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We can t forget em : Pulse tragedy continues to bring change throughout Central Florida

Umbrella art trail offers Clermont businesses path forward

Umbrella art trail gives Clermont businesses cover during pandemic, offers path forward PUBLISHED 5:34 PM ET Apr. 27, 2021 PUBLISHED 5:34 PM EDT Apr. 27, 2021 SHARE CLERMONT, Fla. As local small businesses continue to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, an art trail in Clermont is helping bring people into local businesses.  What You Need To Know Umbrellla art trail in Clermont leads customers into businesses Barbara Hollerand, business liaison for Rise Clermont, came up with the idea Nearly 30 umbrellas are displayed at area nonprofits and businesses Many of the umbrellas were designed by South Lake Art League members  Business is blooming again at Kim’s Cabbage Patch in Clermont. 

Small Screens, Big Scares: 10 More Terrifying TV Movies

Small Screens, Big Scares: 10 More Terrifying TV Movies Now, Chad Collins compiles another list of terrifying made-for-TV movies! Did your favorite make the list? By Chad Collins In June of last year, I highlighted my favorite made-for-television horror movies. The response was somewhat divisive, in large part on account of the perceived snubs (sorry, Salem’s Lot fans). It’s curious, though, because made-for-TV horror movies are, in a sense, a subgenre of their own. Shades of Aaron-Spelling’s heyday, even among those titles he did not produce, permeate almost every entry in the canon of televised scare fests. Despite the diversity– some muted and washed-out, some vibrant and lively, others adapted from seminal pieces of genre fiction– there’s something linking them all together.

One in three Canadians will experience a mental health crisis in their lifetime

  BARRIE, ONT. Jan. 28 marks the 11th annual Bell Let s Talk day an initiative to raise funds for mental initiatives and increase awareness and reduce the stigma around depression, anxiety, or other illnesses. Now more than ever, millions of Canadians are struggling to cope mentally with the new normal brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Mental Health Research Canada, Canadians report their highest levels of anxiety and depression since the pandemic began. Rev. Dr. Glenn Robitaille, Director of Ontario Structured Psychotherapy Program at North Simcoe/Muskoka, says there has been a spike in the number of calls from people seeking support.

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