Use quotes to search for a phrase or name: "toy story", or "brooklyn bridge".

Article

La Schwette Vedette

One hour before screenings begin on the final day of the 2003 Miami International Film Festival, Nicole Guillemet -- tailored, coiffed, and uncharacteristically agitated -- sits huddled over a tiny cocktail table at the back of the dim balcony lounge at the National Hotel. Leaning forward and locking her eyes...
Article

The Bad Shoot

Cop's-Eye View Miami-Dade Det. Kenny Veloz took a call from a buddy cop, Kendall District Sgt. Carlos Dominguez, in December of 2000. Dominguez's parents and grandparents lived in an apartment complex on SW 96th Street and SW 142nd Avenue in Veloz's own Hammocks District. Dominguez told Veloz that his folks...
Article

Letters from the Issue of November 21, 2002

Yes, Haiti Is a Dreadful Place But that doesn't mean Miami has to go down the toilet with it: Regarding Rebecca Wakefield's article about Cheryl Little, who heads the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center ("Little Goes a Long Way," November 7), when the Haitians landed on Rickenbacker Causeway I just happened...
Article

We’re Number One! A Special Report – Part Two

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter Last week Miami Mayor Manny Diaz unveiled an assortment of proposals he hopes will reduce poverty in his city. Not end poverty, just reduce it. This wasn't exactly a rousing declaration of war, and it was 30 years...
Article

Meet Your Neighbors

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter It's the women who keep ramshackle, decaying Overtown held together as it waits (and waits) for the revitalization promised almost since the day it was destroyed. And nobody works harder or longer than the grandmothers, the elders who...
Article

A Few Good Ideas

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter Yes, Miami is a trash-strewn city of desperate extremes, plagued by inadequate educational opportunities, job prospects, and public services. It's a city fragmented by racism, corruption, and apathy. But Miami is also a city of endless reinvention, a...
Article

What Did You Do in the War on Poverty?

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter Miami underwent significant change between 1990 and 2000, not least of which was the city's poverty rate: It grew with such exuberance that Miami climbed from fourth to first place among the nation's most impoverished big cities. That's...
Article

Looks Good on Paper

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter Surely by now someone somewhere in Miami's bureaucracy must have drafted a war plan to attack the city's outrageous poverty, right? In fact the Community Development Department (CDD) did just that several years before the 2000 U.S. Census...
Article

Meet Your Neighbors

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter A small misunderstanding about Medicaid and Medicare coverage touched off a crisis in Ofelia Garcia's world. The money involved (less than $100 per month) would have elicited no more than a shrug from some people. But it was...
Article

Born in a Bad Way

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter Ted Lucas grew up in Carol City, a black neighborhood close to the Broward County line. His family was poor but his athletic talent helped him win a scholarship to Chaminade-Madonna College Preparatory School in Hollywood, though his...
Article

Meet Your Neighbors

Charts Miami Neighborhood Map Lawsuits Galore The Miami Index Miami's Brain Matter Naomi wouldn't be quite so desperate now if she hadn't spent her rent money to bury her mother. But what choice did she have? Naomi is sure her 85-year-old mother, Rosalia, could have lived longer if she'd been...
Article

One For the Heart

He's our skinny one, and he has no idea what he's in for. That's part of what makes it hard. Seeing him looking so healthy, watching him swing on the monkey bars. He gets his legs going like a crooked pendulum, lets go with one hand and stretches forward, skips...
Article

Expanding Space

In an ongoing endeavor to develop, understand, and communicate "art," our definitions are constantly morphing. At the speed that we identify and recognize, we deny and re-create, each time pushing the walls of the "white box" to a point of distension. Since the advent of modernity -- when artists decided...
Article

Mama Mia, That’s Cheap Italian!

The birthday dinner's entrée had been prepared especially at the request of the honoree, a tri-coastal sophisticate who divided his time among Toronto, Miami, and the French Riviera. But all six guests plus the host qualified as educated and experienced international eaters, vera cucina italiana on top of most everyone's...
Article

Blue Note Casablanca

If Sax on the Beach fails, the newly opened music bar will be just another Miami jazz dream deferred, like Arthur's (which featured big names in the Eighties) and the cozy, if empty, Champagnes on 79th Street that closed months ago. This gin joint in the lobby of the Bay...
Article

From Cuba with Life

Photography is a great medium for social documentation. Think of nineteenth-century French photographer Eugène Atget, who produced thousands of photographs of Paris with direct, novel, and poetic renditions of everything imaginable: people in the streets, shop fronts, buildings, wheeled vehicles of all kinds, decorative details, et cetera. Cuban photo documentaries...
Article

Of Pain and place

Close to HomeThey met at Victory Hospital back in August 1962. My mother had just given birth to me, but owing to problems during the delivery, she needed to be hospitalized for more than a week after I was born. One of her roommates was Rita Grady, who was expecting...
Article

How to Raze the Dead

This past April 11, a heart attack took the life of 74-year-old Mary Ellen Bethel Hanna. Her children, Larry and Jacqueline, wanted a simple burial for their mother, whom they affectionately describe as old-fashioned. Mary Ellen had not remarried after losing her husband, World War II veteran Wilbert Hanna, in...
Article

Hearts and Souls

NW 36th Street in Miami. Action Muffler, El Patio Body Shop, an old warehouse transformed into En Espiritu y En Verdad evangelical ministry. Jackson High School stands secure behind an imposing iron fence. Across the street, protected by its own fence, Ebenezer United Methodist Church looms over all, the church's...
Article

Old Black Magic Box

The first-floor lounge of the Radisson Deauville Resort Hotel is precisely the kind of place one would expect to find the cocktail set. Fifty blocks north of bustling South Beach, this gem of postwar-modern design features a sprawling lobby of sweeping curves and giant columns. Behind the bar the large...
Article

Class Act

The early morning dropoff at Belén Jesuit Preparatory School unfolds with almost military precision. Young uniformed boys, backpacks in hand, one by one jump out of late-model SUVs and minivans. The vehicles, many displaying "Belen Wolverines" license plates, linger momentarily at the school's entrance before lurching back into west Miami-Dade...
Article

Into the Picture

Little has been said about the ubiquitous effect of irony in much of today's art. Irony allows detachment, a trend that may have started with Dada, the first anarchic movement in modern art history. After a catastrophic first world war, Dadaists had good reasons to resent absolutes. When Genezyp Kapen,...