0713 estate

76
LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 1 JULY 2013 SPECIAL SUMMER ARTS ISSUE : MUSIC, MUSEUMS, AND MUCH MORE Puppet Master the Jim Hammond makes puppets. Is he an artist or a businessman? The answer is yes.

Upload: lifestyle-publications-llc

Post on 09-Mar-2016

253 views

Category:

Documents


14 download

DESCRIPTION

Lifestyle Magazines are the premiere publications in Weston, Parkland, Coral Springs, Las Olas and Estate homes (covering West Davie, Southwest Ranches, Hawks Landing and Plantation Acres) and are often referred to as the “Ocean Drive’ or “Town and Country Magazine” for these cities. The magazines cater to the high end luxury product lines and services reaching an affluent audience and readers, who have the ability to buy most anything. The magazine’s editorial content features the “who’s who” and those people having the most impact on the community, along with covering the social scene, galas and events where many of those same people gather. The magazines are delivered by direct mail monthly to over 40,000 homes valued in the millions of dollars. They are also being distributed throughout the city at strategic locations, such as Town Centers, Country Clubs, Athletic Clubs and the Resorts & Spas, along with our advertising partners in the city.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 1

JULY 2013 SPECIAL SUMMER ARTS ISSUE : MUSIC, MUSEUMS, AND MUCH MORE

PuppetMasterthe

Jim Hammond makes puppets.Is he an artist or a businessman? The answer is yes.

Page 2: 0713 estate

/alliedkitchenandbath Licensed and Insured General Contractor, Lic. Number 85CGC1225CX

616 West Oakland Park Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311954.564.1611 www.alliedkitchenandbath.com

SINCE 1984

“Every proper party begins and ends with the kitchen. ALLIED has provided me with a real chef playhouse which is chic

enough to entertain in, durable enough to work in, and pretty enough to do my TV show in. The ALLIED team gave me way

more than I expected, for far less than I thought.”-CHEF RALPH PAGANO

RALPH PAGANO is a chef, world traveler and media personality. Ralph can be seen on the Lifetime Network, The Travel Channel, and is the official chef of the "Paul and Young Ron Show". He has battled

on Iron Chef America and on Hell's Kitchen. The chef can be seen every night at his signature, ALBA seaside Italian restaurant, located at the SOLÉ on the Ocean Resort on Sunny Isles Beach.

PARTNERS WITH SOUTH FLORIDA'S BEST CHEFSVisit our 15,000 sq. ft. showroom • Meet Our TeamRemodeling kitchens, baths and entire homes for 28 years

Page 3: 0713 estate

/alliedkitchenandbath Licensed and Insured General Contractor, Lic. Number 85CGC1225CX

616 West Oakland Park Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311954.564.1611 www.alliedkitchenandbath.com

SINCE 1984

“Every proper party begins and ends with the kitchen. ALLIED has provided me with a real chef playhouse which is chic

enough to entertain in, durable enough to work in, and pretty enough to do my TV show in. The ALLIED team gave me way

more than I expected, for far less than I thought.”-ChEf RALPh PAGANO

RALPh PAGANO is a chef, world traveler and media personality. Ralph can be seen on the Lifetime Network, The Travel Channel, and is the official chef of the "Paul and Young Ron Show". He has battled

on Iron Chef America and on Hell's Kitchen. The Chef can be seen every night at his signature, ALBA seaside Italian restaurant, located at the SOLE' on the Ocean Resort on Sunny Isles Beach.

partners with south Florida's Best CheFsVisit our 15,000 sq. ft. Showroom • Meet Our TeamRemodeling kitchens, baths and entire homes for 28 years

Page 4: 0713 estate

GET BACK INTHE GAME

Don’t let injuries slow you down.

Contact DR. JESSE SHAW at ALL-PRO ORTHOPEDICS,

a leading specialist in the treatment of Orthopedics

and Sports Medicine. Dr. Shaw is committed

to getting you back into YOUR game.

YOUTH & ADULT SPORTS MEDICINE

JOINT REPLACEMENT

TRAUMA AND FRACTURES

SHOULDER AND UPPER EXTREMITY

ARTHRITIS

KNEE & SHOULDER ARTHROSCOPY

17779 SW 2nd Street, Pembroke Pines, Florida | Silver Lakes Campus

www.AllProOrthopedics.com 954-322-1110

Dr. Jesse Shaw, Fellowship Trained

LauderdaleBMW.com

1-866-692-1893US 1 between the Downtown Tunnel & the Airport1400 South Federal HighwayLauderdale BMW of Ft. Lauderdale

1-866-992-1666Just East of I-7514800 Sheridan StreetLauderdale BMW of Pembroke Pines

LauderdaleBMW.com

Page 5: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 5

GET BACK INTHE GAME

Don’t let injuries slow you down.

Contact DR. JESSE SHAW at ALL-PRO ORTHOPEDICS,

a leading specialist in the treatment of Orthopedics

and Sports Medicine. Dr. Shaw is committed

to getting you back into YOUR game.

YOUTH & ADULT SPORTS MEDICINE

JOINT REPLACEMENT

TRAUMA AND FRACTURES

SHOULDER AND UPPER EXTREMITY

ARTHRITIS

KNEE & SHOULDER ARTHROSCOPY

17779 SW 2nd Street, Pembroke Pines, Florida | Silver Lakes Campus

www.AllProOrthopedics.com 954-322-1110

Dr. Jesse Shaw, Fellowship Trained

LauderdaleBMW.com

1-866-692-1893US 1 between the Downtown Tunnel & the Airport1400 South Federal HighwayLauderdale BMW of Ft. Lauderdale

1-866-992-1666Just East of I-7514800 Sheridan StreetLauderdale BMW of Pembroke Pines

LauderdaleBMW.com

Page 6: 0713 estate

6 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Coral Springs: 6264 West Sample Road • Davie: Griffin Road & University Drive • Pembroke Pines: Westfork Plaza - 15885 Pines Boulevard • Sawgrass (coming soon) • Weston: Weston Town Center - 1642 Town Center Circle

WE’LL MAKE IT QUICK WHEN YOU’RE SICK.

The facility charges at our urgent care centers are less than the facility charges at Baptist Health hospitals.

When it’s a heart attack, severe injury or another life-threatening problem, call 911 or head to the nearest hospital emergency room. But when you or your child has a common ailment or a minor injury, visit Baptist Health Urgent Care. You’ll find compassionate Baptist Health doctors and nurses ready to treat your minor ailments from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a week. And at the end of your visit, you can walk out with your prescribed medication. For more information or to find a location near you, call 954-837-1100 or visit KnowBaptist.com.

A not-for-profit organization committed to our faith-basedcharitable mission of medical excellence

Imet Jim Hammond on Valentine’s Day. It was at a holiday party thrown by a bank vice president in her condo

overlooking the Intracoastal in Fort Lauderdale.

At such gatherings, I dread the question, “So what do you do for a living?” Most people don’t know what

a magazine editor does, and explaining it bores even me.(Don’t get me wrong, I love my job. But telling others about it

isn’t fun. Try it yourself: Sum up your career in three sentences. Does it really do your life justice?)

Eventually, I sat down at the dining room table next to a grinning bespectacled man with wild blond hair. A woman across the table was in the process of asking him, “So what do you do?”

He grinned wider and blurted, “I make puppets!”Silence.“Oh.”More silence.“What kind of puppets?”“All kinds!” he declared before turning the question. “What

do you do?”The woman mumbled something and ended the conversation

YOU DON’T NEED TO STARVE TO BE AN ARTIST PUPPETS AND PROFITS

FROM THE EDITOR

Michael Koretzkyeditor in chiefLifestyle Publications

moments later. Which was understandable. What normal career can compete with puppetry?

I yearned to ask the question I’m sure the woman wanted to but couldn’t – because it might offend this large and wild-looking baby-faced man: “Can you really make a living making puppets?”

The short answer is yes. Jim Hammond is not a starving artist. You can fi nd the long answer on page 32.

A few weeks later, I attended a Broward Alliance mixer at Gallery One, a Fort Lauderdale hotel on the Intracoastal not too far from the bank VP’s condo. I met Kimberly Miller, Gallery One’s director of sales and marketing. She had recruited artists to paint

during the mixer. I was surprised to learn she curates an art gallery in the hotel – and her guests, especially those from other countries, regularly buy the works.

You can read more about Miller’s commitment to the arts – and her business – on page 42. But these two chance encounters made me realize what a misconception I’ve been carrying around since college. Namely, that successful artists have somehow sold out. I have yet to delve deep enough into my psyche to understand where that concept comes from. But I’m sure society is to blame.

It’s certainly to blame for the special issue you’re now reading. Welcome to Lifestyle Media’s fi rst (and I hope annual) Arts Issue, where we’ll dispel such silly myths and propel deserving artists every summer. Between now and then, we’re going to cover the arts more intensely, so email me at Michael@lmgfl .com with any intriguing and artistic ideas.

Page 7: 0713 estate

Coral Springs: 6264 West Sample Road • Davie: Griffin Road & University Drive • Pembroke Pines: Westfork Plaza - 15885 Pines Boulevard • Sawgrass (coming soon) • Weston: Weston Town Center - 1642 Town Center Circle

WE’LL MAKE IT QUICK WHEN YOU’RE SICK.

The facility charges at our urgent care centers are less than the facility charges at Baptist Health hospitals.

When it’s a heart attack, severe injury or another life-threatening problem, call 911 or head to the nearest hospital emergency room. But when you or your child has a common ailment or a minor injury, visit Baptist Health Urgent Care. You’ll find compassionate Baptist Health doctors and nurses ready to treat your minor ailments from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a week. And at the end of your visit, you can walk out with your prescribed medication. For more information or to find a location near you, call 954-837-1100 or visit KnowBaptist.com.

A not-for-profit organization committed to our faith-basedcharitable mission of medical excellence

Imet Jim Hammond on Valentine’s Day. It was at a holiday party thrown by a bank vice president in her condo

overlooking the Intracoastal in Fort Lauderdale.

At such gatherings, I dread the question, “So what do you do for a living?” Most people don’t know what

a magazine editor does, and explaining it bores even me.(Don’t get me wrong, I love my job. But telling others about it

isn’t fun. Try it yourself: Sum up your career in three sentences. Does it really do your life justice?)

Eventually, I sat down at the dining room table next to a grinning bespectacled man with wild blond hair. A woman across the table was in the process of asking him, “So what do you do?”

He grinned wider and blurted, “I make puppets!”Silence.“Oh.”More silence.“What kind of puppets?”“All kinds!” he declared before turning the question. “What

do you do?”The woman mumbled something and ended the conversation

YOU DON’T NEED TO STARVE TO BE AN ARTIST PUPPETS AND PROFITS

FROM THE EDITOR

Michael Koretzkyeditor in chiefLifestyle Publications

moments later. Which was understandable. What normal career can compete with puppetry?

I yearned to ask the question I’m sure the woman wanted to but couldn’t – because it might offend this large and wild-looking baby-faced man: “Can you really make a living making puppets?”

The short answer is yes. Jim Hammond is not a starving artist. You can fi nd the long answer on page XX.

A few weeks later, I attended a Broward Alliance mixer at Gallery One, a Fort Lauderdale hotel on the Intracoastal not too far from the bank VP’s condo. I met Kimberly Miller, Gallery One’s director of sales and marketing. She had recruited artists to paint

during the mixer. I was surprised to learn she curates an art gallery in the hotel – and her guests, especially those from other countries, regularly buy the works.

You can read more about Miller’s commitment to the arts – and her business – on page XX. But these two chance encounters made me realize what a misconception I’ve been carrying around since college. Namely, that successful artists have somehow sold out. I have yet to delve deep enough into my psyche to understand where that concept comes from. But I’m sure society is to blame.

It’s certainly to blame for the special issue you’re now reading. Welcome to Lifestyle Media’s fi rst (and I hope annual) Arts Issue, where we’ll dispel such silly myths and propel deserving artists every summer. Between now and then, we’re going to cover the arts more intensely, so email me at Michael@lmgfl .com with any intriguing and artistic ideas.

Page 8: 0713 estate

8 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

PUBLISHER Jim NortonASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Beth TacheEDITOR IN CHIEF Michael KoretzkyASSOCIATE EDITOR Danielle Tarrant

CREATIVE

CREATIVE DIRECTOR Melanie Geronemus SmitART DIRECTOR Alexander Hernandez

DESIGNER Jason D’AuriaMARKETING

CHIEF MARKETING OFFICER Dawn RahickiEVENTS PLANNER Suzanne Holtermann

WRITERS

BUSINESS STYLE EDITOR Brandon BallengerSENIOR WRITER Ryan Cortes

COPYEDITOR Emily Mitchell-CettiCONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Laura Gates Cummings, Kevin Lane, Randi Aileen Press, Bruce Turkel

PHOTOGRAPHERS

Downtown Photo/Fort Lauderdale, Dreamfocus Photography

ADVERTISING SALES

CHAIRMAN Gary Press

LIFESTYLE PUBLICATIONS, LLC

3511 W. Commercial Blvd., Suite 200Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33309 954.377.9470 | fax 954.377.9418

www.lifestylemagazinegroup.com

©2013 Lifestyle Magazines are published by Lifestyle Media Group, all rights reserved. Lifestyle Magazine

is a monthly advertising magazine. All contents are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without written

consent from the publisher. The advertiser is solely responsible for ad content and holds publisher

harmless from any error.

LasOlasLifestyle

Parkland

Estate

Lifestyle

CoralSpringsLifestyle

Lifestyle

Estero

WestonLifestyle

Lifestyle

Lifestyle

BETH TACHE [email protected]

LINDA CARRY [email protected]

PETER EVANS [email protected]

TODD GERONEMUS [email protected]

SHARI GLATTER [email protected]

DEBBIE GOLD [email protected]

JILL HOROWITZ [email protected]

BONNIE JUDSON [email protected]

KIM KADEL [email protected]

LISA LEE [email protected]

RONA LEVENSON [email protected]

SALLY NICHOLAS [email protected]

DEBBIE PEROVICH [email protected]

RHONDA ROSENOF [email protected]

C U S T O M F L O O R W R A P S

8 8 8 . 3 5 2 . 0 9 0 3 • W W W. Y O U R E M A G I N AT I O N . C O M

C A L L T H E P R O F E S S I O N A L SE N T E R TA I N E R S • C E L E B R I T Y H O S T • D A N C E R S • D J

8 8 8 . 3 5 2 . 0 9 0 3 • W W W. Y O U R E M A G I N AT I O N . C O M

BEWARE OF

IMITATORS

Page 9: 0713 estate

PUBLISHER Jim NortonASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Beth TacheEDITOR IN CHIEF Michael KoretzkyASSOCIATE EDITOR Danielle Tarrant

CREATIVE

CREATIVE DIRECTOR Melanie Geronemus SmitART DIRECTOR Alexander Hernandez

MARKETING

CHIEF MARKETING OFFICER Dawn RahickiEVENTS PLANNER Suzanne Holtermann

WRITERS

BUSINESS STYLE EDITOR Brandon BallengerSENIOR WRITER Ryan Cortes

COPYEDITOR Emily Mitchell-CettiCONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Laura Gates Cummings, Kevin Lane, Randi Aileen Press, Bruce Turkel

PHOTOGRAPHERS

Downtown Photo/Fort Lauderdale, Dreamfocus Photography

ADVERTISING SALES

CHAIRMAN Gary Press

LIFESTYLE PUBLICATIONS, LLC

3511 W. Commercial Blvd., Suite 200Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33309 954.377.9470 | fax 954.377.9418

www.lifestylemagazinegroup.com

©2013 Lifestyle Magazines are published by Lifestyle Media Group, all rights reserved. Lifestyle Magazine

is a monthly advertising magazine. All contents are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without written

consent from the publisher. The advertiser is solely responsible for ad content and holds publisher

harmless from any error.

LasOlasLifestyle

Parkland

Estate

Lifestyle

CoralSpringsLifestyle

Lifestyle

Estero

WestonLifestyle

Lifestyle

Lifestyle

BETH TACHE [email protected]

LINDA CARRY [email protected]

PETER EVANS [email protected]

TODD GERONEMUS [email protected]

SHARI GLATTER [email protected]

DEBBIE GOLD [email protected]

JILL HOROWITZ [email protected]

BONNIE JUDSON [email protected]

KIM KADEL [email protected]

LISA LEE [email protected]

RONA LEVENSON [email protected]

SALLY NICHOLAS [email protected]

DEBBIE PEROVICH [email protected]

RHONDA ROSENOF [email protected]

Page 10: 0713 estate

10 JULY 2013

LIFE INSURANCE + RETIREMENT/401(K) PLAN SERVICES + DISABILITY INCOME INSURANCE + LONG TERM CARE INSURANCE + ANNUITIES

MassMutual Financial Group refers to Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. (MassMutual), its affiliated companies and sales representatives. Insurance products are issued by MassMutual, Springfield, MA 01111, and its subsidiaries, C.M. Life Insurance Company and MML Bay State Life Insurance Company, Enfield, CT 06082. CRN201505-172459

Balancing all the priorities in your life – from your family and career to your physical health and financial well-being – is

rarely easy. But it’s always worth the effort.

DBS Financial Group can help. Our financial professionals have the experience and knowledge to help you build a custom

financial strategy that addresses your needs today – while providing security in the years ahead for you and the people

who matter most.

To learn more about our balanced approach, contact DBS Financial Group today.

David Schulman, CLU®, ChFC®

General AgentDBS Financial Group1000 Corporate Drive, Suite 700Fort Lauderdale, FL [email protected]

WE ALL STRIVE FOR THAT MOMENT OF

PERFECT BALANCE.

618893.indd 1 6/10/13 4:48 PM

14 BUZZ

TOP 5 18 5 Must Do Museums that Aren’t Mausoleums

20 5 Must Hear Local Music Acts

22 GALLERY GUIDE

STYLE 24 Travel Style: Cabo Rocks

FEATURES 28 Tommy Dalton Looking at Music in a New Way

COVER STORY 32 The Puppet Master

HAPPENINGS 40 Relay Rally

BIZ STYLE 42 Corporate & Artistic

45 WHO’S WHO IN HEALTHCARE

DINING 58 Looks Good, Tastes Great

SCENE ON SITE 62 Broward Heart Ball 64 Dream Makers Gala 66 Governor Visits Boys and Girls Club in Davie 68 Cars, Cocktails, Cuisine Caring Celebration 70 Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera’s Fountain of Youth 82 LAST LOOK

74 CLOSER

JULY 2013

18

42

24

28

58

COVER PHOTO BYDOWNTOWN PHOTO/ FORT LAUDERDALE

contents

32

Page 11: 0713 estate

LIFE INSURANCE + RETIREMENT/401(K) PLAN SERVICES + DISABILITY INCOME INSURANCE + LONG TERM CARE INSURANCE + ANNUITIES

MassMutual Financial Group refers to Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. (MassMutual), its affiliated companies and sales representatives. Insurance products are issued by MassMutual, Springfield, MA 01111, and its subsidiaries, C.M. Life Insurance Company and MML Bay State Life Insurance Company, Enfield, CT 06082. CRN201505-172459

Balancing all the priorities in your life – from your family and career to your physical health and financial well-being – is

rarely easy. But it’s always worth the effort.

DBS Financial Group can help. Our financial professionals have the experience and knowledge to help you build a custom

financial strategy that addresses your needs today – while providing security in the years ahead for you and the people

who matter most.

To learn more about our balanced approach, contact DBS Financial Group today.

David Schulman, CLU®, ChFC®

General AgentDBS Financial Group1000 Corporate Drive, Suite 700Fort Lauderdale, FL [email protected]

WE ALL STRIVE FOR THAT MOMENT OF

PERFECT BALANCE.

618893.indd 1 6/10/13 4:48 PM

TOC

Page 12: 0713 estate

12 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

A TRUSTED NAME INURGENT CARE AND IMAGING, NOW IN RIO VISTA

JUST A SHORTWALK FROM HOME.

The Holy Cross Urgent Care and Imaging Center brings the expertise and compassionate care of nationally ranked

Holy Cross Hospital to your neighborhood. When you need immediate care, but it’s not

serious enough for the ER, just walk in, no appointment needed. Or when you have to

fit a physical, immunization or diagnostic test around your work schedule, we’re here. And we’re fast -- we won’t make you sit and stay!

Pre-register online atHolyCrossUrgentCare.com

1115 S. Federal Hwy., Fort Lauderdale | 954-764-6646Urgent Care & Imaging Center

WHAT ARE YOUR KIDS DOING

THIS SUMMER?

10 WEEK SUMMER PROGRAM ACTIVITIESDAILY RIDING LESSONS • TRAIL RIDING

CAMPER HORSE SHOWS • ARTS & CRAFTSINCREDIBLE FUN AND MORE

SIGN UP TODAY!

954.757.111925+ acre facility

6670 NW 82nd Terrace, Parkland, FL 33067www.pinehollowflorida.com

• Open 7 days a week• Covered arena measures

225’ x 112’• Air-conditioned glass

viewing area• Beginner through advanced

riding lessons• Personalized riding

programs

Page 13: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 13

A TRUSTED NAME INURGENT CARE AND IMAGING, NOW IN RIO VISTA

JUST A SHORTWALK FROM HOME.

The Holy Cross Urgent Care and Imaging Center brings the expertise and compassionate care of nationally ranked

Holy Cross Hospital to your neighborhood. When you need immediate care, but it’s not

serious enough for the ER, just walk in, no appointment needed. Or when you have to

fit a physical, immunization or diagnostic test around your work schedule, we’re here. And we’re fast -- we won’t make you sit and stay!

Pre-register online atHolyCrossUrgentCare.com

1115 S. Federal Hwy., Fort Lauderdale | 954-764-6646Urgent Care & Imaging Center

WHAT ARE YOUR KIDS DOING

THIS SUMMER?

10 WEEK SUMMER PROGRAM ACTIVITIESDAILY RIDING LESSONS • TRAIL RIDING

CAMPER HORSE SHOWS • ARTS & CRAFTSINCREDIBLE FUN AND MORE

SIGN UP TODAY!

954.757.111925+ acre facility

6670 NW 82nd Terrace, Parkland, FL 33067www.pinehollowflorida.com

• Open 7 days a week• Covered arena measures

225’ x 112’• Air-conditioned glass

viewing area• Beginner through advanced

riding lessons• Personalized riding

programs

Page 14: 0713 estate

14 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

In its fi rst two decades, the Broward Center for the Performing Arts remained unchanged while the downtown Fort Lauderdale arts

and restaurant district evolved around it. Now it’s in the midst of its fi rst major overhaul, and it’s a big one.

One of the Top 10 arts venues in the country as measured by ticket sales, the Broward Center will be unrecognizable to patrons who fi rst stepped inside the dual-theater facility in 1991. Phase 1 was fi nished last summer, and it added new seats, sound and lighting systems, and a new VIP club level to the main theater.

“It’s a beautiful lounge where we’re really offering a new experience,” says Jan Goodheart, the center’s vice president of external affairs. “You arrive one hour earlier than curtain, and there’s a beautiful buffet and open bar. In its fi rst year, it’s been very successful.”

Phase 2 isn’t about renovation but construction. The ambitious plans include the addition of the two-story Huizenga Pavilion on the New River, with a bistro on the fi rst fl oor and a ballroom on the second. It’ll open next spring.

Then there’s the Rose Miniaci Arts Education Center on the west side of the building, with a 2,100-square-foot main education space and 3,000 square feet of classroom, coaching, and administrative space. It opens next summer.

Best of all, the $55 million renovation has raised $30 million in private donations, Goodheart says. She can’t say this, but we can: Miami-Dade could learn a few things about renovating public spaces from the Broward Center.

And Goodheart says the fundraising isn’t over yet, whether it’s “people who might want to put their name on something or people who want to give $10.” Anyone who donates receives a pin in the shape of an exclamation point. For details, call Goodheart at (954) 765-5814.

BROWARD CENTERFOR THE EXPANDING ARTS

Boca Raton CommunityHigh School (Anything Goes)Best Song: “Anything Goes”Stage Crew: Kelley Cunningham and Crew Special E� ects/Technology: Senior and Co. Lighting: Parker, Shackelford and Co.

Coral Glades High School (Midsummer/Jersey)Ensemble in a Play: The Hairdressers

Cypress Bay High School (Legally Blonde: The Musical)Featured Actress in a Musical: Gillian Rabin

J.P. Taravella High School (Leading Ladies)Best PlayFeatured Actress in a Play: Casey HernandezLead Actor in a Play: Christian FrostSupporting Actor in a Play: Patrick SaxerSupporting Actress in a Play: Mia Cleary Make-up: Shaina Zwiebel and Crew Sets: Chris Arata and JPT Stagecraft ClassSound: Alex Hoffman, Todd Silver, Alex Montesino

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School (Grease and criticism)Critics’ Team Senior Critic: Skyler Evans Junior Critic: Marissa Krantz Comic Actress in a Musical: Carly SeidnerFemale Vocalist: Carolina MenesesMarketing and Publicity: Jessie Karlen, Carly Sadicario

North Broward Preparatory School(A Flea in Her Ear)Comic Actor in a Play: Neil GoodmanCostumes: Devon Horn

Pine Crest School (Oklahoma!)

Comic Actor in a Musical: Patrick BoyleFemale Dancer: Laura Sky Herman

Pompano Beach High School (As You Like It)Male Vocalist: Nicholas Guinta

Pope John Paul II High School (You Can’t Take It With You)Lead Actress in a Play: Lauren Nolan Comic Actress in a Play: Jessica Coons

South Plantation High School (Big and criticism)Sophomore Critic: Aaron Bourque Male Dancer: Lance Spencer Creativity: Julia Rodriguez, Christina Nunes, Shen Rogus, ASL translation and instruction

St. Thomas Aquinas High School(Dead Man Walking)Featured Actor in a Play: Jake Mathwich

Suncoast Community High School(In the Heights) Lead Actor in a Musical: Joel Gutierrez Featured Actor in a Musical: Taige Mills Choreography: Kyle Cortes Props: Shoshana Cohen, Melanie Grande

University School(Tarzan: The Stage Musical and criticism)Best MusicalFreshman Critic: Carlo Feliciani Supporting Actor in a Musical: Ryan Juda Supporting Actress in a Musical: Laura GalindoEnsemble in a Musical: Apes Ensemble Orchestra: Jammin’ Jungle Orchestra

West Boca Raton High School (9 to 5: The Musical)Lead Actress in a Musical: Jade Zaroff

STUDENTS ON STAGEA play from 1958, Leading Ladies, was the big winner at the 2012-13 Cappies – short for the Critics’ Awards Program – at the Broward Center in May.

The comedy scored big for J.P. Taravella High School, raking in eight awards, including Best Play. It was most for the year. Overall, theater students from 14 public and private high schools in Broward and Palm Beach counties won awards. Winners were determined by votes from fellow students and through a weighted peer review voting process. Here’s a list of the winners:

BUZZ

Page 15: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 15

In its fi rst two decades, the Broward Center for the Performing Arts remained unchanged while the downtown Fort Lauderdale arts

and restaurant district evolved around it. Now it’s in the midst of its fi rst major overhaul, and it’s a big one.

One of the Top 10 arts venues in the country as measured by ticket sales, the Broward Center will be unrecognizable to patrons who fi rst stepped inside the dual-theater facility in 1991. Phase 1 was fi nished last summer, and it added new seats, sound and lighting systems, and a new VIP club level to the main theater.

“It’s a beautiful lounge where we’re really offering a new experience,” says Jan Goodheart, the center’s vice president of external affairs. “You arrive one hour earlier than curtain, and there’s a beautiful buffet and open bar. In its fi rst year, it’s been very successful.”

Phase 2 isn’t about renovation but construction. The ambitious plans include the addition of the two-story Huizenga Pavilion on the New River, with a bistro on the fi rst fl oor and a ballroom on the second. It’ll open next spring.

Then there’s the Rose Miniaci Arts Education Center on the west side of the building, with a 2,100-square-foot main education space and 3,000 square feet of classroom, coaching, and administrative space. It opens next summer.

Best of all, the $55 million renovation has raised $30 million in private donations, Goodheart says. She can’t say this, but we can: Miami-Dade could learn a few things about renovating public spaces from the Broward Center.

And Goodheart says the fundraising isn’t over yet, whether it’s “people who might want to put their name on something or people who want to give $10.” Anyone who donates receives a pin in shape of exclamation point. For details, call Goodheart at (954) 765-5814.

BROWARD CENTERFOR THE EXPANDING ARTS

Boca Raton CommunityHigh School (Anything Goes)Best Song: “Anything Goes”Stage Crew: Kelley Cunningham and Crew Special E� ects/Technology: Senior and Co. Lighting: Parker, Shackelford and Co.

Coral Glades High School (Midsummer/Jersey)Ensemble in a Play: The Hairdressers

Cypress Bay High School (Legally Blonde: The Musical)Featured Actress in a Musical: Gillian Rabin

J.P. Taravella High School (Leading Ladies)Best PlayFeatured Actress in a Play: Casey HernandezLead Actor in a Play: Christian FrostSupporting Actor in a Play: Patrick SaxerSupporting Actress in a Play: Mia Cleary Make-up: Shaina Zwiebel and Crew Sets: Chris Arata and JPT Stagecraft ClassSound: Alex Hoffman, Todd Silver, Alex Montesino

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School (Grease and criticism)Critics’ Team Senior Critic: Skyler Evans Junior Critic: Marissa Krantz Comic Actress in a Musical: Carly SeidnerFemale Vocalist: Carolina MenesesMarketing and Publicity: Jessie Karlen, Carly Sadicario

North Broward Preparatory School(A Flea in Her Ear)Comic Actor in a Play: Neil GoodmanCostumes: Devon Horn

Pine Crest School

(Oklahoma!)Comic Actor in a Musical: Patrick BoyleFemale Dancer: Laura Sky Herman

Pompano Beach High School (As You Like It)Male Vocalist: Nicholas Guinta

Pope John Paul II High School (You Can’t Take It With You)Lead Actress in a Play: Lauren Nolan Comic Actress in a Play: Jessica Coons

South Plantation High School (Big and criticism)Sophomore Critic: Aaron Bourque Male Dancer: Lance Spencer Creativity: Julia Rodriguez, Christina Nunes, Shen Rogus, ASL translation and instruction

St. Thomas Aquinas High School(Dead Man Walking)Featured Actor in a Play: Jake Mathwich

Suncoast Community High School(In the Heights) Lead Actor in a Musical: Joel Gutierrez Featured Actor in a Musical: Taige Mills Choreography: Kyle Cortes Props: Shoshana Cohen, Melanie Grande

University School(Tarzan: The Stage Musical and criticism)Best MusicalFreshman Critic: Carlo Feliciani Supporting Actor in a Musical: Ryan Juda Supporting Actress in a Musical: Laura GalindoEnsemble in a Musical: Apes Ensemble Orchestra: Jammin’ Jungle Orchestra

West Boca Raton High School (9 to 5: The Musical)Lead Actress in a Musical: Jade Zaroff

STUDENTS ON STAGEA play from 1958, Leading Ladies, was the big winner at the 2012-13 Cappies – short for the Critics’ Awards Program – at the Broward Center in May.

The comedy scored big for J.P. Taravella High School, raking in eight awards, including Best Play. It was most for the year. Overall, theater students from 14 public and private high schools in Broward and Palm Beach counties won awards. Winners were determined by votes from fellow students and through a weighted peer review voting process. Here’s a list of the winners:

BUZZ

Page 16: 0713 estate

16 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

• Facial Rejuvenation• Brow Lift• Eyes, Nose & Lips• Body Contouring

• Tummy Tucks• Breast Enhancements(Enlarge, Reduce & Lift)• Permanent Makeup• Liquid Facelift• Ultrasonic Liposuction• Laser Hair Removal• BOTOX® Cosmetic• Dysport®• Injectable Fillers• Cosmetic Labiaplasty

The Patient and any other person responsible for payment has a right to refuse to pay, cancel payment, or be reimbursed for any other service, examination, or treatmentwhich is performed as a result of and within 72 hours of responding to the advertisement or the free, discounted fee or reduced fee, service, examination, or treatment.

Accredited Operating Facility AAAASF

Charles A. Messa, III, M.D., F.A.C.S.Board Certified By

The American Board Of Plastic Surgery

A more beautiful you!

Specialized Skin CareWeston Medical & Professional Campus | 2823 Executive Park Drive

954.659.7760 | WWW.WESTONCOSMETICSURGERY.COMFINANCING AVAILABLE | SE HABLA ESPAÑOL

Member

20% OFFBotox & Dysport

25% OFFTNS Eye Repair

50% OFF INJECTABLE FILLERS When you purchase one at the regular price, get the second half off

LATISSE $125.005 ml. size normally $179

HOW TO HAVE A CLASSICAL SUMMER

LET FREEDOM RUN

buzz

While Broward County is becoming a year-round place to live and play, it’s still sadly true that much of its culture is seasonal. But for the past 22 years, the Symphony of the Americas – Broward’s only professional

orchestra – has hosted Summerfest. It’s an ambitious effort, bringing a different world-renowned European orchestra to South Florida to play nearly a dozen shows in just a few weeks.

The 23rd annual Summerfest, sponsored by American Airlines, begins this month and welcomes the I Musici Estensi Chamber Orchestra from Milan, Italy. Select members of the Symphony of the Americas will join in to play the music of Dvorak, Telemann, Purcell, Verdi, and the legendary Argentine composer Piazzolla. There’s also a world premiere by Italian composer and soloist Lorenzo Turchi-Floris, Summerfest’s composer in residence.

Tickets range from $25 to $60 depending on the venue and location. For exact prices, check out the websites below. Here’s a list of all the concerts in Broward in July and August...

Lifestyle Magazine went searching for an interesting arts-related event happening in Weston this

month – this is our Special Arts Issue, after all – but we had no luck. Even the city’s communication’s director, Denise Barrett, called July a “dead month” for Weston arts events. But, the one interesting thing that is going on? The 20th annual Weston July 4th 5k races.

And if you have big July 4th plans, don’t worry – the race begins early, at 7 a.m. The 5k takes place at Weston Regional Park and tickets are $15 in advance or $25 on race day.

Proceeds benefi t the Broward Health Foundation, the sponsor of the event for the past 12 years.

“The theme of this year’s Fourth of July celebration is ‘Let Freedom Ring,’” says Don Decker, Weston’s Parks and Recreation director.

Runners are encouraged to wear red, white, and blue. After the run is the annual Hometown Parade, which takes place “in and around” Weston Town Center, according to Decker. The parade starts at 10:30 a.m. Regristration for tickets can be found at www.splitsecondtiming.com or at the Weston Community Center.

Date: Friday, July 12 Where: Sunshine Cathedral, Fort LauderdaleWhen: 7:30 p.m. Info: 954-462-2004 or www.sunshinecathedral.org

Date: Sunday, July 14 Where: Trinity Lutheran Church, Fort LauderdaleWhen: 3 p.m.Info: 954-463-2450 or 954-987-5481 or www.trinityftl.org

Date: Wednesday, July 17 Where: Susan B. Katz Theater, Pembroke Pines When: 7 p.m.Info: 954-961-6067 or www.ppines.com/river/index.html

Date: Friday, July 19 Where: Pompano Beach Civic Center, Pompano BeachWhen: 7 p.m. Info: 954-786-4111 or www.mypompanobeach.org

Date: Saturday, July 20 Where: First Congregational Church, Fort LauderdaleWhen: 7:30 p.m.Info: 954-563-4271 or www.uccftl.org

Date: Friday, Aug. 2Where: Broward Center for the Performing Arts Amaturo Theater, Fort Lauderdale When: 8 p.m.Info: 954-462-0222 or www.browardcenter.org

Date:: Sunday, Aug. 4 Where: Sunrise Civic Center Theater, Oakland ParkWhen: 2 p.m.Info: 954-747-4646 or www.sunrisefl .gov

More info at http://sota.org

BUZZ

Page 17: 0713 estate

• Facial Rejuvenation• Brow Lift• Eyes, Nose & Lips• Body Contouring

• Tummy Tucks• Breast Enhancements(Enlarge, Reduce & Lift)• Permanent Makeup• Liquid Facelift• Ultrasonic Liposuction• Laser Hair Removal• BOTOX® Cosmetic• Dysport®• Injectable Fillers• Cosmetic Labiaplasty

The Patient and any other person responsible for payment has a right to refuse to pay, cancel payment, or be reimbursed for any other service, examination, or treatmentwhich is performed as a result of and within 72 hours of responding to the advertisement or the free, discounted fee or reduced fee, service, examination, or treatment.

Accredited Operating Facility AAAASF

Charles A. Messa, III, M.D., F.A.C.S.Board Certified By

The American Board Of Plastic Surgery

A more beautiful you!

Specialized Skin CareWeston Medical & Professional Campus | 2823 Executive Park Drive

954.659.7760 | WWW.WESTONCOSMETICSURGERY.COMFINANCING AVAILABLE | SE HABLA ESPAÑOL

Member

20% OFFBotox & Dysport

25% OFFTNS Eye Repair

50% OFF INJECTABLE FILLERS When you purchase one at the regular price, get the second half off

LATISSE $125.005 ml. size normally $179

HOW TO HAVE A CLASSICAL SUMMER

LET FREEDOM RUN

buzz

While Broward County is becoming a year-round place to live and play, it’s still sadly true that much of its culture is seasonal. But for the past 22 years, the Symphony of the Americas – Broward’s only professional

orchestra – has hosted Summerfest. It’s an ambitious effort, bringing a different world-renowned European orchestra to South Florida to play nearly a dozen shows in just a few weeks.

The 23rd annual Summerfest, sponsored by American Airlines, begins this month and welcomes the I Musici Estensi Chamber Orchestra from Milan, Italy. Select members of the Symphony of the Americas will join in to play the music of Dvorak, Telemann, Purcell, Verdi, and the legendary Argentine composer Piazzolla. There’s also a world premiere by Italian composer and soloist Lorenzo Turchi-Floris, Summerfest’s composer in residence.

Tickets range from $25 to $60 depending on the venue and location. For exact prices, check out the websites below. Here’s a list of all the concerts in Broward in July and August...

Lifestyle Magazine went searching for an interesting arts-related event happening in Weston this

month – this is our Special Arts Issue, after all – but we had no luck. Even the city’s communication’s director, Denise Barrett, called July a “dead month” for Weston arts events. But, the one interesting thing that is going on? The 20th annual Weston July 4th 5k races.

And if you have big July 4th plans, don’t worry – the race begins early, at 7 a.m. The 5k takes place at Weston Regional Park and tickets are $15 in advance or $25 on race day.

Proceeds benefi t the Broward Health Foundation, the sponsor of the event for the past 12 years.

“The theme of this year’s Fourth of July celebration is ‘Let Freedom Ring,’” says Don Decker, Weston’s Parks and Recreation director.

Runners are encouraged to wear red, white, and blue. After the run is the annual Hometown Parade, which takes place “in and around” Weston Town Center, according to Decker. The parade starts at 10:30 a.m. Regristration for tickets can be found at www.splitsecondtiming.com or at the Weston Community Center.

Date: Friday, July 12 Where: Sunshine Cathedral, Fort LauderdaleWhen: 7:30 p.m. Info: 954-462-2004 or www.sunshinecathedral.org

Date: Sunday, July 14 Where: Trinity Lutheran Church, Fort LauderdaleWhen: 3 p.m.Info: 954-463-2450 or 954-987-5481 or www.trinityftl.org

Date: Wednesday, July 17 Where: Susan B. Katz Theater, Pembroke Pines When: 7 p.m.Info: 954-961-6067 or www.ppines.com/river/index.html

Date: Friday, July 19 Where: Pompano Beach Civic Center, Pompano BeachWhen: 7 p.m. Info: 954-786-4111 or www.mypompanobeach.org

Date: Saturday, July 20 Where: First Congregational Church, Fort LauderdaleWhen: 7:30 p.m.Info: 954-563-4271 or www.uccftl.org

Date: Friday, Aug. 2Where: Broward Center for the Performing Arts Amaturo Theater, Fort Lauderdale When: 8 p.m.Info: 954-462-0222 or www.browardcenter.org

Date:: Sunday, Aug. 4 Where: Sunrise Civic Center Theater, Oakland ParkWhen: 2 p.m.Info: 954-747-4646 or www.sunrisefl .gov

More info at http://sota.org

BUZZ

Page 18: 0713 estate

18 JULY 2013

Do it all at the Museum.

See. Taste. Learn. Join.

One East Las Olas Boulevard Fort Lauderdale, FL

954.525.5500 | moafl.org | / moafl

Foto Fort Lauderdale On view through October 6

Stiles presents in cooperation with Northern Trust and Greenberg Traurig

Bunny Yeager: Both Sides of the Camera

Woman’s World: Contemporary Views of Women by Women

Curated by Peter Boswell

Image: Bunny Yeager and Bettie Page pose with a 4 x 5 speed graphic camera at Africa USA, Boca Raton, Florida 1954

Register Now!Creative Summer Art Academy for Grades 1-12 5 Two-week Sessions

Summer Nights of Art for Adults

Who Am I to You? South Florida Cultural Consortium Juried Exhibition On view through September 1

Organized by the Museum of Art, Curated by Freddy Jouwayed

Annual exhibition of Visual & Media Artists Fellowship grant winners.The South Florida Cultural Consortium is funded in part with the support of the National Endowment for the Arts, the Florida Department of State Division of Cultural Affairs and the Florida Arts Council, the Boards of County Commissioners of Broward, Miami-Dade, Martin and Monroe Counties, and the Palm Beach County Cultural Council.

MOA158_DestinationAd_LifestyleJul_8.375x10.875_mech.indd 1 6/12/13 2:16 PM

01. MUSEUM OF ART FORT LAUDERDALEHow has the Internet changed art museums? They’re no longer just for standing in front of two-dimension paintings. Inside this venerable downtown Fort Lauderdale edifi ce, you can attend wine and food events (our favorite title: “Homage to Fromage”) and sign the kids up for intensive two-week summer arts programs. And you can see art that isn’t what you might expect. Recent exhibits have included works from Andy Warhol and some scary-looking sculptures from New Guinea and Peru. One of the most popular past exhibits featured Princess Diana’s dresses. www.moafl .org

02. MUSEUM OF Discovery & Science

Good children’s museums are like good children’s

movies: There’s something thrown in for the adults, even if the target audience doesn’t

get it. If you’ve ever attended any of the live

animal shows or science presentations, you know what

we mean. Also fascinating for the older folks: the playful otters and the creepy spiders. Then, of course, there’s the 3D IMAX theater, which shows major-release hits like Man of Steel as well as documentaries about oceans and butterfl ies. www.mods.org 03. YOUNG at ArtAny honest parent will tell you they’ve also learned a few things venturing through this 55,000-square-foot fl ying wedge of a building. (You’ve got to see it

to understand that.) The museum is cleverly split into four “scape” sections, from Greenscapes to Culturescapes. All are interactive. For instance, Artscapes allows you to paint on a cave wall and draw your own Victorian-era self-portrait. www.youngatartmuseum.org

04. CORAL SPRINGS Museum of ArtThe problem with Broward musuems is their location. Most are east. This one is only a teenager – 16 years old – but it’s literally carved out a niche for itself. The sculpture garden is the big draw here, from Zimbabwe black granite to colorful metal by Romero Britto. www.csmart.org

05. ART & CULTURE Center of HollywoodThe smallest museum on this list is also the most eccentric. Located in a former funeral home – the main gallery is where the chapel was – the center has featured everything from a Lego sculpture exhibit to shadow-puppet shows. This is a museum you can feel comfortable visiting in jeans and a T-shirt. www. artandculturecenter.org

Some are big, some are tiny, none are boring

Be honest. When you hear someone say, “Let’s go to a museum,”

you’re probably not thinking, “That’s the most exciting entertainment option I’ve heard today!”

But Broward County has museums that are good for more than just fi eld trips for the kids. And even the children’s museums have enough verve to keep parents interested. Here are our Top 5...

MUSEUMS THAT AREN’T

MAUSOLEUMS

must DO

Page 19: 0713 estate

Do it all at the Museum.

See. Taste. Learn. Join.

One East Las Olas Boulevard Fort Lauderdale, FL

954.525.5500 | moafl.org | / moafl

Foto Fort Lauderdale On view through October 6

Stiles presents in cooperation with Northern Trust and Greenberg Traurig

Bunny Yeager: Both Sides of the Camera

Woman’s World: Contemporary Views of Women by Women

Curated by Peter Boswell

Image: Bunny Yeager and Bettie Page pose with a 4 x 5 speed graphic camera at Africa USA, Boca Raton, Florida 1954

Register Now!Creative Summer Art Academy for Grades 1-12 5 Two-week Sessions

Summer Nights of Art for Adults

Who Am I to You? South Florida Cultural Consortium Juried Exhibition On view through September 1

Organized by the Museum of Art, Curated by Freddy Jouwayed

Annual exhibition of Visual & Media Artists Fellowship grant winners.The South Florida Cultural Consortium is funded in part with the support of the National Endowment for the Arts, the Florida Department of State Division of Cultural Affairs and the Florida Arts Council, the Boards of County Commissioners of Broward, Miami-Dade, Martin and Monroe Counties, and the Palm Beach County Cultural Council.

MOA158_DestinationAd_LifestyleJul_8.375x10.875_mech.indd 1 6/12/13 2:16 PM

01. MUSEUM OF ART FORT LAUDERDALEHow has the Internet changed art museums? They’re no longer just for standing in front of two-dimension paintings. Inside this venerable downtown Fort Lauderdale edifi ce, you can attend wine and food events (Our favorite title: “Homage to Fromage”) and sign the kids up for intensive two-week summer arts programs. And you can see art that isn’t what you might expect. Recent exhibits have included works from Andy Warhol and some scary-looking sculptures from New Guinea and Peru. One of the most popular past exhibits featured Princess Diana’s dresses. www.moafl .org

02. MUSEUM OF Discovery & Science

Good children’s museums are like good children’s

movies: There’s something thrown in for the adults, even if the target audience doesn’t

get it. If you’ve ever attended any of the live

animal shows or science presentations, you know what

we mean. Also fascinating for the older folks: the plyful otters and the creepy spiders. Then, of course, there’s the 3D IMAX threater, which shows major-release hits like Man of Steel as well as documentaries about oceans and butterfl ies. www.mods.org 03. YOUNG at ArtAny honest parent will tell you they’ve also learned a few things venturing through this 55,000-square-foot fl ying wedge of a building. (You’ve got to see it

to understand that.) The museum is cleverly split into four “scape” sections, from Greenscapes to Culturescapes. All are interactive. For instance, Artscapes allows you to paint on a cave wall and draw your own Victorian-era self-portrait. www.youngatartmuseum.org

04. CORAL SPRINGS Museum of ArtThe problem with Broward musuems is their location. Most are east. This one is only a teenager – 16 years old – but it’s literally carved out a niche for itself. The sculpture garden is the big draw here, from Zimbabwe black granite to colorful metal by Romero Britto. www.csmart.org

05. ART & CULTURE Center of HollywoodThe smallest museum on this list is also the most eccentric. Located in a former funeral home – the main gallery is where the chapel was – the center has featured everything from a Lego sculpture exhibit to shadow-puppet shows. This is a museum you can feel comfortable visiting in jeans and a T-shirt. www. artandculturecenter.org

Some are big, some are tiny, none are boring

Be honest. When you hear someone say, “Let’s go to a museum,”

you’re probably not thinking, “That’s the most exciting entertainment option I’ve heard today!”

But Broward County has museums that are good for more than just fi eld trips for the kids. And even the children’s museums have enough verve to keep parents interested. Here are our Top 5...

MUSEUMS THAT AREN’T

MAUSOLEUMS

must DO

Page 20: 0713 estate

20 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

At the Renaissance, soul stirring settings and a unique event environment  combined with savvy service create the premier setting for your next    

gathering. Poised on a beautiful lakefront setting, the hotel features 250 deluxe guest rooms, outdoor pool and whirlpool, health club and BIN595            Restaurant and Lounge. Whether your trip is for business or pleasure,    Renaissance believes there is always something new to be found.  

You spend your life working. You should discover the world as you go. 

RENAISSANCE FORT LAUDERDALE‐PLANTATION 

1230 S Pine Island Road, Plantation, FL 33324             954.472.2252              www.renaissanceplantation.com 

Special Occasion Events  to Include: 

• Weddings • Bar/Bat Mitzvahs • Quinceaneras • Bridal/Baby Showers • Social Gatherings 

01. JOEL DASILVA and the Midnight HowlEven after a couple of years with his own band, the Midnight Howl, DaSilva p r o b a b l y remains more w e l l - k n o w n for his previous group, the Hep Cat Boo Daddies, with which he played for just over a decade. But where that band traffi cked mainly in swinging rockabilly-style rave ups – the name sort of gives away the genre – DaSilva’s work with his new band is much more blues-based. In fact, the group has already become a leading light of the South Florida blues scene. DaSilva and company reached the semifi nals – just one round out from the fi nal competition – of the International Blues Challenge, a nationwide battle of the blues bands held in Memphis. And at a showcase of blues guitar work put on by the South Florida Blues Society on May 26, DaSilva’s group served as the backing band for all the featured guitarists.

02. ALBERT CastigliaSpeaking of blues guitarists, Albert Castiglia has been playing guitar and singing in South Florida since the early 1990s, and served as guitarist for the great harmonica player Junior Wells’ touring band. Now, he occasionally embarks on national tours, and will tour Europe next April, but when he’s not doing all of that, you can catch him at any number of local joints, keeping his hands dirty by playing out like any other band. In fact, June sees the guitarist playing a bunch of gigs from Key West to Boca Raton before leaving South Florida to run around the country throughout the summer festival season. So, catch him this month, or wait until the Legendary Rhythm and Blues Cruise pulls out of Fort Lauderdale in October.

03. CRAZY FingersRelive the misspent days of your youth by hitting up South Florida’s own Grateful Dead cover band. It seems every major metropolitan area has at least one tribute act keeping the dream alive; there’s even a site, GratefulDeadTributeBands.com, that attempts to catalog every act in the trade. Crazy Fingers is better than most, to the point that if old Deadheads close their eyes at the group’s regular gigs on Sundays at Boston’s on the Beach in Delray or Thursdays at the Funky Biscuit in Boca, they can almost fool themselves into thinking it’s the boys themselves, circa late 1980s or early 1990s.

04. SPAM AllstarsCombining Latin and electronic infl uences, the Spam Allstars provide a soundtrack to Miami better than any other band in the area. The group, led by DJ Le Spam, includes nine members and has had a regular Thursday gig at the Miami club Hoy Como Ayer since 2001. If you feel the need to move, these Thursday night free-for-alls are the place to be, attracting hip-shaking fans from around the area.

05. CAT ShellSinger/songwriter Cat Shell has been a force in local music for about half a decade, since the release of her fi rst album, 2007’s Cat’s Outta the Bag. She blends some modern R&B and pop sensibilities with a strong infl uence from the female jazz crooners of half a century ago, folks like Nina Simone and Etta James, as well as more-modern jazz-infl ected singers like Norah Jones and Diana Krall. Her songs share themes with those other chanteuses as well – fi nding love, losing it, regrets, and hopes.

When Dan Sweeney began covering local music, it was

2000, and the South Florida scene was for teenagers and twentysomethings. Now, the award-winning critic is 36 years old with two children – and last year, some of his stories were obituaries for local musicians (Dan Hosker of The Holy Terrors and Bobby Johnston of Load). You know you’ve been doing something for a long time when your interview subjects start dying. So Lifestyle asked Sweeney to list fi ve bands that local adults would enjoy hearing live. Here are his Top 5, in no particular order...

LOCAL MUSIC ACTS

must HEAR

DAN SWEENEY

Page 21: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 21

At the Renaissance, soul stirring settings and a unique event environment  combined with savvy service create the premier setting for your next    

gathering. Poised on a beautiful lakefront setting, the hotel features 250 deluxe guest rooms, outdoor pool and whirlpool, health club and BIN595            Restaurant and Lounge. Whether your trip is for business or pleasure,    Renaissance believes there is always something new to be found.  

You spend your life working. You should discover the world as you go. 

RENAISSANCE FORT LAUDERDALE‐PLANTATION 

1230 S Pine Island Road, Plantation, FL 33324             954.472.2252              www.renaissanceplantation.com 

Special Occasion Events  to Include: 

• Weddings • Bar/Bat Mitzvahs • Quinceaneras • Bridal/Baby Showers • Social Gatherings 

01. JOEL DASILVA and the Midnight HowlEven after a couple of years with his own band, the Midnight Howl, DaSilva p r o b a b l y remains more w e l l - k n o w n for his previous group, the Hep Cat Boo Daddies, with which he played for just over a decade. But where that band traffi cked mainly in swinging rockabilly-style rave ups – the name sort of gives away the genre – DaSilva’s work with his new band is much more blues-based. In fact, the group has already become a leading light of the South Florida blues scene. DaSilva and company reached the semifi nals – just one round out from the fi nal competition – of the International Blues Challenge, a nationwide battle of the blues bands held in Memphis. And at a showcase of blues guitar work put on by the South Florida Blues Society on May 26, DaSilva’s group served as the backing band for all the featured guitarists.

02. ALBERT CastigliaSpeaking of blues guitarists, Albert Castiglia has been playing guitar and singing in South Florida since the early 1990s, and served as guitarist for the great harmonica player Junior Wells’ touring band. Now, he occasionally embarks on national tours, and will tour Europe next April, but when he’s not doing all of that, you can catch him at any number of local joints, keeping his hands dirty by playing out like any other band. In fact, June sees the guitarist playing a bunch of gigs from Key West to Boca Raton before leaving South Florida to run around the country throughout the summer festival season. So, catch him this month, or wait until the Legendary Rhythm and Blues Cruise pulls out of Fort Lauderdale in October.

03. CRAZY FingersRelive the misspent days of your youth by hitting up South Florida’s own Grateful Dead cover band. It seems every major metropolitan area has at least one tribute act keeping the dream alive; there’s even a site, GratefulDeadTributeBands.com, that attempts to catalog every act in the trade. Crazy Fingers is better than most, to the point that if old Deadheads closes their eyes at the group’s regular gigs on Sundays at Boston’s on the Beach in Delray or Thursdays at the Funky Biscuit in Boca, they can almost fool themselves into thinking it’s the boys themselves, circa late 1980s or early 1990s.

04. SPAM AllstarsCombining Latin and electronic infl uences, the Spam Allstars provide a soundtrack to Miami better than any other band in the area. The group, led by DJ Le Spam, includes nine members and has had a regular Thursday gig at the Miami club Hoy Como Ayer since 2001. If you feel the need to move, these Thursday night free-for-alls are the place to be, attracting hip-shaking fans from around the area.

05. CAT ShellSinger/songwriter Cat Shell has been a force in local music for about half a decade, since the release of her fi rst album, 2007’s Cat’s Outta the Bag. She blends some modern R&B and pop sensibilities with a strong infl uence from the female jazz crooners of half a century ago, folks like Nina Simone and Etta James, as well as more-modern jazz-infl ected singers like Norah Jones and Diana Krall. Her songs share themes with those other chanteuses as well – fi nding love, losing it, regrets, and hopes.

When Dan Sweeney began covering local music, it was

2000, and the South Florida scene was for teenagers and twentysomethings. Now, the award-winning critic is 36 years old with two children – and last year, some of his stories were obituaries for local musicians (Dan Hosker of The Holy Terrors and Bobby Johnston of Load). You know you’ve been doing something for a long time when your interview subjects start dying. So Lifestyle asked Sweeney to list fi ve bands that local adults would enjoy hearing live. Here are his Top 5, in no particular order...

LOCAL MUSIC ACTS

must HEAR

DAN SWEENEY

Page 22: 0713 estate

22 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

LifestyleMEDIA GROUP

Correctly identify the CENTER OF ATTENTION in Lifestyle’s August cover story and you will be entered to win a $100 gift certifi cate to Grille 401 on Las Olas!

Visit lmgfl .com, click on the “Guess the next cover story” banner to name this man of mystery!

CAN YOU

GUESS...OUR NEXT COVER STORY?

GALLERY GUIDE

When it comes to supporting the arts in

Broward County, here’s a gallery, a frame

shop, and a museum that do it with gusto...

Young At Art Museum751 SW 121st AvenueDavie, FL 33325Young At Art Museum features four permanent galleries, a traveling art exhibit, artwork from prominent artists scattered throughout the 55,000 square-foot, LEED-certifi ed space, and the Young Art Institute. The museum also features a series of group and solo spotlight exhibitions, lectures and workshops by South Florida contemporary artists.

Call Of Africa, Inc.920 N.E. 13th StreetFort Lauderdale, FL 33304Las Olas Boulevard’s oldest Gallery, Call of Africa’s Native Visions has an amazing array of both contemporary and traditional artworks from around the world. With an emphasis on the natural world and artworks adorning covers of Christies and Sotheby’s, mediums include oils, acrylics, bronze, glass, stone and wood.

Jazz Framing1386 Weston RoadWeston, FL 33326954-384-7610We o� er custom framing for paintings, photos, fi ne art prints, mirrors, posters, etc. Our services include custom framing, custom matting, dry mounting, canvas stretching and professional framing consultation.

Page 23: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 23

LifestyleMEDIA GROUP

Correctly identify the CENTER OF ATTENTION in Lifestyle’s August cover story and you will be entered to win a $100 gift certifi cate to Grille 401 on Las Olas!

Visit lmgfl .com, click on the “Guess the next cover story” banner to name this man of mystery!

CAN YOU

GUESS...OUR NEXT COVER STORY?

GALLERY GUIDE

When it comes to supporting the arts in

Broward County, here’s a gallery, a frame

shop, and a museum that do it with gusto...

Young At Art Museum751 SW 121st AvenueDavie, FL 33325Young At Art Museum features four permanent galleries, a traveling art exhibit, artwork from prominent artists scattered throughout the 55,000 square-foot, LEED-certifi ed space, and the Young Art Institute. The museum also features a series of group and solo spotlight exhibitions, lectures and workshops by South Florida contemporary artists.

Call Of Africa, Inc.920 N.E. 13th StreetFort Lauderdale, FL 33304Las Olas Boulevard’s oldest Gallery, Call of Africa’s Native Visions has an amazing array of both contemporary and traditional artworks from around the world. With an emphasis on the natural worldw and artworks adorning covers of Christies and Sotheby’s, mediums include oils, acrylics, bronze, glass, stone and wood.

Jazz Framing1386 Weston RoadWeston, FL 33326954-384-7610We o� er custom framing for paintings, photos, fi ne art prints, mirrors, posters, etc. Our services include custom framing, custom matting, dry mounting, canvas stretching and professional framing consultation.

Page 24: 0713 estate

CABO SAN LUCAS,

Mexico also known simply as Cabo, is a great spot for tourists and beach-goers

world-wide. What began as a small fi shing village is today one of the top tourist destinations fi lled with fantasy, adventure and 360 days of sunshine!

Located at the very tip of the Baja California Peninsula, Cabo is bordered by the Pacifi c Ocean and Sea of Cortez. The most popular activities involve the water. Cabo is also known as “The Marlin Capital of the world,” as well as “The Aquarium of the World.” With one of the largest reefs in the world the snorkeling and scuba diving are well worth the trip and for the fi sherman in you, “Incredible!” If golf is your thing, then you’ve come to the right place. Championship golf courses are both challenging and unbelievably beautiful. High season runs from November to May with the Christmas holidays being the busiest time and you’ll fi nd plenty of spring breakers and families in mid-March.

According to Lisa Crawford, Founder/CEO of SitInMySeats VIP Tickets, Travel & Concierge Services, a stay at Las Ventanas Al Paraiso is your window to paradise. I feel very comfortable recommending one of the most acclaimed resorts ever to our most discerning clientele who visit time and time again and seem to always

capture their fi rst magical moment. Las Ventanas has redefi ned luxury, pampering, and hospitality. The desert beach hideaway in Los Cabos captivates guests with expansive suites, inspired cuisine and the salon and spa, the resort’s recently unveiled sanctuary of renewal and revitalization. One of our clients recently visited Cabo and requested a private Tequilla tasting paired up with food from a well-renowned Mexican chef. No problem for the Team at SitInMySeats.

And what can you say about a sultry Cabo night? “What happens in Cabo, stays in Cabo” the longtime mantra. Club and bar hopping on foot is easy and the lounge music and theme parties draw beautiful people to the wide array of hip international clubs. The celeb hangouts have all-day and all-night happy hours, beautiful people, and the latest grooves from the hottest DJs in downtown. So as you can see for yourself “Cabo Rocks”!

For more information or to book your VIP Trip to Cabo or any other fabulous travel destination, please contact SitInMySeats VIP Tickets, Travel & Concierge Services at 954-456-0419/ 866-798-7328 or email Lisa Crawford at [email protected]. You can also now customize your trip with Lisa in person at her new offi ce located at 1263 E. Las Olas Blvd., Suite 204 in Downtown Ft. Lauderdale and meet the team!!

CABOROCKS

Page 25: 0713 estate

CABO SAN LUCAS,

Mexico also known simply as Cabo, is a great spot for tourists and beach-goers

world-wide. What began as a small fi shing village is today one of the top tourist destinations fi lled with fantasy, adventure and 360 days of sunshine!

Located at the very tip of the Baja California Peninsula, Cabo is bordered by the Pacifi c Ocean and Sea of Cortez. The most popular activities involve the water. Cabo is also known as “The Marlin Capital of the world,” as well as “The Aquarium of the World.” With one of the largest reefs in the world the snorkeling and scuba diving are well worth the trip and for the fi sherman in you, “Incredible!” If golf is your thing, then you’ve come to the right place. Championship golf courses are both challenging and unbelievably beautiful. High season runs from November to May with the Christmas holidays being the busiest time and you’ll fi nd plenty of spring breakers and families in mid-March.

According to Lisa Crawford, Founder/CEO of SitInMySeats VIP Tickets, Travel & Concierge Services, a stay at Las Ventanas Al Paraiso is your window to paradise. I feel very comfortable recommending one of the most acclaimed resorts ever to our most discerning clientele who visit time and time again and seem to always

capture their fi rst magical moment. Las Ventanas has redefi ned luxury, pampering, and hospitality. The desert beach hideaway in Los Cabos captivates guests with expansive suites, inspired cuisine and the salon and spa, the resort’s recently unveiled sanctuary of renewal and revitalization. One of our clients recently visited Cabo and requested a private Tequilla tasting paired up with food from a well-renowned Mexican chef. No problem for the Team at SitInMySeats.

And what can you say about a sultry Cabo night? “What happens in Cabo, stays in Cabo” the longtime mantra. Club and bar hopping on foot is easy and the lounge music and theme parties draw beautiful people to the wide array of hip international clubs. The celeb hangouts have all-day and all-night happy hours, beautiful people, and the latest grooves from the hottest DJs in downtown. So as you can see for yourself “Cabo Rocks”!

For more information or to book your VIP Trip to Cabo or any other fabulous travel destination, please contact SitInMySeats VIP Tickets, Travel & Concierge Services at 954-456-0419/ 866-798-7328 or email Lisa Crawford at [email protected]. You can also now customize your trip with Lisa in person at her new offi ce located at 1263 E. Las Olas Blvd., Suite 204 in Downtown Ft. Lauderdale and meet the team!!

CABOROCKS

Page 26: 0713 estate

26 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Real People. Real Stories.www.eyeonsouthflorida.com

AWARD WINNING GYMUn Nuevo Increible Gimnasio para toda la familia

1951 N. Commerce Pkwy., Weston

954.384.9393www.TagGymnastics.com

Indoor basketball/soccer • Trampoline • Tumbling • Gymnastics

THISSUMMER...LEARN TO

FLY

SUMMER CAMPstarts June 10th$45/day $195/week

WHO’SWHO IN REAL ESTATEBROWARD COUNTY

2013Broward’s Resourcefor REAL ESTATE Professionals

Reach more than 195,000 Broward Readers with Homes valued at $500,000 to more than $15,000,000

JOHNSMITHBroker/Owner,

Smith Real Estate

2350 E. LAS OLAS BLVD.

FORT LAUDERDALE

954.555.5555

SMITHREALESTATE.COM

E D U C A T I O N

Bachelor of Arts,

University of Texas at El Paso

A W A R D S

Top Individual Agent for Listing

Units Sold in 2012

#1 Individual Agent for Cook,

Smith & Brandt for Income &

Closed Volume

Served as a member of the

Cook, Smith & Brandt Agent

Leadership Council

L O C A T I O N S

Las Olas, Lighthouse Point,

Parkland and Weston

John Smith is a leading luxury real

estate specialist, serving all of Broward

County. John brings a wealth of

knowledge about the market and

the area, assisting hundreds of clients

achieve their real estate goals.

John is experienced in many areas

of real estate: residential sales and

leasing, relocation, investment and

development. The firm also specializes

in commercial sales and leasing, and

property management.

John’s professional goals are to

conduct myself ethically, seeking

win-win transactions and to grow

and change within the real estate

industry, providing my clients with the

best possible service. Many clients

have complimented John on his

competence and negotiating skills.

John works with many different

buyers and sellers locally, nationally

and internationally and utilizes his vast

experience helping clients understand

the market and achieve their real

estate goals in Broward County.

His main focus is to bring great results

and knows that happy clients make

for more happy clients.

John is a South Florida native and

knew he wanted to be in real estate

from an early age. Born and raised in

Fort Lauderdale, John completed his

studies at Florida Atlantic University.

John worked for several leading

real estate companies, achieving

tremendous success both personally

and for the firms he worked for, before

establishing his own realtor business in

2006 where he and his team continue

to be trail blazers in the Broward

market. and are consistently ranked

in the Top 10 of leading South Florida

real estate companies.

John believes in giving back to the

community and he and his team are

involved with several local non-profits,

with many holding board positions.

John’s Philosopy:

As a Realtor® my goal is to assist

people in one of the most important

events of their lives, and to always be

aware of that responsibility.

My intention is to place the client’s

wants and needs above my own and

to do such an outstanding job that

they will be eager to refer me to their

friends and family.

R E A L E S T A T E P R O F I L E S

Final Material Deadlines:

Sept. 2013 issue deadlines July 20th, 2013

Feb. 2014 issue deadlines

December 20th, 2013

As a Realtor®

my goal is to assist

people in one of

the most important

events of their lives,

and to always

be aware of that

responsibility.

Lifestyle Media Group publishes Broward County’s most established and recognized monthly magazines featuring exclusive views of the upscale, lively and contemporary environments in which Broward residents live, work and play.

Our November 2013 and April 2014 issues will feature full-page profi les of Broward’s real estate leaders. If you’d

like to reach more than 195,000 of Broward’s most affl uent readers, this is the perfect vehicle for your message.

Call now for special pricing.Advertising Deadline

November issue deadlines September 20thApril issue deadlines February 20th

Who’s Who in REAL ESTATEComing November 2013 and April 2014

For information, please contact Jim Norton at 954.217.1165

or [email protected]

LifestyleMEDIA GROUP

The Perfect Advertising Vehicle For Broward’s Real Estate LeadersREAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS, AGENTS, BROKERS AND MORTGAGE, LEGAL OR OTHER REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS CAN NOW REACH BROWARD’S MOST AFFLUENT READERS.

Page 27: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 27

Page 28: 0713 estate

28 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Tommy Dalton’s childhood dream was to be a Major League baseball player. The Hollywood native grew up watching the New York Yankees on TV. And in person.

“The Yankees did spring training here, so I was always going there and hounding them, getting autographs,” Dalton says. He also played catcher in Hollywood Hills Baseball Little League at Rotary Park.

But when he was 15, Dalton literally had trouble keeping his eye on the ball. His doctor told him he had degenerative amblyopia, commonly known as “lazy eye.” It meant his left eye was slightly impaired – and there was no cure. It wouldn’t be noticeable to anyone looking at him, but it would defi nitely hurt his ability to hit a Major League pitch or fi eld a pop fl y.

Dalton vividly recalls that conversation with his doctor:

“I remember him saying that if I was ever to get hit and lose vision in my good eye, I’d be legally blind and not be able to do certain things – like drive a car. I wanted to be a professional baseball player my whole life, since I was four years old. Then it was like, ‘Wow, what am I going to do now?’”

His father, Todd Trombetta, tried cheering up his son by distracting him. He took him to a Goo Goo Dolls concert.

“He was really getting into it,” says Trombetta, who stood with his son in the fi fth row of the Pompano Beach Amphitheater. Dalton caught a guitar pick tossed into the crowd by frontman Johnny Rzeznik.

“I still have that pick,” Dalton says. After the concert, he asked his father

for guitar lessons. Trombetta bought him an Ibanez acoustic guitar, and Dalton still has that, too.

Now Dalton is poised for his shot at success. This summer, he’s touring in support of his independently released self-titled album, and its fi rst single, “Sweet.” His father is his manager, and he’s doing a few things differently than most aspiring local acts.

1. GO TO SCHOOL

Three weeks after giving his teenaged son that guitar, Trombetta booked him his fi rst performances – in middle and elementary schools.

“It was just me and an acoustic guitar,” Dalton says. “I did career days and talked about drug awareness.”

As he gained experience, Dalton graduated to playing shows at the Hollywood Beach Bandshell, Sunfest, and Footy’s Wing Ding. The gigs got bigger and the audiences got older, but the music didn’t change much.

“I’ve always liked country,” Dalton says. “I always listened to country. I was always writing the same songs back then as now – very story-type songs, and that’s a lot of what country’s about.”

Lesson: Too many musicians play too many nightclubs. Explore every opportunity to play to an audience.

2. GET OUT OF TOWN

If you play country music, you eventually have to head to Nashville. It’s almost a law. So in 2009, Dalton moved to the country music capital of the world. He did what many new musical arrivals do. He played on street corners for tips.

“Being there, it’s like putting yourself in a fi shbowl,” Dalton says. “So many people there are in the music business. It pushes you to be competitive.”

Dalton ended up working with award-winning country artists such as Grammy-winning guitarist Brent Mason (who co-produced his album) and singer Jake Owen (who he opened for last year).

But like his father, Dalton thought differently. He met everyone he could in Nashville, whether they were country artists or not. And that’s where he began collaborating with Richard “Richie” Supa, a songwriter and guitarist recognized for his work with Aerosmith, Pink, and Ozzy Osbourne, among others.

Supa was immediately impressed. “He’s an up-and-coming singer, and I

thought he was really talented,” he says. “He’s got a great sound and a great look – all the pieces you need to make it in this business.”

Supa has written several songs with

Dalton, even lending him a tune he originally intended for Aerosmith lead singer Steven Tyler. It’s called “Oxygen.”

“I wrote that with my buddy Brett James, who has written a ton of hits for Kenny Chesney,” Supa says. “We wrote ‘Oxygen’ for Steven back when he was talking about coming to Nashville and

“I always listened to country. I was always writing the same songs back then as now – very story-type songs, and that’s a lot of what country’s about.”

Richie supa and tommy dalton

Looking at music in a new wayHow a lazy eye and a clever dad have given country rocker Tommy Dalton his shot at the big timeBY EMILY BLOCHBY EMILY BLOCH

MUSIC STYLE

Page 29: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 29

Tommy Dalton’s childhood dream was to be a Major League baseball player. The Hollywood native grew up watching the New York Yankees on TV. And in person.

“The Yankees did spring training here, so I was always going there and hounding them, getting autographs,” Dalton says. He also played catcher in Hollywood Hills Baseball Little League at Rotary Park.

But when he was 15, Dalton literally had trouble keeping his eye on the ball. His doctor told him he had degenerative amblyopia, commonly known as “lazy eye.” It meant his left eye was slightly impaired – and there was no cure. It wouldn’t be noticeable to anyone looking at him, but it would defi nitely hurt his ability to hit a Major League pitch or fi eld a pop fl y.

Dalton vividly recalls that conversation with his doctor:

“I remember him saying that if I was ever to get hit and lose vision in my good eye, I’d be legally blind and not be able to do certain things – like drive a car. I wanted to be a professional baseball player my whole life, since I was four years old. Then it was like, ‘Wow, what am I going to do now?’”

His father, Todd Trombetta, tried cheering up his son by distracting him. He took him to a Goo Goo Dolls concert.

“He was really getting into it,” says Trombetta, who stood with his son in the fi fth row of the Pompano Beach Amphitheater. Dalton caught a guitar pick tossed into the crowd by frontman Johnny Rzeznik.

“I still have that pick,” Dalton says. After the concert, he asked his father

for guitar lessons. Trombetta bought him an Ibanez acoustic guitar, and Dalton still has that, too.

Now Dalton is poised for his shot at success. This summer, he’s touring in support of his independently released self-titled album, and its fi rst single, “Sweet.” His father is his manager, and he’s doing a few things differently than most aspiring local acts.

1. GO TO SCHOOL

Three weeks after giving his teenaged son that guitar, Trombetta booked him his fi rst performances – in middle and elementary schools.

“It was just me and an acoustic guitar,” Dalton says. “I did career days and talked about drug awareness.”

As he gained experience, Dalton graduated to playing shows at the Hollywood Beach Bandshell, Sunfest, and Footy’s Wing Ding. The gigs got bigger and the audiences got older, but the music didn’t change much.

“I’ve always liked country,” Dalton says. “I always listened to country. I was always writing the same songs back then as now – very story-type songs, and that’s a lot of what country’s about.”

Lesson: Too many musicians play too many nightclubs. Explore every opportunity to play to an audience.

2. GET OUT OF TOWN

If you play country music, you eventually have to head to Nashville. It’s almost a law. So in 2009, Dalton moved to the country music capital of the world. He did what many new musical arrivals do. He played on street corners for tips.

“Being there, it’s like putting yourself in a fi shbowl,” Dalton says. “So many people there are in the music business. It pushes you to be competitive.”

Dalton ended up working with award-winning country artists such as Grammy-winning guitarist Brent Mason (who co-produced his album) and singer Jake Owen (who he opened for last year).

But like his father, Dalton thought differently. He met everyone he could in Nashville, whether they were country artists or not. And that’s where he began collaborating with Richard “Richie” Supa, a songwriter and guitarist recognized for his work with Aerosmith, Pink, and Ozzy Osbourne, among others.

Supa was immediately impressed. “He’s an up-and-coming singer, and I

thought he was really talented,” he says. “He’s got a great sound and a great look – all the pieces you need to make it in this business.”

Supa has written several songs with

Dalton, even lending him a tune he originally intended for Aerosmith lead singer Steven Tyler. It’s called “Oxygen.”

“I wrote that with my buddy Brett James, who has written a ton of hits for Kenny Chesney,” Supa says. “We wrote ‘Oxygen’ for Steven back when he was talking about coming to Nashville and

“I always listened to country. I was always writing the same songs back then as now – very story-type songs, and that’s a lot of what country’s about.”

Richie supa and tommy dalton

Looking at music in a new wayHow a lazy eye and a clever dad has given country rocker Tommy Dalton his shot at the big timeBY EMILY BLOCHBY EMILY BLOCH

MUSIC STYLE

Page 30: 0713 estate

30 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

doing a country-bluesy solo album outside of Aerosmith, but it never did happen. So I played it for Tommy, and he loved it. It clicked.”

Lesson: Don’t just network with those in your immediate circle. Meet everyone you possibly can.

3. PAY ATTENTION TO EXPENSES

Coincidentally, Supa has a house in Plantation, and Dalton sees his mentor whenever he returns to Broward County – which is often, because Dalton records here. In fact, his father bought into a recording studio just so he wouldn’t have to keep paying for studio time.

Eight years ago, Trombetta became half-owner of Sunfl ower Studios in downtown Hollywood. It was money well spent, he says.

“Tommy was able to come in here and work whenever he wanted,” Trombetta says. “He was here all the time, recording and learning the process how to engineer songs.”

That meant taking his time to polish each song, instead of looking at the clock. It’s quickly paid for itself.

“We were spending a good amount of money recording,” Trombetta says, “and I made the decision, ‘Hey we need to be in a situation where we could work at our leisure and not have to pay.’”

Lesson: Owning is sometimes better than renting.

4. SELL THE SONGS Dalton has an endorsement deal with True Religion brand

jeans – because a couple years ago, Trombetta says, “He wrote a song about their jeans called ‘Damn Jeans.’”

The song – available on YouTube, just search “Dalton Damn Jeans” – even played on Sirius XM Radio’s Nashville Channel. Emboldened by the True Religion deal, Dalton is attempting something similar with his new single, “Sweet.”

“We’re actually gonna try and secure a major ice tea company like Arizona who has a peach tea,” Tromebtta says. “That’s one of the things I feel Tommy has at his advantage. I feel he’s very marketable.”

Lesson: Don’t be afraid to sell what you got.

5. WORK BOTH ENDS “We’ve done as much as we can on our own,” Trombetta

says. “We’re putting out our own record. We’re putting it on the radio. We’ve done it all ourselves, and we’re hoping one of two things happen: Either we make enough noise in Nashville independently and a major label picks him up, or we make enough noise where a South Florida investor will see what we’ve done and come aboard and we can just continue on with our own label.”

And if that’s not enough, Trombetta has no apologies or regrets.

“I’m dad,” he says fondly. “A lot of parents put a lot of pressure on their kids to follow a certain path, but I’ve always been the kind of dad who’s kind of their best friend and lets them do whatever it is they’d like to do.

“I believe in his talent, I believe in his abilities. I’m very supportive.”

Lesson: Always lean on family. www.tommydalton.com

CALL TODAY FOR YOUR FREE CONSULT!

Ph. 954.636.6300

www.yourfatlosscoach.com

...in a few weeks withYour Fat Loss Coach Lana

TRANSFORMyour best you

"High school reunion coming up? Can't fit into your bathing suit?

We never need to diet

anymore, we have our

physical lives back! Thanks

to mu Fat Loss Coach

Family!!! Eric and Jodi

...10 months later

Page 31: 0713 estate

doing a country-bluesy solo album outside of Aerosmith, but it never did happen. So I played it for Tommy, and he loved it. It clicked.”

Lesson: Don’t just network with those in your immediate circle. Meet everyone you possibly can.

3. PAY ATTENTION TO EXPENSES

Coincidentally, Supa has a house in Plantation, and Dalton sees his mentor whenever he returns to Broward County – which is often, because Dalton records here. In fact, his father bought into a recording studio just so he wouldn’t have to keep paying for studio time.

Eight years ago, Trombetta became half-owner of Sunfl ower Studios in downtown Hollywood. It was money well spent, he says.

“Tommy was able to come in here and work whenever he wanted,” Trombetta says. “He was here all the time, recording and learning the process how to engineer songs.”

That meant taking his time to polish each song, instead of looking at the clock. It’s quickly paid for itself.

“We were spending a good amount of money recording,” Trombetta says, “and I made the decision, ‘Hey we need to be in a situation where we could work at our leisure and not have to pay.’”

Lesson: Owning is sometimes better than renting.

4. SELL THE SONGS Dalton has an endorsement deal with True Religion brand

jeans – because a couple years ago, Trombetta says, “He wrote a song about their jeans called ‘Damn Jeans.’”

The song – available on YouTube, just search “Dalton Damn Jeans” – even played on Sirius XM Radio’s Nashville Channel. Emboldened by the True Religion deal, Dalton is attempting something similar with his new single, “Sweet.”

“We’re actually gonna try and secure a major ice tea company like Arizona who has a peach tea,” Tromebtta says. “That’s one of the things I feel Tommy has at his advantage. I feel he’s very marketable.”

Lesson: Don’t be afraid to sell what you got.

5. WORK BOTH ENDS “We’ve done as much as we can on our own,” Trombetta

says. “We’re putting out our own record. We’re putting it on the radio. We’ve done it all ourselves, and we’re hoping one of two things happen: Either we make enough noise in Nashville independently and a major label picks him up, or we make enough noise where a South Florida investor will see what we’ve done and come aboard and we can just continue on with our own label.”

And if that’s not enough, Trombetta has no apologies or regrets.

“I’m dad,” he says fondly. “A lot of parents put a lot of pressure on their kids to follow a certain path, but I’ve always been the kind of dad who’s kind of their best friend and lets them do whatever it is they’d like to do.

“I believe in his talent, I believe in his abilities. I’m very supportive.”

Lesson: Always lean on family. www.tommydalton.com

We accept

the McKay

scholarship!

EnrollingNOW for the 2013-2014 school year

Page 32: 0713 estate

Jim Hammond builds puppets from $10 to $10,000. So is he an artist or a businessman? The answer is yes. By Ryan C ortes P hotos by Downtownphoto/Fort Lauderdale

PuppetMasterthe

32 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Page 33: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 33

Jim Hammond builds puppets from $10 to $10,000. So is he an artist or a businessman? The answer is yes. By Ryan C ortes P hotos by Downtownphoto/Fort Lauderdale

PuppetMasterthe

Page 34: 0713 estate

34 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

“You doing all right?” he asks the baby. Well, the puppet is asking. “Dude, it’s so trippy being a baby. Imagine if I was a set of keys being jingled.” He jerks the puppet back and forth. “Jingle, jingle, jingle.”

The baby stops crying. The parents are impressed. But they don’t buy Tiki Man. He costs up to $4,000 for a 45-minute outdoor show and he isn’t for sale — he’s only for rent. Hammond custom-builds his creations for companies and commercials. And they’re usually not children’s toys. In fact, Hammond says…

“Puppetry has never been just for kids. Give any adult a puppet, and they do one

of two things: Either the puppets beat each other up or they make out. It’s the core of what we don’t want to talk about – sex and violence.”

This isn’t child’s play Hammond’s puppets have

appeared as characters in TV commercials and as props in the Lion King Broadway show. He sells them and even rents them. But he doesn’t do what most people think a puppeteer does: Host a low-rent Muppet-like show for kids all by himself in an elementary school.

“A lot of puppeteers, they’ll build a show, book a show, and perform the show. Jim is different,” says Dave Goboff, the president for the last decade of the South Florida Puppet Guild, a group of puppeteers and puppet lovers who meet monthly. “He has a bigger scope, so whereas I might build a show for myself and perform it,

Jim builds and thinks about it for a staff of people – and he hires people. He has a certain synergy, and it’s rare.”

Rare enough that Hammond is the only business of his kind in South Florida. He’s sold and rented puppets since 2009, and he says he’s made money every year – even during this “challenging economy.”

“From a fi nancial standpoint, helping people fabricate their work is a better business plan than creating your own work,” he says.

“He is the only person that I’ve ever met that does what he specifi cally does,” says Chuck Loose, owner of a FAT Village screen-

printing company called Iron Forge Press. “I’ve met a few puppeteers, but none of them have a studio or a solid business foundation like Jim.”

Last month, Hammond left his 800-square-foot studio in FAT Village for a 8,000-square-foot warehouse in Wilton Manors, where he plans to expand both the size of his business and the size of his puppets. Some of his creations take four people to maneuver.

“We’re bursting at the seams,” he told the two couples that night of the last Art Walk as he sat in his old studio.

Hammond also needs more room for his employees. He currently has 4-5 part-timers helping him fabricate his creations in any given week. They also help him brainstorm.

“I’m a collaborator,” he says. “I don’t want to be a

Hammond has many hands helping him, from the president of the South Florida Puppet Guild (top right), to people who just strol led into his studio...

Dave Goboff

Jim McNulty

Luiz Rodriguez

Ronni Gerstel

Jim Hammond sits alone in his Fort Lauderdale studio, with the lights off save for one lamp on his desk. But he’s not a depressed artist. He’s a savvy businessman.

It’s a Saturday night in late May, and he’s part of Art Walk, a monthly open house for the artists who rent space in FAT Village. The unfortunate acronym stands for Flagler Arts & Technology, a four-block artists’ community in downtown Fort Lauderdale, bordered by railroad tracks and Maguires Hill 16, a popular Irish pub.

The Art Walks are intended to attract locals to check out struggling artists, who sell their work out of former warehouses now carved into small galleries. But by the time you read this, Hammond will have shuttered his FAT Village studio.

He didn’t fail. He succeeded too much.

On this summer evening, two couples stroll in – one pushing a stroller. As they gaze at the puppets literally hanging around the studio, the baby starts wailing. Without a pause, Hammond whips around with a puppet called “Tiki Man,” his two-foot creation with bulging eyes, long white teeth, and blue hair.

This puppet, cal led Tiki Man, isn’t for sale. But you can rent him (and Jim Hammond and other puppets) for a 45-minute show. The cost? Up to $4,000.

Page 35: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 35

“You doing all right?” he asks the baby. Well, the puppet is asking. “Dude, it’s so trippy being a baby. Imagine if I was a set of keys being jingled.” He jerks the puppet back and forth. “Jingle, jingle, jingle.”

The baby stops crying. The parents are impressed. But they don’t buy Tiki Man. He costs up to $4,000 for a 45-minute outdoor show and he isn’t for sale — he’s only for rent. Hammond custom-builds his creations for companies and commercials. And they’re usually not children’s toys. In fact, Hammond says…

“Puppetry has never been just for kids. Give any adult a puppet, and they do one

of two things: Either the puppets beat each other up or they make out. It’s the core of what we don’t want to talk about – sex and violence.”

This isn’t child’s play Hammond’s puppets have

appeared as characters in TV commercials and as props in the Lion King Broadway show. He sells them and even rents them. But he doesn’t do what most people think a puppeteer does: Host a low-rent Muppet-like show for kids all by himself in an elementary school.

“A lot of puppeteers, they’ll build a show, book a show, and perform the show. Jim is different,” says Dave Goboff, the president for the last decade of the South Florida Puppet Guild, a group of puppeteers and puppet lovers who meet monthly. “He has a bigger scope, so whereas I might build a show for myself and perform it,

Jim builds and thinks about it for a staff of people – and he hires people. He has a certain synergy, and it’s rare.”

Rare enough that Hammond is the only business of his kind in South Florida. He’s sold and rented puppets since 2009, and he says he’s made money every year – even during this “challenging economy.”

“From a fi nancial standpoint, helping people fabricate their work is a better business plan than creating your own work,” he says.

“He is the only person that I’ve ever met that does what he specifi cally does,” says Chuck Loose, owner of a FAT Village screen-

printing company called Iron Forge Press. “I’ve met a few puppeteers, but none of them have a studio or a solid business foundation like Jim.”

Last month, Hammond left his 800-square-foot studio in FAT Village for a 8,000-square-foot warehouse in Wilton Manors, where he plans to expand both the size of his business and the size of his puppets. Some of his creations take four people to maneuver.

“We’re bursting at the seams,” he told the two couples that night of the last Art Walk as he sat in his old studio.

Hammond also needs more room for his employees. He currently has 4-5 part-timers helping him fabricate his creations in any given week. They also help him brainstorm.

“I’m a collaborator,” he says. “I don’t want to be a

Hammond has many hands helping him, from the president of the South Florida Puppet Guild (top right), to people who just strol led into his studio...

Dave Goboff

Jim McNulty

Luiz Rodriguez

Ronni Gerstel

Jim Hammond sits alone in his Fort Lauderdale studio, with the lights off save for one lamp on his desk. But he’s not a depressed artist. He’s a savvy businessman.

It’s a Saturday night in late May, and he’s part of Art Walk, a monthly open house for the artists who rent space in FAT Village. The unfortunate acronym stands for Flagler Arts & Technology, a four-block artists’ community in downtown Fort Lauderdale, bordered by railroad tracks and Maguires Hill 16, a popular Irish pub.

The Art Walks are intended to attract locals to check out struggling artists, who sell their work out of former warehouses now carved into small galleries. But by the time you read this, Hammond will have shuttered his FAT Village studio.

He didn’t fail. He succeeded too much.

On this summer evening, two couples stroll in – one pushing a stroller. As they gaze at the puppets literally hanging around the studio, the baby starts wailing. Without a pause, Hammond whips around with a puppet called “Tiki Man,” his two-foot creation with bulging eyes, long white teeth, and blue hair.

This puppet, cal led Tiki Man, isn’t for sale. But you can rent him (and Jim Hammond and other puppets) for a 45-minute show. The cost? Up to $4,000.

Page 36: 0713 estate

36 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

“I think it’s complicated for any child to watch a parent suffer,” says his sister Vicky, an administrator for a health foundation in Washington, DC. “And I think his art was an early creative outlet to express himself.”

Hammond agrees: “It was tough, but I wouldn’t be the person I am today if I hadn’t gone through it. It was probably therapeutic. I could create little worlds where I could have control and the outcomes could be pretty and the end of the fairy tales could be good.”

They were about to get really good.

From Burger King to the Lion King After his father died, the family moved

an hour away to Saratoga Springs, where the 16-year-old Hammond worked in a Burger King before landing a job at a nearby amusement park called The Great Escape. It had a puppet theater, and he was a puppeteer. Within a year, he was the puppet theater manager.

For four years, Hammond managed or performed 21 shows a day. It helped pay for college, where he studied performance and production design at SUNY. He got his graduate degree from the University of Connecticut – in puppeteering. It’s a major offered by less than a dozen schools nationwide.

Hammond met his wife Shelly in Connecticut, and they coincidentally both got job offers in South Florida, almost at the same time. Shelly became the technical director at the Broward Center, while her husband was hired by the Florida Grand Opera to help with props and production.

They knew nothing about South Florida, and they didn’t care.

“We were artists with four art degrees between the two of us,” Hammond says. “And it was important to fi nd something so we wouldn’t default on our loans.”

In 2003, the touring Broadway production of The Lion King was in town at the Broward Center, and Hammond

applied to work backstage. After that, “I was on the road,” he says.

For six and a half years. Sometimes it was months before he saw Shelly again. He says it was “hellacious,” but his wife understood.

“It was certainly an upsetting conversation to have,” Shelly says. “We hadn’t been married very long and I’m not sure I was quite prepared for him to take off, but I was thrilled that he was going to be able to pursue his dreams. It was the best way for him to hone his skills.”

The return home In 2009, he fi nally left The Lion King

and returned to South Florida and Shelly. He opened his Puppet Network studio in FAT Village. His success might have surprised others, but not him.

“I’m a pain in the ass, man. I’m going to work and work and work to make it happen,” he says with a laugh.

Success meant more work than

solo act.”But becoming a puppet businessman is different than being a puppet artist,

Hammond learned.“When you fi rst start off, you’re just excited that someone’s buying your product,

that someone wants to have your vision as part of their life experience,” he says. “As you move deeper into your career, you realize, ‘Oh man, there’s some hard costs that are involved in the creation of this puppet.’ A $5,000 puppet or $10,000 puppet typically will cost me 40 percent of that in materials and transportation and labor costs.”

Hammond admits he gets strange looks when he tells people what he does for a living – and stranger looks when they hear the prices.

“It’s not a matter of respect, it’s a matter of surprise, because this is so specifi c,” Hammond says. “With the mission we have – an entertainment fi rm that is focused primarily on puppet theatre, puppet fabrication, and puppet design – we’re it in South Florida.”

Hammond’s wife, Shelly Bradshaw, doesn’t get the same kinds of questions, because her job – while also in the business of culture – is much easier to grasp. She’s vice president of operations at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Fort Lauderdale. But when she attends business functions or parties with her husband, she hears him asked the same couple of questions: “Is that a job? People do that?”

It wasn’t always a job. But he did always do it. Everything is a puppet Growing up in a small town in southern New York called Hoosick Falls, Hammond

didn’t play with toys the way other kids did. A Matchbox car was alive – the headlights were the eyes, the grill was the mouth, and soon enough, the car wasn’t just a car.

When he was 8, Hammond began performing puppet shows in his backyard for neighbors, for family, for fun. His puppets were sometimes sticks with rocks for eyeballs.

“An object was never an object to me,” he recalls. “I would never walk through the woods and just see trees.”

When Hammond was 11, his father was diagnosed with cancer. Tumors at the base of his brain rendered him a quadriplegic.

“I remember he had these open wounds at his neck,” Hammond says. “We’d occasionally see the bandages pulled away, and he just had these big holes where they pulled out the tumors.”

Hammond’s father died two years later — he was 41. Hammond is now 43.

The puppets on the left? They cost $10,000. The one above? $10. The animated chairs appeared on a local T V commercial for Boca Bargoons, a South Florida fabric company. The creation above, held by Rodriguez and Gerstel, was put together with nothing but items from a dol lar store.

Page 37: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 37

“I think it’s complicated for any child to watch a parent suffer,” says his sister Vicky, an administrator for a health foundation in Washington, DC. “And I think his art was an early creative outlet to express himself.”

Hammond agrees: “It was tough, but I wouldn’t be the person I am today if I hadn’t gone through it. It was probably therapeutic. I could create little worlds where I could have control and the outcomes could be pretty and the end of the fairy tales could be good.”

They were about to get really good.

From Burger King to the Lion King After his father died, the family moved

an hour away to Saratoga Springs, where the 16-year-old Hammond worked in a Burger King before landing a job at a nearby amusement park called The Great Escape. It had a puppet theater, and he was a puppeteer. Within a year, he was the puppet theater manager.

For four years, Hammond managed or performed 21 shows a day. It helped pay for college, where he studied performance and production design at SUNY. He got his graduate degree from the University of Connecticut – in puppeteering. It’s a major offered by less than a dozen schools nationwide.

Hammond met his wife Shelly in Connecticut, and they coincidentally both got job offers in South Florida, almost at the same time. Shelly became the technical director at the Broward Center, while her husband was hired by the Florida Grand Opera to help with props and production.

They knew nothing about South Florida, and they didn’t care.

“We were artists with four art degrees between the two of us,” Hammond says. “And it was important to fi nd something so we wouldn’t default on our loans.”

In 2003, the touring Broadway production of The Lion King was in town at the Broward Center, and Hammond

applied to work backstage. After that, “I was on the road,” he says.

For six and a half years. Sometimes it was months before he saw Shelly again. He says it was “hellacious,” but his wife understood.

“It was certainly an upsetting conversation to have,” Shelly says. “We hadn’t been married very long and I’m not sure I was quite prepared for him to take off, but I was thrilled that he was going to be able to pursue his dreams. It was the best way for him to hone his skills.”

The return home In 2009, he fi nally left The Lion King

and returned to South Florida and Shelly. He opened his Puppet Network studio in FAT Village. His success might have surprised others, but not him.

“I’m a pain in the ass, man. I’m going to work and work and work to make it happen,” he says with a laugh.

Success meant more work than

solo act.”But becoming a puppet businessman is different than being a puppet artist,

Hammond learned.“When you fi rst start off, you’re just excited that someone’s buying your product,

that someone wants to have your vision as part of their life experience,” he says. “As you move deeper into your career, you realize, ‘Oh man, there’s some hard costs that are involved in the creation of this puppet.’ A $5,000 puppet or $10,000 puppet typically will cost me 40 percent of that in materials and transportation and labor costs.”

Hammond admits he gets strange looks when he tells people what he does for a living – and stranger looks when they hear the prices.

“It’s not a matter of respect, it’s a matter of surprise, because this is so specifi c,” Hammond says. “With the mission we have – an entertainment fi rm that is focused primarily on puppet theatre, puppet fabrication, and puppet design – we’re it in South Florida.”

Hammond’s wife, Shelly Bradshaw, doesn’t get the same kinds of questions, because her job – while also in the business of culture – is much easier to grasp. She’s vice president of operations at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Fort Lauderdale. But when she attends business functions or parties with her husband, she hears him asked the same couple of questions: “Is that a job? People do that?”

It wasn’t always a job. But he did always do it. Everything is a puppet Growing up in a small town in southern New York called Hoosick Falls, Hammond

didn’t play with toys the way other kids did. A Matchbox car was alive – the headlights were the eyes, the grill was the mouth, and soon enough, the car wasn’t just a car.

When he was 8, Hammond began performing puppet shows in his backyard for neighbors, for family, for fun. His puppets were sometimes sticks with rocks for eyeballs.

“An object was never an object to me,” he recalls. “I would never walk through the woods and just see trees.”

When Hammond was 11, his father was diagnosed with cancer. Tumors at the base of his brain rendered him a quadriplegic.

“I remember he had these open wounds at his neck,” Hammond says. “We’d occasionally see the bandages pulled away, and he just had these big holes where they pulled out the tumors.”

Hammond’s father died two years later — he was 41. Hammond is now 43.

The puppets on the left? They cost $10,000. The one above? $10. The animated chairs appeared on a local T V commercial for Boca Bargoons, a South Florida fabric company. The creation above, held by Rodriguez and Gerstel, was put together with nothing but items from a dol lar store.

Page 38: 0713 estate

38 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

he could handle, so he had to hire assistants – what he calls “freelance puppeteers,” although some spend more than full-time hours with him. His 26-year-old assistant Luiz Rodriguez says he can work 9 to 5 on “low-production days” – and 9 a.m. to midnight on “high-production days.” He doesn’t mind. “I have no problem coming in here,” he says. “I love it.”

Like the other assistants, Rodriguez wasn’t hired from a Monster.com ad. “I literally just wandered into his shop, and I was like, ‘Wow,’” he says.

It was during one of those Art Walks fi ve years ago that Rodriguez

chatted with Hammond for an hour. They talked about an event that Hammond adores but makes him no money at all: The annual Day of the Dead, a parade of puppets that will wind through Fort Lauderdale in November.

Hammond says the “community event” is inspired by a Mexican holiday of the same name. Rodriguez was born in Mexico and says, “I was weirded out because he was a white dude with long blonde hair trying to do a Mexican festival.”

Skeptical, Rodriguez says, “I just had to make sure he knew what he was doing. The great thing is, he respects the religious and cultural aspects [of Mexico] and I was really blown away.”

Now settled in his new studio, Hammond is already thinking about his next big project: Puppet Network on TV.

“What I would love to do,” he says, “is actually create a television network that is focused entirely on puppet theater and puppetry.”

Twenty-four hours of puppets and plays?

“Sounds almost as crazy as someone wanting to put cartoons on all day,” he says smiling. “Doesn’t it?”

Doubt him at your own peril.

Day of the Dead 2013

On Saturday, Nov. 3, Jim Hammond invites you to his fourth annual puppet parade in honor of the dead. The free event is an ode to Mexican culture. Hammond calls it a “memory for the dead, party for the living.” Last year, nearly 7,000 people showed up in the streets of FAT Village.

Hammond expects closer to 10,000 people this year, and he’s expanding the route, which will weave through the downtown Riverwalk district. For more information, visit www.puppet-network.com/events or call 954-766-4741.

Last year’s Day of the Dead was more fun than morbid.

To learn more about the Leaders in Law Awards or to submit a nomination, visit lmgfl.com/awards. NOMINATION DEADLINE: JULY 31, 2013.

THE ULTIMATE COURT OF RECOGNITION. DO YOU KNOW A LEGAL PROFESSIONAL WHO SHOULD BE HONORED?

THE ULTIMATE COURT OF RECOGNITION. DO YOU KNOW A LEGAL PROFESSIONAL WHO SHOULD BE HONORED?

THE ULTIMATE COURT OF RECOGNITION. DO YOU KNOW A LEGAL PROFESSIONAL WHO SHOULD BE HONORED?

To learn more about the Leaders in Law Awards or to submit a nomination, visit lmgfl.com/awards. NOMINATION DEADLINE: JULY 31, 2013.

NOMINATE THEM TODAY.The Leaders in Law Awards is a unique awards program created by Lifestyle Media Group to honor the lawyers, law firms and corporate counsel that promote excellence in law, maintain the highest level of ethics, show a commitment to their community and are proven leaders.

Candidates will be judged on outstanding litigation, advocacy, counseling, advancements to the legal profession, as well as contributions to the advancements to the legal profession, as well as contributions to the advancement of the bar such as public service, bar association activities and pro bono activities.

Any law firm, business or individual may nominate a candidate. All candidates must be entered via our online nomination system at lmgfl.com/awards.

Lifestyle Media Group publishes South Florida's most established and recognized monthly magazines, serving the area's most affluent communities. Our readership of 234,000 includes Florida's most influential includes Florida's most influential CEOs, executives and business leaders.

PRESENTING SPONSOR

GOLD SPONSORS

Page 39: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 39

he could handle, so he had to hire assistants – what he calls “freelance puppeteers,” although some spend more than full-time hours with him. His 26-year-old assistant Luiz Rodriguez says he can work 9 to 5 on “low-production days” – and 9 a.m. to midnight on “high-production days.” He doesn’t mind. “I have no problem coming in here,” he says. “I love it.”

Like the other assistants, Rodriguez wasn’t hired from a Monster.com ad. “I literally just wandered into his shop, and I was like, ‘Wow,’” he says.

It was during one of those Art Walks fi ve years ago that Rodriguez

chatted with Hammond for an hour. They talked about an event that Hammond adores but makes him no money at all: The annual Day of the Dead, a parade of puppets that will wind through Fort Lauderdale in November.

Hammond says the “community event” is inspired by a Mexican holiday of the same name. Rodriguez was born in Mexico and says, “I was weirded out because he was a white dude with long blonde hair trying to do a Mexican festival.”

Skeptical, Rodriguez says, “I just had to make sure he knew what he was doing. The great thing is, he respects the religious and cultural aspects [of Mexico] and I was really blown away.”

Now settled in his new studio, Hammond is already thinking about his next big project: Puppet Network on TV.

“What I would love to do,” he says, “is actually create a television network that is focused entirely on puppet theater and puppetry.”

Twenty-four hours of puppets and plays?

“Sounds almost as crazy as someone wanting to put cartoons on all day,” he says smiling. “Doesn’t it?”

Doubt him at your own peril.

Day of the Dead 2013

On Saturday, Nov. 3, Jim Hammond invites you to his fourth annual puppet parade in honor of the dead. The free event is an ode to Mexican culture. Hammond calls it a “memory for the dead, party for the living.” Last year, nearly 7,000 people showed up in the streets of FAT Village.

Hammond expects closer to 10,000 people this year, and he’s expanding the route, which will weave through the downtown Riverwalk district. For more information, visit www.puppet-network.com/events or call 954-766-4741.

Last year’s Day of the Dead was more fun than morbid.

To learn more about the Leaders in Law Awards or to submit a nomination, visit lmgfl.com/awards. NOMINATION DEADLINE: JULY 31, 2013.

THE ULTIMATE COURT OF RECOGNITION. DO YOU KNOW A LEGAL PROFESSIONAL WHO SHOULD BE HONORED?

THE ULTIMATE COURT OF RECOGNITION. DO YOU KNOW A LEGAL PROFESSIONAL WHO SHOULD BE HONORED?

THE ULTIMATE COURT OF RECOGNITION. DO YOU KNOW A LEGAL PROFESSIONAL WHO SHOULD BE HONORED?

To learn more about the Leaders in Law Awards or to submit a nomination, visit lmgfl.com/awards. NOMINATION DEADLINE: JULY 31, 2013.

NOMINATE THEM TODAY.The Leaders in Law Awards is a unique awards program created by Lifestyle Media Group to honor the lawyers, law firms and corporate counsel that promote excellence in law, maintain the highest level of ethics, show a commitment to their community and are proven leaders.

Candidates will be judged on outstanding litigation, advocacy, counseling, advancements to the legal profession, as well as contributions to the advancements to the legal profession, as well as contributions to the advancement of the bar such as public service, bar association activities and pro bono activities.

Any law firm, business or individual may nominate a candidate. All candidates must be entered via our online nomination system at lmgfl.com/awards.

Lifestyle Media Group publishes South Florida's most established and recognized monthly magazines, serving the area's most affluent communities. Our readership of 234,000 includes Florida's most influential includes Florida's most influential CEOs, executives and business leaders.

PRESENTING SPONSOR

GOLD SPONSORS

Page 40: 0713 estate

40 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

18JULY

Blue Martini

2432 E. Sunrise Blvd.

Fort Lauderdale

954-609-9344

By Regina Kaza

THE EVENT The fi rst annual Relay Rally brings together 24 Relay for Life teams for one common goal: beating cancer.

Relay teams from each city in Broward will meet at Blue Martini at the Galleria Mall to raise some last-minute money for the American Cancer Society.

“We’ve been so focus-driven on money and numbers that only positive things can come out of this,” says Lindsay Mapica, Weston Rally’s fundraising chair and Relay Rally’s organizer. Weston Rally raised $238,695.58 last year, the most in its history.

Relay for Life’s fundraising year ends the day after this event, and ticket sales will boost each city’s annual donation before the total count. Guests can choose which city to donate their ticket proceeds to, and they enjoy a drink ticket along with some light hors d’oeuvres inside.

“It does get competitive,” Mapica says. “But imagine what all cities in Broward can do together.”

Mapica is expecting around 150 people for a night fi lled with silent auctions, raffl es, and various prizes to support those battling cancer across the world.

THE CAUSE More than a million people in the United States are diagnosed with cancer each year. The American Cancer Society is the premier national nonprofi t organization funding research towards fi nding a cure as well as patient facilities and support programs.

Through events like Relay for Life, the Society has helped almost 14 million cancer survivors celebrate more birthdays. Every year, Relay for Life events held at local schools feature a survivors lap, inspirational ceremonies, and a candle-lit walk honoring those who lost their lives to cancer. Each Relay team organizes its own fundraiser to support cancer awareness and research. More than 4 million people in more than 20 countries have annually raised more than $400 million through the Relay For Life movement.

RELAY RALLYTICKETSTickets for Relay Rally are available

for $20 per person in cash at the door. For more information about

the event or to fi nd out about sponsorship opportunities, call

Lindsay Malpica at 954-609-9344.

THE sponsors AIB, Fairy Fundraisers, Fast

Signs, Sir Pizza, Lifestyle Media Group, Los Barrios Graphic

Design, Ad Valorem Title, Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach, Harley

Davidson.

HAPPENINGS

Page 41: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 41

18JULY

Blue Martini

2432 E. Sunrise Blvd.

Fort Lauderdale

954-609-9344

By Regina Kaza

THE EVENT The fi rst annual Relay Rally brings together 24 Relay for Life teams for one common goal: beating cancer.

Relay teams from each city in Broward will meet at Blue Martini at the Galleria Mall to raise some last-minute money for the American Cancer Society.

“We’ve been so focus-driven on money and numbers that only positive things can come out of this,” says Lindsay Mapica, Weston Rally’s fundraising chair and Relay Rally’s organizer. Weston Rally raised $238,695.58 last year, the most in its history.

Relay for Life’s fundraising year ends the day after this event, and ticket sales will boost each city’s annual donation before the total count. Guests can choose which city to donate their ticket proceeds to, and they enjoy a drink ticket along with some light hors d’oeuvres inside.

“It does get competitive,” Mapica says. “But imagine what all cities in Broward can do together.”

Mapica is expecting around 150 people for a night fi lled with silent auctions, raffl es, and various prizes to support those battling cancer across the world.

THE CAUSE More than a million people in the United States are diagnosed with cancer each year. The American Cancer Society is the premier national nonprofi t organization funding research towards fi nding a cure as well as patient facilities and support programs.

Through events like Relay for Life, the Society has helped almost 14 million cancer survivors celebrate more birthdays. Every year, Relay for Life events held at local schools feature a survivors lap, inspirational ceremonies, and a candle-lit walk honoring those who lost their lives to cancer. Each Relay team organizes its own fundraiser to support cancer awareness and research. More than 4 million people in more than 20 countries have annually raised more than $400 million through the Relay For Life movement.

RELAY RALLYTICKETSTickets for Relay Rally are available

for $20 per person in cash at the door. For more information about

the event or to fi nd out about sponsorship opportunities, call

Lindsay Malpica at 954-609-9344.

THE sponsors AIB, Fairy Fundraisers, Fast

Signs, Sir Pizza, Lifestyle Media Group, Los Barrios Graphic

Design, Ad Valorem Title, Hilton Fort Lauderdale Beach, Harley

Davidson.

HAPPENINGS

1 IN 88 CHILDREN HAS BEEN IDENTIFIED WITH AN AUTISM

SPECTRUM DISORDER

TO HELP YOU CAN DONATE YOUR

GENTLY USED ITEMSCALL US NOW

FOR A FREE PICKUP1-888-9-PICKUPWWW.9PICKUP.COM

Furniture • Jewelry • Clothing • TVs • Books • Art • Computers • Toys • Linens • Appliances

All Donations are Tax Deductible

http://www.cdc.gov/features/countingautism/Follow us on 9pickup on

Triton Insurance Group is an independent, family owned agency serving all Florida for nearly two decades. “We value our independence” and as a licensed independent insurance agency we have the ability to “shop” your coverage with hundreds of “A” Rated companies.

Unlike a captive agent who is at the mercy of one insurance provider, we work for you. We take your policy to market and present you with options, the best coverage for the best price.

We provide insurance options for homeowners, investment homes, personal & commercial auto, flood, umbrellas and business owner policies.

HomeOwners

Automobile

PersonalWatercraft

Commercial &Business Owner

100 NORTH STATE ROAD SEVEN, SUITE 304, MARGATE, FLORIDA 33063 • CALL NOW TOLL FREE 866.400.7674

Page 42: 0713 estate

42 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

CORPORATE MUSIC MAKINGWhen the Gallery One hotel sought a corporate trainer last month, it hired a Nashville guitarist named Jeff Jacob. His company, The Song Team, leads team-building exercises that work like this...

THE HOOKJacob speaks with his company contact about the goals of the exercise, working off a 12-question sheet he’s developed. From there, he writes the “hook” of a song, along with the chorus. For GalleryOne, that included, “Fort Lauderdale is more than you see/Each hotel is quite unique/We got shops and we got art/It’s really kinda tough to know where to start/When it comes to our Hilton family.”

THE INTROJacob shows a fi ve-minute video featuring The Beatles and Rolling Stones that ends with the revelation that few hit songs are the work of one person. Jacob told the GalleryOne group that in 2011, the biggest pop hits of that year had “an average of 4.1 songwriters.” Lesson: We all have to work together.

THE PLAY DOHJacob has learned to mix his media. He divides the room into teams and gives them specifi c emotions to shape out of Play Doh in 15 minutes. Example: A Gallery One group had to sculpt how they feel on Sunday before having to go to work on Monday. The themes that emerge from those sculpture become the lyrics of the song.

THE WRITINGThis is the longest and “funnest” part, Jacob says. On a fl ipboard, the group assembles stanzas. The discussion focuses on the goals and fears of the group. In this case, Hilton sales managers expressed concerns about the lingering perception of Fort Lauderdale as “Fort Liquordale,” a spring break hangout unsuitable for an older and more affl uent crowd. Jacob says his job was to help them brainstorm solutions while also writing lyrics.“I’m not trying to dictate,” he says. “I’m trying to collaborate.”

For more information on artistic team-building, email Lois Marino at [email protected]

Kim miller

On the fi rst Saturday of last month, 20 Hilton sales managers from around the country met at the Gallery One hotel along the Intracoastal in Fort Lauderdale. Over a lunch of mojo spiced pork loin and shrimp kabobs, they sculpted with Play Doh and wrote a song.

And it was all business.These global sales managers fl ew in from Virginia, Dallas, New York, and

Washington, D.C., so they could brainstorm better ways to sell the Hilton brand in Broward County. Kimberly Miller, Gallery One’s sales and marketing director, wined and dined them. But she also wanted to blow their minds.

So Miller hired 43-year-old Jeff Jacob to lead a two-hour team-building exercise. He didn’t foist them into awkward role-playing skits or onto a nerve-wracking ropes course. Instead, the Nashville songwriter/guitarist taught these top salespeople how to pen a pop tune.

And it was “awesome,” Miller says.“It helps bring different levels of team members together, striving for the same

common cause,” Miler says. “A senior leader can learn so much about what their team feels and faces just from the clay-building step of the songwriting process – adults can easily revert to children when need to!”

Miller met Jacob through Lois Marino, BBX Capital’s community relations manager in Fort Lauderdale. Marino is also the program manager for Art in the Workplace, which “fuses the arts into the business community by doing team-building exercises.”

Marino says the idea came from her boss, BBX Capital’s president Jarett Levan. “He’s a big supporter of the arts,” Marino says, “and he’s made it a part of my job.”

So Marino’s Art in the Workplace program has hooked up big Broward businesses like BGT Partners and the Stiles Corporation with workshops that include dancing interpretively and making tie-dye bags.

“It really does work,” she says. “It takes employees out of their everyday world.”Marino joined the GalleryOne workshop and raved afterward, “That was so

much fun! I had to write a song with people I barely knew. But by the end of it, I knew Hilton’s managers and its mission.”

Those words are, quite literally, music to Jeff Jacob’s ears. He’s co-founder of The Song Team, a 3-year-old national training fi rm that uses music to “hit the mental reset button.” This year, he’s on pace to do 30 programs just like GalleryOne’s.

The week before he visited Fort Lauderdale, Jacob and his team trained 300 employees at a credit union in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. And when he left Lauderdale, he headed to the University of Indianapolis – revisiting his very fi rst client from January 2011. (Jacob adds with a grin, “We’re starting to get what every speaker needs: repeat business and spinoffs.”)

Other clients have included major corporations like DaVita (one of the nation’s largest kidney care companies) and Emdeon (a major healthcare system provider of revenue and payment management systems).

“Healthcare is defi nitely a growing segment,” Jacob says. The reason is simple: Industries in upheaval, both for good or bad reasons, need to motivate their employees to think differently and quickly.

“This is the equivalent of speed dating,” Jacob says. “We’re writing a song real fast.”

Unlike traditional training exercises that can take an entire morning, afternoon, or even a day, Jacob wrapped his in two hours. But how does he compare on cost?

Jacob doesn’t want to talk price, but he does say, “Our programs are very affordable for small and mid-sized organizations.” Bottom line, he says: Anyone who’s hired a traditional trainer can hire an artistic one.

“If you can afford that,” he says. “You can afford this.”

CORPORATE& ARTISTICMUSIC CAN SOOTHE THE SOUL, BUT CAN IT SELL EMPLOYEES ON A COMPANY’S MISSION?

story and photos By Michael Koretzky

BUSINESS STYLE

jeff Jacob

Page 43: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 43

CORPORATE MUSIC MAKINGWhen the Gallery One hotel sought a corporate trainer last month, it hired a Nashville guitarist named Jeff Jacob. His company, The Song Team, leads team-building exercises that work like this...

THE HOOKJacob speaks with his company contact about the goals of the exercise, working off a 12-question sheet he’s developed. From there, he writes the “hook” of a song, along with the chorus. For GalleryOne, that included, “Fort Lauderdale is more than you see/Each hotel is quite unique/We got shops and we got art/It’s really kinda tough to know where to start/When it comes to our Hilton family.”

THE INTROJacob shows a fi ve-minute video featuring The Beatles and Rolling Stones that ends with the revelation that few hit songs are the work of one person. Jacob told the GalleryOne group that in 2011, the biggest pop hits of that year had “an average of 4.1 songwriters.” Lesson: We all have to work together.

THE PLAY DOHJacob has learned to mix his media. He divides the room into teams and gives them specifi c emotions to shape out of Play Doh in 15 minutes. Example: A Gallery One group had to sculpt how they feel on Sunday before having to go to work on Monday. The themes that emerge from those sculpture become the lyrics of the song.

THE WRITINGThis is the longest and “funnest” part, Jacob says. On a fl ipboard, the group assembles stanzas. The discussion focuses on the goals and fears of the group. In this case, Hilton sales managers expressed concerns about the lingering perception of Fort Lauderdale as “Fort Liquordale,” a spring break hangout unsuitable for an older and more affl uent crowd. Jacob says his job was to help them brainstorm solutions while also writing lyrics.“I’m not trying to dictate,” he says. “I’m trying to collaborate.”

For more information on artistic team-building, email Lois Marino at [email protected]

Kim miller

On the fi rst Saturday of last month, 20 Hilton sales managers from around the country met at the Gallery One hotel along the Intracoastal in Fort Lauderdale. Over a lunch of mojo spiced pork loin and shrimp kabobs, they sculpted with Play Doh and wrote a song.

And it was all business.These global sales managers fl ew in from Virginia, Dallas, New York, and

Washington, D.C., so they could brainstorm better ways to sell the Hilton brand in Broward County. Kimberly Miller, Gallery One’s sales and marketing director, wined and dined them. But she also wanted to blow their minds.

So Miller hired 43-year-old Jeff Jacob to lead a two-hour team-building exercise. He didn’t foist them into awkward role-playing skits or onto a nerve-wracking ropes course. Instead, the Nashville songwriter/guitarist taught these top salespeople how to pen a pop tune.

And it was “awesome,” Miller says.“It helps bring different levels of team members together, striving for the same

common cause,” Miler says. “A senior leader can learn so much about what their team feels and faces just from the clay-building step of the songwriting process – adults can easily revert to children when need to!”

Miller met Jacob through Lois Marino, BBX Capital’s community relations manager in Fort Lauderdale. Marino is also the program manager for Art in the Workplace, which “fuses the arts into the business community by doing team-building exercises.”

Marino says the idea came from her boss, BBX Capital’s president Jarett Levan. “He’s a big supporter of the arts,” Marino says, “and he’s made it a part of my job.”

So Marino’s Art in the Workplace program has hooked up big Broward businesses like BGT Partners and the Stiles Corporation with workshops that include dancing interpretively and making tie-dye bags.

“It really does work,” she says. “It takes employees out of their everyday world.”Marino joined the GalleryOne workshop and raved afterward, “That was so

much fun! I had to write a song with people I barely knew. But by the end of it, I knew Hilton’s managers and its mission.”

Those words are, quite literally, music to Jeff Jacob’s ears. He’s co-founder of The Song Team, a 3-year-old national training fi rm that uses music to “hit the mental reset button.” This year, he’s on pace to do 30 programs just like GalleryOne’s.

The week before he visited Fort Lauderdale, Jacob and his team trained 300 employees at a credit union in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. And when he left Lauderdale, he headed to the University of Indianapolis – revisiting his very fi rst client from January 2011. (Jacob adds with a grin, “We’re starting to get what every speaker needs: repeat business and spinoffs.”)

Other clients have included major corporations like DaVita (one of the nation’s largest kidney care companies) and Emdeon (a major healthcare system provider of revenue and payment management systems).

“Healthcare is defi nitely a growing segment,” Jacob says. The reason is simple: Industries in upheaval, both for good or bad reasons, need to motivate their employees to think differently and quickly.

“This is the equivalent of speed dating,” Jacob says. “We’re writing a song real fast.”

Unlike traditional training exercises that can take an entire morning, afternoon, or even a day, Jacob wrapped his in two hours. But how does he compare on cost?

Jacob doesn’t want to talk price, but he does say, “Our programs are very affordable for small and mid-sized organizations.” Bottom line, he says: Anyone who’s hired a traditional trainer can hire an artistic one.

“If you can afford that,” he says. “You can afford this.”

CORPORATE& ARTISTICMUSIC CAN SOOTHE THE SOUL, BUT CAN IT SELL EMPLOYEES ON A COMPANY’S MISSION?

story and photos By Michael Koretzky

BUSINESS STYLE

jeff Jacob

Page 44: 0713 estate

44 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

WHO’SWHO IN HEALTHCAREBROWARD COUNTY

2013Healthcare Professionals committed to making a difference

WHO’SWHO IN HEALTHCAREBROWARD COUNTY

2013Healthcare Professionals committed to making a difference

Dimensions Design Center is a full service remodeling company with a focus on customer care and an unparalled attention to detail.

We look forward to giving your home the upgrade it deserves.

Call Now for a FREE In-Home Estimateor Visit Our New Showroom Today!

your dream homeBECOMING A REALITY

imagine...

KITCHEN & BATH REMODELS OUTDOOR KITCHENS & PERGOLAS MARBLE/GRANITE COUNTER TOPS CUSTOM CLOSETS CUSTOM CABINETRY FLOORING

Ph. 954.533.443512323 SW 55th St. Suite 1004 Cooper City 33330

www.DimensionsDesignCenters.com

Achilles Tears Adult & Pediatric Deformity CorrectionAnkle Ligament InjuriesFracturesHard To Heal Wounds Laser Treatment For Nail Fungus Prp (Platelet Rich Plasma Injections) Sclerotherapy Injections(For Varicose And Spider Veins) Sports Injuries

Phone: 954.942.5005 • Fax: 954.432.9446 • [email protected] N. Flamingo Rd, Suite 208 • Pembroke Pines, FL 33028 • 2825 N. State Rd. 7, Suite 203 • Margate, FL 33063

DRBELLFOOTANKLE.COMCertifi ed by the American Board of Podiatric Surgery

Daniel Bell DPMBoard certified*

Adult & Pediatric

Foot & Ankle Surgery

Sports Medicine

Page 45: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 45

WHO’SWHO IN HEALTHCAREBROWARD COUNTY

2013Healthcare Professionals committed to making a difference

WHO’SWHO IN HEALTHCAREBROWARD COUNTY

2013Healthcare Professionals committed to making a difference

Page 46: 0713 estate

46 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

DR. TODDPUSATERIFIRST DENTAL COSMETIC DENTIST251 Commercial Blvd.

Fort Lauderdale, FL

Phone: 954.776.4740

Fax: 954.748.4740

www.fi rstdentalonline.com

E D U C A T I O N u University of Illinois,

Champaign – Urbana

u University of Illinois College of Dentistry, Chicago

u North Eastern Regional Board - Certifi ed

u Florida Board Certifi ed

u Art and Science of Botox - Certifi ed

u Zoom - Certifi ed u American Dental

Association

Dr. Pusateri of First Dental is the premier porcelain veneer dentist in Fort Lauderdale. As a professional who has been perfecting the art and science of dentistry for over 18 years, Dr. Pusateri maintains that veneers are conservative and highly effective, while the results are immediate, dramatic and long-lasting.

He is licensed and Board Certifi ed to practice in all areas of General Dentistry.

Dr. Pusateri is renowned for his advanced smile makeover techniques and procedures that transform even the most crooked smiles or stained teeth into works of art. Using the latest in whitening treatments, alternatives to orthodontics and porcelain laminate veneers, he achieves beautiful, long-lasting results painlessly and affordably.

Dr. Pusateri’s key concern for his patients is PREVENTION. Through a thorough

examination, he will diagnose your dental condition and recommend a treatment plan to restore your teeth to their proper function and beauty.

Dr. Pusateri utilizes the most current instruments and procedures to make your experience with us as comfortable as possible. Through extensive continuing education of Dr. Pusateri and Staff, they are able to provide the newest innovations and techniques in dentistry. White fi llings, cosmetic bonding, implants, teeth whitening and full porcelain crowns are all new and rapidly changing areas of dentistry today. Dr. Pusateri uses the best and most current treatment options available today.

Dr. Pusateri and his team are patient focused - whether for general dentistry or cosmetic makeovers - we want to make you smile!

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

Helping our patient’s smile refl ect their true image is our ultimate goal

CHARLES A. MESSA, III, MD, FACS2823 Executive Park Drive

Weston, FL 33331

(954) 659-7760

westoncosmeticsurgery.com

C E R T I F I C A T I O N S American Board of Surgery and The American Board of Plastic Surgery

E D U C A T I O N Dr. Messa completed his undergraduate education at LaSalle University where he graduated magna cum laude, and was a scholar athlete and Rhodes Scholar nominee. He received his Doctor of Medicine degree from the Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine.

He subsequently completed general surgery training at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center, receiving honors as an outstanding surgical resident and teacher. He then completed training in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the prestigious University of Pennsylvania Medical Center.

Charles A. Messa, III, M.D., F.A.C.S., is a double Board Certifi ed Plastic Surgeon who has devoted his career in plastic surgery to helping patients look and feel better. He has specialized in cosmetic plastic surgery in south Florida for over 17 years. During that time he has become well-known as an expert in the cosmetic enhancement of face, breast and body. As Medical Director of the Weston Cosmetic Surgery Center, he has received the Black Diamond award from Allergan Medical. As a Black Diamond Physician, Dr. Messa is in the top 1% of plastic surgery practices in the country by volume.

Dr. Messa completed his plastic surgery residency at the prestigious University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, and is board certifi ed by both the American Board of Plastic Surgery and the American Board of Surgery. He is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and an active member of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery and the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

Dr. Messa serves as a consultant for Allergan Medical Breast Aesthetics because of his recognized excellence in aesthetic

breast surgery and has been distinguished as one of America’s Top Plastic Surgeons since 2002 by the Consumer’s Research Council of America.

The plastic surgeon, with credentials you can trust, who other physicians and their families choose for their cosmetic procedures, Dr. Charles Messa is renown in the fi eld of cosmetic plastic surgery with word of mouth referrals from across the United States, and Europe.

Patients who are seeking exceptional results choose Dr. Messa. He provides only the highest quality services and products coupled with compassionate, attentive, expert care. Dr. Messa has extensive, specialized training and years of experience in the fi eld of cosmetic plastic surgery. He is committed to every patient’s utmost satisfaction and he provides the highest quality of patient care to achieve each person’s individual appearance goals. Dr. Messa and his staff are dedicated to ensuring that each patient is treated with compassionate, attentive care that ensures their safety, well-being, and ultimate satisfaction with their results.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

“”

I treat each patient as if they were a member of my family.

Page 47: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 47

DR. TODDPUSATERIFIRST DENTAL COSMETIC DENTIST251 Commercial Blvd.

Fort Lauderdale, FL

Phone: 954.776.4740

Fax: 954.748.4740

www.fi rstdentalonline.com

E D U C A T I O N u University of Illinois,

Champaign – Urbana

u University of Illinois College of Dentistry, Chicago

u North Eastern Regional Board - Certifi ed

u Florida Board Certifi ed

u Art and Science of Botox - Certifi ed

u Zoom - Certifi ed u American Dental

Association

Dr. Pusateri of First Dental is the premier porcelain veneer dentist in Fort Lauderdale. As a professional who has been perfecting the art and science of dentistry for over 18 years, Dr. Pusateri maintains that veneers are conservative and highly effective, while the results are immediate, dramatic and long-lasting.

He is licensed and Board Certifi ed to practice in all areas of General Dentistry.

Dr. Pusateri is renowned for his advanced smile makeover techniques and procedures that transform even the most crooked smiles or stained teeth into works of art. Using the latest in whitening treatments, alternatives to orthodontics and porcelain laminate veneers, he achieves beautiful, long-lasting results painlessly and affordably.

Dr. Pusateri’s key concern for his patients is PREVENTION. Through a thorough

examination, he will diagnose your dental condition and recommend a treatment plan to restore your teeth to their proper function and beauty.

Dr. Pusateri utilizes the most current instruments and procedures to make your experience with us as comfortable as possible. Through extensive continuing education of Dr. Pusateri and Staff, they are able to provide the newest innovations and techniques in dentistry. White fi llings, cosmetic bonding, implants, teeth whitening and full porcelain crowns are all new and rapidly changing areas of dentistry today. Dr. Pusateri uses the best and most current treatment options available today.

Dr. Pusateri and his team are patient focused - whether for general dentistry or cosmetic makeovers - we want to make you smile!

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

Helping our patient’s smile refl ect their true image is our ultimate goal

CHARLES A. MESSA, III, MD, FACS2823 Executive Park Drive

Weston, FL 33331

(954) 659-7760

westoncosmeticsurgery.com

C E R T I F I C A T I O N S American Board of Surgery and The American Board of Plastic Surgery

E D U C A T I O N Dr. Messa completed his undergraduate education at LaSalle University where he graduated magna cum laude, and was a scholar athlete and Rhodes Scholar nominee. He received his Doctor of Medicine degree from the Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine.

He subsequently completed general surgery training at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center, receiving honors as an outstanding surgical resident and teacher. He then completed training in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the prestigious University of Pennsylvania Medical Center.

Charles A. Messa, III, M.D., F.A.C.S., is a double Board Certifi ed Plastic Surgeon who has devoted his career in plastic surgery to helping patients look and feel better. He has specialized in cosmetic plastic surgery in south Florida for over 17 years. During that time he has become well-known as an expert in the cosmetic enhancement of face, breast and body. As Medical Director of the Weston Cosmetic Surgery Center, he has received the Black Diamond award from Allergan Medical. As a Black Diamond Physician, Dr. Messa is in the top 1% of plastic surgery practices in the country by volume.

Dr. Messa completed his plastic surgery residency at the prestigious University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, and is board certifi ed by both the American Board of Plastic Surgery and the American Board of Surgery. He is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and an active member of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery and the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

Dr. Messa serves as a consultant for Allergan Medical Breast Aesthetics because of his recognized excellence in aesthetic

breast surgery and has been distinguished as one of America’s Top Plastic Surgeons since 2002 by the Consumer’s Research Council of America.

The plastic surgeon, with credentials you can trust, who other physicians and their families choose for their cosmetic procedures, Dr. Charles Messa is renown in the fi eld of cosmetic plastic surgery with word of mouth referrals from across the United States, and Europe.

Patients who are seeking exceptional results choose Dr. Messa. He provides only the highest quality services and products coupled with compassionate, attentive, expert care. Dr. Messa has extensive, specialized training and years of experience in the fi eld of cosmetic plastic surgery. He is committed to every patient’s utmost satisfaction and he provides the highest quality of patient care to achieve each person’s individual appearance goals. Dr. Messa and his staff are dedicated to ensuring that each patient is treated with compassionate, attentive care that ensures their safety, well-being, and ultimate satisfaction with their results.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

“”

I treat each patient as if they were a member of my family.

Page 48: 0713 estate

48 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

JEROMEOBEDBoard Certifi ed Dermatologist500 South East 15th Street

Suite 108

Fort Lauderdale

954 990 6591

www.browardderm.com

E D U C A T I O N u Honors in Zoology

& Human Nutrition, University of Florida

u Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine

u Residencies in Family Medicine and Dermatology at Broward General Medical Center

Broward Dermatology & Cosmetic Specialists founder and lead dermatologist, Dr. Jerome Obed, seamlessly blends his experience and passion to bring each patient the absolute best in advanced dermatological care.

A native Floridian, Dr. Obed has been living in South Florida for the past ten years. After graduating from the University of Florida with Honors in both Zoology and Human Nutrition, he attended the Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine (KCOM) in Missouri. Dr. Obed then returned to Florida, where he completed two residencies at Broward General Medical Center; the fi rst in Family Medicine, followed by a second in Dermatology. In the interim, he practiced both primary and critical care medicine before transitioning to his true passion, the fi eld of Dermatology.

His unique path and training translate into unparalleled care for his patients. This preparation, paired with the use of the latest technologies, allows him to address all of his patient’s dermatalogical needs. This includes both general and

surgical dermatology, as well as many common cosmetic procedures. With a proactive approach Dr. Obed not only addressess dermatalogical issues before they become a problem, but also helps his patients achieve healthy skin that will last a lifetime.

Dr. Obed also serves as Clinical Assistant Professor at Nova Southeastern University, where he plays an integral role in the education of medical students and residents. He continues to publish scientifi c papers, attends conferences regularly, and even lectures to members in his dermatologic college.

In his free time, Dr. Obed enjoys working as a Ringside Physician, where he is entrusted to care for elite athletes both inside and outside of the ring. He has made numerous appearances on ESPN and other television networks for professional boxing and mixed martial arts events.

Dr. Obed believes strongly in the power of prevention. Consequently, he urges everyone to see a dermatologist as part of their ongoing healthcare regimen.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

It’s been said, beauty is only skin deep. However, as dermatologists, we believe it is much more. On a daily basis we see the impact our care has on the lives of our patients.

JOAQUIN ZAGARRA DDS, MDSORTHODONTIST2711 Executive Park Drive

Suite 4

Weston, Florida 33331

(954)321-5600

www.doctorzag.com

E D U C A T I O N u DDS from Universidad

Javeriana u Certifi cate in Orthodontics

University of Pittsburgh u Master in Dental Science

University of Pittsburgh u Health Care Management

Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano

Dr. Joaquin Zagarra is an experienced Orthodontist who has been in private practice for over 30 years and has enriched the South Florida community with his knowledge and expertise. He obtained his specialty certifi cate in Orthodontics and a Master’s degree from the University of Pittsburgh. He is originally from Colombia and practiced with his father for many years in a very well-known and respected practice.

Dr. Zagarra performs thorough diagnosis as the gateway to treating the many conditions that can affect the teeth in children and adults. His state-of-the-art offi ce is a beautiful setting for the intricate tasks that his specialty demands. The friendliness and courtesy of his staff make it a delightful experience for his patients, who feel at home at his offi ce. As an expert in Growth and Development he treats many children and teens by guiding their dentition to harmonize with the growing face and obtain beautiful smiles and functional bites.

Dr. Zagarra started teaching Orthodontics at Universidad Javeriana, where he became Graduate Program Director. In 2002 he was hired by Nova Southeastern University in Davie and was soon named Co-Director of the Graduate Orthodontic Program. He returned to private practice in 2007 and built a brand new offi ce in the city of Weston in 2009.

Dr. Zagarra thoroughly enjoys a tranquil life with his wife and daughters in his home in Weston, where he fi nds time to jog or ride his bike along the many trails. His passion is music (plays guitar and drums) and practices yoga and meditation. In his spare time he studies energy fi elds of biological organisms and has travelled to Russia and India in this pursuit. He speaks Spanish, Portuguese and English fl uently.

Dr. Zagarra has lectured extensively and is a member of the American Association of Orthodontists, the Colombian Society of Orthodontics and a Fellow of the World Federation of Orthodontists.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

“ ”A beautiful

smile is forever...

Page 49: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 49

JEROMEOBEDBoard Certifi ed Dermatologist500 South East 15th Street

Suite 108

Fort Lauderdale

954 990 6591

www.browardderm.com

E D U C A T I O N u Honors in Zoology

& Human Nutrition, University of Florida

u Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine

u Residencies in Family Medicine and Dermatology at Broward General Medical Center

Broward Dermatology & Cosmetic Specialists founder and lead dermatologist, Dr. Jerome Obed, seamlessly blends his experience and passion to bring each patient the absolute best in advanced dermatological care.

A native Floridian, Dr. Obed has been living in South Florida for the past ten years. After graduating from the University of Florida with Honors in both Zoology and Human Nutrition, he attended the Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine (KCOM) in Missouri. Dr. Obed then returned to Florida, where he completed two residencies at Broward General Medical Center; the fi rst in Family Medicine, followed by a second in Dermatology. In the interim, he practiced both primary and critical care medicine before transitioning to his true passion, the fi eld of Dermatology.

His unique path and training translate into unparalleled care for his patients. This preparation, paired with the use of the latest technologies, allows him to address all of his patient’s dermatalogical needs. This includes both general and

surgical dermatology, as well as many common cosmetic procedures. With a proactive approach Dr. Obed not only addressess dermatalogical issues before they become a problem, but also helps his patients achieve healthy skin that will last a lifetime.

Dr. Obed also serves as Clinical Assistant Professor at Nova Southeastern University, where he plays an integral role in the education of medical students and residents. He continues to publish scientifi c papers, attends conferences regularly, and even lectures to members in his dermatologic college.

In his free time, Dr. Obed enjoys working as a Ringside Physician, where he is entrusted to care for elite athletes both inside and outside of the ring. He has made numerous appearances on ESPN and other television networks for professional boxing and mixed martial arts events.

Dr. Obed believes strongly in the power of prevention. Consequently, he urges everyone to see a dermatologist as part of their ongoing healthcare regimen.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

It’s been said, beauty is only skin deep. However, as dermatologists, we believe it is much more. On a daily basis we see the impact our care has on the lives of our patients.

JOAQUIN ZAGARRA DDS, MDSORTHODONTIST2711 Executive Park Drive

Suite 4

Weston, Florida 33331

(954)321-5600

www.doctorzag.com

E D U C A T I O N u DDS from Universidad

Javeriana u Certifi cate in Orthodontics

University of Pittsburgh u Master in Dental Science

University of Pittsburgh u Health Care Management

Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano

Dr. Joaquin Zagarra is an experienced Orthodontist who has been in private practice for over 30 years and has enriched the South Florida community with his knowledge and expertise. He obtained his specialty certifi cate in Orthodontics and a Master’s degree from the University of Pittsburgh. He is originally from Colombia and practiced with his father for many years in a very well-known and respected practice.

Dr. Zagarra performs thorough diagnosis as the gateway to treating the many conditions that can affect the teeth in children and adults. His state-of-the-art offi ce is a beautiful setting for the intricate tasks that his specialty demands. The friendliness and courtesy of his staff make it a delightful experience for his patients, who feel at home at his offi ce. As an expert in Growth and Development he treats many children and teens by guiding their dentition to harmonize with the growing face and obtain beautiful smiles and functional bites.

Dr. Zagarra started teaching Orthodontics at Universidad Javeriana, where he became Graduate Program Director. In 2002 he was hired by Nova Southeastern University in Davie and was soon named Co-Director of the Graduate Orthodontic Program. He returned to private practice in 2007 and built a brand new offi ce in the city of Weston in 2009.

Dr. Zagarra thoroughly enjoys a tranquil life with his wife and daughters in his home in Weston, where he fi nds time to jog or ride his bike along the many trails. His passion is music (plays guitar and drums) and practices yoga and meditation. In his spare time he studies energy fi elds of biological organisms and has travelled to Russia and India in this pursuit. He speaks Spanish, Portuguese and English fl uently.

Dr. Zagarra has lectured extensively and is a member of the American Association of Orthodontists, the Colombian Society of Orthodontics and a Fellow of the World Federation of Orthodontists.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

“ ”A beautiful

smile is forever...

Page 50: 0713 estate

50 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

DR. SHINO BAY AGUILERABoard Certifi ed Dermatologist and Dermatologic SurgeonShino Bay, Shino Bay Cosmetic Dermatology, Plastic Surgery & Laser Institute

350 Las Olas Boulevard, Ste. 110 Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33301Tel. 954-765.3005.

Palm Beach Island50 Cocoanut Row, #120Palm Beach, FL 33480 Tel. 561-832-1950

www.shinobayderm.com

www.browardderm.comE D U C A T I O N u Medical Director of Nova

Southeastern University Dermatology Department.

u Volunteer instructor of Dermatology for University of Miami.

u Assistant Professor of Dermatology for Suncoast University.

u Appointed “Chief Resident Physician” for both of his three year residency programs.

A W A R D S u #1 Injector of Sculptra

Aesthetic in the entire United States

u Winner of the 2011 and 2012 Patient’s Choice Awards

u Winner of the 2011 and 2012 Aesthetic Academy’s Prestigious National Award for “Best Non-Surgical Facial Enhancement”

u Top Platinum Level Injector and Physician Trainer for Botox and Fillers for Allergan.

Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera is a world renowned Cosmetic Dermatologist, Dermatologic Surgeon, Cosmetic Laser Expert, and is Dual Board certifi ed with a Fellowship in Dermatology from the American College of Osteopathic Dermatology. He has over 17 years of ongoing advanced training in lasers and Aesthetics and is a clinical researcher, publisher, and Medical Director of NOVA University Dermatology residency program and Assistant Professor of Dermatology for four other Universities.

As a top-requested International physician trainer and keynote speaker, Dr. Aguilera travels the world teaching physicians the proper use of the newest laser advances and cosmetic techniques. He participates in FDA clinical trial studies for a leading global, laser manufacturer. He is called upon to determine the best treatment protocols and has a unique ability to provide patients with a dramatically younger, more energetic look.

Dr. Aguilera is an internationally known, premier expert in beauty restoration, cosmetic lasers and age-reversing techniques. He performs procedures with passion, attention to detail, and a caring

attitude that are evident from the fi rst time you meet him. His specialty and extensive knowledge in dermatology and especially cosmetic dermatology have driven him in a quest for excellence. In recognition of his expertise, one of the world’s leading cosmetic laser manufacturers fl ies Dr. Aguilera all over the world to be a keynote speaker, as well as to train Physicians in the use of emerging, Gold Standard cosmetic laser technologies and optimally effective techniques.

His particular expertise is in custom designing the newest and most effective non-surgical, age reversing and beautifying programs. These include anti-aging, liquid and laser face lift and eye lifts and maximum revision of erasure of wrinkles, scars, acne, rosacea, sun damage, hair, spots, veins and stretch marks and more. As the premier expert in beauty restoration and age-reversing techniques, his results are dramatic and provide you with a youthful, symmetric, invigorated look.

Dr. Aguilera has trained thousands of physicians and is extremely knowledgeable about the concepts and applications of skin laser and cosmetic injectable technologies.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

DR. JESSESHAWALL PRO ORTHOPEDICS &SPORTS MEDICINE17779 SW 2nd Street, Pembroke Pines, FL 33029Silver Lakes Campus954-322-1110www.AllProOrthopedics.com

E D U C A T I O N u Medical School - Nova

Southeastern University u New York Institute of

Technology, New York College of Osteopathic Medicine, Peninsula/Long Island Jewish Hospital Consortium (Internship and Residency in Orthopedic Surgery)

u Florida Orthopedic Institute (Fellowship)Dr. Jesse Shaw is Fellowship trained in

orthopedic sports medicine from the Florida Orthopedic Institute in Tampa and has cared for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and New York Yankees during spring Training. He was also the University of Tampa Women’s Soccer Physician during their national championship season in 2007. From 2008-2010 Dr. Shaw cared for patients while on staff at Imperial Point and Holy Cross Hospitals. He now returns to his home town after spending the last two years working at the Mayo Clinic in Georgia

Dr. Shaw specializes in ACL, knee ligament and meniscal surgery, as well as complex shoulder injuries such as impingement, rotator cuff injury, and instability. All-Pro Orthopedic and Sport Medicine also treats patients for orthopedic conditions that are not sports related, such as arthritis, knee replacement, hip replacement, complex shoulder replacement, fractures and trauma injuries.

All-Pro Orthopedic and Sports Medicine serve professional and amateur student-athletes, as well as recreational sports enthusiasts and regular patients who care to get the very best orthopedic treatments

for the shoulder,elbow, hip, knee, ankle and back injuries.

Our full-service approach, which integrates your primary care physician and surgeon with a host of clinical support staff, is designed to return you to maximum function as quickly and safely as possible. This integrated approach enables our clinical team to properly evaluate your condition and prepare you mentally and physically for the procedure by continuously monitoring and managing the entire pre- and post-surgical performance and progress. This unique continuum of care approach produces outstanding clinical and patient satisfaction results.

We combine extensive education about prevention of injuries and disease through lectures and educational sessions, as well as preoperative care. Our highly trained team of surgeons, nurses, physician assistants, rehabilitation specialists and medical support personnel works with you and your primary care physician to develop a customized treatment plan. Should you need surgery, you can be confi dent you’ll receive the most advanced surgical procedures using the latest technologies.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

I have returned to Pembroke Pines to bring my extensive training and exceptional education to serve my hometown. As a highly skilled specialist in orthopedics and sports medicine, I am really focused on my commitment to this community, clinical care and advanced techniques in sports medicine. Having trained in New York City, I hope to bring this standard of excellence to Pembroke Pines with the opening of this practice.

Page 51: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 51

DR. SHINO BAY AGUILERABoard Certifi ed Dermatologist and Dermatologic SurgeonShino Bay, Shino Bay Cosmetic Dermatology, Plastic Surgery & Laser Institute

350 Las Olas Boulevard, Ste. 110 Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33301Tel. 954-765.3005.

Palm Beach Island50 Cocoanut Row, #120Palm Beach, FL 33480 Tel. 561-832-1950

www.shinobayderm.com

www.browardderm.comE D U C A T I O N u Medical Director of Nova

Southeastern University Dermatology Department.

u Volunteer instructor of Dermatology for University of Miami.

u Assistant Professor of Dermatology for Suncoast University.

u Appointed “Chief Resident Physician” for both of his three year residency programs.

A W A R D S u #1 Injector of Sculptra

Aesthetic in the entire United States

u Winner of the 2011 and 2012 Patient’s Choice Awards

u Winner of the 2011 and 2012 Aesthetic Academy’s Prestigious National Award for “Best Non-Surgical Facial Enhancement”

u Top Platinum Level Injector and Physician Trainer for Botox and Fillers for Allergan.

Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera is a world renowned Cosmetic Dermatologist, Dermatologic Surgeon, Cosmetic Laser Expert, and is Dual Board certifi ed with a Fellowship in Dermatology from the American College of Osteopathic Dermatology. He has over 17 years of ongoing advanced training in lasers and Aesthetics and is a clinical researcher, publisher, and Medical Director of NOVA University Dermatology residency program and Assistant Professor of Dermatology for four other Universities.

As a top-requested International physician trainer and keynote speaker, Dr. Aguilera travels the world teaching physicians the proper use of the newest laser advances and cosmetic techniques. He participates in FDA clinical trial studies for a leading global, laser manufacturer. He is called upon to determine the best treatment protocols and has a unique ability to provide patients with a dramatically younger, more energetic look.

Dr. Aguilera is an internationally known, premier expert in beauty restoration, cosmetic lasers and age-reversing techniques. He performs procedures with passion, attention to detail, and a caring

attitude that are evident from the fi rst time you meet him. His specialty and extensive knowledge in dermatology and especially cosmetic dermatology have driven him in a quest for excellence. In recognition of his expertise, one of the world’s leading cosmetic laser manufacturers fl ies Dr. Aguilera all over the world to be a keynote speaker, as well as to train Physicians in the use of emerging, Gold Standard cosmetic laser technologies and optimally effective techniques.

His particular expertise is in custom designing the newest and most effective non-surgical, age reversing and beautifying programs. These include anti-aging, liquid and laser face lift and eye lifts and maximum revision of erasure of wrinkles, scars, acne, rosacea, sun damage, hair, spots, veins and stretch marks and more. As the premier expert in beauty restoration and age-reversing techniques, his results are dramatic and provide you with a youthful, symmetric, invigorated look.

Dr. Aguilera has trained thousands of physicians and is extremely knowledgeable about the concepts and applications of skin laser and cosmetic injectable technologies.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

DR. JESSESHAWALL PRO ORTHOPEDICS &SPORTS MEDICINE17779 SW 2nd Street, Pembroke Pines, FL 33029Silver Lakes Campus954-322-1110www.AllProOrthopedics.com

E D U C A T I O N u Medical School - Nova

Southeastern University u New York Institute of

Technology, New York College of Osteopathic Medicine, Peninsula/Long Island Jewish Hospital Consortium (Internship and Residency in Orthopedic Surgery)

u Florida Orthopedic Institute (Fellowship)Dr. Jesse Shaw is Fellowship trained in

orthopedic sports medicine from the Florida Orthopedic Institute in Tampa and has cared for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and New York Yankees during spring Training. He was also the University of Tampa Women’s Soccer Physician during their national championship season in 2007. From 2008-2010 Dr. Shaw cared for patients while on staff at Imperial Point and Holy Cross Hospitals. He now returns to his home town after spending the last two years working at the Mayo Clinic in Georgia

Dr. Shaw specializes in ACL, knee ligament and meniscal surgery, as well as complex shoulder injuries such as impingement, rotator cuff injury, and instability. All-Pro Orthopedic and Sport Medicine also treats patients for orthopedic conditions that are not sports related, such as arthritis, knee replacement, hip replacement, complex shoulder replacement, fractures and trauma injuries.

All-Pro Orthopedic and Sports Medicine serve professional and amateur student-athletes, as well as recreational sports enthusiasts and regular patients who care to get the very best orthopedic treatments

for the shoulder,elbow, hip, knee, ankle and back injuries.

Our full-service approach, which integrates your primary care physician and surgeon with a host of clinical support staff, is designed to return you to maximum function as quickly and safely as possible. This integrated approach enables our clinical team to properly evaluate your condition and prepare you mentally and physically for the procedure by continuously monitoring and managing the entire pre- and post-surgical performance and progress. This unique continuum of care approach produces outstanding clinical and patient satisfaction results.

We combine extensive education about prevention of injuries and disease through lectures and educational sessions, as well as preoperative care. Our highly trained team of surgeons, nurses, physician assistants, rehabilitation specialists and medical support personnel works with you and your primary care physician to develop a customized treatment plan. Should you need surgery, you can be confi dent you’ll receive the most advanced surgical procedures using the latest technologies.

H E A L T H C A R E P R O F I L E S

I have returned to Pembroke Pines to bring my extensive training and exceptional education to serve my hometown. As a highly skilled specialist in orthopedics and sports medicine, I am really focused on my commitment to this community, clinical care and advanced techniques in sports medicine. Having trained in New York City, I hope to bring this standard of excellence to Pembroke Pines with the opening of this practice.

Page 52: 0713 estate

ASK THE EXPERTS

HEALTH

REALESTATE

LAW

SOCIALMEDIA

FAMILY

FINANCE

FITNESS

Celebrating independenCe day all Month-longSaVe 1,000s

50 YEARSPlusSINCE 1962

RICK CASE HONDAI-75 & Griffin

866-757-4644

Cars

RICK CASE FIATI-75 between Griffin & Royal Palm

866-910-1420

RICK CASE HYUNDAII-75 between Griffin & Royal Palm

866-757-5568

RICK CASE HONDAI-75 & Griffin

866-812-6572

Cycles

RICK CASE ACURAON 441 at Sunrise

866-895-5702

RICK CASE HYUNDAION 441 at Sunrise

866-899-1817rickcase.com

FLORIDA’S FASTEST GROWING DEALER!Along with the World’s Largest Honda & Hyundai Dealerships, we are

building the World’s Largest Volkswagen & KIA Dealerships in West Broward.

ONLY 1 DEALER - RICK CASEGIvES YOU All THIS!

OUR GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICE!Receive the LOWEST Price. We sell for less!

LOWEST PAYMENT, PRICE, AND A MONEY-BACK GUARANTEEWith our Money-Back Guarantee, If you are not completely satisfied simply return the vehicle within 3 Days or 300 Miles, whichever comes first, and we will give you a complete refund.

DOUBLES THE NATIONWIDE FACTORY WARRANTYUp to a 20 Year / 200,000 Mile Nationwide Limited Powertrain Warranty with every new Hyundai, Acura, Honda & FIAT purchase.

TOYOTA & NISSAN ARE HEREfor you to drive & compare. See why Hyundai, Acura, Honda and FIAT are the BEST!

DISCOUNT GAS & FREE CAR WASHES FOR LIFE!Earn Rewards Points with every purchase and save on future purchases of vehicles, service, parts and accessories. Plus, use Rewards Card for FREE car washes for life and discount gas.

Page 53: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 53

ASK THE EXPERTS

HEALTH

REALESTATE

LAW

SOCIALMEDIA

FAMILY

FINANCE

FITNESS

Celebrating independenCe day all Month-longSaVe 1,000s

50 YEARSPlusSINCE 1962

RICK CASE HONDAI-75 & Griffin

866-757-4644

Cars

RICK CASE FIATI-75 between Griffin & Royal Palm

866-910-1420

RICK CASE HYUNDAII-75 between Griffin & Royal Palm

866-757-5568

RICK CASE HONDAI-75 & Griffin

866-812-6572

Cycles

RICK CASE ACURAON 441 at Sunrise

866-895-5702

RICK CASE HYUNDAION 441 at Sunrise

866-899-1817rickcase.com

FLORIDA’S FASTEST GROWING DEALER!Along with the World’s Largest Honda & Hyundai Dealerships, we are

building the World’s Largest Volkswagen & KIA Dealerships in West Broward.

ONLY 1 DEALER - RICK CASEGIvES YOU All THIS!

OUR GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICE!Receive the LOWEST Price. We sell for less!

LOWEST PAYMENT, PRICE, AND A MONEY-BACK GUARANTEEWith our Money-Back Guarantee, If you are not completely satisfied simply return the vehicle within 3 Days or 300 Miles, whichever comes first, and we will give you a complete refund.

DOUBLES THE NATIONWIDE FACTORY WARRANTYUp to a 20 Year / 200,000 Mile Nationwide Limited Powertrain Warranty with every new Hyundai, Acura, Honda & FIAT purchase.

TOYOTA & NISSAN ARE HEREfor you to drive & compare. See why Hyundai, Acura, Honda and FIAT are the BEST!

DISCOUNT GAS & FREE CAR WASHES FOR LIFE!Earn Rewards Points with every purchase and save on future purchases of vehicles, service, parts and accessories. Plus, use Rewards Card for FREE car washes for life and discount gas.

Page 54: 0713 estate

54 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Ever wonder why some people seem to always do well in businesses while others fail? I have met many serial entrepreneurs that are perennial winners when buying or starting businesses. We often ask are there worse businesses or worse business owners? Most reply the latter, there are worse business owners.

Here are ten of the traits that each of these serial successful entrepreneurs has:

1. They work hard. Sometimes they are the hardest working person in their company. Many times I have seen people outwork others that are smarter.

2. They know how to treat their employees and customers. I have not seen many mean people last in business. At award ceremonies you always see the winner thank their people and clients. You cannot build a big business alone; believe me it helps to be nice fi rst.

3. They personally deal with issues. And they are often not very nice about it. Hard on problems, soft on people. Often they are obsessive about customer service.

4. They are not afraid to get dirty. They are not afraid to work alongside their employees when the bad stuff hits the fan. Roll up your sleeve kind of people win!

5. They know how to lose. They know when to call it quits, take the loss, admit they’re wrong, and move on from a bad idea or decision.

6. They are never satisfied and often have a tough time acknowledging a win. There is never an end to the game. Constantly pursuing a better way, effi ciencies, and not afraid to tweak and experiment.

7. They trust their employees. They delegate well and don’t micromanage. They promote from within and invest in people. They can handle and manage imperfection in performance.

8. They have resources. Sorry to say, it is nearly impossible to start with no money and make

it. Most of the time it takes money to make money!

9. They give back and share their wealth and knowledge. They never forget where they came from, and keep grounded and usually are humble.

10. Finally, they take risk!! You must take risks to win in business. The key to success is to understand your odds and minimize the downside of any endeavor or decision.

Of course there are exceptions to these rules. Steve Jobs is an example. However, I can name many of our local entrepreneurs do have the above traits. Wayne Huizenga, Mike Jackson, Mike Maroone, Jim Moran, John Offerdahl, Terry Stiles, Peggy Nordeen, Keith Koenig, and Howard Dvorkin to name a few you might know.

In the end, if you want to be successful in business, you need to have many of the above traits. it’s never too late to practice and learn them!

WHAT ARE THE SUCCESSFUL TRAITS OF SERIAL ENTREPRENEURS?

ANDREW CAGNETTACertified Business Intermediary

CEO, Transworld Business Advisors

Offices Nationwide954-772-1122

[email protected]

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

The newest advances in Laser Technology have revolutionized “Gold Standard” CO2 Laser Skin Resurfacing!! With another new technology Upgrade, we now offer “Multi-Pulse” a Deep CO2 Microablative laser that can safely and precisely remove outer layers of damaged skin and penetrate via millions of microthermal zones to reveal the underlying skin and create brand new skin which is softer, smoother and often dramatically, younger looking. It also stimulates the regeneration of healthy skin underneath (called “Laser Skin Renewal”), for a dramatically youthful and beautiful appearance!

This superlative skin resurfacing –rejuvenation procedure will reverse years of sun damage, wrinkles, scars and many other skin imperfections in just minutes. When compared to other forms of laser treatment, the new “Deep” CO2 micro ablative is the new “Gold Standard” for rapid and optimal enhancement in as littleas 1 treatment!

Our patients, ranging in age from 13 to 81 say that “The micro ablation removes sun damaged skin and makes it fresher looking; the second part called “bulk heating” improves collagen and elastic fi bers deep down that improve deep to moderate wrinkles”. It’s also great for removing all types of scars, safe anywhere on the face, body or hands and we are even using it on stretch marks. By fractioning the laser beam into microscopic beams, a specifi c portion of the skin is left unharmed, which is more conducive to healing. This fractional method enables cells

to begin healing within 24 hours and the comfortable downtime can be adjusted to fi t your busy schedule for 3 to 7 days – versus two months with the original CO2 laser.

“The new “Non-Surgical Laser Facelift or Eye Lift” can take years off a person’s appearance and give them better looking skin than someone many years younger,” noted Dr. Aguilera. Our other popular cosmetic procedures include Botox, Dysport and Dermal fi llers to replenish the volume of fat loss and bone loss on the face. Fillers take care of the volume and folds while the laser takes care of the skin’s texture, tone and elasticity. Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera is in fact, #1 in Sculptra Aesthetic Treatments in the entire USA!! No one treats more patients with Sculptra Aesthetic and is a Platinum level Top Injector and Physician Trainer for all the major injectables!

Dr. Aguilera has trained thousands of physicians and is extremely knowledgeable about the concepts and applications of skin laser and cosmetic injectable technologies. His unique ability to provide patients with a dramatically younger, more energetic look makes him an in-demand cosmetic dermatologist - and as holder of two board certifi cations and a Fellowship in Dermatology from the American Osteopathic College of Dermatology, an Asst. Professor of Dermatology for 5 Universities and the Chief Medical Director

of the Dermatology Residency program at NOVA University, Dr. Aguilera is an internationally known, premier expert in optimal, natural looking, beauty restoration, Cosmetic lasers and age reversing techniques. The world class, “Shino Bay Cosmetic Dermatology & Laser Institute” is certifi ed as a prestigious, “Laser Center of Excellence” and Physician Training Center for the United States and Latin America.

If you are ready to reverse the aging process, call either our Las Olas Blvd, Ft Lauderdale offi ce today at 954-765-3005, or our Palm Beach Island Location at: 561-832-1950 for a Complimentary Cosmetic Consultation.

For more information and additional before and after treatment photos, visit www.ShinoBayDerm.com.

TURN BACK THE CLOCK IN MINUTES!

“OFTEN A 1 TREATMENT WOW” ….THE DEEP, FRACTIONAL CO2

MICRO-ABLATIVE LASER

BeforeAfter CO2 Fractional Laser Treatment and Aesthetic Injectables

DR. SHINO BAY AGUILERA Dual Board Certified Dermatologic Surgeon Winner of the Prestigious, National Award 2011 and 2012“Best Non Surgical Facial Enhancement” Winner of the 2011 and 2012 Patient’s Choice Award Shino Bay Cosmetic Dermatology & Laser Institute

East Fort Lauderdale350 E. Las Olas Boulevard, Suites 110 + 120Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301 • (954) 765-3005Palm Beach Island 50 Cocoanut Row, Suite 110Palm Beach, FL 33480 • (561) 832-1950www.ShinoBayDerm.com

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

Page 55: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 55

Ever wonder why some people seem to always do well in businesses while others fail? I have met many serial entrepreneurs that are perennial winners when buying or starting businesses. We often ask are there worse businesses or worse business owners? Most reply the latter, there are worse business owners.

Here are ten of the traits that each of these serial successful entrepreneurs has:

1. They work hard. Sometimes they are the hardest working person in their company. Many times I have seen people outwork others that are smarter.

2. They know how to treat their employees and customers. I have not seen many mean people last in business. At award ceremonies you always see the winner thank their people and clients. You cannot build a big business alone; believe me it helps to be nice fi rst.

3. They personally deal with issues. And they are often not very nice about it. Hard on problems, soft on people. Often they are obsessive about customer service.

4. They are not afraid to get dirty. They are not afraid to work alongside their employees when the bad stuff hits the fan. Roll up your sleeve kind of people win!

5. They know how to lose. They know when to call it quits, take the loss, admit they’re wrong, and move on from a bad idea or decision.

6. They are never satisfied and often have a tough time acknowledging a win. There is never an end to the game. Constantly pursuing a better way, effi ciencies, and not afraid to tweak and experiment.

7. They trust their employees. They delegate well and don’t micromanage. They promote from within and invest in people. They can handle and manage imperfection in performance.

8. They have resources. Sorry to say, it is nearly impossible to start with no money and make

it. Most of the time it takes money to make money!

9. They give back and share their wealth and knowledge. They never forget where they came from, and keep grounded and usually are humble.

10. Finally, they take risk!! You must take risks to win in business. The key to success is to understand your odds and minimize the downside of any endeavor or decision.

Of course there are exceptions to these rules. Steve Jobs is an example. However, I can name many of our local entrepreneurs do have the above traits. Wayne Huizenga, Mike Jackson, Mike Maroone, Jim Moran, John Offerdahl, Terry Stiles, Peggy Nordeen, Keith Koenig, and Howard Dvorkin to name a few you might know.

In the end, if you want to be successful in business, you need to have many of the above traits. it’s never too late to practice and learn them!

WHAT ARE THE SUCCESSFUL TRAITS OF SERIAL ENTREPRENEURS?

ANDREW CAGNETTACertified Business Intermediary

CEO, Transworld Business Advisors

Offices Nationwide954-772-1122

[email protected]

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

The newest advances in Laser Technology have revolutionized “Gold Standard” CO2 Laser Skin Resurfacing!! With another new technology Upgrade, we now offer “Multi-Pulse” a Deep CO2 Microablative laser that can safely and precisely remove outer layers of damaged skin and penetrate via millions of microthermal zones to reveal the underlying skin and create brand new skin which is softer, smoother and often dramatically, younger looking. It also stimulates the regeneration of healthy skin underneath (called “Laser Skin Renewal”), for a dramatically youthful and beautiful appearance!

This superlative skin resurfacing –rejuvenation procedure will reverse years of sun damage, wrinkles, scars and many other skin imperfections in just minutes. When compared to other forms of laser treatment, the new “Deep” CO2 micro ablative is the new “Gold Standard” for rapid and optimal enhancement in as littleas 1 treatment!

Our patients, ranging in age from 13 to 81 say that “The micro ablation removes sun damaged skin and makes it fresher looking; the second part called “bulk heating” improves collagen and elastic fi bers deep down that improve deep to moderate wrinkles”. It’s also great for removing all types of scars, safe anywhere on the face, body or hands and we are even using it on stretch marks. By fractioning the laser beam into microscopic beams, a specifi c portion of the skin is left unharmed, which is more conducive to healing. This fractional method enables cells

to begin healing within 24 hours and the comfortable downtime can be adjusted to fi t your busy schedule for 3 to 7 days – versus two months with the original CO2 laser.

“The new “Non-Surgical Laser Facelift or Eye Lift” can take years off a person’s appearance and give them better looking skin than someone many years younger,” noted Dr. Aguilera. Our other popular cosmetic procedures include Botox, Dysport and Dermal fi llers to replenish the volume of fat loss and bone loss on the face. Fillers take care of the volume and folds while the laser takes care of the skin’s texture, tone and elasticity. Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera is in fact, #1 in Sculptra Aesthetic Treatments in the entire USA!! No one treats more patients with Sculptra Aesthetic and is a Platinum level Top Injector and Physician Trainer for all the major injectables!

Dr. Aguilera has trained thousands of physicians and is extremely knowledgeable about the concepts and applications of skin laser and cosmetic injectable technologies. His unique ability to provide patients with a dramatically younger, more energetic look makes him an in-demand cosmetic dermatologist - and as holder of two board certifi cations and a Fellowship in Dermatology from the American Osteopathic College of Dermatology, an Asst. Professor of Dermatology for 5 Universities and the Chief Medical Director

of the Dermatology Residency program at NOVA University, Dr. Aguilera is an internationally known, premier expert in optimal, natural looking, beauty restoration, Cosmetic lasers and age reversing techniques. The world class, “Shino Bay Cosmetic Dermatology & Laser Institute” is certifi ed as a prestigious, “Laser Center of Excellence” and Physician Training Center for the United States and Latin America.

If you are ready to reverse the aging process, call either our Las Olas Blvd, Ft Lauderdale offi ce today at 954-765-3005, or our Palm Beach Island Location at: 561-832-1950 for a Complimentary Cosmetic Consultation.

For more information and additional before and after treatment photos, visit www.ShinoBayDerm.com.

TURN BACK THE CLOCK IN MINUTES!

“OFTEN A 1 TREATMENT WOW” ….THE DEEP, FRACTIONAL CO2

MICRO-ABLATIVE LASER

BeforeAfter CO2 Fractional Laser Treatment and Aesthetic Injectables

DR. SHINO BAY AGUILERA Dual Board Certified Dermatologic Surgeon Winner of the Prestigious, National Award 2011 and 2012“Best Non Surgical Facial Enhancement” Winner of the 2011 and 2012 Patient’s Choice Award Shino Bay Cosmetic Dermatology & Laser Institute

East Fort Lauderdale350 E. Las Olas Boulevard, Suites 110 + 120Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301 • (954) 765-3005Palm Beach Island 50 Cocoanut Row, Suite 110Palm Beach, FL 33480 • (561) 832-1950www.ShinoBayDerm.com

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

Page 56: 0713 estate

56 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Whether you run a retail shop, a law or accounting fi rm, or a medical practice, interviewing and selecting a marketing fi rm can be an intimidating process. If you’ve never done it before, it can be a daunting task.

You may call friends or post a status update to Facebook or LinkedIn seeking referrals. You could ask peers at your next networking breakfast.

But in the end, it comes down to you, your team – and the marketing fi rms you eventually contact.

How can you ensure a smooth selection process in fi nding a suitable marketing firm? Success can be condensed down to two words: Results and culture.

Results prove they can do the work. Culture shows you can work together. Each is as vital as the other. In fact, when small companies hire vendors or contractors, how the two get along is essential to long-term success.

When vetting a prospective marketing partner, look for a…

• PARTNER. Some marketers see themselves as vendors providing a service. You want a partner whose senior executives anticipate and are responsive to the needs of your organization. When you win, they win. When you come up short, they admit their role and commit to collaborating on improvement.

• PROVEN TRACK RECORD. Have the firms you’re interviewing

worked in your fi eld – and have the results to show for it? They’ll all talk the talk. Instead, ask for newspaper clips, social media links, print ads or other deliverables that prove – beyond their promises – that they’ve delivered. Tease out details about their network of connections in your industry. Do they know the people, the trends and the places they’ll need today to ensure your company’s success tomorrow?

• BROAD MARKETING ACUMEN – especially in social media. Being able to pitch a press release, build a tradeshow presence or create a display ad isn’t enough any longer. Today’s marketing campaigns require social media. This includes website development, blogging, social networking like a Facebook fan page, a robust LinkedIn presence or a Twitter feed – all seamlessly interwoven into a holistic marketing campaign.

• CULTURAL FIT. We’re not talking jeans versus suits here. These can co-exist – and the relationship still can fail. Culture is something you’ll likely feel – deeply – from the fi rst meeting. In a word, do the firms “Grok,” or intimately, profoundly or completely share your mindset or thinking? Truth be told, no one may. But look for the one that comes closest in this eye-to-eye point of view. It’s powerful – and irreplaceable.

• LIST OF REFERENCES. That a connection on LinkedIn or a trusted ally of 20 years made the referral isn’t enough. Ask each marketing fi rm for at least three to fi ve references from clients in businesses not much different from your own. Then, call those references. Ask about the agency’s strengths and weaknesses, its power and shortcomings. If the reference has nothing but high regards for the firm, you may be left wondering if you’re getting an honest assessment.

In the end, your selection of a marketing partner should be just the fi rst step in a productive, profi table and enduring relationship. It’s about creating The Right Fit.

Todd Templin is Executive Vice President of Boardroom Communications Inc., an integrated marketing and public relations agency based in Fort Lauderdale. He can be contacted at 954-370-8999 or [email protected].

THE RIGHT FIT: HOW TO SELECT YOUR NEXT MARKETING FIRM

TODD TEMPLINBoardroom Communications

1776 N Pine Island RoadSuite 320Fort Lauderdale, FL 33322954.370.8999www.BoardroomPR.com

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

For smile maker Dr. Yolanda Cintron, biological and cosmetic dentistry provides the opportunity for educating people and discovering what is possible in their lives and how we can achieve optimal levels of health.

“Invest in yourself; your Health is your Wealth,” says Dr. Cintron who focuses her biocompatible cosmetic-driven practice on helping patients achieve optimal

health and youth in a few visits. She incorporates innovative technologies, personalized treatment plans and an experienced, highly trained and dedicated team.

The newest trend is Anti-Aging and Biological (holistic) Dentistry. Physicians abroad are recommending all metals in their patients’ mouth be removed for optimal health. Not just anyone can remove these amalgam fi llings; there are many precautions that need to be taken when dealing with the removal.ANTI-AGING MEDICINE

Cardiologist, cancer specialists, endocrinologist and other medical experts are referring their patients to Dr. Cintron. These physicians understand how vital dental health is to the health of the whole body. Dr. Cintron is certifi ed by “The

IAOMT” to safely remove these potentially hazardous fi llings. The body naturally has an electric current, especially in the mouth because of its proximity to the brain. The upper teeth are less than 2 inches from the brain, which causes much concern. The electrical activity is dramatically increased due to the placement of the fi llings.

The combination of the elements in these fi llings releases both a positive and negative high electrical current and acts like small batteries in your mouth.

This has an impact in your immune and neurological system.DENTAL ARTISTRY

Rather than pursue a career as an artist, Dr. Cintron made the right decision to manifest her creative eye for beauty into smile rejuvenation. “The love and passion I have for people and their health led me to cosmetic dentistry,” she says. Offering patients over 25 years of experience, Dr. Cintron is a proud member of the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry, an organization that boasts rigorous membership criteria, representing her high standards and attention to detail. “There are certain things you do not learn in school. An artistic eye, for example, is a God-given gift. Seeing how a smile can look its best at any age comes naturally to me. It is fascinating to see the improvements cosmetic dentistry can have on health, energy, self-esteem, and appearance.” Since she is an international practice; out-of-town patients are escorted the moment they land in Fort Lauderdale, and are assigned a personal concierge, who ensures all of their needs are met including accommodations, transportation and more.

Once the consultation begins, Dr. Cintron assesses each patient’s dental needs with high-tech photography and digital X-rays. After the data has been acquired, the patient is taken to a private offi ce where their case is presented to them and the Doctor speaks one-on-one about their goals, concerns and options.

A GENTLE TOUCH OF A WOMAN

YOLANDA CINTRON DMDThe International Center

For Dental Excellence2021 East Commercial Blvd #208

Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308(954) 938-4599

www.DrCintron.com

BEFORE

AFTER

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

Page 57: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 57

Whether you run a retail shop, a law or accounting fi rm, or a medical practice, interviewing and selecting a marketing fi rm can be an intimidating process. If you’ve never done it before, it can be a daunting task.

You may call friends or post a status update to Facebook or LinkedIn seeking referrals. You could ask peers at your next networking breakfast.

But in the end, it comes down to you, your team – and the marketing fi rms you eventually contact.

How can you ensure a smooth selection process in fi nding a suitable marketing firm? Success can be condensed down to two words: Results and culture.

Results prove they can do the work. Culture shows you can work together. Each is as vital as the other. In fact, when small companies hire vendors or contractors, how the two get along is essential to long-term success.

When vetting a prospective marketing partner, look for a…

• PARTNER. Some marketers see themselves as vendors providing a service. You want a partner whose senior executives anticipate and are responsive to the needs of your organization. When you win, they win. When you come up short, they admit their role and commit to collaborating on improvement.

• PROVEN TRACK RECORD. Have the firms you’re interviewing

worked in your fi eld – and have the results to show for it? They’ll all talk the talk. Instead, ask for newspaper clips, social media links, print ads or other deliverables that prove – beyond their promises – that they’ve delivered. Tease out details about their network of connections in your industry. Do they know the people, the trends and the places they’ll need today to ensure your company’s success tomorrow?

• BROAD MARKETING ACUMEN – especially in social media. Being able to pitch a press release, build a tradeshow presence or create a display ad isn’t enough any longer. Today’s marketing campaigns require social media. This includes website development, blogging, social networking like a Facebook fan page, a robust LinkedIn presence or a Twitter feed – all seamlessly interwoven into a holistic marketing campaign.

• CULTURAL FIT. We’re not talking jeans versus suits here. These can co-exist – and the relationship still can fail. Culture is something you’ll likely feel – deeply – from the fi rst meeting. In a word, do the firms “Grok,” or intimately, profoundly or completely share your mindset or thinking? Truth be told, no one may. But look for the one that comes closest in this eye-to-eye point of view. It’s powerful – and irreplaceable.

• LIST OF REFERENCES. That a connection on LinkedIn or a trusted ally of 20 years made the referral isn’t enough. Ask each marketing fi rm for at least three to fi ve references from clients in businesses not much different from your own. Then, call those references. Ask about the agency’s strengths and weaknesses, its power and shortcomings. If the reference has nothing but high regards for the firm, you may be left wondering if you’re getting an honest assessment.

In the end, your selection of a marketing partner should be just the fi rst step in a productive, profi table and enduring relationship. It’s about creating The Right Fit.

Todd Templin is Executive Vice President of Boardroom Communications Inc., an integrated marketing and public relations agency based in Fort Lauderdale. He can be contacted at 954-370-8999 or [email protected].

THE RIGHT FIT: HOW TO SELECT YOUR NEXT MARKETING FIRM

TODD TEMPLINBoardroom Communications

1776 N Pine Island RoadSuite 320Fort Lauderdale, FL 33322954.370.8999www.BoardroomPR.com

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

For smile maker Dr. Yolanda Cintron, biological and cosmetic dentistry provides the opportunity for educating people and discovering what is possible in their lives and how we can achieve optimal levels of health.

“Invest in yourself; your Health is your Wealth,” says Dr. Cintron who focuses her biocompatible cosmetic-driven practice on helping patients achieve optimal

health and youth in a few visits. She incorporates innovative technologies, personalized treatment plans and an experienced, highly trained and dedicated team.

The newest trend is Anti-Aging and Biological (holistic) Dentistry. Physicians abroad are recommending all metals in their patients’ mouth be removed for optimal health. Not just anyone can remove these amalgam fi llings; there are many precautions that need to be taken when dealing with the removal.ANTI-AGING MEDICINE

Cardiologist, cancer specialists, endocrinologist and other medical experts are referring their patients to Dr. Cintron. These physicians understand how vital dental health is to the health of the whole body. Dr. Cintron is certifi ed by “The

IAOMT” to safely remove these potentially hazardous fi llings. The body naturally has an electric current, especially in the mouth because of its proximity to the brain. The upper teeth are less than 2 inches from the brain, which causes much concern. The electrical activity is dramatically increased due to the placement of the fi llings.

The combination of the elements in these fi llings releases both a positive and negative high electrical current and acts like small batteries in your mouth.

This has an impact in your immune and neurological system.DENTAL ARTISTRY

Rather than pursue a career as an artist, Dr. Cintron made the right decision to manifest her creative eye for beauty into smile rejuvenation. “The love and passion I have for people and their health led me to cosmetic dentistry,” she says. Offering patients over 25 years of experience, Dr. Cintron is a proud member of the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry, an organization that boasts rigorous membership criteria, representing her high standards and attention to detail. “There are certain things you do not learn in school. An artistic eye, for example, is a God-given gift. Seeing how a smile can look its best at any age comes naturally to me. It is fascinating to see the improvements cosmetic dentistry can have on health, energy, self-esteem, and appearance.” Since she is an international practice; out-of-town patients are escorted the moment they land in Fort Lauderdale, and are assigned a personal concierge, who ensures all of their needs are met including accommodations, transportation and more.

Once the consultation begins, Dr. Cintron assesses each patient’s dental needs with high-tech photography and digital X-rays. After the data has been acquired, the patient is taken to a private offi ce where their case is presented to them and the Doctor speaks one-on-one about their goals, concerns and options.

A GENTLE TOUCH OF A WOMAN

YOLANDA CINTRON DMDThe International Center

For Dental Excellence2021 East Commercial Blvd #208

Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308(954) 938-4599

www.DrCintron.com

BEFORE

AFTER

LIFESTYLE ADVICE

Page 58: 0713 estate

58 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Market 171850 SE 17th St #109Fort Lauderdale954-835-5507www.market17.net

You want ambiance? Artwork? Plating? Pshaw. Market 17 wants to open your eyes to a new dining experience. It’s called Dining in the Dark.

“You have dinner in complete darkness,” Executive Chef Lauren DeShields says. “Your senses heighten because of that, and it’s a really fun experience.”

Market 17 admits cribbing the idea from Ctaste, an Amsterdam restaurant that invented the concept that’s been replicated around the world. But Market 17 is the only Broward restaurant offering the experience on a regular basis, which means the staff has gotten really good at it.

There’s a dedicated “dark room” off the main dining room that seats two to 14. You greet your hostess in the light and discuss any food allergies and diet restrictions. But other than that, this is literally a blind tasting – you’ll be served a number of different tastes without knowing in advance what they are.

Your sever will help you “locate and stabilize” your food and drink, and DeShields creates new dishes nightly just for the dark room. The four to eight courses ($75 per person) are fi lled with texture, are easy to eat, and available with blind wine pairings ($25).

ARTISTIC MEALS DOWN SOUTHBY RANDI AILEEN PRESS, DINING DUCHESS

Sometimes, a good meal is worth a short drive. Since this is our annual arts issue, here are two of my favorite Miami restaurants that combine classic food with an artistic fl air…

Wynwood Kitchen & Bar2550 NW 2nd Avenue305-722-8959www.Wynwoodkitchenandbar.com

Wynwood Kitchen and Bar (WKB) is Miami’s global-Latino dining destination, featuring graffi ti art, “street art-inspired cocktails,” and live music. This is a big space – a warehouse environment with high ceilings covering 5,000 square feet, with 200 seats indoors and out. The interiors have an industrial feel, with dark oak tables surrounded by contemporary gun-metal chairs, comfortable taupe metallic leather banquettes in the dining room, and a leather-topped bar. An outdoor area features colorful chairs and tables surrounded by the murals of Wynwood Walls, a street art park featuring work by some of the world’s most esteemed graffi ti artists.

In May, WKB launched a series of chef/artist collaborative dinners, and the fi rst one teamed executive chef Miguel Aguilar with Miami graffi ti and street art scene artist Santiago Rubino. The weekly music series ranges from jazz quartets to singers/songwriters and DJs.

Barton G, The Restaurant 1427 West AvenueMiami Beachwww.bartongtherestaurant.com

Barton G. Weiss is Miami’s best-known events-and-culinary creator. His fans adore the creativity, his detractors loathe his excesses. But no one can deny his appeal. At his Miami restaurant – he has another in Los Angeles – your rare tuna might come to your table with a samurai sword stuck to a wooden slab. Your cocktail might have plumes of liquid nitrogen pouring over the edges. Your steak might be served with a 3-foot-long fork.

Once you step inside “The Restaurant,” you’re in a lush tropical garden for al fresco dining. The interior cherry and zebra woods. The bar is made of onyx. But this isn’t shtick. The food tastes sublime, even if appearances can be cheerfully over the top. Don’t believe me? Try the “Big Top Cotton Candy” for dessert.

give off a Key West vibe. His favorite and prettiest dish is the grilled duck breast with red sauerkraut and apples alongside a goat cheese puree ($26).

And his favorite painting? An abstract piece of a jazz musician playing a bugle, priced at $3,000.

Grateful Palate Restaurant and Wine Bar817 SE 17th Street Fort Lauderdale954-467-1998 thegratefulpalate.net

Sometimes, art is on the inside. The Grateful Palate is on the end of a small shopping center – next door to a Subway, which is itself next door to a Dough Boys Pizzeria. The clean but nondescript sign on the outside doesn’t signal what’s past the front door: a 55-seat contemporary lounge style dining room with a wine cellar and an open kitchen.

That’s because The Gourmet Palate got its start two decades ago as an upscale grocery store specializing in yacht provisions. In 2009, new owners gutted the place and added a living room-like area with couches and coffee tables. Other artsy touches: a decorative colored glass partition, a few granite-top tables, and a row of barstools facing the chef in the open kitchen.

And when it comes to serving up artistic dishes, executive chef Hector Lopez favors the braised lamb shank ($29) or pan seared diver scallops ($30).

“We treat every guest as a VIP,” he says. “If there’s a little grain of pepper on the plate, it won’t go out. People eat with their eyes fi rst. If it doesn’t look good people won’t want to eat it.”

Fine dining is like fi ne art – you get what you pay for, and imitations are obvious. Broward County has many excellent restaurants serving sophisticated meals in stunning settings, so it’s impossible to list them all. But here are three of our favorites…

Mojo4140 N Federal HighwayFort Lauderdale954-568-4443www.facebook.com/mojofl

Mojo’s decor is island-café-meets-modern-art-gallery, with each wall decked in fl oor-to-ceiling paintings on sale for $500 to $8,000. The artist? He’s also the executive chef and owner, Dominick Falcoine.

The self-taught artist’s Modern American menu is just as artistic with Italian and Asian fl air.

“I love to cook, and I love to paint,” Falcoine says. “The concept was the art of food and the paintings. It’s just something I like to do.”

He also likes striped booths and turquoise and orange accents that

BY REGINA KAZA

DINING STYLE

Some local restaurants that focus on appearances – and one that doesn’t

LOOKS GOOD, TASTES GREAT

Page 59: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 59

Market 171850 SE 17th St #109Fort Lauderdale954-835-5507www.market17.net

You want ambiance? Artwork? Plating? Pshaw. Market 17 wants to open your eyes to a new dining experience. It’s called Dining in the Dark.

“You have dinner in complete darkness,” Executive Chef Lauren DeShields says. “Your senses heighten because of that, and it’s a really fun experience.”

Market 17 admits cribbing the idea from Ctaste, an Amsterdam restaurant that invented the concept that’s been replicated around the world. But Market 17 is the only Broward restaurant offering the experience on a regular basis, which means the staff has gotten really good at it.

There’s a dedicated “dark room” off the main dining room that seats two to 14. You greet your hostess in the light and discuss any food allergies and diet restrictions. But other than that, this is literally a blind tasting – you’ll be served a number of different tastes without knowing in advance what they are.

Your sever will help you “locate and stabilize” your food and drink, and DeShields creates new dishes nightly just for the dark room. The four to eight courses ($75 per person) are fi lled with texture, are easy to eat, and available with blind wine pairings ($25).

ARTISTIC MEALS DOWN SOUTHBY RANDI AILEEN PRESS, DINING DUCHESS

Sometimes, a good meal is worth a short drive. Since this is our annual arts issue, here are two of my favorite Miami restaurants that combine classic food with an artistic fl air…

Wynwood Kitchen & Bar2550 NW 2nd Avenue305-722-8959www.Wynwoodkitchenandbar.com

Wynwood Kitchen and Bar (WKB) is Miami’s global-Latino dining destination, featuring graffi ti art, “street art-inspired cocktails,” and live music. This is a big space – a warehouse environment with high ceilings covering 5,000 square feet, with 200 seats indoors and out. The interiors have an industrial feel, with dark oak tables surrounded by contemporary gun-metal chairs, comfortable taupe metallic leather banquettes in the dining room, and a leather-topped bar. An outdoor area features colorful chairs and tables surrounded by the murals of Wynwood Walls, a street art park featuring work by some of the world’s most esteemed graffi ti artists.

In May, WKB launched a series of chef/artist collaborative dinners, and the fi rst one teamed executive chef Miguel Aguilar with Miami graffi ti and street art scene artist Santiago Rubino. The weekly music series ranges from jazz quartets to singers/songwriters and DJs.

Barton G, The Restaurant 1427 West AvenueMiami Beachwww.bartongtherestaurant.com

Barton G. Weiss is Miami’s best-known events-and-culinary creator. His fans adore the creativity, his detractors loathe his excesses. But no one can deny his appeal. At his Miami restaurant – he has another in Los Angeles – your rare tuna might come to your table with a samurai sword stuck to a wooden slab. Your cocktail might have plumes of liquid nitrogen pouring over the edges. Your steak might be served with a 3-foot-long fork.

Once you step inside “The Restaurant,” you’re in a lush tropical garden for al fresco dining. The interior cherry and zebra woods. The bar is made of onyx. But this isn’t shtick. The food tastes sublime, even if appearances can be cheerfully over the top. Don’t believe me? Try the “Big Top Cotton Candy” for dessert.

give off a Key West vibe. His favorite and prettiest dish is the grilled duck breast with red sauerkraut and apples alongside a goat cheese puree ($26).

And his favorite painting? An abstract piece of a jazz musician playing a bugle, priced at $3,000.

Grateful Palate Restaurant and Wine Bar817 SE 17th Street Fort Lauderdale954-467-1998 thegratefulpalate.net

Sometimes, art is on the inside. The Grateful Palate is on the end of a small shopping center – next door to a Subway, which is itself next door to a Dough Boys Pizzeria. The clean but nondescript sign on the outside doesn’t signal what’s past the front door: a 55-seat contemporary lounge style dining room with a wine cellar and an open kitchen.

That’s because The Gourmet Palate got its start two decades ago as an upscale grocery store specializing in yacht provisions. In 2009, new owners gutted the place and added a living room-like area with couches and coffee tables. Other artsy touches: a decorative colored glass partition, a few granite-top tables, and a row of barstools facing the chef in the open kitchen.

And when it comes to serving up artistic dishes, executive chef Hector Lopez favors the braised lamb shank ($29) or pan seared diver scallops ($30).

“We treat every guest as a VIP,” he says. “If there’s a little grain of pepper on the plate, it won’t go out. People eat with their eyes fi rst. If it doesn’t look good people won’t want to eat it.”

Fine dining is like fi ne art – you get what you pay for, and imitations are obvious. Broward County has many excellent restaurants serving sophisticated meals in stunning settings, so it’s impossible to list them all. But here are three of our favorites…

Mojo4140 N Federal HighwayFort Lauderdale954-568-4443www.facebook.com/mojofl

Mojo’s decor is island-café-meets-modern-art-gallery, with each wall decked in fl oor-to-ceiling paintings on sale for $500 to $8,000. The artist? He’s also the executive chef and owner, Dominick Falcoine.

The self-taught artist’s Modern American menu is just as artistic with Italian and Asian fl air.

“I love to cook, and I love to paint,” Falcoine says. “The concept was the art of food and the paintings. It’s just something I like to do.”

He also likes striped booths and turquoise and orange accents that

BY REGINA KAZA

DINING STYLE

Some local restaurants that focus on appearances – and one that doesn’t

LOOKS GOOD, TASTES GREAT

Page 60: 0713 estate

60 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Page 61: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 61

Page 62: 0713 estate

62 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Rick & Rita Case Gwen & Howard Dvorkin with Maria Hunt

Gerry Litrento, Maria Hunt & Chad Bushell Kristi Klotz & Mike Linder

The American Heart Association celebrated its annual Broward Heart Ball on Saturday, May 4. The premier event drew hundreds of Broward’s medical, social, and philanthropic leaders at the Marriott Harbor Beach Resort & Spa and was able to raise $935,000 for the cause.

Sandra Mayer & Lesley LitrentoChristy Nelson & Jeff Berardelli

Jeffrey & Paula Levenson Erin Clampett, Romina Sifuentes, Jamie Shock & Sara Shake

Broward Heart Ball

SCENE ON SITE

Untitled-2 1 4/29/13 10:07 AM

Page 63: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 63

Rick & Rita Case Gwen & Howard Dvorkin with Maria Hunt

Gerry Litrento, Maria Hunt & Chad Bushell Kristi Klotz & Mike Linder

The American Heart Association celebrated its annual Broward Heart Ball on Saturday, May 4. The premier event drew hundreds of Broward’s medical, social, and philanthropic leaders at the Marriott Harbor Beach Resort & Spa and was able to raise $935,000 for the cause.

Sandra Mayer & Lesley LitrentoChristy Nelson & Jeff Berardelli

Jeffrey & Paula Levenson Erin Clampett, Romina Sifuentes, Jamie Shock & Sara Shake

Broward Heart Ball

SCENE ON SITE

Untitled-2 1 4/29/13 10:07 AM

Page 64: 0713 estate

64 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Babette Ferre & David Kubiliun Susie Bond, Melanie Geronemus Smit & Debbie Zelman

Williard and Tianna Shepard, Debbie Zelman, Dr. Livia Scheller and David Kubiliun Melissa Hoff Roth and Phillip Roth

Approximately 500 friends and supporters of Can’t Stomach Cancer: The Foundation of Debbie’s Dream joined Debbie Zelman at The Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa for the Fourth Annual Dream Makers Gala - Cirque Dreams on Saturday, April 20, to help raise awareness about stomach cancer.

Dwayne and Duree RossJerry Guttman & Andrew Guttman

Bettina & Jerome Hollo & Stacy Ostrau Lynn Kaplan, Alan Levy, Marla Bergmann & Gene & Marsha Levy

Dream Makers Gala

SCENE ON SITE

Page 65: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 65

Babette Ferre & David Kubiliun Susie Bond, Melanie Geronemus Smit & Debbie Zelman

Williard and Tianna Shepard, Debbie Zelman, Dr. Livia Scheller and David Kubiliun Melissa Hoff Roth and Phillip Roth

Approximately 500 friends and supporters of Can’t Stomach Cancer: The Foundation of Debbie’s Dream joined Debbie Zelman at The Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa for the Fourth Annual Dream Makers Gala - Cirque Dreams on Saturday, April 20, to help raise awareness about stomach cancer.

Dwayne and Duree RossJerry Guttman & Andrew Guttman

Bettina & Jerome Hollo & Stacy Ostrau Lynn Kaplan, Alan Levy, Marla Bergmann & Gene & Marsha Levy

Dream Makers Gala

SCENE ON SITE

Page 66: 0713 estate

66 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

360_058_ClubRed_ad_8.375x10.875_Layout 1 3/19/13 2:07 PM Page 1

Christy Hierholzer, Cathy Donnelly (Chairman) & Suzanne Hazelroth (Board)

Chip Bamond, Ronnie Oller,, DeAnn Hazey, Neolita Maharaj & Michael Fischler

Rick & Rita Case, St. Rep. Perry Thurston, Rep. Joe Gibbons, Mayor Jean Paul, Gov. Rick Scott & Carol Hattan Rick Case & Chip LaMarca

Governor Rick Scott made a special visit to the Rick & Rita Case Boys & Girls Club in June. The visit demonstrated the importance on the units in the community, and Gov. Scott touted the substantial economic benefi t of having these facilities for our youth in our community.

Sherifff Scott Israel & Ron BergeronRep. Joe Gibbons, Brian Quail & State Sen. Chris Smith

Giovanni Moss, Marciano LewisArthur E. Benjamin, Sheriff Scott Israel, Rep. Joe Gibbons, Brian Quail, Gov. Rick Scott, Marti & Wayne Huizenga with Rita & Rick Case

Governor Visits Boys & Girls Club in Davie

SCENE ON SITE

Page 67: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 67

360_058_ClubRed_ad_8.375x10.875_Layout 1 3/19/13 2:07 PM Page 1

Christy Hierholzer, Cathy Donnelly (Chairman) & Suzanne Hazelroth (Board)

Chip Bamond, Ronnie Oller,, DeAnn Hazey, Neolita Maharaj & Michael Fischler

Rick & Rita Case, St. Rep. Perry Thurston, Rep. Joe Gibbons, Mayor Jean Paul, Gov. Rick Scott & Carol Hattan Rick Case & Chip LaMarca

Governor Rick Scott made a special visit to the Rick & Rita Case Boys & Girls Club in June. The visit demonstrated the importance on the units in the community, and Gov. Scott touted the substantial economic benefi t of having these facilities for our youth in our community.

Sherifff Scott Israel & Ron BergeronRep. Joe Gibbons, Brian Quail & State Sen. Chris Smith

Giovanni Moss, Marciano LewisArthur E. Benjamin, Sheriff Scott Israel, Rep. Joe Gibbons, Brian Quail, Gov. Rick Scott, Marti & Wayne Huizenga with Rita & Rick Case

Governor Visits Boys & Girls Club in Davie

SCENE ON SITE

Page 68: 0713 estate

68 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Refresh for your Reunion

4161 NW 5th Street, Suite 100, Plantation, FL 33317www.takeshape.info

954.585.3800

- Hair Transplantation by Individual Follicles - Breast augmentation- Breast lift- Breast reconstruction- Breast reduction- Pectoral implants- Liposuction- Tummy tuck- Labiaplasty

- Body contouring- Laser hair removal- Fat grafting with

concentrated stem cells- Rhinoplasty- Ear pinning- Brow lift- Brazilian Butt Lift

- Botox, Sculptra, Radiesse, Juvederm and Belotero,

Dysport, Restylane injectables

- Neck lift- Face lift- Eyelid lift- Laser skin resurfacing- Chemical Peels- Microdermabrasion

Russell F. Sassani, M.D. George Dreszer, M.D.,M.S. Christopher J. Low, M.D.

Scan to See Before & After Images

Printing Sponsor Top Drawer Media Solutions Craig & Denell Herman

Hein & Monica Van Gorp along with Keiko & Alejandro Mendoza

Broadway Performers The Garden State Guys: J.D. Daw, Adair Watkins, Matt Faucher & Kasey Marino with Joanne Dauer & Kira Turchin

Kira & Jason Turchin

Jami & Jon GensonAliza & Leif Novie

CJ & Sarah Nickoson with Teri & Jim LewisLee & Alyssa Quittner, Caring Sponsors Dr. Lisa Slingbaum & Dr. Joel Slingbaum with Marci Osheroff Huffman & Jeff Huffman

Cars, Cocktails, Cuisine Caring CelebrationBetty Cares, Inc. and the law offi ces of Jason Turchin hosted the third Annual Cars, Cocktails, Cuisine Caring Celebration at the Dauer Museum of Classic Cars on May 4. The event featured Broadway performers and raised money to support family members of children in Miami Children’s Hospital. Save the date for next year’s event: March 1, 2014!

photos courtesy of Sam B Photography

SCENE ON SITE

Page 69: 0713 estate

Refresh for your Reunion

4161 NW 5th Street, Suite 100, Plantation, FL 33317www.takeshape.info

954.585.3800

- Hair Transplantation by Individual Follicles - Breast augmentation- Breast lift- Breast reconstruction- Breast reduction- Pectoral implants- Liposuction- Tummy tuck- Labiaplasty

- Body contouring- Laser hair removal- Fat grafting with

concentrated stem cells- Rhinoplasty- Ear pinning- Brow lift- Brazilian Butt Lift

- Botox, Sculptra, Radiesse, Juvederm and Belotero,

Dysport, Restylane injectables

- Neck lift- Face lift- Eyelid lift- Laser skin resurfacing- Chemical Peels- Microdermabrasion

Russell F. Sassani, M.D. George Dreszer, M.D.,M.S. Christopher J. Low, M.D.

Scan to See Before & After Images

Printing Sponsor Top Drawer Media Solutions Craig & Denell Herman

Hein & Monica Van Gorp along with Keiko & Alejandro Mendoza

Broadway Performers The Garden State Guys: J.D. Daw, Adair Watkins, Matt Faucher & Kasey Marino with Joanne Dauer & Kira Turchin

Kira & Jason Turchin

Jami & Jon GensonAliza & Leif Novie

CJ & Sarah Nickoson with Teri & Jim LewisLee & Alyssa Quittner, Caring Sponsors Dr. Lisa Slingbaum & Dr. Joel Slingbaum with Marci Osheroff Huffman & Jeff Huffman

Cars, Cocktails, Cuisine Caring CelebrationBetty Cares, Inc. and the law offi ces of Jason Turchin hosted the third Annual Cars, Cocktails, Cuisine Caring Celebration at the Dauer Museum of Classic Cars on May 4. The event featured Broadway performers and raised money to support family members of children in Miami Children’s Hospital. Save the date for next year’s event: March 1, 2014!

photos courtesy of Sam B Photography

SCENE ON SITE

Page 70: 0713 estate

70 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

Gabriella Arenas, Alex Arenas & Silvana Pugliese

Lauren Sparrow, Denyse Hostig, Kathy Sherbal, Lori Bender, Ellen Davis & Betsy Fletcher

Stacey Udine, Jill Horowitz & Brooke Wachsman

Dr. Shino Aguilera & Silvia Bessolo

Lee Nelson, Paige Piland & Vanessa Seiler

Lee Nelson & Dawn Rapano

Jim Norton, Sally Nicholas & John Hollywood Abresch

Maxine and Barry Spiegel with Bonnie Judson

Dr Shino Bay Aguilera’s Fountain of YouthDr. Shino Bay Aguilera brought the “Fountain of Youth to Parkland” as he spoke about the latest award-winning cosmetic solutions available. All proceeds from the event benefi ted Not My Daughter, Find a Cure Now to help end breast cancer.

SCENE ON SITE

Page 71: 0713 estate

Gabriella Arenas, Alex Arenas & Silvana Pugliese

Lauren Sparrow, Denyse Hostig, Kathy Sherbal, Lori Bender, Ellen Davis & Betsy Fletcher

Stacey Udine, Jill Horowitz & Brooke Wachsman

Dr. Shino Aguilera & Silvia Bessolo

Lee Nelson, Paige Piland & Vanessa Seiler

Lee Nelson & Dawn Rapano

Jim Norton, Sally Nicholas & John Hollywood Abresch

Maxine and Barry Spiegel with Bonnie Judson

Dr Shino Bay Aguilera’s Fountain of YouthDr. Shino Bay Aguilera brought the “Fountain of Youth to Parkland” as he spoke about the latest award-winning cosmetic solutions available. All proceeds from the event benefi ted Not My Daughter, Find a Cure Now to help end breast cancer.

SCENE ON SITE

Page 72: 0713 estate

72 JULY 2013 | LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM

AD

LAST LOOK

Levinsons Jewelers was busy in May, and not just in the store. On Friday, May 17, Mark and Robin Levinson hosted a dinner party to honor Swiss watchmaker Franck Muller, who was in South Florida to unveil his new collections. Pictured are local sports stars Cliff Floyd and Sam Madison....

Leia Bosco and Carrie Allgaier co-chaired Moonlight & Martinis, which featured a “Cocktail Showdown” at the W Fort Lauderdale on May 17. The event, sponsored by PetSet, raised more than $9,000 was raised to help the Humane Society of Broward County...

Brandi Corbin, Sam Stull, Melissa DeAssis, and Michael Puck

The next day, Muller did the actual unveiling with watch enthusiast Dan Marino in attendance. L-R: Mark and Rob Levinson, Marino, Muller

Feel Good About Yourself Again

MelanieBEFORE & AFTER

GAIN CONFIDENCE WITH WEIGHT-LOSS SURGERY

At 90 pounds overweight, Melanie didn’t realize she was using food to relieve stress. The Memorial Weight-Loss Surgery Program helped her find new ways to cope—and helped her lose 12 sizes.

When Melanie was researching laparoscopic band surgery (LAP-BAND®), she explored her options and kept coming back to Dr. Brett Cohen and the Memorial Weight-Loss Surgery Program.

Memorial Regional Hospital’s distinction as a Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence helped confirm her decision—since programs must meet high standards of quality, safety and surgical expertise to earn this seal.

After the minimally invasive, outpatient procedure, Melanie looks and feels better than ever.

“My in-laws, at Thanksgiving this year, told me this is the best I’ve ever looked,” she says. “It felt really good to hear that.”

You can feel good about yourself again, too. Learn more at a free seminar. Visit MHS.net/WeightLoss or call 954-265-5889.

“If you’ve tried and tried to lose weight with no success, weight-loss surgery can help you achieve long-term results. We can help you have the life you deserve.”

– Brett Cohen, MD, FACSMedical Director of Bariatric SurgeryMemorial Regional Hospital

MEMORIAL REGIONAL HOSPITAL | MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PEMBROKE

Scan to view video

6/13

Page 73: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 73

AD

LAST LOOK

Levinsons Jewelers was busy in May, and not just in the store. On Friday, May 17, Mark and Robin Levinson hosted a dinner party to honor Swiss watchmaker Franck Muller, who was in South Florida to unveil his new collections. Pic-tured are local sports stars Cliff Floyd and Sam Madison....

Leia Bosco and Carrie Allgaier co-chaired Moonlight & Martinis, which featured a “Cock-tail Showdown” at the W Fort Lauderdale on May 17. The event, sponsored by PetSet, raised more than $9,000 was raised to help the Humane Society of Broward County...

Brandi Corbin, Sam Stull, Melissa DeAssis, and Michael Puck

The next day, Muller did the actual unveiling with watch enthusiast Dan Marino in attendance. L-R: Mark and Rob Levinson, Marino, Muller

Feel Good About Yourself Again

MelanieBEFORE & AFTER

GAIN CONFIDENCE WITH WEIGHT-LOSS SURGERY

At 90 pounds overweight, Melanie didn’t realize she was using food to relieve stress. The Memorial Weight-Loss Surgery Program helped her find new ways to cope—and helped her lose 12 sizes.

When Melanie was researching laparoscopic band surgery (LAP-BAND®), she explored her options and kept coming back to Dr. Brett Cohen and the Memorial Weight-Loss Surgery Program.

Memorial Regional Hospital’s distinction as a Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence helped confirm her decision—since programs must meet high standards of quality, safety and surgical expertise to earn this seal.

After the minimally invasive, outpatient procedure, Melanie looks and feels better than ever.

“My in-laws, at Thanksgiving this year, told me this is the best I’ve ever looked,” she says. “It felt really good to hear that.”

You can feel good about yourself again, too. Learn more at a free seminar. Visit MHS.net/WeightLoss or call 954-265-5889.

“If you’ve tried and tried to lose weight with no success, weight-loss surgery can help you achieve long-term results. We can help you have the life you deserve.”

– Brett Cohen, MD, FACSMedical Director of Bariatric SurgeryMemorial Regional Hospital

MEMORIAL REGIONAL HOSPITAL | MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PEMBROKE

Scan to view video

6/13

Page 74: 0713 estate

74 JULY 2013

Even a casual culture-seeker in Broward County will stumble upon massive

edifi ces like the Broward Center and the Museum of Art. But here are some best-kept cultural secrets you can check out, often for free or cheap…

COOL CULTURE FEW LOCALS KNOW ABOUT

WEIRDCHEAPSMART & FUN

CLOSER

STARRY NIGHTSMarkham Park in Sunrise is no secret. The

sprawling county park has 10 miles of bike trails, 88 campground hookups, and even a 3.5-acre dog park (affectionally known as Barkham Park). But few folks know about the Fox Observatory. It features, and we’re quoting from the South Florida Amateur Astronomers Association, which runs the observatory: “A pair of 16-inch and 14-inch Schmidt-Cassegrains, a Brandon refractor, three Dobson refl ectors, and a 12-inch Newtonian.” If you don’t know what any of that means, show up any Saturday night at dusk for a free viewing through those telescopes and an astronomy lesson that’s better than any you’ll fi nd in a book or video. www.sfaaa.com

If you prefer to peruse the heavens without peering though a telescope, go to Broward College in Davie. In the middle of campus is the Buehler Planetarium, which boasts that its Zeiss M 1015 projector and its modern digital audiovisual equipment makes it “one of the most advanced planetariums in South Florida.” For $6, you can see amazing shows like “Cosmic Colors,” which dramatically shows you the night sky is more than black and white. www.iloveplanets.com

WARS AND CARSIt’s not a name that rolls off the tongue:

The Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale Museum. But it’s the only military museum in the county, and it features an anti-aircraft gun, bombs, uniforms, and models of ships and planes. Check out the “Broward Goes to War” exhibit through the month of August. www.nasfl museum.com

Speaking of WWII, the Fort Lauderdale Antique Car Museum features Packards from before the Big One. We’re talking a 1920 limo, a 1909 speedster, and a 1930 fi re engine. Why Packard? Because as the museum staff will tell you, they’re “some of the fi nest automobiles in the world,” although they haven’t been made since 1958. Never heard of Packard? You should see one up close. www.antiquecarmuseum.org

photos by michelle friswell

Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera - A world-renowned Cosmetic Dermatologist, Dermatologic Surgeon and #1 in volume in Sculptra® Aesthetic treatments in the entire United States, leads an outstanding team in the latest, most effective techniques and offers over 50 of the latest premier, constantly-upgraded, laser and cosmetic technologies for your optimal results. He is dual-board certified with a fellowship in Dermatology from the American College of Osteopathic Dermatology and has over 16 years of on-going advanced training in Cosmetic Lasers and Aesthetic Medicine. He is a master artist with cosmetic fillers (achieving your most natural looking enhancement)

F i v e - S t a r e x p e r t i S e . F i v e - S t a r r e S u l t S .

CALL TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION

W i n n e r o f t h e p r e s t i g i o u s n at i o n a l aW a r d

“BEST Non-Surgical Facial Enhancement” in 2011 and 2012

“Patients Choice Award” in 2011 and 2012

W i n n e r o f t h e

no one treats More pat ients With sCulptra aesthet iC

We are the #1 volume office for Sculptra Aesthetic ® treatments in the entire United States!

WE ARE THE #1 IN vOLUME OffICE fOR SCULPTRA® AESTHETIC TREATMENTS IN THE ENTIRE UNITED STATES !WE ARE THE #1 IN vOLUME OffICE fOR SCULPTRA® AESTHETIC TREATMENTS IN THE ENTIRE UNITED STATES !

AWARD-WINNING RESULTS AT SHINO BAY!

OUR PATIENT BEfORE

TREATMENT

and a leading-edge researcher in lasers, as well as the most advanced age- reversing and cosmetic enhancing therapies. Dr. Aguilera is also the top requested keynote speaker and trainer for Sculptra

® Aesthetic

and for one of the world’s leading laser manufacturers. With years of award-winning, world-class cosmetic enhancements, Dr. Aguilera and his staff form an uncompromising and talented team that can show you the exciting future of ageless transformations! Shino Bay offers a myriad of optimally effective solutions, from non-invasive, minimally-invasive to surgical procedures, that will inspire confidence in your decisions, ...and in yourself.

The Future of Ageless Transformations

F o r m o r e i n F o r m a t i o n a n d a d d i t i o n a l B e F o r e & a F t e r p h o t o S v i S i t :

www.ShinoBayDerm.com

Las OLas BLvd., Ft. LauderdaLe 954.765.3005

350 EAST LAS OLAS BLVD. • SUITE 110 + 120 FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA

PaLM BeaCH I s LaNd

561.832.1950 50 COCOANUT ROW • SUITE 120

PALM BEACH ISLAND, FLORIDA

or

50% Off!

NeoGraft Hair Transplants

f O R A L I M I T E D T I M E

Painless, Scarless & Undetectable

OUR PLASTIC SURGEON HAS RECENTLY WON THE PRESTIGIOUS NATIONAL AWARdS:

“BEST Surgical, Facial Enhancement”

“BEST Surgical, Body Contouring”

AfTER OUR NATURAL-LOOKINGCOSMETICENHANCEMENTS

Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera Board Certified Dermatologic Surgeon

Page 75: 0713 estate

LIFESTYLEMAGAZINEGROUP.COM | JULY 2013 75

Even a casual culture-seeker in Broward County will stumble upon massive

edifi ces like the Broward Center and the Museum of Art. But here are some best-kept cultural secrets you can check out, often for free or cheap…

COOL CULTURE FEW LOCALS KNOW ABOUT

WEIRDCHEAPSMART & FUN

CLOSER

STARRY NIGHTSMarkham Park in Sunrise is no secret. The

sprawling county park has 10 miles of bike trails, 88 campground hookups, and even a 3.5-acre dog park (affectionally known as Barkham Park). But few folks know about the Fox Observatory. It features, and we’re quoting from the South Florida Amateur Astronomers Association, which runs the observatory: “A pair of 16-inch and 14-inch Schmidt-Casseg-rains, a Brandon refractor, three Dobson re-fl ectors, and a 12-inch Newtonian.” If you don’t know what any of that means, show up any Sat-urday night at dusk for a free viewing through those telescopes and an astronomy lesson that’s better than any you’ll fi nd in a book or video. www.sfaaa.com

If you prefer to peruse the heavens without peering though a telescope, go to Broward Col-lege in Davie. In the middle of campus is the Buehler Planetarium, which boasts that its Zeiss M 1015 projector and its modern digital audiovisual equipment makes it “one of the most advanced planetariums in South Florida.” For $6, you can see amazing shows like “Cos-mic Colors,” which dramatically shows you the night sky is more than black and white. www.iloveplanets.com

WARS AND CARSIt’s not a name that rolls off the tongue:

The Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale Museum. But it’s the only military museum in the county, and it features an anti-aircraft gun, bombs, uniforms, and models of ships and planes. Check out the “Broward Goes to War” exhibit through the month of August. www.nas-fl museum.com

Speaking of WWII, the Fort Lauderdale Antique Car Museum features Packards from before the Big One. We’re talking a 1920 limo, a 1909 speedster, and a 1930 fi re engine. Why Packard? Because as the museum staff will tell you, they’re “some of the fi nest automobiles in the world,” although they haven’t been made snce 1958. Never heard of Packard? You should see one up close. www.antiquecarmuseum.org

photos by michelle friswell

Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera - A world-renowned Cosmetic Dermatologist, Dermatologic Surgeon and #1 in volume in Sculptra® Aesthetic treatments in the entire United States, leads an outstanding team in the latest, most effective techniques and offers over 50 of the latest premier, constantly-upgraded, laser and cosmetic technologies for your optimal results. He is dual-board certified with a fellowship in Dermatology from the American College of Osteopathic Dermatology and has over 16 years of on-going advanced training in Cosmetic Lasers and Aesthetic Medicine. He is a master artist with cosmetic fillers (achieving your most natural looking enhancement)

F i v e - S t a r e x p e r t i S e . F i v e - S t a r r e S u l t S .

CALL TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION

W i n n e r o f t h e p r e s t i g i o u s n at i o n a l aW a r d

“BEST Non-Surgical Facial Enhancement” in 2011 and 2012

“Patients Choice Award” in 2011 and 2012

W i n n e r o f t h e

no one treats More pat ients With sCulptra aesthet iC

We are the #1 volume office for Sculptra Aesthetic ® treatments in the entire United States!

WE ARE THE #1 IN vOLUME OffICE fOR SCULPTRA® AESTHETIC TREATMENTS IN THE ENTIRE UNITED STATES !WE ARE THE #1 IN vOLUME OffICE fOR SCULPTRA® AESTHETIC TREATMENTS IN THE ENTIRE UNITED STATES !

AWARD-WINNING RESULTS AT SHINO BAY!

OUR PATIENT BEfORE

TREATMENT

and a leading-edge researcher in lasers, as well as the most advanced age- reversing and cosmetic enhancing therapies. Dr. Aguilera is also the top requested keynote speaker and trainer for Sculptra

® Aesthetic

and for one of the world’s leading laser manufacturers. With years of award-winning, world-class cosmetic enhancements, Dr. Aguilera and his staff form an uncompromising and talented team that can show you the exciting future of ageless transformations! Shino Bay offers a myriad of optimally effective solutions, from non-invasive, minimally-invasive to surgical procedures, that will inspire confidence in your decisions, ...and in yourself.

The Future of Ageless Transformations

F o r m o r e i n F o r m a t i o n a n d a d d i t i o n a l B e F o r e & a F t e r p h o t o S v i S i t :

www.ShinoBayDerm.com

Las OLas BLvd., Ft. LauderdaLe 954.765.3005

350 EAST LAS OLAS BLVD. • SUITE 110 + 120 FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA

PaLM BeaCH I s LaNd

561.832.1950 50 COCOANUT ROW • SUITE 120

PALM BEACH ISLAND, FLORIDA

or

50% Off!

NeoGraft Hair Transplants

f O R A L I M I T E D T I M E

Painless, Scarless & Undetectable

OUR PLASTIC SURGEON HAS RECENTLY WON THE PRESTIGIOUS NATIONAL AWARdS:

“BEST Surgical, Facial Enhancement”

“BEST Surgical, Body Contouring”

AfTER OUR NATURAL-LOOKINGCOSMETICENHANCEMENTS

Dr. Shino Bay Aguilera Board Certified Dermatologic Surgeon

Page 76: 0713 estate

A handcrafted aluminum fist, in a hand-sewn leather glove.

All New 2013 GL-Class

14199 Pines Boulevard,Pembroke Pines, FL

(954) 644-5035www.MBPines.com

The all-new 2013 GL-Class has beautifully appointed 7-passenger cabin and an array of thoughtful safety features. Test drive one today at Mercedes-Benz of Pembroke Pines.

ANSF265856.indd 1 12/13/12 5:47 PM