Showing posts with label realtor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label realtor. Show all posts

Sunday, August 16, 2020

School supplies to be distributed

 Staff Report Aug 13, 2020

https://www.yoursun.com/venice/school-supplies-to-be-distributed

VENICE — Three nonprofits are teaming up to help with “provide needed educational resources for South County students and families who have been impacted by the current pandemic and economic crisis.”

According to a news release from United Way South Sarasota County along with American University Women and Laurel Civic Association, the groups will help Laurel Civic Association clients.

The students involved will have “backpacks full of school supplies” that will be distributed at Laurel Civic Association Monday.

Volunteers with the Venice Branch of the American University Women and United Way will “organize and package school supply items and new back packs.”

The items are bought through United Way South Sarasota County’s COVID-19 Relief & Recovery Fund partners, which, according to the news release, includes Publix, Walmart, Four Thought Private Wealth (Venice), Lions Club of Venice, Sertoma Club of Venice and Wells Fargo.

Also assisting are Giraffe Packaging and Moving of Bradenton and Nick’s Landscaping, assisting with transporting supplies, the news release states.

“We are excited to be putting aspects of our new Modern United Way Blueprint into tangible projects where we do what United Way does best, which is plug into a community, identify a need or gap, and bring together resources, funding, and/or collaboration with businesses and non-profits whose mission and/or philanthropic goals align with that need and make it an impactful reality,“ United Way South Sarasota County President & CEO Barbara Cruz said. “Our generous COVID-19 Relief & Recovery Funding partners made it possible for us to purchase quality items for this project, and having truly invested partners like AAUW alongside Laurel Civic Association makes this a successful project for our families and individuals in need here in South County.”

The United Way of South Sarasota County said the needs remain great in the area and donations are needed and pushed into the community. Financial donations to the COVID-19 Recovery & Relief Fund can be completed by visiting www.uwssc.com, calling 941-484-4811 or texting UWSSC to 243725.

The Recovery & Relief Fund “provides financial assistance to families and individuals in South County in need of: rental assistance, child care, prescriptions and other eligible expenses,” the release said. “Any donation large or small will have an immense impact in the lives of so many.”


Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964



West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179








Thursday, June 18, 2020

New era policing: Mr. Ed and North Port's happy campers


By CRAIG GARRETT Staff Writer Jun 18, 2020
https://www.yoursun.com/northport/news/

NORTH PORT — If only ice cream could fix our troubles.

North Port has taken its best shot with its “Beat the Heat with NPPD” program. The theory revealed itself early Tuesday as three North Port police officers with the department's Community Policing Unit waited outside the George Mullen Activity Center off Sumter Boulevard.

With the trio was Ed Mazzeo, the owner of Mr. Ed's Ice Cream and Shaved Ice. He is a happy-go-lucky man and Sarasota school bus driver outwaiting the coronavirus before purchasing another vending truck. He's also a throwback vendor, traveling streets, at parks and senior centers, his calliope of ice-cream music from his 55-set playlist drifting about.

Mazzeo on Tuesday had loaded Mr. Ed's with eclairs and popsicles. Cop SUVs were on either end of Mazzeo's truck, lights flashing, no whooping of sirens.

Inside Mullen Center were summer campers, kids playing under the new rules of distancing because of the coronavirus.

The surprise at mid-morning break was Mr. Ed's Ice Cream snacks. But as the children, tall as office chairs and lined like soldiers, approached, they spotted North Port officers Erin Finnegan, Kristin Voigt and their boss, Sgt. Scott Miranda, all with North Port Community Policing. And each in protective facemasks.

There was line bunching, some hesitation. But the fright melted as Voigt in the window of Mr. Ed's truck leaned out with an eclair in a brown wrapper.

Then things broke loose and happy children returned to the shade and enjoyed their treats.

Mission accomplished.

Which is the program's goal, said Sgt. Miranda, a man with a New England accent as authentic and thick as chowder.

Positive interaction, he said: “They (kids) see us as part of the community, normal everyday people, just like them."

North Port's Community Police Unit is five members, Tuesday's three and two School Resource Officers, or SROs, at Imagine Schools. Community policing goes back decades, to placing officers in neighborhoods, walking a beat. That evolved to repairing goodwill in the 1960s. The same thing is happening today.

It boils down to communities seeing police positively and not fearing them, Miranda said.

North Port has other outreach, as well. Finnegan is the department's homeless liaison, for example. And the city has hired a civilian homeless coordinator. The position is grant funded and the coordinator will work through North Port's Social Services Division.

“We will show our community,” Finnegan said, “that we will continue to grow with them.”

Side note: North Port police will donate bicycle helmets to 75 or so children. It is first-come, first-served. Florida mandates that kids up to 16 wear a bike helmet. The giveaway runs from 1-4 p.m. Friday at police headquarters, 4980 City Hall Blvd.




Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964








Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Food distribution set for Saturday

Mike Ziebell.jpg

PHOTO PROVIDED
All Faiths Food Bank employee Mike Ziebel puts some produce
in the car for a client at a mobile food pantry.


https://www.yoursun.com/venice/food-distribution-set-for-saturday/
Staff Report May 5, 2020

WEST VILLAGES — All Faiths Food Bank is working with two spring training facilities for upcoming food distribution events.

The events are to help those dealing with COVID-19 and take place from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. or until food runs out Saturday at CoolToday Park in West Villages and again at the same time frame May 16 at Ed Smith Stadium in Sarasota.

The events will occur in the parking lots: CoolToday Park is at 18800 South, West Villages Parkway, West Villages; Ed Smith Stadium is at 2700 12th St., Sarasota.

The National Guard will provide on-site assistance with the massive effort.

All Faiths is holding it largely because of the sudden unemployment in Florida, it said in a news release, with more than 900,000 residents submitting unemployment claims since mid-March.

It expects to serve up to 4,600 people at each facility, it said.

"We want area families struggling with the loss of jobs, or whose businesses that have been forced to close due to the pandemic, to know that we are here for them," All Faiths Food Bank CEO Sandra Frank said in the news release. "For many in our community, hunger is something that happens to ‘other people.’ But now, with the current state of the economy, we all know someone who has lost their job, or been forced to shutter their business, and is facing financial challenges."

It said in the news release "there will be no registration or approval process, and no collection of information on-site. Social distancing and no-touch strategies will be observed – food will be distributed via drive-thru and placed directly into the trunks of cars. Attendees will also receive information about additional Food Bank locations where groceries are available."

All Faiths has bought about 10,000 gallons of milk from Dakin Dairy Farms and produce from Florida farmers, it said.

“We’re doing everything we can to assist local farms while providing food for area residents and families negatively impacted by COVID-19,” Frank said. “Last month, the Food Bank increased produce distribution by 78% – we are pleased to have access to these healthy foods, thanks to Feeding Florida.”

The Major League Baseball teams donated the spots to assist.

“We are grateful to the management of the Atlanta Braves and Baltimore Orioles for donating the use of their spring training locations,” Frank said. “These venues offer the sheer size and infrastructure necessary for such a large effort. We are grateful they are providing such vital assistance to help community members who are struggling.”

It said COVID-19 has led to "an unprecedented spike" for food assistance.

"In the first 30 days of the crisis, the Food Bank saw a 100% increase in food distribution and a 40% increase in new clients at mobile pantry distributions. Simultaneously, costs have skyrocketed due to the loss of consumer food donations, the loss of its significant volunteer force under the stay-at-home order, and changes to food distribution, including a need for individual packaging and the move to a drive-thru/no touch model," the news release stated.

To donate, learn about other distributions or for more information, visit www.allfaithsfoodbank.org.






Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate






Tuesday, March 31, 2020

TV shows to BINGE ON

https://venice.floridaweekly.com/articles/tv-shows-to-binge-on/
| March 26, 2020

BY NANCY STETSON

(now that you’re home)

Maybe you’re self-quarantining, erring on the side of caution, doing your part to minimize social contact and flatten that coronavirus curve.

You can’t go out to the movies or to see a concert or a play. You can’t go out dancing and hang out in a club.

Tired of looking at the four walls already?

There are plenty of exciting things to look at instead.

Here’s a totally eclectic, non-comprehensive list of quality shows you can stream or binge-watch.

“The Good Place” Seasons 1- 4

Eleanor Shellstrop (Kristen Bell) dies unexpectedly and winds up in The Good Place (which is run by Ted Danson.) But, it’s a mix-up; she was a self-centered, self-serving, foul-mouthed woman who drank to excess and didn’t care about the rules or how she affected others.

This delightful comedy series follows four mismatched people who have arrived in the afterlife. It not only deals with ethical, moral and spiritual issues but is also tremendously clever and equally funny.

 And who could resist Maya Rudolph playing God?

“The Good Place” is full of the unexpected, with plot twists galore. (In fact, if you watch this, watch the episodes in order; you don’t want to ruin the surprises.)

Where else can you find a show that’s so thought-provoking yet humorous? And OK, it’s a little goofy too, at times.

If you’ve always intended to watch it, now might be a good time to get hooked.

(Plus, it might just earn you some points in heaven, if they’re still using that system.)

“ZeroZeroZero” Amazon Prime

“ZeroZeroZero” has been described as a show for those who miss “Narcos.” Based on the non-fiction book of the same name by Italian journalist Robert Saviano (who also wrote “Gomorrah”), this show follows a shipment of drugs: Those who want it, and those who want to stop it. (“ZeroZeroZero” is what the drug traffickers call the purist cocaine.)

I’m hard-pressed to think of another show that includes the Mafia, the Mexican drug cartel and Middle-eastern terrorists. It’s full of action and plot twists. Gorgeous scenes from around the world, including the U.S., Italy, Mexico, and Casablanca are juxtaposed against the ugliness of the ruthless and violent characters in them.

“Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madam C.J. Walker” Netflix

Madam C.J. Walker, the daughter of slaves, became a millionaire with her hair products for women of color. Good hair makes you self-confident, and “Wonderful hair leads to wonderful opportunities,” as she says.

Oscar-winner Octavia Spencer plays Madame Walker in this Netflix series that began streaming on March 20. It’s the story of a woman who started out making $1.50 washing clothes and who became an entrepreneur and an astute businesswoman as well as the nation’s first female self-made millionaire. She saw a need for hair products for people of color and filled it. Not only that, she helped empower other women as well, so they could also become self-sufficient.

“Ozark” Seasons 1- 3 Netflix

“Ozark” is about a financial planner (Jason Bateman), his wife (Laura Linney) and their two teens forced to escape from Chicago and hide out in the Ozarks in Missouri when a money-laundering scheme goes south. But they wind up having to launder even larger amounts of money for a Mexican cartel, and life keeps throwing more and more obstacles in their path. It’s a compelling and unpredictable watch.

Look for the O in the creative opening credits.

It’s quartered internally, with four images foreshadowing what’s to come in that episode (and also in the shape of the remaining four letters that spell out “Ozark”).

Season 3 is slated to start streaming on Netflix on March 27.

“Westworld” Seasons 1- 3 HBO


Season 3 of “Westworld” has recently begun streaming on HBO at 9 p.m. Sundays. Fascinating, at times confusing and mystifying, the series is an update of a 1973 movie of the same name, about an amusement park for adults where humans interact with robots. They can fight them, kill them, even have sex with them. The robots’ memories are wiped clean, and they are returned to interact with a new batch of rich tourists.

This series takes the original premise further and has the benefit of 21st-century special effects.

Some of the robots become self-aware; that’s the problem when humans start messing with Artificial Intelligence and try to play God.

In Season 3, the robots step outside of Westworld and enter into the real world. Even if the story doesn’t make perfect sense and you suspect the writers are just making it up as they’re going along, it’s great to see futuristic architecture, cars, clothing and other design.

 “Succession” Seasons 1- 2 HBO, Hulu, Amazon Prime

Here’s a series about a global media titan (Brian Cox) and his narcissistic, self-serving children who all want to curry his favor and grab as big of a slice of the pie as they can. Some are not above planning a takeover of their father’s international media conglomerate.

Look up the words “greedy” and “backstabbing,” and you’ll find a portrait of the Roy family.

“Succession” is a show about wealth, but also about power, power plays and familial and corporate maneuverings. Allegedly, it was inspired by Murdoch, the Trumps and the Sulzbergers.

Just listen to the theme music. It’s majestic, classical with some hip-hop, and discordant —just like the family itself. And check out the crazy dialogue. There are lines that make you laugh with their surrealism, and lines that make you cry because they’re as empty as a politician’s promises.

It’s been called “bitingly savage.” I call it amusing and terrifying and addictive.

“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” Seasons 1- 3 Amazon Prime

Set in the late 1950s and early ’60s, this series follows a married woman, Midge Maisel, who wants to be a standup comic. And she’s funny. Really funny. Her riffs and rants are humorous and authentic.

The only problem is, she’s a woman. She doesn’t do what the few women comics of that time did; she doesn’t tell self-denigrating jokes or put on a strange persona. And that makes a career in stand-up even more difficult for her.

This Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning comedy is great fun, and gets the look of mid-century New York City just right. Sure, it’s a little too pretty, but just think of it as a Technicolor recreation of the times.

It was created by Amy Sherman-Paladino, who also created “Gilmore Girls.”

Watch it and see why everyone else has been raving about this series.

“The Plot Against America” HBO limited series

An adaptation of Philip Roth’s 2004 novel of the same name, here’s a six-part series (Mondays at 9 p.m.) that imagines an alternate history, one in which xenophobic and anti-Semitic aviator Charles Lindbergh becomes president and turns our country in an ugly direction. Claiming “America First,” the populist, isolationist president stirs hatred, refuses to enter World War II (because he agrees with Hitler) and turns the United States into a dangerous place for Jews and anyone who doesn’t agree with him.

“Good Girls” Seasons 1- 2 Netflix Season 1, Hulu

Times are tough. Money is tight. Two sisters (one a suburban housewife and mom, the other a single mother) and their best friend (who happens to be the wife of a policeman) decide to knock off a supermarket.

But the money becomes addictive. They’re also trapped, because the money they stole belongs to a big drug dealer. And so they find themselves having to find ways to launder money for him.

The sisters are played by Christina Hendricks (formerly of “Mad Men”) and Mae Whitman; their friend is portrayed by Retta (formerly of “Parks and Recreation.”)

It’s more cleverly written than you’d expect a network show to be, and the relationship among the three women rings true.

"Los Espookys” Season 1 HBO

This off-beat, off-kilter comedy series revolves around Renaldo, a horror-and gore enthusiast, who forms a business with a group of friends: They provide horror experiences for clients, such as an exorcism or trapping someone in a cursed mirror. Created by Fred Armisen, Ana Fabrega and Jose Torres, the episodes are in Spanish with English subtitles.

Like nothing else on your screen.

Finally, on the off chance that you’ve actually seen all of the above, here are five more totally binge-able, multiple seasons, high-quality shows you absolutely must watch (or watch again):

“Boardwalk Empire”

“The Wire”

“The Sopranos”

“Mad Men”

“Downton Abbey” 




Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate






Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Artist Series continues in Sarasota, Venice

https://www.yoursun.com/venice/artist-series-continues-in-sarasota-venice/
Staff Report, January 28,2019

VENICE — The Artist Series continues with a Jan. 30 concert in Sarasota at Michaels on East and on Feb. 4 concert in Venice at the Plantation Golf & Country Club.

Sopranos Monica Pasquini and Rebecca Shorstein will perform with Joseph Holt on piano at 11 a.m. on Thursday, Jan. 30, at Michael’s on East, 1212 S. East Ave., Sarasota Lunch will follow at 12:15 p.m.

Pasquini, a Sarasota native, is a past recipient of an Artist Series Concerts scholarship award and a musical success story. Joining Pasquini on this homecoming will be fellow coloratura soprano — and Florida native — Shorstein.

Each of these young singers has achieved worldwide individual renown and as a duet, they are known for their dynamic and innovative performances, presenting unique shows with symphony orchestras and at cabaret venues and private events across the United States and abroad.

The perform a musical smorgasbord of classical, pops and contemporary favorites that includes works by Mozart, Offenbach, Puccini, Berlin, Lloyd Webber and more.

The series will bring a Latin theme at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 4, to the Plantation Golf and Country Club, 500 Rockley Blvd. in Venice. The performance will be followed by lunch at 12:15 p.m.

Tunes of the Mariachi and Latin America will be performed by Guillermo López Gutiérrez, tenor; Joseph Holt on piano; and Mariachi Tampa.

The ballroom of the Plantation Golf & Country Club will be hopping with the melodies of master Mariachi musicians and singing by young spinto tenor Guillermo López Gutiérrez.

A native of Sonora, Mexico, Lopez Gutiérrez has been hailed as one of the most promising young voices in Mexico and the U.S. He has performed leading roles with festivals and with symphonies across the country and has been a featured performer with Opera Tampa and with Choral Artists of Sarasota.

One of Florida’s most sought after mariachi bands, Mariachi Tampa is probably best known as the band that’s been drawing SRO crowds to area Mi Pueblo restaurants for more than 15 years.

Artist Series Concerts of Sarasota was formed in 1996 as Artist Series of Sarasota. The non-profit organization presents world-class musical experiences in a diverse range of genres, including classical, cabaret, pop, Broadway, orchestral and opera. A central focus of Artist Series Concerts’ mission is to support the professional careers of exemplary emerging artists by presenting them to the audiences of Florida’s Gulf Coast.

Artist Series Concerts has awarded more than $300,000 to more than 80 gifted young musicians from around the country and in Sarasota and Manatee counties. Past winners have gone on to study at leading music conservatories and pursue successful music careers. For more information, visit artistseriesconcerts.org.




Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate