Find Me (2018)

“If you want answers … you have to explore”
“As much as we’d all like to believe that our problems will slip away the minute we are on trail, that’s rarely the case. But sometimes we find a way to hold that sadness while still finding beauty and adventure in the natural world. Find Me is a great reminder of how to do just that. Watch it to cheer on Joe as he finds himself again, to celebrate just how beautiful even hardscrabble wilderness can be, and maybe most of all to remind yourself where your own inner Joe resides. My bet is he lives somewhere way outside.” – Kathryn Miles, Outside Online
Colin Hay Solo Tour 2020

Looking forward to catching Colin Hay (for the third or fourth time!) at Plaza Live Orlando on Wednesday, April 29, 2020!
Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession (2004)
Selected films featured on Z Channel:
1900
China 9 Liberty 37
Das Boot
The Decline of Western Civilization
Dog Day Afternoon
Fingers
Going Berserk
The Harder They Come
Heaven’s Gate
In a Lonely Place
The Leopard
The Man Who Fell to Earth
Marathon Man
McCabe and Mrs. Miller
Once Upon a Time in America
The Onion Field
Overlord
The Passenger
Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid
Paths of Glory
A Safe Place
Two-Lane Blacktop
The Wild Bunch
Sanibel Lighthouse
The historical marker beneath the Sanibel Lighthouse reads: “The first permanent English-speaking settlers on Sanibel Island arrived from New York in 1833 as part of a colony planned by land investors. Although that settlement was short-lived, the initial colonists petitioned the U.S. government for the construction of a lighthouse on the island. No action was taken on that proposal at the time. By the late 1870’s, sea-going commerce in the area had increased in volume. The U.S. Lighthouse Bureau took the initiative in requesting funds for a lighthouse for Sanibel Island, and in 1884, construction of the tower began. The station was lighted for the first time in August, 1884. The significance of the Sanibel Lighthouse lies in the regular and reliable service it has provided for travellers along Florida’s West Coast. Since 1950, the U.S. Coast Guard property at the lighthouse has been a wildlife refuge.”










