By Scott Maxwell |
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Follow the Money in DyermaniaPublished April 24, 2005Lawyers have long said that prosecutors hold so much influence over grand juries that they could indict a ham sandwich. Personally, I think it's disrespectful for anyone, even legal experts, to compare our mayor to pork products. Still, there are some interesting leftovers from last week's exoneration and return to office of Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer:
Bravo for Cirque Central Florida's premier acrobats celebrated a 3,000th performance Saturday, the same night the show was featured on the Bravo network. The audience for the 9 p.m. show of Cirque du Soleil's La Nouba at Downtown Disney roared with appreciation of the milestone occasion. Of particular merit were trampoline artist Alexandre Daniltchenko and musician Benoit Glazer, who performed in every one of the 3,000 shows. For the numerists among you, show producers have calculated that, in doing 3,000 shows, performers have bounced on trampolines more than 1.2 million times -- and used more than 4,800 rolls of white tape in the physical therapy room. A repeat of the televised tribute to the show airs tonight at 9 on Bravo. The Party Seen Orlando Style, one of the region's newest magazines, staged a party for the young people who look as chic and glossy as its publication. Pro golfer Scott Hoch and wife, Sally, attorney Mark NeJame and wife, Josie, and WKMG-Channel 6 investigative reporter Wendy Saltzman were among the few hundred people who crowded downtown Orlando's Rhythm and Flow on Thursday night. The party, put on by publisher Sven Bode, doubled as a fund-raiser for Backstreet Boy Howie Dorough's Lupus Foundation. With Dorough on tour with the boys, his mother and sister represented the family. Stapp still feels slap from suit Ex-Creed rocker Scott Stapp may have moved out of his Orange County home, but he still has a lawsuit against him in the courthouse here -- one in which Stapp is accused of not paying for $60,000 worth of treatment he received from a California doctor. The lawsuit, filed by former business partner Jeffrey Cameron, says that Cameron paid Dr. David Kipper $60,000 "for certain medical treatments received by the defendant." It goes on to say that Stapp promised to reimburse Cameron, but never did. Kipper, who has treated the likes of Ozzy Osbourne, was the subject of an investigative piece by the Los Angeles Times in 1998 that highlighted Kipper's unorthodox practice of offering a detoxification program in a posh hotel for anywhere from $10,000 to $19,000 a week. Cameron's Orlando attorney would not comment on the suit. Neither would a spokesman for Stapp, who moved to South Florida. But in an interview last year, when MTV asked him about a concert where attendees sued because they said it was so bad, Stapp said: "I've heard the rumors that I was whacked out on drugs, and I can tell you what I was whacked out on . . . prednisone," an anti-inflammatory prescription drug. Keeping his chin up -- and eyes open WESH-Channel 2 meteorologist Mike O'Lenick is obviously trying to remain optimistic about the job search that station execs forced on him by not renewing his contract. During an early-morning segment with Al Roker from the Today show, Roker looked right into the camera and said: "Mike O'Lenick is the man!" Who cared if the cameras were rolling? O'Lenick (who is hoping to snag a new job before his contract expires this fall) quickly came back with: "Thanks, Al. Can I use you as a reference?"
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