Orlando Weekly June 14 2017

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JUNE 14-20, 2017

CoOl SuMmEr Los Angeles’ Black Marble brings fleeting intimacy to Orlando By Mathew Moyer, page 11

HAPPENING NOW, FIND MENUS AT BITE30.COM


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BEST PH O | PH O 8 8

BE ST PR E SC R I PT I ON F OR LIV IN G T HE SA N C T UM

You won’t need burgers for a fast-food fix once you find this Vietnamese noodle shop. Specializing in gigantic, weirdly addictive bowls of very thin rice noodles and various cuts of beef submerged in delicately seasoned broth, they also serve the usual exotics of shrimp paste and grilled pork – but the soup’s the thing. 730 N. Mills Ave., 407-897-3488; also 9728 E. Colonial Dr., 407-930-7670,

Plant-based eatery deftly disproves the antiquated notion that meatless and wheatless equates to tasteless with boldly flavored green, grain and pasta bowls. Oh, and they can also pull a proper espresso. Note: Dairy and gluten options are available. 715 N. Ferncreek Ave., 407-757-0346

BEST BAKERY Valhalla Bakery

BEST CUPCAKE Sweet! by Good Golly Miss Holly

BEST INDIAN Tamarind Indian Cuisine

BEST PHO Pho 88

BEST SUSHI Seito Sushi

BEST BARBECUE 4 Rivers Smokehouse

BEST DELI TooJay’s Gourmet Deli

BEST ITALIAN (NOT JUST PIZZA) Prato

BEST PIZZA Mellow Mushroom

BEST TACOS Gringos Locos

BEST BRUNCH Santiago’s Bodega

BEST DESSERTS Better Than Sex

BEST JUICE/SMOOTHIES Planet Smoothie

BEST PLACE TO BUY MEAT Freshfields Farm

BEST TEAHOUSE Pom Pom’s Teahouse & Sandwicheria

BEST BURGER BurgerFi

BEST DINER Christo’s Café

BEST KOREAN Korean BBQ Taco Box

BEST PLACE TO BUY PRODUCE Freshfields Farm

BEST THAI SEA Thai Restaurant

BEST CARIBBEAN Bahama Breeze

BEST DOG-FRIENDLY PATIO The Hammered Lamb

BEST LATE-NIGHT RESTAURANT Gringos Locos

BEST PUB GRUB Oblivion Taproom

BEST THEME PARK BAR Margaritaville

BEST CHEAP EATS Gringos Locos

BEST FOOD TRUCK Korean BBQ Taco Box

BEST LATIN Black Bean Deli

BEST RAMEN Noodles & Rice

BEST THEME PARK RESTAURANT Be Our Guest, Magic Kingdom

BEST CHEF James Petrakis

BEST FRENCH Le Coq au Vin

BEST MEXICAN Gringos Locos

BEST RESTAURANT TO TAKE A DATE The Ravenous Pig

BEST VEGAN Ethos Vegan Kitchen

BEST CHINESE Hawkers Asian Street Fare

BEST FRIED CHICKEN The Coop

BEST MIDDLE EASTERN Bosphorous Turkish Cuisine

BEST SANDWICHES/SUBS Publix deli

BEST VEGETARIAN Dandelion Communitea Café

BEST COFFEE Drunken Monkey

BEST GREEK Mediterranean Blue

BEST NACHOS Tijuana Flats

BEST SEAFOOD Winter Park Fish Co.

BEST VIETNAMESE Pho 88

BEST CUBAN Black Bean Deli

BEST ICE CREAM Jeremiah’s Italian Ice

BEST OUTDOOR DINING Hillstone Restaurant

BEST STEAKHOUSE Linda’s La Cantina Steak House

BEST WINGS Gator’s Dockside

To order a Best of Orlando plaque visit: orlandoweekly.newskeepsake.com To participate in this page call: (407) 377-0400 ext 278


FREE | JUNE 14-20, 2017

Publisher Graham Jarrett Editor Jessica Bryce Young Editorial Staff Writer Monivette Cordeiro Calendar Editor Thaddeus McCollum Music Editor Matthew Moyer Digital Content Editor Colin Wolf Contributors Peg Aloi, Rob Bartlett, Jen Cray, Jason Ferguson, Hannah Glogower, Alma Hill, Scott Horn, Liv Jonse, Holly V. Kapherr, Faiyaz Kara, Seth Kubersky, Bao Le-Huu, Cameron Meier, Richard Reep, Joey Roulette, Leah Sandler, Steve Schneider, Madelenie Scott, Nicolette Shurba, Abby Stassen Editorial Interns Kristin James, Virginia Vasquez, Jacob Galvin

Advertising Director of Sales Jeff Kruse Major Accounts Specialist Leslie Egan Senior Multimedia Account Executives Debbie Garcia, Lori Green, Dan Winkler Multimedia Account Executives Scott Navarro, Scott Spar Classified and Legal Rep Jerrica Schwartz Advertising Coordinator Danielle Lebron Marketing and Events Events Director Zackary Rowe Events and Promotions Manager Brad Van De Bogert Marketing and Events Coordinator Rachel Hoyle

29 Cover design by Chris Tobar Rodriguez; photo via Ghostly International

Creative Services Art Director Chris Tobar Rodriguez Production Lead Designer Melissa McHenry Graphic Designer Daniel Rodriguez Graphic Designer Ian Jones Business Operations Manager Hollie Mahadeo Business Assistant Allysha Willison Circulation Circulation Manager Collin Modeste Euclid Media Group Chief Executive Officer Andrew Zelman Chief Operating Officers Chris Keating, Michael Wagner Human Resources Director Lisa Beilstein Digital Operations Coordinator Jaime Monzon euclidmediagroup.com National Advertising: Voice Media Group 1-888-278-9866, voicemediagroup.com Orlando Weekly Inc. 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, Florida 32801 orlandoweekly.com

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NEWS + FEATURES

FOOD + DRINK

7 Your Words

21 Flight of the seagull

Readers react to the 6/7/17 issue

Gaviota’s expertly prepared Peruvian cuisine has wings

7 This Modern World 7 ICYMI

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MUSIC 29 Cool summer Los Angeles’ Black Marble brings fleeting intimacy to Orlando

33 Just can’t get enough

21 Tip Jar

News you need to know but may have missed in the past week

Brooklyn Coffee moves in to the old Restaurant ASH space, plus more in our weekly food roundup

9 Informed Dissent

23 Bar Exam

It must be hard for Marco Rubio to see with his head so firmly planted inside Trump’s ass

Swanky Mathers Social Gathering gives downtown more than a touch of class

11 Mar-a-Lago, my old man and me

25 Recently Reviewed

A San Francisco lefty and her Trump-loving father visit the Winter White House

Short takes on restaurants we’ve reviewed recently

From noisy beginnings, synth-pop duo Body of Light are now the stuff that dancefloor dreams are made of

33 Picks This Week Great live music rattles Orlando every night

35 This Little Underground Ho99o9’s secret Orlando show brings event-making back to the concert experience; Japanese Breakfast and Cende prove ones to watch

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 2017 by Euclid Media Group LLC. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Publisher does not assume any liability for unsolicited manuscripts, materials, or other content. Any submission must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. All editorial, advertising, and business correspondence should be mailed to the address listed above. Subscriptions: Additional copies or back issues may be purchased at the Orlando Weekly offices for $1. Six-month domestic subscriptions may be purchased for $75; one-year subscriptions for $125. Periodical Postage Pending at Orlando, FL POSTMASTER: Send address changes to ORLANDO WEEKLY 16 W. Pine St. Orlando, FL 32801.

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ARTS + CULTURE 17 Barely famous Quirky comic Tig Notaro on killing, not dying, and baring it all on stage

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FILM

CALENDAR

27 On Screens in Orlando

36 Selections

Movies playing this week: Cars 3, All Eyez on Me and more

38 The Week

27 Film Listings

39 Down the Road

Cinema-oriented events to go see this week

17 Culture 2 Go

Back Pages

Fringe sets a box-office record, a list of Critic’s Choice winners, and more performing arts news

48 Gimme Shelter 48 Savage Love

19 Live Active Cultures

49 Classifieds

Theater on the Edge serves up a gleefully glazed, piping-hot production of Superior Donuts

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early bird sale extended through father's day! GIVE YOUR DAD THE GIFT HE DESERVES! PRICES GO UP SUNDAY AT MIDNIGHT EARLY BIRD PRICE: $35 | GATE PRICE: $55

200+ CRAFT BEERS FROM LOCAL BREWERIES, WHISKEY & WINE TASTING, FOOD TRUCKS, LIVE MUSIC & MORE!

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11TH | FESTIVAL PARK

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017

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Readers react to the 6/7/17 issue. In “Aiming for change: Has the post-Pulse momentum for gun reform stalled in Central Florida?,” reporter Adam Manno looked at local attitudes on firearms since the Pulse shootings. @Walt Barnett The national conversation about gun control is pretty much over. We let some guy shoot up an elementary school

In “Still here: One year after Pulse,” reporter Monivette Cordeiro interviewed Pulse survivor Keinon Carter, who went from being declared dead at the hospital to opening a center for black LGBTQ youth. @Carol Diaz We shouldn’t have to acknowledge how many in a race were tragically murdered. LGBT IS NOT ABOUT LATINO BLACK WHITE … the tone of this article confuses me.

and sat back and did nothing, and that was it, that was the day this became a non-issue. America has spoken: guns for everybody everywhere all the time, hell yes.

@Sebastian Rojas I agree with you that a community shouldn’t be divided by race, but it is. There’s no way around it, whether it’s don’t unintentionally, it still happens.

@Marina Hoak Gun control doesn’t stop the spread of toxic ideologies or address the mental health issues that lead to mass shootings. Maybe the issue would gain some

ICYMI ILLUSTRATION BY CHRIS TOBAR RODRIGUEZ

Another mass shooting in Orlando, a report from the ACLU on Florida’s response to ‘guacamole’ algae, a deal on medical marijuana and other things you may have missed this week. »

@Coral Cashes Sounds like he is a great guy. I’m so glad that he has found purpose after the tragedy.

Five people were killed last week by a “disgruntled” former employee of Fiamma Inc., an awning manufacturer on Forsyth Road, according to the Orange County Sheriff’s Office. The victims are Brenda Montanez-Crespo, 44; Robert Snyder, 69; Kevin Lawson, 47; Jeffrey Roberts, 57; and Kevin Clark, 53. Deputies say the shooter, John Robert Neumann Jr., 45, killed himself before they arrived. Neumann walked into Fiamma with a semi-automatic handgun and opened fire on specific employees, leaving at least eight survivors uninjured. He had been fired from the company last April and was the subject of a workplace violence incident in 2014, when he allegedly battered a fellow employee.

traction if politicians saw it as a multi-faceted issue instead of just dumbing it down to “guns are bad.”

Five victims killed in Orlando workplace by disgruntled ex-employee:

@Andrew Ervin What a story! Just wow! Can’t imagine.

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ACLU says Florida failed to warn public of danger during toxic algae bloom crisis: Florida health officials failed to adequately warn the public of the dangers associated with last summer’s toxic blue-green algae bloom on the Treasure Coast, according to a new report from the American Civil Liberties Union. The algae scum that caked the St. Lucie River and its estuary was so thick that local residents started calling it “guacamole,” and it gave off a noxious smell that caused “burning eyes, headaches, flu-like symptoms, respiratory problems [and] rashes.” The report says state agencies were slow to respond to the toxic bloom and to release information to the public. The Florida Department of Environmental Protection and the Department of Health responded to the ACLU report by saying their agencies kept the public informed in a timely manner.

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Florida lawmakers strike a deal on medical marijuana:

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Orlando marks the one-year remembrance of the Pulse massacre:

After failing to reach a deal during the spring legislative session, Florida’s Republican leaders finally agreed on a medical marijuana plan during a special session. The state will have 10 additional marijuana growers, and each company will be limited to 25 retail stores across the state. A ban on smoking medical cannabis remains in the proposal.

After a year filled with grief, anger, tears, hugs and love, the City Beautiful marked the one-year remembrance of the mass shooting where a gunman killed 49 people at the gay nightclub Pulse on Latin night with ceremonies honoring the dead and a promise to continue to be there for families and survivors. After all this time, we’re still here. feedback@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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THE EVER-SHRINKING, EVEN LITTLER MARCO It must be hard for Florida’s junior senator to see with his head so firmly planted inside Trump’s ass These are the relevant facts as

pertains to last Thursday’s spectacle on the Hill: 1. The former director of the FBI testified under oath before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence that the president of the United States demanded his loyalty. 2. Later, the president expressed his “hope” that the FBI director would make an investigation into the president’s associate go away. 3. Then the president complained to the FBI director that the FBI’s investigation was creating a “cloud” over his administration that he wanted lifted; specifically, he wanted the FBI director to announce that the president was not personally under investigation. 4. The FBI director declined to drop either the investigation into the president’s associate or announce that the president was not under investigation – the former because the associate likely committed a crime, the latter because, while the president was not under investigation at the time, his campaign was, so he could be in the future. 5. The president fired the FBI director, blaming the FBI director’s handling of the Hillary Clinton email case. 6. The president then reportedly boasted to the Russians in the Oval Office the next day that a great weight had been lifted, and admitted to NBC News that – contrary to the White House’s earlier position

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– he’d been thinking about Russia when he fired the FBI director. While the FBI wasn’t investigating the president, the FBI director’s testimony indicates that recently appointed special counsel is very likely exploring whether the president attempted to obstruct justice.

These are the relevant facts in

the mind of Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.: 1. The president only asked the FBI director to let the investigation of the president’s associate go once, but did not ask him to let go of the broader Russia investigation. 2. The FBI director did not tell the president to his face that his request was inappropriate. 3. The FBI director never leaked that the president was not personally under investigation.

If you’ve watched Marco Rubio for any length of time, as I have, you’ve learned not to expect much from the man – certainly not much that requires him to display a spine. A year and a half ago, Rubio was on the campaign trail, barking that Donald Trump was a “con man.” Now, after a private dinner with that con man a few days before the committee hearing, he acts like Trump’s defense attorney, parsing words to minimize the potential damage and worrying more about what information wasn’t leaked than whether the president tried to deep-six a criminal investigation like a goddamn mob boss. The worst part is this isn’t at all out

of character. He does this weathervane and upset and because he’s not a politician shit all the time. Shortly after the 2012 … and doesn’t realize or no one’s told him election, you’ll recall, when Marco first that presidents can’t do that, or was that started posturing to run for president, an effort to, in fact, impede an investigahe became an outspoken advocate of tion? … Whether it rises to criminality, you immigration reform; it was all the rage know, I think there’s significant doubts among conservative intellectuals, who about whether it rises to that level.” In other words, the president was pissed saw the Republicans losing ground among Hispanics. But then Marco got a bunch off and too naive to realize that ordering of blowback from his party’s xenophobic the FBI director to drop an investigation base, and just like that, he voted against was a bad idea, so that makes it OK. To get an idea of how asinine this line his own bill. During the 2016 presidential primary, of thinking is, let’s have a thought exerhe postured as a Never Trumper before cise. Let’s say that, around this time last tethering himself to Mango Mussolini’s year, Barack Obama pulled James Comey leg and begging for a convention speaking into a private Oval Office meeting, where spot. He unequivocally promised time and he told Comey he “hoped” Comey could time again not to run for re-election to the drop the email investigation into Hillary Senate if the president thing didn’t work Clinton. And let’s say Comey refused, and Obama fired him, out, then did just offering some that, knifing some During the 2016 thin reed of an Republican pals presidential primary, excuse that was along the way. In quickly dissected January, he railed Rubio postured as a Never and discredited by against secretary Trumper before Obama himself. of state nominee tethering himself to the How long do Rex Tillerson, Mango Mussolini’s leg and you think it would then voted for begging for a convention have taken House him. And so on. Republicans to That’s just who speaking spot. draft articles of Marco Rubio is, impeachment? who he’s always How long do you been: spineless, think it would have taken Marco Rubio to self-interested, shortsighted. He has the intellect to understand that demand Obama’s resignation? They would have been right to do so. Donald Trump is a menace to the republic, that the president is mentally and morally Why is this any different? The problem isn’t just Marco, but what unfit for the job, that he almost certainly comported himself with James Comey in he’s part of: a party that has anchored itself a manner that was at best unethical and to a dumpster fire of a leader in hopes of at worst felonious. And yet here’s what gutting health care and cutting taxes for Lil Marco had to say after the hearing: “It rich people, willing to look the other way was not a good idea to do what he did on – even at a foreign regime compromising the Oval Office on the 14th,” Rubio said, American elections – to achieve those referring to a private meeting Trump had goals. And as long as Republicans are willwith Comey to ask him to back off the ing to tolerate Trump, the president, and investigation into former national security the metastasizing cancer he represents, will infect the body politic. adviser Michael Flynn. “The fundamental question is, is that @jeffreybillman on Twitter the act of someone who is just really angry feedback@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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A San Francisco lefty and her Trump-loving father visit the Winter White House BY MARY FINN

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couple of weeks ago, my dad and I stood on a Palm Beach sandbar staring at President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago golf club and resort. My dad didn’t dress up much for the trip. He was wearing his quintessential summer garb of knee-high white sport socks, a faux Polo shirt from the sale rack and a pair of somewhat saggy khaki shorts. We used my camera’s zoom to see the president’s resort because the local police and the red-shirted Mar-a-Lago security guards staked outside don’t allow commoners an up-close view. From our perch on the side of the bay farthest away from Mar-a-Lago’s front

gates, we could catch a glimpse of the lush green manicured lawns and the white tents that workers were in the process of setting up for weekend events. Most of what goes on at Trump’s members-only resort happens behind the terra-cotta walls and requires the (recently doubled) $200,000 membership fee. Even though my dad and I were standing on the same sandbar, looking through the same zoomed phone screen, squinting in the same midday sun, and turned away by the same security guard, we saw totally different things. I saw the disgustingly gaudy property of a self-serving, thin-skinned, unethical womanizer. I saw the home of a man who seems willing to destroy the country for the sake of protecting his ego. I saw the house of a putative billionaire who hoodwinked working-class Americans into believing that he’s a fiscally conservative populist and yet spends $3.6 million in taxpayer money each weekend to relax at his estate. I saw the house of a con artist. My dad, squinching his eyes to see Mara-Lago across the bay, saw the estate of a president who deserves and earns all that

he has. “He will make my taxes be lesser. I think my sense of America’s place in the world will make me feel better,” my dad said. Trump makes my dad feel good. That’s why I took my dad to Mar-a-Lago. My dad calls himself a “socially and fiscally conservative voter … who would like to see the former order of things preserved.” But unlike many Trump supporters who don’t have a good answer when asked about the period when America had the greatness they want to go back to, my father is pretty specific. He wants to see things go back to “the way things were during Reagan’s second term.” The entire drive on I-95 to the sandbar where we stood looking at Mar-a-Lago we talked politics, like we always do. We talked politics as we walked along the ocean boardwalk after Mar-a-Lago. There were a couple of other things we talked about that day, like my woes about the cost of housing in San Francisco and the tree that fell on my parents’ house during a recent winter storm in Boston, but, as usual, our conversation settled squarely on politics. We’ve never talked much about our feelorlandoweekly.com

ings. My dad tells this story about how when he immigrated from England in his 30s, he was about to board the boat to America and his mother shook his hand, pointed to his luggage and said, “Take care of that trunk, son.” I was raised in Boston and my California friends still make fun of my aversion to hugging. These are not exactly conditions that are ripe for touchyfeely parent-child communication. But my dad and I can debate for hours about the merits of special counsel appointments and FBI investigations. My dad still forwards me news articles the old-fashioned way – through the mail – with Post-its that read, “Thought you’d be interested in this one.” Even though we are political opposites, we are also very much alike. I learned from my dad’s example that I should pay attention to the world. During the first war in Iraq, my dad hung a National Geographic map on the kitchen wall so that we could see where the battles were taking place that we heard reported about on NPR as we ate breakfast.

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I CAN'T MAKE MY DAD SEE WHAT I SEE, EVEN WHEN WE'RE STARING AT THE SAME THING. WE DON'T JUST HAVE DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES ON THE BEAUTY OF THE MIDDAY SUN, SOMETIMES WE CAN'T EVEN AGREE THAT THERE IS A SUN IN THE SKY AT ALL.

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I don’t think he planned on spawning a San Francisco liberal, but Dad did help form me. He has always been my strongest, most challenging and best-informed sparring partner. For years I’ve watched Fox News and read the Drudge Report so that I can anticipate my dad’s arguments, all in the hopes that he might one day miraculously say, “You know what? That’s a good point.” I’m not sure if he also wants me to see it his way or, deep down, if he enjoys debating with me because it gives us something to talk about. I can’t make my dad see what I see, even when we’re staring at the same thing. As we stood snapping father-daughter selfies at Mar-a-Lago, I hoped we could stand there in the afternoon sun and he would see it the way I do. Instead, especially since Trump won, we don’t just have different perspectives on the beauty of the midday sun, sometimes we can’t even agree that there is a sun in the sky at all.

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few days after our visit to Mar-aLago, a 4-foot-by-4-foot sinkhole appeared on the road directly outside the compound’s front gate. In reporting the story, some journalists made note of the role that climate change is playing in Florida and the rest of the country. 12

My dad doesn’t believe that climate change is real. He says that he has read and heard about scientists of “equal stature” including “eminent MIT scholars who are now on committees who say climate change is bullshit. There’s nothing to it.” He doesn’t trust climate scientists’ motives because he thinks that most of them are producing false conclusions so that they can continue to receive government funding for their labs. His prediction was that Trump would call bullshit on the climate change hoax and kill the liberal cash cow. “I think you will see this climate conference in Paris that Trump will simply say, ‘When you come up with something real, give me a buzz. In the meantime we aren’t going to tax American consumers to prevent something that maybe is just unprovable.’” Turned out my dad predicted that right – Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement a little bit after our trip, even though, scientists say, Mar-a-Lago and Palm Beach will likely face dire consequences from rising sea levels. A Guardian investigation showed that the Mar-a-Lago grounds already face a high risk of flooding and over the next 30 years, the resort could become uninhabitable. As my dad and I took seaside photos along the boardwalk, my dad admired the natural beauty. I decided to keep my snarky “enjoy it while you can, climate change denier!” comments to myself.

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ince we couldn’t get into Mar-aLago and we had traveled the 40 miles to get there, we spent the afternoon strolling through Palm Beach. As we walked past Chanel and Louis Vuitton on tony Worth Avenue, I asked my dad, “Do you care that Trump seems to be closing off government from the people?” My dad says he believes in government transparency and that he wants “to see information published widely and loudly.” I am in graduate school studying to become an archivist and recently did an internship at a presidential library where I worked to preserve and make public presidential records. I’ve filed over a hundred Freedom of Information Act requests since Trump took office. I also want to see information published widely and loudly. Like Trump’s tax returns, for instance. “Oh, that’s the old Democratic banging the drum,” he said. “I don’t care about his taxes. I mean, I know what Trump’s taxes are going to show. They are going to show elaborate corporate stuff that will take armies of lawyers to fill out. I understand that.” The way my dad sees it, the complexity of Trump’s taxes is the reason he doesn’t need to see them. “He isn’t a guy filling out a 1099. I mean his taxes are probably 50,000 pages long,” he said. That seems ludicrous to me. Lately, since our trip, I’ve been calling my dad and interviewing him about his views for this story,

recording the calls with his permission so he doesn’t accuse me of spreading “fake news,” and he has a whole slew of arguments for not seeing Trump’s taxes. “I don’t know that he needs to show his taxes. It’s not a law, it’s not required. I don’t know. Maybe in years to come we will find out that he did in fact make a buck on his business while he was president but I don’t know that and I can’t say that at this point,” he says one day on the phone, without hesitation. “I don’t think we have any right to know what Trump’s taxes are.” “I think Trump’s taxes are only a ruse on the part of the opposition to try and embarrass him,” he says later.

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e did spend some time trying to get good shots of Mar-aLago, circling the block around the front gates a half-dozen times in our attempt to snap photos from the car window. I was driving the rental car, window down, holding the wheel with the right hand and snapping photos with the left. “Ma’am, no photos. Keep moving, ma’am,” the Mar-a-Lago security guard yelled to us from the sidewalk with his arms folded across his chest. My dad was disappointed that he couldn’t get a shot standing in front of the gate. He was hoping to show his friends his exploits over morning coffee at the CONTINUED ON PAGE 14


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SCIENTISTS SAY PALM BEACH FACES DIRE CONSEQUENCES FROM RISING SEA LEVELS AND OVER THE NEXT 30 YEARS, COULD BECOME UNINHABITABLE. MY DAD DOESN’T BELIEVE THAT CLIMATE CHANGE IS REAL.

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bagel shop back home. During one of the loops around the block, I asked him if he was bothered by Trump’s lies. “You cared about the Clintons’ lies so much and for so long. How come you don’t care as much about Trump lying?” I asked. “I don’t know if I can put my finger on any instance when Trump has said this was a fact when it turned out to be not a fact,” he said. “I don’t know of anything like that. I can’t think of a blatant example where somebody in the White House said this was black when in fact it was white.” It was enough to make me scream, but I was driving so I had to keep it together. My dad’s a smart guy. He used to be a high-school history teacher and he closely follows current events. He’s one of the few people I know, from any political persuasion, who can find Raqqa on a map. When I hear him say that he can’t put his finger on any instance of Trump being deceitful, I wonder if he’s trying to antagonize me and get under my skin or if he willfully disregards any facts that counter his impressions of Trump. If I’m honest with myself, I’m not entirely immune to this. I worked for the Obama campaign in 2008 and I think Obama, at his core, is a smart, honest, thoughtful guy and that he led from a position of patriotism and he loved the country, warts and all. It’s hard for me to admit that he didn’t keep his cam14

paign promise on closing Guantanamo, he cozied up to Wall Street after the recession instead of using the opportunity to hold the billionaire bankers accountable, and he authorized the use of more quasi-legal drones than any other president. My dad, of course, couldn’t see anything good in Obama. He’d give him a “D” overall for his presidency. “I always got the idea that he was a bit sleazy,” he said as we circled. “Nice speaker, handsome-looking man. But I wouldn’t vote for him and I didn’t vote for him.” (Yes, a family of educators, we’re the types to give grades to politicians. Trump, it turns out, is a star student.) “But, dad, come on. You’ve got to think Trump was lying during the seven years he spread the birther conspiracies?” “I would not be one bit surprised if in the years to come somebody doesn’t expose some of the things that Trump asked,” my dad said, defending Trump’s nonsense to the end. “One more try?” I suggested as we both warily eyed the guard stand. “Sure, but be careful driving and taking pictures at the same time,” he said.

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wanted to see Trump’s Winter White House so that I could try to understand both my father and my country. I had a similar morbid curiosity last June when Trump came to Sacramento for a campaign rally. I went because I was curi-

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ous about what it would actually feel like to be at a Trump campaign event. The crowd chanted all of the well-worn “lock her up”s and “build the wall”s, but I also heard some Trump supporters yell out lines that I hadn’t heard on CNN, like “Rape her!” (at the mention of Hillary Clinton’s name) and “Towelheads!” (at Trump’s mention of Benghazi). I sat in my car in the parking lot after that rally and cried. I didn’t know then that Trump would win. I was pretty sure he’d lose. Still, I was shaken by the fervor, and what felt like raw hatred, of the crowd. But before I drove home to San Francisco, I bought a $20 “Make America Great Again” T-shirt from a parking lot vendor (who was also selling shirts that read “Hillary Sucks But Not Like Monica”). I bought my dad the shirt because he rarely asks me for anything and on the phone on my drive up to the rally, he casually said, “See if you can pick me up a T-shirt.” Despite my angst over it, I bought the gift because I thought it would bring my dad some joy and I wanted him to know I’d heard him. But I couldn’t let go of the disconnect, of the fact that my dad, this man who is so smart and who taught me that I should pay attention to the world, could be aligned with something so vile. Maybe that’s why I wanted to go to Mar-a-Lago. I ask my dad on the phone after our trip if he understands why I have such strong negative feelings about Trump.

“Maybe because you set your heart on Hillary Clinton getting elected and she lost and people simply cannot get over it and they cannot accept the win,” he says. “I think he has spent his life treating women terribly,” I says. I’m shocked by my dad’s response: “That is probably a good, legitimate point. The guy needs to clean up his act,” he says. It’s the first negative thing I’ve heard him say about Trump. But it didn’t seem to bother him too much.

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ack home in my apartment in San Francisco, I listen to the recorded interviews with my dad and cringe. Even though I was trying to be objective and “reporter-ly” in my questions, much of the time I come across sounding like a knee-jerk know-it-all when I ask my dad to justify his views. Ultimately, no matter how I sound, he just thinks I’m dead wrong. He’s been a good sport to go on record for this piece, even though he thinks that people like me have caused the country to fall into disrepair and dishonor. My dad’s views don’t make any more sense now than they did before our visit to Mar-a-Lago. But I’d like to think we are committed to continue grappling with it, trying to better understand where we’re each coming from. My dad implores me to be a “good journalist” and to give him a “fair shake.” “Remember, I’m an old man,” he says. feedback@orlandoweekly.com


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[ A+C profile ]

BY SETH KUBERSKY It’s been a couple of weeks since the 2017 Orlando Fringe finished, which is just enough time to tally the numbers on the 26th annual performing arts festival. Attendance was down slightly at 70,400 versus 72,000 in 2016, and the total number of tickets distributed slipped 4 percent to 50,184. But thanks to a new higher top ticket price, a record-setting $452,641 in sales was returned to the artists, up $28,195 from last year. Despite the departure of executive director George Wallace, this year’s festival was fairly flawless, from the mostly rain-free skies to fresher food options on the lawn. My only real complaint is a good problem to have: Fringe has grown far too large for me to enjoy it all. I didn’t see even half of the 166 participating productions, and never made it to the BYOV venues at Savoy and Breakthrough Theatre. If Fringe is going to keep adding venues and performers, it will need to expand its audience accordingly or producers will struggle to turn a profit.

BARELY FAMOUS

PHOTO BY BOB CHAMBERLIN

what, we’re sick of this. Let’s kill her.’” She went even further later that year, when, as part of the New York Comedy Festival, she performed topless. (According Quirky comic Tig Notaro on killing, not dying, and baring it all on stage to the New York Times, “She showed the audience her scars and then, through the BY TOM SCA N LON force of her showmanship, made you forand the Mississippi native’s career was get that they were there. It was a powerful, here are thousands of stand-up comedians out there, maybe mil- launched as a comedian-storyteller. She even inspiring, statement about survival doesn’t really tell jokes, just talks about and recovery, and yet, it had the larky feel lions. Many of them are funny; most sound the same. If you were really her life and makes uniquely deadpan of a dare.”) What was that like? observations. smart, you could probably write an algo“It crept up in my head as something “At first,” Notaro recalls, “I didn’t think rithm that would suggest what many of I would ever make a living at it. I thought I I really wanted to do after my surgery,” them would say next. Notaro says. “It wouldn’t would do open mics forAnd then there’s Tig Notaro. leave my mind.” She It would be almost impossible to predict ever, and I was content TIG NOTARO tried the topless thing at what she’ll say, as nobody else sounds like with that.” 7 p.m. Saturday, June 17 a club in Los Angeles but She was becomTig Notaro. Not now, not in the past. The Plaza Live said she didn’t feel confiknown as a As a new fan commented on one of her ing 425 N. Bumby Ave. dent there. YouTube videos: “Never thought I would hilariously unconven407-228-1220 But the second time, tional storyteller when laugh at cancer.” plazaliveorlando.org in New York, “I really felt Early in a phone interview from her Los her body decided to go $27.50-$39.50 confident. It was very Angeles home, we ask her to complete the a different way. She was exhilarating. I thought it diagnosed with breast sentence: “Tig is Steven Wright meets …” would be cool to do for After pondering, she replies, “I guess cancer in the summer of my HBO special [the Emmy-nominated Chrissie Hynde, Paula Poundstone and my 2012 – and lived to joke about it. As she said on Late Night With Conan Boyish Girl Interrupted],” Notaro says. mother.” Inspired by Poundstone, Notaro (previ- O’Brien in 2014: “I made so many jokes Although she hasn’t gone topless in a show ously a band manager) tried an open mic over the years about how small my chest since, she says mysteriously, “I don’t like to night at Little Frida’s, a Los Angeles café. was. I started to think maybe my boobs say if I’m going to or not going to.” That first show 20 years ago went well, overheard me and were like, ‘You know arts@orlandoweekly.com

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Despite the daunting range of entertainment, the Orlando Sentinel’s Matt Palm and I were able to decide on our annual Critic’s Choice list without much debate. The big winners, as announced at the Memorial Day closing ceremony, included Animal Engine’s Petunia and Chicken for Best Comedy, Beth Marshall Presents’ Commencement for Best Drama, Johnnie Maier’s ThanksKilling for Best Musical, and Willi Carlisle’s There Ain’t No More: Death of a Folksinger for Best Show of the Festival. Tara Travis, Martin Dockery, Ryan Adam Wells, Rob Gee and Adam Francis Proulx were honored for their solo shows, and acting awards went to Marlon Andrew Burnley, Leesa Castaneda and the cast of Wanzie With a Z, with David Karl Lee taking home Best Director for O-Town. If you missed any Fringe favorites, watch for popular shows to pop back up at January’s Winter Fringe, if not sooner; Ominous George, which won Best Score for Steve Schneider’s hard-rocking songs, will have an encore June 25 at Maxine’s on Shine (ominousgeorge.tix.com).

NOW PLAYING Next to Normal, through June 18 at Valencia East … Superior Donuts, through July 2 at Theater on the Edge … Animal Crackers, through July 2 at Mad Cow … Geezers, through June 19 at Breakthrough.

UPCOMING The Final, Final Farewell Tour of Delores & Dick DelRubio, June 16 at Starlite Room at Savoy … Rent Boy: The Musical, June 16-July 1 at Parliament House … A Night With Winnie, June 16-19 at the Abbey … Josephine: A Burlesque Cabaret Dream Play, June 29-July 13 at the Venue.

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BY SETH KUBERSKY ALLAN WHITEHEAD AND NEILA LAKE IN SUPERIOR DONUTS | PHOTO BY MONICA MULDER

Summer is nearly here, and with it comes an annual slowdown in local theaters. The lull leaves us time to look back at some recently announced show slates for the 2017-2018 theatrical season:

ORLANDO REPERTORY THEATRE

The Orlando Rep ambitiously opens their 15th season in September with Disney’s hit musical Newsies, which just ended its national tour last fall. That’s followed in October by Polkadots, a “cool kids musical” about racial segregation, and The Best Christmas Pageant Ever: The Musical in November. Flora & Ulysses, adapted from Kate DiCamillo’s award-winning book, opens in January 2018, with Madagascar: A Musical Adventure and Judy Moody & Stink: The Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Treasure Hunt capping the season in February and April, respectively. Short-time special engagements include a Mr. Richard Halloween concert and Tony Brent’s antibullying magic show in January.

Theater on the Edge serves up a gleefully glazed, piping-hot production of Superior Donuts Pinder) and Debbie Does Dallas (directed by Adam McCabe) will fill out 2017. Next year features Tales From the Dressing Room with Darcel Stevens, Greg Coffin’s Convenience, Joe DiPietro’s F*cking Men, Terrence McNally’s Mothers and Sons and Skip Stewart’s 7 Deadly Campy Sins.

ANNIE RUSSELL THEATRE

The mainstage at Rollins College returns in September for its 85th season with the political musical The Cradle Will Rock. Kate Hamill’s new adaptation of Sense and Sensibility premieres in November, the terrorism docudrama The Women of Lockerbie runs in February, and 9 to 5: The Musical ends the school year in April. Studentdirected productions of Eleemosynary, The BETH MARSHALL Flick and On the Verge or The Geography of PRESENTS Producer Beth Marshall is hold- Yearning will also be presented in October, ing auditions on June 25 and 26 for her February and April. entire 10th season, including February’s The Lieutenant of Inishmore, which was SUPERIOR DONUTS AT announced in March on the Garden THEATER ON THE EDGE Theatre’s schedule. Marshall is also Luckily, not every troupe has taken off seeking talent for September’s annual for the summer. Right now through July Play-in-a-Day, plus Paul Rudnick’s Most 2, up-and-coming company Theater on Fabulous Story Ever Told in December and the Edge is serving up a gleefully glazed, a New Works workshop series of playwrit- piping-hot production of Superior Donuts. ing contest winners. Marshall also plans to Aging ex-hippie Arthur Przybyszewski mount Save Me, Dolly Parton and Friday (Allan Whitehead) has spent most of Night in America at the 2018 Orlando his 60 years assiduously avoiding conFringe, lottery willing. flict, whether dodging the Vietnam War draft or deflecting his neighbor Max’s (Robb Maus) entreaties to sell his strugPARLIAMENT HOUSE gling Chicago doughnut shop. Arthur is so FOOTLIGHT THEATRE In April, Tim Evanicki announced 11 averse to unpleasantness, he barely intertitles for the 2017-2018 season at Footlight acts with the cops (Cecilia Gazzara, Mark Theatre at the Parliament House, starting Kelly) investigating the vandalism of his with the currently running Rent Boy: The restaurant. But Arthur’s reticence is disMusical. Jeff Jones’ Little Miss Rainbow rupted by Franco Wicks (Sean Philippe), Sunshine pageant parody is up next in July, an underprivileged teen who talks his way and Daddy Issues, an unnamed musical, into employment and ends up becomPaul Rudnick’s Jeffrey (directed by Eric ing a surrogate son. When Wicks runs

afoul of the neighborhood bookie (Marco DiGeorge) and his goon (Zack Roundy), Arthur must finally leave the sidelines and stand up for something. Tracy Letts’ Superior Donuts, which had a brief run on Broadway in 2009, is probably the most accessible play from an author better known for the brutal dramas Bug and Killer Joe. In fact, the storyline is so sitcom-like in its setup that CBS spun it off into a half-hour comedy starring Judd Hirsch. But dig beneath the comic facade and you’ll find a script grappling with questions of color, class and the cruel edge of the American dream. At the heart of the show is the relationship between Arthur, the cynical second-generation Polish immigrant, and Franco, the ambitious African-American teen. The pair’s interaction evolves from witty odd-couple patter to something more profound as they bond despite barriers of race and age. The two leads are terrific, especially Philippe, a stand-up comic whose kinetic hyperverbalism recalls a young Chris Tucker; his emotional final interaction with Whitehead adds unexpected weight to the ambiguous ending. However, director Pam Harbaugh hasn’t struck quite the right balance of humor and humanity with the rest of her cast. Arthur’s romantic interludes with his police paramour are cringe-worthy in their juvenile goofiness, and scenes with the antagonists are undermined by inconsistent accents and unconvincing combat. Perhaps this production’s biggest problem is its greatest asset; designer Samantha DiGeorge’s hyper-realistic set is so authentic, you’ll be tempted to order a dozen during intermission. But with the ultrarealistic environment come agonizingly slow scene changes that rob the show of momentum and inflate the running time by nearly 30 minutes beyond the Broadway version. Theater on the Edge hit home runs with their last two shows, so there’s no shame in scoring a solid triple this time. Even if the cake underneath this confection is undercooked, the fantastically funny frosting is well worth the calories. skubersky@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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tip jar

[ food + drink ]

BY FAIYAZ KARA

PHOTO BY ROB BARTLETT

FLIGHT OF THE SEAGULL

the Florida Mall for almost half the price. I suppose Gaviota takes the “Fine” in its moniker seriously – servers wear bowties in this understated, yet classy, restaurant (no thumping soundtrack and clubby atmo here), and customers are given a red-carpet welcome and treated accordingly. So, fair Gaviota’s expertly prepared Peruvian cuisine has wings warning: Menu prices reflect South Eola Drive, not South Orange Blossom Trail. BY FAIYAZ KARA In fact, we felt quite content ordering an eru: It’s like Epcot for the ily in many of Gaviota’s dishes, and we $18 plate of arroz con pato. The rice, dotted gastronome.” You’re wel- feasted on complimentary bowls of the with peas and carrots, is tinged green from come, Peru Tourism Bureau. toasted Andean chulpe corn called cancha being cooked in a cilantro puree and black Actually, given the increasing number of between courses and between sips of brac- beer, and a wonderfully tender duck leg visitors to the Land of the Incas, the country ing pisco sours ($10). The puckery aperitif axe-kicks upward from the hillock of rice as if paying homage likely doesn’t need my help with a populist is an ideal potable to to the dish’s Chinese tourist board slogan. Hell, Peru is already pair with the leche de roots. Just as good thrice-stamped on my own passport, and tigre ($10). Yes, “tiger GAVIOTA SEAFOOD & FINE is another $18 rice with good gastronomic reason. After my milk” – the base of any PERUVIAN CUISINE dish, this one teeming first visit back in 2005, its cuisine, raked ceviche worth its salt 100 S. Eola Drive with supremely tenand seeded with the flavors of the globe, (and pepper, onion, 407-428-4682 der squid rings, fresh stuck to me like fried cuy does to one’s ribs. lime juice and chilies) – gaviotarestaurant.com shrimp and mussels, Every time I step into a Peruvian restau- has that crunchy chulpe $$ then crowned with rant this side of the Isthmus of Panama, I wading in a champagne a lone mussel atop desperately seek out alpaca-stuffed rocoto saucer, along with bits arroz tinged yellow relleno of the sort I inhaled while sojourn- of grouper for as texby aji amarillo. turally rich a starter you’ll find on the ing in Arequipa. A thick creamy number called “Suspiro “Ohh, I love rocoto relleno,” cooed our menu. But if ceviche is Peru’s national dish, de Limeña ($7), or “The Sigh of Lima,” Arequipeño server as we gave Gaviota Seafood & Fine Peruvian Cuisine’s menu then lomo saltado ($16) comes a close sec- is so named because it’s sweet and light a once-over. “But we don’t have that here.” ond. Here, the beef flambéed in pisco and like a woman’s sigh. Yes, a poet named No, but Gaviota (Spanish for “seagull”) soy sauce is so tender, it takes on an almost this dessert of dulce de leche topped does serve another favorite of mine – skew- pillowy quality. Dipping the beef into a with meringue, and the rules of gastroers of grilled beef hearts ($14). The mighty piquant rocoto pepper and herbaceous hua- nomic diction were followed with a tres fine anticuchos are reddened in a marinade catay (Peruvian black mint) sauce makes it leches of lúcuma fruit ($7) as well. No of mild aji panca (Peruvian red pepper) and all the better. The rice has the right amount doubt Gaviota’s team of Peruvian cooks served with chimichurri, roasted potatoes of stick, and the french fries were bonnes. are well-versed, but in this revolving-door and fattened kernels of choclo, or Peruvian The price, however, seemed a bit exces- Thornton Park locale, it’ll be up to them to corn. Corn, an essential crop in the Andes sive considering one can enjoy a similarly write their own ending. since the pre-Colombian era, figures heav- structured dish at Memories of Peru near fkara@orlandoweekly.com

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OPENINGS Chalten Pizza and Helado, an Argentinian pizza and ice cream joint, will open in the space previously occupied by Trevi Pasta Express in Ivanhoe Village ... Pizzeria Roberti, by accomplished chef Joseph Roberti, has opened in the old NY Pizza & Tripletas space on South Chickasaw Trail ... The oddly named but awesomely menu’d Joyful Garden Seafoods Restaurant, promising authentic Chinese seafood fare, has opened in the 1st Oriental Supermarket plaza … Brooklyn Coffee Shop has opened in the former Restaurant ASH space on Mills Avenue … Kava Cove Lounge, serving kava – the Polynesian beverage derived from the kava root – is now open on Fairbanks Avenue … Jax Thornton Park will open this August in the space that most recently housed Baoery Asian Gastropub in Thornton Park … The Gourmet Muffin is now serving, yep, gourmet muffins in Audubon Park … Look for pizza joint Your Pie to open on the ground floor of the SkyHouse Orlando apartments … Achiote Puerto Rican Restaurant has opened in the Southchase Plaza on South OBT … El Molcajete Mexican Restaurant will open in the space that previously housed Willie’s Pinchos, La Chari and Tortilleria la Mexicana on North Goldenrod Road. NEWS James Beard Foundation news: Hari Pulapaka (Cress Restaurant) and Kathleen Blake (The Rusty Spoon) are the only Florida chefs to pledge allegiance to Smart Catch, a chef-run sustainable seafood program; Tapa Toro (I-Drive), Hard Rock Café (Universal) and K Restaurant (College Park) are the local participants in the Blended Burger Project, which strives to make burgers better by blending ground meat with chopped mushrooms for a healthier nosh. EVENTS The trio behind the soon-to-open Kadence will host a sushi pop-up at Redlight Redlight at 5:30 p.m. on June 18 and 25 … IKEA’s Midsummer Smorgasbord Dinner is Friday, June 16 at 5 p.m. Cost is $16.99 ($4.99 children 12 and under) … Soulful Sunday will feature a congregation of soul-food trucks 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, June 18, at Hungerford Field in Eatonville … Dragonfly Robata hosts a masquerade party Saturday, June 24. On arrival, guests will select a mask, then enjoy complimentary cocktails and hors d’oeuvres before gorging on a sixcourse meal. Cost is $140 per couple. Got restaurant dish? Send tips to dining@orlandoweekly.com

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Mathers Social Gathering 30 S. Magnolia Ave., 407-250-5005, mathersorlando.com You won’t find a better-looking throwback bar than Mathers Social Gathering. The space, located on the third floor of the 19th-century Mather Building, is decked out in early 20th-century opulence, from comfortable leather armchairs to polished wooden bookcases to some of the best mood lighting around. Touches of local history abound, including seats and a giant U.S. flag rescued from Tinker Field. Just know that you’re going to have to pay a steep price for the privilege of drinking anything here. There’s also a dress code, so suit up, guys.

ESSAY QUESTION: WHY SHOULD I DRINK HERE?

SHORT ANSWER/MULTIPLE CHOICE: AFTER WORK OR AFTER HOURS? After hours BEER/WINE OR LIQUOR TOO? All of the above CHECK ALL THAT APPLY: fancy cocktails make ’em strong and keep ’em coming wine list (5 choices or more) craft beer beer: the usual suspects wide selection of bottles or cans (more than 12) wide selection on tap (more than 12) FOOD SERVED? YES There’s a small menu of fancy snacks SMOKING ALLOWED INSIDE? NO OUTSIDE DRINKING? NO DOG-FRIENDLY? NO

BATHROOMS: NIGHTMARE OR NOT BAD? Not bad. BAG HOOKS? YES TVS? NO DJS? NO

MADE FRESH TO ORDER

LIVE MUSIC? NO LOUD MUSIC OR BACKGROUND MUSIC? Background swing-era jazz GAMES? CHECK ALL THAT APPLY: pinball video pool

SOULFUL FOOD

darts other orlandoweekly.com

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recently reviewed EDITED BY JESSICA BRYCE YOUNG

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

$10 OR LESS $10-$15 $15-$25 $25 OR MORE

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

MILLENIA 106

A focused menu of local, seasonal fare peppered with Portuguese and Brazilian flavors allows journeyman chef Bruno Fonseca to showcase his personal style and brilliant technique. Dishes, for the most part, are creative yet approachable – be it a magnificent serving of simply grilled royal red shrimp with “punched” potatoes, or golden tile crested with fennel-citrus-blueberry salad served over farro verde. Duxelles are folded into the beef for added umami in the burger, and if you’re up for a fancified sharing plate, the tuna tartare with a grating of preserved lemon and cured yolk sided with Aleppo-peppered pork rinds over an avocado puree (whew) will do just fine. Closed Sundays and Mondays. 4104 Millenia Blvd., 407-930-6206; $$

LA MERCE RESTAURANT & MARKET A seafood-leaning menu at this Spanish resto off Park Avenue shows potential, but prices may be scaring off customers who’ll never get to try their excellent black seafood paella (with squid ink), octopus carpaccio, or grouper with clams. A proper-good flan will please the custard set, and service is as friendly as can be. The restaurant’s hidden “market” sells wine, cheese and olive oil. Closed Mondays. 155 E. Morse Blvd., Winter Park, 321-295-7611; $$$$

BAD AS’S SANDWICH

This Milk District sandwich joint gives lunch reason to live, thanks to chefowner John Collazo’s mighty fine sammies. Most are served on a French roll, though the El Anormal #3 with adoboroasted pork and peppery cantimpalo sausage gooeyed up with chipotle jack cheese comes served on soft, subtly sweet egg bread. Simpler sandwiches, like the Mafioso with thinly shaved beef and the Ninja with crispy fried pork belly, shouldn’t be overlooked. Closed Sundays. 207 N. Primrose Drive, 407-757-7191; $

FIREFLY KITCHEN & BAR The former Taps in Winter Park Village has transformed into Firefly, with a still-respectable list of brews as well as 48 wines available via dispensers. The atmosphere is damn fun, but the menu of burgers, flatbreads and Southern

fare needs a bit of work. Glimmers of hope come from the kitchen in the fried chicken, a classic poutine with a peppery gravy, and desserts fashioned from recipes of the owner’s grandmother – the pecan pie and moonshine cake in particular. Open daily. 480 N. Orlando Ave., Winter Park, 407-677-5000; $$

REEL FISH COASTAL KITCHEN & BAR

Steadily improving fish house in the former Ravenous Pig space has a lot going for it, notably the owner’s zeal to make the venture a success. Also successful: a bracing ceviche of shark, snapper and hogfish; panko-breaded roasted oysters; and a quartet of fried green tomatoes atop zesty roasted pepper vinaigrette. There’s plenty of fried goodness for the fish camp lover in you, and if the whole roasted yellowtail snapper is available, get it. Closed Mondays. 1234 N. Orange Ave., Winter Park, 407-543-3474; $$$

LUKE’S KITCHEN AND BAR

There’s nothing novel at James Beard Award nominee Brandon McGlamery’s Maitland resto, but there’s plenty good – from the design to the cocktail program to such dishes as diver scallop ceviche, flavorful bone-in ribeye, and stellar swordfish. Meats like to get plonked atop starches and veggies here, BTW. More goodness: peppery (though expensive) crab cake and the au poivre burger, which is our new favorite. Open daily. 640 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland, 407-674-2400; $$$$

HUNGER STREET TACOS The gourmet taco trend gains traction at Hunger Street Tacos, named after the famed Mexico City strip. Brisket, chorizo and chicken tinga tacos are twice-tortillaed in proper fashion. Vegan (sautéed hibiscus taco) and vegetarian options (squash blossom quesadilla; vegetable tinga) will please the meatless crowd. Desserts like chocoflan and Key lime pie with toasted meringue are more than just mere afterthoughts. Closed Sundays. 2103 W. Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park, 407-545-5998; $

CHEF ART SMITH’S HOMECOMIN’

Celebrity chef Art Smith returns to Disney with his aptly named restaurant showcasing all that’s good about Southern fare. His near-legendary fried chicken (get it with house-made doughnuts), shrimp and grits, fried catfish, chicken and dumpling soup, and pimento cheese keep the masses at Disney Springs fat and happy. A few bites of the hummingbird cake will definitely slow the pace of your park perambulations. There’s a nice selection of moonshine cocktails, too. Open daily. Disney Springs, 1602 E. Buena Vista Drive, 407-560-0100; $$$ n

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ON SCREENS IN ORLANDO

FILM LISTINGS Back to the Future Trilogy The classic

’80s time-traveling trilogy. Back to the Future at 4 pm; Back to the Future Part II at 6:30 pm; Back to the Future Part III at 8:45 pm. Saturday, 4 pm; Garden Theatre, 160 W. Plant St., Winter Garden; $8-$18; 407-877-4736; gardentheatre.org. Father’s Day Brunch: Die Hard A special barbecue

lunch buffet followed by a screening of everyone’s favorite not-a-Christmas movie. Sunday, 11:30 am; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $35; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Milk Money Movies: Despicable Me A criminal mastermind uses a trio of orphan girls as pawns for a grand scheme, but their love changes him for the better. Tuesday, 10 am; Garden Theatre, 160 W. Plant St., Winter Garden; $2; 407-877-4736; gardentheatre.org.

Cars 3 BY ST EVE SCHNEID ER OPENING THIS WEEK: 47 Meters Down Hometown girl made good

Mandy Moore is part of a diving team menaced by killer sharks. This is us … crapping our one-piece! (PG-13) All Eyez on Me Per TMZ, both Diddy and Suge

Knight have given their stamp of approval to the long-awaited Tupac biopic. So you just know it’s gonna uncover some hard-hitting truths. (R) The Book of Henry An intrepid kid teams up

with his mother to protect the girl next door from her wicked stepfather. Which is far afield of my own personal philosophy of neighborliness: If you’re not bringing potato salad, mind your own damn business. (PG-13) Cars 3 The third installment in Pixar’s automotive franchise includes never-before-heard dialogue by the late Paul Newman. And that’s great news if you’ve ever wanted to hear him say, “This is going straight to video, right?” (G) Kill Switch Scientist Dan Stevens has to decide

whether to save our universe from destruction or spare a parallel reality that has just as much right to live. (More, if they don’t have men’s rompers there.) (R) Rough Night A group of women find new depths to their friendship after they kill a male stripper at a bachelorette party. You know, just like Wonder Woman intended. (R)

ALSO PLAYING: 3 Idiotas A Mexican remake of an Indian

comedy about college classmates who try to locate a missing pal. En Filme has criticized the moviemakers for “the little intelligence with which they develop the actions.” I like the cut of your jib, En Filme. (PG-13)

11:55 A war hero heads for a showdown with

the brother of a drug dealer he killed, in a movie The Hollywood Reporter compares to High Noon. Or maybe Really, Really High Noon. (NR) Churchill Brian Cox plays the British war icon in an exploration of Churchill’s alleged opposition to D-Day. (No word on what he thought of the other guys in the Delta House.) (PG) It Comes at Night Two families hide out from a

mysterious plague that has overrun the world. SPOILER: It’s white people! (R) Megan Leavey The Iraq war is analogized via the deep bond between a female soldier and her canine companion. Don’t worry: After we’ve gone through the entire animal kingdom, we’ll get around to worrying about the civilians. (PG-13) The Mummy By the time you read this, one

or two Americans may still be interested in seeing the DOA first foray into Universal’s announced series of monster reboots. Meanwhile, Warner Bros. may be backing off from its threat to sue Uni for ownership of the “Dark Universe” imprint – because, in the immortal words of George Carlin, “It’s bad luck to hit a guy like that.” (PG-13) My Cousin Rachel Rachel Weisz takes the lead role in an adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s novel about a woman who may be using sinister and erotic means to advance her fortunes. Hey, it beats working at Red Robin. (PG-13) Paris Can Wait At the age of 81, Eleanor Coppola moves beyond shooting documentaries about her family’s filmmaking projects to lens her very own narrative feature. It’s about a woman who finds fulfillment by getting away from her moviemaker husband. Submitted without comment. (PG)

More Q Than A: American Fable Set in the

1980s in the rural Midwest, a family suddenly has to deal with their struggling farm while their 11-year-old daughter finds herself lost between fantasy and reality. Wednesday, 7 pm; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave; $5-$7; avalongallery.org. Music Mondays: Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary The definitive docu-

mentary film about an outside-the-box thinker with extraordinary talent whose boundary-shattering music continues to influence people around the world. Monday, 9:30 pm; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Paris Can Wait Diane Lane stars as a neglected

wife who takes a romantic road trip with a suave Frenchman. Through Thursday, June 22; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $11; 407-629-0054; enzian.org. Resident Evil: Vendetta The third installment in the animated film franchise. Monday, 7 & 10 pm; multiple locations; $14.91; fathomevents.com. Rifftrax Live: Summer Shorts Beach Party The Rifftrax crew and special guests riff on educational shorts. Thursday, 8 pm, Tuesday, 7:30 pm; multiple locations; $12.50-$14.91; fathomevents.com. Some Like It Hot Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon and Marilyn Monroe star in a comedy about two jazz musicians who dress in drag to find work. Wednesday, 2 & 7 pm; multiple locations; $13.31; fathomevents.com. Vintage Favorites: The Sting A young con man

seeking revenge for his murdered partner teams up with an old pro to win a fortune from a criminal banker. Thursday, 7 pm; Garden Theatre, 160 W. Plant St., Winter Garden; $8; 407-877-4736; gardentheatre.org. orlandoweekly.com

JUNE 14-20, 2017

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[ concert preview ]

COOL SUMMER

he’s performing a handful of songs off his newest record, It’s Immaterial (Ghostly International), and while there may not be a smile on his face as he gently sings under buoyant guitars and icy synth lines, it’s not Los Angeles’ Black Marble brings fleeting intimacy to Orlando hard to tell that he’s happy. That he’s comfortable for now. BY JESSE FEINMAN Earlier, Stewart had expressed some of lack Marble is playing to a crowd ment. The band formed in Stewart’s NYC his dissatisfactions with touring, mentionof 400 people at the Good Room bedroom in 2011, and has since then been ing that it can feel “surprisingly like a job,” in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. Most of meticulously crafting wistful synth-pop bal- and that “it’s hard to find a moment to just the audience is dancing with one another lads in the vein of New Order, Oppenheimer chill out.” But, watching him on stage, it’s clear those shortcomings under the large blue disco ball and the Analysis and Solid have become, well, immarest are staring at the stage, entranced. Space. His sparse, BLACK MARBLE terial. After each track This Orlando Weekly reporter is a visitor to lo-fi early demos with Body of Light, finishes, the dancing stops the city and venue, and Chris Stewart, the caught the attention J.a.s.o.n. for a few moments, and mastermind behind Black Marble, former- of independent label 8 p.m. Friday, June 16 everyone claps and cheers. NYC, now-L.A. resident, now falls into the Hardly Art, which, as Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. Stewart and his touring Stewart remembers same category. willspub.org band effortlessly create an amusement, “My initial aspirations were incredibly with $12-$15 intimacy between audimodest,” he told me over the phone, two led to Black Marble ence and performer, and days earlier, during a van ride from Detroit becoming “one of to Toronto. “I didn’t have any idea I’d be those bands that had a record deal with- according to Stewart, that accomplishment here at this point.” Perhaps to most people, out ever playing a show.” His first LP, A is not purely coincidental. “It’s sort of like playing at midnight on a Tuesday in a dark, Different Arrangement, was released in a relationship to me. … There’s a mutual sweaty bar may not appear glamorous, or 2012, and attracted thousands of listen- effort, I guess,” he explains. During our conversation, Stewart stresseven remotely appealing, but to Stewart ers with its cold yet inviting and honest it comes across as a crowning achieve- themes and melodies. Over four years later, es, “It’s boring to just have a bunch of sad

B

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songs; you can only have so many before you just start bumming yourself out.” While Black Marble’s music may be associated with sadness and melancholy, it isn’t simply one-dimensional. “I have things to write about that I think are more interesting,” he notes. The mood of the show isn’t sad; no one in the crowd is crying or looking upset. Indeed, there is a subtle communal joy, almost as if Stewart has cracked open the window enough for everyone to feel a small breeze for a precious few moments. After playing for about 45 minutes, Stewart tells the crowd that the next song they play will be Black Marble’s last for the night. It won’t be long until Stewart is off the stage, packing up his gear, and leaving New York again, just like he did months before. When Stewart moved to Los Angeles in 2016, it was with feelings of pure wonder and mystification. And when asked if those emotions are still present he admits, without a hint of regret, that they aren’t: “I don’t think it’s necessarily a bad thing, that it isn’t magical anymore – it’s a place to live, I still really enjoy it. I think it was the right thing to do, and I’m happy with being here. I like it for different reasons now, things that I didn’t know until I moved.” There is clearly something fleeting about the music of Black Marble and even Stewart himself. But, as the crowd departs the venue to head home or to a bar or anywhere else, Stewart seems fully at ease with the temporary nature of it all. “I’m having fun,” he says, no matter how long it lasts.

JUNE 14-20, 2017

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[ concert preview ]

JUST CAN’T GET ENOUGH From noisy beginnings, synth-pop duo Body of Light are now the stuff that dancefloor dreams are made of BY MATTHEW MOYER

I

n late spring 2016, Body of Light, the lot of new faces. We’re big fans of Black electro-dance duo of brothers Alex Marble too.” In the beginning, though, bigger capac(vocals, electronics) and Andrew Jarson (electronics) were having a ity was the last thing on Body of breakthrough. Every night. Onstage. Light’s hive mind. The band – now In the midst of a U.S. tour with fellow based in Los Angeles – got their young EBM-industrial upstarts High start in 2012 in Tempe, Arizona, Functioning Flesh, it was clear that Body as part of the shadowy Ascetic House arts collective, a group of of Light’s moment was here. Every set was a new peak. Maybe it likeminded DIY enthusiasts that was when Alex Jarson slid on a pair of also gave birth to Destruction leather gloves and really started stalking Unit and Marshstepper and a the stage, microphone chord flailing like a label/publishing outlet of the lash. Maybe it was when the duo crashed same name. Besides fostering headlong into newer songs, all anthe- some incredible musical talent mic slabs of icy synth, dance-heavy beats – recent releases from this year and Jarson’s commanding voice welded take in everything from Soren Roi to undeniable pop melodies, setting usu- to Glochids – the label also underally jaded crowds of punks, goths and took grand conceptual gestures agoraphobes into fits of nonstop ecstatic like sending their cassette releases to prisoners dancing. Body of Light and releasing had truly arrived. BODY OF LIGHT a cassette title And sure enough, with Black Marble, for every day in short order their J.a.s.o.n. of the month first LP for dark in January tastemakers Dais 8 p.m. Friday, June 16 2014. Body of Records duly arrived, Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. Light’s initial and it was a monster. willspub.org efforts were Let Me Go was $12-$15 more based in everything that their soundscape recent round of live work and earlier efforts for Chondritic and drone before moving on to Sound and Ascetic House had hinted at. harder dance grooves and darkLet Me Go was a collection of gleaming, wave dramatics. Alex Jarson metronome-perfect, open-heart-surgery remembers that time fondly, synth pop with a capital “S.” Big-time though: “There were so many arena moves like the milestone albums different communities working – Violator level, Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret very hard to organize everything level. Despite every evidence of a pop and throw unique shows. I love master plan, frontman Alex Jarson plays Arizona and owe it so much. it down: “Nothing was intentional. We Ascetic House came about just went into it hard, writing songs we because we felt like we needed a thought were good and full of texture. We direct outlet for our ideas.” Despite a somewhat menacing wanted to make songs that stood out, but visual image and transgressive also made us dance.” Given that this will be the band’s first lyrical content, Body of Light full proper tour since the release of Let Me in 2017 has the same core goal Go last year, the Jarsons are understand- as forebears Depeche Mode or ably excited about both an itinerary that Front 242 had during their salad includes cities they’ve never played before days: to inspire unselfconscious and their tourmate. Enthuses Alex Jarson: body movement and communal “A lot of these shows are bigger capacity experience. Dark dance party, so we have the opportunity to play for a anyone?

GREAT LIVE MUSIC RATTLES ORLANDO EVERY NIGHT

Jarson readily agrees that there is a celebratory aspect to their shows and even goes one step further: “Body of Light is a powerful, energetic experience. The movement hardly ever stops. By the end of each show, I’m struggling to speak. It’s just how I communicate. But it’s all inclusive. Everyone is invited, so you’re right, it’s celebratory.” And beyond that, the duo wants to offer some sonic sanctuary in times where any respite is sorely needed, concludes Jarson: “I want our shows to be a place where people can hide out at and reveal their true faces.”

Yngwie Malmsteen Noted guitar shred-god and puffyshirt-enthusiast Malmsteen has been the torchbearer for guitar acrobatics for several decades running. Expect pomp and/or circumstance. 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 14, at the House of

mmoyer@orlandoweekly.com

Blues, $25

Dave Mason A sort of Zelig of British post-psych rock music, Mason has done time in Traffic, Derek and the Dominos and in Jimi Hendrix’s band. On this night, he steps out on his own to show off an ample solo catalog. 10 p.m. Thursday, June 15, at the Plaza Live, $39-$65

Saved by the ’90s Have we hit peak ’90s nostalgia? Dare you venture to this ’90s-themed touring getdown at HOB? Don’t be a Daria. Or, wait, do. 9 p.m. Friday, June 16, at House of Blues, $8

Coping Skills Totally of-the-moment indie-pop from Philly with a potent lyrical bite and a refreshing disregard for nostalgia; joined by locals TV Dinner and Tallahassee’s Cooper. 11 p.m. Saturday, June 17, at Uncle Lou’s, $5

Gorguts Legendary and creatively restless Québécois death metal troupe make a rare trip stateside and an even rarer Florida appearance. Blockbuster. 7 p.m. Sunday, June 18, at the Haven Lounge, $15-$18

Heliophonic Local synth wizard Heliophonic will be crafting soundscapes one bloop and blip at a time as part of a diverse bill downtown. 10 p.m. Monday, June 19, at 64 North, free

Linda Cole, Greg Parnell and Co. Jack-of-all trades belter Linda Cole (member of Count Basie’s Orchestra, the Spinners) sits in with Greg Parnell’s combo for an evening of jazz and R&B standards. 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 20, at Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, $12-$15

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ORLANDO WEEKLY

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BENEFITING

BAR & BREWERY EVENTS IN CENTRAL FLORIDA LUNAR HUGS WHEN: JUNE 15-29, 7-11 P.M. | PRICE: FREE Interdisciplinary artist Hannah Spector's tapestry gallery of "lunar hugs" focusing on simple colors and rhythmic shapes. DEADLY SINS BREWING

THE STATES, EVERLOST US, SCHOLARS & SCOUNDRELS WHEN: SAT., JUNE 17, 8 P.M. | PRICE: FREE Indie. THE HOURGLASS BREWERY

JESTELLE

JOSH & JULIEANN WHEN: FRI., JUNE 16, 8-11 P.M. | PRICE: FREE Acoustic guitar and violin duo. WOP'S HOPS

PLAN B WHEN: FRI., JUNE 16, 8 P.M. | PRICE: FREE Plan B will be performing live in the taproom Frid on Friday, June 16, at 8 PM. This local group plays a groovy blend of Latin and American music. DEADLY SINS BREWING

HOMEBREW COMPETITION:

BREWS, BLUES & BBQ WHEN: SAT., JUNE 17, 2-10 P.M. | PRICE: FREE-$30 Local homebrewers compete and show off their wares, accompanied by live music and barbecue. VIP ticket includes beer and food. DEAD LIZARD BREWING COMPANY

WHEN: SAT., JUNE 17, 9 P.M.-12 A.M. | PRICE: FREE Cover songs derived from the Orlando based, American rock'n roll, band, Tears of a Tyrant. OBLIVION TAPROOM

UNPLUGGED SUNDAY OUTLAWS WHEN: SUN., JUNE 18, 10 A.M.-4 P.M. | PRICE: FREE Live music from AJ Gayton, craft beer and BBQ. DEADLY SINS BREWING DEAD

FATHER'S DAY GRILL OUT WHEN: SUN., JUNE 18, 12-5 P.M. | PRICE: FREE Free BBQ and drink deals all day. DEADLY SINS BREWING

FOR TICKETS TO ORLANDO’S PREMIER CRAFT BEER EVENT GO TO ORLANDOBEERFESTIVAL.COM 34

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BY B AO L E - H U U HO99O9 | PHOTO BY JEN CRAY

HO99O9, BLACKSTAR, JUNE 9

Ho99o9 – or more precisely, their locally based manager Mike Feinberg – did it again. The hot-shit band’s Orlando debut last October at Spacebar was a legit underground sensation and one of the best live events of 2016. Last weekend, the rappunk juggernaut came back, packing a gunning debut album with the seriously timely title of United States of Horror. To up the ante, their return was a secret show, a clandestine word-of-mouth affair with nothing officially announced but a date. Then came a post on the Facebook event page three days before the show that linked to a spartan website (blkstr.club) for a club that didn’t even exist yet with only a downtown street listed – no number. The only click there linked to an RSVP page on the band’s website. Then, on the day of the show, a scan of a hand-drawn flyer with complete details was emailed out. On site, there was a designated free parking lot – a major bonus in downtown – for those who either flashed the flyer or knew the event password (“deathkult,” of course). Once out of the car, signs led to a fence break in the lot where the path to a back entrance was. This, people, is called event-making. Anytime, anyplace, Ho99o9 are a phenomenon of pure eruption. But given some of the explicit themes on their new album, they’ve become the sound of artistically armed resistance that meets the current zeitgeist head-on, threat for threat. The cavalry has arrived. But just as exciting, and no doubt the bigger story locally, is the new venue.

Blackstar – yes, a Bowie reference – is the working title of the place previously known as the Brink and most dearly remembered as neighborhood-dive-cumDIY-venue Hoops Tavern. Though the Hoops structure is part of it, the venue actually expanded into a two-buildingand-courtyard compound as the Brink. In terms of space and renovations, that club did a very good job of capitalizing on the potential of the full site and cleaning it up without glamming it out too much. This new concept is poised to build on that work and, hopefully, do it justice finally. However, club sources tell me that Blackstar is a fluid thing right now, a developing idea that’s more in trial mode than actual soft opening. But it’s been a long time since something around here has been worth watching this intently. If done right, like this debut, it could be gamechanging. As for Ho99o9, they know how to make a splash, that’s for sure. But this show reaffirmed that Mike Feinberg knows how to make a happening. And with some key help from Spacebar’s Tommy Mot, it’s a flair he’s been exercising liberally here on his home turf. Lucky us.

(SANDY) ALEX G, JAPANESE BREAKFAST AND CENDE, THE SOCIAL, JUNE 7

Live, headlining Domino Records artist (Sandy) Alex G validated his well-established reputation as an intriguing wonder. But his openers are bands you should know. Japanese Breakfast is the vehicle for Michelle Zauner (of Little Big League). Though the new album on Dead Oceans

Ho99o9 have become the sound of artistically armed resistance that meets the current zeitgeist head-on, threat for threat. The cavalry has arrived. (Soft Sounds From Another Planet) isn’t released until July 14, the band’s Florida debut gave an ample and lush glimpse of it. Zauner is venturing even further out than she has before, stylistically and sonically – from wispy, sighing pillow-talk pop to gorgeously dreamy and panoramic guitar flights, even on out to sleek electronic dance (“Machinist”). But through the kaleidoscope, a bright-eyed ecstasy permeates it all. The brightest spark, however, came from the newest act, Cende. They’re a Brooklyn band whose moniker – pronounced “send” – is a Descendents reference (lop off the first and last three letters of the name et voilà), and they’re loaded with members of very notable rising young bands LVL UP and Porches. But, those weighty associations aside, Cende deserve their own place in the race. Their music, pulsing with pace and melody, is punk-kicked powerpop dialed in to the indie-rock now. Live, they’re a finely tuned jet of spirit, wire and sinew. And between their beaming, justreleased debut album (#1 Hit Single) and tight, bracing stage presence, this band is both real and ready. baolehuu@orlandoweekly.com orlandoweekly.com

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Wednesday, 14 Naga

Thursday, 15 One City – One Pulse

MUSIC

ART

The work that Planned Parenthood does across the country is in the paradoxical position of being both increasingly essential and increasingly under fire; a chance to go beyond lip service support and to actually contribute, tied to incredible music is like a triple score. You’re in luck – Wednesday’s benefit show at Will’s Pub gathers three of the most exciting femme-led electronic acts currently active in Florida, and pairs them with readings from Alexia Clarke of the stellar Phosphene Girl zine. Regular readers of this publication will no doubt be familiar with the works of fast-rising projects Tiger Fawn and Lush Agave and their unique combinations of the avant-garde with very different eras of popular music. New to the eyes and ears of Orlando music fans, however, will be Tampa’s Naga, a future-forward collision of experimental electronics and modern R&B shimmy, courtesy of video artist Pia Love and SPQR’s Colby Smith. Naga’s music is all gleaming neon, tropical fauna and Miami pirate radio signals ghosting in and out. The duo are true originals, equally at home playing the International Noise Conference in Miami as they are covering Frank Ocean. Get in on the ground floor with this incredible group before albums come out on Hot Releases and More Records. One hundred percent of all door proceeds goes to Planned Parenthood, as well as proceeds from a raffle that includes prizes from Park Ave CDs, Enzian Theater, Illuminated Paths and more. Worth your time, your ears and your money. – Matthew Moyer

Orlando artists aim to provide a space of inspiration and remembrance in the larger Orlando community at the One City – One Pulse art exhibition, one year after the Pulse tragedy. While the event is free, donations go toward OnePULSE and QLatinx. Coinciding with the Third Thursday Gallery Hop in the Downtown Arts District, artists present work across all mediums at Gallery 29 and the Magic Gallery, both located inside CityArts Factory. Since last year’s tragedy, the community of Orlando has rallied around those groups that were targeted and continues to do so one year later. According to the event’s Facebook page, the theme is “Diversity and Inclusion in the Orlando, LatinX and LGBT community.” Event organizers have called for local writers to submit poetry, short stories and essays in both Spanish and English to share written perspectives, in addition to the artwork. – Virginia Vasquez 5:30 p.m. | through July 15 | CityArts Factory, 29 S. Orange Ave. | 407-648-7060 | orlandoslice.com | free

with Tiger Fawn, Lush Agave, Alexia Clarke | 8 p.m. | Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave. | willspub.org | $5-$7

Thursday, 15

RiffTrax Live: Summer Shorts Beach Party FILM

OUR PICKS FOR THE BEST EVENTS THIS WEEK

While we love having new episodes of Mystery Science Theater 3000 to watch on Netflix, one aspect of the original show that we miss is the short films. Even though they were originally included as filler for episodes where the movie’s running time was a little too short, the riffing on short films like The Home Economics Story or Are You Ready for Marriage? provided some of the best laughs in the show’s 10-season original run. This week, some of the MST3K alumni – including Michael J. Nelson (“Mike”), Kevin Murphy (“Tom Servo”) and Bill Corbett (“Crow”) – get together at the Belcourt Theater in Nashville, Tennessee, for a one-night short film festival broadcast live to theaters across the country. Three theaters in town are carrying the simulcast: the Winter Park Village Regal, the Universal CityWalk AMC and the Cinemark at Artegon. We’ve got movie sign! – Thaddeus McCollum 8 p.m. | multiple locations | fathomevents.com | $12.50-$14.91

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PHOTO BY ADRIEN SALA

Saturday, 17 Festival of the Sea EVENTS

Something is fishy in Festival Park. What could shrimp, lobsters, fish, oysters and other bivalves be doing nearly 50 miles from the ocean? It could only be the Festival of the Sea. A surf experience on turf complete with live music; a beer and wine garden; and a kids area with face painting, a bounce house and clowns making balloons, Festival of the Sea is meant to bring out those who share a taste for the bounty of the sea with multiple seafood vendors. – Jacob Galvin 11 a.m.-7 p.m. | Festival Park, 2911 E. Robinson St. | gopartylive.com | $10-$25


Saturday, 17 Give

Tuesday, 20

MUSIC

Fear not: D.C. hardcore is alive and well in 2017. And not, as you might suspect, just as an empty echo of its salad days – look no further for a perfect snapshot of the modern capital sound than the twin pairing of Give and Protester, bands who pay due respect to their history while still managing to carve out a space that’s entirely their own. Give is a love letter to D.C.’s now-infamous Revolution Summer, but not a tribute – post-hardcore unafraid to branch into grunge and psychedelic sounds. Playing powerful hardcore punk grounded in the early-’80s Northeast (now with a metallic twinge, as per March’s Hide From Reality LP), Protester takes a stand so fresh that they’ll likely go down as the definitive straight-edge band of our time. When they play alongside Triple-B Records standout Unified Right and Orlando’s fast-charging Flamethrower, don’t expect anything less than a testimony to today’s real-deal hardcore. – Madeleine Scott with Protester, Unified Right, Flamethrower | 9 p.m. | Stardust Video & Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road | stardustie.com | $5-$7

COURTESY OF ABRAMORAMA

Monday, 19 Music Mondays: Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary FILM

Let Mayor Dyer Cook You Breakfast Tacos

The joint Enzian and Park Ave CDs cinematic partnership has not only redeemed the usual dismal prospects for fun on a Monday night, it has also brought to Orlando (well, Maitland) sonic/visual gems on Nick Cave and X Japan that otherwise would have to be given even more sad/exclusive screenings on our lonely laptops. This week’s offering, however, has a hell of a lot of potential. Seasoned documentarian John Scheinfeld (The U.S. vs. John Lennon) offers up a labor of love tribute to one of the all-time and most mercurial greats of jazz music, saxophonist and free-jazz innovator John Coltrane. How does one even approach a career that included both the tuneful bop of Blue Train and the mind-melting scree of Ascension? Very carefully? With the cooperation of Coltrane’s family and associated record labels, Scheinfeld attempts to merge hagiography and personal remembrances to present a complete portrait of one of the most complex figures in modern American music. An early review in LA Weekly may claim that Coltrane’s music gets at times crowded out by a procession of talking heads, but interviews with Wayne Shorter and home movie footage with Alice Coltrane have us nonetheless very intrigued. – MM

EVENTS

9:30 p.m. | Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland | 407-629-0054 | $11

Mayor Buddy Dyer’s fondness for breakfast tacos is no secret. When leaders from the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts floated plans to open a few bars and restaurants on the open land to either side of the facility, Buddy – their across-thestreet neighbor – had no demands for the team “other than a place where he can get breakfast tacos,” he told the Orlando Business Journal. Which is why it’s less surprising, though still surpassingly weird, that the mayor will be making breakfast tacos for the masses. Yes, for 45 minutes, your elected city leader will be in the kitchen at Bikes Beans & Bordeaux, sleeves rolled up and slinging egg, chorizo and bacon tacos on homemade tortillas. Why, though? Like we said, the man loves his breakfast tacos, and after the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Bumby multiuse path, he got to chatting with the owner of B3 and actually volunteered to come in and do a Taco Tuesday takeover. Why doesn't matter, though – we’re just looking forward to the Most Special Taco Tuesday ever. – Jessica Bryce Young 5 p.m. | Bikes, Beans & Bordeaux, 3022 Corrine Drive | 407-427-1440 | bikesbeansandbordeaux.com | taco prices TBA

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THEWEEK

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

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14-TUESDAY, JUNE 20 COMPILED BY THADDEUS MCCOLLUM

MUSIC WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14 The Come Up 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570. The Daniel Heitz Band 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Eugene Snowden’s Ten Pints of Truth 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Kevin Garrett 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $15-$17; 407-246-1419. Reggae Night with Hor!zen and DJ Red I 10 pm; The Caboose, 1827 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-898-7733. Tiger Fawn, Lush Agave, Naga, Phosphene Girl 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $5-$7. Yngwie Malmsteen 7 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $25; 407-934-2583.

THURSDAY, JUNE 15

[MUSIC] Lindsey Stirling Sunday at House of Blues

Create: Dr. Ozi 10 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $5; 407-872-0066.

PHOTO BY DEVIN GRAHAM

Dave Mason 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $39-$65; 407-228-1220. Doktor Faux & the Right Angles, the Crack Rock Opera 8-11 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-322-7475. Emily Kopp 7:30 pm; Timucua White House, 2000 S. Summerlin Ave.; $11.49; 407-595-2713. Humming House, the 502s 7 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12.

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

FRIDAY, JUNE 16 Adventure Club 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $20; 407-504-7699.

Kaleigh Baker 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.

Agent 13, Old Man Crunchy 9 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171.

Maxo Kream 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $15; 407-999-2570.

Allan Vache Quartet 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951.

Natty’s Common Roots 9 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; free; 407-636-3171. ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017

SummerJellyJam: Stanger Stranger, Color Vision, Sacred Owls, RV 9:30 pm; Vinyl Arts Bar, 75 E. Colonial Drive; $5.

Jason Bieler (Saigon Kick) 8 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $20-$50; 407-246-1419.

The Mellow Relics 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.

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Raleigh Estes and Friends 8 pm; Muldoon’s Saloon, 7439 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-657-9980.

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Archila, Fobia, Castillo, Chris Ayo 10 pm; Peek Downtown, 50 E. Central Blvd. Suite B; $5-$7. Black Marble, Body of Light, J.a.s.o.n. 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $12-$15.

CFCArts Symphony Orchestra: American Roadtrip 7:30 pm; Calvary Assembly of God, 1199 Clay St., Winter Park; $10-$25; 407-937-1800 x710. Cry Baby, Bryan J. 10 pm; Vinyl Arts Bar, 75 E. Colonial Drive; contact for price. Darell 10 pm; Gilt Nightclub, 740 Bennett Road; $10-$30; 407-504-7699. A Feasting Beast, the Witching Hour, Heretical Lacerations, Sick Thrill 7 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; $10; 407-322-7475. Floorplay: Frankie Alex & Trini D. 10 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; free; 407-999-2570. Josh and Julieann 8-11 pm; Wop’s Hops, 419 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-878-7819.

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Father’s Day Brunch: Die Hard

Dew and a Brew Tullamore rep Rob Ryan pours free samples of his product for patrons, who are encouraged to pair the Irish whiskey with a special selection of Goose Island beers. Live music provided by Every Day I and Neil Alday. 10 p.m. Thursday; The Woods, 49 N. Orange Ave.; free; thewoodsorlando.com

Vault 5421 Preview Party Gods and Monsters was particularly screwed over by the sudden shuttering of Artegon; the comic store had to pack up all of its inventory and decorations and figure out how to squeeze them into a much smaller space on I-Drive. For their second anniversary, G&M opens their new post-apocalyptic bar area, Vault 5421. Enjoy craft beer and soda while surrounded by decor reminiscent of Fallout and Mad Max. 11 a.m. Saturday; Gods & Monsters, 5421 International Drive; free; godmonsters.com Fresh Produce This recurring local hip-hop festival moves from its Mills 50 roots to the Henao Center. The night features more than 80 musical acts, including Bubble Boys, Family Gang, and more MCs than could comfortably fit into a station wagon. Artists will be on hand to create some graffiti live, and there will also be opportunities for attendees to show off their skills. 3 p.m. Saturday; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $10; freshproduceorlando.com

Father’s Day Brunch: Die Hard We hope you didn’t choose the fallacious “Die Hard is a Christmas movie” hill to die on, because the Enzian is invalidating that dumb idea. Die Hard is obviously a Father’s Day film – despite the lack of kids in it – because dads love summer action movies, we guess. And dads also love meat and beer, so Enzian has it covered with a barbecue buffet and unlimited Yuengling if you spring for the VIP ticket. 11:30 a.m. Sunday; Enzian Theater, 1300 S. Orlando Ave., Maitland; $35-$60; enzian.org

Iron & Wine

THE LOCAL ALTERNATIVE FOR

Nov. 7 at the Beacham Frank Iero & the Patience, June 22 at the Social

Chevelle, July 19 at House of Blues

The Districts, June 23 at the Social

Taking Back Sunday, July 20 at House of Blues

What So Not, June 24 at Gilt Nightclub

The Rocket Summer, July 25 at the Social

Micah Schnabel, June 24 at Lil Indies

SALES, July 25 at Will’s Pub

Duke Dumont, June 29 at the Beacham

Dragonforce, July 27 at the Beacham

Migos, July 3 at Gilt Nightclub

Cindy Wilson (The B-52’s), July 27 at Will’s Pub

Metallica, July 5 at Camping World Stadium STRFKR, July 10 at the Beacham Born of Osiris, July 11 at the Social Rooney, July 12 at the Social Ted Nugent, July 14 at the Plaza Live Phantogram, Tycho, July 15 at Hard Rock Live Puddles Pity Party, July 15 at the Plaza Live

Shawn Mendes, July 28 at Amway Center Prince Royce, July 29 at Amway Center All Time Low, Aug. 6-7 at House of Blues

Cafe Tacvba, Sept. 29 at House of Blues

The Goddamn Gallows, Aug. 23 at Will’s Pub

Band of Horses, Oct. 7 at House of Blues

Social Distortion, Aug. 25 at House of Blues Goo Goo Dolls, Aug. 30 at Hard Rock Live Ed Sheeran, Aug. 31 at Amway Center Manchester Orchestra, Sept. 5 at House of Blues Apocalyptica, Sept. 6 at House of Blues

Thundercat, Oct. 10 at the Beacham Needtobreathe, Oct. 13 at House of Blues

FESTIVALS

Bruno Mars, Oct. 14 at Amway Center Descendents, Oct. 20 at House of Blues

SPORTS

Halsey, Oct. 22 at Amway Center

The Afghan Whigs, Sept. 6 at the Social Adam Ant, Sept. 9 at the Beacham The Chris Robinson Brotherhood, Sept. 10 at the Social

Bad Suns, Nov. 3 at the Beacham

EVENTS

Iron & Wine, Nov. 7 at the Beacham

The Melvins, Sept. 18 at the Social

Imagine Dragons, Nov. 10 at Amway Center

Laetitia Sadier Source Ensemble, Aug. 12 at Will’s Pub

Epica, Lacuna Coil, Sept. 24 at the Plaza Live

Grizzly Bear, Nov. 15 at House of Blues

Lil Yachty, Aug. 15 at Hard Rock Live

Misterwives, Sept. 24 at the Beacham

Gabriel Iglesias, Dec. 2 at Amway Center

J. Cole, Aug. 16 at Amway Center

Pitbull, Sept. 29 at Amway Center

Katy Perry, Dec. 17 at Amway Center

Blondie, Garbage, Aug. 9 at Hard Rock Live

EVENTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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SUNDAY, 18

PHOTO COURTESY OF NASA

Orbits & Ice Ages: The History of Climate LEARNING

Conversing with someone who has an asteroid named after him probably isn’t something you get to do very often. The Central Florida Freethought Community’s monthly educational events are made for those who crave intellectual talks that feed their minds, and this month’s speaker has a pretty impressive résumé. Dr. Daniel Britt, UCF Professor of Astronomy and Planetary Sciences, has served on the science teams of the Mars Pathfinder and Deep Space Network NASA missions, and is currently researching the physical properties of the mineralogy of asteroids, comets, the moon and Mars under multiple NASA grants. We all know of the controversial “debate” over climate change, and Britt’s taking the opportunity to launch into the past to offer a bit of perspective on the difference between climate and weather, and how it’s affected the planet over millions of years. This is a good way to hop in on a lecture with Professor Britt without paying tuition. – Kristin James 1-3 p.m. | University Club of Winter Park, 841 N. Park Ave., Winter Park | 407-644-6149 | cflfreethought.org | free

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 38

Oak Hill Drifters 9 pm-1 am; The Stranded Sailor Pub, 418 Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 321-362-8153. Otown Marco 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $15; 407-999-2570. Plan B 8 pm; Deadly Sins Brewing, 750 Jackson Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-900-8726.

Saved by the ’90s 9 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $8; 407-934-2583. Summer Meltdown: Armada, Kill the Sound, Sark Summer, Breathing Theory, Fight Fall, Anyone’s Guess 7 pm; Venue 578, 578 N. Orange Ave.; $10; 407-872-0066. Tears of a Tyrant 9 pm-1 am; Bloodhound Brew Pub & Eatery, 5801 Conroy Windermere Road; free; 321-278-0452.

SATURDAY, JUNE 17

Row Jomah 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.

The Bloody Jug Band 8:30 pm; Sanford Brewing Company, 400 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free.

Said the Sky 10 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $10-$20; 407-246-1419.

Brian Busto, Wilson Santos 10 pm; Vinyl Arts Bar, 75 E. Colonial Drive; $5. CONTINUED ON PAGE 42

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THEWEEK CONTINUED FROM PAGE 41

Jestelle 9 pm-midnight; Oblivion Taproom, 5101 E. Colonial Drive; free; 321-278-0452. Kevin Maines & the Volts, Shak Nasti, Hannah Harber & the Lionhearts 8 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; $10-$12.

Carlos Daniels: Homenaje a Juan Gabriel 7:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $8; 407-934-2583.

Mike Davis 6:30-9 pm; Modernism Museum Mount Dora, 145 E. Fourth Ave., Mount Dora; $25; 352-385-0034.

CFCArts Symphony Orchestra: American Roadtrip 7:30 pm; Calvary Assembly of God, 1199 Clay St., Winter Park; $10-$25; 407-937-1800 x710.

Miss Jacqueline Jones 8-10:30 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951.

Children’s Concert 11 am-noon; Edgewater Library, 5049 Edgewater Drive; free; 407-835-7323. Chris Dupre 8 pm; Dead Lizard Brewing Company, 4507 36th St.; free. Coping Skills, TV Dinner, Cooper 11 pm; Uncle Lou’s Entertainment Hall, 1016 N. Mills Ave.; $5 suggested donation; 407-270-9104.

Gwadcip$ 9 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free. Jay Critch, Richie Wess, Yung Dred, DJ Spinatik 7 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $10; 407-999-2570.

The Osceola Brothers 7:30 pm; Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave.; free. Reggae Mondae: Florida Man 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Robotman 10 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.

Lindsey Stirling, James Arthur, Judah 6:30 pm; House of Blues, Disney Springs, Lake Buena Vista; $47; 407-934-2583.

Somber, Everything We Have, Heliophonic, Men Against Fire 8 pm; 64 North, 64 N. Orange Ave.; free; 321-245-7730.

Mutoid Man, Helms Alee 7 pm; The Social, 54 N. Orange Ave.; $17-$20; 407-246-1419.

Unplugged Sunday Outlaws 10 am-4 pm; Deadly Sins Brewing, 750 Jackson Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-900-8726.

Torque: DJ Micro 10 pm; Native Social Bar, 27 W. Church St.; $10-$15; 407-403-2938.

Patty & Michael 8-11 pm; Aloma Bowl, 2530 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-671-8675.

MONDAY, JUNE 19

The States, Everlost US, Scholars and Scoundrels 8 pm; The Hourglass Brewery, 255 S. Ronald Reagan Blvd., Longwood; free; 407-719-9874.

Dusty Fuss 9:30 pm; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free.

SUNDAY, JUNE 18

Fresh Produce Art & Music Festival 3 pm; Henao Contemporary Center, 5601 Edgewater Drive; $10.

Ancient Sun 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540.

Give, Protester, Unified Right, Flamethrower 9 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; $5-$7; 407-623-3393.

Broccoli Samurai 8 pm; West End Trading Company, 202 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-322-7475.

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Gorguts, Defeated Sanity, Exist 7 pm; The Haven, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $15-$18; 407-673-2712.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017

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The In-Between Series: Unit Colossus 7 pm; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free. Jeff Rupert Quartet 8 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Memento Mori 10 pm; Independent Bar, 70 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-839-0457.

TUESDAY, JUNE 20 The Groove Orient 10:30 pm; Tanqueray’s, 100 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-649-8540. Linda Cole, Greg Parnell and Company 7:30 pm; Blue Bamboo Center for the Arts, 1905 Kentucky Ave., Winter Park; $15; 407-636-9951. Natalie Grata, Chris Belt & Beatriz Ramirez, Thad Anderson, Luis Guerrero 7:30 pm; The Art Gallery at Mills Park, 1650 N. Mills Ave.; $21.99; 855-336-3653.


THEATER Aladdin and the Magic Lamp This familyfriendly production of the celebrated folktale lets the audience determine the outcome of the play. Thursday, 10:30 am & 1 pm, Friday, 10:30 am, Saturday, 2 & 4:30 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; Goldman Theater at Lowndes Shakespeare Center, 812 E. Rollins St.; $9$20; 407-447-1700; orlandoshakes.org. Animal Crackers A nostalgic Marx Brothers musical comedy. Friday-Saturday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2:30 pm, Monday, 7:30 pm; Mad Cow Theatre, 54 W. Church St.; $23-$47; 407297-8788; madcowtheatre.com. The Final, Final Farewell Tour of Delores & Dick DelRubio Delores and Dick present a campy, loving and hysterical tribute to the Prima Lounge acts reminiscent of yesteryear. Friday, 8 pm; Savoy Orlando, 1913 N. Orange Ave.; $20; savoyorlando.com. The Lion in Winter King Henry’s three sons, each eager to take his throne, plot against Henry’s manipulative wife Eleanor of Aquitaine. Sunday, 2 pm; University of Central Florida, Theatre UCF, 4000 Central Florida Blvd.; $20; 407-823-1500; theatre.cah.ucf.edu.

Next to Normal A rock musical about a suburban family struggling with the effects of mental illness. Contains adult language and themes. Friday-Saturday, 7:30 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; Valencia College East Campus, 701 N. Econlockhatchee Trail; $15; 407-582-2900. A Night With Winnie Cabaret tribute to Bette Midler by Jennica McCleary. Friday-Saturday, 8 pm; The Abbey, 100 S. Eola Drive; $10$25; 407-704-6261; abbeyorlando.com. Superior Donuts Arthur Przybyszewski owns a decrepit donut shop in the Uptown neighborhood of Chicago. Franco Wicks, a black teenager who is his only employee, wants to change the shop for the better. By Tracy Letts. Wednesday, 7 pm, Saturday, 8 pm, Sunday, 2 pm; Theater on the Edge, 5542 Hansel Ave.; $16-$24; theaterontheedge.org.

COMEDY

Dean Napolitano Friday-Saturday, 7 pm; Bonkerz – Otters on the River, 4380 Carraway Place, Sanford; $10; bonkerzcomedyproductions.com.

THEWEEK

Improv at AdLib Improv comedy. Saturday, 7:30 pm; AdLib Theatre, 200 N. Denning Drive, Winter Park; $5; 413-407-0103; adlibcomedy.com.

The Perfect Game Bowling tournament with a live podcast featuring local Orlando shows. Hosted by Oh No Radio Show. Friday, 8 pm; Colonial Lanes, 400 Primrose Drive; free; 407-894-0361; coloniallanes.net.

ImprovMania Family-friendly comedy. Saturday, 7:30 pm; Winter Springs Performing Arts, 1425 Tuskawilla Road, Winter Springs; $10; winterspringsarts.org. James Yon, Mike Charette Friday-Saturday, 7:30 pm; Bonkerz – Boardwalk Bowl, 10749 E. Colonial Drive; $10; 407-6292665; eastorlando.bonkerzcomedy.com. Jim Jefferies Saturday, 8 pm; Hard Rock Live, 6050 Universal Blvd.; $39.50-$49.50; 407-351-5483; hardrock.com.

Clash of the Comics Stand-up comedy competition. Wednesday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $8; 407480-5233; theimprovorlando.com.

Kojo Prince & the Got Jokes All Stars Thursday, 7 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $10; 407-4805233; theimprovorlando.com.

Corey Holcomb Friday, 6:30 & 9:45 pm, Saturday, 6 & 9:30 pm, Sunday, 6 pm; Orlando Improv, 9101 International Drive; $25; 407480-5233; theimprovorlando.com.

Little Fish, Huge Comedy Night Stand-up from Central Florida’s best new comics. Tuesday, 10 pm; Little Fish Huge Pond, 401 S. Sanford Ave., Sanford; free; 407-963-5522.

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Shit Sandwich Probably the best comedy showcase in town. Show up early to grab a good seat. Saturday, 9 pm; Bull and Bush, 2408 E. Robinson St.; free; 407-896-7546. Tig Notaro Saturday, 7 pm; The Plaza Live, 425 N. Bumby Ave.; $27.50-$39.50; 407-228-1220; plazaliveorlando.com. Vince Taylor, Brody Love Friday, 7:30 pm; Bonkerz – Downtown Orlando, 129 W. Church St.; $10.

DANCE Arthur Murray Central Florida Theater Day Theater performances by Orlando’s premier ballroom dance studio. Saturday 2-5 pm; Orlando Repertory Theatre, 1001 E. Princeton St.; $5; 407-203-6740; orlandorep.com.

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Big Bang Boom! Cabaret Burlesque. Saturday, 8 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; $10; 407636-3171; letsmakeitathing.com. Magic Mike 50 Shades Darker Erotic male dance revue. Wednesday, 8 pm; Copper Rocket Pub, 106 Lake Ave., Maitland; $20; 407-636-3171; letsmakeitathing.com. Standing Ovation Summer Dance Showcase Experience the art of dance through jazz, hip hop, ballet, musical theater, gospel, lyrical, tumbling, acro, tap and contemporary dance. Sunday, 6 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $25; drphillipscenter.org. World Ballet Competition Aspiring young dancers from around the globe compete in daily performances. Monday-Tuesday, 4 pm; Orange County Convention Center, 9800 International Drive; $10-$40; 407849-4669; worldballetcompetition.com.

ART OPENINGS/EVENTS

Broken Ego, Healing Soul Art show featuring the works of 11 artists and live music by Gwadcip$ and Nubes. Friday, 8 pm; Kaleidoscope Venue for the Arts, 1991 Corporate Square, #181, Longwood; $5; 321-947-5484. Coffee & Cake With Dina Mack and Richard Reep Both artists discuss their artwork, take questions from the audience and participate in a moderated interview. Friday, 6:30-8:30 pm; The Art Gallery at Mills Park, 1650 N. Mills Ave.; free; 855-336-3653; thegalleryatmillspark.com. Fairly Weathered Friends Group show featuring art from eight visiting artists from Asheville, North Carolina. Opens Thursday, 6-10 pm, through July 15; Redefine Gallery, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060; redefinegallery.com. Finding Your Inner Artist: A Live Painting Event Live painting with Steven Lee Hall Jr., artist and star of the hit Discovery Channel show Naked and Afraid. Tuesday, 6 pm; Edgewater Library, 5049 Edgewater Drive; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. Frida Kahlo Meets Lady Gaga See how Frida Kahlo paved the way for artists like Lady Gaga to live their lives “out loud.” Thursday, 11:30 am; 1921 by Norman Van Aken, 142 E. Fourth Ave., Mount Dora; $30; 352-385-0034; 1921nva.com. 44

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017

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Gallery Talk With Margaret Miller An arts talk with Margaret Miller, Director of the Institute for Research in Art at USF. Friday, 5 pm; Museum of Art DeLand – Downtown, 100 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $10; 386-734-4371; moartdeland.org. Lunar Hugs Interdisciplinary artist Hannah Spector’s tapestry gallery of “lunar hugs” focusing on simple colors and rhythmic shapes. Opens Thursday, 7-11 pm, through June 29; Deadly Sins Brewing, 750 Jackson Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-900-8726; deadlysinsbrewing.com. Mary’s Art Show Artwork by Will’s Pub’s own Mary Frances Dodd. Opens Friday, 6 pm, through July 9; Lil Indies, 1036 N. Mills Ave.; free; willspub.org. No Borders: The Tournament Graffiti tagging tournament. Saturday, 8:30 pm; The Geek Easy, 114 S. Semoran Blvd., Winter Park; $7; 407-332-9636. One City – One Pulse To mark the anniversary of the Pulse tragedy, artists from the LGBT, Latinx and Orlando community have submitted work to inspire hope and healing in our city. Opens Thursday, 6-9 pm, through July 15; CityArts Factory, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060. Paper: An Artifact of the Future Art made from discarded paper products by Anni Christie, Christy McCutchen and Amy Selikoff. Opens Thursday, 6-9 pm, through July 15; The Gallery at Avalon Island, 39 S. Magnolia Ave.; free; avalongallery.org. Script Orlando: Pulse One Year Later Presentation by renowned muralists Michael Pilato and Yuri Karabash, sharing images from their multi-canvas mural depicting victims, survivors and responders. Thursday, 6:30 pm; The Dorothy Lumley Melrose Center, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; ocls.info. Seeing Sounds Meet and greet with Grammynominated producer Ayo and artist Jbon. The Workaholics Podcast will be recording live during the show. Thursday, 6-10 pm; CityArts Factory, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060. What Has Changed? An art show addressing what has changed since the Pulse tragedy. Featuring performances from the Orlando Gay Chorus and Latin guitar/percussionists Antone Affronti and Adalberto Bravo. Thursday, 6-8 pm; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. CONTINUING THIS WEEK

49 Portraits Through Wednesday; The Terrace Gallery at Orlando City Hall, 400 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-246-4279; 49portraits.com. American Youth: Our Identity Through Sunday; Mennello Museum of American Art, 900 E. Princeton St.; $5; 407-2464278; mennellomuseum.com.


Art Is Moving A moving art exhibit on SunRail, featuring Central Florida artists’ work on every window of the designated car. Ongoing; various locations; $4; 407-398-2862; sunrail.com. David Lynch Tribute Art Show Through July 9; The Falcon, 819 E. Washington St.; free; 407-423-3060. Flora & Fiber Fridays, Saturdays, noon-4, Tuesdays-Fridays, 10 am-4 pm; Ruth Funk Center for Textile Arts, 150 W. University Blvd., Melbourne; free; 321-674-8313; textiles.fit.edu. Florida Prize in Contemporary Art Through Aug. 20; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231. For the Love of Summer Through July 8; 6th Ave Art Studios, 133 W. Sixth Ave., Mount Dora; free; 407-620-4350.

THEWEEK Sanford Art Walk Saturday, 6-9 pm; Downtown Sanford, Sanford Avenue and First Street, Sanford; free; 407323-2774; sanfordartwalk.com. Sea and Sky: Watercolors and Drawings by Paul Signac Through Sept. 10; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu. Segregation Story Mondays-Fridays, 10 am-4:45 pm, Saturdays, Sundays, noon-4 pm; Mount Dora Center for the Arts, 138 E. Fifth Ave., Mount Dora; free; 352-3830880; mountdoracenterforthearts.org.

Gary Bukovnik: Flower Power Through July 2; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $5; 386-734-4371.

Silent Spaces Fridays, 8:30 am-noon and Mondays-Thursdays, 8:30 am-4:30 pm; Valencia College East Campus, 701 N. Econlockhatchee Trail; free; 407-582-2268.

Interim Form Ongoing; The Art Gallery at Mills Park, 1650 N. Mills Ave.; free; 855336-3653; thegalleryatmillspark.com.

Third Thursday Gallery Hop Thursday, 6 pm; CityArts Factory, 29 S. Orange Ave.; free; 407-648-7060; cityartsfactory.com.

Le Salon Through Aug. 26; Snap Space, 1013 E. Colonial Drive; free; snaporlando.com.

TV Through July 9; The Hammered Lamb, 1235 N. Orange Ave.; free; 407-704-3200.

Lisa Parker Hyatt: Focusing on the Irreducible Through July 2; Museum of Art DeLand, 600 N. Woodland Blvd., DeLand; $5; 386-734-4371.

Youth in Focus: Moments in Nature Through July 18; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona State College, Daytona Beach; free; 386-506-4475; smponline.org.

My Favorite Art Show Through July 2; Dandelion Communitea Cafe, 618 N. Thornton Ave.; free; 407-362-1864; dandelioncommunitea.com. Oded Halahmy: Babylonian Odyssey Through Dec. 31; Orlando Museum of Art, 2416 N. Mills Ave.; $15; 407-896-4231. One Orlando Collection and Digital Gallery The expanded One Orlando Collection and digital gallery featuring images of individual items collected at the Pulse memorial site in their current state of preservation. Curated pieces will include community artwork and international support received following the tragedy. Through Saturday; Orange County Regional History Center, 65 E. Central Blvd.; free; 407-836-8500; ocfl.net. Our Orlando Through Sunday; Mennello Museum of American Art, 900 E. Princeton St.; $5; 407-246-4278; mennellomuseum.com. Patrick Martinez: American Memorial Through Sept. 10; Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, 1000 Holt Ave., Winter Park; free; 407-646-2526; cfam.rollins.edu. Perception & Reality II Through July 1; Snap Downtown, 420 E. Church St.; free; snaporlando.com.

BUY • SALE • TRADE 2 Convenient locations DechoesResale.com

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EVENTS Chief’s Combat for a Cure A course of exercises that mimic the movements of a firefighter when on the job. The top three participants are awarded medals. Benefits the National Brain Tumor Society. Saturday, 9-11 am; CrossFit Independence, 570 N. Alafaya Trail; $20; braintumor.org. Dew and a Brew Brand ambassador Rob Ryan pours samples of Tullamore D.E.W. to be paired with special Goose Island selections. Thursday, 10 pm; The Woods, 49 N Orange Ave.; various menu prices; 407-203-1114; thewoodsorlando.com. Festival of the Sea Multiple seafood vendors serve up your favorites. Saturday, 11 am; Festival Park, 2911 E. Robinson St.; $5$30; 407-381-5310; gopartylive.com. Fidget Spinner, Vape and POPS Meet and Party Night Extravaganza Collectibles galore. Tuesday, 8 pm; Backbooth, 37 W. Pine St.; $5; 407-999-2570; backbooth.com. Free RPG Day Celebrate Free RPG Day with demos, giveaways and introduction sessions. Saturday, 2 pm; Cloak and Blaster, 875 Woodbury Road; free; cloakandblaster.com.

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THEWEEK CONTINUED FROM PAGE 45

Haitian Academy Awards Show An awards show honoring Haitian celebrities in music, acting, art and other fields of entertainment. Saturday, 5 pm; Bob Carr Theater, 401 W. Livingston St.; $40-$65; 407-246-4262; drphillipscenter.org. Homebrew Competition: Brews, Blues, & BBQ Local homebrewers compete and show off their wares, accompanied by live music and barbecue. VIP ticket includes beer and food. Saturday, 2-10 pm; Dead Lizard Brewing Company, 4507 36th St.; free-$30; 407-777-3060. Keepin It Real Pre-Father’s Day Bash Motorcycle club party with live music, food and prizes. Saturday, 8 pm; Aloma Square Shopping Center, 6700 Aloma Ave., Winter Park; $5-$7. Letters to Strangers Write letters of encouragement and affirmation to strangers. All supplies will be provided. Friday, 2-3 pm; Orlando Public Library, 101 E. Central Blvd.; Free; 407-835-7323; ocls.info. Mayor Dyer Cooks You Breakfast Tacos The mayor cooks breakfast tacos with eggs, cheese, chorizo, bacon and salsa. Tuesday, 5 pm; Bikes Beans & Bordeaux, 3022 Corrine Drive; free; 407-427-1440; bikesbeansandbordeaux.com. Ultimate Elvis Contest & Festival Fundraiser Dress in your best Elvis attire for an Elvis wine walk, concert, sale and more. Friday, 5-11 pm, Saturday, noon-11 pm; Mount Dora Community Building, 520 Baker St., Mount Dora; $45$75; 407-962-0263; epcontinentals.com. Vault 5421 Preview Party Sneak preview of post-apocalyptic gaming bar Vault 5421, prizes for best cosplays, art vendors, raffles, gaming sessions and more. Saturday, 11 am-11 pm; Gods & Monsters, 5421 International Drive; free; 407-270-6273; godmonsters.com. World Beauty Fitness & Fashion Be mesmerized by some of the most beautiful models in the world as they take the stage in a show of glitz and glamor. Saturday, 5 pm; Alexis & Jim Pugh Theater, Dr. Phillips Center, 445 S. Magnolia Ave.; $73.75; drphillipscenter.org. Ye Parched Pirates Pub Crawl Pirate-themed pub crawl through downtown bars. Friday, 8 pm; Casey’s on Central, 50 E. Central Blvd.; $10-$20; orlandopubcrawl.com.

LEARNING Orbits and Ice Ages: The History of Climate A talk by Dr. Britt, Professor of Astronomy and Planetary Sciences on Climate Change, explaining how and why climate has 46

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changed. Sunday, 1-3 pm; University Club of Winter Park, 841 N. Park Ave., Winter Park; free; 321-804-3373; uclubwp.org.

LITERARY Meet the Author: Mary V. Dearborn Mary V. Dearborn, the first female author to write a full biography of Ernest Hemingway, reads from her book. Reading preceded by a VIP meet-and-greet with the author. Wednesday, 6 pm; Winter Park Public Library, 460 E. New England Ave., Winter Park; free-$50; 407335-4192; writersblockbookstore.com. The Short Attention Span Storytelling Hour Open-mic storytelling series. Wednesday, 7 pm; Stardust Video and Coffee, 2424 E. Robinson St.; free; 407896-4954; facebook.com/stardustie. Spilled Milk Literary Open Mic Open mic for all literary forms. Thursday, 8 pm; The Milk Bar, 1842 E. Winter Park Road; free; 407-623-3393.

FAMILY G.I. Joe Collectors’ Convention Thousands of G.I. Joes for sale. Special guests. Saturday, 10 am-5 pm, Sunday, 9:30 am-3:30 pm; Walt Disney World Dolphin, Walt Disney World Resort, Lake Buena Vista; $25; 817-448-9863; gijoecon.com. Hot Dogs, Cool Cats Adopt-a-thon Reduced adoption fees for dogs and cats. Adopters will also receive a special goodie bag. Saturday, 10 am-6 pm; Orange County Animal Services Pet Rescue and Adoption Center, 2769 Conroy Road; cost of adoption; 407-836-7297; ocnetpets.com.

SPORTS Central Florida Mah Jongg Experienced American Mah Jongg players meet weekly using the National Mah Jongg 2015 card and rules. Wednesdays, 12:304 pm; MetroWest Country Club, 2100 S. Hiawassee Road; free; 561-704-9302. I Believe in Wrestling Live pro wrestling. Friday, 8-10 pm; Team Vision Dojo, 6923 Narcoossee Road; $10-$15; 407334-2200; ibelieveinwrestling.com. The Orlando (Afternoon) Shuffle Free shuffleboard event. Equipment provided. Saturday, 3-5 pm; Beardall Senior Center, 800 S. Delaney Ave.; free; 407-230-5356. Orlando City vs. Miami FC MLS Soccer. Wednesday, 7:30 pm; Orlando City Stadium, 655 W. Church St.; $17-$71; 855-675-2489; orlandocitysc.com. Orlando City vs. Montreal Impact MLS Soccer. Saturday, 7:30 pm; Orlando City Stadium, 655 W. Church St.; $17-$71; 855-675-2489; orlandocitysc.com. n


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B Y D A N S AVA G E

I’m almost 30 and I’m a virgin. I’m an overweight, straight-ish guy (I’m attracted to a few men, but those cases are exceedingly rare). I’ve also gone through an absolute hell life thus far, losing a testicle to cancer and having an abusive father who threatened a teenage me into celibacy by invoking the phrase “penile lobotomy” should I have sex with any girlfriends. I’ve barely dated in 10 years, and while I’m free from my father and the aforementioned mortal dick terror, I’m also INCREDIBLY scared about putting myself out there. I’m disabled, I’m not conventionally attractive by most standards, my whole zone down there is scarred up from surgeries and, to top it all off, I’m on the small side. The last time I had the opportunity for sex, I went for it, but I was so terrified that I couldn’t keep it up. The woman I was with said something to the effect of “Well, I can’t do anything with that, now can I?” after which I asked her to leave because, seriously, that’s kind of an asshole thing to say. I’m notionally on Tinder and Bumble, but I really don’t know what I’m doing – and more often than not, I feel like the right thing for any theoretical partners would be for me to just stay in hiding and not inflict my grotesque presence on them. I’m scared of another humiliation, as that’s most definitely not my kink, and I’m at an age where my complete lack of experience and physical deformity are (I would have to imagine) major issues for anyone I might encounter. I truly want romance, sexuality and companionship in my life. I haven’t fought through poverty, disability, physical and emotional abuse, and my genitalia trying to kill me to stay entombed in my office alone and unloved. I just do not know where to even begin. The Virgin Who’s Been Fucked A Whole Lot Just Never In The Good Way Off the top of my head … Hire a sex worker. It will allow you to separate your anxieties about finding romance and companionship from your anxieties about being sexually inexperienced. A kind, indulgent, competent sex worker can relieve you of your virginity and help restore – or instill – confidence in your dick’s ability to get and stay hard in the presence of another human being. Be totally honest about your inexperience and your concerns. If you get the sense during negotiations – which should be brief and to the point – that the woman you’re talking to is impatient or uncaring, thank her for her time and start over. There are kind, caring, compassionate sex workers out there. Presumably you’ve got a computer in your office, TVWBFAWLJNITGW. Use it to find one. Get out of the house. Go places, do things – as much as your disability and budget allow. Even if you have to go alone, go. Even

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if the things you want to do are unlikely to put you in front of many/any women, do those things. You’re likelier to meet someone if you’re out of the house and moving through the world. Even if you don’t meet someone right away, you’ll feel less isolated and less alone. Even if you never meet someone (I’m not sugarcoating things – some people don’t), going places and doing things means you’ll have a rich and full and active life regardless. You’re not alone. OK, you’re alone – but you’re not alone alone. Meaning, there are women (and men) out there who feel just as paralyzed as you do – because they’re 30-year-old-or-older virgins, because they’re not conventionally attractive, because their first/only sexual experiences were just as humiliating, because they had traumatic childhoods and bear emotional scars. You want a woman to come into your life who is patient and accepting and kind and willing to look past your disability and your inexperience and your difficult history. Be patient, accepting, kind and similarly willing. Get over those scars. I had a boyfriend a long time ago who had significant scarring on his balls and taint. He was a farm boy (sigh), and he fell on a piece of farm machinery and wound up straddling a scalding-hot pipe. I don’t know how that worked exactly, because I don’t know from farm machinery, but the pipe burned through his jeans and left third-degree burns on his balls, taint and upper-upper thigh. Ten years later, we started going out – and guess what? I didn’t notice his scars. And not for want of opportunity: He was my first serious boyfriend, and I spent the better part of three months with my face in his crotch. The scars that were so obvious to him and left him feeling self-conscious about his genitals? They were invisible to me until he needlessly apologized for them. Genitals are a jumble of flesh and folds and hairs and colors and bits and pieces and sometimes scars, TVWBFAWLJNITGW. If you’re worried your scarring is noticeable, mention that you’re a cancer survivor and lost a ball but gained a sick (as in cool) scar. Good luck, TVWBFAWLJNITGW. We’re rooting for you. Your a faggot. Women Obsess Real Men Your new here, WORM, aren’t you? I’m a straight woman, and I’ve been dating my boyfriend for about eight months. We have a wonderful relationship and amazing sex. There’s one thing he does in the bedroom, however, that I find off-putting and I was hoping you might be able to provide some insight. About 25 percent of the time after he ejaculates, he briefly licks some of his come off his fingers. This

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017

orlandoweekly.com

“VIRGIN TERRITORY”

kind of creeps me out. I’ve been with more than a few dudes, so I obviously understand that a woman eating their come is a common turn-on, but this is my first experience with this particular incarnation. At first I was worried my aversion might be rooted in some deeply buried homophobic beliefs, but we’ve discussed the idea of me pegging him, and that I can get behind. I think it’s more that this smacks of a certain egotism I find frivolous. Like, I wouldn’t go around shoving my fingers inside my pussy and rubbing the results all over my face. Typically we’re able to discuss any kind of conflict or confusion that arises between us, but this one seems tough to broach for me. Three questions: How common is this? Do I need to just get over it or should I try to talk to him about it? Would most guys suck their own dick if they were able? Yearning Understanding Concerning Kink 1. It’s not common, YUCK, but it’s not unheard of, either. Maybe your boyfriend grew up with sex-phobic parents who blew up at the sight of a crusty sock – so he opted to destroy the evidence by eating it and developed a taste for it. Maybe he thinks his semen contains powerful woo-woo-y masculine energy and wishes to retain some of it. Maybe he had a girlfriend who thought it was hot to see him eat his come and he (wrongly) assumes it’s a turn-on for you, too. 2. Yes, you need to get over it and, yes, you should ask him about it. The former almost certainly requires the latter. 3. Every man on earth tries, a select few succeed, and we all would if we could. Even my new friend WORM.

On the Lovecast, advice from a dominatrix on kinky parties: savagelovecast.com. mail@savagelove.net ITMFA.org

Are you looking for a new family member? Meet Periwinkle!

Periwinkle (A370994) is a 2-yearold dog who is looking for a home. She is a very friendly and sweet pup and she’s playful, but can also be mellow. Periwinkle loves to eat treats, and she enjoys being petted. She does have heartworm disease, but her treatment is sponsored in full. For the month of June, dance on over to Orange County Animal Services and participate in our Meow and Bow Wow Luau adoption promotion! The adoption fee will be reduced to either $5, $10 or $15. Fees includes sterilization, vaccines and microchip identification. Periwinkle’s adoption fee has been waived due to her heartworm disease. Orange County Animal Services is located at 2769 Conroy Road in Orlando, Florida near the Mall at Millenia. The shelter is open 10 a.m. through 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 1 p.m. through 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information, please call 407-8363111 or visit ocnetpets.com.


Marketplace REWARD OF UP TO $17,000 If you have any information or details of the crime featured below, you may be eligible for a reward of up to $17,000. On September 25, 2016 at approximately 3:53 a.m., Orange County deputies responded to 4729 S. Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL regarding a shooting. Two (2) victims were transported to ORMC and Christian Santiago was later pronounced deceased. He succumbed to a fatal gunshot wound. If you have any information on this homicide, please call Crimeline. You will remain anonymous. 800-423-TIPS - crimeline. org. No Caller ID No Recorders No Hassles Cash for cars and trucks Running or not Any Condition 352-771-6191. WANTED - All motorhomes, fifth wheels and travel trailers. Cars, vans and trucks any condition. Cash paid on the spot. Call 954-789-7530.

Misc Do you have Osteoarthritis? –

Osteoarthritis studies are enrolling now. Those who qualify may receive*: -Compensation which varies by study up to $1,000 -No-cost study-related care from doctors -No-cost study medication. Call today at 866-290-5847 Or visit www.OAresearchstudies. com. *In a clinical research study, the participants may receive investigational study product or may receive an inactive substance, or placebo, depending on the study design. Participants receive study-related care from a doctor/research team for the duration of the study. Reasonable payments will be made for participation and the length of the study may vary.

Do you have Rheumatoid Arthritis? –

Rheumatoid Arthritis studies are enrolling now. Those who qualify may receive*: -Compensation which varies by study up to $625 -No-cost study-related care from doctors -No-cost study medication Call today at 1-866-291-3330 Or visit www.raresearchstudiestoday.com. *In a clinical research study, the participants may receive investigational study product or may receive an inactive substance, or placebo, depending on the study design. Participants receive study-related care from a doctor/research team for the duration of the study. Reasonable payments will be made for participation and the length of the study may vary.

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Legal, Public Notices In order to satisfy a contractual landlord’s lien, under the provisions of the Florida Self­Service Storage Space Act, public notice is hereby given that the following described property will be sold at public sale to the highest bidder for cash only. The sale will be held at the times and locations listed below: A-AAAKey Mini Storage 1001 S. Semoran Blvd. Orlando, FL 32807 June 29th, 2017@9:30am: Anthony Pagan-Bags, Boxes and Totes,Clothes, Donald S. Eckenrod-Artwork, Tools, Furniture and Boxes, Juan S. OrtegaFurniture, Vintage Beer Sign, Golfbag w/ clubs and Tools, Brett Mifflin-Furniture, Pictures, Boxes and Bins, Ruben Alers-Luggage, Electronics, Furniture, Boxes and Bins, Eusebio Martinez-A/C unit, Tackle Pulley, Mattresses, Camera and Totes, Christina Spears-Toys, Holiday Decorations, Clothes, Boxes and Bins, Valerie G. Jones-Artwork, Grill, Furniture and Clothes, Calisha Mills-Large TV, Baby Stroller and Bouncy, Glass Top, Sally Nicholas-Bins and Boxes, Fishing Equipment, Toys and Clothes, Gianfranco MarceloBags, Bins and Clothes, Hector L. Camano-2006 Mercedes White VIN 4JGCB75E86A008608, Tools A-AAAKey Mini Storage 5285 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32839-2307 June 29th 2017 @11:00 Sheila Daniel-Shelving, Mattress Set, Misc. Boxes, Bags and Totes, Eliezer Mestre-4 Chairs, Painting Easel, Bed Frame, Table, Misc. Boxes, Bins and Tubs, Paulema Augustin-Monitors, TV’s, Headboard, Mattress and Boxes, Wordean Floyd-Couch and Loveseat, 2 Stools, Table, Boxes, Gregory Percy-Suitcases, Boxes and Books.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR OSCEOLA COUNTY, FLORIDA U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff, v. ROBERT RICHARDSON, JR., AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF ROBERT LEE RICHARDSON, SR., DECEASED; et al., Defendants. CASE NO.: 2015-CA- 000446 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE is hereby given that, Armando Ramirez, Clerk of the Circuit Court of Osceola County, Florida, will on the 27 day of June, 2017, at 11:00 a.m. ET, at the Osceola County Courthouse, 2 Courthouse Square, Suite 2600, Room 2602, Kissimmee, Florida 34741 in accordance with Chapter 45, F.S., offer for sale and sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Osceola County, Florida, to wit: Lot 50, Eagles Nest at The Oaks, a Subdivision as per plat thereof recorded in Plat Book 13, Page(s) 185 and 186, of the Public Records of Osceola County, Florida. Property Address: 2813 Eagle Claw Court, Kissimmee, FL 34746 pursuant to the Final Judgment of Foreclosure entered in a case pending in said Court, the style and case number of which is set forth above. Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale. If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in a court proceeding or event, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator, Court Administration, Osceola County Courthouse, 2 Courthouse Square, Suite 6300, Kissimmee, FL 34741, (407) 742-2417, at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving notification if the time before the scheduled court appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. SUBMITTED on this 30TH day of May 2017. SIROTE & PERMUTT, P.C. /s/ Anthony R. Smith, Esq., FL Bar #157147, Kathryn I. Kasper, Esq., FL Bar #621188 Attorneys for Plaintiff. OF COUNSEL: Sirote & Permutt, P.C., 1115 East Gonzalez Street, Pensacola, FL 32503, Toll Free: (800) 826-1699, Facsimile: (850) 462-1599.

NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 1994 Honda VIN# 2HGEJ2224RH518250 To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on June 28, 2017, 7301 Gardner Street, Winter Park, FL. 32792 Constellation Towing & Recovery LLC

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: June 28th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 9:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 13125 S. John Young Pkwy. Orlando, Fl. 32837 (407) 240-0958 #00720-Garvey Johnson- piano, cabinets, #00450-Dalila Rheafurniture, #00826-Diana BabilonaHousehold Items, #1115F- Arturo Vargas- Household Items, #00183Ricardo Garcia- Household Items, #00672- Flor Ponce- Household Items. 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5753 Hoffner Avenue Orlando, FL 32822 (407) 212-5890 #1074-Chardleene MenendezHousehold goods, #1496- Onix Rosario- Household goods, #1313-Christopher MartinezHousehold goods. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

orlandoweekly.com

JUNE 14-20, 2017 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Legal, Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03 CASE NO.: DP14-444 IN THE INTEREST OF: T.L., a male child, DOB: 08/11/2001 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA To: Michael Grubb, Address unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren), a copy of which is attached. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea on 5th day of July, 2017, at 9:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS/THESE CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. 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 25th day of May, 2017. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT (Court Seal) By: (Signed) Deputy Clerk. This summons has been issued at the request of: Stacy McDuffie, Esq., Florida Bar No.:56020, Children’s Legal Services, State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 822 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 563-2380 - Telephone, Stacy. mcduffie@myflfamilies.com. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, Jenny Oldham, 1701 East Jersey Ave., Orlando FL 32806, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: Periwinkle Fashion It is the intent of the undersigned to register “Periwinkle Fashion” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated: 6/8/17

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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 7/DAWSON ROBINSON SERVICE CENTER CASE NO.: DP08-429 In the Interest of: J. K. DOB: 11/22/2005, Minor Child. SUMMONS AND ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Howard King (father) 1625 Indiana Street, #A6 {Last known Address} Orlando, FL 32805 WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Daniel P. Dawson, on , July 21, 2017, at 9:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. 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 MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. 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 1st day of June 2017. This summons has been issued at the request of: Andrea Beth Ashcraft, Esquire, Florida Bar No.: 0433871, Senior Attorney for State of Florida, Children’s Legal Services, Department of Children and Families, 882 S. Kirkman Road, Ste 200, Orlando, FL 32811, 407-563- 2317. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, By /s/ Deputy Clerk, (Court Seal).

NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, Armor Diagnostics LLC, of 241 N Country Club Road Suite 1013, Lake Mary, FL 32746 County of Seminole, pursuant to the requirements of the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations, is hereby advertising the following fictitious name: Allyance Mobile It is the intent of the undersigned to register “Allyance Mobile” with the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Dated:6/6/17

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 CASE NO:DP15-157 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILD: J.M. DOB: 07/16/2015 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Alexander Javier Mann, Address Unknown A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea on July 31, 2017 at 11:00 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. 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 MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 16th day of May, 2017. This summon has been issued at the request of: Nancy A. Robak, Florida Bar No.: 88796, Senior Attorney for Florida Department of Children and Family. nancy. robak@myflfamilies.com; CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT BY:/S/ DEPUTY CLERK (court seal).

NOTICE OF ACTION RE: The Florida Educator Certificate of: Hugh F Broomes, 4709 South Ferncreek Avenue, Orlando, FL 32806 Notice is hereby given to Hugh F Broomes, Respondent of an administrative complaint seeking disciplinary action against his Florida Educator Certificate. This notice shall constitute service of the administrative complaint, which shall be filed with Education Practices Commission. If Respondent wishes to respond to the administrative complaint, he must contact Professional Practices Services at 850/245-0438 by July 20, 2017. Respondent who fails to file a written request for a hearing by this date shall waive his rights, and the complaint will be considered by the Education Practices Commission for final action.

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017 ● orlandoweekly.com

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 07 CASE NO.: DP14-334 IN THE INTEREST OF: S.A. DOB: 09/17/2016, A MINOR CHILD. SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: JEREMIAH BECKER, Address Unknown WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child, a copy of which is attached, you are hereby commanded to appear before the Honorable Judge Daniel P. Dawson on July 10, 2017 at 11:30 a.m., at Thomas S. Kirk 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. 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 AS A PARENT TO THE CHILDREN NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. WITNESS my hand and seal of this court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 22nd day of May, 2017. This summons has been issued at the request of: Jill Fowler, Esquire, FBN: 45276, Attorney for the State of Florida, Children’s Legal Services, 400 West Robinson Street, Suite N211, Orlando, Florida 32801, (407) 317-7643-Telephone, (407) 317-7126-Fax, jill. zivot@myflfamilies.com. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Rochelle Marrero, Deputy Clerk (Court Seal). If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact Court Administration, at 425 N. Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida 32801, telephone (407) 836-2303, not later than (7) days prior to the proceeding. If you are hearing or voice impaired, call 1-800-955-8771.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE JULY 05, 2017 at 8:00AM at My Towing Company 1800 N Forsyth Rd., Orlando FL 32807. Will sell the following vehicles to the highest bidder 2012 SEADOO YDV36759C212 Term of the sale are cash. My Towing Company reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids. Vehicle sold as is, no warranty, no guarantee, no title.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: June 29th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 9:30a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1101 Marshall Farms Rd. Ocoee, Fl. 34761 (407) 877-0191 #B087-Dawn Swaim-Household goods #C189-Janet HowellHousehold items #B077-Deborah Wright-Furniture and appliance #E331-Deborah Wright-3 bedroom house #G425-Deborah WrightHousehold goods #A013-Deborah Wright- Household goods #E316Debra Clark-Household items #B120-Rebecca Groff-Household items #B083-Jason JakubowskiFurniture #C191-Bryan Mixson Jr.-Household goods #F401Kellie Bright-Couch, loveseat, full bed, boxes #F393-Joshua Smith-Couch washer dryer and boxes #G424-Letitia MitchellHousehold items #P615-Roberto Santana- 2015 SWTM Trailer, VIN-​ 1S907X12XFM982097​, OWNER: Jose Angel Hernandez Petit. 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5603 Metrowest Blvd. Orlando, FL 32811 (407) 445-0867 #03004 Nelson Ramos, Jr restaurant eqpt; #02226 Demond Jefferson shoes,clothes; #08009 Esther Jones household goods; #02115 Tricia Slavin hsehold furniture, items, etc.; #01026 Shane Jordan one bedroom apt; #08012 Ernst Louis clothes, boxes; #05023 Alisha Laforest clothes, toys; #08032 Chiinelle (Chinelle) Fraites 2 living room,2 bedroom sets, boxes, dining room, 4 TV; #09119 Nicole Macarthur bins, TV, chest; #07031 Darci Amarante new mattresses, box springs, pillows. 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 5592 L. B. McLeod Rd. Orlando, Fl. 32811 (407) 445-2709: #361 Christina Anderson-HHG #448 Medical Alteratives of America Inc-Charts #610 Norvella WatsonHHG #044 Norvella Watson-HHG, Clothes #881 Ten 55 Productions Inc –HHG #132 Giovana Amarante–Furniture, Boxes #357 Joel Roger–HHG #711 Shirley Burns–Bike, Boxes #141 Eric Larson–Dresser bruronight stands queen matress 8-10 boxes #861 Luz Hernandez– HHG #125 Jeanette Hernandez-HHG #732 Cyrille Houndambi- HHG #682 Michael Davidson-HHG #762 Hugo Escorche-HHG 1:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at 3501 S. Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL. 32839 (407)839-5518 #4033- Igor Souvorkine- House hold goods, #1031- Roslyn ScottHouse hold items, beds, #4057Bernard Mcdonald- House hold goods, #1005- Annie Mae Wall – Clothes and books, #2078- Rodney Brown – House hold items, #4109- Shakina Jones- Kids toys towels, blankets and house hold items, #1093 – Dustari Fortilien – House hold items, # 4095 – Bevelyn Green- Jones – Tv, Clothes, boxes, #2046 – Patricia Harrison – House hold items, #1078 – Lamartrella Denine Lofton – Household items, #1003 – Ana Semidey – House hold goods, #2115 - Divida Daniels – Clothing, #1104 – Jeffrey Loureston Petush – Household items, #1103B- Derrick Rountree-

Household items, #2014- Anita Whitted- Household items, #2152Anita Whitted – Household items, #3137 – Kirk Shields – Household items, # 2124 – Yolanda Taneka Merritt – House hold items 3:00p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1420 N Orange Blossom Trail Orlando, FL 32804 (407) 6503739 #762 Eugenio Ma Ruffat – Household goods; #416 Terrell Smith – DJ equipment, household goods; #343 Emilee McMaster – Household goods; #463 Michael Parker – Household goods; #856 Camille McKinnis – Household goods; #337 Misty Simmons – Bedroom/Household goods; #478 Raoul Vinton Williams Jr – Furniture, Boxes, Electronics, Home goods; #857 David Kelly Fulton Jr – Boxes, Clothes, Totes. 4:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 1001 Lee Rd. Orlando, FL 32810 (407) 539-0527 #1142-Clifford Hughley-bike, power tools, tool box, ladder, wood, movies, doors. #3068-Courtney Pierce-bed, chairs, couch, dining set, mattresses, table, bags, bike, boxes, totes. #2079-Lakesha Harris-beds, monitor, bike, boxes, clothes, shoes, totes, hose, fan. #4109-Erica Latasha Price-clothes, shoes, totes, toys. #3089-Ricky Corbin-2 bikes, boxes, clothes, shoes, telescope, dry erase board. #3150-Ronald Smith- chair, printer, totes, keyboards, speakers, tools. #4017-Lloyd Redden-bed, chair, microwave, books, boxes, pictures, tool box. #Curtisicia Renee Waller-boxes, clothes, shoes, totes, rug, xmas tree, perfume. #4055- Arthur Owens-armoire, chair, table, dvd, tv, boxes, clothes, totes, sofa bed. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that Mindful Storage will sell at public auction, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: May 16th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 3:30 p.m. at the Mindful Storage facility located at: 900 Cypress Pkwy. Kissimmee, Fl. 34759 (321) 732-6032 732-6032 #B111-Alejandro Martinez-Malo/ House Hold Items, #1191-Terrence Stoute/House Hold Items, #C139-Denzi Wroy/Household & Business Items. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Mindful Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.


Legal, Public Notices Notice of Public Auction for monies due on storage units located at U-Haul company facilities. Storage locations are listed below. All goods are household contents or miscellaneous and recovered goods. All auctions are hold to satisfy owner’s lien for rent and fees in accordance with Florida Statutes, Self-Storage Act, Sections 83.806 and 83.807. The auction will start at 8:00 a.m. on July 6, 2017 and July 7, 2017 and will continue until finished U-Haul Moving and Storage of Maitland, 7815 North Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL 32810; C36 John Hancock $590.80, L56 Jonette Johnson $726.60, B27 Angel Torres $324.25 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Apopka, 1221 E Semoran Blvd, Apopka, FL 32703; 1174 Sandra Fisher $1104.85, 1323 Cindy Garcia Saucedo $572.96, 1110 Laquanta Mathis $729.28, 1179 Sandra Fisher $612.25, 1113 Jeffery Dwinal $1174.96 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Altamonte Springs, 598 W Hwy 436, Altamonte Springs, FL 32714; B122 Megan Gantt $962.50, D100 Sheryl Dowling $1171.10, AA1797E $529.10 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Semoran, 2055 N Semoran Blvd, Winter Park, FL 32792; 1555 Justin Johnson $336.60, 1508 Anthony Garcia $352.70, 1369 Paul Crane $917.20, 1422 Jay Williams $336.60, 1237 Robert Jenkins $1017.25, 1406 Darron Lee $336.60 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Longwood, 650 N. Ronald Reagan Blvd, Longwood, FL 32750; A105 Daniel Markus Damuth $341.45, E064 Jook-Ting Shim $378.15, A012 Linda Sallee $332.75 U-Haul Moving and Storage of Lake Mary, 3851 S Orlando Ave, Sanford, FL 32773;5052 Jasmyne Smith $561.00, 1326 Jessica Jimenez $296.30, 1734 Edwin Rivera $209.09, 1280 Peter Voigt $542.60, 5018 Edmon Jones $551.00, 2045 Doyle Washington $404.70, 1043 Natalie Paradise $518.00, 1436 Robert Finney $400.75, 1124 Patty Graffuis $880.00, 1047 Jayna Fox $321.00, 1605 Curtis Davis $788.25, 1525 Cathy Ross $630.20, 1403 Onita Weber $621.20, 1278 Tonya Mays $400.75, 2044 Mary HArris $357.00, 1110 Deborah Xavier-Velez $560.00, 1003 Jenae Packer $815.00, 1754 Lnesha McClain $347.00, 1201 Donovan McGill $710.40, 2522 Taylor Lovett $714.70, 1485 Selma Ortiz Ferrer $440.50, 2063 Juan Cruze $482.15 U-Haul Moving and Storage at Rinehart, 1811 Rinehart Road, Sanford, FL 32771; 2112 Bernard Kielton $1180.70, 1065 Sherod Mitchell $465.00, 1023 Atlantic Therapy Group $550.60, 4061 Alnisa Williams $280.25, 3032 Charles Firlein $379.40.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION FOR MONIES DUE ON STORAGE LOCKERS LOCATED AT UHAUL COMPANY FACILITIES. STORAGE LOCATIONS AND TIMES ARE LISTED BELOW. ALL GOODS SOLD ARE HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS, MISCELLANEOUS OR RECOVERED GOODS. ALL AUCTIONS ARE HELD TO SATISFY OWNER’S LIEN FOR RENT AND FEES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807, STARTS AT 8 am and RUNS CONTINUOUSLY. Uhaul Ctr Kirkman-600 S Kirkman Rd-Orlando 7/5/17 5023 Christopher Martial 3003 Frederick Dauley 3039 Derek Carmichael 8018 Mario Romero 5011 Michael Drew 2034 Katrina Edwards 1092 Daniel Silva 6026 Rashad Permenter 3061 Isaiah Hernandez 1055 Romean Hamzehloui 1015 Erica Rooke 2099 Janashia Carter 8016 Taylor Bennett 3054 Edwin Daville 2053 Sabrina Collins 6048 Melissa Miller 4008 James Ivory 1082 David Young Uhaul Ctr Orange Ave-3500 S Orange Ave-Orlando 7/5/17 1045 Shaquetta Lott 2405 Jessica Whitley AA6582D Claude Fleury 1102 Recover Truck DC2182S Michelle Blass 1531 Recovery Truck TM2600H Diane Wiggins 1113 Sophia Harrison 2403 Manoj Rajayah Uhaul Ctr Baldwin Park- 4001 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 7/5/17 D216 Jason Perry D193 Maya Aleandre D234 Charles Parker C200-01 William Rams D125 Elyssa Baity B146 Kristal Stewart Uhaul Ctr Goldenrod-508 N Goldenrod Rd-Orlando 7/5/17 430 Melissa Ragonese 114 Armando Martinez 531-37 Shane Turpin 120 Venessa Beaz 1306 David Crosby Uhaul Ctr Alafaya-11815 E Colonial Drive-Orlando 7/5/17 1901 Jhonathan Orellana 1233 Latrice Brown 1119 Randy Paul 1905 Dieudonne Mbuy 1027 Anthony Baker 1429 Carlos Longmire 1113 Sacha Comrie 1512 Greda Marrero.

NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 1999 HONDA JHLRD2845XC007598 2004 KIA KNDJD733645253257 1995 TOYOTA JT2AE04B4S0123586 2005 CHRYSLER 1C4GP45R25B417334 To be sold at auction at 10:00 a.m. on June 30, 2017, 4412 ALLEN ST KISSIMMEE, FL 34746 New Generation Towing

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE FOLLOWING TENANTS WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH TO SATISFY RENTAL LIENS IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUTES, SELF STORAGE FACILITY ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. CONTENTS MAY INCLUDE KITCHEN, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS, BEDDING, TOYS, GAMES, PACKED CARTONS, FURNITURE, TOOLS, TRUCKS, CARS, ETC. THERE’S NO TITLE FOR VEHICLES SOLD AT LIEN SALE. OWNERS RESERVE THE RIGHT TO BID ON UNITS. LIEN SALE TO BE HELD ONLINE WEDNESDAY JUNE 28, 2017 AT THE 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. www. personalministorage.com PERSONAL MINI STORAGE FORSYTH - 2875 FORSYTH RD. WINTER PARK, FL 32792 - AT 10:00AM: FSI #A5-Shanta Nicole Moore PMS #116-Sean M Higgins; #258-Jason A Gaspard; #318-Jennifer Kay Dussing; #340-Julian Matthew Sharidon Davis; #474-Deborah Guzman MICHIGAN MINI STORAGE - 200 W. MICHIGAN ST ORLANDO, FL 32806 - AT 10:30AM: #8- Janice Johnstone; #15-Christopher Franklin; #203-Norberto Hernandez PERSONAL MINI STORAGE LAKE FAIRVIEW - 4252 N ORANGE BLOSSOM TR. ORLANDO FL 32804 - AT 11:00AM: #153-Thomas, Sherriel Janise; #305-Thompson, Denise Rosalee; #359-Young, Willette Atricia; #419-Williams, Tammy Antoinette; #635-Salatich, Blaise Peter; #726-Castro, Eddy; #854-WilliamsClark, Kerrin Andrea; #866-Berrios, David PERSONAL MINI STORAGE WEST - 4600 OLD WINTER GARDEN RD. ORLANDO FL 32811 AT 11:30AM: #35-Lamont Tyrone MasonSolution Custom Cleaning Inc; #43-Dominique Lamont Dozier; #95-Antoine Gregory Blyther; #98-Charles Maurice Carbon Jr.; #100-Miriam Diaz Cordova; #151-Jose Gilberto Almenas Ross; #152-Vince Delrenard Brown; #212-Willie Lee Hill; #272-Vince Delrenard Brown; #305-Mark Wesley Middlebrooks Jr.; #386-Yesenia Pagan; #492Troy Jones Jr.; #604-Boris Lavell Johnson; #626-Andre Decells Miller; #635-Ursula Blondale Baker; #638-Auterio Leonde Wilson; #647-Ursula Blondale Baker; #248A-Jarine Bennett; #382-Lashawn Paul.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA DIVISION: 03 CASE NO.: DP14-444 IN THE INTEREST OF: T.L., a male child, DOB: 08/11/2001 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA To: Jennifer Lopez, Address unknown. WHEREAS a Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child(ren), a copy of which is attached. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy R. Shea on 5th day of July, 2017, at 9:00 a.m. at the Juvenile Justice Center, 2000 East Michigan Street, Orlando, Florida 32806, for a TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS ADVISORY HEARING. You must appear on the date and at the time specified. FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORY HEARING CONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS/THESE CHILD(REN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD(REN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. 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 25th day of May, 2017. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT (Court Seal) By: (Signed) Deputy Clerk. This summons has been issued at the request of: Stacy McDuffie, Esq., Florida Bar No.:56020, Children’s Legal Services, State of Florida, Department of Children and Families, 822 S. Kirkman Road, Suite 200, Orlando, FL 32811, (407) 563-2380 - Telephone, Stacy. mcduffie@myflfamilies.com.

NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: JA3AJ26E44U058044 2004 MITS To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on June 25, 2017, 606 Haralson Ave, Orlando, FL 32805 All Auto Towing, INC.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: June 30th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 11:00a.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 2631 E Semoran Blvd. Apopka, FL 32703 (407) 818-1681 #3032-Kimberly Caleb-Household goods #2337-Brandon JamersonHousehold goods #1304- Phyllis Reed-Boxes #2213B-Annetta Clemons-Household items 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 831 N Park Ave. Apopka, FL 32712 (407) 450-0345 #1812 Jose Acevedo- Household Items, #2806 Angel Vazquez- Household Items, #2203 Leisa Whitfield- Household Goods, #2427 Ciji Sanshayla Charlton- Household Items, #1020 Theresa Brockenbrough- Household Goods 2:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 610 Rinehart Rd. Lake Mary, FL 32746 (321) 420-1686 0672 Ayana Outerbridge household items, 0905 Kelly Kidwell Boat 23ft Sea Fox-HIN LYGHA254L900 PARTS ONLY + TRAILER PARTS ONLY, 0500 Ronald & Anny Schmid household goods, 0560 Donna GRUENENEIER HOUSEHOLD GOODS, 2002 Crystal Rodriguez Household Items, 0167, Michael Rosenblum Dinning table, 2 cabinets, bed, coffee table, 2 knick knacks, 0579 Alexandra Sanchez 2 bed apartmentDresserQueen MattressSofaDining, 0175 Luis Torres Clothes, Boxes, TV, 0568 Melissa Pereira household goods, 0318 Reginald Gallon household goods, 0148 tiffany Williams household goods, 0266 Ginger Swinehart unknown. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 1D8GT28KX9W553919 2009 DODG To be sold at auction at 8:00 a.m. on June 26, 2017, 606 Haralson Ave, Orlando, FL 32805 All Auto Towing, INC.

orlandoweekly.com

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 CASE NO: DP15-438 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILDREN: I.R.G DOB: 10/12/2007, E.C.C. DOB: 11/22/2011 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Darius Garrett, Address Unknown A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea on July 5, 2017 at 11:00 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. 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 MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 25th day of May, 2017. This summon has been issued at the request of: Nancy A. Robak, Florida Bar No.: 88796, Senior Attorney for Florida Department of Children and Family. nancy. robak@myflfamilies.com; CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT BY:/S/ DEPUTY CLERK (court seal). NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 2005 HYUNDAI KM8SC13D75U884101 To be sold at auction at 10:00 a.m. on July 12, 2017, 4412 ALLEN ST KISSIMMEE, FL 34746 New Generation Towing

NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 2016 KAWASAKI JKAEX8A13GDA27104 To be sold at auction at 10:00 a.m. on July 10, 2017, 9881 RECYCLE CENTER RD. ORLANDO FL 32824 New Generation Towing

JUNE 14-20, 2017 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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Legal, Public Notices Notice of Public Sale: Pursuant to F.S. 713.78 on June 30, 2017 at 9:00 am, Riker’s Roadside Services, LLC, 630 E Landstreet Rd, Orlando, FL 32824, will sell the following vehicles and/ or vessels. Seller reserves the right to bid. Sold as is, no warranty. Seller guarantees no title, terms cash. Seller reserves the right to refuse any or all bids;

2C4GP74L51R296566 2001/CHRY 4T1BE46K07U504623 2007/TOYOT 2HGEJ8544WH502819 1998/HOND 1GCCS19X5W8160706 1998/CHEV 3N1AB6AP6CL674807 2012/NISS 1J4GK48K83W691019 2003/JEEP JH4DB7559VS007192 1997/ACUR 1FMZU73E95UB22864 2005/FORD 4A3AE45G83E157993 2003/MITS 3FAHP011X7R176947 2007/FORD 1G2NF52EX4C246962 2004/PONT 2G4WS52J211231085 2001/BUIC 2G1WF55E429211844 2002/CHEVR 1J4GW48S21C732487 2001/JEEP 4T1BE46K27U601516 2007/TOYOT 1N4BA41E76C844976 2006/NISS 1C4GP54R5VB314495 1997/CHRY 1G1ZT51886F199474 2006/CHEV 1HGCG324XYA005059 2000/HOND 1G6KD54Y25U139561 2005/CADI 1FAFP53U26A224770 2006/FORD 1B7FL26X9VS246008 1997/DODG WMWRC33405TJ66715 2005/MINC 2G2WP522841304399 2004/PONT 1N4AL21E38N443765 2008/NISS 1C4GP45R75B365585 2005/CHRY 1HGCG32452A026845 2002/HOND 1C3CDZAB1CN133920 2012/DODG 2HGES26792H505583 2002/HOND 3N1CB51D15L551783 2005/NISSAN KMHHM65D66U222545 2006/HYUN 2G1WF52E449197130 2004/CHEV 1HGCM56363A071509 2003/HOND 1HGEM22923L054972 2003/HOND KL5JD66Z27K549401 2007/SUZ KNAFB1215X5789076 1999/KIA 1N4AL2AP8BN426968 2011/NISS JYARJ06E26A031000 2006/YAMA 2G1FP22K6X2140202 1999/CHEV 2FAFP74W7YX101150 2000/FORD 1G8ZG5282VZ276521 1997/STRN 52

JS3TD62V814161043 2001/SUZU 1G4CW52KXX4659497 1999/BUIC 1YVGD22B4N5201742 1992/MAZD KMHWF35VXYA273561 2000/FORD 2B6HB21YXTK149228 1996/DODG 2B3KA43R96H264007 2006/DODG JT2EL45U2P0115489 1993/TOYOT 1FMDU65P9YZA10883 2000/FORD 1D4HB48N34F197398 2004/DODG 1N4AL11E85C133290 2005/NISS 1YVFP80C845N86562 2004/MAZD 1HGCD5699TA267254 1996/TOYOT 2C3HC56G1YH390579 2000/CHRY 2HGFA55508H701719 2008/HOND 1N4BA41E44C813763 2004/NISS 3B7HC13Z4VG830395 1997/DODG 1J8FT47W67D209287 2007/JEEP 1G1ND52FX4M613372 2004/CHEV 1FMZU62E22ZB41413 2002/FORD JS1GW71A362112585 2006/SUZU JT3HN87RXX0251033 1999/TOYOT 3VWDF71K75M606017 2005/VOLK WDBHA24G7XA759332 1999/MERZ ZC2FS1205LB206067 1990/CHRY 1N4AB41D8TC770320 1996/NISS 1FMZU63K65ZA05584 2005/FORD 4T1BF18B4XU300304 1996/TOY JT6GF10U0Y0045853 2000/LEXS 2MELM75W8PX623013 1993/MERC 1B4GP25B61B185965 2001/DODG 1UYVS25315U549903 2005/UTILITY KMHDU46D39U758083 2009/HYUND 1G8ZK52772Z221080 2002/STRN 1G6DZ67A890174763 2009/CADI JNKBV61EX8M219767 2008/INFI JH4KA9655TC011137 1996 ACUR SAJDA01NX1FM01032 2001/JAGUAR 1N4AL2APXBC140664 2011/NISS 1FAFP4043WF272232 1998/FORD 1G1AT58H697260659 2009/CHEV L8YTDNPA4DY500054 2013/SHEN 1N6SD11S4MC411051 1991/NISS JN1CA21D5VT208603 1997/NISS 1FMNU43S0YEC17783 2000/FORD 2MELM74WXRX626970 1994/MERC 1HGCB7699PA077560 1993/HOND 1C4NJPBB5ED564155 2014/JEEP L9NTELKD7H1050272 2017/TAOI 5NPDH4AE7GH676132 2016/HYUN 3N1CN7AP3FL955053 2015/NISS

3N1AB7AP8EY218075 2014/NISS 1FTEX1C88GFA50970 2016/FORD. NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON JUNE 23, 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED 1051 BUENAVENTURA BLVD – KISSIMMEE, FL 34743 – AT 9:30AM: 01110 - Abu, Jossie, 01134 - Rodriguez, Ilsa, 01201 - Rubio, jaime, 02120 - Rivera, Jorge, 02141 - Justiniano, Kenyee, 02149 - Stees, Jenny, 02205 Olmo, Daniel, 02210 - Velasquez, Yvette, 02217 - Murray, Stacy, 02423 - Helisek, Matthew, 02435 - Ramos, Ruben, 02505 - Medina, Elizabeth, 02620 - Jean Louis, Andre, 03108 - Davila, Angel, 04110 - Caribean CeramicTile, 04113 - Narvaez, Edwin, 04117 Simon, Michael, 04119 - Cintron, Milton, 04133 - gonzalez, jeanne, 04145 - Torres, Josue, 04315 Brown, Robert, 04431 - Narvaez, Rois, 04525 - Raising knowledge academy, 04525 – Ariam Cotto, 05106 - Singh, Dave, 05118 Gonzalez, Ronald, 05137 - Velez, Jeremy, 05147 - Perez, Xenia, 05160 - Rentas, Brandon, 05243 Houston, Patricia, 05258 - Rachel, Vivian, 05337 - Cruz, Melba, 05348 - Tobon, Walter, 05364 - Bustos, Francisco, 05435 Andino, Edward, 21621 - Ramirez, Giovanni 1800 TEN POINT LN – ORLANDO, FL 32837 – AT 9:40 AM: 0121 - Torres, Carlos, 0163 - Willridge, Teroy, 0213 - Stokes, Nicholis, 0255 - Morales, Wilfredo, 0300 - Arribas, Marisol, 0304 EKTHUVAPRANEE, KARLA, 0306 - Klein, Michael, 1009 Morales, Nancy, 1021 - Reichley, James, 1042 - Amezquita, Kristian, 1045 - Montes, Dalys, 1067 Sayago, Manuel, 1068 - Irizarry, Noemi, 2017 - Philips, Carl, 2030 - Olivencia, Daisy, 2041 Dean, Mark, 2045 - Richmond, Marcus, 2070 - Davis, Antoinio, 3014 - Mendoza, Leyda, 3033 Bernabe, Marilyn, 5023 - Tenorio, Galo, 5030 - Restrepo, Tatiana, 5031 - Hernandez, Kimberly, 7012 - Gibbs, Martha, 7029 - Colon, Christian, 7044 - Martinez, Manuel, 7066 - Henderson, Timothy, 7085 - Rivera, Yvette, 7090 - Abreu, Rafael, 7113 - Felce, Alejandro, 7142 - Rodriguez, Jose, 7153 Duchac, Neil 2783 N. JOHN YOUNG PKWY – KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – AT 10:50 AM: 1002 - ESTREMERA, MARIA, 1010 - THOMPSON, PHILLIP, 1024 - BREEDEN, RUBY, 1053 - SKENES, CARL, 1056 - CROUSE, KAHLA, 1064 - TORRES, RAYMOND, 1072 - BRADY, DAISY, 1110 ANDERSON, GEORGE, 11116 - GOODMAN, MICHELLE, 1113 - TOLEDO, ALEXIS, 11207 - VIGUIE, DEBRA, 11212

ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017 ● orlandoweekly.com

- GREGORY, PATRICIA, 11308 KEEFER, MYRA, 1157 - VELEZ JR, DAVID, 1201 - CULTRERA, CARLOS, 12014 - FERNANDEZ, STEPHANIE, 12025 - GRAY, THOMAS, 12063 - WILLOUGHBY, DERRICK, 12112 - WHITE, RACHAEL, 12202 - CARTAGENA, LUIS, 12306 - MARIN, DIEGO, 12312 - GREER, RICHARD, 12406 - WILSON, BRIAN, 12414 - MELTON HEINE, SHAUNDA, 12421 - CARDERO, JASMINE, 12503 - SANCHEZ, ARACELIS, 1260 - CORDOVI, DAVID, 12605 - JARVIS, REBECA, 12614 FILHO, JOAQUIM, 12615 - VALENTIN, SHEILA, 201 - BROWN, MICHAEL, 293 - KALLOO, ANNETTE, 306 - HACKER, ALTEREESE, 343 - DUQUE, JULIAN, 403 - TIRADO, ARMANDO, 472 - OCONNOR, SHEZWAE, 502 - RAMIREZ, EDGAR, 513 - MABSON, LAVERNE, 592 - MAILE, RUSELL, 611 - SMITH, GARY, 706 - JOHNSON, DARLENE, 712 - MORALES, CARMEN, 907 - SCHREIBER, MELISSA, 915 SEONATH, RAVINDRANAUTH, 966 - PERSAUD, KENNETH 1701 DYER BLVD, KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – AT 10:00 AM: 0009 - BAEZ, SUSINDY, 0041 - SALDANHA, ROBERTA, 0043 WALKER, CAROL, 0045 - BIELE, FRANCISCO, 0046 - Santana, Denise, 0085 - Taczli, Philip, 0089 - THOMAS, VALERIE, 0090 - RODRIGUEZ SOTO, SANDRA, 0095 - Culley, Jazzmin, 0105 Carris, Justin, 0145 - PATE, PAUL, 0153 - Bowles, Robert, 0160 - WOODS, DRUVONDA, 0169 - Sanders, Janie, 0308 - Santos, Emiliano, 1016 - CARBONE, ERIKA, 1017 - BATCHLEOR, PAUL, 1024 – Estabrooks, Diane Lynne, 2006 - Mcelory, Karen Aneia, 2012 - Church, Matthew, 2051 - Mincer, Samantha, 2081 - Wynter, Nadia, 2086 - Sosa, Marisol, 2093 - MANANA MOJICA, KRIZIA, 2099 - RUIZ, AMANDA, 2110 - Paulino, Luis, 4014 - Almodovar, Fernando, 4017 - Joseph, Chantal, 4030 - Burgess, tiffeny, 4040 - Sanchez, Joseph, 6002 GEBREHEWET, AZMERA, 6042 - Rix, Jessica, 6066 - Williamson, Marc, 6072 - ORTIZ, MARIBEL, 6073 - Martinez, Joanelly, 6076 Kissimee Family Mission Inc, 6080 - Johnson, Brian, 6084 - Brooks, Noreen, 6085 - CRUZ, DAISY, 6126 - Rangel, Glaucia, 6128 MCEACHERN, KIMBERLY, 6146 - Upperman, Linda, 6156 - Raup, Emily, 6158 - WALKER, CAROL, 6176 - Gonzales, Yesenia, 6198 McQueen, Sherri, 6201 - Ruiz, Denise, 6209 - COLBERT, ROBERT, 6222 - YEAGER, TURINA, 7219A - Tazama, Gilner, 8013 - Diaz, Maribel, 8061 - Cortes, Bonny, 8072 - Rubio, Jaime, 8078 - Torres, Sophia, 8079 - ROBERTS, PARDEEP, 8080 - Sharrer, Renate 951 S. JOHN YOUNG PKWY – KISSIMMEE, FL 34741 – AT 10:10 AM: 1002 - RIVERA, CARLOS, 1011 - Nicholson, Thomas, 1013 - Pinckney, Alethia, 1022 - Cepeda, Tomara, 1027 - King, Ronald, 1123 - Francis, Letriece, 1204 - Maldonado, Diana, 1212 - Lawes, Avis, 1236 - Gordon, Rohan, 1308 - Riddell, Brett, 1316 - Walker, Jacquana, 1504 - Soto, Nereida, 1510 - Perez, Jennifer, 1511 - M & J Pool Services of Florida, 1511 – Jose Roman, 1522 - Torres, Jasmin, 1525 Denny, Kurt, 1540 - Rodriguez, Angel, 1611 - Karkosky, Robert, 1700 - Palma, Rossner, 1711 Wilson, William, 1714 - EUSTACE, JOHN, 1806 - Ferguson, Marlon, 2051 - Michelson, Michael, 2060 Santillanes, Ruth, 2071 - Bennett,

Tartriequa, 2101 - Alvarado, Silvio, 2107 - Wilson, Shauna, 2166 Rose, David, 2174 - FISHER, PATRICK, 2184 - Jameson Hudson, Veronica, 2200 - Rogers, Malinda, 2227 - Cruz, Reina, 2318 - Amador, Victor, 2332 - Green, Nathalie 227 SIMPSON RD - KISSIMMEE, FL 34744 –AT 10:20 AM: 012 Hodge, Kocheta, 036 - Santiago, Pablito, 045 - Kingdom Restoration World, 070 - Barbee, Rachel, 104 Denson, Danielle, 224 - Rodriguez, Katherine, 233 - Mills, William, 246 - Serrano, Jorge, 263 - Carde, Rafael, 265 - Poueriet, Raziel, 268 - Briscoe, Nigel, 309 - Betances, Mayline, 324 - Inoa, Jenny, 340 Melendez Lozada, Geysha, 354 - Ferguson, Allen, 419 - Williams, Lilkeasha, 422 - Acevedo Jr., Ceferino, 434 - Martinez, Ingrid, 452 - Garcia, Edwin, 532 - Castro, Endel, 540 - Mclaurin, Kekan, 549 - White, Sonora, 557 - Persons, Justin, 580 - Jackson, Charles, 610 - Blanchard, Patrick, 620 Burgos, Orlando, 706 - Harrison, Ashley, 710 - Williams, Jimmy, 722 - Arraiga, Herminia, 826 - Coutou, Rupert, 832 - Sinclair, Daniel, 838 - Soto Ayala, Angel, 865 Uribe Carvajal, Juan, 882 - Higgs, Herbert, 890 - Schooler, Delia, RV3 - Thomas, Sumpter. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ORANGE COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISION: 03 CASE NO: DP15-438 IN THE INTEREST OF MINOR CHILDREN: I.R.G DOB: 10/12/2007, E.C.C. DOB: 11/22/2011 SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF ADVISORY HEARING FOR TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS STATE OF FLORIDA TO: Tracy Cox, Address Unknown A Petition for Termination of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this court regarding the above-referenced child. You are hereby commanded to appear before Judge Timothy Shea on July 5, 2017 at 11:00 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. 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 MIGHT LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS AS A PARENT TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION ATTACHED TO THIS NOTICE. YOU MAY BE HELD IN CONTEMPT OF COURT IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Orlando, Orange County, Florida this 25th day of May, 2017. This summon has been issued at the request of: Nancy A. Robak, Florida Bar No.: 88796, Senior Attorney for Florida Department of Children and Family. nancy. robak@myflfamilies.com; CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT BY:/S/ DEPUTY CLERK (court seal).

NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON JUNE 22, 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED. 28075- 4729 S Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, FL, 32839—AT 9:30AM: 0107 - Fauntleroy, James, 0118 - Torez, Yaira, 0130 - Hunter, Paula, 0144 - Miranda, Kim, 0151 - Akande, Adewale, 0153 - Anderson, Tiffaney, 0158 - Charles, Kevin, 0202 - Laureano, Keymilis, 0206 - Buchana, Jo Ann, 0213 - Adams, Aneisha, 0226 - De Jesus Rodriguez, Felix, 0231 - Johnson, Jermaine, 0238 - Rios, Gladys, 0242 - Thompson I I, Keith, 0311 - Ousley, Baretta, 0312 - Shield Jr, Ken, 0315 - Brisbane, Harold, 0324 - Bridgewater, Maruko, 0336 - Baskins, Robert (Bob), 0349 - Fraser, Christopher, 0354 - Gardner-oliver, Gina, 0414 - White, Estella, 0435 - Williams, Edith, 0506 - Key, ANDRIA, 0507 - Nichols, Edwin, 0513 - Cameron, Noreen, 0514 - Brown, Telisha, 0604 - Maragh, Courtney, 0627 - Trice, Germaine, 0701 - Mack, Lillian, 0711 - Knight, Mary, 0733 Rayo, Marielena, 0806 - Longley, Chelsia, 0834 - Jordan, Glynn, 0843 - Vassale, Joseph, 0847 Strouse, Ashley, 0903 - Jackson, Santana, 0904 - Delancy, Marie Renee, 0905 - Pollard, Tatyanna, 0906 - Mayfield, Dwight, 09105 Martinez, Jellitza, 09107 - Martin Federal Credit Union, 09108 Dangleben, Paul, 09125 - Dais, Julius, 0926 - Sublet, Glender, 0932 - Scott, Tonjla, 0944 - Parks, Michelle, 0949 - Mitchell, Roger, 0983 - Kline, Jason, 0996 - Munoz, Abdias, 0997 - Jumpp, Janelle, 1008 - Yarber, Kelly, 1012 - West, Latrese, 1019 - Arguelles Tirado, Erline, 1050 - Saint Fort, Flavia, 1063 - Cadely, Dunel, 1064 Burke, Kaishma, 1068 - Milhomme, Manes, 1086 - Smith, Athena, 1108 - Langston, Geraldine, 1116 Mcneil, Queenesther, 1119 - Fryer, Marlin, 1122 - Scholz, Rebecca, 1149 - Mcdaniel, Keisha, 1161 Caldwell, Johnnie, 1167 - Briskey, Bradley, 1205 - Hadden, Jason, 1208 - Deas, Angel, 1217 - Rochelien, Rosette, 1236 - Duverceau, Yves, 1244 - Johnson, Shavon, 1249 - Bracey, Phillippa, 1253 - Felix, Ebony, 1274 - Alvarez, Marilyn 25454 - 235 E Oak Ridge Road, Orlando, FL, 32809AT 10:30AMA105 - Brooks Jr., Albert, A117 -


Legal, Public Notices MARTINEZ, JUAN, A125 - Henry, Sandra, A144 - Bryan, Pearl, A146 - Anderson, David, A150 - Spence, Carl, A157 - Sills, Kari, B205 Calderon, Jose, B245 - Bellamy, Shuantae, C303 - Robles, Minerva, C312 - Hernandez, Meliza, D409 - Rivera, Jennie, D418 Winn, Jaleesa, E506 - Regis, Felix, E518 - Dorcely, Ervens, E529 - Hylton, Candace, E533 - Lewis, April, F636 - Marcelin, Immaculee, G702 - Velazquez, Lionel, G711 - Diaz, Randy, H801 - Francois, Carole, H806 - Burnes Bowles, Kimberly, J013 - Guidry, Charles, J017 - Jackson, Steven, J019 Brown, James, J026 - Bazalar, Francisco, K109 - Hill, Tommie, K110 - Dorsey, Errick, K111 - Rigg, Taj, K114 - Munoz, Abdias, K120 - Smith, Labrina, L214 - Ortiz, Christian, L232 - Berdiel, Waykiria, M317 - AAtlantis Delivery Services, N401 - Coleman, Brittany, N403 - Pacheco, Miriam, O515 - Cruz, Juan, P005 - Rodgers, Ronn, P009 - Henderson, Michael, P046 - Laurent, Matheus, P053 - Perez, Juan Carlos 20711- 1801 W Oakridge Rd Orlando, FL 32809 AT- 11:30AM: B020 - Tejada, Jennifer, B041 Oliver, Barbara, B042 - Tejada, Jennifer, B054 - Rincon, Andres, C005 - Marc, Forecia, C031 Barner, Tonia, C048 - Breedlove, Obrian, D007 - Santos, Walter, D025 - Jean-Louis, Wilda, D039 - Calloway, Brennicka, D049 Jacques, Scardy, E012 - Phillips, Millie, E022 - Aldrich, Barbara, E032 - Lavache, Gina, F012 Gresham, Brittany, G012 - Garcia, Louis, G013 - Joseph, Marc, G027 - Chappell, Micahel, G043 - De Melo Faria, Sandro, H013 Ryan, John, H025 - Washington, Raniskia, H027 - Pierre, Mirtha, H028 - Rivera, Felisha, J002 Ulneus, Rosemaine, J003 - Brown, Angela, J027 - Svacha, Mathew, J032 - Brown, Tanzy, J038 - Anthony, Brandon, J040 - Radiano, Kimberly, J076 - Deverney, Vivian, J082 - Matos, Diana, J083 - Rodriguez, Bernadette, J090 - Roman Borrero, Javier, J101 - Castro, William, J118 - Danza, Michelle, J121 - Terameaux, Kimmy, J124 - Best, Ernest, J129 - Anty, Rebecca, J158 - Weidman, Tammi, J160 - Rivera, Sonia, J169 - Rivera, Eddie, J172 - Matos, Nubia, K001 - Hernandez Gonzalez, Geraldo Reinaldo, K011 - Peters, Gregory, K012 - Kleinberger, Gary, K019 Blanco, Gustavo, K020 - Carter, Kathryn, K036 - Ellis, Jadae, K048 - Serafin-Jimenez, Augurio, K053 - Wilson, Victor, K057 - Hodgson, Jayson, K064 - Tejada, Jennifer, K065 - Ortiz, Luz, K071 - Santiago, Lorna, K083 - Mortimer, Gilson, K087 - Catala, Monica, K099 Theodore, Edeline, K101 - Catala Nieves, Edwin, K109 - Danza, Michelle 24303- 1313 45th Street, Orlando, FL 32839-AT 12:30PM: A105 - Fairley, Arantes, A117 Williams, James, A118 - Anderson, Stacy, A123 - Similien, Diemerite,

A136 - Love, Charmayne, A192Lesperance, Frantz, B205 - Simon, Kyle, B209 - Wells, Marquita, B216 - Walton, Alexander, B217 Williams, Lorraine, B219 - Smith, Myeisha, B225 - Johnson, Lynda, B230 - Monroe, Cy, B244 - Singleton, Christopher, B254 - Coker, Leslie, C302 - Roman, Evangelina, C316 - Colin, Jean, C328 - Pierre, Emmanuael, C329 - Lawrence, Khanisha, C381 - Mundy, Phillip, C394 - King, Kanesha, D403 - Neely, Donna, D404 - Lalanne, Marie, D409 - Woodson, Lesine, D421 - Hair, Jennifer, D435 - Alberto, Francisca, E519 - Abrams, Troy, E520 - Williams, Kiya, E525 - Williams, Frederick, E528 - Jackson Jr, Charlie, E568 - Tillman, Tory, F608 - Claire Saint, Emmanuel, F630 - Simon, Karen Ingrid, F640 - Brown, Randy, G710 - Fraser, Christopher, G722 Richardson, Michael, H804 - Miller, Samson, H820 - Bryant, Hernisha, H838 - Marshall, Mae, J901 Honore, Nicole, J907 - Mercier, Martine, J915 - Perez, Madeline.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that on Extra Space Storage will sell at public auction at the storage facilities listed below, to satisfy the lien of the owner, personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the following locations: June 28th, 2017 at the times and locations listed below. The personal goods stored therein by the following: 12:30p.m. at the Extra Space Storage facility located at: 11971 Lake Underhill Rd. Orlando, Fl. 32825 (407) 380-0046 #706-Beverly Rodriguez-Bins,To tes,Clothes,Wheelchair,Mattress #1327-Kendra Branker- household goods,furniture #308-Thomas Lewinski-furniture,household items,boxes,electronics #618Gardy Delva-bed,dresser,full mattress,clothes #552-Alexis Sanchez-furniture, household items, fridge,clothes Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale. 2001 AUDI VIN# WAUEH64B21N037730 1996 TOYOTA VIN# JT2AC52L3T0197890 To be sold at auction at 8:00AM on JULY 10tH, 2017, at 2500 N. Forsyth rd, Orlando Fl 32807. Around The Clock Towing inc.

NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON JUNE 22, 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT & FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED. 1080 E ALTAMONTE DR, ALTAMONTE SPRINGS FL AT 9:30 AM: B021 - Quiles, Ilene, B071 - Johnson, Amber, B116 - Lechtenberg, Samuel, B145 Awada, Steve, B161 - Richardson, Danielle, C015 - Bryson, Alisha, C053 - Holt, Jelena, C054 - walters, jarvis, C067 - Hill, Jasmyn, C073 - Congress, Sebastian, C079 - Davis, Katrina, C082 Lorne, Monique, D018 - Sanchez, Jesus, D031 - Totaro, Timothy, D061 - Ruehlman, Joanna 310 W CENTRAL PARKWAY, ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, FL, 32714 AT 9:45 AM: 0008 - Livanos, Anthony, 0318 - Fleming, Helen, 0351 - Smith, Earle, 0491 - Rivera, Jo, 1017 - Harvell, Tonya, 3010 - Rountree Jr., Roosevelt, 3028 Lincoln, Roseen, 3055 - Needham, Roger, 3064 - Acosta, Priscilla, 4013 - Caraballo, Iliana, 5015 Garcia, Jose 2800 W STATE ROAD 434 , LONGWOOD , FL, 32779 AT 10:00 AM: 0005 - Graziano, Lisa, 0344 - Angevine, Michael, 0423 - MELENDEZ, PEDRO, 0675 Smith, Lamont, 0702 - Dennis, Billy, 0750 - Smiley, Marshell, 0816 - Scott, Kevin, 0930 - Chavez, Ricardo 521 S STATE ROAD 434, ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, FL, 32714 AT 10:15 AM: 3006 - Consulate Health Care, 3030 - Colon, John, 4006 - Branch, Suzanne, 5025 - Bays, Shawn, 5046 - Vallejo, Caleb, 5051 - Johnson, Dora, 5127 - Sumner, Kristine 455 S HUNT CLUB BLVD, APOPKA, FL, 32703 AT 10:30 AM: 1021 - Aviles, Lisa, 3001 - Henshilwood, David, 4006 Rivera, Jeffrey, 4062 - Jones, Michelle, 4079 - Lee, Connie, 5023 - Kinslow, Sally, 5052 - Creamer, Tara, 6217 - Shrock, David 2431 S ORANGE BLOSSOM TRAIL, APOPKA, FL, 32703 AT 10:45 AM: B035 - Clark, Shakeana, C016 - Chatigny, Betty, C021 - Brailsford, Janelle, D076 - Willcox, Jason, G002 - Hardy, Betty, NA03 - Miller, Carl, NA04 - Colon, Alberto, U002 - Harkness, Shannon, U031 - Palmer, Elizabeth, U035 - Perez, David, V016 - Campbells, Jacqueline 108 W MAIN ST. APOPKA , FL, 32703 AT 11:00 AM: 0124 - Durham, Arika, 0217 - Daniels, Raekwon, 0311 - Hart, Jeannie,

0514 - Brown, Weldon, 0522 LANE, WENDY, 0603 - Helton, Lacye, 0613 - Lawrence, Siteria, 0621 - Lewis, Brittany, 1103 Owens, Candice, 1355 - Knight, Angie, 1412T - Soto, Martha, 1708 - Tyler, Corinthian, 1726 - Beckett, Rackel 8255 SILVER STAR ROAD ORLANDO, FL 32818 AT 11:15 AM: 1004 - Johnson, Tamara, 1110 - Chance, Lillie, 1407 - Wright, Rebekah, 1408 - Beavers, Dashe, 1444 - Holmes, Quiana, 1606 - Zumaeta, Ada, 2026 - Guirand, Jean, 2047 - vazquez, christian, 2136 - Tiwari, Narupa, 2259 - Lobban, Desmond, 2260 - Clark, Arielle, 2331 - donaldson, nicole 3150 N. HIAWASSEE RD ORLANDO, FL 32818 AT 11:30 AM: 1203 - Mcclendon, Dee, 1205 - Richberg, Solomon, 1206 - Risper, Beverly, 1407 - Bienaime Jr., Franklin, 1413 - Formor, Pamela, 1705 - Neish, Morise, 1814 - Lovett, Kenneth, 1815 - Richards, Duane, 1830 - Mayan, Iekramullah, 1907A - Johnson, Jamie, 2104 - Wallace, Denise, 2200 Little, Miranda, 2217 - Hall, Alisha, 2302 - Hastings, Nouchelle, 2524 - Simmons, Adriane, 2629 - Neal, Trenitrice 6770 SILVER STAR ROAD ORLANDO, FL 32818 AT 11:45AM:, 0005 - Perfecting Praise Ministries, Inc., 0029 - Desaussure, Charlie, 0033 - Auguste, Rubert, 0035 Dawson, Yonique, 0057 - Talley, Pamela, 0078 - Jones, Lazeta, 0094 - Hinton, Bethany, 0119 - Pruitt, Amina, 0128 - shackelford, christopher, 0173 - Griffin, Ivy, 0198 - Service, Damian, 0208 - Norfleet, Naporschia, 0236 - Brown, Latreveous, 0243 - Johnson, Latoria, 0308 - Leeks, Rodriguez, 0310 - Harris, Takita, 0314 - farrow, Shaniqua, 0324 - Jules, Martine, 0332 - Elliott, Derrick, 0335 - Thomas, Veronica, 0338 - Wheeler, Chiquita, 0340 - Oliver, Yolanda, 0358 - Stuart, Chris, 0382 - Lampkin, Latoya, 0404 - Jackson, Shonte, 0412 Hill, Alicia, 0471 - Williams, Tatisa, 0494 - Devitt, Michael, 0503 - Herring, Yvondia, 0505 - BALDWIN, SAMUEL, 0506 - Rodriguez, Esdras, 0510 - rodriguez, Naomi, 0512 - West, Kevin, 0527 - Roberts, Patrick, 0546 - Mims, Destiny, 0598 - Keating, Robert, 0618 - Rogers, Derrick, 0623 - Jones, Shenita, 0723 - Rojas, Jessica, 0857 - Cutliff, Tiffany, 0861 - rodriguez, Naomi, 0870 - Oelhoffen, Kam, 0897 - Johnson, Tangela 0921 - Hopkins, George.

NOTICE OF SALE PS ORANGECO, INC. PERSONAL PROPERTY CONSISTING OF COUCHES, BEDS, TV’S, CLOTHES, BOXES OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS & OTHER PERSONAL ITEMS USED IN THE HOME, OFFICE OR GARAGE WILL BE SOLD FOR CASH OR OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF AT PUBLIC SALES ON JUNE 23RD 2017 AT LOCATIONS & TIMES INDICATED BELOW, TO SATISFY OWNERS LIEN FOR RENT

& FEES DUE IN ACCORDANCE WITH FLORIDA STATUES, SELF STORAGE ACT, SECTIONS 83.806 AND 83.807. ALL ITEMS OR SPACES MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE AT THE TIME OF SALE. ORIGINAL RESALE CERTIFICATE FOR EACH SPACE PURCHASED IS REQUIRED. 08714- 8149 Aircenter Court, Orlando, FL 32809-7414 AT9:30AM- 1011 - Mayo, Chrystal, 1115 - Passalacqua, Mirtha, 1161 - Difazio, Joseph, 1168 - Colon, Luis, 1175 - Heslin, Charlotte, 2031 - Perez, Maria, 2054 - Labbe, Naica, 2064 - Williams, Barnett, 2106 - Torres, Geomares, 2136 - heifetz, avee, 2183 - Ortiz, Luz, 2190 - Rabassi, Rick, 2214 - Okamoto, Michael, 2248 - Perez Correa, Luz, 2256 - Morris, Kristen, 3010 - Johnson, Donna Lea, 3050 - Howe, Thomas, 3058 - Watkins, Timothy, 4045 - Reece, Thomas, 6002 - Satterfield, Antonio, 6010 - Matthews, Ms, T, 6114 - Acree, Christina 08726- 4801 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL, 32822-2316 AT09:45AM- 0112 - Melton, Donnie, 0118 - Hurlburt, Sebron, 0142 Duclos, Nadeige, 0150 - Larribeau, Annelle, 0151 - CLEVELAND, MELANIE, 0180 - Stevens Jr., James S., 0192 - Pittman, Robert, 0202 - Young, Olando, 0215 Biggs, Keith, 0216 - sanchez, felix, 0219 - Lasher, Parker, 0245 - Garces, Luis, 0253 - Acevedo, Luis, 0256 - Acosta, Laura, 0260 - Kinard, Alyson, 0296 - Jean, Shadee, 1021 - Campbell, Melanie, 2006 - Davis, Kismet, 3026 - Winkle, Tracy, 3074 - Kuhn, Donna, 5012- Christina Manous, 6019 - Turpin, Shannone, 6021 Areizaga, Anthony, 6023 - Taylor, Taronda, 6026 - Dan Casto Wallcovering, 7010 - Ruiz, Maria, 7011 - Ruiz, Jorge, 7056 - Dela Fuente, Nancy, 7064 - Garcia, Wilda, 7072 - Vargas, Fernando, 7087 Reese, Rosalyn, 7109 - Santiago Santiago, Gisselle, 7116 - Mendez, Stephanie, 7129 - Booth, Zachary, 7149 - Rodriguez, Diana, 8005 - Ross, Jimena, 8012 - Ruiz, Maria, 8029 - Butler, Victor, 8123 - Sanchez, Felix, 8138 - winkle, tracy, 8152 - Becker, Jonathan, 8185 - Rojas, Hector, 9003 - Tracz, Olinda 28084- 2275 S Semoran Blvd, Orlando, FL, 32822-2703 AT 10:00AM- A108 - Jeffries, Donald, A109 - Padilla, Jessica, A128 Davis, Clifford, A130 - Wilcox, Kimberly, A135 - Williams, Lynette, B116 - Lerggios, Roberto, B118 - Cobb, Brenda, B121 - Belcher, Grant, B135 - Cromie, Tim, B136 - donohoe, Thomas, B145 - Mole, Frances, B152 - Smith, Marisha, B167 - Jordan, Terrance, B170 - Parker, William, B181 - Martin, Charles, B201 - Flanagan, Christy, B203 - Tanner, Janis, B220 donohoe, Thomas, B224 - Conley, Christopher, C117 - guerra, luis, C132 - Louise, Nicole, C148 HILL, DOUGLAS, C153 - Ranson, Clark, C160 - Hibi, Saori, C162 Phillips, Renee, C195D - Martinez, Tricia, C195I - Cesareo, Samantha, C199G - Blackwell, Elizabeth, C208 - Shomefun, George, C209 - LAMERE, ALYSSA, C211E -

orlandoweekly.com

Walker, Nifisha, C212E - Weber, Jazmin, C230C - Wright, Danny 20179- 903 S. Semoran Blvd. Orlando FL, 32807 at 10:30AM: A001 - Brooks, Vertreca, B001 Lozado, Susana, B004 - Oquendo, Judith, B018 - ZAYAS, ANNA, B020 - Andino, Annette, B023 Faraldo, Jessica, B048 - Landron, Natalia, C004 - Clum, Vicki, C014 - Marmol, Steve, C015 - TEJADA, MARITZA, C022 - Munoz Centeno, Manuel, C028 - Calderon, Isializ, C046 - Holland, Columbus, C064 - Bishop, Scott, C079 - Taft, Andre, C081 - SHABAZZ, RAHMAAR, D002 - Romero, cristino, D013 - Wagner, Tonya, D014 Correa, Brenda, D026 - Cardenal, Elizabeth, D027 - Conway, Leon, D035 - Rink, Kathryn, D038 Orange County Democratic Exec. Cte., D042 - Ray, Lamar, D057 - Romero, Ramona, D083 - Black, Austin, D097 - Kolljeski, Jerry, D105 - Roman, Nikos, D108 Gonzalez, Hector, D120 - Newlan, Cynthia, D128 - Richardson, Jean- Louis, D161 - Perrone, Danna, D165 - Gonzalez-Jimenez, Zuelika, D183 - Kipp, Ronald, D191 - Moradel, Carol, D203 Benjamin, Danny, D208 - ZAYAS, DANA, D213 - Fariello, Jason, D227 - Spruell, Shelley, D228 Slayton, Victoria, D230 - Zapata, Osman, E009 - Breland, Sada, E024 - Strader, Travis, E034 - Sanchez Jr, Ricardo, E042 AGOSTO, LILLIAN, E045 - Arroyo, Pauline, E082 - Mcrae, Channing, E093 - Ramos, Luis, E094 - Hagy, Susan, E099 - Connolly, Madeline, E101 - Bonilla, Victor 25850- 2525 E Michigan St , Orlando , FL, 32806-5039 AT 11:30AM: 1027 - Melendez, Wanda, 2010 - Porter, Denise, 2026 - Crouch, Fred, 2037 - Elliot, Susan, 4011 - Smith, Benjamin, 4012 - King, Neshby, 4029 Rivera, Angel, 4033 - Zeek, Jason, 4037 - Atkinson, Jon, 5057 - Davis, Craig, 5337 - Barrow, James, 6219 - Bohanna, Gwen, 6306 - Hayman, Quinn, 6406- Sodexo C/O Janet Bennett, 6432 - Mitchell, Tiffany, 6449 - Nerette, Jean, Emmanuel, 6501 - Pinkney, Prince, 6502 BJanes, Beth, 6518 - Stewart, David, 6522 - Maxius, Viergeline, 6529 - Smart, Judy, 6615 Modeste, Julian, 6631 - Murphy, Steve, 6643 - Ryder, Laurie.

NOTICE OF SALE Vehicles will be sold as is, no warranty. Seller reserves the right to refuse any bid. Terms of bids are cash only. Buyer must have funds on hand at time of sale: 2006 CHEVROLET KL1TD666X6B673897 1975 OLDSMOBILE 3J57K5R168515 2003 SORENTO KNDJD733635052487 To be sold at auction at 10:00 a.m. on June 30, 2017, 9881 RECYCLE CENTER RD. ORLANDO, FL 32824 New Generation Towing

JUNE 14-20, 2017 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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ORLANDO WEEKLY ● JUNE 14-20, 2017 ● orlandoweekly.com

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JUNE 14-20, 2017 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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