The Chicken Boss has opened next to The Bacon Boss HQ & offers hand-breaded tenders (& sandwiches), plus delicious waffle-cut regular & sweet potato (shown) fries. (Below left)
When we last updated you about everything happening at The KRATE at The Grove Container Park, The Chicken Boss had not yet opened next to The Bacon Boss HQ.
Since then, Bacon Boss owners Josh & Christy Norlandâs new Chicken Boss (top photo) has opened and they have another local favorite on their hands. The Chicken Bossâ nicely spiced, hand-breaded tenders (left), new chicken sandwiches and waffle fries are served hot and crispy, the chicken is juicy inside and there also are several tasty house-made sauces from which to choose.Â
Top That! Pizza has added NY-style pizza & wings to the menu at The Fry Room, which it replaced.
Also now open, in something of a surprise, is Top That! Pizza & More. The surprising part is that Top That! opened so quickly â and still carries many of the same food items â in the former location of The Fry Room, although its new menu items â including some really good NY-style pizza and wings â have replaced The Fry Roomâs popular (and tasty) apple cider donuts. Â
Another newcomer at the KRATEs, in the former location of the shuttered Tonellaâs Flowers, is MM Kicks, which owner (and long-time âkicksâ collector) Will Mendez (photo below) says is your place to buy, sell and trade vintage and sought-after sneakers.Â
With the impending release this month of âAir,â the Matt Damon/Ben Affleck movie about how Nike built its athletic shoe brand around one man â Michael Jordan, of course â MM Kicks is likely to get an instant boost in popularity.Â
The knowledgeable and friendly staff at Nutrition Smartâs Wesley Chapel location is ready and eager to serve you! (Photos by Charmaine George)
In case you missed it, there is a local, natural grocery and vitamin market located in your neighborhood. If youâre interested in maintaining a healthy lifestyle, buying natural groceries, and getting knowledgeable, friendly, and helpful service while shopping for your health needs, youâre in luck â Nutrition Smart is located right down the street from you, on Bruce B Downs Blvd., just south of S.R. 56.
Nutrition Smart has long excelled at creating an enjoyable place to shop with competitive prices. CEO Yuda Saban explains, âWe are committed to providing the community with an option for healthy living.â
Are you super busy or just prefer ordering online? Not a problem. Nutrition Smart offers both local delivery and curbside pickup.Â
Here are just some of the things you will find in the store:
What makes Nutrition Smart different than the rest?
âą The health of Nutrition Smartâs customers really matters to the management of each store and its staff. So, it is the top priority for all of them to provide personalized service to everyone who walks in the door, in order to help them find the right products for their lifestyle.
âą Nutrition Smart has been serving the local community for 13 years â featuring an extensive, ânicheâ selection of healthy living essentials you canât typically find at other markets.
âą Nutrition Smart also offers so many ways to save! Active and veteran military members, first responders, nurses and teachers all receive 10% off their purchases all day, every day. On Tuesdays, seniors (ages 55 & older) also receive 10% off. You also can sign up for Nutrition Smartâs Email Club, Text Club & and Loyalty Rewards Programs for even more savings.
Donât forget â the store offers weekly and monthly sales, consisting of tons of BOGO options. They even price-match their competitors!
And, now that the worst of the Covid-19 pandemic appears to be behind us, the store is re-introducing educational seminars on everything from meditation to juicing and also will be making appearances at community events like the Easter Egg Hunt at the Tampa Premium Outlets this Saturday, March 25.
For more information, visit NutritionSmart.com or call the store at (813) 341-4444. And please, stop in and see for yourself at 1821 BBD Blvd.
Straight from the âHow to Grow Something Special Out of Nearly Nothingâ handbook, our congratulations go out to CEO Blair Valentine of The Market Culture, who organized and put on her first âMarket Elaineâ First Friday event at The Village at The Grove in October 2021 with little more than 20 crafters and vendors and an idea.
Less than a year and a half later, The Market Elaine, named for Blairâs paternal grandmother Dolaura Elaine, features more than 150 vendors, plus entertainment for kids and adults. The event held the First Friday of each month now attracts thousands of visitors to well beyond The Village area of The Grove. In fact, the vendors now reach south from The Village to The KRATE container park.
âThis is so much fun,â a visitor walking her golden doodle named Janice told me. âIâve found delicious baked goods for me, dog treats and toys for her and some great gifts for my family.â
And, even the existing brick-and-mortar businesses at The Grove say they now get a nice bounce from the Market Elaine.
Steve Falabella, who owns both the Falabella Family Bistro and 900Âș New York Pizza in The VIllage, says âWeâre already packed every weekend at the Bistro,â Falabella says. âBut, the Market Elaine has definitely attracted a lot of new faces and kept the pizza place hopping, too.â
The next Market Elaine will be held Friday, April 7, 5 p.m.-9 p.m.. For more info, visit TheMarketCulture.com.Â
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After 17 years at Pasco-Hernando State College (PHSC), which includes leading the Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch, president Timothy L. Beard, Ph.D., will retire effective January 31, 2024, the school announced on Mar. 1.
By the time he retires, Beard will have served nearly nine years as the state collegeâs president and CEO. Prior to that, he served more than eight years as PHSCâs Vice President of Student Affairs and Enrollment Management.
The school announced that it is conducting a nationwide search for Beardâs successor. Myers McRae Executive Search and Consulting firm will lead the search for PHSCâs fifth president, teaming up with a presidential search committee comprised of community stakeholders and PHSC faculty, staff and students.
During Beardâs presidency, PHSC constructed the $18-million Instructional Performing Arts Center (IPAC), located on Old Pasco Rd. in front of Cypress Creek middle and high school. The facility opened in 2021, and provides instruction in music, dance, theater and multi-media design.
âServing as PHSCâs president has been the crowning achievement of my career,â Beard said in a release. âThe College has made exceptional progress, thanks to the guidance of our trustees and the dedication of our administrators, faculty and staff. I remain in awe of the transformative power of education.â
Beard also has been at the helm for a number of other major projects, like adding a $5 million Burn Center and Fire Academy training center at PHSCâs East Campus in Dade City, which will also be home to a future STEM Student Success and Community Engagement Center with a projected $25-million budget.
Dr. Beard earned his Bachelorâs degree from Florida A&M (FAMU) in 1984, and received his Masterâs and Ph.D. degrees from Florida State University. He worked on the staff, faculty and in the administrations at FAMU, FSU and the University of South Alabama in Mobile before accepting the vice presidentâs position at PHSC.
He succeeded former PHSC presidents Katherine M. Johnson, Ed.D., in 2015. Johnson was preceded by the late Robert W. Judson, Jr, Ed.D., and Milton O. Jones, Ph.D., the collegeâs founding president.
PHSC, which has six locations in Pasco and Hernando counties serving nearly 10,000 students annually, saw its operating budget increase by nearly 40 percent under Beard, and the PHSC Foundationâs assets increased by more than 60 percent. Beard personally raised several hundred thousand dollars to establish and fund scholarships.
PHSCâs nine-member District Board of Trustees is hoping to find and introduce Beardâs replacement in September.
Local author Lois Lewandowski poses with most of her âvanity publishedâ books, including The Ghost on Swann. (Photos by Charmaine George)
I recently read a novel by someone Iâve known indirectly for more than 20 years â Hunterâs Green resident Lois Lewandowski.
To be fair, despite knowing Loisâ husband (and local financial advisor) Chuck Lewandowski for that amount of time, I had only met her a handful of times and I honestly had no idea that the one-time IT rep for a Silicon Valley company who later worked in the jewelry department of Nordstromâs was a published author.
So, when Lois (who writes her books as âL.A. Lewandowskiâ) contacted me by email about buying an ad for her most recent âvanity publishedâ (she hates the term âself-published;â more on this below) novel â The Ghost on Swann â I told her that I would read the book first and be honest with her about whether or not I thought it would be worth buying ads to try to sell copies of it.
Well, quite truthfully, I was blown away by The Ghost. Each chapter of the book is told in first person by one of the four major characters â the ghost herself, Bertha âPoshâ Swann, Poshâs friend Victor, Victorâs niece Tyrene and even a mannequin named Maude. The format, albeit a little confusing at first, does make you want to find out what happens next. Posh, who âhauntsâ the business now owned by her living friend Victor, was murdered in the same building many years earlier.
If you recognize the spelling of âSwann,â itâs because Poshâs family is supposedly the reason Swann Ave. in Tampaâs renowned Hyde Park Village neighborhood (where the entire story is set) was given that name.
For a book devoid of sex and violence (even the description of Poshâs murder was somewhat pedestrian), The Ghost on Swann is a true page-turner. I told Lois that, as I read it, I wondered if maybe Poshâs murder was more of a mystery than the reader is led to believe, but as it turns out, The Ghost is not a murder mystery. Instead, itâs simply a well-crafted story rooted in the fashion industry (as Lois herself has been) that likely will appeal more to women than to men but I wouldnât discourage anyone from giving it the once-over.
âIâm very proud of The Ghost,â Lois says. âIt took three rewrites to get it to where it is now.â
Lois On âVanityâ Publishing
Speaking of rewrites, as I mentioned earlier, Lois isnât a fan of the term âself-published,â because it indicates to many people that the books are likely less âprofessionalâ than those published by one of the remaining major publishing houses.
However, after reading The Ghost, itâs obvious that Loisâ work is not only professional, she takes a lot of pride in things like her editor (Stacy Juba), the design of the covers of her books, the spelling, grammar and punctuation of her stories and other things that many âself-publishedâ authors donât seem to sweat as she does.
âI prefer to call it âvanity publishing,ââ she says. âJust because Viking, Penguin and other traditional publishers havenât published my books, I care that if you read them, you wonât be able to distinguish it from a traditionally published book.â
She admits, however, that some self-publishers who donât think they have to pay the same attention to detail, give the vanity publishing business a bad name. Many also donât think you can make ârealâ money as a vanity publisher.
âBut that just isnât true,â Lois says. âIâm in a lot of online independent publishing groups and the word is that it takes as many as 15 books to really start making money. The Ghost on Swann is only my sixth book, but my brain is very active and I have at least three more that are close to being ready, so I feel like Iâm on my way.â
On the other hand, Lois says that even though sites like Amazon do provide numbers of copies sold to authors, âI donât really worry about sales. I write because I have stories in my head and I do regularly receive money for my book sales, too.â
Lois says it wasnât always her dream to be a writer â âI wanted to be a lawyer, really…but it is my dream now.â She points to one vanity publisher who has written 35 or more books, putting out two a year, and has enough of a following that it is now his full-time job. âAmazon has an algorithm (for book sales) and you have to feed the algorithm, so I have to get another book out by October of this year to do that.â
She also says that a lot of people she meets tell her that they really want to write a book and she always encourages them to do so.âStephen King calls it âBIC,â or âButt in Chair,â which is the only way to get it done.â
In addition, Lois wrote for a blog called âIndies Unlimitedâ and found out, âthat a lot of self-published writers are too cheap to register their work with the Library of Congress to protect it. But, if you really think you have a story people would be interested in reading, why wouldnât you want to protect it?â
She adds, âWritersâ ideas are not copyright-able, but the words themselves are. If you protect your work, and someone publishes something thatâs really close to your words, you can go after them legally.â
Lois says she even has gone so far as to teach âAuthors 101â courses at public libraries, where she teaches people who want to write how to get started. âAfter the Tampa Bay Times did an article on me several years ago, I had 25 or 30 people at my course at the Riverview library,â she says. âThe information I gave out then is all old now because of the internet, but I found out that a lot of people definitely have stories they want to tell in a book. Thatâs why, when I did my Authors 101 course, I felt so good about encouraging other authors to become vanity publishers.â
She also notes that itâs harder than ever to get one of the big publishing houses to publish your book, as you have write query letters to literary agents because, âyou canât even submit a manuscript to the folks at Random House.â
But, Lois says, âIf you want to be a writer, your goal should be to publish, not to make money. âI donât keep track of my sales because my goal is to be proud of my work. If people love my books, the money will come.â
Before releasing The Ghost on Swann in 2022, Loisâ first book was Born to Die, The Montauk Murders (2011). That was followed by A Gourmet Demise, Murder in South Tampa (2014), which Lois says briefly hit #1 on Amazon for a while and may be her career best-seller. Between those murder mysteries was Gentleman Vampire: The Undead Have Style (2012). She also has published Bacon Aporkalypse, which is a collection of recipes paired with short stories in 2014. And, Lois says the ebook Thirty Days of Work from Home Style (2020), was how she navigated the pandemic. She says her next book, which she plans to have out by the end of this year, will be the sequel to Gentleman Vampire.