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  • AP Top 25 poll preview: Alabama loss will change the top 5 and USF’s loss opens up race for G5 bid

    The top five of The Associated Press poll is in for a change Sunday after staying the same for three weeks.

    No. 4 Alabama’s eight-game winning streak ended Saturday with its 23-21 loss to No. 11 Oklahoma, and voters undoubtedly will drop the Crimson Tide. More important, Alabama’s margin for error to make the Southeastern Conference championship game and College Football Playoff has narrowed.

    No. 3 Texas A&M nearly had the same fate as the Tide. The Aggies had to make their biggest comeback in program history to beat South Carolina 31-30 and stay on track to play in the SEC title game.

    No. 5 Georgia posted an impressive 35-10 win over No. 10 Texas and should get a one-rung promotion.

    The situation in the Group of Five is scrambled again after No. 25 South Florida lost 41-38 to Navy. The Bulls came into the weekend as the front-runner for the G5’s automatic CFP bid. The Bulls’ loss bolstered the hopes of fellow American Conference teams North Texas and Tulane and No. 24 James Madison of the Sun Belt Conference.

    No. 1 Ohio State was in control all the way in a 48-10 victory over UCLA. No. 2 Indiana, 11-0 for the first time, defeated Wisconsin 31-7 and should keep its spot behind the Buckeyes in the AP poll and the CFP rankings.

    The situation in the Atlantic Coast Conference remains messy. There are four teams with one loss in ACC play, and two-loss Miami owns the best CFP resume. Miami hammered North Carolina State 41-7 at home while Georgia Tech escaped one-win Boston College 36-34 on a field goal in the final seconds.

    Saturday’s results will give AP voters good reason to move No. 16 Miami ahead of No. 14 Georgia Tech, just as the CFP committee jumped the Hurricanes over the Yellow Jackets in its rankings earlier this week.

    Look for them to move up

    — No. 5 Georgia should be No. 4 after its dominant win over Texas.

    — No. 7 Oregon had no problem against Minnesota on Friday in a 42-13 win. The Ducks were three poll points behind No. 6 Mississippi last week, slipping a spot despite beating Iowa on the road. It would make just as much sense if voters put Oregon back at No. 6 after the Rebels tussled with three-win Florida deep into the fourth quarter before winning 34-24.

    No. 8 Texas Tech’s 48-9 win over UCF was its third straight impressive victory after its loss to Arizona State.

    — No. 9 Notre Dame posted a solid 37-15 win at Pittsburgh in what, on paper, was the Fighting Irish’s last tough game.

    — No. 11 Oklahoma’s win over Alabama was a showcase for its defense and a big boost to its playoff resume.

    — No. 12 BYU punctuated its 44-13 win over TCU with Tanner Wall’s 68-yard pick-6.

    No. 15 Utah’s 55-28 victory over Baylor keeps the Utes in the Big 12 race but needing help to get to the conference title game.

    — No. 20 Virginia got quarterback Chandler Morris back from a concussion and bounced back from a bad loss to Wake Forest to win 34-17 at Duke.

    — No. 24 James Madison, which entered the rankings last week for the first time in two years, routed Appalachian State 58-10.

    Look for them to drop

    — No. 4 Alabama will fall. The question is how far? The Tide and Oklahoma have two losses, but the Sooners won the head-to-head meeting and deserve to be ahead of ‘Bama.

    — No. 10 Texas’ 25-point loss to Georgia put the kibosh on its hopes of going to a third straight CFP.

    — No. 14 Georgia Tech must drop. The Yellow Jackets had to come from behind to get past an opponent that has not beaten an FBS team, and in their previous game they lost to an N.C. State team that got clobbered by Miami.

    — No. 19 Louisville should drop out after losing 20-19 to Clemson. It was the Cardinals’ second straight loss at home. They lost to California last week.

    — No. 23 Pittsburgh probably will fall out after losing by 22 to the Irish, but the Panthers still have a path to the ACC championship game.

    — No. 25 South Florida had been in the driver’s seat for the G5 bid in the CFP after bouncing back from its loss to Memphis with a convincing win over UTSA last week. That bid is wide open now after the Bulls’ loss to Navy.

    Wild cards

    — No. 6 Ole Miss dominated the stat sheet and Kewan Lacy was spectacular, but it was a three-point game until the final two minutes.

    — No. 17 Southern California got all it could handle from Iowa before winning 26-21.

    — No. 18 Michigan had a close call against Northwestern, winning 24-22 on a field goal as time expired. It will be interesting to see how voters view it.

    No. 21 Tennessee’s workmanlike 42-9 win over New Mexico State probably won’t move the needle.

    ___

    Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

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  • Afghan man living in Lowell speaks about ICE detention

    LOWELL — When Ihsanullah Garay was delivering food on Sept. 14, he found himself struggling to find the Starbucks he was being sent to pick up from in Methuen.

    He asked the first people he saw for directions, a man and a woman sitting in a car. The man pointed Garay in the right direction, he told The Sun Monday morning, and Garay thanked him and started walking away. Then, the two people started asking Garay questions about his nationality, and where he was born. Garay is from Afghanistan, arriving in the U.S. in the spring of 2021 on a student visa to get a doctorate in finance.

    “I said, ‘Brother, this is not related to you. You helped me, I said thank you, that’s it,’” Garay said.

    Garay then tried to walk away, but he said the man shouted at him, and continued questioning Garay’s nationality, while Garay maintained that he was in the country legally.

    After more back and forth, Garay said the man finally identified himself as a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, and ask him to produce identification, which Garay had in his car, along with an ID badge from a former job.

    Garay was soon placed in handcuffs, beginning a more than monthlong ordeal in ICE custody that brought him to three different ICE facilities in three states before he was released on bond last month. After he arrived back in Lowell, where he has been living with his cousin, Abdul Ahad Storay, Garay took some time to settle and work to get back on track with his ongoing treatment for brain cancer.

    On Monday, he sat down with The Sun in Storay’s computer store in Downtown Lowell to give his firsthand account of his experience.

    Garay said that when he was placed in handcuffs, he tried to explain his situation to the ICE agents, to no avail.

    “I said, ‘What are you doing? I have brain cancer. I have a work permit, I have Social Security, I have everything. What are you doing?’ He said nothing,” said Garay.

    Garay’s first stop was the ICE field office in Burlington, where many of those detained by the agency in Greater Lowell are being brought. Since the spring, allegations of extremely poor conditions inside the building have been made by detainees and their attorneys, as it is designed primarily as an office building, not a long-term detention facility.

    Garay could not speak much to the conditions inside, as he said he was only at the facility for roughly an hour before he was transferred to another facility in Rhode Island. In that short time, though, Garay said he was asked by ICE officials for proof that he has brain cancer, which he was able to show them through his MyChart app when they brought him his phone, which they had confiscated along with his ID and other belongings. When the ICE officials saw the medical documents, Garay said they seemed shocked he was telling the truth.

    While still in Burlington, Garay said he suffered a couple medical episodes which lasted about two minutes, though he was unsure whether these were seizures or something else stemming from his brain cancer.

    Garay spent about 28 days in the facility in Rhode Island, and at one point he said similar medical episodes would occur on a near nightly basis, bringing him to the point of needing a wheelchair to move around, but the medical care available at the facility was not sufficient, he said. After he was moved to Georgia, where he was given the Oct. 21 court hearing that resulted in his release, Garay said he experienced more of the same.

    “They have no neurosurgeon, they have no oncologist, they have no neurologist, nothing,” said Garay.

    Through all of this, Garay was missing key appointments in the course of his cancer treatment. He was supposed to start a new medication at a Sept. 24 appointment at Boston Medical Center, but he missed it while in custody and was not able to start the medication on time. Even after reaching out to his doctors, Garay said the medicine did not arrive before he was moved to Georgia. In the meantime, he said he was prescribed Keppra, an anti-seizure medication he was supposed to take in the morning and evening, but it was only ever brought to him for the night dose while he was in Rhode Island.

    In Georgia, Garay said he saw a slight improvement to that end, as they gave him both daily doses of the anti-seizure medication, though at that facility he still lacked the medical care he needed.

    After he was released on bond, the police brought Garay to the airport, where he was denied boarding because his identification had been taken by ICE in Massachusetts, despite reassurance from the police and ICE he would be allowed on the plane.

    After Storay called local police to help his cousin, Garay was brought to Jacksonville, Florida, where he got on a bus for the multi-day journey back north to Lowell.

    Now home, Garay is doing much better. He is able to walk around without the need for a wheelchair, and his cancer treatment is moving back on track after he met with his doctors at the end of October. His next appointment is an MRI at Boston Medical Center later this month, and he has multiple other appointments scheduled with his doctors before the end of the year.

    Still, his ICE ordeal continues with a court hearing on Dec. 11 in Georgia, but Garay and his attorneys are working on getting it moved up to Massachusetts. He hopes to remain in the U.S., not only because of his ongoing medical treatment, but also because both he and Storay, himself a U.S. citizen, would not be safe returning to Afghanistan, which fell back to Taliban control in 2021, months after Garay left the country.

    As his home country fell, and the U.S. completed the withdrawal of its military forces, Garay applied for asylum that August on top of his student visa, fearing what would happen to him if he were to return.

    “If the U.S. will give me nationality, I will accept it. If not, I will go somewhere else,” said Garay. “When the Taliban suddenly came, I had no choice but to apply for asylum.”

    Garay’s asylum case has been pending ever since. So when Temporary Protected Status was offered to Afghan citizens living in the U.S. the following spring after the Taliban retook control, Garay did not apply for TPS due to his open asylum case. TPS for Afghanistan was terminated in July this year.

    “They (ICE) told me my visa expired in September 2021. I asked them how this was possible when I came in April,” said Garay.

    Even without the Taliban, Garay said he could not return because Afghanistan lacks the medical infrastructure he needs to treat his cancer.

    Now that he is back in Lowell, Garay is looking for other work that is not food delivery.

    In addition to delivering food, Garay said he had been working at Lahey Hospital as a receptionist, but he left that job just a couple weeks before his arrest after they could not give him enough hours.

    Friends of Garay also left Afghanistan after he did, but some went to Canada, he said, and once there they asked him to join them.

    “I said no … I don’t want to be in some country illegally, so that is why I am here,” said Garay.

    Garay credited Storay for getting him back to Lowell.

    “He knows my situation. Nobody can even imagine my situation … He also knows what he has been spending on me. Only he knows,” said Garay.

    An ICE spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment Friday. When previously asked about Garay’s case in October, ICE Boston spokesperson James Covington said in a statement Garay is “an illegal alien from Afghanistan,” and claimed he lawfully entered the U.S. in April 2021 with permission to remain until Sept. 7, 2021.

    “However, he violated the terms of his lawful admission when he refused to leave the country. Garay will remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of his removal proceedings,” Covington said in the Oct. 11 statement.

    In addition to Garay’s current work permit, Storay was also able to show The Sun Garay’s original student visa, which was issued in April 2021 and expired one year later, seven months after Covington claimed it did.

    Peter Currier

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  • Court date for lawsuit challenging Florida’s bear hunt set for Monday

    FLORIDA — A judge will hear arguments about Florida’s bear hunt on Monday. The conservation group, Bear Warriors United, filed an injunction on top of a recently filed lawsuit.

    They want to stop the hunt until further studies can be completed about bear populations in Florida.

    The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s (FWC) website says the state’s bear population is upwards of 4,500 and says there is an increase in encounters with people.

    They also say the hunt prevents road deaths and malnutrition.

    Since 2006, there have been 42 documented incidents of bear and human contact in Florida. That means bears physically touching someone, not just a sighting or close encounter.

    There has only been one confirmed fatal attack in the state’s history.

    FWC issued permits in four bear hunting zones for December.

    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Pinion scores 24, South Florida downs Kennesaw State 108-89

    KENNESAW, Ga. ( (AP) — Joseph Pinion scored 24 points as South Florida beat Kennesaw State 108-89 on Sunday.

    Pinion shot 5 for 7 (3 for 3 from 3-point range) and 11 of 12 from the free-throw line for the Bulls (3-1). Josh Omojafo scored 20 points while going 6 of 13 from the floor, including 2 for 3 from 3-point range, and 6 for 6 from the line and added six rebounds. Izaiyah Nelson shot 6 of 10 from the field and 6 of 6 from the free-throw line to finish with 18 points.

    The Owls (3-1) were led in scoring by Simeon Cottle, who finished with 25 points. Braedan Lue added 12 points, two steals and four blocks for Kennesaw State. Trey Simpson and RJ Johnson also had 11 points.

    The score was 56-41 at halftime, with Pinion racking up 20 points. Omojafo scored 18 points in the second half to help lead the way.

    Up next

    South Florida’s next game is Wednesday against Oklahoma State on the road, and Kennesaw State plays Rice on Monday.

    Associated Press

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  • Canucks score 5 3rd-period goals to beat Lightning 6-2

    TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Kiefer Sherwood, Linus Karlsson and Drew O’Connor scored in a 1:40 span in Vancouver’s five-goal third period and the Canucks overcame an early deficit to beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 6-2 on Sunday night.

    Sherwood tied it at 2 on a power play at 4:11, with his shot deflecting in off Lightning defender J.J. Moser’s skate. Sherwood has 12 goals this season.

    Karlsson put the Canucks ahead at 4:54 with a backhander, and O’Connor added his fifth of the season at 5:51 on a tip. Mackenzie MacEachern scored his first of the season with 6:08 remaining, and Marcus Pettersson added his first of the season into an empty net with 3:03 to go.

    Kevin Lankinen made 28 saves, and Quinn Hughes had four assists after missing a game because of an upper-body injury. The Canucks ended a three-game losing streak. They opened a three-game trip Friday night with an overtime loss at Carolina

    Jake DeBrusk started the comeback on a power play at 9:26 of the second, beating Jonas Johansson from close range off a rebound for his seventh goal.

    Nikita Kucherov and Jake Guentzel spotted Tampa Bay — coming off a 3-1 victory at Florida on Saturday night — to a 2-0 lead, each scoring their eighth of the season.

    Kucherov scored on a one-timer from the right circle with 35 seconds left in the first period, and Guentzel made it 2-0 on a tip at 4:35 of the second.

    Up next

    Canucks: At Florida on Monday night.

    Lightning: Host New Jersey on Tuesday night.

    Associated Press

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  • 13 Italian-made pastas that may soon face a 107% tariff

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The U.S. Department of Commerce is proposing an unprecedented 107% tariff on some Italian-made pastas coming into the country, accusing 13 companies of what’s called “dumping.”


    What You Need To Know

    • The Commerce Department is accusing 13 Italian-made pasta brands of selling their products cheaper than American counterparts, a practice called “dumping”
    • To counteract, the department has proposed a 107% tariff to be placed on more than a dozen Italian pasta brands set to take effect in January
    • Local Italian markets say they’re prepared for possible tariff, buying more items in advance in case of limited supply


    Mazarro’s Italian Market has been around for nearly 25 years, and has quite a few options.

    “This is our fresh pasta department right here, with all of our fresh sauces. In house, handmade, fresh pasta,” said Bradley Simons, buyer and manager at Mazarro’s. “I had a hard time believing it, and I still think it’s not going to be 100 percent tariff.”

    In a September report in the Federal Register, officials accuse 13 foreign companies of “dumping.” That’s when they sell their products in the U.S. cheaper than their American counterparts, effectively undercutting domestic brands. A full list of brands affected can be found below.

    Set for January, the Trump administration is considering a 107% tariff on 13 brands; nearly 92% because of the dumping probe, on top of the 15% tariff tacked onto anything coming from the European Union.

    “We haven’t really heard much from our distribution or import partners on it, because everyone is optimistic it’s going to be resolved before it turns into what’s being talked about now,” Simons said.

    Across the 20-foot self-described “pasta wall,” Simons says they carry only a couple of the brands impacted by this possible tariff. Just in case, Simons says Mazzaro’s has already bought more Italian-made pasta ahead of the tariff.

    “We use over 30-40 pasta brands currently. So, if 10 of those go away, yeah, it could be an issue for us, but it wouldn’t have a widespread effect on our market or operations,” said Simons.

    Despite the threat of tariffs, Simons says he’s focused on delivering fairly priced items with exceptional taste. As for the current 15 percent tariff on EU goods, Simons says he and his distributors have absorbed the cost, keeping prices steady across the board.

    “Rest assured, if there is one missing, I have dozens of others that I can point you in the right direction of, and you’ll be super happy with it,” Simons said.

    For now, Mazarro’s is just waiting until January to see if that tariff threat becomes reality

    Spectrum Bay News 9 reached out to the White House and the Commerce Department for comment, but didn’t hear back.


    Brands impacted by possible 107% tariff:

    • Agritalia
    • Aldino
    • Antiche Tradizioni Di Gragnano
    • Barilla 
    • Gruppo Milo 
    • La Molisana
    • Pastificio Artigiano Cav. Giuseppe Cocco
    • Pastificio Chiavenna
    • Pastificio Liguori 
    • Pastificio Lucio Garofalo
    • Pastificio Sgambaro
    • Pastificio Tamma 
    • Rummo

    Andy Cole

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  • Ole Miss fans fear Lane Kiffin is leaving after postgame comments

    The Ole Miss student section was vocal about their wishes for head coach Lane Kiffin after the No. 7 Rebels defeated Florida 34-24 in front of 68,138 fans at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium on Saturday night.

    More News: Ole Miss Players Speak Out on Lane Kiffin to Florida Rumors

    The crowd chanted “we want Lane” as the Rebels headed into the locker room after improving their record to 10-1 overall and 6-1 in the SEC. Ole Miss appears to be destined to make the College Football Playoff, as its final challenge in the regular season will come against 5-5 Mississippi State on Nov. 28.

    Whether Kiffin is coaching Ole Miss in the CFP remains to be seen. The 50-year-old head coach has been heavily linked to Florida. His name has also been tied to LSU and a few NFL teams in recent weeks.

    More News: College Football Program Generates Major Buzz After Jumping in CFP Ranking

    Kiffin has done nothing to shut down those rumors, choosing not to sign a contract extension with Ole Miss.

    During his postgame news conference, Kiffin was asked about his future with the Rebels. He sidestepped the question, saying that talking about the situation would be unfair to his players.

    “I love what we’re doing here,” said Kiffin, via Edgar Thompson of the Orlando Sentinel. “Today was awesome. To even talk about it right now would be so disrespectful to our players and what they did today.”

    Loading twitter content…

    Gators and Rebels fans on social media thought Kiffin’s answer pointed to him leaving Oxford.

    “Oh, he’s definitely gone. So easy to say ‘I’m not leaving,’” wrote a fan.

    “Oh yeah GONE gone,” believes a fan.

    “Wouldn’t be disrespectful if he said he’s staying… #interesting,” suggested another.

    “He gone…cuz a simple I’m ole miss through and through or I’m a rebel til I die would of sufficed,” wrote a fan.

    “I’m scared he’s gonna go to uf if I hope he don’t. He is either rage baiting the whole college football scene or he’s gonna go,” posted another.

    “He’s leaving :/,” believes a poster.

    “Dude is so gone,” argued another.

    Amid rumors about Kiffin’s future, Ole Miss has begun searching for his potential replacement.

    The Rebels will have a bye in Week 13, and that could be when Kiffin decides to sign an extension or pursue other offers.

    For more on the NCAA, head to Newsweek Sports.

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  • Kai Trump shoots 13-over 83 in LPGA Tour debut, leaving her last in 108-player field

    BELLEAIR, Fla. (AP) — Kai Trump shot a 13-over 83 on Thursday in her LPGA Tour debut in The Annika, leaving President Donald Trump’s granddaughter last in the 108-player field.

    In breezy afternoon conditions at Pelican Golf Club, the high school senior bogeyed the first four holes and finished the birdie-less round with nine bogeys and two double bogeys.

    “I was definitely more nervous than I expected, but I thought I hit a lot of great shots out there,” she said. “I hit a lot of good shots just to the wrong spots.”

    The University of Miami recruit is playing on a sponsor exemption.

    “It was pretty cool because I know I hit it far, but kind of playing with the best players in the world and being literally right there or even outdriving on some of the holes, it felt pretty good,” said Trump, the daughter of Donald Trump Jr. “Felt like my game is in a good spot, and especially only being a senior in high school.”

    Haeran Ryu led the tournament at 6-under 64, also playing in the afternoon.

    ___

    AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

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  • How the funny and feminist fashion in ‘Palm Royale’ further the storytelling

    NEW YORK (AP) — When Kristen Wiig steps out of a vintage Rolls-Royce in the opening scene of Season 2 of “Palm Royale,” she’s sporting a tall, yellow, fringed hat, gold platform sandals and sunny bell bottoms, with fabric petals that sway with every determined step. It’s the first clue that the costumes on the female-driven comedy are taking center stage.

    The Apple TV show made a splash in its first season with the starry cast, high production values and ubiquitous grasshopper cocktail. Wiig’s character, Maxine, tries to break into Palm Beach high society in 1969 and bumps heads with co-stars Carol Burnett, Allison Janney, Leslie Bibb and Laura Dern. But also playing a starring role are the vintage designer frocks that reflect each character.

    For Season 2, which premiered this week, Emmy-winning costume designer Alix Friedberg says she and her team coordinated “thousands” of looks that reflect the characters’ jet-setting style. She says 50-60% of the brightly colored and graphic print costumes are original vintage designer pieces, sourced by shoppers and costume designers.

    “The looks are so iconic. Sometimes Kristen will walk in in something, and it brings tears to my eyes,” Kaia Gerber — who plays Mitzi — told The Associated Press in a recent interview.

    The creative process entails more than shopping

    If not original vintage, Friedberg’s team builds the costumes, and if a character has to wear an outfit in multiple scenes or in big dance numbers, the team may create duplicates to preserve continuity. Friedberg says she was lucky to find so many vendors with vintage designer pieces in great condition.

    “(Bibb’s character) Dinah wears a few original Oscar de la Renta pieces that are really so perfect. Bill Blass was a big one, Oleg Cassini,” Friedberg says. “There’s a dress that (Janney’s character) Evelyn wears that’s this all emerald green jersey, it’s an original Halston and it’s so stunning on her and it really does sort of evoke what’s to come in the ‘70s.”

    Janney calls Friedberg “brilliant” and marveled at her talent at finding pieces that are like works of art. Some of her favorites were the characters’ après-ski looks in the Swiss Alps — but she finds it hard to pick an ultimate favorite.

    “All of them just make me feel divine. And the hair is just a masterpiece, and the makeup — it all goes together to just create Evelyn and I barely have to do anything,” Janney says.

    Costumes can be funny

    The costumes also help heighten the comedy. Friedberg says Evelyn’s stoic and deadpan character elicits laughs with some of her over-the-top getups.

    “She’s delivering this dialogue, these lines with, like, seven wigs on top of her,” Friedberg says. “The absurdity comes out really in how these women present themselves time and time again. … It was just so much fun to get to laugh and wink at the audience.”

    Burnett called costume fittings on the show “great fun” and said they helped her find her character, the scheming Norma. “I work from the outside in. I have to know what I’m going to look like,” she says.

    Norma’s signature turban started as a practical idea to help Burnett save time in hair and makeup. “The first time she put it on, we were both like, ‘Oh, that’s really so fabulous,’ and every time she came out as Norma without the turban, I really missed it,” Friedberg says. “Each time we built her a dress, we always had to sort of think about what the turban would be, and then it started to switch, and we started designing the turbans before the dress!”

    Season 2 of Apple TV’s “Palm Royale” features fabulous costumes and sets, lots of laughs and an undercurrent theme of feminism and female friendship. (Nov. 10)

    Many looks go deeper than sparkly sequins

    The costumes also help set the tone for the female empowerment theme that permeates this season. “Evelyn wore a lot more pants — which seems ridiculous to say today — but back then that was a real power move,” Friedberg says.

    Bibb had ideas to show how Dinah evolves from her trophy wife persona. “I knew this season was about her finding sort of her own wealth without a man … and what that looked like. I always have been obsessed with Sharon Stone in ‘Casino,’” Bibb says — and so they “stole” a bit of that look. “We really have Dinah going into pantsuits and just a different sense of her and she’s really becoming her most modern self.”

    Friedberg conveyed the privilege and simplicity of the rich men in the series through clothing as well. Josh Lucas plays Douglas, who suffers some disappointments this season, reflected in his costumes.

    “What if we approach Douglas where he’s always been dressed by women in his life? He’s always been dressed by someone else. He’s never shopped,” Lucas says he posed to Friedberg (who happens to be his sister-in-law in real life). “And for the first time, (his wife’s) character is not doing that, so he only has three hole-filled Hawaiian shirts.”

    He’s in fact the rare character who repeats outfits, Friedberg notes. “You can kind of see them, as the series goes along, getting a little bit more and more threadbare,” she says.

    Gerber’s character gets a major makeover this season after coming into money. The actor gushed about Friedberg’s intentional designs as Mitzi finds her “womanhood and her power.”

    “It was so fun to be able to be wearing these expensive gowns and jewelry and the hair and the makeup, and how that really sort of parallels Mitzi’s inner journey as well,” she says.

    The costumes may be eye candy, but Friedberg says each look also carries deeper meaning.

    “Maxine wears this dress that was an original Oscar de la Renta dress,” Friedberg says. “It’s very much something that Norma would wear, and it is saying to the audience without saying to the audience that she’s arrived, it’s her time, it’s time for her to rule.”

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  • Jack Finley scores 1st NHL goal to help the Lightning beat the Panthers 3-1

    SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Jack Finley scored his first NHL goal early in the third period to break a tie and the Tampa Bay Lightning held on to beat the Florida Panthers 3-1 on Saturday night.

    Emil Lilleberg and Zemgus Girgensons also scored for the Lightning. They improved to 8-2-0 in their last 10 games and 5-2-2 on the road.

    Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped 23 shots for Tampa Bay.

    Brad Marchand scored his team-leading 12th goal of the season for Florida, a power-play tally midway through the second period that tied it at 1.

    But Finley picked up a loose puck near the blue line and skated in alone on goalie Sergei Bobrovsky for what became the go-ahead goal 4:09 into the third. Girgensons sealed it with an empty-netter with 50.3 seconds remaining.

    Bobrovsky made 17 saves for Florida, which saw its two-game winning streak snapped.

    It was the first game between the teams since Oct. 4, a preseason contest that saw more than 300 penalty minutes and both rosters getting depleted because so many players were sent to the locker room early because of those infractions.

    And this game was chippy at times — as Lightning-Panthers games tend to be — but it was nothing like the penalty-fest from the preseason. There were only 14 penalties, 13 of them 2-minute minors and the other a 4-minute double minor against the Lightning in the third. There were some scuffles, but nothing that rose to the level of a fighting penalty or a major.

    Up next

    Lightning: Host Vancouver on Sunday night.

    Panthers: Host Vancouver on Monday night.

    Associated Press

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  • USF loses ground in AAC championship game bid in loss to Navy 41-38

    ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — Eli Heidenreich caught five passes for 146 yards and became Navy’s all-time receiving yards leader, quarterback Braxton Woodson ran for 103 yards and two touchdowns in the fourth quarter in relief of Blake Horvath and the Midshipmen defeated South Florida 41-38 on Saturday.

    Alex Tecza carried 12 times for 126 yards, including an early 76-yard score, and caught Horvath’s lone touchdown pass as Navy (8-2, 6-1 American Athletic Conference) secured a half-game lead in the conference.

    Heidenreich has 1,794 career receiving yards and moved past Rob Thompson’s 1,736, compiled from 1965-67.

    Byrum Brown threw for 327 yards and two touchdowns, and ran for 136 yards and two more scores for South Florida (7-3, 4-2), which scored 22 points in the fourth quarter yet lost its second consecutive road game. The Bulls also lost ground in their bid to reach the conference championship game.

    After Heidenreich earlier career-long 82-yard catch from Horvath set up Brandon Chatman’s 4-yard touchdown run to make it 14-3 at the end of the first quarter, his 32-yard catch from Woodson was a crucial moment during an eight-play, 75-yard scoring drive that ended with Woodson’s 20-yard scoring run to make it 34-24.

    On Navy’s next possession, Woodson ran 64 yards for the Midshipmen’s third play of 60 or more yards to make it 41-30.

    The takeaway

    After another big home win put the Bulls back in the Top 25 for the fifth time this season, South Florida may fall back.

    Up next

    South Florida: At UAB next Saturday.

    Navy: At Memphis on Nov. 27.

    Associated Press

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  • Strawberry Festival announces 2026 music lineup

    PLANT CITY, Fla. – The Florida Strawberry Festival has announced its musical lineup for the 2026 event.

    Among the artists performing on the Wish Farms Soundstage are festival staples The Oak Ridge Boys, Alabama, Jo Dee Messina and the Bellamy Brothers.


    What You Need To Know

    • Florida Strawberry Festival has announced its musical lineup for the 2026 event
    • Each year, over 600,000 visitors enjoy the Festival’s headline entertainment
    • MORE INFORMATION: Florida Strawberry Festival

    Other groups playing toward the end of the festival are Dierks Bentley, Marshall Tucker Band and The Offspring.

    “As we unveil our headline entertainment for BerryFest26, I couldn’t be more proud to share this year’s theme  Still Growing’  which perfectly reflects both our community’s spirit and the Festival’s continued evolution,” said Florida Strawberry Festival President Kyle Robinson. “We’re honored to welcome an incredible lineup of artists, including Forrest Frank, Alabama, Riley Green, Dierks Bentley, Ty Myers, Lonestar, and many more, whose talent and energy will light up our stage.”

    Each year, over 600,000 visitors enjoy the Festival’s headline entertainment, youth livestock shows, exhibits of commerce and, of course, its strawberry shortcake.

    The 91st Annual Florida Strawberry Festival will take place February 26 – March 8, 2026. For more information, visit www.flstrawberryfestival.com.

    Advance tickets for gate admission and headline entertainment shows will go on sale Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025 at 8 a.m. EST at the Amscot Main Ticket Office located at 2209 W. Oak Avenue in Plant City, and can be purchased online at www.flstrawberryfestival.com, on the Festival’s app, or by phone at 813-754-1996.

    Spectrum News Staff

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  • USDA secretary: SNAP recipients set to receive food payments by Monday at latest

    ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. — As states across the country scramble to issue the full SNAP benefits that nearly 42 million nationwide and 2.9 million in the Sunshine State depend upon, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke L. Rollins said Thursday that most recipients will receive their payments by Monday at the latest.

    Although the restoration of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) after the 43-day government shutdown will provide relief, many people are still likely to experience food insecurity afterward, according to a local nonprofit leader.


    What You Need To Know

    • SNAP recipients can expect to receive full benefits again by Monday, according to the U.S. Agriculture secretary
    • But for many, the fear of not knowing where they will get their next meal remains
    • One widowed, single mother who is dependent on SNAP says she struggled to keep food on the table for her and her 14-year-old son during the government shutdown
    • Meanwhile, the leader of one local nonprofit says that food insecurity and demand have not been so high since the COVID-19 pandemic


    Single widowed mother Jen Hall, who is a SNAP recipient, described the past month as “challenging” as she struggled to put food on the table for her and her 14-year-old son.

    Even before the government shutdown, however, Hall says her SNAP benefits were shrinking. In order to be deemed eligible for SNAP, she has to recertify every six months. But the last time she recertified prior to the shutdown, her monthly allowance dropped from around $160 to just $24 a month.

    “It was a challenge to not know when things are coming,” Hall says. “We’ve got the holidays coming up. There’s lots of things coming up, but also, every day people need to eat.”

    Hall is permanently disabled and still grieving the loss of her husband, who passed away last year because of health complications following a workplace incident in 2022.

    She says that her husband’s lack of adequate healthcare contributed to his death, which is why she firmly believes that food and healthcare are two basic human rights to which everybody should have access.

    “When we’re looking at the government shutdown, it’s important to frame that as the choice was people dying from lack of healthcare or people going hungry, and both of those are lose-lose situations, and I happen to be one of those people who sits on both sides of those,” Hall says. “My husband died from lack of adequate healthcare. I would die if I lost health insurance, and I have no idea how I am going to continue to feed my son and I.”

    Hall was in a car accident that left her permanently disabled years ago. Today, she relies on Medicare and Medicaid to get care. She says she has not been able to find a job because of the nature of her medical conditions.

    “The other concern is that if I do attempt employment, there’s a good chance I will lose my health insurance, and without my health insurance, I will die,” she says.

    During the shutdown, Hall sought help from the Hope CommUnity Center in Apopka, which provides an emergency food pantry to community members in need, including SNAP recipients like her.

    Central Florida nonprofits like the Hope CommUnity Center are still short on food donations, leaders say.

    “Food insecurity is even larger than what it was during the (COVID-19) pandemic,” Hope CommUnity Center Executive Director Felipe Sousa-Lazaballet says.

    The increase in demand was exacerbated by recent federal cuts that forced them to be entirely dependent on donations from local churches and other nonprofits, he says.

    The most demand Sousa-Lazaballet has seen comes from Social Security recipients and single mothers like Hall, he says.

    “The majority of the people that we’re supporting are actually U.S. citizens who are in incredible need, and it is incredibly sad that in the richest country in the world, people are going hungry right now,” he says.

    Sousa-Lazaballet is encouraging people to donate to local food drives or to nonprofits within their communities to help nonprofits fill the food insecurity gaps.

    Sasha Teman

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  • Pinellas Park residents asked to evacuate due to potentially hazardous fire

    PINELLAS PARK, Fla. — Emergency workers in Pinellas Park are asking for anyone living within a quarter-mile of 6400 53rd Street to evacuate their home while firefighters deal with a blaze that potentially involves hazardous materials.

    Initially, residents were asked to stay indoors.

    The Pinellas Park Fire Department released the following statement on the fire:

    “Pinellas Park Fire Department, in conjunction with the Pinellas County Hazardous Materials Team, Lealman Fire Rescue, and St. Petersburg Fire Rescue are still engaged in an active hazardous materials incident. Residents initially noted a fog with an odor in the area. Arriving fire crews found a storage unit with a plume of smoke coming from it. 

    Due to the nature of the contents on site, residents have been requested to evacuate if they live within a 300-meter radius (roughly 1/4 mile) from 6400 53rd Street.”

    A safe place is being provided at the Broderick Recreation Center, located at 6101 66th Ave., for any evacuee who does not have a place to go.

    Officials say the situation caused a firefighter to be taken to the hospital, but the individual’s current status was not immediately released, other than to say that they were in “stable condition.”

    This is a breaking story and more details will be posted as they become available.

    Spectrum News Staff

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  • New federal rules will outlaw most THC products

    TAMPA, Fla. — The bill President Donald Trump signed to reopen the federal government contains a provision that will dramatically reshape the THC product marketplace, effectively criminalizing most THC-infused products currently sold in the U.S.


    What You Need To Know

    •  President Donald Trump recently signed a bill into law to reopen the federal government, which had been shut down for more than a month
    •  A provision in the bill, though, dealt not with the shutdown, but hemp products in the U.S.
    •  The provision will dramatically reshape the THC product marketplace, effectively criminalizing most THC-infused products currently sold in the U.S.


    The new rule makes any product containing more than 0.4 milligrams of total THC illegal — including hemp-derived or synthetic cannabinoids such as Delta-8.

    While some Florida hemp shop owners say the change could devastate their businesses, supporters argue the stricter limits will help protect children.

    The tighter regulations caught many in the hemp industry off guard.

    “It was a shock to everybody,” said Carlos Hermida, owner of Chillum Mushroom and Hemp. “I mean, they literally snuck it in there.”

    Hermida says the change amounts to an attack on the industry, noting that a large portion of his store’s inventory will no longer be allowed.

    “We sell glass and we sell vapes and other things … but it’s definitely 90% of my hemp inventory, which is a significant amount,” he said. “We’ve been selling hemp in Florida … for about eight years.”

    Under the new federal provision, only 0.4 milligrams of total THC per container will be permitted — far below the potency of most products now on shelves.

    “So this little bit here, this oil … is almost 900 milligrams in this container,” Hermida said. “This little bit would be very, very illegal. And these gummies are 300 milligrams per gummy. They would only allow four milligrams per gummy.”

    The ruling applies to all hemp-derived cannabinoids, including those synthesized outside the plant such as Delta-8.

    For Ellen Snelling, chair of the Hillsborough County Anti-Drug Alliance, the new limits are long overdue.

    “This is something I’ve been hoping for since about 2022,” Snelling said.

    She said she believes the changes will help reduce youth access to drugs and prevent medical emergencies linked to THC exposure.

    “I think it will make a big difference, especially with our children,” she said. “Florida Poison Center numbers continue to go up — exposures, hospitalizations, ER visits of children and adults.”

    The hemp industry generates billions in annual revenue, and business owners like Hermida worry about what comes next.

    “This is definitely something that we need to figure out … to make sure that our business stays up and running,” he said.

    Despite the sweeping changes, the new regulations won’t take effect immediately. A one-year delay in implementation will give Congress time to revisit the issue and craft additional rules.

    Jeff Van Sant

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  • Florida adopts ‘Phoenix Declaration,’ Epstein’s powerful friends

    The Florida State Board of Education has unanimously adopted the Heritage Foundation’s “Phoenix Declaration,” and newly released emails show that Jeffrey Epstein still had a complex network of wealthy and influential friends, even after he was convicted of soliciting prostitution from an underage girl in 2008.


    Florida is now the first state in the nation to adopt the “Phoenix Declaration” — a set of education philosophies put forth by the Heritage Foundation, a high-profile conservative think tank.

    The State Board of Education approved the declaration unanimously, setting it up to be the driving force for how public schools will instruct students.

    “Every child should have access to a high-quality, content-rich education that fosters the pursuit of the good, the true, and the beautiful, so that they may achieve their full, God-given potential,” reads the declaration.

    The declaration emphasizes seven principles — parental choice and responsibility; transparency and accountability; truth and goodness; cultural transmission; character formation; academic excellence; and citizenship. 

    “I don’t know how anyone could disagree with parental choice and responsibility, curriculum transparency, academic excellence, and instruction on objective truth,” said Education Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas. “These principles are principles that everyone across the board on both sides of the aisles can agree with.”

    The declaration says that students “should learn that there is objective truth and that it is knowable.”

    “Science courses must be grounded in reality, not ideological fads,” it continues. “Students should learn that good and evil exist, and that human beings have the capacity and duty to choose good.”

    The declaration goes on to decry “fads or experimental teaching methods” in favor of “core knowledge and tried-and-true pedagogy.”

    As for educational policies governing how students learn about the history of the United States, the declaration insists that schools should “foster a healthy sense of patriotism and cultivate gratitude for and attachment to our country and all who serve its central institutions.”

    “Students should develop a deep understanding of and respect for our nation’s founding documents and the ideas they contain about ordered liberty, justice, the rule of law, limited government, natural rights, and the equal dignity of all human beings,” the declaration says. “Students should learn the whole truth about America — its merits and failings — without obscuring that America is a great source of good in the world and that we have a tradition that is worth passing on.”

    Critics, including the Florida Education Association, rebuked the declaration as a politicized document authored by a conservative organization, which, among other things, championed the controversial Project 2025.

    “The Phoenix Declaration is the latest thinly veiled attempt by billionaire-backed special interests to dismantle and politicize Florida’s public education system,” the union said in a statement.

    Supporters, however, say they believe the declaration’s philosophies will help improve teaching, learning and civic outcomes in Florida’s public schools.

    “Many students are just being taught what to think,” said Orlando school board member Alicia Farrant. “And parents want their kids to learn how to think, how to think critically, and that gets us back to those foundations that made our nation great.”

    Other states are considering adoption of the Phoenix Declaration — state leaders in South Carolina and Oklahoma have endorsed it.

    By the time Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to soliciting prostitution from an underage girl, he had established an enormous network of wealthy and influential friends. Emails made public this week show the crime did little to diminish the desire of that network to stay connected to the billionaire financier.

    Thousands of documents released by the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday offer a new glimpse into what Epstein’s relationships with business executives, reporters, academics and political players looked like over a decade.

    They start with messages he sent and received around the time he finished serving his Florida sentence in 2009 and continue until the months before his arrest on federal sex trafficking charges in 2019.

    During that time, Epstein’s network was eclectic, spanning the globe and political affiliations: from the liberal academic Noam Chomsky to Steve Bannon, the longtime ally of President Donald Trump.

    Some reached out to support Epstein amid lawsuits and prosecutions, others sought introductions or advice on everything from dating to oil prices. One consulted him on how to respond to accusations of sexual harassment.

    Epstein was charged with sex trafficking in 2019, and killed himself in jail a month later. Epstein’s crimes, high-profile connections and jailhouse suicide have made the case a magnet for conspiracy theorists and online sleuths seeking proof of a cover-up.

    The emails do not implicate his contacts in those alleged crimes. They instead paint a picture of Epstein’s influence and connections over the years he was a registered sex offender.

    Ybeth Bruzual, Holly Gregory, Phillip Stucky, Jason Delgado, Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • St. Augustine’s Fountain of Youth Park offers more than just a legendary sip

    ST. AUGUSTINE Fla. — In the heart of St. Augustine, the Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park marks the spot where legend says Ponce de León searched for eternal youth.


    What You Need To Know

    • The park features the reconstructed site of the first successful Catholic mission in the continental U.S.
    • Visitors can explore burial grounds, Timucua artifacts and remains from the original Spanish fort
    • The park blends archaeology, Native American history and Spanish colonial heritage — all beyond the myth of magical water


    Today, it offers visitors a glimpse into the state’s early history through archaeology, native culture and centuries-old stories.

    When you think of St. Augustine’s Fountain of Youth…

    Here at one of the state’s oldest tourist attractions is a glimpse into Florida’s ancient past, where its history is brought to life.

    Like the country’s first Catholic mission located in St. Augustine.

    “It is the reconstruction of the first successful Catholic mission in the continental United States,” said Shane Ohara, tour guide at the Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park

    Missionaries came to the spot serving as a military and religious base for Spain.

    They aimed to gain a foothold in North America and convert native populations to Christianity — Native Americans known as the Timucua.

    “This would be 4,000 years prior to 1565. And Saint Augustine is established by the Spanish,” said tour guide Anthony Cappel.

    Guests at the Fountain of Youth can visit burial grounds and marked sites of early structures, where archaeologists uncovered Timucua remains, artifacts from 1565 and the first Spanish fort.

    “There is a burial ground that they found in the 1930s. And those are all Catholic burials of the Timucua people,” said Cappel.

    One after another, people line up — of all ages — to taste the famous fountain.

    Pets are no exception, as many bring their dogs.

    Many guests who come to the park have been there before.

    Karyn Berger visited the place in 1976.

    She believes the fountain is a state of mind.

    “The fountain of youth is what you make of it, what you believe in yourself,” said Berger, visiting from North Carolina

    Guests learn from guides about the explorer — but in a story lacking evidence he was truly in search of the Fountain of Youth.

    “So, this would have been a natural meeting spot for them to move to essentially free or interact with Ponce de León. We have no record of the conversation between the headman or the chief of the village and Ponce,” said tour guide Elizabeth Lynch.

    The park features historical presentations, roaming peacocks and a rich blend of Native, foreign and American cultures that left behind many mysteries.

    Admission to the Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park is $22.95 for adults, $9.95 for children ages 6 to 12, and free for kids under 5.

    Randy Rauch

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  • Students inducted into John Glenn Top Gun Academy Aerospace Honor Society

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The global aerospace industry is projected to grow significantly, with estimates ranging from more than $400 billion this year to upwards of $1 trillion in 10 years.

    As that growth continues, Hillsborough County Public Schools is making sure students are ready.


    What You Need To Know

    • On Friday, 70 students from Stewart Middle Magnet School were inducted into the John Glenn Top Gun Academy Aerospace Honor Society 
    • Stewart Middle Magnet School is a NASA Explorer STEM school
    • Students heard from a Blue Origin representative and a real astronaut


    On Friday, students from Stewart Middle Magnet School were inducted into the John Glenn Top Gun Academy Aerospace Honor Society at the St. Pete Museum of History.

    The students were already comfortable in their blue flight suits.

    “We want them to start training early, in terms of their interests, so they can start learning more — maybe taking more advanced classes when they get to high school, and kind of preparing them for the future in the areas of STEM because it’s very desperately needed in our country,” said Stewart Middle Magnet School lead teacher emeritus Lynn McDaniel.

    McDaniel said the school is a NASA Explorer STEM school, and regardless of where students interests may lie, teaching them about STEM and how it’s used in space provides options.

    “I like space, but I prefer the ground more,” eighth grader Grayson Luke said. “I’m more interested in engineering and how everything works.”

    Students even heard from a Blue Origin representative and a real astronaut, Nicole Stott. And even for students like Grayson who prefer to be firmly planted on Earth, McDaniel said the opportunities are endless.

    “There’s careers in aerospace for them, they don’t all have to be astronauts,” McDaniel said. “There’s engineering, there’s space medicine, so we’re giving them experiences in all of that.”

    McDaniel  said she hopes experiences like Friday’s will encourage students to later pursue careers that are out of this world.

    Fallon Silcox

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  • Students inducted into John Glenn Top Gun Academy Aerospace Honor Society

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The global aerospace industry is projected to grow significantly, with estimates ranging from more than $400 billion this year to upwards of $1 trillion in 10 years.

    As that growth continues, Hillsborough County Public Schools is making sure students are ready.


    What You Need To Know

    • On Friday, 70 students from Stewart Middle Magnet School were inducted into the John Glenn Top Gun Academy Aerospace Honor Society 
    • Stewart Middle Magnet School is a NASA Explorer STEM school
    • Students heard from a Blue Origin representative and a real astronaut


    On Friday, students from Stewart Middle Magnet School were inducted into the John Glenn Top Gun Academy Aerospace Honor Society at the St. Pete Museum of History.

    The students were already comfortable in their blue flight suits.

    “We want them to start training early, in terms of their interests, so they can start learning more — maybe taking more advanced classes when they get to high school, and kind of preparing them for the future in the areas of STEM because it’s very desperately needed in our country,” said Stewart Middle Magnet School lead teacher emeritus Lynn McDaniel.

    McDaniel said the school is a NASA Explorer STEM school, and regardless of where students interests may lie, teaching them about STEM and how it’s used in space provides options.

    “I like space, but I prefer the ground more,” eighth grader Grayson Luke said. “I’m more interested in engineering and how everything works.”

    Students even heard from a Blue Origin representative and a real astronaut, Nicole Stott. And even for students like Grayson who prefer to be firmly planted on Earth, McDaniel said the opportunities are endless.

    “There’s careers in aerospace for them, they don’t all have to be astronauts,” McDaniel said. “There’s engineering, there’s space medicine, so we’re giving them experiences in all of that.”

    McDaniel  said she hopes experiences like Friday’s will encourage students to later pursue careers that are out of this world.

    Fallon Silcox

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  • 35th Annual Ruskin Seafood Festival this weekend

    RUSKIN, Fla. — One year after hurricanes destroyed their entire office and left the community in tatters, organizers of the Ruskin Seafood Festival are celebrating resilience with an even bigger event and free admission for all attendees. 

    Building on last year’s success, the festival will once again offer no entry fee, and this year they’re also waiving the usual $2-per-car charge to enter E.G. Simmons Park, where the event is held.


    What You Need To Know

    • Ruskin Seafood Festival to feature 150 vendors this weekend at E.G. Simmons Conservation Park
    • Festival will include 300 local musicians
    • Admission fee of $10 is waived, as is the $2 fee to enter the park
    • Festival runs 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday


    Festival-goers can expect a full weekend of entertainment.

    Over the course of two days, around 300 local musicians will perform across two stages. The grounds will also feature car shows both days, a dog “Bark Yard” for pet owners, 35 arts and crafts vendors, and of course, plenty of seafood and other local fare.

    Melanie Davis, Executive Director of the Greater South Shore Chamber of Commerce, says the festival plays a major role in supporting local businesses by giving them face-to-face access to the community.

    “Our small businesses… it is their opportunity to showcase what they have to the community,” Davis said. “You have new residents here, even older residents that have been here forever, [who] have no idea that these guys are right down the road and what they do. Whether they sell here or just make the connections and develop that trust… you know exactly where they are — you met them right down the road.”

    The Ruskin Seafood Festival runs Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

    For more details, visit Ruskin Seafood Festival.

    Jason Lanning

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