Thursday, November 22, 2012

Guess It's Time to Eat Cake - Guest Post


By The Hater

We here at Effin' Florida have been desperately trying to restrain ourselves from commenting on the Petraeus sex "scandal" invented by hyperbolic blue stockings -- in part because coverage is so ridiculous that it's impossible to improve on with comedy. But this piece in the erstwhile Tampa Bay Times, one of the best papers in the nation in my youth, which has now tried reach every lowbrow, mouth-breathing demographic available (despite the best intentions of the Poynter Institute) is finally enough to draw our notice. As if Florida (and Tampa -- and South Tampa) weren't hellacious shit holes enough, this piece has to reduce the coverage of this allegedly earth-shattering event to desperate gossip and resort to stereotype.

Tuxedos come out for Ye Mystic Krewe of Gasparilla's coronation ball, but the Cattle Baron's Ball is intractably Western — Stetsons, Tony Lama boots, pearl-button shirts. Black ties at the Cattle Baron's Ball would be as silly as Hawaiian shirts at the elegant Pavilion gala.
Jill Kelley might have known so, had she grown up south of Kennedy Boulevard, gone to Plant High School, come out as a debutante, paid dues to the Junior League and had a daddy who teed off at the Palma Ceia Golf & Country Club.
 
A decade ago, Kelley was an arriviste, a new-in-town doctor's wife looking to climb rungs on Tampa's social ladder.
The annual cowboy ball to raise money for cancer research could have been her way up.
She offered to chair the event if she could turn it into a formal affair. She went so far as to mail out save-the-date cards with a new dress code.
Thank you, no, organizers said. It would remain hoedown casual. With that, Kelley had overstepped an invisible line in a city where boundaries were set so long ago no one need even discuss them.
OMG! She's a would-be social climber into the high society of South Tampa, which covers a mere 1,500 square mile.  She wanted to get into THIS fantasy land of men who would prefer to live in the 1950s:
"Dad's been talking about this since I was 3," said Liz Cordell. "He's crying because he thinks this dress makes me look like I'm getting married."
Awww. So CUTE! My quick perusal of this list tells me why, even though I grew up in Alfred Austin's personal home (not this one, the one before it), not just one of his developments, I never knew these people (thank god!): Little did I know that Plant High was the epicenter of addle-brained privilege and backward social norms. I mean, in excess of how much the American high school is already such a place.

So that scurrilous Kelley is an arriviste into this blue-skinned mouth-breathing society, but they cruelly reject her! No racist homophobic Gasparilla KKKrewe for you, bitch! Move on to those uncouth SOLDIER types! Now, to be fair, the Times writer perhaps has more ironic disdain for this bullshit than editorial detachment allows, else why this:

"If you are brand new to the community, and you want to get into that echelon, you do need to meet high charitable expectations," says Kasey Shimberg Kelly, a South Tampa native and member of the Shimberg clan that has donated millions to various causes. "It definitely requires a hefty commitment of time and or money. If you're able and fortunate to come in with an open checkbook, you're welcomed with open arms. With cash comes bigger exposure because everyone knows who you are — the diamond sponsor, not just a table host."
Or the mention of a "charming" mansion.

Bayshore is smelly, grotesque, and undeservedly beloved. "Charming" is far from the first word that comes to mind for those houses.

And I write as one who got his first kiss in one, admittedly in a 7th-grade game of spin-the-bottle that also involved weak screwdrivers, not to mention that the girl was likely a future deb. So you know I'm not bringing any of my own baggage or anything. On the other hand, my memories of the TYCC were much blander than the power-brokering described in the coverage of this affair. I mostly remember doctors' wives having mediocre burgers with their churlish offspring before we could run to the pool or walk the dock looking at boats. And the all black wait staff who were unfailingly friendly and polite and pretended to give a shit about whatever I had been up to since the last time I saw them. When I think of Major I still want to cry a little today for being so fucking clueless. But if you're the type who misses the J.J. Hunsecker school of gossip as power, you're exactly the sort of audience the Tampa Bay Times hopes to reach, and I leave you to this cancerous metastasis of journalistic ambition gone astray:

Jill Kelley wanted to live with her doctor husband and three children on Bayshore Boulevard, a 4 1/2 mile waterfront ribbon of concrete and the city's prettiest and most prestigious address. For months she knocked on doors, even suggesting to some residents it was time to downsize. 
The Kelleys bought a charming brick mansion. She attended teas, luncheons, fashion shows, cocktail parties and galas. But insiders didn't consider her one of them. They say she tried too hard. She should have gone slower.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Conch Republic's Re-Secession Canceled

A Key West bookstore was the first place I ever saw the complete works of V.I. Lenin, so I always mistakenly assumed the place was a hive of hippie leftism dressed up in an alcoholic coma, but I guess I should have realized that no one was buying for a reason. Seriously, I'd like it to be a funny snarky comment that some sad fuck topped himself because Obama won re-election, but I have to wonder if some mental illness was present. Either that or this man was, in one of the gay-friendliest places I can think of, so self-loathing that he was thinking of becoming a Scientologist, cause they cured Tom Cruise, right?

A Key West man who told his partner that "if Barack gets re-elected, I'm not going to be around" was found dead on Nov. 8, with the words "F--- Obama!" scrawled on his will and two empty prescription bottles nearby. The rest is here

Saturday, October 27, 2012

That's Quite the "Nest Egg!"


                            Those eyes! Those fixed and unblinking eyes!

Something stupid and/or wicked from Florida government that isn't (clearly) the work of Governor Skeletor? This story sounds like it's not telling us something about what Pam Bondi really said, or something, because she should have been furiously covering her ass about this. $300 Million to help mortgagees and she's hoping it will hatch into beautiful multi-colored (but NOT homosexual!) streams of popularity for her party? Or her? Or maybe she can't remember where she put it. . .

Of the $2.5 billion going to states, just over a billion dollars has been pledged for housing-related programs, while a roughly equal amount has been diverted to plug budget holes or fund programs unrelated to the foreclosure crisis. $378 million is still to be determined, and almost all of that is Florida’s. 
Florida’s funds are caught between the Attorney General, Republican Pam Bondi, and the Republican state legislature. Bondihas pledged to make the money available to homeowners; earlier this year, she called for suggestions from the public. Some state lawmakers, however, insist that it needs to go through the regular appropriations process — where it could potentially be siphoned off into other programs. And that wouldn’t happen until March, when the legislative session begins. 
“We were very happy about the Attorney General’s commitment early on that the money be used within the spirit of the settlement,” said Jaimie Ross, president of the Florida Housing Coalition, an advocacy organization. “But is it just going to sit there until the legislature starts so that we can wait to see how they want to use it? The silence is deafening.”

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

It's "like" a Carl Hiassen Novel!

No, actually I think it has reached the point where Carl Hiassen can no longer keep up; Governor Skeletor has taken a lot of the heat, but David Rivera's shadow candidate and Alan West's McCarthy Redux aren't exactly slouches. Carl, I'm afraid you may need a new beat, someplace wacky but not batshit crazy...

Since he was elected to Congress in 2010, Mr. Rivera, one of three Republican Cuban-American House members from Miami, has been dogged by allegations of wrongdoing while he was a state legislator. On Wednesday he was charged by the Florida Commission on Ethics with 11 counts of filing fraudulent financial disclosure forms, misusing campaign funds and concealing a $1 million consulting contract with a Miami gambling business while he served in the State House. 
Mr. Rivera, who was Senator Marco Rubio’s roommate when both were state representatives, called the charges false in a statement, but he is also confronting another series of damaging accusations. 
The Miami Herald has reported that Mr. Rivera ran a puppet candidate in the Democratic primary against his Democratic challenger, Joe Garcia, who lost to Mr. Rivera in 2010. The candidate, Justin Lamar Sternad, a part-time hotel worker with no political experience, has told the F.B.I. that Mr. Rivera was secretly behind his race, The Herald reported. The newspaper said Mr. Rivera funneled as much as $43,000 to Mr. Sternad, who paid cash this summer for expensive campaign fliers attacking Mr. Garcia. A federal grand jury is investigating.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Jacksonville Stay Classy!

When people see you having sex in your moving car -- and your partner is naked to boot -- the best solution is always to threaten one of those drivers with your car, and then to pull a gun on him and his co-workers. Because they were all in the wrong.

Stay Classy Jacksonville


Please, Please Stick to PowerPoint "Presentations"

Well, the best part of this is imagining the conversation that took place between the cop and the (mercifully) unidentified suspect vermin-infested unwashed. (There but for the grace of god. . .) "Officer may I present the area for your inspection?" "Uh. . .um. . ." "Sir, I really wasn't masturbating, and if I can show you my rash you'll see what I mean." "Uh. . .[swallows bilge] okay, sir, present your genitals. And keep your hands where I can see 'em."

Genitals 'presented' to Port St. Lucie Police

On the other hand, chalk one up to the Port St. Lucie Police for actually investigating this story instead of throwing him in the clink pending medical examination. I'm glad they have confidence in their rash diagnoses. Or that this rash was so visible and obvious, even to a cop. Personally I can't unsee this mind's-eye portrait.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Eating Cockroaches is Not Worth an $850 Python






The worst part about the whole thing, besides the death of the contestant, is that the only prize for winning was an $850 python. If the roaches didn't kill the guy, the python surely would have. 

There are a lot of cockroaches in Florida and clearly not enough real food. Either that, or people who failed to get on American Idol or some other contest show and can't do with hotdogs or other real food have to resort to holding cockroach-eating contests. And, in the case of the winner here, die from it. It's been a week and we still don't know whether the Miami man (who has a 7-year old daughter) died from eating the cockroaches or not. 

Archbold ate more than 60 grams of meal worms, 35 three-inch-long “super worms” and part of a bucket full of discoid roaches to win the “Midnight Madness” bug-eating competition Friday night at Ben Siegel Reptiles in Deerfield Beach, about 40 miles north of Miami, according to The Miami Herald. The take-home grand prize was a python from the reptile shop.

NCBNews.com