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Train to become a volunteer for Coastal Hospice

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Coastal Hospice & Palliative Care is offering an introduction and training course for anyone interested in volunteering at the nonprofit organization that serves Dorchester, Somerset, Wicomico and Worcester counties. The course is open to anyone, and attendees are not required to commit to volunteering. There is no cost to attend.

Coastal Hospice depends on a dedicated staff of volunteers to fulfill its mission. Patient volunteers offer comfort and companionship to patients and their families, provide transportation and deliver supplies. Other volunteers support the staff with office work or assist at the Coastal Hospice Thrift Shop in Berlin. Volunteers also have opportunities to work directly with veterans as part of Coastal Hospice’s We Honor Veterans program.

Everyone interested in volunteering is invited on Wednesday, June 15 from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. For those interested in volunteering for patient care, the session will continue on Wednesday, June 15 from 1-5 p.m. and conclude on Wednesday, June 29 from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

The training course will be held at the Coastal Hospice Volunteer Offices, Philmore Commons, 224 Phillip Morris Dr., Suite 202, Salisbury, on the northwest corner of U.S. Rt. 50 and Phillip Morris Dr., in the building west of M&T Bank.

Along with information about opportunities for volunteering with Coastal Hospice, the course will include discussions about end-of-life changes, the hospice philosophy, admission criteria, and patient rights.

For more information or to register for the course, call Sally Rankin, manager of volunteer services, at 410-543-2590.

Founded in 1980, Coastal Hospice is a nonprofit health care organization that cares for individuals facing life-limiting conditions but who want to remain as active and engaged as possible. Coastal Hospice cares for patients in their home, nursing home, assisted living facility or at Coastal Hospice at the Lake.

So My Dad Bought a Boat (Part 3)

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This is the last of a three-part essay. We will publish the series each Thursday through its completion. Find part one here.

So while my dad bought a boat, his dad built a boat. That’s pretty cool, right? My dad was young, very young. He lived in Maryland, on the Bush River on the western Shore. His father was a machinist for the Aberdeen Proving Grounds. It was a kit boat, the boat he built. You know, the kind you build from a kit. Sold by Chriss Craft, it was a 14 foot runabout with a 10 hp Martin motor. Dad says Martin is no longer in business, making motors anyway. He remembers fishing on the boat with his father. Cruising out to the Chesapeake, racing other boaters, spending time with his family, it was a different time for sure. While my mother insisted my sister and I learn to swim, in case we fell overboard or something happened, my dad’s mother insisted he was was restrained by a leash. A leash fastened to his waist with the other end tied to the rail. So he wouldn’t fall out of the boat. Apparently, my grandmother and grandfather won Parents of the Year that year. My grandmother would tell this one story, and with no sense of shame, or embarrassment, or I-should-have-known-better attached to it, she would say with pride that she used that same leash system to keep him safe in the yard. One end fastened to his waist, the other to a clothesline. You know. She could run about the yard. And he would. Back and forth back and forth, on his own little run. It is rumored my grandmother also crate chained her children, but that rumor has not been verified.
“Seriously, Grandma?” I asked.
“My mother told me to do it.” Was her answer. Grandma Casey, was a sturdy German woman who married an Irishman. Oh the stories one could tell about the wisdom and missives and habits of my Grandma Casey, and my grandma always listened to her.

My father’s family moved to Florida when he was ten. His father started working for NASA as a machinist. The boat came with them, much like Hesperus would travel with us. And like Hesperus, they rarely, if ever, went out on her. And there she sat, in their yard, for a long time. Eventually and unceremoniously they sold the boat to a family friend. This friend also allowed her to sit, unused, in their yard. I find it interesting, that, that bit of nostalgia.

Or perhaps it is just a sentimental me grasping at a connection with my father and his father. A man I never knew. And yet, like my own time, my father’s time to be raised on the water, raised by the water, raised by that vessel, that boat that safely carried our lives across the water. Well, it was ended at the age of ten. Nothing remarkable, I suppose, but a coincidence, a thing we share, an unspoken and perhaps until now, un-thought of thing we share. Yeah, it’s kind of sad in a way, the selling of the boat; my grandfather’s, my father’s, and in a sense mine. A sad demise of a boat, and maybe of a childhood. Oh, that may be a bit dramatic. For certainly my childhood continued. My father’s as well. Mine lasted quite a while, I thank my parents for that, my father’s was cut short by an early marriage, child, and the death of his father. Allow me one more indulgence, one more comparison, one more coincidence … As I’ve said, the sale of the boat for my father was clearly more than a sad demise of what was always far more than a boat. I say clearly, as it is evidenced by his continued desire to have a boat. His first boat he bought maybe five years after his father died.

We moved back to Orlando. Hesperus had finally and also unceremoniously been sold for a second time, and the horses went with her. We were free of horses, we were free of boats. And we were free of the ties that bound us together. Times were good, times were bad, times were as bad as they could ever be. So my Dad bought a motorcycle. That lasted a very short time. It was never the same. It didn’t work the same. My dad, my mom, they couldn’t fight and scream, and yell, and laugh and love and work together. Not on a motorcycle. And not in their lives. They could do some of those things. And they did; thy fought and screamed and yelled and there was still love, but the love was now like Hesperus, or the old kit boat. It sat in the yard, unceremoniously. All but forgotten. And the work, there was no work. Or the laughter, that had gone too. So they didn’t: they didn’t laugh and they didn’t work.

Then along came a no named Scout 165. For while time may heal all wounds, so too does a boat. This one was a small 16-and-a-half foot skiff for fishing and tooling up and down the rivers of Central Florida. They went out on it, my parents did. Sometimes just the two of them, sometimes with others. My mother’s mother went with them a few times. Some friends, my sister. I regret that I never did. And while it was just a small boat, it was also a small step in their learning to work once more. That small step, I suppose, held a lot of significance.

The first time we went for a ride on this new boat of Dad’s, it was a little bit of an ordeal. Mike had gone with him to get the boat in Delaware. They drove together back to my parents’ house, and bright and early they set out to launch the boat and bring her out to the boat slip my father had secured at the Eastern Shore Yacht and Country Club. Mike and my father are quite close. Mike and my father are quite similar. Mike and my father had a long day. I drove down to meet them. Our plan was to have lunch and go for a ride on the boat. Getting the boat secured was evidently less than fun. The slip was not the best of slips, the tying of the boat was not easy. My father and Mike rigged up or invented some weighted system that would allow for movement of the tide and current and all sorts of things that could potentially go wrong. What they did not account for, however, was the simple fact that the docking system for my father’s kind of boat was not really suitable. Not to mention we were all a little out of practice. And then on top of all of that, the accessibility to the bay and other rivers and inlets and creeks, it would not be a suitable and easily accessible location for my father and his boat. It was, at first, a disappointment.
What was not a disappointment was my father seemed to fall right back into the old swing of things. His boat owner swagger, if you will, had begun to come back. I offered to help Mike and Dad with some of the set up, I was essentially told to go below. Yep, “Get down below,” was the phrase my sister and I would often hear when things were about to go awry. When it became necessary to drop or raise the sail. Tie some lines or lower the boom and batten down the hatches or whatever nautical thing might arise. I’m so technical here, because, you see, although my sister and I grew up on a boat, our knowledge of sailing consists of hotdogs make good bait, colorful language and what we could learn while we were banished to down below. And what we learned was we always got sick when we were down below. Especially my sister. And so, as I have said, my offer of help to my father and my husband was unceremoniously declined. I chose to have a beverage with my mother instead.
We made it out on the boat, however. My parents, Mike, Sam, and I. Mike and my father had figured out whatever it was they needed to figure out. We took a quick cruise down Taylor Creek, into Puncoteague Creek and we returned once we met the Chesapeake Bay. It was not a long ride. It was a windy ride, beautiful scenery, much to look at, and much to remember. And that old bit of arguing came back, highlighted by my mother’s attempt to assist with docking and my father’s shouts of protest and my mother’s comments of how she has done this before and my father’s insistence that she get out of the way. “I used to do this all the time!” She complained to me once we were safely ashore and Mike and my father wrestled with the tie up once again. I shook my head. Things really hadn’t changed. They were on a boat, fighting and yelling.

We’ve made other trips. Mike, my parents and I went up and down the Pokomoke River. A beautiful ride to be sure. The dark waters and amazing wildlife, it is a real treat. My parents have made that a few times. My sister has joined them and my father’s oldest friend, Ronnie. My father has boated with other friends as well, and one of his newest friends, my husband. They have fished and cruised and laughed and even argued. My father in-law joined them on one such venture. My father brings his boat up here, to Salisbury, and they launch in the Wicomico or Nanticoke. Sometimes the fishing is not so good, sometimes it is very good. But it is not about the fishing, not really. Nor is it really about the ride. It is about the boat.

It is always about the boat. And what we learn, and that it brings us together. The boat does. The boat brings us together. Some of my greatest memories of real and true togetherness are on a boat. My dad’s boat sinking is one of my earliest memories, a broken engine, too many mosquitos joining us when we tried to sleep down below, a cool breeze and gentle sway and listening to our parent’s tell stories when we moved out to the deck. Swimming, diving, jumping laughing. Being afraid, being sad, being angry … and working it all out on a boat.

Fifty years my parents have been married. Actually, it has been a little over fifty years now. I figure they have, God willing maybe another thirty year run. At least twenty-five. I don’t really like to think of my parents in terms of their mortality, I guess no child ever does. But they have time. Another quarter of a century or so for fighting and laughing and yelling and loving and screaming and, well, growing. Of growing up, learning to live and love. Learning how to navigate their twilight years, together. Absolutely together, still, on this no-named boat.
So my Dad bought a boat. Big deal, right? But this time it’s different. This time it has done something else. It means something else. He didn’t just buy a boat. But then again, maybe it is not so different after all. The boat, owning a boat, it has never really been just about the boat. I think that my Dad has figured that too. So my dad bought a boat.

5 things you can only do in North Ocean City

Ocean City is usually synonymous with the beach and the Boardwalk in people’s minds, but a specific destination restaurant, bar or amusement may have a more powerful association for some visitors. Almost all of the most iconic images and locations, in the collective consciousness, are located south of the Route 90 bridge. Ocean City seems to be more focused toward the inlet, but for savvy travelers who make a left when they come over the bridge and head north, there are experiences exclusive to the area. Some of these experiences are obvious, like less crowded beaches and more neighborhoods and condos. Others are less-so. I put together my 5 secret reasons to love North Ocean City below, feel free to share yours in the comments.

5. Enjoy the view from the Fenwick Inn

I’ll admit to having a certain weakness for a rooftop bar and rooftop dining generally. Because it is such a seasonal experience, there aren’t as many places to do it as one might like. The outdoor deck atop the Fenwick Inn is one of those great rooftop hangout experiences. I’ve been there day and night and even though the vibes are different, lounging in the sun versus enjoying the evening breeze, the upshot is the same: it is relaxing. Catch the sunset over the bay or the sunrise over the ocean, all from the same seat. Pretty cool.

Clarion

4. Step out to the oceanfront deck at Horizons

Horizons is already known for its award winning buffet, but as a nightlife destination it is worth remembering the views. In the winter it provides all of the ocean views with none of the seasonal bitterness. In the summer, though, theres nothing like getting stepping away from the bar for a little night sea air. Even better, start your night on the deck as the sun fades behind the hotel and you’re left with the darkening ocean as an additional evening companion. The deck bar has its own benefits, not the least of which is being steps away from the sand.

greene turtle mug

3. Buy a piece of the Original Greene Turtle

The Original Greene Turtle always is in the running for Best Sports Bar in Ocean City for good reason. They take sports seriously, particularly Maryland Sports. But the ‘Turtle also is known for its world famous Mug Club. The bar, which since has become a regional phenomenon, still has the feel of an old-timey downtown bar. It is dim enough that during the day it provides respite from the sun as well as plenty of recuperative beverages. In the evening, it remains both a dining and a drinking hotspot with plenty of entertainment and enough televisions to make sure you don’t miss a moment of any of the games.

longboard

2. Watch mixologists work at the Longboard Cafe

As we have mentioned before, there is a ton to like at the Longboard Cafe. They have great food and service, for example, and it is off the street and secluded but not too secluded. The best thing, though, is how seriously they take the beverage portion of the meal. Their bartenders aren’t tap monkeys and watching them work is a pleasure. Not only that, but they are skilled recommenders. That is, if for some reason you can’t decide from the cocktails, beers and wines on the menus, the staff  can talk you through your dispositions and then help you figure out something new to try.

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1. Be responsible for deciding the Best of Ocean City

OK, you don’t have to be in North Ocean City to do this, but you have to have been to North Ocean City to do this. With all the focus on the boardwalk and the inlet these and other North Ocean City icons sometimes get forgotten. If you’re a “North ‘O'” enthusiast, make sure you give your favorite places their due.

The New Adventures of Alice in Wonderland

The two six-year-olds whom I accompanied (along with both their mothers) to the Saturday, May 7th matinee performance of The New Adventures of Alice in Wonderland, were giddy with excitement as we entered the theatre. The Ocean City Convention Center was crowded with activity. There was a volleyball tournament going on, and girls from teams across the state were wandering into the main floor of the center. We made our way to the Roland E. Powell Performing Arts Center and showed our tickets at the door.

It was there my daughter began to get nervous. She asked the usher, “Where are we sitting?”

The usher looked at our tickets. “You lucky girl,” she said. “You’re in the front row!”

She turned to me. “Why do we have to sit in the front row?”

My daughter has never been a fan of dark theaters. She’s six, but she’s seen only three movies in theaters in her life. (When I was that age I’d spent several hundred hours in dark theaters, mesmerized by moving pictures.) She was not happy about having to sit so close to the stage in a darkened theatre. When the lights went out she grabbed my arm and draped it over her shoulder.

I had only one expectation for this production of Alice in Wonderland, and that is that it would be like the book except in play format. There would be a girl named Alice—enthusiastically played by Danielle Tuomey—who would fall asleep in a tree, and then she would follow a white rabbit down a rabbit hole and enter the world of Wonderland. I was a little surprised, as was my daughter, to hear some heavy bass coming from the speakers, and the unmistakeable riffs of eighties jazz music. Howard Sribnick, the president of the Worcester County Library Foundation which brought the show to Ocean City, announced just before the performance that this was the 20th anniversary of the production. When I heard the music I understood.

Alice

Alice in Wonderland performance

The show doesn’t open in a park with Alice reading a book, though. It opens in a city. For this former Manhattanite, The City will always be New York City, and when the performers come out on stage and begin to dance against the backdrop of a cityscape, New York was my first thought. The White and Red Queens wander the stage with entourages in tow holding aloft cupcakes which they are taking to have judged at a cupcake baking competition. Alice steps in the middle of it, of course, as that is what Alice does. “Curiouser and curiouser,” cries Alice (in the book and in the musical), and the words could describe both what is happening to her, and Alice herself. Her curiosity is what propels the story. She wanders off to explore the city, losing her sisters, and it is then she sees the White Rabbit (Shawn Nakia) scurrying away with an invitation for the Duchess (Amanda Patten). Alice follows him, not down the rabbit hole but down the subway stairs. And anyone who’s ever ridden a New York City subway knows how dark those tunnels can look from the platform.

Here the show takes a more traditional turn, though with a few twists and turns that help the story move faster. What really gives the story a modern feel, and helps it stand out as truly a gem of a production, are the dances. This is not a musical in the sense that characters suddenly break out in song in the middle of a performance, though there are two songs that conclude the first and nearly finish the second acts. It is a musical dance performance in that every scene is full of spectacular, show stopping dance routines. The opening dance in the city scape sets the mood for dancing that both engages a young audience, and moves the story forward. In the subway tunnel number, Alice wears a lighted costume and dances through ever decreasing colored arches. The world seems to get smaller and smaller with each arch she passes through. In the tea party scene the dancing takes a modern twist with the Mad Hatter teaching Alice the Whip and the Nae Nae.

The Mad Hatter steals the show with his flamboyant costume and his witty and often outlandish modern references. Played with perfect over-the-topness by Jeremy Trammelle, the Hatter brings a smile to every face in the audience. Even my little girl pushed my arm away and clapped her hands excitedly when he crossed the stage in his giant tea cup.

After the show, the stars lined up in the lobby and the kids crowded around them. My daughter and her friend went to every performer for their autographs. The biggest crowd was around Alice. She is the star of the show, after all, and the one with whom most kids identify. It isn’t just her that makes this a great show, though. The entire cast, and the energy they bring to the show, make The New Adventures of Alice in Wonderland worth going out of your way to see.

Especially if you’re a nervous six-year-old.

The New Adventures of Alice in Wonderland, directed by Susan Thornton and written by Ms. Thornton and Steve Steele, was presented by Other Voices, Inc, at the Roland E. Powell Performing Arts Center in Ocean City. The show starred Danielle Tuomey, Julie Herber, Joann Lee, Amanda Patton, Jeremy Trammelle, Shawn Nakia, Adam Blackstock.

Margaritas and other perfect things at the Longboard Cafe

Usually I go on my Happy Hour Adventures on a whim. I don’t scout these places out but rather pop in with my camera and ask if I can hang out and take some photos. The Longboard Cafe was the first place I made a conscious decision to visit. I’d been there the day before for lunch and the midday experience was such that I really wanted to get a gander at Happy Hour. I had the privilege of sitting not only within arm’s reach of the hot sauce bar (more on that in a second) but also near the proper bar. The beer and liquor selection along told me this was a place for people who prefer better drinks. I like to think I’m one of those people. I wanted to come back when the place was filled with my peers. But first things first:

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Martha Redding laughs as she restocks the bar in preparation for the Happy Hour rush.

Lunch, hot sauce and margaritas

For my lunch appetizer (yes, appetizer, I was hungry) I had the Wrinkled Green Beans, which I had been given to understand was a house specialty. The beans are deep fried but not battered and served with a sweet Asian sauce. The only disappointment was that I left a few drops of that awesome sauce behind, having run out of beans and lacking the courage to use a spoon. The main course was a roasted portobello mushroom sandwich with a side of fries.
The sandwich was astounding, but let me tell you why you need to order the fries: there is a hot sauce bar. I didn’t count the bottles, but if you told me for sure there were 200 I would believe you. I used a different sauce for each of the french fries and each was better than the last. It’s more than a gimmick, though, it is part of what I would come to discover is an overall emphasis on the taste experience.
Although it was a lateish lunch, the place was buzzing with conversation. A couple of people were at the bar, a group of matrons were occupying the back part of the restaurant and some young ladies were sitting by the big bay windows, picking at a plate of ahi nachos; more than a few people were having margaritas. That’s when I knew I wanted to return for Happy Hour. If it’s busy in the mid-afternoon, I knew early evening would be a hit.

Morgan Fagan jumped behind the bar to help out as people started rolling in for Happy Hour.
Morgan Fagan jumped behind the bar to help out as people started rolling in for Happy Hour.

Happy Hour at the Longboard Cafe

There were two regulars keeping their own council at the Longboard Cafe bar but no one else, which was odd. I guess some days are quiet. What can you say?
The upside is that I was able to chat with some of the staff. Morgan Fagan was running the show while the boss and owner, Rich Vach was away for the afternoon. We got to talking about the food and the beers (they almost exclusively have local craft beer on draft) and she gave me the margarita rundown. It wasn’t an accident that there were so many people having them the day before, the margaritas are something of a specialty there.
Morgan is fresh-faced and enthusiastic. She had an iced coffee that she sipped at as we talked. In between sips and chatter she would look over my shoulder at the door in case someone came in. When someone did she watched the nearest waitress usher them to their table. I started taking photos to go with my story and she teased Martha Redding, who was pinch-hitting behind the bar, about mugging for the camera as she mixed up another margarita.
I mentioned to Morgan that it was odd that there weren’t more people in the bar, given that it was Cinco de Mayo, and she shrugged. She thought it would have been busier herself, but it was an early-season Thursday afternoon. I wandered off to take a photo of a group of ladies who had come in for an early dinner.

Longboard Cafe
Susan and Stefanie Riddle and their friend Angelina Corrado popped by the Longboard Cafe for a pre-Mother’s Day margarita.

Moms and margaritas

Besides being Cinco de Mayo, it also was the Thursday before Mother’s Day and Angelina Corrado joined Susan and Stefanie Riddle to celebrate. They came for the margaritas and were waiting on two Perfects and a Cucumber Jalapeno. Stefanie and Angelina were regulars and Longboard Cafe enthusiasts, always happy to stop in and sip a potent drink while snacking on whatever pleased them. While I was chatting with the ladies the bar filled up, as if people heard the call of the margarita.
Morgan had jumped behind the bar, prepping glasses for Martha who was shaking and mixing, churning out drinks to order one after the other. The staff, who had been joking with us earlier, all had snapped into action. It was a sight to behold as the already cheery servers doubled their positivity with something to do. By the time I headed back to my car, several people had spilled out onto the front deck and the place was in full swing.
Even though the deck doesn’t look out over the water, it is nice to be able to sit outside and people watch while enjoying your evening.

“Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” Review

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The is one of two reviews of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off in what we’re calling our Battling Buellers posts in anticipation of this Wednesday’s re-release in Ocean City.

“Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it”. These were the words to live by after you saw Ferris Bueller’s Day Off for the first time. Directed by John Hughes, who made other classics like The Breakfast Club and Sixteen Candles, the film is fun and charming for audiences of all ages. While it seems like a typical comedy about a group of teens cutting class to have fun, there is a lot more to it than that. The film deals with several emotional and social issues that are common amongst teens, like depression and the inability to communicate with adults. Like Hughes’ other films, it has cemented itself among other classics that have come to define generations of young adults, having the ability to incite laughter, sadness, awe, and a whole range of other emotions.

Matthew Broderick stars as the titular Ferris Bueller, a high school senior known for his carefree, no rules attitude. Everyone adores him at his school, except for his jealous, conniving sister Jeannie and his by-the-book principle Ed Rooney. The film revolves around Ferris waking up one morning and deciding to ditch school for the day, bringing his best friend Cameron and girlfriend Sloane with him. For the rest of the day, they get into all sorts of shenanigans like stealing Cameron’s father’s prized Ferrari, eating dinner at a fancy restaurant while posing as the “Sausage King of Chicago”, visiting the Art Institute and the Sears Tower, and finally lip-syncing his way into audiences’ hearts with a rendition of The Beatles’ “Twist and Shout” in a parade. All the while with Rooney and Jeannie hot on their trail to catch Ferris in the act.

While the film maintains a charming, comical atmosphere for the majority of the time, there are some deeper personal issues it deals with as well. Cameron’s emotional state, for example, is a main motivational point for Ferris. It’s made clear throughout the movie that Cameron’s parents are essentially nonexistent in his life and they do not have a good relationship. At several points, Cameron even points out how his father cherishes his car more than he does for his wife and son. The uncertainties of love and marriage are persistent not just for Cameron, but for Ferris as well. By the end of the film, the audience knows that this day off wasn’t just for Ferris to have fun. It was an outlet for Cameron to express himself and take a little joy in life as well. The ending is hopeful for Cameron, though. Through a series of misfortunes, the Ferrari ends up getting destroyed and Cameron stands up to take the blame, saying he and his father will “have a little chat” when he gets home.

The film may not be popular with all audiences, but it’s important to remember that it’s not just another teen comedy movie. Like all of Hughes’ films, there are certainly some serious undertones that make his characters so well rounded and uniquely loveable. I think I speak for everyone when I say that we have all imagined what it would be like to take a day off like Ferris did, or that we relate to Jeannie and her jealousy of her brother’s easygoing nature. I think that the reason Hughes’ films have remained such cultural icons today is because they have the ability to speak to teens and relate to their problems in a way that other films could never do. From generation to generation, his films have spoken to audiences everywhere, and Ferris Bueller’s Day Off speaks louder than most people ever thought it could.

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off: Classic Movie Reviews

The is one of two reviews of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off in what we’re calling our Battling Buellers posts in anticipation of this Wednesday’s re-release in Ocean City.

Few can deny that 1986’s Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is a classic, and if you don’t, its likely you view the film as the miscreant-truant of cinema or as the sibling-who-gets-away-with-everything of film. As with any film as popular are Ferris Bueller there are those who take issue with it, some for its whiteness, some for a protagonist who can fairly be described as unlikable. But it’s clear that despite those dissenters, the film still enjoys a wide popularity nearly 30 years after its release, perhaps surpassing other huge works of the Hughes canon.  To me the reasons for this are clear:  Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is an exemplary hangout movie with a magnificent script, great characters, and the ability to endure after numerous viewings.

In preparation for this review I viewed the film for what was probably my ten millionth time (give or take) and what is important to note is that I do not consider myself an above average fan. Whether you love this movie or just like it, if you’re a Gen Xer or a Millenial, you’ve probably seen it that many times without meaning to. That kind of ubiquity is in no small part due to Hughes’s script, which is able to take the silly fun and poignant coming of age themes while Weird Science while leaving the sophomoric humor, and also the teen melodrama of The Breakfast Club and Sixteen Candles. I do not mean to put those films down, but Ferris Bueller is simply able to strike a balance that those otherwise fine films cannot. To emerge from my digression, what I found on my ten millionth viewing is that the film continues to charm me, from my favorite bits like, “They bought it.” To lines I hadn’t noticed before, “I want to go to a good college so I can lead a fruitful life.” Hughes’ clever dialogue and excellent characterizations hold up better than they have any right to.

Speaking of characterizations, let’s talk about Ferris, who is one of those characters that you simply cannot imagine anyone else for the role but Mathew Broderick. It’s a shame no other film has been able to use the actors talents quite as effectively, because he is spot on in this. Hughes presents a character who is a liar, a cheater, a law breaker with little reverence for education or the feelings of others, but because of his roguish characterization and Broderick’s boyish smirking, we love him. He is a snobby brat and a charming rapscallion; a selfish truant and a charming rogue; a privileged punk and a mythological trickster god. If there is something I don’t like about Ferris, is that he has pretty much no emotional journey or change in the film. There is obvious error in the characters ways, but the film refuses to acknowledge them. There is no lesson to learn and no real threat of failure throughout the film. But these concerns are mitigated largely by the film’s truly dynamic character: Cameron.

There’s been a lot of attention paid to Cameron in discussions of the film, and it’s no wonder why. Cameron begins the film as Ferris’s foil and partner in crime, a brow-beaten best friend who is dragged into Ferris’s day off and spends most of the film objecting. But Cameron is the character who has stuff to work out, who is in desperate need of change. Without Cameron, the film would be watching a winner always win. Not the height of drama. Cameron provides the film’s emotional core. And, in Ferris’s offer to take the blame for the destruction of Cameron’s Father’s car, Cameron’s sublot is what gives Ferris is one moment of goodliness and humanity. By way of this I can say that film might be elevated by giving  Cameron a larger, perhaps even POV role. Many are fond of the Ferris Bueller/Fight Club theory which posits Ferris as Cameron’s psychological manifestation of the man he wishes he could be a la Tyler Durden. Although I view this theory as bullhockey, it’s a fun exercise to consider it. Instead, I’d like to see something more in line with The Great Gatsby, wherein we view the magnificence and the flaws of Bueller through the perspective of the more grounded Cameron, as we see Gatsby through Nick. Regardless of how the film might be improved in this sense, Alan Ruck’s performance as Cameron and the role the character plays in the film as it is excellent.

Mia Sara’s performance and Sloan is fine. Her characters presence in the film is fairly inconsequential but does a nice job of rounding out the threesome and does add much to the dynamic of our heroes. Beyond this, Jennifer Grey and Jeffery Jones, as Ferris’s annoyed sister and his buffoonish principal respectively, are great characters and great performances. Through them, the film delivers a myriad of complications that threaten to put an end to Ferris’s Day Off, and though these complications could be a bit more dire or threatening, they still add a tension that keeps the story going.

Perhaps the best thing that I can say for Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is that it manages to be a film that is undeniably 80s, while not letting this detract from it. The film could easily be remade in the modern era, but of course it should not. Not only is it a classic work of a beloved auteur, but there is no reason to modernize it, because despite being 30 years old, it remains timely, or perhaps timeless. The characters and situations are iconic and though some improvements could be made, I struggle to think of any that need to be made. You can (and should) see Ferris Bueller’s Day Off on the big screen at Fox Sun & Surf Cinema on 5/18 at 7:00 pm

So My Dad Bought a Boat (Part 2)

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This is the second of a three-part essay. We will publish the series each Thursday through its completion. Find part one here.

For as long as my father has wanted a boat, or at least this boat, or at least this iteration of his boat wanting, if you will allow me that, eight to ten years say, my mother has wanted a new vanity for their hall bath. The one they have is horrifically ‘80s. Now, I won’t make some snarky comment as to my mother’s taste in décor, her sense of style, or the like (this is not a piece of fiction in which I can protect her sense of anonymity behind a pseudonymed caricature named Rowena). No, this is real. So I’ll just say I was pleasantly surprised that she wanted to update the horrific vanity.
We’ve looked at them, bathroom vanities. She and I. She’s looked at them with my father. She’s looked at them with my sister. She has even looked at them with her grandchild, my son Sam. She has some specific wants or needs or demands, you can call them. It must be white. It has to have drawers and a cabinet. It cannot be too deep. She and I actually were looking at a vanity on that fateful day. That day my Dad bought a boat. The vanity she wanted cost about $300. The boat did not cost $300. My mother is still waiting for her vanity. So, my Dad bought a boat.

Our next boat, the second one, came not too terribly long after the tragic dockside mauling of our first. It was not a fishing boat. It was a sail boat. Who knew my Dad could sail? I didn’t. But then I was like three when he got it, so what did I know? It was a 25-foot American Masthead Sloop christened Hesperus. A good name for a boat, I know. Perhaps you remember? Hesperus is the personification of the Evening Star in Greek Mythology. Hesperus is also an ill-fated boat in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s tragic and epic poem, The Wreck of the Hesperus. In our lives, however, it was the no named boat that sunk. But Hesperus? I grew up on her. Sort of. My sister and I both did. And come to think of it, my parents did as well.
With the purchase of Hesperus, my mother made a decision. If we were going to do a lot of boating, my mother insisted that my sister and I could swim. My mother didn’t think she was a strong enough swimmer to save us should something happen. So at three, I learned to swim and swim well.

We lived in Largo, Florida at the time. Largo is a little suburb of town in the St. Petersburg area between Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. Given the location, we sailed a lot! We would overnight at various islands, some with conveniences and some without. We swam, we fished, we never used sunscreen! Ahhh, the seventies, what could go wrong? Your child is pale skinned and fair, blonde hair and blue eyes? No worries, rub them down in baby oil and stick them on the white reflective surfaces of a sail boat, surrounded by water in the blazing Florida sun.
My mother always wanted my sister and I to have fun. My Dad could be a bit more serious at times. He learned to let go. One night, Lyn (my sister) and I wanted to fish. Dad didn’t want to deal with it so he insisted we had no bait. Mom insisted we could fish anyway. Dad didn’t want to go through the ordeal of baiting hooks and setting it all up for two kids who would be bored with it in ten minutes anyway. My mother asked him what else he was doing out here anchored by some little island off the Gulf Coast of Central Florida? Again he insisted there was no bait. She handed him some hot dogs. He laughed, then protested, then looked in her eyes and saw she was serious. He protested some more. Lyn and I fished. I think my sister might have caught one. But, soon enough, like Dad had said, we indeed were bored. We wanted to do something else. But my sister had caught a fish. So there was my dad, with fishing pole and hotdogs, fishing away.

Our family vacations were on that boat. Most weekends were spent on that boat. We slept on it, fought on it, ate on it, had fun on it. My sister and I actually had to be friends on it. Our families joined us on the boat. My mother dealt with my dad’s family, and my dad dealt with my mother’s. Our parent’s had jobs on the boat. My dad captained and navigated and reigned supreme. My mother cooked and manned the sails and was the final word. They fought, yelled, argued, screamed; they laughed, they talked, they loved. They learned to work together. It wasn’t always a smooth partnership, but it was theirs. It was that way on the boat, the way they learned to navigate the waters of the Gulf Coast, and the depths of family weekends and vacations too. It was how they learned to navigate the last 50 years, I would say. 50 years of marriage is no weekend getaway.
Of course with all the fun, there were the rough times. The time my father nearly went blind while painting the bottom of the boat. The time both my parents were certain we weren’t going to make it back to the marina during a freak thunderstorm. And the times my father used the boat as an escape when things got rough. If escaping my mother by going to the boat was his intention, well, that boat was as much her respite as it was his. And so now, as I think on it, he wasn’t escaping my mother, he was running to her. Running to the place where they yelled and screamed, and argued and laughed and learned and loved and worked together. Where they were one. That place where they grew up. Together.

We moved, eventually. From Largo to a little town in North Florida called Sopchoppy. Yep, I’ll write it again so you don’t have to go back to re-read that word. Sopchoppy, S-O-P-C-H-O-P-P-Y. I’ve had to spell that word to folks my whole life, well, since I was 10. We were not too far from the water, and we sailed occasionally. Not as often, but still, we sailed. Oh, but we had horses. My sister and I had school. My mother had PTA and my father had work. He traveled, my mother volunteered, my sister and I had friends that lived in a church. No, really, their house was an old church. Our lives changed drastically. Hesperus was no longer the center of our vacations, our recreation, our trips, our lives. It was no longer my father’s escape. It was no longer my father’s return.

We moved again. To Lakeland, Fla., a mid-sized town between Orlando and Tampa. We sold Hesperus in the six months we lived there. We moved again, to Alachua, near Gainesville. Gainesville is the home to the University of Florida and the Gators. The people who bought Hesperus stopped paying. My dad retrieved her and once again, Hesperus sat in our yard. She rested, unceremoniously, on her trailer. Kind of like those reconstructed whale or dinosaur bones you might find in museum. I would climb up on her sometimes, and sit. And remember. I suspect my dad did too.

Pocomoke and the arts: The Spirit of “1776”

Twenty-two men are in seated in folding metal chairs in the hall of St. Mary’s Church in Pocomoke City. Each of us reads from a script in our hands. We come from all over the Eastern Shore, from south in Accomack County, Virginia, Crisfield, Salisbury, Snow Hill, Berlin, and all the way north into Delaware. We are lawyers and engineers and teachers and writers, and we are, all of us, members of the Second Continental Congress.

The church hall is a stand-in for the assembly room of Independence Hall where, 240 years ago, several dozen men met to decide the future of a nation not yet formed: The United States of America. By May of 1776 delegates from the thirteen colonies, from Massachusetts in the north to Georgia in the south, had been meeting in secret in “hot-as-hell” Philadelphia for a year to discuss the hostilities with Great Britain. It had been more than a year since the battles of Lexington and Concord had turned a minor rebellion of British colonies into an all out war, and these delegates, good men all, had been sent by their respective colonial legislatures to hash out what was the ultimate goal of fighting. Many wanted peace with Great Britain, their primary beef being with the crown and the rule of King George more than with the British parliament of the time. Others, like John Adams of Massachusetts, felt that Britain was the King, and that to defy one was to defy the entire nation.
In the church hall a messenger (Khalil Kaczmarek) enters with a dispatch from General Washington. Charles Thomson (Wesley Moore), secretary of the Congress, reads the letter which describes the deplorable condition of the Army of the United Colonies holed up in New York. “I pray god some relief arrives before the armada but fear it will not,” Thomson reads.

Rehearsal for 1776: The Musical

The room is silent for a beat and then my character, Colonel Thomas McKean from Delaware, stands. “Surely we’ve managed to promote the most depressing man on this continent to the head of our troops,” I intone in a deep Scottish brogue. Col. McKean was born in Pennsylvania to Ulster-Scot parents, and I may be the only person in the room who can speak confidently with the accent.
Many of the men here have performed with this group before. Perhaps not in a musical, but the production team, the Eastern Shore Madrigals, has performed more than forty shows over the last dozen or more years. Last year, at the Mar-Va Theater in Pocomoke, they put on a well-received production of The Sound of Music. This year, in honor of the 240th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the Eastern Shore Madrigals are putting on a play about the meeting of men that drafted and signed the storied document that laid the foundation not only for our nation, but for a new birth of freedom that continues to be an example for freedom around the globe. A document which, in the words of the Thomas Jefferson of the play, “place(d) before mankind the common sense of the subject–in terms so plain and firm as to command assent.”
We are, all of us, not professional actors. Less than a handful have performed in prior plays. What we all have in common is a chromosome and a willingness to be on stage six times in June. To stand before an audience and sing, “It’s hot as hell in Philadelphia!” For me, that involves channelling a 280-year-old man from Pennsylvania and Delaware who was a passionate believer in independence.
It is an opportunity, according to the director, Mark Tyler, that comes along only once in a decade. The play opened on Broadway in 1969 and ran until 1972. Though it was revived on Broadway in 1997, and ran for 333 shows, one can generally only see this production when it comes to a regional theater like this one.

“1776: The Musical” will be performed at the Pocomoke High School auditorium weekends from June 10 through the 18. For tickets visit www.easternshoremadrigals.com.

Fager’s Island, timing, and intentionality: Happy Hour Adventures

Dave Rizer moves around the bar with the confidence of experience. He practically grew up around Fager’s Island and, as he looks down the barrel of his third decade of employment there, clearly he knows what he is doing. What he is doing today is making Orange Crushes and chatting with the entire bar, mostly at the same time. It’s early and there only are a few couples at the bar, but the number grows as 5 o’clock approaches.
Fager’s Island has made its bones as a local’s bar. There are people who come to happy hour daily, season in and season out, as well as those who are less-frequent regulars. Sitting at the bar in Fager’s, looking out over the bay, you get a sense that keeping the place solvent is as easy as making certain that the bay doesn’t run out of water. Or sunsets. But Ocean City is kind of a monument to people who thought having waterfront property was sufficient for running a successful bar and were taught otherwise by practical reality.
The fact is, these people work like maniacs and smile like angels, season in and season out. Every day is a challenge to make sure that things are right and comfortable for the guests. The place runs with German precision disguised as island laissez faire. Just ask Dave.
Sunset is a metaphor for what makes Fager’s work. It is a combination of timing and a kind of Zen intentionality. I don’t know if you know this or not, I certainly didn’t, but the bartenders at Fager’s time the sunset. Every day.

fager's island
Dave Rizer has made more Orange Crushes in his life than you could drink if you started doing it professionally. He also has ensured the sunset has proper accompaniment for the last three decades

Sunsets at Fager’s Island (and a physics lesson)

For those of you who don’t know, Fager’s Island plays the sun down every day to the 1812 Overture. Tchaikovsky’s work starts precisely 15:08 before the sun fades behind West Ocean City. It starts off so subtly that you’re more than a minute in before you know it has begun. Of course, by the crescendo everyone is all in.
Here is a fun sunset fact: You might know that sunset is a different time every day, but did it also occur to you that it is a different duration? Winter sunsets are shorter and also take less time to occur. Dave told me that John Fager wants the sunset manually started every day. The equivalent (for those of you old enough to remember) of pressing play on a tape deck while looking at your wrist watch. It only is barely more modern today. The point here is, it could be set to run automatically. Fager’s could have a program set to play the 1812 Overture 15 minutes and eight seconds before the sun dips below the horizon. Hell, my teenager probably can get her iPhone to do that.
But the bartenders here don’t. It’s part challenge and part focus. It’s a way of staying present, being in the here and now and embracing the end of the day, or at least the waning of the light. For the guests, it is a way of drawing attention to a daily miracle. Watch the sun go down. Take a breath. Witness the transformation. Be in the moment. Hear the La Marseillaise theme and embrace the fight. The War of 1812 was about taking one’s independence and making it stick, doing something with your freedom. The only thing more glorious than realizing one’s freedom is exercising it.

Fager's Island
Orange Crush? Don’t mind if we do. All the time. These ladies came to Ocean City in the winter just to hang for a weekend, and split as Monday night came on.

Skip to the famous part

By the time the part of the Overture that everyone can whistle is playing, most nights and for most practical purposes, the dark has arrived. At Fager’s, it doesn’t announce the end of the day so much as the beginning of the evening. Your attention had been brought to the fact that the sun is going down but it has been focused on the fact that the evening has begun.
The Orange Crushes were on special when I was having my Happy Hour Adventure and that’s kind of appropriate. The bar filled up with person after person asking for an Orange Crush. If there’s anything more Ocean City than having an Orange Crush at Fager’s while Tchaikovsky plays, I don’t think I can stand to know what it is. And that is the draw at Fager’s, kind of. I think it is more appropriate to call it a symptom of the draw.
Imagine working at a place where staying in tune with history, with the sun and with tradition is in your job description. Fager’s is cultivating a way of life; and the people who work there, who care for the guests, squeezing oranges, finding seats, giving directions and suggesting complementary beers and foods become part of the culture of commitment. They are present enough to figure when the sun crosses the horizon. They celebrate the fact daily. Nothing but good can come of that.

The Ocean City Hotel vs. the Ocean City Condo: A primer

Should we book a hotel room, or rent a condo? It’s a question that could be applied to many vacation spots, but here in Ocean City Md, it is the question when in regards to accommodations. As a matter of fact, If you are having a conversation about Ocean City, it always is a dead giveaway that you are engaging with someone who never has been here before when they ask you? “So, what do you guys rent one of those big houses there?”
If reading that last sentence made you smile or even chuckle, then chances are you already are a veteran vacationer of our little beach town. You probably have had people tilt their heads and squint back at you as inform them that, “No, they don’t have beach houses.”
Now, on the other hand, if you yourself have never visited our little slice of the W\Eastern Shore, then let me be the first to welcome you aboard and invite you to continue reading along as we explore this age-old debate among our vacationers.

Ocean City Vacation Rentals – Rent a condo in Ocean City Maryland

Vacation Rentals Navigation If you’re considering a condo, beach house, apartment for your next stay in Ocean City, Md, this is the best site to find Ocean City vacation rentals. From bayside condos with balconies overlooking iconic sunsets, to full beach houses steps from the sand, to single rooms for rent, Ocean City has the condos or vacation rentals you and your family need for a stress-free vacation experience.

As I briefly touched on above, beach houses might be the common at the Delaware beaches, and practically the standard when thinking about the Outer Banks, but in Ocean City Md. lodging is predominately made up of hotels/motels and condominiums, which leaves us all asking ourselves and each other which option works out best. Now, before I just dive straight in with my own perspective on this matter, let me first give you some brief background on my vacationing experience here on the island.
Park-Place-Hotel

A trip down Ocean City Condo memory lane

The true definition of what really distinguishes a motel from a hotel could be subject to interpretation, and perhaps even debate, but as a child I observed that hotels had a few more amenities, and the room doors were internal, as apposed to facing out towards a parking lot. Aside from those things the basic concept was pretty much the same. My earliest memories of Ocean City, are from when my parents took us to the Stowaway Motel on 21st. It was a no frills type of place, 2 beds, a bathroom, and some pretty noisy window a/c units. Despite it’s short comings it was ocean front and right on the boardwalk so nobody in my family complained. We actually stayed here for a number of years until we moved up to the Best Western Flagship Hotel, located at the end of the boardwalk. In a way, this location felt like the outskirts of town, because much of what was north of here was either just built, or was in the process of being built in what is now commonly referred to as “condo row”. Every year we’d get in the car, and drive up the coast looking upward at these new high rise buildings until eventually my father decided it was time to upgrade our family vacation to a condominium in the Sea Watch building.
I’ve often heard that history repeats itself, and I’m not sure if this is the case here or not, but what I can tell you is while I’ve stayed many different places in town as an adult, once I had kids of my own I found myself booking us rooms at a motel, the former Santa Maria Motel, to be exact. Does anyone else remember this place? It wasn’t much to look at but the rooms were clean, and the 15th Street location was hard to beat. Truth be told, it worked out great, and the price was just right too. But as our family grew we moved up to a three bedroom condo and eventually, in a surprise turn of events, we went back to a hotel room. So, why did we do an about face? Well, that’s really what you wanted to know the second you started reading this article – isn’t it?
 Condo interior

Ring the bell!

In this corner of the ring we have the condominium: When it comes to renting a condo, there are a lot of advantages over a hotel room. I’d list “space” at the top of the plus column, but it is a little more involved than just more square footage. Typically that extra room is distributed to bedrooms being separate entities from the living room, full sized kitchens, baths, and often times even having laundry facilities. Essentially it is a comfortable home that you’re renting for your stay.
This is a great choice for families of all sizes. There’s nothing quite like personal space and privacy to keep the harmony going inside your family unit and getting one with more than one bathrooms can certainly solve some obvious problems. With all these positives it almost seems impossible to find anything negative here. But as we all know, nothing is perfect, and even conveniences can become inconvenient in the blink of an eye. Condo owners tend to want to maximize their rental season, so this means a lot of weekly only rentals during the summer months, along with set starting and ending days ie. Saturday to Saturday. With that being said, even if the dates and the length of stay restrictions work out for you, keep in mind that unlike a hotel, housekeeping and providing linens will fall squarely on your shoulders. This might not seem like too big of a hurdle for some, but for a family of seven people and their bags already packed into a mini van, the added luggage of bath towels, bed linens, and pillows can leave you feeling like Chevy Chase loading up the Family Truckster, if you’re not careful.
Now in the other corner we have hotels: I don’t think anyone wants or needs me to explain how hotel stays work, but just as I listed all the up sides of rentals, it would only be fair to point out the advantages that hotels have over condominiums. Flexibility of the number of nights you can stay, and choosing the days you begin and end your stay, can be a huge asset for many people. Another thing to consider here is what I like to refer to as the R&R factor. I mean lets be honest here, even if you can look past stacking your family and the extra luggage into your car like a giant Jinga game, having to make the beds, wash and dry bath towels, empty garbage cans and clean the place before you leave can absolutely suck the rest and relaxation right out of your vacation. Also worth mentioning is if you have a problem with your room, there’s something to be said for being able to ride the elevator down to the lobby and find a solution right there at the front desk instead of calling your rental agency and waiting around for a call back in order to resolve your issue.
The Castle in the Sand
The Castle in the Sand

Want to have your cake and eat it too?

Like everything there are pros and cons, and if you just can’t seem to get off the fence here on this one, I have one final option for you: there are some condo units that are located in and owned by hotels. A couple that come to mind are the Carousel Hotel, and the Quality in Oceanfront (on 54th st) they have two- and three- bedroom condos in and near their hotel buildings that include linens and housekeeping, along with access to all the amenities of the hotels themselves. You might say they’re kind of the best of both worlds.
Bottom line is there’s really no winner or loser here in any of these lodging options, it simply comes down to what fits the bill best. Just as no two people are alike, no two families are either. At the end of the day you must choose which option works best for your own family’s needs.
Happy hunting my friends!
Sincerely, The Outsider

A guide to Ocean City Watersports

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a guide to ocean city watersports
a guide to ocean city watersports

Ocean City is the perfect location for Watersports. With both the Ocean and the Bay providing access to water, there is a vast choice of activities to try. We’re providing this guide to Ocean City Watersports as a way for you to start and think about what you might like to try when you arrive on your Ocean City Vacation. From jet skiing to parasailing, from pontoon boat rides to speed boat rides, and everything in between, take to the water when you are in Ocean City and get the thrill of your life. Check out these Watersports in Ocean City Md Photos.

Some of the coolest watersports gear around

From hoverjets to parasailing to good ol’ fashioned jet skiing, Ocean City is built for Watersports. The bay provides plenty of calm waters for novices and those who are old hands alike.

Hoverboarding is like waterskiing without a boat. Or a second ski.
Hoverboarding is like waterskiing without a boat. Or a second ski.

Parasailing soar above it all and take a dip

No guide to Ocean City watersports would be complete without parasailing. This activity is among the most precious memories for many youngsters who have done it for the first time in Ocean City. It’s thrilling and exhilarating but also tame and peaceful.

parasailing in OCean City
Parasailing is a great way to see the beach. Well, another great way to see the beach.

Watersports aren’t all adrenaline

There are few more satisfying ways to spend an afternoon than pleasure boating. Maybe do a little fishing, a little sunning and even take a quick dip in the ocean. The least expensive way to do that is to rent a pontoon boat for a few hours and test drive a life of leisure.

There are worse ways to spend an afternoon than cruising around on the bay.
There are worse ways to spend an afternoon than cruising around on the bay.

Someplace between relaxation and a workout

Stan Up Paddleboarding has grown by leaps and bounds over recent years. Mostly, it is a great way to tour the island waterways if kayaking isn’t your thing. The best part is that you can use it as a workout (I’ve seen people on Assateague riding waves on it), as a method of transportation or as a leisurely activity.

It's kind of like a solo gondola.
It’s kind of like a solo gondola.

Of course, jetski while you’re visiting Ocean City

There is a reason this is among the most popular of the watersports. Jet skiing is cool, it is relatively easy to learn to so and is a really safe way to tool around the Ocean City waterways.

Jet skiing at Odyssea Watersports Ocean City MD

A family affair

There are lots more things to do. Kayaking, surfing, sport fishing, but the most important part of your family vacation is the family part. Nearly all of the entries in our guide to Ocean City Watersports are family friendly for people of all ages, which is another reason they are so popular with our visitors.

People young and, well, less young enjoy jet skiing together.
People young and, well, less young enjoy jet skiing together.

The Shining: Classic Movie Reviews

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Whenever I hear the word “Redrum,” it immediately sends a chill down my spine. I immediately think of elevator doors opening and a wave of red pouring out, or I hear the chipping away of a wooden door by an axe, followed by the immortal “Here’s Johnny!” This is the lasting effect that Stanley Kubrick’s masterpiece film has on its viewers.

The Shining is consistently rated by critics as one of the best horror films ever made. What’s ironic to me is that the plot doesn’t seem that scary: a young family spends the winter looking over a hotel while the father (portrayed by legendary actor Jack Nicholson in one of his most memorable roles) slowly but surely spirals into unparalleled insanity right before our very eyes. Ok, great. He’s no Freddy Krueger or Jason Voorhees. I’d take my chances with a glorified hotel babysitter over a disfigured homicidal maniac any day of the week. But you’d be wrong to assume that this film is not nearly as terrifying as a slasher flick. From the very first scene of Jack Torrance accepting the caretaker position at the Overlook Hotel, the audience feels in their bones that everything will eventually go wrong. The long, abandoned hallways; the prolonged silence that makes us toss and turn in our seats; the eerie little details that add up to some pretty major scares. It’s a barrage of screams and gasps waiting to happen.

What makes The Shining so dreadfully spectacular is the blurred line between realism and fantasy. Is the hotel actually haunted, or is it simply a case of cabin fever gone horribly, horribly wrong? Ask anyone who’s seen the film and they may argue for one side or the other. We as the audience are left to determine what is really going on so that, essentially, we are making our own horror film. It’s only as scary as we want it to be. And that’s the beauty of it. There have been many different interpretations about what the film is really about over the years. Some argue that it’s a film about the genocide of the Native Americans, while others choose to view it as a movie about the Holocaust. Some even believe it is Stanley Kubrick’s confession to filming the Apollo 11 moon landings. Everything in the film is open to different emotions and interpretations, and if you see it more than once you’ll more than likely latch on to new details and form a different opinion of the movie.

In my case, I can watch the scene were Torrance’s wife Wendy finally confronts her husband about his mental state, and sometimes I’ll be scared out of my mind. But other times, I may just laugh at how silly the scene seems. It’s hard not to when Nicholson is clearly having so much fun with spiraling out of his mind. Does that make me insane? Would people in the audience look at me and wonder if I’m the one who’s actually losing his grip on reality? This is the effect of The Shining. Eventually it gets to the point where we lose our grip on what we believe is real in the film.

Movies in Ocean City

The Shining plays at Fox Sun and Surf Cinema on October 26th at 10 p.m. as part of the theater’s TMC Classics program. OceanCity.com welcomes new writers on all topics. Click here for more information on becoming an OceanCity.com contributor.

Take a Virtual Tour of the Ocean City Area Brewery Scene (10 photos)

You are about to embark on virtual tour of 10 unique breweries from Ocean City and the surrounding area that offer some of the best local beer available anywhere in the country. From easily drinkable, beach-inspired light brews, to heavily-hopped IPAs, to robust stouts and porters, the Ocean City area’s breweries offer a wide range of styles and flavors that will keep you coming back for tastings, even after the sun has set on the summer season.

After you read about them, head over to ShoreCraftBeer.com to see how you can win prizes for trying them all out on or to plan your next beer vacation!

Ocean City Brewing Co.

tour oc brewing coThe face of the Ocean City brewery scene changed forever in June 2014 when the Ocean City Brewing Co. opened its doors. What was once an old warehouse on 56th St. is now home to Ocean City’s largest production brewery, which includes a full service restaurant, a massive sports bar with 54 inch TVs, and retail shop. Ocean City Brewing Co. prides itself on having beers for every taste and has 2 dozen taps of its own unique brews- including Ocean City’s only locally made lager. Stop by for daily tours at 11am, 1pm, and 3pm.

 

Assawoman Bay Brewing Co.

tour assawoman

The 45th St. Taphouse has been pouring pints of the area’s best beers since it opened in 2012, but the owners wanted to take their craft beer venture one step further by brewing their own in 2014. Enter Jason Weissberg, a former employee at Dogfish Head Brewing and Eats brought in to oversee the brewing operation at Assawoman Bay Brewing Co. Now, not only does the brewery boast one of the most spectacular views in the history of microbrews, but also an impressive lineup of beers to match, including the award-winning Trans-porter.

 

Backshore Brewing Co.

tour backshore

Speaking of scenic views, Ocean City’s first brewing company- the Backshore Brewing Co.- overlooks the Atlantic Ocean from its home on the Boardwalk (10th St.). Backshore, with its outdoor patio, vintage WV bus, skateboard flights of award-winning beer, and alcoholic ‘Hoop Tea’, embodies the ‘shorebilly’ lifestyle of Ocean City. Check it out for a one-of-a-kind experience next time you’re in Ocean City, and check out the craft beer documentary, Blood, Sweat, and Beers to learn about Backshore’s struggles to survive.

 

Fin City Brewing

tour fin city

Located high in the rafters above Hooper’s Crab House and born out of a homebrewer’s dream, the Fin City Brewing Co. has been cranking out its “obscenely fresh handcrafted ales” since April of 2012. “Why drink a Coors Light when you can have a local brew,” questions manager Patrick Brady. We are still waiting for a good answer.  While you’re thinking it over, stop by Fin City to grab a few pints or grab a 6-pack from your local beer store and taste the beach, not the Rockies.

 

Burley Oak Brewing Co.

tour burley

Located just outside of Ocean City in ‘America’s Coolest Small Town’ of Berlin, MD, the Burley Oak Brewing Co. has been producing world-class beers since 2011. Rated a 99 overall by BeerAdvocate, Burley Oak is made by craft beer lovers for craft beer lovers, and offers a constantly changing spectrum of brews. Stop by to taste one of Burley’s 6 beers rated 90+ by BeerAdvocate, or grab a 6-pack to take next time you go fishing, boating, or head out to Assateague.

 

Tall Tales Brewery

tour tall tales

Further west on Route 50, in Parsonsburg, MD, fairy tales and folklore come to life in the form of locally brewed craft beer at the Tall Tales Brewery. This small, premium brewery offers a collection of different brews, including Sasquatch Imperial Stout, Excalibur IPA, Paul Bunyan Pale Ale, and Redheaded Step Child- each inspired by a tall tale from folk lore.

 

Evolution Craft Brewing Co.

Evolution Public House Salisbury MD

Good food was meant to be enjoyed with good beer, and in no place is that more evident than at Evolution Craft Brewing Co. in Salisbury, MD. Sitting just minutes from the bypass Evo is one of the mid-Atlantic’s premier craft breweries and is accompanied by a gorgeous restaurant and tasting room serving fabulous local, seasonal food menus, seven unique mainline brews, four seasonal beers, and numerous small batch series’ and experimental creations. The combination of excellent atmosphere, spectacular service, farm fresh food, and creative craft brews makes Evo a crowning achievement of the Eastern Shore craft beer experience, and well worth the stop on your way to or from the beach.

 

Rubber Soul Brewing

Tour Rubber Soul

Opened in the summer of 2015, Rubber Soul Brewing Co. in Salisbury, MD is one of the newest additions to the local craft beer scene. But new doesn’t mean lack of experience, as Rubber Soul’s brewing operation is headed up by former Dogfish Head brewer Jesse Prost. This bicycle themed brewery is already serving up some of the area’s best brews and is quickly earning a reputation as a a must visit destination for craft beer lovers.

 

3rd Wave Brewing Co.

tour 3rd wave

Run by a pair of surfing buddies turned homebrewers turned entrepreneurs, the 3rd Wave Brewing Co. in Delmar, DE (just 5 minutes from Salisbury) is Delmarva’s only all female owned brewery and is known for “Good Friends, Good Waves, and Good Beer.” Great beers is more like it, as 3rd Wave has some of the best- and most inventive- in the area. With everything from traditional IPAs, ales, stouts, and porters to an ever changing assortment of sours, fruit beers, seasonals, and other creative brews made with fresh local ingredients, 3rd Wave is more than living up to it’s motto.

 

Chesapeake Brewing Co.

tour chesapeake brewing

Our final stop- the Chesapeake Brewing Co.- is down the road in Crisfield, MD, but well worth the trip to those willing to make it. Located right near the Chesapeake Bay, the Chesapeake Brewing Co. makes local beer that pairs with the local fishing and waterman culture. Plan a day trip to Smith Island and hit Chesapeake Brewing on your way there or back (or both), or plan an overnight trip and pair your brewery visit with a stay at a local bed and breakfast.

Still thirsty for more local beer? Check out ShoreCraftBeer.com to learn about the nearly 20 breweries on the Delmarva peninsula and see how you can win prizes for trying them all!

 

2015 Ocean City Crew Comps (26 photos)

The 17 crews that make up Ocean City Beach Patrol have been competing against one another in tests of physical and mental  fitness since 1976.  The Crew Competitions gives Ocean City Beach Patrol the chance to demonstrate their lifesaving skills and the community a chance to celebrate all that the Beach Patrol does for them. Competition  builds team spirit and encourages lifeguards to keep in top shape.  It’s  essential to the success of a lifeguard. Why? Because every time a lifeguard gets in the water, they have to defeat the ocean .

During the Crew Comps crews channel their competition in a festive atmosphere.

The 2015 Crew Comps took place on Saturday,  July 25, on the  North Division Street beach.  Here’s a recap:

The event kicked off with the Land Line.    Each crew used a system of ropes to rescue their designated victim.

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Can you spell teamwork?

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Next up was the Paddle Board Relay.

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Each competitor ran as fast as they could…

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and leaped into the water.

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There was still more to come. Next up was the  Run Swim Run relay.

The competitors kicked up the sand as the crowd looked on.

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When they emerged…

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They sped to the finish  line.

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The crews lined up for the 400 M relay…

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Which went by in a blur.

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Before you knew it. It was time for a good old game of tug-of-war.

Spectators settled in for the competition

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Each team dug their trenches.
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Then the action began. Each crew had a member cheering them on.

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There were looks of determination on every face.

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Throughout the entire event the community was celebrating its Beach Patrol  and each crew certainly gave the community a reason to celebrate.

Microbrew Monday: July 27, 2015

With 4 breweries in town, 10 more under an hour away, and more popping up every few months, Ocean City, MD has asserted itself as the fastest growing craft beer brewery destination on the East Coast. Each week, OceanCity.com brings you ‘Microbrew Monday’ to keep you in the know about what’s going on around our local brewery scene. Don’t forget to check out ShoreCraftBeer.com for complete craft beer coverage and to learn how you can win prizes just for drinking local with the ShoreCraftBeer.com Shore-17 and OC-8 Brewery Challenges!

burley best ofHere are this week’s highlights:

– On Monday, July 27, Ocean City Brewing Company will host the ‘Jet Powered Fundraiser’ to raise money for Cedar Chapel Special School. On July 13, local business and brewery owners took to the skies on jet powered watercraft to raise donations to help build new educational space at Cedar Chapel. Stop by the brewery from 4:30-6:00 on the 27th to see the footage, enjoy free appetizers, and help us meet our $2500 goal.

Burley Oak is almost 4 years old and is already thinking ahead to the celebration. Mark you calendars for August 26th for an all day party with bottle releases, live music, food, giveaways, and more.

– Speaking of Ocean City Brewing Co., it has two dozen taps, many of which are occupied by craft beers made on premise. This week, Ocean City Brewing has new summer releases like its Blood Orange IPA, Orange Cruch Wheat Ale, and Watermelon Mint Ale, so make sure to stop by to sample them all! Also, head to the brewery for Pint Night on Tuesday at 7:00, “Firkin Friday” where a special, one-of-a-kind cask-conditioned brew is featured weekly, and breakfast at the brewery on the weekends. Finally, if you want a first-hand look at the brewing process, don’t forget to stop by OC Brewing Co. for a personal tour of the operation. Tours take place daily at 11am, 1pm and 3pm.

– Evolution Craft Brewing Company, in Salisbury, has great food and beer specials all week at Public House Restaurant and the tasting room. Check them out Monday for 1/2 priced wings and all day happy hour; Tuesday you can get a beer and burger for only $10; Wednesday house-smoked brisket sandwiches are 1/2 off all day; Thursday is ‘Community Appreciation Night” featuring discounts for police, firefighters, EMTs, teachers and others who make the local community a better place; and Sunday Evo has 1/2 priced burgers and happy hour all day long.

– The 3rd Wave Brewing Co., just up the road in Delmar, DE, prides itself on ‘Good Friends, Good Waves and Great Beer’ and wants to share all three with you. This week, stop by the taproom for School Faculty Appreciation Night on Monday for Hoppy Hour prices with proper ID, Wednesday for 3 pints for $3 each, Flight Night on Thursday with half price flights, or any other night to try 3rd Wave’s newest offerings.

– Located at 10th St. and the Boardwalk, Ocean City’s first brewery- Backshore Brewing Co.- may have the best view of any brewery anywhere in the country. Stop by for the view and stay for the handcrafted beers and brand new HoopTea. Plus, don’t forget to be on the lookout for Backshore’s big screen debut in ‘Blood, Sweat, and Beer,’ a recently released documentary chronicling two craft beer breweries.