable battery life that we all take for granted today,” Parker told Orlando Weekly, “without growing the size of the phone or making smartphone companies eliminate features.”

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In the late 1990s, ParkerVision entered into discussions with Qualcomm, now one of the largest wireless technology companies in the world. It looked like Parker’s company was going to kick into a higher gear. Although it’s based in Jacksonville, the company began leasing a facility in Lake Mary in 2000. “I’m looking at this thinking, we’re going to be a 1,000-person company,” Parker said. “This is going to be fabulous. We’re going to bring all kinds of people from all over the world. People aren’t going to just be visiting Orlando because of Disney and the vacation.” Orlando is home to one of ParkerVision’s top engineers. The company’s Lake Mary design space was more than 17,000 square feet. Parker imagined recruiting talent from the Space Coast. But the dream came tumbling down in lawsuits and patent disputes that the company is still fighting today.

Here’s a simplified version of the technology that led to the fallout between ParkerVision and Qualcomm. Innovations in radio frequency technology — how our cell phones send and receive signals that are then converted into data — is a large part of why phones are so ubiquitous today. One of the key developments in the past two decades has been converting signals more efficiently. In old analog hardware, like radios from a century ago, sending and receiving signals was constant work and required bulky mechanics to do the job. Parker says his company’s energy sampling technology, which “samples” slices of radio waves rather than converting the entire signal, offered an elegant solution while also cutting down on noise. And all of it was easily achieved by a small chip. “One of the most interesting parts of our story is the lead inventor [David Sorrells] who developed this was not classically trained in radio frequency technology at all,” Parker said. “In fact, he doesn’t have a formal colMention radio frequency receivers at a dinner party and lege degree.” In internal emails later revealed during their first it’s likely to cause even more glazed eyes than patent law.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com


court case, Qualcomm employees praised the technology’s potential. “This is virtually the holy grail of RF receiver designs — achievable within practical limits!” One employee wrote in 1998 after ParkerVision approached the company about licensing the technology. “FYI. [T]his is critical technology that we must land based on what we have seen so far,” wrote another employee in a 1999 email to Qualcomm co-founder Irwin Jacobs. The two companies seemed to be on the path to partnership. Qualcomm was not yet the massive company it is today, although it was riding its own wave of early-’90s innovations in mobile phone technology. Because of growing competition, the company restructured in 1998. The next year, Qualcomm’s stock rose 2,619 percent, turning some of its southern California investors into “quillionaires.” Negotiations between ParkerVision and Qualcomm eventually soured. According to ParkerVision, the first technology Qualcomm sold infringing on its patent came in 2006. At that time, advances in 3G mobile technology meant cell phones worked faster than ever. Then, in 2007, the first iPhone was introduced and there was no looking back. From then on, smartphones were central in everybody’s life. In only a few short years, grandpa would figure out how to text you cringey memes and clown-face emojis. As one of the largest mobile chip providers in the world, Qualcomm was capitalizing on all of it. By the time iPhones were let loose on the world, ParkerVision’s conversations with Qualcomm had long since ceased. But Parker says the discovery of a 2011 academic conference paper proved what he long suspected: Qualcomm had stolen their technology. “It’s complete bullshit,” Parker said. “I don’t know a nicer way to say it.” That year, his company sued Qualcomm for patent infringement in the Middle District of Florida and went to court in Orlando. In 2013, a jury agreed with Parker, awarding ParkerVision $173 million in past damages. But the next year, Judge Roy Dalton reversed the decision, siding with Qualcomm. “There was some initial email excitement,” Qualcomm attorney John Scott told Orlando Weekly about the technology. “Some of those emails were used in the first trial and frankly, I think were responsible for the jury verdict. Although it’s never clear in the emails: What is the technology that’s being touted by the engineers?” Patent disputes are complicated and jargony, making the jury’s job hard. Dalton’s reversal in the case came down to inconsistencies in ParkerVision’s expert witness testimony. Scott says the judge granted a motion setting aside the jury verdict, “finding as a matter of law that the admissions that we had obtained in that case meant that we did not infringe those patents.” Andres Sawicki, a University of Miami law professor specializing in intellectual property, told Orlando Weekly the judge’s decision is unusual. “It’s not every day that you see a judge set aside a jury verdict, be it in a patent case or otherwise,” he said. “Typically, courts defer quite a bit to juries.” However, he also noted that these kinds of cases can be hard to untangle. “Qualcomm’s main argument, it seems, is that the ParkerVision patents are the kind of technology that anybody working in the field at the time would have been able to figure out without a great deal of trouble,” Sawicki said. In patent law, this concept is known as prior art, which helps determine whether an invention is novel or not obvious enough to be patented. With companies

racing to find ways to make cell phones smaller and more efficient, the components to build ParkerVision’s technology may have already been in the air in the 1990s. But Sawicki says there’s another side to this concept. “We often have in the patent law space this legal fiction where we think of the inventor sitting in his lab with the whole universe of information in their field pinned up on their wall. And obviously it’s unrealistic.” ParkerVision has had its share of skeptics over the years, even fueling online beefs. A now-defunct website called PV Notes (run by “a group of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs with extensive technical and business backgrounds brought together by the outrageous claims from ParkerVision”) was dedicated to picking apart the technical details of the company’s technological claims. There are also skeptics of its business model. Joe Mullin, Mark Cuban Chair to Eliminate Stupid Patents at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, says ParkerVision hasn’t reported revenue from products since 2006. “Public records show that ParkerVision doesn’t produce any goods or services and instead makes money through patent lawsuits,” Mullin told Orlando Weekly. “And patent assertion entities like ParkerVision exploit our broken patent system, they kill jobs, and they hurt small businesses.” Mullin says with a system that tilts toward patent owners, suing over patent infringement is big money. Last year, 87% of high-tech patent lawsuits in federal courts were filed by entities that got most of their revenue from patent licensing. Mullin says these “patent trolls” often use the cost of litigation as leverage. Going to court can cost millions of dollars. “There’s also a pretty big contingent of once-upona-time businesses that, like, had a thing once that had a small number of sales, or no sales,” Mullin said. “Then it kind of flipped and what was left were patents. And some of them are able to continue to litigate those patents for a long time.” Parker refutes Mullin’s claims, saying his company “relies on the patent system to protect its investment of hundreds of millions of dollars invested in inventing, developing and licensing the cutting-edge, proprietary radio-frequency (RF) technologies that have enabled wireless solution providers to make and sell advanced wireless communication products.” And despite his years of pursuing justice in the courts, Parker is no fan of the lawsuits either: “We could be building more products, more technologies, employing lots of engineers. But instead, all of our money is going to litigation.” Others believe there could actually be value in giving people the ability to work on new technologies without bankrupting themselves. “When we’re going to be investing in innovation, we don’t know in advance which paths are going to be successful and which ones are going to fail,” Sawicki said. “And so one thing we’re going to want to do is create a mechanism for people to be able to monetize even their less successful efforts.” Legal battles between the companies continued to chug

along after Judge Dalton’s 2014 decision, with challenges in the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, a federal board that was created to settle patent disputes outside of the regular court system and for far less money than litigation. Each side notched wins with the board. Then, ParkerVision and Qualcomm were back in an Orlando courthouse over yet another patent dispute in 2020. The pandemic delayed proceedings but in March of this year, Judge Paul Byron, who believed a jury wouldn’t be able to understand the technology, ruled in favor of Qualcomm. ParkerVision has appealed the case and the appeal is likely to get underway next year.

The years-long struggle raises many questions, not least of all how the patent system can work better. Mullin says there are a number of options. Strengthening the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, better known as the PTAB, is one avenue. Established under the America Invents Act a decade ago, its sole purpose is to determine whether a patent is valid or not and keep these cases out of the legal system. Mullin says it’s been especially effective at limiting patent trolls’ damage on the system. But he adds that the Trump administration has undermined the PTAB, leading to a growing number of cases thrown out on technicalities. Mullin says another issue is the number of patents that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office grants each year. In 2020, the office issued more than 350,000 utility patents, the most common type of patent. He says it’s impossible for the office to give each application (which totaled nearly 600,000 that year) a thorough examination. The PTAB, if strengthened and relieved of loopholes, could be an important backstop for this process. Last year, Senator Patrick Leahy introduced the Restoring the America Invents Act in Congress to do just that. Orlando’s tech sector still lags behind the national average in employment numbers. But the industry is growing. Between 2015 and 2020, high-tech job numbers in the Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford metro area grew by 26.8% — three times the national average. And in recent years, there have been some high-profile moves in the area. In March, Electronic Arts opened its Central Florida office at Creative Village in downtown Orlando. The video game developer has a workforce of about 1,000 employees in the area. The $1.5 billion mixed-use building is also part of the new downtown campus for the University of Central Florida and Valencia College, and houses UCF’s game design programs. Building on its gaming prowess and the virtual reality companies that call the city home, the Orlando Economic Partnership has declared the city the center of the emerging “metaverse.” Orlando is also home to other prestige tech companies. Stax (formerly Fattmerchant) has been described as the “Netflix of credit card processing.” Its unique approach to credit card transactions has earned the company a valuation exceeding $1 billion, officially making the company a unicorn this year. Stax CEO Suneera Madhani says her company is only the first unicorn to come out of Orlando. Orlando’s newest neighborhood, Lake Nona, is getting in on the tech action, too. A German aviation company is planning to open its first “vertiport” for air taxis in the U.S. in the neighborhood by 2025. (Caveats: The aircraft is still in the developmental phase and only the rich will be able to afford trips in the taxis for at least the first decade.) Lake Nona also is home to self-driving shuttle startup Beep. All of this fits in with Orlando’s plan to be a “futureready city.” (The master plan is also available in a virtual meeting room — Metaverse, eat your heart out.) This was the theme for Buddy Dyer’s 2019 State of the City address. In it, Dyer expressed the importance of the tech sector for the city. “Our future success depends on our ability to attract and grow talent, our ability to take advantage of the sweeping technological advancements coming our way.” However, with a system out of whack and dispute cases on the rise, Orlando’s burgeoning tech industry likely hasn’t seen its last patent feud. Still, who knows? If the tech revolution continues in Orlando, Epcot’s vision of the future, which has shimmered for so long just over our horizon, might soon take a backseat to the real thing.

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AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME Democrats are playing with fire as they spend money to try to manipulate Republican primaries BY JEFFREY C. BILLMAN

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t’s possible, if unlikely, that John Gibbs would have beaten Michigan Rep. Peter Meijer (R-MI) without Democrats’ help. While the $450,000 they spent exceeded what Gibbs raised during the campaign, it paled in comparison to Meijer’s arsenal. Besides, Gibbs had Donald Trump’s endorsement, which is worth twice that sum in Republican primaries. But to the degree it mattered, the meddling paid off. Democrats got the matchup they wanted: Instead of challenging a normie incumbent in November, Democrat Hillary Scholten will face an election-denying, possibly anti-Semitic former Trump staffer who promoted the weird-ass conspiracy theory that Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager participated in Satanic rituals. A seat they would probably lose became a seat they’ll probably win. This wasn’t the first time this cycle that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) tried to game a Republican primary on behalf of a MAGA mouth-breather. It was, however, the first time their preferred opponent won. Machiavelli would be proud. But the DCCC is playing a very dangerous game, one whose short-term benefits are far outweighed by its longterm risks. Meijer was one of only 10 Republicans — and the only freshman — to vote for Trump’s impeachment following the Jan. 6 insurrection. Quite appropriately, Democratic leaders praised his “courage and integrity” while denouncing “opportunistic politicians who desire to rule at all cost.” Meijer’s party, meanwhile, joked about assassinating him. But as soon as Democrats no longer found it useful to pit Good Republicans against Trump’s Lackeys, they dropped nearly half a mill reminding Michigan Republicans that Gibbs was Trump’s guy and shrugging off the hypocrisy by quoting Jean-Paul Sartre: “In politics, we all have dirty hands up to our elbows. Nobody’s pure,” Rep. Jamie Raskin said. The day before the primary, Meijer wrote that it was nauseating to watch “my Democratic colleagues to sell out any pretense of principle for political expediency — at once decrying the downfall of democracy while rationalizing the use of their hard-raised dollars to prop up the supposed object of their fears. “The Democrats are justifying this political jiu-jitsu by making the argument that politics is a tough business. I don’t disagree. But that toughness is bound by certain moral limits: Those who participated in the attack on the Capitol,

Election denier, conspiracy theorist and former Trump staffer John Gibbs is running for Congress in MIchigan PHOTO VIA VOTE FOR GIBBS WEBSITE

for example, clearly fall outside those limits. But over the course of the midterms, Democrats seem to have forgotten just where those limits lie.” This is an important point: Either Trump and his acolytes pose an existential threat to our democratic institutions or they don’t. If they do — and they do — why elevate them? Michigan’s 3rd District is a tossup. But it won’t be the tossup on which Congress turns. To keep control of the House, Democrats have to win all the races that FiveThirtyEight currently rates as tossups — plus a handful that favor Republicans. So it’s worth asking whether the juice is worth the squeeze. But the real danger lies in the message Democrats sent: If you do the right thing, we’ll fuck you for it. What incentive do Republicans have to take “courageous” stands if they know that not only will their party ostracize them, but the other guys will pour fuel on the fire? That’s not to say that Democrats should help Republicans win re-election. But they shouldn’t go out of their way to defeat the ones who respect the rule of law. It’s not like the GOP is getting less authoritarian. In Dallas this week, the Conservative Political Action Conference invited autocrat Viktor Orban, the prime minister of Hungary — whose close adviser recently resigned while calling a racist speech Orban made “pure Nazi” — to open its event. Orban delivered a grievance-ridden address about “globalists” and “communists” and “fake news.” Trump, Sen. Ted Cruz and other Republican luminaries followed. Meanwhile, in Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis wielded his executive powers in an unprecedentedly autocratic fashion.

He suspended a twice-elected district attorney for what DeSantis called “incompetence”: signing pledges not to prosecute doctors who provide reproductive and genderaffirming health care services — and criticizing DeSantis for his authoritarian actions. Ironic, huh? DeSantis, of course, is the governor who revoked Disney’s longstanding tax benefit in retaliation for the company lightly criticizing his anti-LGBTQ efforts. “I don’t think the people of Hillsborough [County] want to have an agenda that is basically woke, where you’re deciding that your view of social justice means certain laws shouldn’t be enforced,” DeSantis said. Another bit of irony: The DA he suspended won re-election in 2020 with 53 percent of the vote, whereas DeSantis won in 2018 by 0.4 percentage points while getting stomped in Hillsborough. So maybe he should take a pass on claiming to know what the people there want. The governor’s bumbling attempts at dictatorship might be darkly comedic … if he weren’t a frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination. But if and when the little tyrant becomes everyone’s problem, our democracy will need Republicans willing to stand against him at their own political peril. When Democrats shiv someone like Meijer, they’re making that less likely — and lending credibility to Trumpian claims that their concerns about democratic erosion are nothing more than political posturing.

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[ arts + culture ]

‘Materials and Their Impressions,’ wall collage with acrylic screenprints on paper, window screen, flagging tape and wire, dimensions variable, 2022

‘Linoleum Series II,’ mixed media with plaster, fencing, zip ties, washers, acrylic and ink on linoleum, 12.5 x 12.5 inches, 2020

PROCESS OVER PRODUCT Shannon Rae Lindsey explores the nature of objects at Casselberry Sculpture House BY NICOLETTE SHU R BA

I

n his 1956 science fiction short story “The Last Question,” Isaac Asimov invites readers to consider the end through the beginning, or the beginning through the end — order and chaos. The plot, set in 2061 and beyond, revolves around a question repeatedly asked by man that stumps even the galaxy’s most sophisticated sentient computers: How might we rebuild our universe despite its inevitable end? How can we reverse entropy? But while the supercomputer Multivac and human hivemind Zee Prime were concerned with thwarting entropy to preserve life at the end of time, Shannon Rae Lindsey, current artist-in-residence at Casselberry’s Sculpture House, is dedicated to embracing entropy in all its beauty and curiosity. In August 2004, during a previous career as a pharmacy technician, Lindsey traveled to Arcadia, Florida, to serve the small DeSoto community while residents dealt with the damage following Hurricane Charley. In the midst of her

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work, Lindsey observed and was intrigued by the unfamiliarity of the familiar. Metal roofing wrapped around telephone poles led her to deeper questions of our understanding of objects, materials and definitions. This was a pivotal moment in Lindsey’s career as an artist, and in her work she began to explore how context changes our perception of an object. “I hope to re-create that moment of wonder and engagement with the viewer that there’s this little flicker of familiarity and then you’re enticed to get closer and [ask] ‘How do I know what this is?’” Lindsey says. Lindsey’s current solo exhibition at the Sculpture House showcases new works and new processes from the artist, including screenprinted paper collages and webs of mixed media. But the centerpiece is the sweeping sitespecific installations comprised of construction implements — including a lustrous vortex of metal roofing material arranged delicately in large ribbon-like folds — and an entire

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room of cascading and frayed orange silt fencing. “The installations are really exciting because they’re really defined by the space,” Lindsey says. “They’re site-specific, they respond to the amount of space that I’m able to use, the architecture, and they are also defined by how much time I have to install them.” Her residency at this Casselberry gallery space — a former residential home acquired and repurposed by the city of Casselberry as an extension to their city arts program — gave her the opportunity to exhibit her three-dimensional works. “I’m dependent on this public-facing venue to be able to install installations,” says Lindsey. “Whereas, the twodimensional stuff obviously looks the same as it does in my studio, the installations are really dependent on having that space, and I like to show them with the two-dimensional work because it really is a two-dimensional and three-dimensional approach to the work itself.”


[ arts + culture ]

‘Silt Fencing Room,’ site-specific installation with orange silt fencing, dimensions variable, 2022

Lindsey’s practice is rooted in Process art, a movement that flourished in the 1960s utilizing nontraditional manufactured materials, with a brief that the act of creating the work was as important, if not more than, the finished work itself. “I really lean into that because the materials that I use are mostly manufactured construction materials and I discovered them and have spent many years exploring them in my practice because … I have an interest in perception and specifically, how we perceive something as being ordered or disordered, and also, hand-in-hand, being useful or being non-useful,” Lindsey says. Much of her work revolves around the difficulty in definition, and the fact that how we define things is based on our points of comparison and perspective. In her process-based approach, Lindsey is less concerned with manipulating objects to fit a preconceived notion, and more with exploring an object’s intrinsic possibilities. “I don’t really care about these things doing what I want them to do. I want to embrace what it will naturally do,” says

Lindsey. “What are the characteristics of these materials and in which they will show their work, contemporary artists how can I interact with it in different processes to reveal dif- sharing their practice, and the community surrounding all ferent aspects of them?” coming together in this one place,” she says. As well as Sculpture House artist-in-residence, Lindsey After this solo exhibition, Lindsey will showcase work at wears many other hats — mixed media the Snap! Orlando gallery’s “Florida artist, gallery director at UCF Arts, and Showcase” group exhibition, follecturer at UCF — each of these roles lowed by a solo show at the Francis ARTIST TALK: intersecting with and informing the othMarion University Place Gallery in SHANNON RAE LINDSEY ers. She started working in gallery spaces South Carolina. 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 12 after completing her undergraduate “I try to always be productive The Sculpture House degree in Fine Arts from the University enough, flexible enough, adaptable 120 Quail Pond Circle, Casselberry of South Florida, and joined Tampa’s enough, to take every opportunity casselberry.org Tempus Projects where she helped build that I can and I don’t want to say free walls, hang art, sweep floors and run no, because this is such a learning lights. experience for me as an artist and so Lindsey understands galleries and much of my work evolves from these museums as integral to an artist’s career, where they can experiences,” Lindsey says. showcase their research and receive feedback from viewShannon Rae Lindsey’s work will be on display at the ers. Her varied roles culminate in the gallery. “This is where Casselberry Sculpture House through Aug. 19. students can see their future in terms of a professional venue arts@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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BY SETH KUBERSKY

Welcome to the hightech fantasy and hair-pulling frustration known as the Disney MagicBand+ Look upon Disney’s MagicBand+, ye mighty, and despair | photo by Seth Kubersky

One Night

Between the record-setting sec- to tap their way through turnstiles instead of game are all clustered together in a central ond-quarter revenues recently reported by Central Florida area attractions and the rapidly rising levels of traffic at Orlando International Airport, it seems like our local tourism industry has rebounded at full speed from the pandemic this summer — but one major thing has been missing. While the crowds may be back in full force, with an ever-increasing roster of resurrected live performances to keep them entertained, this summer there’s been a noticeable deficit of major new ride debuts. For example, SeaWorld opened its Ice Breaker roller coaster back in February, and has begun teasing a stand-up Surf Coaster for 2023, but its only new draws for the summer were fireworks and food festivals. Likewise, after opening a blockbuster new attraction nearly every summer for the past decade, Universal not only passed on adding anything substantial to its existing parks this season, but, as of this writing, has also been unable to reopen Revenge of the Mummy following its multimonth refurbishment. Memorial Day’s long-delayed opening of Epcot’s Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind coaster was the exception that proved the rule, as Walt Disney World’s three other theme parks received no substantive additions for this summer’s resurgent audiences. But in lieu of adding new actual adventures included with regular admission, late last month Disney introduced a new optional accessory that — depending on your level of cynicism — is either an exciting evolution in interactive technology, or a desperately underdeveloped cash grab. Welcome to the high-tech fantasy and hair-pulling frustration known as MagicBand+. “MagicBand” will already be a familiar buzzword to anyone who has vacationed at Disney World over the past decade, and many annual passholders like myself probably already own a half-dozen or more of the low-powered RFID-enabled wristbands, which were a cornerstone of Disney’s controversial billion-dollar MyMagic+ information technology project. For years, MagicBands were provided free to onsite hotel guests and passholders, allowing them

scanning traditional tickets. However, promised MagicBand-triggered effects inside the parks either never materialized or faded away, as Disney focused on smartphonebased interactivity instead. Rather than abandon the bands entirely, Disney has doubled down and released MagicBand+, which squeezes in additional technology — including a ring of multi-colored lights, haptic vibration motors and Bluetooth wireless communication — to bridge the gap for guests between the free PlayDisney app’s digital games and the physical theme park around them. In addition to performing all the same functions as the original MagicBand (which will also remain available and fully operational for the foreseeable future), MagicBand+ lets wearers enjoy exclusive app-based activities around the Walt Disney World Resort, including the Fab 50 Quest in all four parks; the Star Wars: Batuu Bounty Hunt around Galaxy’s Edge at Disney’s Hollywood Studios; and synchronized effects during nighttime spectaculars. (Raise your hand if you remember the ill-fated “Glow With the Show” and “Made With Magic” light-up merchandise.) Alas, my opening-day MagicBand+ experience was less than magical. Although I was able to purchase my preferred design on the morning of their debut without a long delay, it emerged from the box with a dead battery. A much smarter move is to order yours online ahead of time via shopdisney.com. That way, you can charge the band, connect it to your park admission using your My Disney Experience app (remove your phone’s case if tapping doesn’t trigger the process), and update its firmware and settings (be sure to pick your favorite color and turn on increased motion sensitivity in the options) before arriving at the resort, instead wasting time in the park trying to get it working like I did. Once my MagicBand+ was fully powered and paired, it didn’t take too long for me to exhaust the interactive entertainments that the devices currently enable. The Fab 50 Quest is pretty much a failure, at least in the two parks I’ve tried it at so far. The interactive golden character statues involved in the

location at Epcot and Hollywood Studios, killing the scavenger hunt’s challenge; waving your MagicBand+ at them makes you look ridiculous, and only triggers a reaction about half the time; and the payoff — a brief sound clip that’s often too quiet to understand and some stiffly animated augmented reality (AR) characters viewable inside the app — barely seems worth the effort. Batuu Bounty Hunting fared far better, but still wasn’t without its flaws. After receiving an assignment, I roamed Black Spire Outpost seeking my mark like the Mandalorian. My MagicBand+ buzzed and blinked as I tracked my alien prey, who was ultimately revealed (again via AR) behind a sealed door emblazoned with a yellow skull symbol. This digital game of hot-and-cold makes a fun distraction while waiting for your Rise of the Resistance Lightning Lane time, but the clues can be confusing — especially when it’s too sunny to see the MagicBand+’s colored lights, which is almost always — and after a few rounds, my band’s low-battery warning began blinking. Ultimately, there’s no reason that all these features couldn’t have been integrated into Disney’s apps for smartphones or Apple Watch. No reason, that is, except the opportunity to sell digital handcuffs to Disney diehards like myself for $35-$45 apiece. Without question, Walt Disney World has plenty of obsessed passholders who will appreciate MagicBand+ as one more diversion during their near-daily visits. The real test will come late this year when MagicBand+ debuts at Disneyland in California, which has decimated its Magic Key passes for locals in favor of prioritizing short-term tourists. Those folks may be better served spending that MagicBand+ money on a couple of days’ worth of Genie+ Lightning Lane privileges, or one of the interactive Power-Up bands that will be sold at Super Nintendo World, which should open shortly after at rival Universal Studios Hollywood. A wristband-based battle between Mickey and Mario? Now that’s a Super Smash Brothers bout I can’t wait to watch.

only! August 26

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SODOUGH SQUARE SoDo pizzeria does the Motor City justice with Detroit-style pies that are light, airy and cheesily crisped around the edges. There aren’t any losing combinations, no matter the toppings. For a proper Detroit-style pairing, Faygo in various flavors is offered. Open Wednesday to Sunday. (reviewed Aug. 3) 419 Michigan St., sodoughsquare.com, $$

PLANTEES

GÀ ME WITH A SPOON It’s all about the chicken at North Vietnamese noodle joint Ga 2 To in Mills 50 BY FAIYAZ KARA

“T

his is just like eating in Hanoi,” menu of chicken dishes, we knew exactly said Top Chef winner Hung what to do. “Let’s get everything,” I said, and Huynh the first time we dined in a matter of minutes we were popping stirat Ga 2 To. The restaurant, hidden within fried chicken gizzards ($15) off a gorgeous the V-shaped cluster of businesses inside plate stacked with chicken hearts and small the “1216” plaza near the corner of Mills and eggs. Or … not eggs? “They’re ovaries,” said Huynh with a Colonial, bills itself as a “Vietnamese coffee shop with a twist.” The twist? It’s really a chuckle, and we dug into the fiery offal salad Vietnamese noodle shop that serves coffee. reinforced with whole garlic. The ovaries And not just any Vietnamese noodle shop, taste like dense egg yolks and further charge but a North Vietnamese noodle shop special- this protein-charger of a starter. But don’t izing in all things chicken, or gà as they say pass on the actual salad ($13.75). This is no chicken salad gunked in mayo in Vietnam. Chef-owner Ty Hoang clearly wanted to — oh, no. It’s a bracing, infernal, vibrant create a transportive experience, and Ga 2 salad with various greens, cherry belle and To does exactly that (minus the motorcycle watermelon radishes, red bell peppers, cabbage, and slivers of exhaust or hokey senchicken and chicken timentality). There are cartilage. Glorious. It’s inviting front and back GA 2 TO one of my fave salads, patios, should the need and the chicken has a to replicate eating in the 1216 E. Colonial Drive lot to do with it. Hoang sticky swelter of a Hanoi 407-412-6444 sources the free-range, summer arise. It’s all a $$ antibiotic-free cluckers part of the restaurant’s from Orlando Halal Live allure — though, in all Poultry. honesty, the restaurant’s Then we got our slurp on, deeming the air-conditioned confines proved a lot more mién gà, a soup with mung bean noodles, alluring to us. So, after a complimentary serving of iced chicken, intestines, liver and those eggy jasmine tea, and a glance at the focused ova ($13.95) a suctorial success. Along with

The Mills 50 hotspot next to Lil Indies and Will’s Pub lures them in with a focused, all-vegan menu of plant-based burgers, nuggets and shakes. The ideal side for all of them? “Plantstyle” shoestring fries slobbered in vegan cheese, grilled onions and chives. Open daily. (reviewed July 27) 1030 N. Mills Ave., 321-2064271, planteesburgers.com, $$

PHOTO BY ROB BARTLETT

herbs, sprouts, scallions and cilantro, the soup is topped with dried bamboo shoots grown in the highlands of Vietnam. And that pristine bone broth buoys the phó gà ($13.95) as well, a bowl of Vietnamese penicillin that I’ll be ordering the next time I’m under the weather. When Huynh and I meet at Ga 2 To three months later, the menu features additional items, including the eponymous gà 2 tô ($14.50). It translates to “chicken in 2 bowls” and that’s what you get — a bowl consisting of rice noodles, chicken, pig heart and herbs in a blistering sauce; and another bowl with chicken broth, also spicy, with those “young eggs.” Do the dip or alternate bites between dry and wet. Either way, it makes an incredible meal. Enjoying the soup with fried imperial rolls ($12) makes it a superlative one. They’re superbly crisp and come filled with a mix of chicken and shiitake mushrooms. We also try the marinated chicken with mung bean sticky rice ($16.95). The seasoned legs slicked with soy and secrets take a back seat to the rice. Mung beans are steamed, mashed into balls, then shaved onto the turmeric-tinged rice topped with fried shallots. I can see why Hanoians consider xôi xéo a breakfast staple — in addition to being soft and chewy, the rice is subtly sweet as well. Certainly not as sweet as the egg coffee ($7), though. Egg yolks are beaten into an airy fluff with sweetened condensed milk for 10 minutes before being poured atop bold, caffeine-rich robusta coffee. It’s wickedly addictive, this cà phê trúng, and another breakfast staple as well. And if you’re wondering if Ga 2 To is open for breakfast, they’re not — maybe that’s the twist.

BACÁN Deftly executed dishes influenced by the cuisine of the Americas are a hallmark of this handsome restaurant inside the Lake Nona Wave Hotel. Charred pulpo embellished with a colorful spill of aji amarillo and chimichurri; fiery corn ribs jacked with adobo mayo; and cod poached in olive oil served atop crispy quinoa crowned with lime foam are stellar. Cocktails are as stiff as they are creative. Be sure to stroll the worldclass sculpture garden before or after dinner. Open daily. (reviewed July 20) 6100 Wave Hotel Drive, 321-675-2000, lakenonawavehotel.com, $$$$

FREDSTER’S Owned by a band leader and the former co-owner of Dexter’s of Winter Park, this Maitland gathering ground for the gray-haired set resuscitates the aughts-era dishes and vibe of Dexter’s with dishes like the chicken tortilla stack, lamb sliders and eggplant roulade. It’s also a live music venue and the dance floor gets packed, particularly on weekend nights. Closed Monday. (reviewed July 6) 1720 Fennell St., Maitland, 321-444-6331, fredsters.net, $$

JAPANATOLIA Turkish rolls called “su-chi” are reminiscent of sushi, only instead of sushi rice and nori, spiced bulgur and flour tortilla are the base ingredients. The pinwheel-like creations come with seven different exterior components ranging from avocado to collards to rare roast beef. In addition to su-chi, a host of cold apps and dips, as well as hot items like meatballs in mushroom gravy, are served at this food-court operation inside the Oviedo Mall. Don’t pass on fresh-made desserts and savory pastries. Open daily. (reviewed June 29) 11600 Oviedo Mall Blvd., Oviedo, 407-542-3071, instagram.com/ japanatoliafusion, $$

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[ film + tv ] that’s going to explore a bunch of issues only hinted at in the original, including gender identity and race. While promoting the show, real-life Rockford Peach Maybelle Blair did her part by coming out as a lesbian at age 95. Personally, I’m going to have to wait a few more years to decide if she’s sincere or if it’s just a phase. (Amazon Prime) Lucy’s School — In the latest “Peanuts” special, the headstrong Miss Van Pelt starts her own elementary school, only to find out it’s a lot more work than she had envisioned. I don’t know, Roosevelt Franklin seemed to manage just fine. Maybe if she weren’t such a f***ing Karen? (Apple TV+) A Model Family — Streaming’s fascination with all things South Korean continues with a drama series about a humble college professor who gets tangled up in the drug trade to provide for his family. A little Breaking Bad, a little Ozark … somebody explain to me why it’s China we’re going to war with over knockoffs. (Netflix) Jamie Foxx and Snoop Dogg play vampire hunters in Day Shift, premiering Friday on Netflix

ON (small) SCREENS IN ORLANDO

Never Have I Ever Season 3 — How long can Mindy Kaling continue to depict her adolescence as an awkward and painful process of having to choose between multiple cute guys until we have absolutely no sympathy for her whatsoever? Well, there’s another season coming after this one, and she swears that’ll be the end. Good call. She needs to get to the B.J. Novak years while she’s still young enough to remember them. (Netflix)

PHOTO COURTESY NETFLIX

Streaming premieres you won’t want to miss by Steve Schneider

PREMIERES WEDNESDAY:

PREMIERES THURSDAY:

PREMIERES FRIDAY:

Bank Robbers: The Last Great Heist — This week’s big true-crime doc tells the story of a bunch of thieves who stole millions from a Buenos Aires bank and got away, slipping past 200 police officers who were gathered outside. The key to their plan was convincing the cops the place was an elementary school. (Netflix)

The Box — In a three-part docuseries, Detective Chris Loudon is motivated to crack a serial-murder case after he discovers photographs of a bunch of young women in an evidence box that’s gone untouched for half a century. See, now that’s exactly what my house is like. (Paramount+)

13 the Musical — The Broadway hit that gave the world Ariana Grande yields a long-awaited film adaptation, with newcomer Khiyla Aynne stepping into the role Grande once occupied. Might as well be proactive about your newfound fame, Khiyla: File that restraining order against Pete Davidson now. (Netflix)

Heartsong — A traveling violinist gets himself into a world of trouble when he falls for the bride at a wedding he’s been hired to play. Gosh, most musicians I know would be happy just to get some of the buffet. (Netflix)

Dota: Dragon’s Blood — Book 2 of the dragon-and-demon-happy videogame adaptation ended with a whole bunch of subterfuges revealed and characters killed off. But there’s plenty left to resolve in this third go-’round, like the pressing question of who gets to rule the moon. (My guess is that it depends on whether they allow ballot harvesting.) (Netflix)

Day Shift — Jamie Foxx plays a hardworking dad whose job as a pool cleaner is a cover for his real gig: hunting vampires. Snoop Dogg appears as a fellow slayer who tries to get Foxx’s character union benefits. That isn’t a joke, by the way, but an actual plot point in the movie. I always appreciate it when the people who make these things give me a nice paragraph’s vacation. (Netflix)

I Am Groot — Five new animated shorts show Baby Groot experiencing childhood’s customary rites of passage, including learning to draw and taking a bath. Ask any animator: If you learn to draw, you’ll absolutely take a bath. (Disney+) Indian Matchmaking — Mumbai relationship expert Sima Taparia returns for a second season of helping lonely hearts find their soulmates. Eight new episodes of hookahs and hookups, comin’ right at ya. (Netflix) Instant Dream Home — Master renovators have just 24 hours to make an ordinary domicile into something truly special. And I’m supposed to be impressed by this? I can turn any decent dwelling into a pig sty in six! (Netflix)

Stay on Board: The Leo Baker Story — Learn the story of the champion skateboarder who withdrew from the 2020 Olympics to pursue life as transgender and nonbinary. It’s kind of sad when you realize that 25 years ago, the skating was the part you had to reassure the world wasn’t a crime. (Netflix) Trolls: TrollsTopia — The show’s seventh and final season includes appearances by such fanciful creatures as “glampires” (fabulous vampires), “rock-coons” (hardcore raccoons) and “Orlando Sentinel Top Fans” (the worst kind of trolls there are, anywhere). (Hulu and Peacock)

Secret Headquarters — High-octane family fun ensues when a kid discovers the crime-fighting nerve center his dad (Owen Wilson) has built under their home. Of course, what he really would have preferred to find is porn. (Paramount+) This Fool — Stand-up comic Chris Estrada adapts his life and work into a sitcom about a juvie rehabilitation worker whose own cousin is a gangbanger fresh out of prison. On the plus side, he always knows where to go when he wants to bring a shiv to Show and Tell. (Hulu)

PREMIERES MONDAY: Deepa & Anoop — Preschool viewers get some new role models in the form of an Indian girl and her pet elephant. Sima Taparia says they’re perfect for each other, but she’ll wait until they’re an appropriate age to draw up the marriage contract. (Netflix)

Five Days at Memorial — This reality-based miniseries about the effects of Hurricane Katrina on a New Orleans hospital was originally pitched as a season of Ryan Murphy’s American Crime Story. Instead, Murphy went with an adaptation of the Clinton/Lewinsky impeachment scandal. I guess he felt Hurricane Katrina just hadn’t blown hard enough. (Sorry everybody, I’m always a little rusty when I come back from vacation.) (Apple TV+)

PREMIERES TUESDAY: Untold — The unconventional sports documentary series returns with four new episodes. In the first, The Girlfriend Who Didn’t Exist, we learn how linebacker Manti Te’o was catfished into thinking not only that he had a girlfriend, but that she had died of leukemia. Come back next week for a hard-hitting exposé of America’s mathletes, The Girlfriend Who Lives in Canada. (Netflix)

A League of Their Own — The beloved Penny Marshall movie about the early days of women’s baseball becomes a series orlandoweekly.com

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Friday, November 11th & Saturday, November 12th 5:30pm - 9:00pm

Guests who book a stay for at least one night of the event are eligible for a discounted room rate with proof of event ticket purchase. Booking hours: Mon - Fri 8:30am - 7:00pm & Sat - Sun 8:30am - 5:00pm.

Tickets

Event Only Tickets $165 Room Reservations: 1.800.227.1500

FoodAndWineClassic.com

* Event will be outdoors weather permitting. Discounted room rate is only available to guests who book a room over at least one of the nights of the event. Guests must present proof of event ticket purchase at time of check in for discount to be honored. Educational seminars are sold separately. Contact our reservations department for full details.

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BY B AO L E - H U U MATT KAMM | PHOTO BY JENNA ROBBINS

LOCAL RELEASES

Matt Kamm has long been one of the area’s most colorful freaks, recording mostly under various iterations of the Tele name. But in recent years, he hasn’t been especially prolific. That’s why his latest Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord release is particularly noteworthy. Here, Kamm finally unleashes the pop diva within and goes all Top 40. No, of course that’s not true. Anyone who knows this inveterate weirdo either saw right through that or is currently wiping up the spit take they just did upon reading it. Still, the new Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord single “Go Back to Bed,” though unquestionably psychedelic, is one of Kamm’s more lucid trips. The spacey pop gem coasts on a dream cloud whirring with retro-futuristic electronic flourishes, but its sonic clarity makes it as distilled and accessible a gateway into Matt Kamm’s surrealist realm as they come. This four-minute Technicolor fantasy now streams everywhere. It’s also available as a name-your-price download on Bandcamp for the collectors out there. Orlando’s Florida Slang — the indie-pop duo of Jeff Ilgenfritz (Mumpsy, Moonmen from Mars, Luscious Lisa and many others) and Darci Ricciardi — have just released new album Bright Futures on Post Records. I already hinted at the volume of material they’re sitting on when I first wrote about the band last October upon their debut. Just to update the count, this will be their third full-length collection in well under a year. Anyone else feeling like a slack ass right now? Anyway, the nine-song Bright Futures is another well-crafted batch of balmy and sweetly sentimental tunes. In musical new-

Matt Kamm has long been one of the area’s most colorful freaks. His new single as Tele & the Ghost of Our Lord, “Go Back to Bed,” is a spacey pop gem, a four-minute Technicolor fantasy

comer Ricciardi, it’s clear that Ilgenfritz has found an inspiring new collaborator, one who’s spurred him into an impressive new phase of prolificacy. With songs like the skyward swoon of “Heartbeat,” the album’s latest single, he’s audibly rejuvenated. Bright Futures now streams everywhere.

CONCERT PICKS THIS WEEK If you’re coming out, be safe, be cool.

Voodoo Kulture: Leave it to Nigel John and Mr. Mogembo to turn out a fresh and deep take on a dance music event. The two veteran local DJs are pushing their rhythmic intellect down a more experimental rabbit hole this time, diving into a darker side of house music steeped in heady Afro and Latin sounds. The event takes place in the upstairs loft space but the destination will be deep underground. (9 p.m. Friday, Aug. 12, Magnolia Orlando, $6-$10)

Nothing Butt Rock Fest: You may not be proud of it, but you may wanna check out this show. As the name implies, it’s a showcase where local bands (Felicity, Breed, The High Ground) impersonate some true legends of butt rock (Nickelback, Godsmack, Three Days Grace). Although these aren’t mine personally, nobody appreciates a guilty pleasure like me. And I gotta applaud the truly dreadful lengths this show is willing to go to. This one’s gonna be a riot. (8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13, Will’s Pub, $15$20) Jayo: If there’s one thing that the golden era of East Coast hip-hop has taught us, it’s that jazz and rap go boom-bap together like chocolate and peanut butter. And there are few acts in town that embody that divine bridge live like Orlando’s Jayo. He’s not just a multi-instrumentalist and beatboxer who plays keys, guitar and bass; he’s also a looper who can lay it all down and stitch it together on his own. Go get on that abstract, original tip. (8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13, Bynx, free) City Morgue: With lots of menacing looks and face tats, the young New York rap duo of ZillaKami and SosMula are some of today’s biggest poster boys of shock and sensation. But without music that’s equal to it, even the most lurid horrorcore extremity becomes camp. City Morgue, however, serve up deliciously nasty bangers like the bloody sons of Gravediggaz and DMX. It’s splashy, it’s demented and it’s some of the best hardcore rap in the game right now. (6 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 17, The Beacham, $25) baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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of the WEDNESDAY, AUG. 10

Michael Bublé

Velvety-smooth crooner Michael Bublé is on his summertime “Higher” tour, and the man has a date with Orlando on Wednesday. Bublé is kicking off his U.S. jaunt in the South, and there’s plenty of Florida love — shows in Orlando, Sunrise and Tampa are on the books. The multi-platinum singer — and favorite of grandparents everywhere — will be showcasing songs from his newest album, Higher. If you’re lucky, the Canadian singer might even bust out his new cover of Olivia Rodrigo‘s pop hit “Drivers License.” 8 p.m., Amway Center, 400 W. Church St., amwaycenter.com, $65-$165. — Matthew Moyer THURSDAY, AUG. 11

War on the Catwalk Florida is currently having a moment of hateful stupidity regarding drag. Gov. DeSantis recently filed a complaint against a Miami establishment that hosts a drag brunch that children were allowed at, trotting out the whole “culture war” talking point that the event was an attempt to “sexualize” children. (We will now hold our breath until DeSantis serves a similar complaint to Hooters. Oops, we died.) So this has been on our minds, and the protests at “Drag Queen Story Hours” at public libraries have been on our minds. What right-wingers are breathlessly spouting about drag is wrong and disingenuous; it’s a beautiful art form that’s both a pastiche of pop-culture at its wildest and all about the ecstasy of performance as liberation. We guess all this is to say that the touring “War on the Catwalk” will be at the Plaza Live, with Drag Race stars including The Vivienne, Krystal Versace, Kita Mean, Kornbread, Priyanka, Kylie Sonique Love, Denali and Crystal Methyd. Make it sell out. 8 p.m., The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave., dragfans. com, $35-$199. — MM FRIDAY, AUG. 12

COURTESY PHOTO

ANTHR A X, F R I D AY N I G H T AT HOUSE OF BLUES

Anthrax, Black Label Society If you had “Go Metal Thrashing Mad” on your summer to-do list, you’re in luck. NYC

thrash godfathers Anthrax and rockers Black Label Society are bringing their U.S. co-headlining tour to Orlando this week. The tour is a belated 40th anniversary celebration for venerable metalheads Anthrax, and the band’s guitarist Scott Ian has likened the tour lineup to “the night of 1,000 crushing riffs.” Hatebreed ably serves as touring opener. It’s also worth noting that this is the only Florida date of the entire run, and it’s inches away from selling out. Who’s the man? They all are! 6 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, houseofblues.com, $49.50-$92.75. — MM SATURDAY, AUG. 13

Red Bull BC One Cypher Southeast One of the most lauded breakdancing competitions in the U.S. is going down in the City Beautiful this weekend, when the Red Bull BC One Southeast Regional pits the city’s best pop-and-lockers against each other in the hopes of advancing to the national finals. The competition will be hosted by Myverse, a local battle-rapper and MC, and the winner will be chosen by a panel of veteran dancers. This competition draws breakdancers from all over the Southeast to compete for a coveted spot at the upcoming National Finals in Los Angeles. The winner of the U.S. finals will then go on to represent the country at the eventual world championship in New York City. But first they have to make it out of Orlando. Limber up. 1 p.m., Celine Orlando, 22 S. Magnolia Ave., celineorlando.com, $10. — Maitane Orue MONDAY, AUG. 15

The In-Between Series: Lost Noises Office Local experimental supergroup Lost Noises Office — with members drawn from Obliterati, the Tangled Bell Ensemble and Alterity Chamber Orchestra — make their long-awaited live return in a very fitting space this week. (Surely that’s enough to mitigate the crushing pain of a Monday somewhat?) Though they’re still a new proposition live, Lost Noises Office have actually been around for a couple of years now, with initial momentum on the part of founding members Holly Tavel (keyboards,

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WEEK vocals) and Sarah Morrison (violin, viola) stalling due to the pandemic. The duo had previously collaborated in Obliterati. Percussionist Mario Schambon — who has worked with the likes of Damo Suzuki and Bradford Cox — was added to the group, and the final piece of the LNO puzzle fell into place when oboist Beatriz Ramirez (Alterity, Belt & Ramirez) came into the fold. Their debut show at Will’s was an outré chamber-pop scorcher, so don’t miss out. 7:30 p.m., CityArts, 39 S. Magnolia Ave., eventbrite.com, $5. — MM TUESDAY, AUG. 16

Blxst

Just last week, Californian MC/ singer Blxst got his first platinum certification for 2020 single “Chosen” (a song that boasts features from Ty Dolla $ign and Tyga). And while that’s got to feel good, Blxst is already moving forward fast, touring the U.S. behind new album Before You Go on Red Bull(!) Records. Stepping into the spotlight and out of the studio after potent production for the likes of Kendrick Lamar and YG, Blxst immediately made his mark with an R&B/hip-hop hybrid paired with personal lyrics and smooth delivery on his No Love Lost debut. This year would appear to be his for the taking: collaborating with Rick Ross, performing on the Tonight Show and taking his live show to spots as far-flung as New Zealand. Don’t miss this new talent. 6 p.m., The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave., foundation-presents.com, $25-$45. — MM

MUSIC WEDNESDAY, AUG. 10

Elder, Ruby the Hatchet, Dreadnought

8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $20, willspub.org.

W E D N E S D AY–T U E S D AY, AU G . 10 -16 , 2 0 2 2 Submit your events to listings@orlandoweekly.com

Hard Swingin’ Country Soiree: Decker and Dimitrov 7 p.m., Lil’ Indies, 1036

Enanitos Verdes 7 p.m., House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista, $65-$125.50, 407-934-2583.

THURSDAY, AUG. 11

Get Closer: Linda Ronstadt Tribute

N. Mills Ave., free, willspub.org.

Stillheart, Secret Keeper, No Business

8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $10-$12, willspub.org. FRIDAY, AUG. 12

Acid Dad, Timothy Eerie, Way Out 8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $13, willspub.org.

Flux Pavilion, Avello, Sosmoov, Covah 9 p.m., The

Vanguard, 578 N. Orange Ave., $9.99, 570-592-0034.

Michael Andrew’s 20th Century Swing and Soul Revue 8 p.m., Margeson Theater,

Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St., $36.75, 407-447-1700.

Pinegrove, Sinai Vessel, Poise 6 p.m., The Beacham, 46 N. Orange Ave., $28, 407-648-8363.

Secret Keeper, Max Bartos, Bewitched By You, Matterhorn 7 p.m., Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road, $8-$10, 407-623-3393.

Zach Bartholomew Trio

8 p.m., Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park, $25-$35, 407-636-9951.

SATURDAY, AUG. 13

Diamond: A Tribute to Neil Diamond

7:30 p.m., Athens Theatre, 124 N. Florida Ave., DeLand, $30-$35, 386736-1500.

Eighteen Visions, End, Wristmeetrazor 7 p.m., The

Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive, $20-$25, 407-704-6261.

7:30 p.m., Ritz Theater Sanford, 201 S. Magnolia Ave., Sanford, $23-$30, 407-321-8111.

Michael Andrew’s 20th Century Swing and Soul Revue 3 p.m., 8 p.m., Margeson Theater, Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St., $36.75, 407-447-1700.

Nothing Butt Rock Fest

8 p.m., Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., $15-$20, willspub.org.

SUNDAY, AUG. 14

CRT, Mother Juno, Leatherette, KTKink, Bacon Grease

8 p.m., Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road, $10, 407623-3393.

MONDAY, AUG. 15

JazzPro Monster Series: The Dan Jordan Quartet

8 p.m., Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park, $20, 407-636-9951. TUESDAY, AUG. 16

Laura Marano 7 p.m., The

Social, 54 N. Orange Ave., $20, 407648-8363.

Phangs, Moontower 8 p.m.,

Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive, $16, facebook. com/henaocenter.

EVENTS Caribbean American Heritage Festival and Expo

Multicultural celebration showcasing the cultural diversity of Orlando and

the Caribbean American community with steelpan music, Junkanoo parade, tassa drumming, African drumming, Indian dancing, art and craft booths, and food. 1 p.m. Sunday, Seneff Arts Plaza, 445 S. Magnolia Ave., free, 844-513-2014, drphillipscenter.org.

“(Dis)reputable”

Metropolitan Opera soprano Emily Pulley, last seen as Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings in the Company’s world premiere of The Secret River, returns with a program that runs the gamut of formidable women of varying degrees of respectability and rectitude. 2 p.m. Sunday, University Club of Winter Park, 841 N. Park Ave., Winter Park, $46.35, 407-6446149, operaorlando.org.

India Independence Day Parade Celebrate the 75th anniversary of India’s Independence Day with live music, food and cultural entertainment. 2 p.m. Saturday, Cranes Roost Park, 274 Cranes Roost Blvd., Altamonte Springs, free, 407-571-8863, uptownaltamonte.com.

“Peace of Woodstock”

A 90-minute music-and-visuals tribute to the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, the celebrated threeday concert that took place in August 1969. 7:30 p.m. Friday, Athens Theatre, 124 N. Florida Ave., DeLand, $30-$35, 386-736-1500, athensdeland.com.

Saturday Matinee Classics: “The Heroic Trio”

A new 4K restoration of Johnnie To’s 1993 classic starring Michelle Yeoh (Everything Everywhere All at Once), Maggie Cheung (Hero) and Cantopop star Anita Mui as a trio of knife-throwing, shotgun-toting, kung-fu-fighting superheroes. Noon Saturday, Enzian Theater, 1300 S.

Orlando Ave., Maitland, $9, 407629-1088, enzian.org.

“Songs for a New World”

The Dr. Phil’s resident artist interns perform a moving collection of songs that examine life, love and the choices we make. 7 p.m. Friday, Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, 445 S. Magnolia Ave., $20, drphillipscenter.org.

ART EXHIBITIONS Artist-in-Residence: Shannon Rae Lindsey An

interdisciplinary artist who explores drawing, painting, sculpture and installation with unconventional art materials and processes, Lindsay’s work embodies order and disorder to manifest her understanding of entropy. Through Aug. 19. The Sculpture House, 120 Quail Pond Circle, Casselberry, free, 407-2627700, casselberry.org.

“Boundaries and Frontiers” In the narratives

of human history, the ocean has served as pathway, battleground, site of origin — a liminal space that is shaped and, in turn, shapes the surrounding world. Through Sept. 4. Rollins Museum of Art, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park, free, 407-6462526, rollins.edu/rma.

“Cherish the Ordinary”: Peterson Guerrier Local

artist Guerrier is best known for work focusing on the concept of duality. Works will be on display in the Board of County Commissioners Chambers Gallery. Through Sept. 28. Orange County Administration Building, 201 S. Rosalind Ave., free, 407-836-5540, orangecountyfl.net.

Chris Robb: “Physical Currency” Local artist Robb graduated from the University of Central Florida in 1980 and

immediately moved to the Lower East Side of New York. The first shows he participated in were group shows with Keith Haring, JeanMichel Basquiat, Kenny Scharf and many others. Through Sept. 11. The Terrace Gallery, Orlando City Hall, 400 S. Orange Ave., free, 407-2464279, orlando.gov.

“Corpus Delicti” This exhibition features the work of Jessica Caldas, a Florida-based Puerto Rican artist and advocate. Through Sept. 18. Art and History Museums – Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland, $6, 407539-2181, artandhistory.org. Florida Byways: Jules André Smith and the Bok Fellows While exploring the

surrounding byways that weave throughout Florida, Art Center founder Smith created watercolors and drawings of parts of Florida that were typically unseen by the casual tourist. Through Aug. 14. Art and History Museums – Maitland, 231 W. Packwood Ave., Maitland, $6, 407-539-2181, artandhistory.org.

“The Florida Prize in Contemporary Art” Artists

range from emerging to mid-career, all working in Florida and all artists engaged in exploring significant ideas of art and culture in original and visually exciting ways. Through Aug. 14. Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave., $20, 407-8964231, omart.org.

“An Irresistible Urge to Create”: The Monroe Family Collection of Florida Outsider Art

Comprehensive exhibition of Florida outsider art brought together for the first time. Through Oct. 16. Mennello Museum of American Art, 900 E. Princeton St., $12, 407-246-4278, mennellomuseum.org. n

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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): One of the inspiring experiments I hope you will attempt in the coming months is to work on loving another person as wildly and deeply and smartly as you love yourself. In urging you to try this exercise, I don’t mean to imply that I have a problem with you loving yourself wildly and deeply and smartly. I endorse your efforts to keep increasing the intensity and ingenuity with which you adore and care for yourself. But here’s a secret: Learning to summon a monumental passion for another soul may have the magic power of enhancing your love for yourself. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Musician Viv Albertine has recorded four albums and played guitar for the Slits, a famous punk band. She has also written two books and worked as a TV director for 20 years. Her accomplishments are impressive. Yet she also acknowledges that she has spent a lot of time in bed for many reasons: needing to rest, seeking refuge to think and meditate, recovering from illness, feeling overwhelmed or lonely or sad. She admiringly cites other creative people who, like her, have worked in their beds: Emily Dickinson, Patti Smith, Edith Sitwell and Frida Kahlo. I mention this, Virgo, because the coming days will be an excellent time for you to seek sanctuary and healing and creativity in bed. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran author Katherine Mansfield wrote, “The mind I love must have wild places, a tangled orchard where dark damsons drop in the heavy grass, an overgrown little wood, the chance of a snake or two, and a pool that nobody’s fathomed the depth of.” Be inspired by her in the coming weeks, Libra. I suspect you will flourish if you give yourself the luxury of exploring your untamed side. The time is ripe to wander in nature and commune with exciting influences outside your comfort zone. What uncharted frontier would you enjoy visiting? SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): When you are functioning at your best, you Scorpios crave only the finest, top-quality highs. You embrace joys and pleasures that generate epiphanies and vitalizing transformations. Mediocre varieties of fun don’t interest you. You avoid debilitating indulgences that provide brief excitement but spawn long-term problems. In the coming weeks, dear Scorpio, I hope you will embody these descriptions. It’s crucial that you seek gratifications and delectations that uplift you, ennoble you and bless your future. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Wish on everything,” advises Sagittarian author Francesca Lia Block. “Pink cars are good, especially old ones. And first stars and

shooting stars. Planes will do if they are the first light in the sky and look like stars. Wish in tunnels, holding your breath and lifting your feet off the ground. Birthday candles. Baby teeth.” Your homework during the next two weeks, Sagittarius, is to build a list of further marvels that you will wish on. It’s the Magic Wish season of the year for you: a time when you’re more likely than usual to encounter and generate miracles. Be proactive! Oh, and very important: What are your three top wishes? CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Author Aldous Huxley wrote, “That people do not learn much from the lessons of history is the most important lesson that history has to teach.” While his observation is true much of the time, I don’t think it will be so for you in the coming weeks. I suspect you will triumph over past patterns that have repeated and repeated themselves. You will study your life story and figure out what you must do to graduate from lessons you have finally, completely learned. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In the film I Origins, a scientist says this to a lover: “When the Big Bang happened, all the atoms in the universe were smashed together into one little dot that exploded outward. So my atoms and your atoms were together then. … My atoms have always known your atoms.” Although this sounds poetic, it’s true in a literal sense: The atoms that compose you and me and everyone else were originally all squeezed together in a tiny space. We knew each other intimately! The coming days will be an excellent time to celebrate your fundamental link with the rest of the universe. You’ll be extra receptive to feeling connection. You’ll be especially adept at fitting your energy together with others’. You’ll love the sensation of being united, merged, blended. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): My Piscean friend Luna sent me a message that sums up how I feel about you these days. I’ll repeat it here in the hope it will inspire you to be perfectly yourself. Luna said, “Every time I meet someone who was born within like two weeks of my birthday, I end up with the impression that they are the loopiest and wisest person I’ve met in a long time. They are totally ridiculous and worthy of profound respect. They are unhinged and brilliantly focused. They are fuzzyheaded dreamers who couldn’t possibly ever get anything practical accomplished and they are lyrical thinkers who charm me with their attunement to the world’s beauty and impress me with their understanding of how the world works. Hahahahaha. Luckily for me, I know the fool is sacred.”

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Tips to get the most out of the coming weeks: No. 1, exercise your willpower at random moments just to keep it limber. No. 2, be adept at fulfilling your own hype. No. 3, argue for fun. Be playful and frisky as you banter. Disagree for the sport of it, without feeling attached to being right or needing the last word. No. 4, be unable to understand how anyone can resist you or not find you alluring. No. 5, declare yourself President of Everything, then stage a coup d’état. No. 6, smile often when you have no reason to. No. 7, if you come upon a “square peg, round hole” situation, change the shape of the hole. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): If I had to choose a mythic deity to be your symbolic helper, I would pick Venus. The planet Venus is ruler of your sign, and the goddess Venus is the maven of beauty and love, which are key to your happiness. But I would also assign Hephaestus to you Tauruses. He was the Greek god of the metalworking forge. He created Zeus’ thunderbolts, Hermes’ winged helmet, Aphrodite’s magic bra, Achilles’ armor, Eros’ bow and arrows, and the thrones for all the deities in Olympus. The things he made were elegant and useful. I nominate him to be your spirit guide during the next 10 months. May he inspire you to be a generous source of practical beauty. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): To be a true Gemini, you must yearn for knowledge — whether it’s about coral reefs, ancient maps of Sumer, sex among jellyfish, mini-black holes, your friends’ secrets or celebrity gossip. You need to be an eternal student who craves education. Are some things more important to learn than others? Of course, but that gauge is not always apparent in the present. A seemingly minor clue or trick you glean today may become unexpectedly helpful a month from now. With that perspective in mind, I encourage you to be promiscuous in your lust for new information and teachings in the coming weeks. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian drummer Ringo Starr is in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Though he has received less acclaim than his fellow Beatles, many critics recognize him as a skillful and original drummer. How did he get started? At age 13, he contracted tuberculosis and lived in a sanatorium for two years. The medical staff encouraged him to join the hospital band, hoping it would stimulate his motor skills and alleviate boredom. Ringo used a makeshift mallet to bang the cabinet near his bed. Good practice! That’s how his misfortune led to his joy and success. Is there an equivalent story in your life, Cancerian? The coming months will be a good time to take that story to its next level. orlandoweekly.com

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Q: I’m a 36-year-old married woman who fantasizes about her husband of 10 years being intimate with other women. This isn’t a new thing for me. I’ve fantasized about this for years, but we’ve never acted on it. He is intrigued but afraid that it might somehow damage our relationship. I’ve done some research on it and it’s something I’m eager to try. (With my husband’s consent, of course!) But in all my research, I’ve found different and sometimes conflicting definitions of what it means to be a “cuckquean.” I’m interested in watching my husband pleasure and be pleasured by another woman in a purely physical way. I’m not interested in being “cheated on.” No flirty texts, no unsanctioned coffee dates. I’ve read accounts of women who are turned on by the humiliation and insecurity of their partner being with others, often women the husband knows “in real life,” either through work or through social life. In my case, I would rather my husband not even know the name of the other woman. And he would only be able to sleep with her with my consent and I would want to be “in control” of the situation. So, what does that make me? Do cuckqueans come in all different proclivities? I feel like the end result is the same — my partner bedding someone else — but my motivation is different than what I’ve seen. What The Cuck Am I? A: “The scenario WTCAI describes sounds more like hotwifing with the gender roles reversed than cuckolding,” says Venus, host of “The Venus Cuckoldress Podcast.” “She’s interested in hothusbanding!” Let’s quickly define terms. A man into hotwifing enjoys “sharing” his wife with other men, WTCAI, and a woman into hot-husbanding enjoys “sharing” her husband with other women. (All this sharing, of course, is consensual.) Cuckolds, on the other hand, aren’t sharing their wives. They’re being “cheated on” by their wives. And cuckqueans aren’t sharing their husbands. They’re being “cheated on” by their husbands. Cuckolds and cuckqueans, by definition, don’t just wanna see their spouses fucking another person, they also want their partners to humiliate and degrade them. (I put “cheated on” in quotes because the “cheating” is consensual and symbolic; likewise, “sharing” is in quotes above because spouses aren’t property.) “But cuckolding and hotwifing have a really wide spectrum of practices and dynamics,” says Venus. “Some cucks are submissive and get into degradation, and some cucks really aren’t subs or into degradation at all. I don’t see why hothusbanding/ cuckqueaning can’t be just as varied. Humiliation, submission and degradation don’t have to be involved!” Venus is right: There are guys out there who call themselves cuckolds but aren’t subs and don’t

wanna be humiliated or degraded. But I would argue that these guys aren’t cuckolds, WTCAI, just as I would argue that you aren’t a cuckquean. We have lots of words to describe letting your partner fuck other people — open, monogamish, swinging, mate-swapping, hotwifing, hothusbanding, stag and vixen, CNM — but we only have one word to describe letting your partner fuck other people while getting off on being humiliated and degraded: cuckolding. And since most people understand cuckolding to involve humiliation and degradation, telling someone you’re a cuckold when you’re not into those things is like telling someone you’re a power bottom when you don’t like anal or telling someone you’re into impact play when you don’t like having your ass so much as tapped. It confuses rather than clarifies. What’s worse, tell someone you’re a cuckold/cuckquean and they might start degrading you while they’re fucking your partner, which would ruin everything for everybody. As for setting up a sex date for your husband with an anonymous woman, Venus has a practical suggestion. “There are a lot more men out there looking for casual sex than there are women,” says Venus, “which makes WTCAI’s fantasy difficult to pull off. But I know a woman whose wife wanted to be blindfolded and then have a group of women come in — all strangers to her — and go down on her. Not an easy fantasy to pull off either! So they hired a sex worker to facilitate things, and it was amazing. Perhaps this would be an ideal solution — hiring a sex worker — because then WTCAI would be in total control.” Finally, WTCAI, re-reading your letter just now … it sounds to me like what you really wanna do is, well, whore your husband out. It’s an expression I’ve heard gay men use to describe setting up an anonymous encounter for their boyfriends or husbands. You find someone you wanna see fuck your husband — taking care to find someone your husband would wanna get fucked by — and all your husband needs to know is when and where. Cuckolds and cuckqueans are subs and a sub can “top from below,” as the saying goes, but at least officially a cuck doesn’t have the power. Someone who’s whoring his husband out, on the other hand, has all the power. And that’s what you want, right? Follow Venus on Twitter @CuckoldressV, and check out her podcast, blog, dating advice and more at venuscuckoldress.com. Q: I am a woman married to a man. Many years ago, I told him that I was attracted to a mutual friend of ours … Go to Savage.Love to read the rest of the question, and if you have a question of your own, write to Dan at questions@savagelove.net. DRAWN BY KIERAN CASTAÑO

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Legal, Public Notices ALL ABOARD STORAGE NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Personal property of the following tenants will be sold at public sale to the highest bidder to satisfy a rental lien in accordance with Florida Statutes, Sections: A83.801 - 83.809. All units are assumed to contain general household goods unless otherwise indicated. Viewing of photos will be available on www.lockerfox.com, up to 5 days prior to each scheduled sale. The owners or their agents reserve the right to bid on any unit and also to refuse any bid. All items or units may not be available on the day of sale. The Public Sale will take place via www.lockerfox.com on: Tuesday, August 30, 2022, 2:00 p.m., or thereafter, at: Sanford Depot, All Aboard Storage 2728 W 25th Street, Sanford, FL 32771 407-305-3388 Ronnie Fields-1015, Darby Shipp-Christensen-1166, Kameal Mckinnon-1170, Deandre Culmer-1178, Towana Rush-1249, Jerimiah Miller-1396, SCOTT CHRISTENSEN-1433, John Winkle-1467, Guy Martin-1619, Perry Taylor-1656, Ortiz Israel-1689, Edesha Hall- 1733. The above Tenants have been given proper notice, fourteen days prior to the first publication of this Notice of Sale, that the Owner will enforce a statutory lien on the property located in their respective unit of the above-mentioned self-storage facilities. Ad to run: August 10 and 17, 2022. Erik F. Stidham (ISB #5483) HOLLAND & HART LLP 800 W. Main Street, Suite 1750 Boise, ID 83702-5974 Telephone: 208.342.5000 Facsimile: 208.343.8869 Email: efstidham@hollandhart.com Counsel for Plaintiffs IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA Case No. CV01-2206789 Judge Lynn Norton SUMMONS - PUBLICATION ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYSTEM, LTD; ST. LUKE’S REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, LTD; CHRIS ROTH, an individual; and NATASHA D. ERICKSON, MD, an individual; and TRACY W. JUNGMAN, NP, an individual, Plaintiffs, vs. AMMON BUNDY, an individual; AMMON BUNDY FOR GOVERNOR, a political organization; DIEGO RODRIGUEZ, an individual; FREEDOM MAN PRESS LLC, a limited liability company; FREEDOM MAN PAC, a registered political action committee; and PEOPLE’S RIGHTS NETWORK, a political organization, Defendants. TO: FREEDOM MAN PAC You have been sued by St. Luke’s Health System, Ltd., St. Luke’s Regional Medical Center, Ltd., Chris Roth, Natasha D. Erickson, M.D., and Tracy W. Jungman, NP, Plaintiffs, in the District Court in and for Ada County, Idaho, Case No. CV01-22-06789. The nature of the claims against you are: defamation; invasion of privacy; intentional infliction of emotional distress; and civil conspiracy to commit defamation, invasion of privacy, intentional infliction of emotional distress, trespass, unfair business practices, and wrongful charitable solicitations. Any time after 21 days following the last publication of this summons, the court may enter a judgment against you without further notice, unless prior to that time you have filed a written response in the proper form, including the Case No., and paid any required filing fee to the Clerk of

the Court at Ada County Courthouse, 200 West Front Street, Boise, Idaho 83702 (208) 287-6900 and served a copy of your response on the Plaintiffs’ attorney at Holland & Hart LLP, 800 West Main Street, Suite 1750, Boise, ID 83702 (208) 342-5000. A copy of the Summons and Amended Complaint can be obtained by contacting either the Clerk of the Court or the attorney for Plaintiffs. If you wish legal assistance, you should immediately retain an attorney to advise you in this matter. DATED 7/27/2022. CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT​Phil McGrane B ​ y​/s/​ Eric Rowell, Deputy Clerk. Erik F. Stidham (ISB #5483) HOLLAND & HART LLP 800 W. Main Street, Suite 1750 Boise, ID 83702-5974 Telephone: 208.342.5000 Facsimile: 208.343.8869 Email: efstidham@hollandhart.com Counsel for Plaintiffs IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA Case No. CV01-2206789 Judge Lynn Norton SUMMONS - PUBLICATION ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYSTEM, LTD; ST. LUKE’S REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, LTD; CHRIS ROTH, an individual; and NATASHA D. ERICKSON, MD, an individual; and TRACY W. JUNGMAN, NP, an individual, Plaintiffs, vs. AMMON BUNDY, an individual; AMMON BUNDY FOR GOVERNOR, a political organization; DIEGO RODRIGUEZ, an individual; FREEDOM MAN PRESS LLC, a limited liability company; FREEDOM MAN PAC, a registered political action committee; and PEOPLE’S RIGHTS NETWORK, a political organization, Defendants. TO: DIEGO RODRIGUEZ You have been sued by St. Luke’s Health System, Ltd., St. Luke’s Regional Medical Center, Ltd., Chris Roth, Natasha D. Erickson, M.D., and Tracy W. Jungman, NP, Plaintiffs, in the District Court in and for Ada County, Idaho, Case No. CV01-22-06789. The nature of the claims against you are: defamation; invasion of privacy; intentional infliction of emotional distress; trespass; unfair business practices; wrongful charitable solicitations; and civil conspiracy to commit defamation, invasion of privacy, intentional infliction of emotional distress, trespass, unfair business practices, and wrongful charitable solicitations. Any time after 21 days following the last publication of this summons, the court may enter a judgment against you without further notice, unless prior to that time you have filed a written response in the proper form, including the Case No., and paid any required filing fee to the Clerk of the Court at Ada County Courthouse, 200 West Front Street, Boise, Idaho 83702 (208) 287-6900 and served a copy of your response on the Plaintiffs’ attorney at Holland & Hart LLP, 800 West Main Street, Suite 1750, Boise, ID 83702 (208) 342-5000. A copy of the Summons and Amended Complaint can be obtained by contacting either the Clerk of the Court or the attorney for Plaintiffs. If you wish legal assistance, you should immediately retain an attorney to advise you in this matter. DATED 7/27/2022. CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT​Phil McGrane B ​ y​/s/​ Eric Rowell, Deputy Clerk.

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Legal, Public Notices Erik F. Stidham (ISB #5483) HOLLAND & HART LLP 800 W. Main Street, Suite 1750 Boise, ID 83702-5974 Telephone: 208.342.5000 Facsimile: 208.343.8869 Email: efstidham@hollandhart.com Counsel for Plaintiffs IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA Case No. CV01-2206789 Judge Lynn Norton SUMMONS - PUBLICATION ST. LUKE’S HEALTH SYSTEM, LTD; ST. LUKE’S REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, LTD; CHRIS ROTH, an individual; and NATASHA D. ERICKSON, MD, an individual; and TRACY W. JUNGMAN, NP, an individual, Plaintiffs, vs. AMMON BUNDY, an individual; AMMON BUNDY FOR GOVERNOR, a political organization; DIEGO RODRIGUEZ, an individual; FREEDOM MAN PRESS LLC, a limited liability company; FREEDOM MAN PAC, a registered political action committee; and PEOPLE’S RIGHTS NETWORK, a political organization, Defendants. TO: FREEDOM MAN PRESS LLC You have been sued by St. Luke’s Health System, Ltd., St. Luke’s Regional Medical Center, Ltd., Chris Roth, Natasha D. Erickson, M.D., and Tracy W. Jungman, NP, Plaintiffs, in the District Court in and for Ada County, Idaho, Case No. CV01-22-06789. The nature of the claims against you are: defamation; invasion of privacy; intentional infliction of emotional distress; unfair business practices; wrongful charitable solicitations; and civil conspiracy to commit defamation, invasion of privacy, intentional infliction of emotional distress, trespass, unfair business practices, and wrongful charitable solicitations. Any time after 21 days following the last publication of this summons, the court may enter a judgment against you without further notice, unless prior to that time you have filed a written response in the proper form, including the Case No., and paid any required filing fee to the Clerk of the Court at Ada County Courthouse, 200 West Front Street, Boise, Idaho 83702 (208) 287-6900 and served a copy of your response on the Plaintiffs’ attorney at Holland & Hart LLP, 800 West Main Street, Suite 1750, Boise, ID 83702 (208) 342-5000. A copy of the Summons and Amended Complaint can be obtained by contacting either the Clerk of the Court or the attorney for Plaintiffs. If you wish legal assistance, you should immediately retain an attorney to advise you in this matter. DATED 7/27/2022. CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT​Phil McGrane B ​ y​/s/​ Eric Rowell, Deputy Clerk. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 26th, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 1:00 PM Extra Space Storage 610 Rinehart Rd. Lake Mary, FL 32746 (407) 333-4355 John Masotti– Households Items, Wintzer Jones- House hold Goods Electronics. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com

described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 26, 2022, at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 11920 W Colonial Dr Ste 10, Ocoee FL 34761, 407-794-6970. Noemi Morales Childrens items, Eduardo Marciano- household items, Donald Loper- totes, Shukeema Woodard- household items. Wendy Sumner- household items, cynthia lajuan -adams boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated August 26, 2022 at the time and location listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 1451 Rinehart Rd Sanford, FL 32771 (407) 915-4908 Tamica Shines - household furniture, Franchesska Mercado - household items and personal things, Charnice Medlock - love seat couch 2 twin beds and other furniture. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 26, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage 12709 E Colonial Dr, Orlando FL 32826, 4076343990: Angelo Rodriguez: barber chairs: Marcela Centeno Valdez: personal items, luggage, bags The personal goods stored therein by the following: 1:30PM Extra Space Storage 10959 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando FL 32825, 4075020120: Kim Shaw- Chairs, boxes, totes, hair dryer, car jack, stool, fan, speaker, beach chairs, step stools, computer stand, pet cage The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 11071 University Blvd Orlando, FL 32817, 3213204055: Megan McCoy Rodriguez home goods; Tonnia Bennett entertainment set, boxes, totes TV. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:45PM Extra Space Storage 9847 Curry Ford Rd, Orlando Fl 32825, 4074959612: Marc Metelus-Fridge and boxes; Camillia Posley- Washer, dryer, cocktail table, boxes; Euris Lopez-household items. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 342 Woodland Lake Dr, Orlando FL 32828, 3218004793: Alexei Lebedev – hunting gear, video games, game accessories, boxes. Kenneth Welden – Fishing poles, duffle bag. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage 11971 Lake Underhill Rd, Orlando FL 32825, 4075167913: Marc Davis- bags and boxes. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at

the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complte the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 26, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00 PM Extra Space Storage 831 N. Park Avenue Apopka, FL 32712 (407) 450-0345 Douglas Arnett-studio.-Thomas Forino- household goods.. The auction will be listed and advertised on www. storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to comlete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 5603 Metrowest Blvd Orlando, FL 32811 on 8/31/22 at 12:00 PM: Adam Peter Stevens, house hold. Johnathon Thomas, House stuff. Eudd Ace, crib matt, household items. Timothy Brumlik co Alex Brumlik, Unknown. Timothy Brumlik co Alex Brumlik, Unknown. Nancy Perez, House goods. Lakia Arnold, household goods. Shakeria Williams, Clothing. Antoine Anderson, household goods. Thiago Berte, House goods & tools. Marie Baptiste, 1br bed set, items. Senat Lucsonne, household goods. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 29th, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:00PM Extra Space Storage 2631 E Semoran Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 (407) 408-7437 Elizabeth Fullington-Household goods, margarito Martinez-Household items, Steven Meador-Household items, Shequila Thomas-Household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 1001 Lee Road Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 489-3742, August 26th, 2022 @ 12:00 PM: Shenika McFarland: clothing & totes, Joy Taffani: household items. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property. Extra Space Storage will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: August 26, 2022 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 2:00PM Extra Space Storage 5592 L B McLeod Rd Orlando, FL 32811 (407) 720-2832 Miguel Roman- Boxes, Dining Set, Mattress, Sofa; Larry PierrePortable A/C, Totes, Cooler, Hand Tools, Shelves, Sporting Goods, TV; Kalimah Mosley-Household Items; Christopher Stefan- Couches, End Table, Bunk Bed; Charaun Smith- Living Room Sets, Household Items; Brooke Ansley- Boxes, Bags Mattress; Brian Rodriguez Boxes, Bags. The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures.com. Purchases must be made with cash only

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 07/HIGBEE CASE NO: DP21379, IN THE INTEREST OF Minor Child: B. I. DOB: 07/05/2021. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: Pamela Ingram Address Unknown: A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above referenced children. You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable Heather L. Higbee on August 23, 2022 at 9:30 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. For this hearing, all parties shall participate IN PERSON. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES A CONSTRUCTIVE CONSENT TO THE TPR PETITION OF THE CHILD(REN) AND COULD RESULT IN THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD(REN). “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 13th day of July, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: George Lytle, Esq. Florida Bar No.: 985465 Senior Attorney for DCF. George.Lytle@myflfamilies.com CLERK OF COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk. (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDA. JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 / TYNAN CASE NO: DP14-422, IN THE INTEREST OF Minor Child: Z. W. DOB: 08/05/2012. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: Joseph Ward Address Unknown: A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above referenced children.


You are hereby commanded to appear before Honorable Judge Greg A. Tynan on August 25, 2022 at 10:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. For this hearing, all parties shall participate IN PERSON. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES A CONSTRUCTIVE CONSENT TO THE TPR PETITION OF THE CHILD AND COULD RESULT IN THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 14th day of July, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: Jennifer McCarthy, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 86793 Children’s Legal Services State of Florida Department of Children and Families 400 West Robinson Street, Suite S912 Orlando, FL 32801 Jennifer. McCarthy@myflfamlies.com. CLERK OF COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk. (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA. DIVISION: 7/HIGBEE, WESTGATE SERVICE CENTER CASE NO.: DP20-513 In the Interest of: N.W. DOB: 03/29/2016, minor child. NOTICE OF ACTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: MONIQUE CARLOCK, ADDRESS UNKNOWN WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above - referenced child, you are hereby commanded to appear on Friday, September 30, 2022 at 10:00a.m.., before the Honorable Judge Craig McCarthy, at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, FL 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS OF THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 28th day of July, 2022. This summons has been issued at the request of: Cynthia J. Rodriguez, Esquire Florida Bar No. 1026123, State Attorney Department of Children and Families cynthia. rodriguez4@myflfamilies.com CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk (Court Seal) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR OSCEOLA COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 41 CASE NO.: 22-DP-18. IN THE INTEREST OF: J. N., DOB: 02/26/2022, Minor child. NOTICE OF ACTION AND OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS. STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: ANA GREEN, Unknown Address. A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child; you are to appear before Judge Laura Shaffer, on September 16 th , 2022, at 2:30pm at the Osceola County Courthouse at 2 Courthouse Square, Courtroom 4C, Kissimmee, FL 34741, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD WHOSE INITIALS APPEAR ABOVE. “Pursuant to Sections

39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand as the Clerk of said Court and the Seal, this 18th day of July, 2022. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT (Court Seal) By: /s/ Deputy Clerk. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR OSCEOLA COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 41 CASE NO. 18-DP-114 IN THE INTEREST OF J.R., DOB: 07/15/2010, MINOR CHILD. NOTICE OF ACTION AND OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: JOSE LUIS RAMOS (unknown address) A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren); you are to appear before Judge Laura Shaffer, on August 29th, 2022, at 9:45a.m. at the Osceola County Courthouse at 2 Courthouse Square, Courtroom 4C, Kissimmee, FL 34741, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THESE CHILDREN. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILDREN WHOSE INITIALS APPEAR ABOVE. “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4) (d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand as the Clerk of said Court and the Seal, this 21st day of July, 2022. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT (Court Seal) By: /s/ Deputy Clerk. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR OSCEOLA COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 41 CASE NO.: 18-DP-78. IN THE INTEREST OF: M. H., DOB: 06/26/2017, Minor child. NOTICE OF ACTION AND OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS. STATE OF FLORIDA. TO: FELICIA RHOADES, Unknown Address. A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child; you are to appear before Judge Laura Shaffer, on October 17th, 2022, at 2:30pm at the Osceola County Courthouse at 2 Courthouse Square, Courtroom 4C, Kissimmee, FL 34741, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD. IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD WHOSE INITIALS APPEAR ABOVE. “Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the availability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3), Florida Statutes.” WITNESS my hand as the Clerk of said Court and the Seal, this 27th day of July, 2022. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT (Court Seal) By: /s/ Deputy Clerk. Notice Is Hereby Given that Exacta Land Surveyors, LLC, 1500 W. Third St, Ste 130MZ, Cleveland, OH 44113, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name of H&H Survey Consultants, with

its principal place of business in the State of Florida in the County of Seminole will file an Application for Registration of Fictitious Name with the Florida Department of State. NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8:00am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. U-Haul Ctr Kirkman: 600 S Kirkman Rd Orlando, FL 32811 09/06/2022 2039 Joannie Confident, 1056 Breezae Rainey, 3050 LItisha Davis, 3078 Carnell Fee, 2076 Allan Perdomo, 2014 Larry Daviss, 1016 Tammi Jones, 6039 Mystery Unit, 1032 Taneisha Bloomfield, 6002 Nikki Washigton, 3100 Ero Perry, 3021 Jose Torres Villafuerte, 2062 Gillian Mcnabola, 1020 Sherline Ulysse, 1008 Azi Nelson, 3002 Wanda Jones, 5038 Sanderson Gandert, 2001 Justin English, 6045 Kendra Moore, 1035 Nicole Johnson, 2009 Luis Abreu, 1108 Azi Nelson, 1095 Tia Bell, 8013 Brendin Boele, 6023 Bessie People, 4005 Joshua Parr, 3090 Zantisha Farrington, 6036 Lisa Wareham, 5001 Andrew HUbbard, 3001 Marcus Moore. U-Haul Ctr Orange Ave: 3500 S. Orange ave. Orlando, FL. 32806 09/06/2022 1726 Jermaine McCoy, 1701 Tonya Roberts, 1831 Shane Heslop, 1042 Marie Alvarez, 2202 Eboni Townsend, 1605 Jean Faustin, 1937 Kylie Collins, 1813 Ambery Rawls, 2407 Ray Amburgey, 1070 Jason Murrill, 1931 Nivia Lampkin, 1103 Martin Ifedebe, 2501 Isaac Aviles, 1815 Rod Smith, 2141 Malcolm Mandun, 1521 Helenikka Williams, 2018 Sabrina Vaughn. U-Haul of Ctr Ocoee: 11410 W Colonial Dr Ocoee, FL 34761 09/06/2022 2315 LInda Barden, 2221 Miguel Hernandez, 1402 Tyreke Scott, 2501 Raynard Young, 2604 Shawn Davis, 3342 Antonio Miller, 1102 Christopher Szuhay, 2402 Marcius Pascal, 2119 LUther Hanes, 2329 Gregory Mckinnond, 2534 Nathaniel Bell, 1716 Stephen Beers. U-Haul of Ctr Clermont: 13650 Granville Ave Clermont, FL 34711 09/06/2022 3067 Mason Moton, 2004 Carlos Jimenez, 1018 Christopher Thornhill, 1043 Roxanne Eadie, 2020 Marisol Rivera, 1019 Marilyn Santamaria, 2187 Maickel Bedir, 1047 Chevaiz Jackson, 3070 Marilyn Santamaria, 2082 Gina Branch, 2157 Elena Combs, 1100 Anthony Scaraggi. Notice of Public Sale Notice is hereby given that Value Store It 27, will sell the contents of the storage units listed below at a public auction to satisfy a lien placed on the contents (pursuant to Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes). The sales will take place on Tuesday, August 23rd, 2022. The sale will be conducted under the direction of Christopher Rosa (AU4167) on behalf of the facilities management. Units will be available for viewing prior to the sale on www.storagetreasures.com. Contents will be sold for cash only to the highest bidder. A 10% buyer’s premium will be charged as well as a $50 cleaning deposit per unit. All sales are final. Seller reserves the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale or to refuse any bids. No one under 16 years old is permitted to bid. The property to be sold is described as “General Household Items” “Personal Property” unless otherwise noted. Unit # – Name – Description. Value Store It 27 at 1700 Celebration Blvd, Celebration, FL. 34747

will list storage units on www.storagetreasures.com at 9:00 AM: 2003- Jonathan Rhodes;2049Jennifer Okeereke;3019-Freddy Cabrera;5027-AnthonyMcintosh/Anthony Tyrell Mc intosh;5063-Beverly Rose Mahmoud;6006-Jennifer Avery/Jennifer M Avery Notice Of Public Sale Personal property of the following tenants will be sold for cash to satisfy rental liens in accordance with Florida Statutes, Self Storage Facility Act, Sections 83-806 and 83-807. Contents may include kitchen, household items, bedding, toys, games, boxes, barrels, packed cartons, furniture, trucks, cars, etc. There is no title for vehicles sold at lien sale. Owners reserve the right to bid on units. Lien sale to be held online ending Tuesday, August 30th, 2022 at times indicated below. Viewing and bidding will only be available online at www.storagetreasures. com beginning at least 5 days prior to the scheduled sale date and time! Also visit www.personalministorage.com/OrlandoFL-storage-units/ for more info. Michigan Mini-200 W Michigan St Orlando, FL 32806-at 10:30am: 29 Stephanie Jones 44 Shanetta T Adams 55 David Tyrone Hill Personal Mini Storage Forsyth-2875 Forsyth Rd Winter Park FL, 32792-at 10:00 am: 244 Susan Othelia Goff 381 Jose Javier Vazquez Vazquez 455 Ferdinand Gonzalez 462 Ferdinand Gonzalez 491 Esteban Sotomayor Gloria 495 Jasmine Smith 512 Michael Pokraka 558 Inawa Naydayad Personal Mini Storage West4600 Old Winter Garden Rd Orlando, FL 32811–at 11:30am: 25 Alfonzo Cortez Felder 74 Regina Stephens Ellis 87 Debra Brooks 92 Sherese Reddock 97 Marshall Whitney 133 Ronald Benson 135 Lance Johnson 141 Mario Jose Ramirez 181 Samuel Demming Jr. 202 Latanya Bradford 218 Tiffany Lafaye Patterson 238 Marzetta Casandra Polite 298A Joe Andrews 2 530 Tylia Freeman 543 Brandon Worthy 544 Ciara Kirkland Personal Mini Storage Lake Fairview-4252 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804-at 11:00 am: 0053 Michael Pilato 0064 Sandra Reyes 0082 Angela Williams 0130 Jeffrey Davis 0160 Jill Salaam 0249 Alysha Dawn Rodriguez 0307 Andres Encarnacion 0360 Gelita Rolle 0423 Cheyenne Jade Walker 0425 Ashley Ferrell 0428 Susan Saunders 0450 Victoria Julian Personal Mini Storage Edgewater-6325 Edgewater Dr Orlando, FL 32810-at 11:30 am: 131 Donna Hodges 210 Mary Thornton 338 Jocheved Vlyter-Major 201 Frank Lee Jackson Jr. 536 Shawn Ferree 707 Edwin Roman 708 Rhonda Lynn Slaughter 823 De Anna Patrice Cilatt 2128 D. Luis Arias 1986 Tracker John Boat Hull #WV6799T Personal Mini Storage Forest City Rd6550 Forest City Rd Orlando, FL 32810-at 12:00 pm: 1028 Steven Alexander, Sun State Finish LLC 3074 Curtis Hamilton 3175 Brandon White 3269 Alexandra Rolle 4006 Stacey Brohn-Edwards 4012 Ana Isabel Garcia Colon 4025 Kiara Sneed 4028 Kesharee Baxter 4044 Leonisha Allicia Claria Eaton 4092 Alin Vaduva 6009 Samantha Anderson 9037 Willie Thomas Walton Jr, 1985 Toyota Pickup, VIN JT4RN55D7F0087163, Tag CXNN27. Notice of Public Sale Notice is hereby given that Storage King USA at 4601 S Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32839 will sell the contents of the storage units listed below at a public auction to satisfy a lien placed on the contents (pursuant to Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes). The sale will take place at the website StorageTreasures.com on August 24, 2022, at 9:00 am. The sale will be conducted under the direction of Christopher Rosa (AU4167) and StorageTreasures.com

on behalf of the facility’s management. Units will be available for viewing prior to the sale on StorageTreasures.com. Contents will be sold for cash only to the highest bidder. A 15% buyer’s premium will be charged as well as a $100 cleaning deposit per unit. All sales are final. Seller reserves the right to withdraw the property at any time before the sale or to refuse any bids. The property to be sold is described as “general household items” unless otherwise noted. Demarkco Davis #0H028 Household Goods, Marshell Williams #0C027 Household Goods, Lydia Jurado #0F015 Household Goods, Nathaniel Perkins Sr. #0G002 Household Goods, Dena Hicks #0G020 Household Goods, Miyoshi Green #0G032 Household Goods, Cynthia Peters #0J005 Household Goods.

ORLANDO, FL 32824- 8146, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. ADAM AYED ENTERPRISES LLC reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. KMHDN46D85U044716 2005 HYUN 1FUJGLBGXCSBN0388 2012 FREIGHTLINER 1XPXD49X0FD293683 2015 PETERBILT 1W16532A9G5550738 2016 WILX.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on the following dates, 08:00 am at 10850 COSMONAUT BLVD ORLANDO, FL 32824, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Notice of Public Sale​N ​ otice is hereby Florida Statutes. NEW GENERATION given that Value Store It 29 – Ocoee will TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves sell the contents of the storage units the right to accept or reject any and/ listed below at a​p​ ublic auction to satisfy or all bids. a lien placed on the contents (pursuant AUGUST 25, 2022 to Chapter 83 of the Florida Statutes). The​​ 4T1BF1FK0CU180689 sales will take place on Tuesday, August 2012 TOYT 23rd, 2022. The sale will be conducted KM8JM12B36U462532 under the direction of​​Christopher Rosa 2006 HYUN (AU4167) on behalf of the facilities AUGUST 27, 2022 management. Units will be​​available for 2D8HN44H28R600789 viewing prior to​​the sale on www.storag- 2008 DODG etreasures.com. Contents will be sold for AUGUST 29, 2022 cash only to the highest bidder. A 10%​​ 1D8HD58217F510845 buyer’s premium will be charged as well 2007 DODG as a $50 cleaning deposit per unit. All JH4KB16575C012470 sales are final. Seller reserves​t​ he right 2005 ACUR to withdraw the property at any time JHLRD2846XC006315 before the sale or to refuse any bids. No 1999 HOND one under 16 years old​​is permitted to bid. The property to be sold is described as “General Household​I​ tems” “Personal NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: NEW GENProperty”​​unless otherwise noted. Unit ERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. # – Name – Description.​V ​ alue Store It gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and 29 at 1251 Fountains West Blvd, Ocoee, intent to sell these vehicles on the folFL 34761 will list storage units on​w ​ ww. lowing dates, 08:00 am at 2603 OLD DIXIE storagetreasures.com at 11:00 AM HIGHWAY KISSIMMEE, FL 34744, pursuA085- Candido D Worrell/ Candido David ant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Worrell Statutes. NEW GENERATION TOWING AND RECOVERY, LLC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. Notice of Public Sale: AUGUST 25, 2022 Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on August 26th, 2T1BU4EE0AC339325 2022 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Of 2010 TOYT Central Florida, INC, 630 E Landstreet Rd, AUGUST 28, 2022 Orlando, FL 32824, will sell the following 1GNDM19W2VB234324 vehicles and/or vessels. Seller reserves 1997 CHEV the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. 1HGCG5652XA048209 Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. 1999 HOND Seller reserves the right to refuse any WBAAM3334XKC62439 or all bids; 1999 BMW 1HGCT1B32GA008298 AUGUST 29, 2022 2016/HOND 5XYZU3LB7EG232414 3TMJU62N09M084268 2014 HYUN 2009 / TOYT 3G5DA03E85S567277 2005 / BUIC NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Preston’s 1NXBU4EE2AZ175493 Towing. gives Notice of Foreclosure of 2010 / TOYT Lien and intent to sell these vehicles JHLRE4H4XBC027654 on the following dates, 07:00 am 605 E 2011 / HOND Donegan Ave, Kissimmee, FL 34744, WBAVM1C58EVW53058 pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the 2014 / BMW Florida Statutes. Vehicles will be sold as 19UUA8F25DA002687 is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right 2013 / ACUR to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash WDDXK8CB6HA017725 only. Buyer must have funds on hand at 2017 / MERZ time of sale: 1ZVFT80N575359589 9/2/2022 2007 / FORD 3FA6P0K93DR129881 WBA4A9C56GG507803 2013 FORD 2016 / BMW 9/9/2022 KNDJ23AU4L7722522 JN1BJ1CV0LW260101 2020 / KIA 2020 NISS 1GR1A0623LE157755 9/16/2022 2020 / GDAN WVWAR7AN8ME009292 2021 VOLK NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: ADAM AYED ENTERPRISES LLC gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 8/26/2022, 09:00 am at 9712 RECYCLE CENTER RD

orlandoweekly.com

AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Employment Administrative Supervisor needed for Isokaitis Realty Services, Orlando, Florida to cr8 rpts 4 prod, payroll, & rental agreemts & rpt 2 mgmt. Prep wrk skd & train new agts. Impl mgmt policies & proc, rec staffing levels. Req. 2 yrs exp as Admin Asst or Supervisor. F/T mail res: Isokaitis, 8638 Brookvale Dr, Windermere, FL 34786. Atwell, LLC seeks Project Engineers (4 positions) to work in Orlando, FL. Assist the project team on various assignments, overseen by the Project Manager and assist with technical training and guidance. Recommend and implement design changes such as grading, size of utilities and other changes per clients’ request. Work with project team members and clients to prepare project proposals. Draft, review, and finalize preliminary and final site plans, documents, and computations, including, but not limited to preparing reports, opinions, and recommendations for the approval of the Project Manager concerning the direction of the project; hydrology/ hydraulic studies, due diligence/site analysis reports, engineer’s opinion of probable costs, project schedules, utility computations, detention/retention computations, storm sewer reports, local and state permit applications, storm water reports, soils reports, earthwork volume calculations, StormCAD reports, WaterCAD reports, and preliminary grading. Florida PE license required. Domestic travel within the states of FL and NC required. Apply online, at: https://careers-atwell.icims.com/ jobs/1660/project-engineer %2c-civil-engineer—-landdevelopment/job. Tax Preparer Interview & gather docs from clients. Review & organize clients’ financial records. Prepare tax returns for individuals & businesses. Assist w/payroll solutions. Req. 1 yr of exp as Tax Preparer or Tax Consultant. To apply, email cover letter & resume to tbs1990.recruit@gmail.com. Tax by Sam, Inc. 2813 S. Hiawassee Rd, Orlando, FL TECHNOLOGY ServiceNow Inc is accepting resumes for the following positions in Orlando, FL: Sr. Performance Engineer (5043-2218564): Work closely with internal and external customers to understand critical system performance issues and provide continuous technical solutions to meet the Service SLAs. Telecommuting permitted. Mail resume to ServiceNow Inc, Attn: Global Mobility, 2225 Lawson Lane, Santa Clara, CA 95054. Resume must include job title, job ref#5043-2218564, full name, email & mailing address. No phone calls. Must be legally authorized to work in U.S. without sponsorship. EOE.

THE GREEK CORNER IS HIRING! – Servers full or pt, Line cook full or pt, Prep cook full or pt We are busy! Apply in person 1600 N Orange Ave Orlando, FL 32804

Sr. Data Scientist, Financial Planning and Analysis Universal Orlando 6526389

GO TO ORLANDOJOBS.COM & ENTER THE JOB NUMBER IN KEYWORD FIELD TO LOCATE THIS POSTION

Sterile Processing Tech I - WPH Sterile Processing - FT - Varies Winnie Palmer Hospital Orlando Health 6526380

Claims Specialist GreatInsuranceJobs.com 6526186 Housekeeping Coordinator ( AM Shift ) - Caribe Royale Hotel Caribe Royale Orlando 6526173

Strategic Financial Analyst (Considering Out-of-State Candidates) Florida Virtual School 6526168

Team Leader Full Sail University 6526158 Recreation Worker - Engelwood Neighborhood Center City of Orlando 6526154

Land Development Records Specialist Polk County Board of County Commissioners 6526152

Host/Hostess (Dinner), Harvest Bistro - Signia by Hilton Orlando Bonnet Creek Signia by Hilton Orlando Bonnet Creek 6526125 Member Services Representative, Oviedo YMCA Family Center YMCA of Central Florida 6526119

Commercial HVAC Duct Foremen (Orlando and Tampa) Energy Air Inc. 6526049

Senior AWS / NodeJS Software Engineer -- Remote - US TTEC 6526035 Shift Lead - Food&Beverage Give Kids The World 6526006

HEALTH INFORMATION SPECIALIST Seminole County Sheriff’s Office 6525899

Transportation Bus Maintenance – Area Mech Fleet B Mechanic Walt Disney World Resort 6526150

GIS Senior Analyst Orange County Sheriff’s Office 6525879

Sales - Account Manager - Inside Sales GreatInsuranceJobs 6526147

Senior Compensation Partner (Hybrid) AAA National Office 6525453

Streets Maintenance Technician City of Casselberry 6526127

Marketplace Attendant - Embassy Suites Orlando Lake Buena Vista South Embassy Suites Orlando - Lake Buena Vista South 6525386

HIREPALOOZA 2022 OrlandoJobs.com 6524354 42

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● AUG. 10-16, 2022 ● orlandoweekly.com

Shop Technician SEAL DISTRIBUTORS INC 6524353

Training and Development Manager Orange County Clerk of Courts 6524228

Human Resource Generalist Boys & Girls Club of Central Florida 6524221 Travel Specialist American Fundraising Foundation 6523464

Business Institute Manager Early Learning Coalition of Orange County 6523361

Work From Home French / Bilingual Customer Service Omni Interactions 6522965 Filtration Mechanics SeaWorld Orlando 6522650

Before and After School Teacher KinderCare Learning Companies 6522490

Membership Development Representative (sales) East Orlando Chamber of Commerce 6522420

Line Cook, The Edison Delaware North 6522417 Central Florida Virtual Hospitality Job Fair June 1st-30th OrlandoJobs.com Recruits! 6522261

Food & Beverage Attendant $1,000 sign on bonus available for FT new employees Palmas Restaurant Group 6522249 Talent Acquisition Coordinator ll University of Central Florida 6522085

Assistant Front Office Manager Orlando Marriott Lake Mary 6522079

Amphicar (Amphibius Car) Mechanic The BOATHOUSE 6522048 Garage Door Installers & Service Technicians Banko Overhead Doors 6521814

Restaurant Steward for NCL Pride of America Cruise Ship Norwegian Cruise Lines - Shipboard 6521652

Prep Cook -Kissimmee - $600 Hiring Bonus Kobe Japanese Steakhouse 6521480 Line Cook 4Rivers Smokehouse 6521478

Residential Electrician Terry’s Electric Inc. 6521411

A/R Clerk Performance Food Group / PFG 6521111

Plant Maintenance Mechanic T.G. Lee Dairy 6519473 Forklift Operator CHEP 6519449

Marketing Manager - Part Time Confidential Employer 6519314

Driver (26 FT Box Truck) Career Xchange 6519313 Managing Director Per Scholas Inc 6518287

Work From Home - Customer Service Call Center (Orlando, FL area) Summit Broadband 6518140 HIREPALOOZA 2022 OrlandoJobs.com 6524354 Executive Assistant to the CEO Early Learning Coalition of Orange County 6523360 Leadership Opportunities SeaWorld Orlando 6521726

Human Resource Manager Florida Paints 6521197

Work From Home French / Bilingual Customer Service Omni Interactions 6522965

Athletics Mental Health Counselor Rollins College (RC) 6521120

Human Resource Manager Florida Paints 6521197




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