Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Your Evening Sift



Go Heat. Here's your evening Sift.

A- Jeff Eats finds that one can find some good chow at a few select gas stations in South Florida.
Let me make this one short and to the point…Panna Cafe Express is a “homerun”…The joint has a menu loaded with breakfast stuff, salads, wraps, subs, burgers, baked goods, empanadas, cachitos. A recent “outing” had me trying…1/2 lb cheeseburger/french fries/beverage ($8.49), tuna salad wrap ($6.59), beef empanada (2-$1.49), turkey sub ($8.49)…now, I may be going out on a limb here, but the burger was as good as the ones I get at Five Guys. The wrap and sub were delicious–same goes for those beef empanadas.

The beautiful thing here…tank of gas, upscale car wash, great food.
B- Check out the procession of cyclists that The Miami Bike Scene got on video at Friday's Critical Mass.
Close to 500 cyclists came out to the Miami Critical Mass ride this past Friday evening making it the largest group thus far since its inception in 2007.
C- The new Marlins stadium has a bunch of space for bikes, according to Transit Miami, but how will they get there?
Personally, I rode from Brickell to the stadium site this weekend via NW South River Drive and NW 4th street. It is mostly a pleasant ride of less than 20 minutes through leafy residential areas of Little Havana. Of course, there are a few perilous intersections with little consideration given to pedestrians or cyclists along the route. But overall, a designated bike route seems entirely feasible on a variety of roadways to link the densest areas of Miami with the stadium. I can even envision a Marlins ambassador leading a group ride from Downtown/Brickell during day games. What a perfect way for the Marlins to promote the LEED certification of the new ballpark as well as provide a fun and hassle-free way for their local fans to get to the game!
D- Eater Miami has the details on Coral Gables Restaurant Week.

E- Beached Miami says you should have been there for the Bonnie “Prince” Billy and The Cairo Gang performance at Radio-Active Records last night. Videos back them up.
Taking down cans of Modelo Especial throughout his set, the Kentuckian shared the stage with helluva guitarist Emmett Kelly (aka The Cairo Gang) and singer Angel Olsen, whose deeply wronged voice and 1000-yard stare infused the informal, unmiked performance with an intensity that eludes description.
F- Coconut Grove Grapevine considers the possibility that food trucks are losing their popularity in the Grove.
Some of the Sony and Crispin-Porter people tell me that they stopped going to the trucks that show up weekly, also because of price. It seems that local restaurants are catching on and offering more food for less money.
G- After reading the latest at The Reid Report, you have to wonder how many more times Governor Rick Scott will intentionally and maliciously violate the Constitutional rights of Floridians.


.

SFDB's A Few Moments @ The New Era South Florida Graffiti Expo

Saturday night was the regularly scheduled FAT Village Art Walk in Fort Lauderdale but this month's event included a few extras including the New Era South Florida Graffiti Expo (NEGE). The NEGE took the bland and dreary rear wall space of the FAT Village warehouse area that faces the railroad tracks just south of Sistrunk Boulevard and turned them into one big canvas for graffiti artists. A couple food trucks showed up, some skate boarders rolled in and some rappers laid down some rhymes in what turned out to be a thoroughly unique South Florida Saturday night.








SFDB Question Of The Day


We don't know a lot about the circumstances of the shooting or anything about the victim and whether he/she was part of the Urban Beach Weekend crowd, but the question that definitely deserves some discussion here at SFDB this morning is...

Should Urban Beach Weekend continue?


My answer: I think Urban Beach Weekend is roughly comparable to Bike Week in Daytona Beach in terms of the crowd that police have to handle and the uptick in crime stats that the community experiences during the event. I can almost betcha that there are some locals that leave the area during that week because of the mayhem.

For example...
Police have focused on dropping crime during Bike Week, cutting arrests from more than 500 in 2005, to 419 last year. Outlaws members have been accused of drug and weapons crimes, even murder and a firebombing in Florida in the 90s.
But yet no one is calling for the end of Bike Week.

But for those who are saying enough is enough, tell me, how do you keep Urban Beach Weekend from happening? People are going to continue to come whether it has a name or not.

Bottom line: The City of Miami Beach and its residents are going to have to learn to cope with it in whatever way they can.



-photo via Miami Beach 411


.

SFDB Morning Chuckle

This might come in handy this morning...


































 
According to the makers of “Ostrich,” the pillow/cushion/bed/garment hybrid sports a “soothing cave-like interior” that “shelters and isolates our head and hands” to create a work-friendly “micro environment in which to take a warm and comfortable power nap at ease.”

-via The Daily Wh.at


.

The Cooler



South Florida's mainstream media is still on vacation this morning so there's not a lot here for the Cooler. Enjoy.

A- Herald: This about sums up Urban Beach Weekend.
“We were not expecting this,” said Madine Wiegand, visiting from Frankfurt, Germany. “It has been loud and people have been really rude. There have been way too many people. But the weather is warm so we will definitely be coming back.”
B-Herald: Fear the Cheesecake Factory!
Restaurants in the Shops at Pembroke Gardens want to block an incoming Cheesecake Factory for fear it will take a bite out of their business.

The mall’s current tenants include big chains like Brio Tuscan Grille and Fuddruckers, with just a few smaller operations.

Still, out of the shopping center’s nine full-service restaurants, six — the Village Tavern, Brio, Fuddruckers, Ra Sushi Bar Restaurant, Stir Crazy and The Pub — are worried, said realtor Jeffery R. Anderson.

“This is bad news!” wrote Marcelo Montalván, president of Fuddruckers for Broward and Miami-Dade counties, in a letter to Duke. “A restaurant with this type of volume will negatively impact all of us who operate as restaurants. We have nothing against the Cheesecake Factory, but we do have a lot to say against our business being reduced and our guests’ parking being taken away.”
C- Herald: Morin.

D- Palm Beach Post: But certain media outlets will continue to say it.
With hurricane season starting Wednesday, and following a 5-year stretch in which no hurricanes struck Florida, the pundits have spun the wheel of fortune and determined that the state — South Florida — Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast — your house — definitely will get a hurricane this year.

Predicting we’re “due” is as irresponsible as predicting we’re not.

Whether a storm struck last year, or not for a long time, has absolutely no effect on whether it will strike, or not strike, this year. None. The weather gods don’t work that way.

.

Your Morning Sift



Good morning.

I don't like Tuesdays when they take on all the characteristics of a Monday. Here's your back-to-work morning Sift.

A- Random Pixels posts a number of comments that he allegedly took from some kind of law enforcement discussion website prior to Urban Beach Weekend.

B- Blogging Black Miami remembers Will "Da Real One" Bell, who was recently gunned down in North Miami.
I only met Bell once several years ago. He was a cool guy. The spoken word community was devastated. Friends and those he mentored poured out their hearts on social media outlets. Mainstream media captured his tragic death from local news to CNN International.

Several fans showed respect for Bell at a candlelight vigil today. Of course there was candlelight, spoken word and tears. Will Bell overcome many obstacles in his life to provide an outlet for poets and, ironically, encourage young people to stop the violence.
C- Key West's USCG Mohawk provides some unique Memorial Day memories for The Green Parrot.

D- Chocolate covered pretzels at Live Laugh Snap.

E- Miami Beach 411 has some photos and video from South Beach this weekend.

F- Man or Maniac? and Camera Ephemera shut down...sorta.
Things have been slowing down; I'm sure you've noticed. It's not that I'm not interested in keeping up the blog; but it's been getting hard to get up interest in THIS blog, if you follow me.

Part of the problem is that this blog never really had a clear purpose. The earlier posts show that; it bounced from being a "how-to" to a photo journal, and ended up being mostly a place to vent my spleen.
G- Lots of new photos are up at The Street.

H- Food for Thought shares some places to eat if you find yourself in the Washington, DC area.


.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Your Evening Sift



I hate the end of a 3-day weekend. *sigh* Here's your evening Sift.

A- Can it be possible that a South Florida blog is already posting about Art Basel 2011? Yes...at Miami Art & Culture.

B- Beached Miami shares some images from last night's Bike Prom.
A romantic roll through the breezy Miami night, it was much like a high school prom, but with bikes instead of limos and far less acne.
C- AshAndBurn has some photos from around this morning's shooting scene on South Beach.

.

BoB Has A Pulse

Back in June of last year, I named three dead South Florida blogs that I would love to see resurrected. One of them was Boom or Bust: Miami.

Well, this weekend my BoB: Miami's RSS feed came to life and it looks like we might soon have a blog to bring back to the SFDB blogroll. This is what Javier Zayas-Bazan had to say when I asked him if the new posts means that he's back.
More like back in the zone.
Sounds like an enthusiastic "yes" to me.

We're going to monitor BoB: Miami for a while before adding it to the blogroll, but in the meantime, make sure you check out BoB: Miami.

.

Video From Thursday's Budget Signing

A video has surfaced that shows Sumter County Sheriff's Office deputies removing Democrats from Thursday's budget signing event held at The Villages in Central Florida.

Listen closely at :45 into the video when one of the deputies is asked if he is on "regular hours" and he responds in the affirmative...



The Governor's Office has already gone on record as saying this was a public event so what we have here are peaceful people being removed from a public town square by on duty law enforcement officers simply because of what was written on their signs and the clothes they wore.

The folks that got tossed deserve a written apology from Rick Scott and the Sumter County Sheriff's Office and the best representation that the ACLU can provide.


-via The Reid Report


.

Memorial Day 2011


Jeff Koterba, Omaha World Herald


.

Your Mid-Afternoon Sift



Strange how it feels like a Sunday. Hope you're enjoying your day off. Here's your Memorial Day mid-afternoon Sift.

A- Some Blogging Guy shares a few photos from a road trip he made to Lake Placid yesterday.

B- There was a couple shootings on South Beach this morning and Beached Miami links to the Herald story and has a rather poor homemade video of one of them.

C- Meatless Miami delivers the news of a great new vegetarian restaurant in Miami.
MVC boasts that their kitchen has "no microwave, no frying, no preservatives, no GMO food, no hydrogenated oils, and no high fructose corn syrup." They also are buying produce from local distributors and you can truly taste the freshness. I legitimately want to try every single thing on the menu. Also worth mentioning is that they open at 8am (!) on weekdays and you are welcome to call in your order for a morning juice or take-out for a work lunch.
D- Memorial Day thoughts from Bark Bark Woof Woof, South Florida Lawyers, The Reid Report, Go Hydrology!, and Eye on Miami. From the latter...
It is inconceivable to me that American soldiers, our children, have been fighting wars on three fronts -- Afghanistan for 9 years-- and that only 16 percent of Miami-Dade citizens voted in the recent mayoral election. Honestly: participating in our democratic process is the least we can offer those putting their lives on the line for the United States and our security.
E- AshAndBurn posts a collection of Urban Beach Weekend images.


.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Your Evening Sift



Everyone is out enjoying the weekend so not much is happening in the South Florida blogosphere, readers. This shouldn't take you long at all. Enjoy your evening Sift.

A- Jeff Eats says that if you like White Castle burgers you'll like White Crescent burgers in West Palm Beach.
The basic story here is, back in 1957 in Bloomfield, New Jersey—White Crescent Burgers opened a “hamburger joint” that looked and tasted like White Castle. At the above website, there is a photo of the original-joint (back in the day) so you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about. The original joint did sliders and fries.

Anyway, a year or so ago, White Crescent opened a location in West Palm Beach. Just so you know from the get-go…the Florida outpost doesn’t have the “cool-crisp-white castle” look that the ’57 joint had…but it does have absolutely delicious sliders and fries.
B- More evidence that America is dumbing down, at Bark Bark Woof Woof.

C- Eye on Miami is still battling their commenters.

.

Go Mario! [A Continuing Series]


South Florida cyclist Mario Renteria has left Florida and is making his way through Alabama as he continues his trek west to California. He's met his share of territorial dogs and hospitable humans along the way and will be crossing into Mississippi today or tomorrow. Not sure how he plans on celebrating the holiday although he has replaced his orange bike flag with an American flag.

You can follow along with his progress and his photos at For No Particular Reason.


.

This Memorial Day Weekend, See "Restrepo"


So this week's movie from my Netflix queue turned out to be "Restrepo."

I knew it was a documentary about the Afghan War and the men fighting it. What I didn't know was that it would be such a moving and powerfully real accounting of the lives of some of the youngest and bravest American soldiers this country has ever known.

If the war is nothing but news reports and statistics punctuated by the notice of yet another local man killed in action, you need to see this movie.

This weekend would be the perfect time.

Restrepo
Trailer
Reviews


.

Your Mid-Afternoon Sift



Hope you're having a great Sunday. I spent the morning watching a movie (more on that in a minute) and am just getting the day rolling. Here's your mid-afternoon Sift.

A- In a rare restaurant review, Eye on Miami heads to Kitchenetta in Fort Lauderdale after reading the favorable reviews on Worst Pizza and is disappointed.
I got there at 5:15 and they didn't open till 5:30. I stood around and waited. Obviously the place was empty. We went inside but it smelled of bug spray so we decided to sit outside. Maria, the bitchy hostess, steered us to a table for two with no tablecloth on the aluminum tabletop. All the other tables had tablecloths. We didn't want to sit there.
B- Coconut Grove Grapevine feels like maps or "MASH signs" are needed in the Grove to assist lost tourists.
We need maps in the Grove that show tourists where the things are that they are looking for. Almost daily, people come out of the parking garage at the Mayfair complex, looking for the entrance to the Mayfair Hotel. Only they end up walking away from it, toward Mary Street. I'm sure there are many frustrated visitors simply because we don't have proper maps around the Grove.

While it's true that the Grove is only a few blocks long, it seems that most tourists need to be lead to their destinations even within those few blocks.
C- Redland Rambles explains what Gleaning Day is at Bee Heaven Farms [Hint: it's sorta like a vegetable treasure hunt].
It was a sunny, hot Sunday morning, and people were already out in the vegetable beds looking for things to pick by the time I arrived. CSA members who had done this before came prepared. They were wearing hats and sunblock, and carried bags and containers for their loot. It’s best to pick first and hang out later before everything is gone and it gets too hot. Pretty much everything was up for grabs (unless it was roped off with pink ribbon). Heirloom tomatoes were the most popular and were the first to go.
D- Nikon Miami is the first blogger to post a couple images of Urban Weekend on South Beach.

E- Sweetwater continues to be a backwater town in a Third World county (my words, not his), according to Random Pixels.


.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

SFDB Saturday Night Turndown Service

Love it...




Eddie Vedder, Longing to Belong


.

Your Evening Sift



Slow, slow day in the South Florida blogosphere today means a pretty skimpy Sift. Hey, if you're around tonight, stop in and check out a pretty cool Turndown Service. Enjoy your evening.

A- Random Pixels selects a few quotes from yesterday's Herald story on Memorial Day festivities on Miami Beach while Sex and the Beach shows us how she is enjoying this year's Urban Beach Weekend.

B- There's a book that looks good enough to eat in the Grove and you can see it at Coconut Grove Grapevine.

.

SFDB Ecard Of The Day



.

Your Morning Sift



Good morning.

We're definitely back to H&H (hot and humid). I got out earlier than usual to do my normal stroll to the Starbucks up the street and it was already blazing. Hope you all are enjoying your Saturday morning. Here's your morning Sift.

A- Brickell Life is recovering from surgery...you know what to do.
Ok, so I'm searching for a little Brickell Life sympathy, but hernia surgery recovery has been a bitch. Yes, today is better than the day before and the next day will be better than today.
B- For all those people who whine about government oversight, Obalesque has a fine example of what your world would be like without it.

C- Go Hydrology! says the wet season has started...but then takes it back in the comments!

D- South Florida Food and Wine has a few recipes for your holiday weekend.

E- Beached Miami posts a killer collection of photos from last night's Critical Mass ride and answers the question, "Can two guys look badass riding a tandem bike together?"

F- Eye on Miami has a hunch on what the newly purchased Herald land is going to be used for and runs with it.
The photos above are from the Malaysia based company that just bought the building and property owned by the Herald: Genting Berhad. And why wouldn't Chinese buy the Miami Herald property and building in downtown Miami for three times the next highest investment?

.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Your Evening Sift



Ahhhhhh. Three days off. The beginning is so sweet. Relax and click through your Friday evening Sift.

A- Could there be a worse time for Phin Phanatic to be weighing whether the Dolphins are still the dominant pro sports team in Miami?
Lately though, the Dolphins have been slipping, recording losing seasons in five of the last seven years. Fans are slowly beginning to lose their patience, uncertainty amongst the front office, unclear sense of organizational direction, a failed attempt to replace a head coach and a draft that left many fans scratching their heads has the fan-base largely divided and heated.

And speaking of Heat, the Miami Heat are winning. And they’re not just winning they’re hammering teams in the playoffs with star-power and exciting basketball. Even if you don’t like the Heat, they’re still an exciting team to watch. Compare that dynamic with the boring product being put on the field at the Stadium formerly known as Joe Robbie and you have to begin to wonder whether the Dolphins are still the favorite sons of South Beach.
B- South Florida Lawyers explains how distractions in the courtroom should be used to motivate attorneys. Don't miss the comments.

C- The Heat Lightning continues their comprehensive and detailed review of THL's 1st year of blogging.

D- Beached Miami interviews the director and producer of Queen of the Sun, a documentary about bee Colony Collapse Disorder that is screening at O Cinema this weekend.
Queen of the Sun, an 82-minute Collective Eye Films documentary that opens at O, Cinema Friday night, explores the ominous phenomenon of Colony Collapse Disorder with a sense of urgency that we have become used to — and maybe even sick of — in a genre you might call “Apocalypse Right Now”. But what sets it apart from other ARN films is that it doesn’t just fear-monger (even though the threat posed by CCD is fearsome and worth mongering), nor does it drag the viewer mercilessly through the sludge of a dark modern wasteland.
E- Film and photos of last night's Heat celebrations on the streets of Miami, as well as some commentary by Miami Beach 411.
But it’s also true we are very fickle as fans. We will remain loyal to the Heat whether they win or lose against Dallas.

But if ownership decides to dismantle the team as Marlins owners have done in the past, then we will lose interest and not care anymore.

There is just too much to do in Miami to spend our time supporting a team that has proven disloyal to its fan base.
F- Eye on Miami breaks down the Miami-Dade mayoral election turnout by precinct and lists the highest and lowest numbers.
To give you an idea about how bad turnout was in some precincts, in Precinct 984, 47 voters, out of 955, voted (less than 5%). Yet Precinct 113 had an 18.38% turnout and some precincts in Hialeah averaged 30%. Precinct 178 had a 66.67% turnout but there are only 3 voters in that precinct. My precinct had a 10% turnout. Hialeah's 30% turnout, do you think it is thanks to all the senior housing and lunch/breakfast programs?
G- Radio or Not explains why she believes the Sun-Sentinel has an anti-Democrat bias.
They refer to me as a “heckler” and someone “trying to score political points” when I actually attended as a constituent concerned over how my congressional representing was “representing” me.

In today’s paper, I’m referred to in the headline as a “protester”. Although I have and will protest things I consider wrong, on the evening of April 26, 2011, I was ejected from a town hall meeting after attempting to ask a question; I was apparently arrested for telling the police officer to get his hand off of me twice.


.

Flashback Friday




Jimi Hendrix, Hey Joe


.

Plum TV: Epicure Gourmet Market

Excellent little video by Plum on the amazing Epicure Gourmet Market in Sunny Isles.





Epicure Gourmet Market
17190 Collins Avenue
North Miami Beach 33160


.

Their Man In Tallahassee [UPDATED]


It's become pretty clear over the last 6 months that Governor Rick Scott considers himself to represent only one group of Floridians: The Tea Party. He's taking care of them and if yesterday was any indication, they're returning the favor.
THE VILLAGES, Florida -- About a dozen Democratic Party activists protesting Gov. Rick Scott's budget policies were peacefully but firmly ejected from the governor's budget-signing ceremony Thursday as Tea Party activists applauded.

A few minutes before the governor's scheduled arrival, several elderly people wearing blue T-shirts inscribed "Vote Democratic" began to take seats in the sweltering town square where the Scott staff had carefully staged a speech and bill-signing for TV cameras. Scott, who announced his budget plans at a Tea Party rally in Eustis Feb. 6, returned to his political roots for the signing ceremony.

There were scores of hand-lettered signs supporting Scott, along with American flags and lapel-stickers on the chests of many spectators, showing support for the conservative Republican's position on cutting state spending.
So because they wore blue t-shirts and carried signs that didn't bear the same message as the Tea Party signs, they were marched out of the meeting by uniformed deputies of the Sumter County Sheriff's Office? You gotta be impressed with the way the Constitution is interpreted by a bunch of old, white people and their hillbilly sheriff's department up there in central Flori-duh. Yeah, I know it was a "private event," but it was the budget signing, for Pete's sake, and it was being held in the town square.

As we find out, they had to do it or it would have ruined the whole well-scripted affair...
Representatives from the Florida Chamber of Commerce, the National Federation of Independent Business, Bitner and Republican legislators Alan Hays of Umatilla and Marlene O'Toole of nearby Lady Lake warmed up the crowd before Scott bounced onto a stage after 1 p.m.

He was surrounded by red, white and blue bunting as Elvis Presley's A Little Less Conversation blared from the loudspeakers — a song he used sometimes during his campaign.

After remarks, Scott moved to a smaller stage where he sat at a wooden desk and formally signed the budget.

Charter school students were bused in to surround the governor for the signing, and were handed homemade signs to wave. When Scott was finished, a man in a tea party T-shirt began encouraging the children to chant Scott's campaign slogan, "Let's get to work."

Scott then handed out tiny replica red Sharpie pens, symbolizing his decision to veto $615 million in spending.

The entire event was broadcast over the Internet by the Republican Party, and in many ways mirrored Scott's budget proposal unveiling in Eustis in February.
Sometimes I wish all this didn't bother me that much. Sometimes I wish that I could read about this crap and then think about my evening dinner plans at Michael's Genuine or the way the Heat played last night. I wish the fact that Floridians are being escorted out of a gathering in a town square by the police because of the color of their tee shirt didn't make me upset. But it does. And, if you're an American and especially a Floridian, it should upset you too.

It's only been 6 months, readers. Jeebus, I'm tired of this bullsh*t.


-image via WTSP


************UPDATED***********

Well, the latest info from at the St. Pete Times is interesting...
A spokesman for Gov. Rick Scott today told Politic365 today that the governor's office did not order anyone removed from Thursday's budget signing at The Villages, and that the event was meant to be public. Only, that's not true.

First, here's what Scott spokesman Lane Wright said, according to the political website. "Governor Scott did not have these individuals removed. This was a public event. It was brought to our attention that the local authorities had removed some. We don't know first-hand who was removed or why.

"We are only seeing what you're seeing in the news reports," Wright added. "It's disappointing to know that anyone who made the effort to be at such an important event wasn't allowed in."

Here's what actually happened -- the Buzz saw all of it firsthand. Sumter County sheriff's deputies were summoned by Scott staffers wearing suits and black earpieces. They told the deputies that the budget signing was a private event and that a group of Democrats standing or sitting in the last two rows had to leave.

Deputies went to tell the group -- more than a dozen people -- to leave. The deputies said the town square had been leased and that the organizers wanted the group of Democrats to leave. The group of Democrats said it was unfair.

"You all are preaching to the choir," a deputy told them. "I'm doing what I'm told."

The deputies were getting their orders from Russ Abrams, a $60,000 a year special assistant to Scott. Seeing this, the Buzz approached Abrams. He told us the budget signing was "a private event." When asked more questions, Abrams said: "I don't need to talk to the press," and then, "I don't have anything to say."

Abrams and other men wearing black earpieces then attempted to identify other people with anti-Scott intentions. They alerted deputies, who told them they had to leave the town square. [Emphasis: SFDB]
So you have a Scott spokesman going on the record today to say that the event was public which contradicts the information that another Scott spokesman was providing while the senior citizens were being escorted out. And deputies in the middle of all this saying they're just following orders.

I tend to believe that a Governor signing the state budget in a town square is a public event and that Mr. Abrams who didn't feel like he had any explaining to do yesterday needs to be questioned by someone.

Meanwhile, here's another photo from the The Leesburg Daily Commercial that shows Sumter County deputies rounding up the senior citizens who looked like Democrats.


While virtually all newspapers and websites that I visited in researching this story included this incident, The Villages Daily Sun did not. In fact, the Daily Sun's David R. Corder wrote an article that read like it could have been issued by the Governor's office in Tallahasee. I extended an invitation to Mr. Corder to explain why he chose not to write about this significant event but after visiting SFDB and checking it out [thanks, StatCounter!], Corder apparently has elected not to comment. Just like Mr. Abrams.

You can bet we'll stay on top of this through the weekend.



.

SFDB Morning Chuckle

Miami-Dade Police have just released this photo in connection with the disappearance of a UM student last Saturday evening.



























-via the internets



.

The Cooler



Heat news abounds this morning. There's a little of that and more in this morning's Cooler.

A- Herald: The Heat won...but then you already knew that.
The United Center crowd deflated with 25 seconds left when Bulls guard Derrick Rose, the youngest MVP in NBA history, missed the second of two free throws to tie the score at 81. James’ midrange jumper with 29.5 seconds left gave the Heat its lead.

Heat forward Chris Bosh made a pair of free throws with 16.8 seconds left, and James blocked Rose’s desperation three-point attempt to tie the score at the buzzer. James and Udonis Haslem, who doubled-teamed Rose on the play, hugged after capping the unlikely finish.

“We don’t even know what happened,” Wade said. “I’m not going to lie to you and say we do.”
B- Herald: Sold.
In a $230 million deal, The Miami Herald’s parent company announced today the sale of 14 acres surrounding the newspaper – as well as the bayside building – to a subsidiary of one of the largest developers of resorts and casinos in the world.

The cash deal between The McClatchy Company and Bayfront 2011 Property LLC, a subsidiary of Genting Malaysia Berhad, allows The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald to continue to operate from their current location rent free for two years as McClatchy searches for a new location.

“While locating a newspaper operation on the bay may have made sense in the past, it no longer is the best fit,’’ said Gary Pruitt, McClatchy’s chairman and chief executive.
C- Herald: The X man is back.
He had to wait two extra days, but former Miami Mayor Xavier Suarez was declared the winner of a Miami-Dade County Commission race Thursday, after an appeals court ruled in dramatic fashion that the suppressed results from Tuesday’s election should be made public.
D- Herald: Let's just call him a liar.
“I’m confident that most of us agree that school funding is far more important than spending those dollars on alligator marketing, or boat racing or anything else that the Tallahassee insiders think is so important,” Scott said, pointing to a few of the line items he vetoed.

Scott never mentioned the fact he originally called for a bigger cut to schools than the Legislature ultimately approved.
E- Herald: Morin.

F- Herald: They write letters.
Voter apathy

It was depressing to see that fewer than 200,000 people voted for mayor in a county of roughly 2.5 million people. If you want to know what’s wrong with society today, you need to look no further.

Javier de la O, Miami
G- Sun-Sentinel: Sold, Part II.
Las Olas Riverfront, the beleaguered 3.67-acre shopping, dining and entertainment complex on the New River in downtown Fort Lauderdale, has been sold for $16.7 million, broker Colliers International South Florida said Thursday.
H- South Florida Business Journal: Go to college on Lincoln Road.
Florida International University is joining the high-end retailers and fabulous fashion houses on Miami Beach’s Lincoln Road.

The university’s College of Architecture + The Arts signed a 15-year lease for 16,000 square feet at 420 Lincoln Road. Appropriately, the building is an Art Deco icon from 1940. The building is owned by Paul L. Cejas, former U.S. ambassador to Belgium, who FIU called a supporter of the university.

The facility, opening this fall, will house a design studio for 70 graduate students, a gallery and performance space for visual arts students,* and music practice rooms so FIU can collaborate with the nearby New World Symphony.
I- WPLG: Good luck.
MIAMI -- Tickets to games 1 and 2 of the NBA Finals between the Miami Heat and Dallas Mavericks go on sale Friday.

The Miami Heat clinched their appearance Thursday night by beating the Chicago Bulls 83-80 in Game 5.

Tickets go on sale Friday at 1 p.m. and will be limited to four per purchase. Inventory is limited and tickets are expected to sell out quickly.

Fans can purchase tickets at HEAT.com , at Ticketmaster.com , or by calling 1-800-4NBA-TIX

Tickets will go on sale at the American Airlines Arena box office at 10 a.m. Tuesday.

.

Your Morning Sift



Good morning.

A little delayed this morning because of a glitch with my Firefox 4 that required a complete clearing of the cache. Weird stuff. But there's nothing weird about this morning's Sift and the SFDB Weekend Widget that is up and running in the right sidebar. It's Friday and it's Memorial Day Weekend, readers!

A- So where are the jobs that Republicans promised to create last year while they were campaigning? Suckers! Bark Bark Woof Woof has the rest of the story.

B- Nikon Miami posts a fast boat photo.

C- Obalesque briefs us on The Tequila Party.
“The Tequila Party” — NOW we’re talking. At least they got the marketing and slogans lined up. Content will follow, followed by fights. Meanwhile, count me in, amigos! Wait, let me grab some lime.
D- They were celebrating the Heat victory on Bird Road last night and 305 has the video.

E- Weird carrots at Redland Rambles. Yes, you heard right.

.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Your Evening Sift



We're still busy updating the SFDB Weekend Widget in the right sidebar as the scent of the long Memorial Day Weekend lingers in the air. Let's get into your evening Sift...

A- Beached Miami leads things off tonight with a video of the Beings final song forever from last night's Bardot finale.
Beings’ last set might not have been perfect, but it was pretty damn good, with drummer Monteavaro abusing the toms with a grin and bassist Alen bouncing around until his glasses fell off. The small crowd gathered to commemorate Beings’ disbandment cheered throughout the bitter-sweet show, and after the last song a few dudes scrambled to snatch the band’s set list as a keepsake.
B- FTL Collective has the news that Lauderdale art lovers will have another place to visit each and every Saturday night.
Thanks to the incredible support of the people behind Revolution and the stronghold of regulars for Digital Love, the new-ish downtown venue Green Room will now become a destination for local art and music lovers through the weekend, not just Thursday nights. Starting this Saturday, May 28th, the Green Room will introduce Gallery Saturdays.
C- Sweet Home Hialeah captures a real classy moment in Hialeah.

D- The South Florida Theatre Scene says this weekend is a great time to see a play and posts their regular weekly review.

E- I loves me All Purpose Dark's bonus zeppelin pictures...and her red shoes.

F- Another day, another example of Republican hypocrisy from Bark Bark Woof Woof.


.

Miami's Charlie's Angels

Maybe it's because I watched the original series when I was growing up or perhaps it's because this new show looks as shallow as the kiddie's pool at the Fontainebleau [not that the original was much better], but I give this thing one season, two tops.



Here's the original, in case you weren't around back then...



The new Miami Charlie's Angels is supposed to air this Fall.

.

Marco Rubio Wants To Take Away Your Medicare


May 25, 2011.

Remember this day, readers.

It's the day that Senator Marco Rubio placed his ideology ahead of the interests of his constituents and voted to take away your Medicare.

In an op-ed that appears in today's Miami Herald, Senator Rubio defends his vote by trotting out the personage of his immigrant mother and father like he always seems to do when he needs to justify a particularly unpopular decision. I mean, really, who can disagree with a grown man who is making all these tough decisions thinking about his Moms and Pops, particularly his Immigrant Moms and Pops.
For me, Medicare is not a political talking point. My parents immigrated to the United States in the late 1950s. They worked hard for over 40 years to provide their children the chance to do all the things they themselves could not. But they never made much money.

As a result, they retired with precious little in savings. Medicare was and is the only way they could access healthcare.

When my father got sick, Medicare paid for his numerous hospital stays. And as he reached the end of life, Medicare allowed him to die with dignity by paying for his hospice care.

Like most 80-year-olds, my mother has several age-related ailments. Without the access to quality healthcare that Medicare pays for, I cannot imagine what life would be like for her.

America needs Medicare. We need it to continue without any benefit reductions for those like my mother currently in the system. And we need it to survive for my generation and my children’s generation.

When a politician says that something "is not a political talking point," he's lying to you. Everything is a political talking point. Otherwise, he wouldn't be called a politician.

Rubio then demonstrates that it's not a political talking point by launching into a highly partisan attack against Democrats and claims they don't have an alternative plan.
Either show us how Medicare survives without any changes or show us what changes you propose we make. Anyone who supports doing nothing is a supporter of bankrupting Medicare.

Where is the House Democrat plan to save Medicare?

Where is the Senate Democrat plan to save Medicare?

Where is President Obama’s plan to save Medicare?

They have no plan to save it, and they do not plan to offer one. They have decided that winning their next election is more important than saving Medicare for my mother and retirees like her.
Actually, Democrats do have a plan. It's called Medicare. It's worked for years and can continue to work if conservative ideologues like Marco Rubio let the Bush tax cuts expire and close the loopholes that allow corporations and the wealthy avoid paying billions of dollars of taxes every single year. It also would help if Republicans would stop supporting billions of dollars of subsidies given to very profitable and healthy oil companies every year. But doing that would require that Rubio slap the hand that feeds him and the Republican Party.

Speaking of plans, look through the op-ed and try to find the details about how Marco and his Republican companions plan on "reforming" Medicare. You won't find it, because it's too frightening and too radical to incorporate in an missive designed to elicit support for his point of view.

Marco Rubio and the other U.S. Senators who voted to take away American's Medicare yesterday are increasingly out of step with the electorate and are banking on an American public that is wont to forget votes like theirs after a few years. I want to make sure we all remember Rubio's vote.

May 25, 2011. Remember.




.

Ed Shultz Makes A Mistake And Mans Up

Not much to say about liberal talk show host Ed Shultz and his disgusting tirade against right winger Laura Ingraham. Here it is...



It was widely condemned by both sides of the aisle and certainly has no place on talk radio. Shultz later apologized...



From Bark Bark Woof Woof...
But it's still way over the line, and I'm glad to see that he's got his ass kicked for it.
The apology was the correct and the civil thing to do here. When liberals find themselves lying in the same gutter that conservatives like Rush Limbaugh, Pamela Geller, and Erick Erickson wallow in, it's time to get up up, clean yourself off and move on.



.

A Story From Joplin...

...that will break your heart.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


.

The Cooler



Here's your review of some the stories I found interesting in this morning's mainstream media.

A- Herald: But what the hell do they know? They're only scientists.
WASHINGTON -- The deadliest tornadoes in decades. Severe flooding on the Mississippi River. Drought in Texas, and heavy rains in Tennessee.

What's up with the weather?

Scientists say there are connections between many of the severe weather events of the past month and global warming.
B- Herald: Video, jazz in Broward County juvi court.

C- Herald: A farmer's market opening in May in Davie?
After closing in 2008, Batten’s Strawberry Farm will be reopening to the public on Friday as a farmer’s market, giving people a chance to buy fresh fruit, veggies, and even nuts, eggs and preserves.

Reopening under the name Batten’s Farmers Market and Davie Agri-Tourism Center, it will also feature a petting zoo and community garden. Produce will come from nearly 175 farmers in Broward County. Eventually, the farmers market plans to add a stand where people can get smoothies and milkshakes, and allow people to pick their own strawberries once again .
D- Herald: Morin.

E- Sun-Sentinel: Idiot.
Boca Raton officials have condemned a man's plan to shred a Quran in a downtown park on Memorial Day, but say they cannot stop the event.

[...]

City officials determined that the event does not require a permit because it is a free-speech action, Brown wrote. Rowley's initial request, to burn a Quran in the park, was denied because the city prohibits fires in parks.

Rowley, 52, has a history of forced hospitalizations and pleaded guilty in 2006 to misdemeanor charges for spray painting "666" on a mosque, three churches and a synagogue, according to court records. He is undergoing court-ordered medical treatment for schizoaffective disorder, according to court records.
F- NBC Miami: Video, Computer thief gets busted after software gives him up.

G- WPLG: Lexus lanes all the way into Broward on I-95.
Miami's express lane concept is traveling north. The lanes will pick up where Miami left off, near the Golden Glades Interchange, and stretch all the way to Broward Boulevard. There will be three exits near Hallandale Beach Boulevard, Sheridan Street and Broward Boulevard.

In order to make it work, the DOT must build an extra lane on either side of Interstate 95. Cones will separate the extra lane and the high-occupancy vehicle lane for paying customers only. That leaves the rest of the interstate -- four lanes -- open to the general public.

.

Your Morning Sift



Good morning.

It's Thursday, which means the SFDB Weekend Widget is up and running in the right sidebar. As always, we'll be updating it throughout the weekend. Let's get going this morning with a solid morning Sift.

A- Another unique South Florida story in audio format at Under the Sun.
Early in our relationship, Victoria invited me to a work event. She said I could learn something. I don’t usually like dressing up for lectures at banks, but I agreed to go.

I asked Victoria if she’d introduce me as her partner.

She said, “What do you want me to do, stand up and say, ‘This is my lesbian lover?’”

I said, “You don’t have to stand up.”

“Do you want me to lose all my clients?” she said. “These are Latins, Andrea. Latins are homophobic.”

“But this is Miami,” I said. “It’s so gay here. Haven’t you been to Lincoln Road?”
B- A couple old photos taken on Miami Beach are up at Random Pixels.

C- It's Obalesque's birthday. You know what to do.

D- Cassie Sackrider makes another appearance at The Street.

E- Eye on Miami detects some voter's remorse while I just think it was stupidity that led to the election of destructive conservative representatives last November.
The furious undercurrents of a struggling economy -- and the dawning awareness on the part of many voters that they have been hoodwinked by GOP radicals, under the Karl Rove banner of the Republican Party -- are beginning to surface. In many ways, Florida Governor Rick Scott represents most the most unvarnished vision; a strait-laced, pro-big business agenda woven through with Tea Party platitudes.
F- The Reid Report looks back at a pretty incredible campaign ad used by Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain in 2006.
The radio ad above ran on black radio stations in 10 battleground states back in ’06, with America’s PAC, a group led by a crank right wing creationist named J. Patrick Rooney, spending $1 million on the buy. Needless to say, Republicans didn’t do so well in the 2006 midterms. And I think we’re seeing why the Hermanator only got that 20 percent in Georgia back in 2004.


.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Your Evening SIft



We're over the hump and sliding into the weekend. Everyone but Blind Tastes...bottoms up! Enjoy your evening Sift.

A- Grab a drink and click on over to Blind Tastes to find out how he's doing on his 30-day reprieve from alcohol.
Yesterday was my 17th consecutive day without a drop of alcohol!! I'm halfway to my goal of 30 days!! It definitely hasn't been easy. In fact, yesterday was my first really tough day at work where I really would've loved to relax while sipping a bourbon when I got home. Right now things are really busy at work and I have a ton of stuff to do and keep getting distracted or nagged by little things that prevent me from making any real progress on the bigger things I need to get done.
B- Blogging Black Miami comments on voter turnout during yesterday's election.
When I look at the number of votes in this last election as compared to the recall election and the 2008 presidential election, there are two thoughts I can't get out of my head: Marvin Gaye's 1971 hit "Inner City Blues". You know..."Oh, make me wanna holler and throw up both my hands" and that ending scene from Spike Lee's film, "School Daze" with Laurence Fishburne and Giancarlo Esposito, you know the one with Fishburne shouting...all together now...cue the alarm clock..."WAKE UP!".
C- Worst Pizza gets harsh with Ovenella Pizza in Boca Raton in a review that seems more critical of the service that they apparently demand [with fountain drinks, no less] than they are of the pizza.
Our server continued to tell us, and I quote “you won’t find a pizza like this in Boca Raton, it is the best”. Well….not exactly the thing to say to someone who is looking to find the best pizza to, you just set yourself an unobtainable bar. He also asked us to leave reviews on the web about the food, which was truly weird since we hadn’t even gotten our orders in yet. Little did he know that he would get his review wish. I even tried to explain to him that I found out about their opening from a tip to this website, but he didn’t seem to even care.
D- There's a new Italian place open in the Gables, according to Eater Miami.
Opened recently, Il Corso Trattoria offers, yep, you guessed it, homemade pastas, brick oven pizzas and assorted Italian fare via chef LeRoy Bautista, formerly of Angelique Euro Cafe. “We’re focusing on simplicity, authenticity and flavors,” said Bautista. “With fresh ingredients and timeless techniques paired with the restaurant’s warm dĂ©cor, we’ve created a welcoming setting that truly enhances the genuine Italian experience.”
E- South Florida Food and Wine presents a list of summer dining specials in South Florida.

F- If you have something that dates all the way back to the ancient '90's, visit The Heat Lightning because they might be able to use it.
The talented artist and my childhood friend Venessa Monokian and I will be putting together a zine as part of a project for the Miami-Dade Public Library System’s Main Library. The library system around these parts is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year (congrats!). In honor of this momentous occasion, they’re also paying homage to the 1990s, a big ten years for the library, apparently.

Venessa and I thought it’d be neat to include you and your stories in the THL-Venessa-Liz zine. We remember the ’90s fairly well, the first half of them, at least. You also probably remember something from that strange, tacky, opulent decade that you want to share with the world.
G- South Florida Classical Review shares the story of Nadine Sierra, an emerging South Florida soprano that has worked hard to get where she is today.
Growing up in Fort Lauderdale, where her father was a Broward County firefighter and her mother a bank teller, Sierra practiced every day from the time she was a child. She would sing at least an hour of scales and arpeggios on different vowels, as well as working on arias and art songs. Her mother, a bank teller who speaks several languages, helped her with diction — and with discipline.

“My mother was very strict,” she said. “If I didn’t practice, I couldn’t go out. I couldn’t go to movies. I couldn’t go out with friends. From six to the time I was 18 years old. I didn’t have a normal childhood. But at the end of the day, it was what I wanted to do. If I hadn’t done that, the life I’m having now wouldn’t have happened.”

In addition to spending so much of her childhood and teen years practicing, she also appeared on stage with the Fort Lauderdale Children’s Theatre. She appeared as Witch Hex in Snow White, the Tin Man in The Wizard of Oz and the nurse Nellie Forbush in South Pacific. She was asked to join Palm Beach Opera’s Young Artist program at age 14.
H- Beached Miami informs us that tonight's Beings concert at Bardot is their last.
“The reason for the split is that I have been doing the band thing since 1996, and I just got to the point that I didn’t want to do it anymore,” frontman Ivan Marchena said. “I have absolutely nothing but love and respect for my friends that I play with (Beatriz

Monteavaro and Mike Alen) and I am proud of what we accomplished together. They are two of the most talented people I have ever had the pleasure of collaborating with. Beings had a great run, and we couldn’t have done it without the support of our friends, families, pets, fellow local/not so local bands, and fans.
I- Boy Writes Miami tries out the food offered up by two of Miami's food trucks.
Anyway, I got my quesadilla, which was greasier than the cast of Jersey Shore rolling on a slice of Sbarro mall pizza. That would normally put me off, but I’ve been hitting the gym with a hammer lately and also came to terms with the fact that one day I’ll probably die anyway, so I threw caution into the wind and took a bite. That was some good-ass quesadilla. It had pieces of red meat and pieces of chorizo, but I think the tastiest pieces were those pieces of freedom and supermodel legs. I can’t put my finger on it, but that sauce has something going on which makes doves cry. Not a fan of the fries, they were pretty bland.
J- Justice Building Blog provides some health information for Miami-Dade lawyers visiting the Metro West Detention Facility.

K- Radio or Not has some good news.
I've just been notified that the City of Ft. Lauderdale "declines prosecution on all municipal ordinance violations" arising out of my arrest on April 26, 2011, after I attempted to ask my congressman at a question at an event advertised as a "Town Hall Meeting."

I will be sending out a note to all who donated to my legal defense fund, offering to return your donations or donate them to the ACLU.

I am now exploring any and all options for a civil suit or suits over my arrest, my treatment by the arresting officer and the BSO deputy while held at the Broward County Jail.
L- Eye on Miami gives some advice to Miami mayoral candidate Carlos Gimenez.
In my informal interviews with voters, I found that none of them listened to the robocalls or they were annoyed by them. The voters said they made their decisions based on other things like the newspaper, emails, etc. Carlos, I heard your wife is your greatest asset. My advice is, get her off the phone and have her meet and greet people. You can't be in 10 places at once but you have many volunteers that can get out there and inspire people. This election is going to hinge on community wide appeal.
M- In something you can file under "no kidding," polls that Bark Bark Woof Woof mentions this evening show that most people don't approve of the job that Rick Scott is doing.

.

SFDB Post Of The Week



SFDB selects its Post of the Week by going back and reviewing all the Sifts that we've done over the past 7 days. We find the best post of the week and note the runners ups as we judge them to be.

I don't think it's any secret that I love great writing. But when it's time to start looking for the Post of the Week, great writing isn't enough all the time. There should be a well-defined story, of course, and more importantly, a point in the post where it all comes together, if only for a sentence, to create that memorable moment that stays with readers after they're through. It happened again this week and I'll let you figure out what post gave me that moment. Here we go.

Runners-UpAll Purpose Dark's Riding A Zeppelin Over Miami captured a unique experience with some great photos and narrative that was actually added after I first viewed the post. Ipanemic's Interactions is short and to the point but powerful. Miami Beach 411 went behind the scenes of two new bagel shops in Miami to determine if the water actually does make a difference.


WinnerFood for Thought is no stranger to these parts and it's because virtually every one of his compositions are expertly plated with generous helpings of well-done photos and tasty narrative. Okay, I'm done. But seriously, there are few better writers in the South Florida blogosphere, in my opinion, than Food for Thought. Last week he shared another Cobaya underground dining experience hosted by the glamorous Michelle Bernstein and did it again with some superb photography and admirable verbiage that did justice to a very special Cobaya event. Michybaya - Cobaya Dinner with Chef Michelle Bernstein was a fine effort that captures this week's SFDB Post of the Week recognition.



'Til next time, keep on blogging!

.

Back Away From Our Medicare

If Republicans were smart, they would realize what the traditionally conservative voters of Western New York (4 Democrats in over 150 years) told them yesterday...
BUFFALO, N.Y. – Democrats picked off a heavily Republican upstate New York congressional seat Tuesday in a special election that became a referendum on Medicare and may have blunted further GOP efforts to cut popular entitlement programs as a way to close the federal deficit.

Erie County Clerk Kathy Hochul defeated Republican state Assemblywoman Jane Corwin, capturing 47 percent of the vote to 43 percent for Corwin, to win the seat in the 26th Congressional District. A wealthy tea party candidate, Jack Davis, took 9 percent.

The rural-suburban district between Buffalo and Rochester is one of New York's most conservative and has been held by a Republican — including national names like Jack Kemp — for years. But Corwin saw her early lead dissolve after coming out in favor of a Republican budget plan that would cut billions from Medicare, the government health plan for seniors.
And that message is simply, "Keep your hands off our Medicare."

Fortunately for Democrats, Republicans aren't smart and Tea Party people are even dumber. There's nothing courageous or innovative about scrapping social programs and continuing to give the wealthy and mega corporations huge tax breaks. As long as they continue to ruthlessly beat up on the elderly, the middle class and the poor in order to guarantee breaks for their base, Republicans are going to keep losing elections. But please don't tell 'em.

Oh, and Tea Party? 9% of the vote. Damn, that's one helluva a movement, folks!



.

Miami-Dade Mayor Election Results

Here is the final tally...


I'm kind of surprised that Luther Campbell actually did as well as he did. But I suppose having the local alternative newspaper manage and hype your campaign almost every day for the last couple months can actually convince some voters (1 in 10, actually) that you are ready to oversee over 27,000 county employees and a budget of hundreds of millions of dollars.

Thoughts? Comments? Wisecracks?

.

Damn You, Mother Nature



The same intersection in Joplin, MO: What it looked like on Google Street View before the latest tornado...and after.


-via The Daily Wh.at


.

The Cooler



There is some strange news out there this morning, readers, Here's some of it.

A- Herald: It is just a game, isn't it?
That the game was taut, tense and so, so nerve-wrackingly close made the Heat’s tenacious triumph all the more impressive, and the loss devastating to the Bulls. For Miami the game was huge. For Chicago it was bigger. Much. It was all but must-win.
B- Herald: Today's Darwin Award.
Santana, police said, got the .22-caliber rifle from a cousin about a week ago. He used it for target shooting. He also left it in his car trunk, loaded and without a trigger guard, the affidavit said.

Monday afternoon, he took the rifle to his apartment at 8851 Fontainebleau Blvd. and asked another man who lived in the complex for help getting it out, the affidavit said. That man was not identified by police.

The man held the trunk open with his right hand and grabbed the barrel of the rifle with his left, the affidavit said. Santana held the rifle stock, the affidavit said.

But as they lifted the rifle, it discharged. The bullet struck the man in the chest. Paramedics took the man by helicopter to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Center, where he died.
C- Herald: Life in South Florida.
Traffic on Bird Road near Southwest 97th Avenue was shut down for several hours Tuesday while police investigated gunfire that erupted inside a car.

The attack happened shortly after 4 p.m. inside a westbound green Mercedes-Benz in the 9800 block of Bird Road, according to Miami-Dade police. Three men were inside the car, and it appeared they all knew each other, police spokesman Detective Roy Rutland said.

At some point, a gun was fired inside the car. Two men were struck, and they ran from the car to a nearby strip mall, Rutland said. They were taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Center for treatment.
D- Herald: Morin's new video.

E- Sun-Sentinel: Video, Broward teachers protest cuts in downtown Lauderdale.

F- Sun-Sentinel: This would never happen with Twitter.
WEST PALM BEACH— A West Palm Beach man was arrested early Monday, after police say he attacked his 86-year-old grandmother.

Jeff Atwell, 26, is being held in lieu of $6,000 bond at the Palm Beach County Jail.

According to the arrest report, West Palm Beach police responded to the Atwell home around 2:16 a.m. on Monday. There, Willie Beatrice Atwell told officers that her grandson, Jeff Atwell, lives with her.

She said Jeff Atwell had walked into the house "extremely upset about Facebook account."

Jeff Atwell grabbed Willie Atwell twice by her neck and shirt collar, but his father intervened, the arrest report stated.
G- TC Palm: I think I see the problem.
PORT ST. LUCIE — Police arrested an 81 year-old Port St. Lucie man after he allegedly pointed a gun at his 29 year-old wife.
H- WPTV: South Floridians live such exciting lives.
PALM BEACH COUNTY, Fla. - A Palm Beach County man faces several charges after deputies say he tried but failed to light his girlfriend on fire.

The woman, who was not named in a police report, claimed that she asked her boyfriend to move out a couple of days ago because he was not paying any bills.

A few days later she was sleeping when she heard a noise and began to investigate. The woman said she got up, saw her front door was open, and when she went to close it someone poured a chemical on her head.

According to a probable cause affidavit, when she wiped what she suspected was gasoline from her eyes her boyfriend was trying to ignite a lighter.

She saw sparks but no flame.

In the police report she said the pair struggled and he eventually grabbed a knife and stabbed her.

[...]

Two other deputies say they stopped the shirtless man who was later identified as Michael P. Sutherland near South Haverhill Road. They say he smelled like gas.

When asked why he smelled like gas, according to the affidavit Sutherland said that he wanted to light his girlfriend on fire, but the lighter didn't work and he was going to a friend's house where he was going to hang himself.


.