The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - #BecauseMiami: Grand Opening...Grand Closing
Episode Date: May 31, 2024Restaurants have been closing en masse across the nation...but especially in Miami. Billy Corben welcomes Felix Bendersky, a restaurant realtor, to explain why. Latoya Ratlieff attended a peaceful pro...test in Fort Lauderdale, one of the many that this nation witnessed in 2020. A cop, who said protesters were jumping on her car, called in for backup. That's when Latoya was shot in the face with a rubber bullet, fracturing her eye socket. She joins the show to update us on what has happened since then. Plus, the Wheel of Despair Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I want to know why so many of your favorite Miami restaurants are closing.
As a broker who specializes in restaurants, usually I get five calls a day from restaurant
owners who want to sell.
But now I've been getting 15 to 20 calls a day.
If I'm getting those calls, it's never good.
So let me break it down for you.
Restaurants that should have closed the last summer stayed open,
over leveraging themselves and waiting for the busy season.
One thing we learned was the busy season never came this year.
Even during Art Basel,
which should be one of the best weeks of the year for restaurants to make money
was the worst performing Art Basel in five years.
That is Felix Bendersky, founder of F&B Hospitality Brokerage. Good hair.
Good hair.
Thank you.
Oh wait, him or me?
Above you.
Your hair looks good.
Thank you.
That is a now viral video from January of this year in which Felix, who is a restaurant realtor,
Roy is the best way to describe him. He basically brokers deals between landlords, property owners,
and restaurateurs who want to open in the South Florida area. And so he predicted in January, January 15th to be precise
in this now viral video,
that there was a restaurant Armageddon inevitable in 2024
in which quote, everyone is gonna close
at exactly the same time in the next few months.
And I'm gonna tell you, I saw this video,
I shared it on about January 15th,
because it honestly just rang true to me.
What I always say about Miami, Miami is the place
where truth is hate and lies are love.
Where we don't have reality, we have realty.
And this to me just sort of embodied that.
This guy was the only truth teller, in my opinion,
in Miami real estate.
And I shared it, the thing exploded,
and Felix started getting a lot of shit for it.
And not just shit for it from outside,
shit from inside, meaning his own clients.
This is not a guy that benefits from telling the truth
about the Miami restaurant industry
or the Miami real estate.
And Felix is joining us now.
Felix, here we are several months out.
I wanna talk a little bit about the shit that you got for this video and
Were you right you predicted a Miami restaurant Armageddon within a few months and it has been a few months
So what was the fallout from your video and where are we at now?
Fallout hasn't stopped. I think I took your place as the most hated person in Miami, based
in my field, in my industry. I don't think that I painted a very nice narrative for everybody
trying to paint a beautiful picture of Miami and the money coming in, but I don't think
I was off either. I think that me and a couple of people in my office
were actually just going through the numbers
and we counted 145 places that either have closed
or are in the middle of closing
since we shot that video January 15th.
At the risk of stating the obvious,
this is incredibly important and consequential, Roy,
because Miami is a hospitality town.
We run on tourism.
I mean, there's a lot of people in this economy who live not just paycheck to
paycheck, but tip jar to tip jar who leave restaurants and nightclubs and,
and, you know, food and beverage establishments and bars with the money
from their shift that they need to live right now to pay their rent, to feed and
clothe and house their families in an increasingly outrageously
unaffordable market down here. Felix though in March of 2021
you were singing a different tune. You told the Daily Mail
that business is booming in Miami with restauranteurs
fleeing New York during the shutdowns and you were getting
as many as 150 groups reaching out to you in just a matter of a couple months
looking for space flash forward three years restaurant Armageddon
what happened.
So I don't think I think people are very confused when I use the
words restaurant Armageddon if anything I don't think that the
number has stopped I think the numbers actually gone up we
actually get way more calls now. The problem is that the demand outweighs
the inventory tremendously.
So for everybody closing,
you got 10 people ready to take their space
because everybody knows that to build in Miami
and dealing with the permitting,
it's just way easier and more likelihood of you opening
if you took a second generation space. As opposed to having to build something out from scratch. Why is that? Talk a little bit about
the inability of entrepreneurs to come in and I mean they're spending a ton of money it seems
but not really able to get an operation going successfully after that.
So you got to love our city. I think the one of the major things that changed was in 2019
Department of environmental Durham our favorite department in Miami actually had passed a new grease trap code because according to
Them we're all going to be underwater in the next 20 30 years
So any restaurant opening after 2019 either needed to get their grease trap replaced or updated.
And it's not a very big department and the permitting on that it's probably
faster to build a skyscraper than to get a permit on that.
So I want to understand because if there's all this demand, there doesn't
seem to be a lot of likelihood for success.
This is already incredibly competitive industry,
the success rate in the FNB businesses was already even in
the boom times pretty low. A lot of these places are going to,
you know, to borrow a term grand opening grand closing, right?
These these places are going to come in and they're going to
fail like a lot of the places before them. So what is going
wrong? What is happening in the market right now where there's just restaurants are just failing?
So I think there's several things to that.
I think that number one, certain areas are over cannibalizing themselves.
You know, how many 10,000 square foot restaurants can we have in a five block radius where your
average price is going to be, you know, $500 a couple or $1,000 a couple.
There's not enough people or lack of as many people
that used to come in the last couple of years
as there is now.
A lot of things that people don't take into consideration
is that Miami is still not a 12 month a year city.
As much as we all want it to be, it's just not.
The third thing is a lot of the out-of-towners that come in,
they have the, my baby is the prettiest baby mentality.
You've never tried my pizza.
You've never tried my pasta.
And I think that a lot of developers and landlords
kind of cater to their ego,
and that's where the problems start.
So what are some of the worst cities or municipalities in Miami-Dade County to open
an F&B spot, to open a restaurant for whatever reason, whether it's the, you know, corruption,
dysfunction, slow walking, the process, too many steps in the process? I think it's literally all of Miami-Dade.
I think it's Miami and Miami Beach mostly.
That's really the, you know, city of Coral Gables
and you know, city of Aventura, city of Sunny Isles,
they kind of have their own municipalities,
things work different.
But when it comes back to the Grease Trap
and what Miami has for the code, you still
have to wait the same exact time.
So you have restaurants signing leases thinking they're going to open in the next six months.
Two years later, they're still paying rent and they can't open.
So right out the gate, you know, the money that they had picked out for furniture, for
good purveyors, for marketing, for supplies. Now that's cut down. I mean, we know restaurants that there's one actually that I
could think of right now, Sunset Harbor, they put $1.7 million into their space, they're never going
to open. What? Yeah, they get the they do a deal with the landlord. The landlord gives them six months, a year and a half later, they're paying $25,000,
$30,000 a month in rent.
At a certain period of time, their investors are going to pull the cord, you know, because
they can't just keep dumping money into a project that they don't know when it's going
to open.
But then what are the landlords do?
They take the keys back gladly, They got a brand new built out space
and they'll charge $120, $125 a foot.
When you're coming off of these,
as you put it, the worst art battle
for restaurants in five years.
This amazing article from journalist Eric Barton
for Air Mail, Graydon Carter's post-vanity fair project.
The title is The New Swampland, says since 2020,
branches of restaurants from New York, Los Angeles,
London, Mexico City, and elsewhere have opened in Miami,
but the bubble may be ready to pop.
The headline, The New Swampland, of course,
kind of compares restaurants in Miami
to the modern day version of unsuspecting people
who came to Florida a century ago
and bought Swampland that was marketed as great real
estate to build homes and businesses and things. My
favorite quote is from Franco Yanele, an Argentinian
restaurant owner who moved to Miami in the height of the
lockdown of the COVID pandemic. Quote, a lot of people told me,
beware, it's really tough to get construction done in this
city. And I thought, I'm from a third world country. What could
be worse than that?
As the author wrote, what Yeneli found was a city that lived up to its notorious reputation.
You of course are, as far as I'm concerned, responsible for this article because you're
not only quoted in it, but it's like, it kind of borrows your thesis and exports it on an
international platform.
I want to know where some of the biggest pushback has come for you.
We talked about a little bit at the beginning, but I know it's hard in this town to tell the truth,
especially if you're a realtor, you know, you're in the facade business. You are in the
fake it till you make it or fake it till you don't make it industry.
So what has been some of the harshest criticism that you've received and has it been because you're lying
or is it because you're telling the truth?
There definitely hasn't been good.
I've gotten a lot of support from the community
and you know what, at the end of the day,
that's really who I care about.
You know, I don't care about developers or landlords
or yes, it's gonna hurt me financially,
but I think that a lot of them are afraid that,
you know what, I'm okay financially,
so whatever happens, they can't really hurt me,
and I think that's really, or by me,
that's really what they're most scared of right now,
is that I can go out and tell the truth,
and I'm not gonna get fired, nobody's gonna do shit,
so it is what it is.
I don't know that I care so much about the Northeasterners,
these carpetbaggers who come down here
and spend a bunch of money and wind up getting screwed.
I mean, I care about the local entrepreneurs
and the people who wanna build local businesses
so that they can create jobs and opportunity
for their families and other locals.
But those seem to be the people
that are suffering the most, is that right?
That is 100% right.
And for me, those are actually the people I try to protect.
So even though I've cost myself and I get criticized
by a lot of brokers and agents,
the fact that like, why are you doing it?
Like, why are you even doing this for a living
if you're just gonna keep talking people out of deals?
Because the way I believe that, you know,
A, it's always better to be a good person.
And B, it's about educating the community
for them not to make mistakes of spending every hard earned dollar they've raised
or, you know, gotten in through, you know, for investment to
open their dream and they're never going to open. So,
unfortunately, I've seen too much of that and I'm just sick
and tired of it. Felix, I understand this isn't just
entrepreneurs who are trying to open restaurants, but people who are trying to take advantage
of the visa program here in the United States
that are disrupting this market in not a good way.
Well, we went through the one thing
which was the market over cannibalizing itself,
the fact that Miami is not a 12 month a year city,
but a lot of the what's going, and the grease trap,
but a lot of what's going on is actually
the investor visa, investors that are coming in
and that's what's driving up the cost on the local operators
because those guys are willing to pay top market rent.
So all you need is one comp from those guys
and everybody else's rent doubles, triples, quadruples
when their market price comes up.
So let me ask you about that.
So this is a hustle that is not really related
to the restaurant business, right?
How does this work?
So there's obviously Miami is a very investor
visa friendly city.
So they have a lot of representatives
or consulting agencies from countries like Argentina,
Venezuela, Colombia.
And what they do is they buy businesses,
restaurants are probably the easiest
and they put in all their own people.
They have to use these consulting companies, contractors and interior designers and lawyers
and they may or may not still open.
But what they do is they wind up paying a premium price because they don't have financials
in the United States. So they'll just pay a higher rent
and put more of a higher deposit.
And what a lot of landlords will do
is they'll take that one comp
and then raise the rent on everybody else around them
because that's all they need is one market comp
that a restaurant is paying you X.
So they, you know, all the developers
will raise the prices on the rent. So they could, you know, all the developers will raise the
prices on the rent. So that's where the problem comes in.
So not unlike what we've seen with the housing market as well, the sort of foreign and cash
investment from people who may not even be living in these in these homes, but are rather
investing in them, raising the value or raising the prices, I should say, of all of the surrounding
homes in the market.
It's that same idea?
That's 100% right, and that's, I think,
where we're getting the most amount of pushback
from developers, you know, of getting cease and desists
from owners and landlords for telling the truth.
Cease and desist telling the truth. you know. Ceasing to tell the truth.
Yeah, for ruining their narrative.
Well, all you're doing though is talking about
the numbers in your own business, right?
That's all these are just data points
that you have from your own experience.
Right, and what hurt them even more is if I actually,
now I would never put a restaurant
that's closing on blast ever until they make it public.
But if I ever was forced to show the numbers Now, I would never put a restaurant that's closing on blast ever until they make it public.
But if I ever was forced to show the numbers
of the restaurants actually closing
or are interested in selling their business,
I think people would be a lot more worried.
Last thing so we're clear though,
what is this visa hustle though?
How do the visas come into play?
So visa hustle comes in, these guys,
if you've noticed, especially over the last couple
of years, all the mediocre restaurants that have been opening, maybe they have an Italian
sounding name, but they don't serve Italian food.
And what they do is they'll buy 51% of an existing business, show that they have employees,
show that they have an actual business.
They get their visa and they put their cousin in the kitchen,
wait for the place to fall apart.
And then the landlord takes it back
and then the new guy comes in
and who will have to pay the $130, $200 a foot
that the landlord is now asking for.
So they have no interest in the actual restaurant business.
And that's what really pisses me off.
I love this town!
Felix Menderski, founder of F&B Hospitality Brokerage,
find him on Instagram at F&B Miami.
Thanks so much for being here.
Thanks. Thanks, brother.
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Hoo!
Woo! It happened during the summer of protest 96 calories per 12 ounces. Whoo.
It happened during the summer of protest in the Black Lives Matter movement,
May 31st, 2020.
During a demonstration in downtown
Fort Lauderdale, Latoya Ratliff was
shot in the face with a rubber bullet.
Officers targeted demonstrators who
were peacefully protesting after
the killing of George Floyd.
The Fort Lauderdale Police Department has since acknowledged that Ratliff did nothing wrong and was a victim.
She has filed a federal lawsuit saying her civil rights were violated.
He was not acting in self-defense. He was not acting in the defense of others.
He was using tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse a crowd of peaceful demonstrators without any warning.
Latoya Ratliff is the great niece of famed civil and women's rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer. She
was attending this peaceful protest in downtown Fort Lauderdale in what was a
summer of protests throughout the country after the murder of George Floyd in 2020.
What happened at this particular event was that an officer by the name of Stylianne Hayes,
she radioed in that she was in some form of distress, that her unmarked vehicle was being
surrounded, that there were protesters
who were jumping and stomping on top of the vehicle, that she was frightened and trapped.
And as a result, without warning, effectively a SWAT team, a militia of Fort Lauderdale
police officers show up, begin firing tear gas and indiscriminately firing rubber bullets into the smoke, into
the crowd.
This video of officers battering peaceful protesters who were kneeling on their knees
on the ground with their hands in the air.
It turns out as a result of this lawsuit that Latoya has filed and in a new report in the
Miami Herald by Sarah Blaski, it says a deposition taken under oath the officer who made the initial distress
call admitted she never actually saw anyone damaging her vehicle or jumping
on the trunk as described in not only her incident report but her radio call
this frantic radio call and a forensic analysis of synchronized video and audio
from the scene shows no evidence that protesters were surrounding the vehicle as the
officer reported while she radioed for backup.
Send me a few more units please. We're starting to surround my car.
Alright, on one avenue?
Yes, I need to know where you're at. Are you on one avenue?
Where are you on one avenue?
2-3, I'm completely surrounded.
Alright.
Move.
Alright.
Jump on my car, send me units.
Alright, make it out to 2th Street.
You're in route.
We're all coming on each other.
Alright, 10-4.
Where is she at on 2th Street, so we know?
She has to go to the garage.
She has to go to the garage.
She has to go to the garage.
I can call her, but I'm just saying, I'll call her first. I'm coming out in a few seconds. In the chaos that ensued as a result of that false report by Officer Hayes, Latoya Ratliff
was shot in the face with a rubber bullet fracturing her eye socket and causing some ongoing, if not permanent,
health concerns and damage.
Latoya is with us now.
Well, Latoya, first off,
I know it's been a number of years,
but how are you feeling?
It's a, that's kind of tough.
I kind of feel like I live in like this
kind of perpetual state of like, I don't have closure.
I don't really have an answer.
And the more I find out, the more I realize
that what happened to me was just completely unjustified.
So I don't know, I kind of take it day by day.
It's frustrating.
Yeah, I don't really know.
It's a process, honestly.
And it feels like there has been
sort of mounting injustices.
I mean, right out of the gate here it seemed pretty obvious
from the video and photographs that we have. This was a very well covered event by the
press, by the protesters themselves who were live streaming a lot of this. This was pretty
tame and quiet until the police showed up and started firing tear gas and rubber bullets
into the crowd. It was only then that I think the protesters kind of reacted, throwing water bottles or things like that.
But immediately, then police chief Rick Maglione,
the Fort Lauderdale mayor, Dean Trantalis,
started lying immediately in a cover-up
and perpetuating what we now know unequivocally to be a lie
because the police officer has now said under oath
that she lied, but I feel like we've known this
the entire time, so is there any sense of vindication
yet here that now that the police officer was forced
to admit under oath that she completely fabricated
what eventually became the justification for this,
well, for this use of force against you and
your fellow protesters.
Indication is such a tough word simply because like, you know, this is going to be four years
that this happened as of Thursday and I still don't have answers.
I'm still struggling with what happened.
There are still people that were impacted that that were tear gassed as well, that were shot
at rubber bullets because there's a host of videos of other officers celebrating after
actually shooting indiscriminately at protesters.
And there isn't any resolution at this point.
And for it to have waited for four years for this information to be revealed, for the police
to be aware of this information, specifically Maglione was aware of, you had to be revealed for the police to be aware of this information. Um, specifically Maglione was aware of,
you had to be aware of this information because this video was readily
available to you. And now, you know, how many years have passed?
So there are people that were hurt,
but maybe they weren't hurt like me that have been sitting at home thinking that
what happened to them was justified. So vindication in a way is,
is it doesn't happen until there's actual
accountability that's made from the, because of what the police did. Like that's when that comes,
that's when I feel vindicated. That's when I feel like, okay, something can come out of this. But
for now we're still kind of in limbo because there are still so many people who are out there that
were tear gassed, that their rights were violated, that don't have a voice and that don't even know
that they are able to pursue damages
and pursue justice for what happened to them.
This officer who in a deposition in your civil case
has admitted to, effectively admitted to lying,
Sileani or Sileani Hayes,
I'm not entirely certain how to pronounce her name.
Did she explain why she fabricated this claim?
Because in my view there could really only be two reasons here either. She was manufacturing a justification
for the use of force
Which you can see clearly from the video is totally unnecessary and out of control based on the facts on the ground
Or she was hallucinating. Maybe she was medicated.
I don't want to speculate, but she seemed to see things
and hear things and experience things
that simply did not exist and did not occur.
That's a good question.
I can't really speak to her mental state
and what kind of drew her to those conclusions
and to make that call, but there's something
is important to point out.
It's like you mentioned the actual police report
or the report that she made after what happened.
And in the report, she described the protest as a riot
from the get go that she was there to monitor the riot,
that she was there to actively move people
and create a safe environment for riot.
And when you think about the language like that and what that means when you say riot
versus a demonstration versus a protest, it can potentially speak to the state of mind
of what this police officer felt when she was coming out to that event, what she viewed
people that were attending that event.
And throughout the report, subsequently, people are listed as protesters and as rioters.
That's a very, very different terminology.
And to use that interchangeably, that can speak to her state and what she actually viewed us as.
Well, in my opinion, her state is full of shit.
That's my view in both reading her report and obviously looking at the objective evidence that we have.
And speaking of objective evidence, as I referenced earlier, there's been this kind of series of injustices or compounding injustice
since that day four years ago. The officer, Detective Eliezer Ramos, who had fired
that rubber bullet into your eye, he was cleared by Internal Affairs,
by an initial investigator, in fact, who told you, I think, in a meeting that he was a cool guy and he must, it must
have been an accident.
Is that how this internal affairs investigation began,
really?
Yeah, that was a moment that is quite unforgettable.
I mean, as many moments throughout this situation
have been that the internal affairs officer basically said
he was a good guy.
And that was a moment for me, which, to pretend like I didn't,
I went into this situation and went into the internal affairs
investigation, truly believing that there was going to be this chance
of accountability and acknowledgement of what happened to me.
I would be in this living in an insane world if I felt that.
But giving an opportunity for them to do what was right.
That moment just kind of solidified for me that this wasn't going
to be an easy situation and that the Fort Lauderdale police weren't willing to actually
be accountable and have transparency and be honest about what happened because you don't
get to decide because you know someone that when they do something that's wrong, when
they clearly do something that violated my rights and actually hurt me that, oh, he's
a good guy.
He didn't mean to do something.
You don't know.
You don't know what his intentions were.
I don't know what his intentions were,
but I know what happened.
I know what I saw.
And now as more information come out,
I know that there wasn't even a justification
for the way they respond to us to begin with.
Yeah, I would take that into a court of law.
Oh yeah, my client's a good guy.
Innocent.
And this is day one, Roy.
I mean, this is, they're calling Latoya in to interview her.
And the guy who is charged with investigating this and getting to the bottom of this and
finding out what actually occurred and what the intentions are, are telling you, oh, it's
probably nothing.
He didn't, I mean, and I believe that investigator was removed from the investigation.
That didn't stop him, the officer Eliezer Ramos, from being cleared
of not doing anything wrong here in this case.
But also there was another officer, the only officer so far charged in anything related
to what happened that day.
And it wasn't even what happened to Latoya.
Steven Poherance faced a misdemeanor charge because he shoved a 19-year-old woman, Jada
Severance, who was literally, you see her on her knees with her hands in the air
Doing nothing not moving he shubs her for no reason at all other than he looks to me like some sort of rabid animal
Out of control if you watch that video footage, and he was acquitted by a jury Roy
But here's what we learned about him. He had been cleared by internal affairs prior to this incident for using force 79 times in just three and a half years on the force. He had
drawn his firearm more than once a month on average since he was hired in October
of 2016 when this happened in 2020. Major red flags at the Fort Lauderdale
Police Department ignored and the police chief at the Fort Lauderdale Police Department ignored.
And the police chief at the time,
Maglione, who had since been reassigned,
not fired, but reassigned,
he admitted that he covered up for bad cops
in use of force investigations
by only reviewing written police reports
in which officers routinely lie
and never watching body cam video.
When they had body cam video, he never bothered watching it.
He just trusted these police reports, which we know now
from both the police report and the body cam footage
of this officer, Hayes, were just fucking lies.
Sorry, Roy, I had to drop an F-bomb there.
Come on, man, you could have just said it was bullshit
and called it a day.
I already called it bullshit. I needed to like, I needed to drop an F-bomb there. Come on, man, you could have just said it was bullshit and called it a game. I already called it bullshit.
I needed to double down, also magnify my profanity.
Latoya, I want to give you the last word here.
Has anyone from the city, the lying mayor,
Dean Trentalis, the lying police chief,
ex-police chief Rick Maglione,
I don't know about who the new police chief is. I
know there was an interim police chief for a minute. Has anybody apologized to you? They've
acknowledged that you did nothing wrong. This was unjustifiable in every conceivable way,
even when they thought that this lying cop Hayes legitimately witnessed some sort of
unrest on her car. But has anybody from Fort Lauderdale reached out to you to apologize
for the injury and injustice that was done to you? So apparently Mayor John Salas said that he called
me. I don't have record of that call. I do have record of him saying multiple times that I
shouldn't have been out there. The only individual that actually reached out to me that I sat down
and I spoke with,
I mean, eventually we had a meeting with the city.
There wasn't an apology during that meeting,
but the only individual that actually apologized
and actually acknowledged what happened to me was wrong
is Vince Lawrence.
And he's the only person that really reached out to me
and acknowledged that any of this shouldn't have happened.
Other than that, I haven't heard from anyone else.
And I doubt that I will ever.
Trent Alice, I believe is Greek for liar.
So if he said he called,
I don't know that I would necessarily believe that.
Probably spam.
Probably, sure.
I mean, it's just unbelievable.
Like here's the thing, Roy.
Like I know that there's such a thing
as a justifiable use of force.
I even know that there's such a thing perhaps as a justifiable use of force. I even know that there's such a thing perhaps
as a justifiable use of deadly force, okay?
But when you're dealing with police unions
and politicians and police chiefs
who have never seen an unjustifiable use of force,
that is disingenuous and frightening.
And here we've seen what is clearly,
and what the city itself has
already acknowledged, is an unjustifiable use of force. And now all the evidence is
that any justification for it was based on an outright lie from a police officer
in both a radio call and a report where she was basically falsely reporting that
she was in some kind of danger when she was in fact not. And no action has been taken, Roy.
I don't see that this officer is under any kind of internal affairs investigation or has been
suspended for this lie that resulted in the injury of innocent people and peaceful protesters.
Protest is in the First Amendment of the Constitution. The press is in the First
Amendment of the Constitution. I want you to search that document up, down, left, right, and sideways, Roy.
You will never see the word police there.
So how we have this class of people who have rights above and beyond the rest of us and
above and beyond what is called for in the Constitution based on what I am not certain,
I mean this is dangerous.
People out there, so-called conservatives who believe in small government Who are concerned about the tyranny of their government who fly don't tread on me flags
There is no greater treading on you than firing a rubber bullet into the face of a peaceful
Protester on the streets of the United States of America Latoya if they don't I will apologize
To you for what happened to you.
I wish you good physical health. I wish you good mental health. I can only imagine. I'm
sorry we showed that clip earlier, which must be traumatic for you, but I think it's important
for people to see and hear what it is that went on out there through no fault of your
own. And thank you for being here and I wish you good luck in the litigation.
Thank you so much. And if I could just say one more thing, I do hope that anyone that sees this
podcast, that sees a report on Miami Hero that you recognize now that what happened to you
wasn't right and it wasn't justified and that you have an ability to seek justice as well.
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It's time once again for the
Because Miami Wheel of Despair.
I feel like Streeter needs to do like a theme song
or something for it, no?
Yeah, that's a good idea.
Theme song, The Will of Fortune.
John Dewey!
I don't know why that would be. I don't even know why you even played that card. I don't know why that would be the theme song, The Wheel of Fortune. John Dewey! I don't know why that would be.
I don't even know why you played that card.
I don't know why that would be the theme song, but
We have biometric technology.
Roy, what is on the wheel this week?
Okay.
I got it.
Proof that I have a list for you.
Um.
The no shit report.
Wait a second, Roy. it looks like there's some
highlighted on that list I use the back of a paper that oh I okay interview prep
for Chris Winningham who is rooting for the New York Rangers I I was I thought
that that meant that maybe these things these topics are pre-selected or rigged
in some way so no no no no no that would be the other side. The other side, okay, all right.
That shows that, okay.
Roy, what are the topics on the deal?
The no shit reports.
Hell yeah.
We'll get to that eventually.
So a holdover from last week's wheel?
Yeah, yeah, a lot of holdovers.
Cocaine, Viscain, as Viscain would be.
V, yeah, the Viscain Tower condo, yeah.
Couple blocks from here, yeah.
Yeah.
Tricky Vicky, who is a big fan of yours.
It's my girl.
Your girl.
Your girl or my girl.
How dare you, sir.
And Soulcrushing Commutes.
So we shall spin this thing and see what it lands on.
You know, it's already pre-determined.
Soulcrushing Commutes. hands on. Soul crushing commute. That is the headline, the Miami New Times this week. Miami's soul crushing daily commute has gotten worse study fines. Roy, how many days per year do you think that Miami commuters spend in traffic?
All of them.
All of them?
Well, yes, that is a very good point actually.
I guess my question is the totality of traffic time from the course of the year.
Over the course of a year, I would say maybe nine days.
Oh wow, if this is Price is Right rules,
you are closest without going over.
I would say one day, Bob, just to be careful.
But it is in fact 236.86 hours or approximately 10 full days.
I'm a winner.
So the typical daily commute in Miami is 58 minutes.
That puts us within the top 25 for cities with the largest 10-year increase in commute
times.
Ohio's average daily commute is about 57.4 minutes, which is three spots below Miami.
So 10 full days a year, Miamians spend sitting in traffic and that's just commuting to work by the way
That's not you know, wherever the hell else you're going sitting in traffic. So over ten days a year
Wow, can you imagine?
Having to do that ten days a year out of your life and having to listen to this podcast while you're doing it
No, no, actually, I absolutely cannot and that is because I cannot sanction your bifurtery.
Spin the wheel Roy.
It landed on cocaine viscane.
So the viscane, there's some luxury condo towers. They are what two or three blocks
away from where we are right now. Just due south. And so what happened a couple days
ago Roy, gunshots. They started flying through the windows on the 44th and 45th floor striking and shattering hurricane impact glass. One bullet landed
inches away, it hit the window, inches away from a high chair. Fortunately the
kids were playing in another room of the house but these were occupied dwellings
getting hit with bullets. The police don't know what the hell happened. What
they do think is that there was a shooter in another neighboring
high-rise tower to the south that was firing,
perhaps not targeting anybody over there, but just firing.
I think that's pretty innovative though from a Grand Theft Auto perspective.
I don't recall any like high-rise to high-rise shootouts,
but I think that's pretty incredible.
Here's some really disturbing video and audio.
Wait till you hear the first thing this woman says
at the top.
I just moved from Chicago to get away from the crime
and violence.
And like five minutes ago, I hear repetitive gunshots.
Peace of mind shattered.
Legitimately, this is scariest.
For the residents of Viscane luxury apartments
South tower in downtown Miami. I could hear the gunshots after Miami police say
shots were fired into occupied apartments just after seven in the evening on Sunday.
Some bullets into kitchen and living room windows and no one knows where they came from.
I'm pretty sure it's on the carpet Can there's some pieces up here to Vivian all oden arrived home to a kitchen crime scene
She lives on the 45th floor and shared these photos of her shattered windows directly next to her baby's high chair
She posted this video on Instagram saying a shooter in downtown Miami put a bullet in my window
Scattering hurricane impact glass onto my baby's high chair. Luckily her kids were playing in another room. She finished the video by saying Miami
what kind of city do we want to be? Okay so she moved from Chicago to Miami to
avoid crime. Yes and then moved to downtown Miami and is now caught on the 44th floor of her condo
in a shootout.
This building is becoming more and more like the Clevelander every day.
You feel like you're back on Ocean Drive, huh Roy?
Yes, we're back baby.
I miss Ocean Drive.
I really, I'm the one, I'm the only one.
Shall we spin the wheel the wheel again right should we
It's a girl tricky Vicky
Hey right you remember that time when when she had that meltdown at the City Commission meeting and she said you are a vile
Little man, how could I forget so I got a whole t- man. How could I forget? So I got a whole
t-shirt about it and everything. Yeah. So I filed a bar. You remind me every day. Wait do I remind
you every day that I made a t-shirt or that I'm a vile little man? That you made a t-shirt. Okay so
it's my profile picture I think. When actually I think when I call you it pops up with me with that exactly so I filed a bar complaint against her for her violating rules with
respect to decorum professional behavior etc and she responded to that complaint
and her response was basically I did it and I'm not sorry. Don't you know who I am and the First Amendment?
That was her response. Okay
The last one yeah set aside
You don't want to repeat that right? No, she said that while in session
Mind you talking about the chrome calling you a vile little man, and she's not denying it
No, I mean how can she there's video evidence of it and she's not sorry for it. And she also, she's basically like, don't you know who I am?
I'm like super important.
I am the disgraced fired Miami city attorney slash mob lawyer, Tricky Vicky Mendez.
And then she shits all over the first amendment and the ability not only of the people to
come to public comment and speak truth to power and confront peacefully their government and criticize it.
But also one of the most fundamental rights
that we have as journalists,
which is to parody and satire our government,
political cartoons.
And she talks about how like we Photoshopped her face
onto Ursula, the villainous from Little Mermaid,
that poor unfortunate soul, Tricky Vicky.
But she criticizes, as I said,
some of the most fundamental rights that we have
to make fun of our government, to use cartoons
and parody and satire to tell the truth
about what's really happening, and she hates it.
She thinks that she, as the second highest paid
public official in the city of Miami,
I hear one of the, if not the highest paid city attorneys in the entire state of Florida,
as a public official, that she somehow, she is beyond reproach, she is above any kind of criticism,
or any kind of truth.
It's an incredibly disturbing thing, and if you're a lawyer who's desperately searching for a new job,
it's like a self-destructive thing to write. Like something is deranged that prospective employers
could read that she wrote. So I wrote back my own rebuttal to that response. And you
know what's happened, Roy?
What's that, Billy?
The complaint has been escalated into a full investigation and most complaints die in Tallahassee,
and only about one out of three complaints
advance to this stage, and it has advanced.
So they opened up an investigation.
All they have to do is watch a video.
We live to fight another day and to see where all of this goes.
And in the meantime, Roy?
You are a vile little man.
And they can also listen and watch this show because you have the clip in question.
Hashtag BLM, hashtag vile lives matter. Roy, it was a hell of a week at Miami City Hall, as it always is.
How can I help?
And I will tell you, Joe Carollo and the horrible, terrible, no good, very bad day at Miami City Hall. That is what Alain Devalle at politicalcortadito.com
called last week's commission meeting
because everything and everything that could go wrong
for poor Commissioner Crazy Joe, AKA...
He's a white beaver, white beaver
Yeah, that's Joe Caroneo
What I have is very small.
So everything went wrong for poor Joe and I went to speak in public comment both of the
issues that I spoke about passed 4 to 1 and I will tell you he got called out by the public,
he got called out by his fellow commissioners, he lost multiple votes, four to one, on issues that were very important to him.
He seemed tired, disoriented, defeated, and it really is starting to look like his 40
plus year reign of terror is finally coming to an end.
Knock wood.
And I gotta tell you the truth, Roy, it was almost sad watching this once proud gladiator
pathetically wobbling on his last legs.
And some of those highlights, Roy, you see how sad,
almost was the key word there.
It's almost.
You look very despondent.
It was almost, almost sad.
This is not your little Twitter account, little Billy.
Any bad day for Joe Carollo is a great day
for the people of the city of Miami.
And our Miami moment is a montage
of some of the great, great events,
great moments that happened last week in Miami City Hall.
Go Panthers and Cocaine's.
I'd like everyone here who's in favor of stopping the LED billboards to please stand and be recognized.
For the records between 25 to 30 people.
Commissioner Correale, I remember you when you were mayor and when you were a commissioner before and you were nice and I'm surprised
You should be embarrassed that instead of listening to your residents. You're mocking them. You're not up there to speak
You're here to you're up there to listen. You shouldn't be mocking your residents. You should be embarrassed about that
That's a motion for PC7. Do I have a second?
Motion fails for lack of second wait, I'm here You have a second.
Motion fails for lack of second. Madam Chair, call the question.
Let's call the question. We've been over this, I'm tired of this.
Let's call the question.
I'm not for the dog and pony. Let's call the question.
We're wasting time. We had an agreement. That's why we had the same
With all due respect. I'm out of order but I'm getting tired of this.
You have to allow your colleague to speak. I understand.
He talks a lot and then we forget. With all due respect.
I have a motion in the second. All in favor?
Aye.
Motion carries.
Motion passes 401 with Commissioner Crowe avoiding no.
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