Today at the Editor’s glance: On Free For All Friday, David Ayres–President David Ayres to you and me–hosts the annual media roundtable discussion about the past year’s biggest stories, with WNZF News Director Rich Carroll, Observer Editor Brian McMillan, Flagler News Weekly’s Danielle Anderson, and me. Cat lovers: It’s Meowy Hour at the Hilton Garden Inn, 55 Town Center Boulevard, palm Coast, from 5 to 7 p.m., hosted by Community Cats of Palm Coast. Enjoy hors d’oeurves and live music while you bid on items in a silent auction and a raffle. Event includes door prizes and a cash bar. Mass Appeal,” a two-character play at the Flagler Playhouse, opens at 7:30 p.m. The play was written by Bill Davis in 1980. The comedy-drama is about the popular but conventional and conservative Father Tim Farley who gets challenged by a rabble-rousing seminarian called Mark Dolson, first about the ordination of women, then about other matters. Book tickets here. Flagler Playhouse, 301 E Moody Blvd, Bunnell.
Now this:
The Live Calendar is a compendium of local and regional political, civic and cultural events. You can input your own calendar events directly onto the site as you wish them to appear (pending approval of course). To include your event in the Live Calendar, please fill out this form.
Flagler County Commission Workshop
Flagler County’s Cold-Weather Shelter Opens
Story Time for Preschoolers at Flagler Beach Public Library
Model Yacht Club Races at the Pond in Palm Coast’s Town Center
Flagler County’s Cold-Weather Shelter Opens
Town of Marineland Commission Meeting
‘Exit Laughing,’ at Daytona Playhouse
Women’s Palm Coast Open, a USTA Pro Circuit Event
Free For All Fridays With Host David Ayres on WNZF
Friday Blue Forum
Crystal Gayle at the Fitz
‘Crimes of the Heart’ at St. Augustine’s Limelight Theatre
‘Every Brilliant Thing,’ at Palm Coast’s City Repertory Theatre
‘Exit Laughing,’ at Daytona Playhouse
Coffee With Flagler Beach Commission Chair Scott Spradley
For the full calendar, go here.
“I’ve been studying the history of the French Revolution. I felt as though utterly crushed by the hideous fatalism of history, I find in human nature a terrible sameness, in human circumstances an ineluctable violence vouchsafed to all and none. Individuals but froth on the waves, greatness a mere coincidence, the mastery of geniuses a dance of puppets, a ridiculous struggle against an iron law that can at best be recognized, but never mastered.”
–From Georg Büchner’s “Complete Plays, ‘Lenz’ and Other Writings,” tr. John Reddick (1993).