logo
Florida State Fair 2025: Here are the wackiest new items

Florida State Fair 2025: Here are the wackiest new items

Axios06-02-2025

The Florida State Fair starts Thursday, which means another lineup of freaky food awaits.
Here's a sampling of what to expect on the midway:
🍝 Baked ziti on a stick: There's no better tribute to your Nonna than a fair-style bastardization of this true Italian classic.
Find it at All American Concessions.
😋 The Southern comfort funnel cake: Props to the concessions mastermind who dared to ask, "What if we did biscuits and gravy… with funnel cake?"
Find it at The Best Around.
🥔 Mexican street corn baked potato: You know what they say: Double the starch, double the fun.
Find it at Spudtastic Potato.
🌽 Pretzel-rolled corn on the cob: This is just Mexican street corn for Midwesterners.
Find it at Miller & Co Concessions.
🥓 S'mores chocolate bacon: If you've never had a hankering for bacon while eating s'mores, maybe you're just not thinking big enough.
Find it at Bacon Stand.
🥐 Salted caramel cinnamon bun: Jokes aside, this just sounds delicious.
Find it at Cinnamon Saloon.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rupert Everett Decries 'Cinematic Wokery' In 'Puritanical' Climate, Says He Hate-Watches ‘Hacks'
Rupert Everett Decries 'Cinematic Wokery' In 'Puritanical' Climate, Says He Hate-Watches ‘Hacks'

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rupert Everett Decries 'Cinematic Wokery' In 'Puritanical' Climate, Says He Hate-Watches ‘Hacks'

British actor Rupert Everett, who is on the jury at the Taormina Film Festival, spoke candidly — at some points seriously and others more drolly — this afternoon on a number of topics ranging from his thoughts on the industry today to the threat of AI and how his tastes in consuming content run to 'things I don't really like to watch.' Charming the assembled film students and accredited attendees, Everett kicked off the conversation in Italian, talking about his experience with Francesco Rosi on 1987's Chronicle of a Death Foretold and the 2019 mini The Name of the Rose, which shot at Cinecittà. More from Deadline Michael Douglas, In Taormina To Receive Career Honor, Apologizes For U.S. Role In Ongoing Global Conflicts: 'This Is The Worst Time That I Can Ever Remember' Da'Vine Joy Randolph On Emerging Industry 'Sisterhood' & Power Of Sharing Info On Salary Talks – Taormina 'Thena': First Look At Peter Gold's Gritty Debut Ahead Of Taormina Premiere Then, asked about the state of the industry, Everett pivoted more so to television than cinema and said: 'I think for me it's not having a very good moment because I preferred the world of entertainment when it was a little bit less puritanical. I feel that now we've got into a world where everybody's so easily offended by anything that anybody does that the result is that everything is completely predictable, and as a result really quite boring. Also, everything is very good because now everyone knows how to reference Visconti for this or Truffaut for that and put it all together — and all these series, they're all good. But I don't feel for me there's personality behind a lot of things, there's just this horrible political movement of kind of cinematic wokery which I really don't like. I think it's as bad as the 4th century Christians in the Roman Empire, they're destroying everything.' Taormina jury member Rupert Everett laments 'cinematic wokery' in today's 'puritanical' society — Deadline (@DEADLINE) June 13, 2025 When queried about what content he enjoys, the multiple BAFTA and Golden Globe nominee said: 'I like to watch things I really don't like. For example, I've been watching this series called Hacks recently, and I really hate every single episode. Each episode I hate more than the last one, but I can't stop watching, so I enjoy that.' Taormina Film Festival jury member Rupert Everett talks hate-watching TV, and cites 'Hacks' but says he can't stop watching — Deadline (@DEADLINE) June 13, 2025 On the subject of AI, Everett mused that it poses a threat to actors, saying: 'I'm sure eventually they'll be able to do all the acting and we'll have to go and do something else. I'm going to become an intimacy director. It's a very easy job, you do three weeks training and then you can tell everybody what to do on a film.' Rupert Everett on the threat of AI to actors and jokes about becoming an intimacy director #TaorminaFilmFestival — Deadline (@DEADLINE) June 13, 2025 Best of Deadline Use The Schwartz!: 'Spaceballs' Movie Photos & Posters 2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More 'Stick' Release Guide: When Do New Episodes Come Out?

NYC's Colbo, Coming Soon and More Lead a Spritz-Inspired Pop-Up This Weekend
NYC's Colbo, Coming Soon and More Lead a Spritz-Inspired Pop-Up This Weekend

Hypebeast

time3 hours ago

  • Hypebeast

NYC's Colbo, Coming Soon and More Lead a Spritz-Inspired Pop-Up This Weekend

For one weekend this June, downtown Manhattan is getting a distinctly Italian refresh. On June 14–15, a two-day cultural takeover calledCampariSpritz Square will bring aperitivo vibes to the heart of Chinatown and the Lower East Side. Inspired by the classic Italian spritz, the event blends food, drink, and design into a lively streetside celebration of slower living—with a bitter twist. The central gathering point is 171 E. Broadway, where guests can sip spritzes alongside small bites in a setting designed to evoke Milan's early-evening energy. But the event isn't confined to one location. Local spots likeSusan Alexandra,Coming Soon, andColboare joining the effort, hosting collaborative pop-ups that combine fashion, art, and music—think DJ sets, aperitivo-themed shopping, and neighborhood-only exclusives. While the spritz has become a familiar sight on menus across the U.S., this weekend offers something more immersive: a chance to experience aperitivo culture not as a trend, but as a ritual. The event draws on both tradition and creativity, weaving in the voices of local businesses and creatives to shape a more personal take on the Italian classic. Reservations for the main experience are now openvia Resy, with limited seatings available for guests 21 and up. Partner activations run from 3–7pm each day. Whether you're a die-hard spritz drinker or just looking for a different kind of downtown weekend, this is shaping up to be a rare collision of good taste, good company, and great timing. DISCLAIMER:We discourage irresponsible and/or underage drinking. Drink responsibly and legally.

Men who stole $6 million golden toilet from English mansion sentenced to prison terms
Men who stole $6 million golden toilet from English mansion sentenced to prison terms

The Hill

time3 hours ago

  • The Hill

Men who stole $6 million golden toilet from English mansion sentenced to prison terms

LONDON (AP) — Two burglars who plotted the heist of a $6.4 million golden toilet, a fully-functional 18-carat piece of contemporary art that was ripped from the plumbing of an English mansion, were sentenced Friday to more than two years in a British prison. The satirical commentary on consumer culture, titled 'America,' by Italian conceptual artist Maurizio Cattelan, had only been on display for a couple days when five burglars swiped it from Blenheim Palace — the country mansion where British wartime leader Winston Churchill was born — in September 2019. The purloined potty was never recovered and was believed to have been chopped up and sold. 'This bold and brazen heist took no more than 5 1/2 minutes to complete,' Judge Ian Pringle said in Oxford Crown Court. 'America has never been seen again.' James Sheen, 40, a roofer who pleaded guilty to burglary, conspiracy and transferring criminal property, was sentenced to four years in prison. Michael Jones, 39, who worked for Sheen and was convicted of burglary at trial, was sentenced to two years and three months. The toilet weighed just over 215 pounds (98 kilograms) and was worth more than its weight in gold. The value of the bullion at the time was 2.8 million pounds ($3.5 million), but it was insured for 4.7 million pounds (more than $6 million). The piece by Cattelan, whose work of a banana duct-taped to a wall was sold in 2024 for $6.2 million at auction in New York, poked fun at excessive wealth. It had previously been on display at The Guggenheim Museum in New York. When U.S. President Donald Trump asked the museum to loan him a Van Gogh painting during his first term in office, the Guggenheim cheekily offered the toilet instead. The White House did not accept the offer. The toilet had just gone on display when Jones visited the museum twice, booking a viewing the day before the theft to take photos, check out the lock and have his own private session on the golden throne. He deemed the experience 'splendid' during his testimony. The next morning before dawn the gang of thieves crashed through the wooden gates of the palace in two stolen vehicles and tore across well-tended lawns. They pulled up to the estate's courtyard and smashed a window that Jones had photographed the day before. The thieves used sledgehammers and a crowbar to wrench the toilet from its foundation, causing considerable damage to the 18th-century property, a UNESCO World Heritage site filled with valuable art and furniture that draws thousands of visitors each year. Surveillance footage showed one of the men, whose face was hidden in a black mask, walking from the palace with a golden toilet seat in his hand. Two other men appeared to lift something golden into the trunk of a waiting car and the suspension sagged under the weight. Sheen's DNA was found on a sledgehammer left behind at the scene of the crime indicating he was among the burglars. Investigators also found hundreds of gold fragments on a pair of sweatpants at his home, which had come from cutting up the spoils of the caper. Sheen had sent a relative a photo of 520,000 pounds in cash, which a prosecutor said was for the sale of about a fifth of the gold. None of the gold or money has ever been recovered and no one else was charged with the burglary. Another convict, Frederick Doe, 37, also known as Frederick Sines, who tried to help Sheen find a buyer for the gold was spared a jail term when Pringle sentenced him last month to a suspended sentence for conspiracy to transfer criminal property. Pringle said the thieves had taken advantage of him. Both Sheen and Jones had lengthy criminal records, prosecutor Julian Christopher said. At the time of the burglary, Sheen was on parole for a firearms conviction that involved a running gun battle with another car that injured passengers in a third vehicle. He was arrested for additional crimes while on release and has since been sentenced to serve more than 19 years in prison. Jones had a record dating back to the age of 13 that included burglary, several car thefts and robbery. Almost six years ago, on the eve of the heist, Jones did his reconnaissance work testing out the toilet. It was a Friday the 13th, a day many consider unlucky. For several years it appeared the burglars appeared to have gotten away with their crime. They avoided charges for more than four years and several culprits were not caught. But Sheen and Jones ultimately paid a price for their roles — on Friday the 13th.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store