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A love note in a bottle is found years later, an ocean away

A love note in a bottle is found years later, an ocean away

Boston Globea day ago
Nearly 13 years later, Kate and Jon Gay, who were walking on a beach in Ireland, nearly 2,000 miles away on the other side of the Atlantic, came across the bottle with the note inside.
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They were walking on the Maharees - a stretch of coastline in western Ireland - when they found the bottle on Monday, Kate Gay told The Post in an email. She said they decided to save opening it for a meeting that evening with the Maharees Conservation Association and local artists for a project about resilience and climate adaptations for coastal communities.
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'It seemed like a fun way to start the meeting,' she said, 'and I wasn't wrong! That bottle had survived so many storms that have caused damage, erosion and flooding in Maharees … yet it arrived on our beach that day, a little weathered but holding strong!'
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Everyone was delighted, and intrigued by the note inside, which read: 'Anita and Brad's day trip to Bell Island. Today, we enjoyed dinner, this bottle of wine and each other, at the edge of the island. If you find this please call us,' followed by a phone number.
While the phone number did not work, the group raised a toast of nonalcoholic mojitos to Brad and Anita, and wished them the best.
Martha Farrell, co-founder of the MCA, then posted the news on the group's Facebook page - sparking a viral detective hunt as people tried to track down the mysterious Brad and Anita, and wondered: Were the two still together?
At home in Portugal Cove-St Philips, Newfoundland, Anita said she was putting her son to bed when her and Brad's phones started buzzing with messages. Within an hour, she was in touch with Farrell and able to confirm that she and Brad were indeed still together - in fact, they married in 2016 and have three children, and she has changed her surname to Squires.
Finding out the couple's news 'was like the perfect ending,' Farrell told The Post in a phone interview Friday.
She said it felt like 'serendipity' for a member of the group to have found a bottle and a story that had traversed an ocean and linked two communities on either side of the Atlantic.
'It's almost like a love letter to each other capturing that moment in time in their lives,' she said.
Gay said the response to the romantic story 'has been phenomenal,' adding, 'the message in a bottle has gone from being a time capsule of a happy moment on Bell Island to a metaphor for resilience and the ripple effect of positive actions and connections.'
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The conservation group has invited the couple to Ireland next year to celebrate its 10th anniversary, which coincides with the Squireses' 10-year wedding anniversary. Anita, who is from Prince Edward Island, is also working to connect the Irish group to local Canadian initiatives.
'We were so surprised to hear that this had even happened and how big the story has become,' Anita said. 'A private moment between Brad and I all those years ago now is reaching so far and so big, it's hard to believe.'
As for what the Squires children think of their parents' story, Anita said they were unfazed.
'We've always loved each other. We've always had a happy relationship, so I think they just think it's kind of like a cute cherry on top,' she said.
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Rosie O'Donnell Responds as Trump Threatens Her Citizenship
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Time​ Magazine

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  • Time​ Magazine

Rosie O'Donnell Responds as Trump Threatens Her Citizenship

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'Bad Vegan' Sarma Melngailis claims her ex ruined her life
'Bad Vegan' Sarma Melngailis claims her ex ruined her life

New York Post

time4 hours ago

  • New York Post

'Bad Vegan' Sarma Melngailis claims her ex ruined her life

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But she claims her own luck ran out when she fell for Anthony Strangis, her now ex-husband and the man with whom she was arrested in Tennessee, near the Dollywood theme park, in 2016. The story of her downfall, conviction on charges of grand larceny, and subsequent prison time were detailed in the buzzy Netflix docu-series 'Bad Vegan.' 15 Melngailis claims her ex-husband is to blame for driving her restaurant into the ground after promising he could help her expand the business — and make her beloved dog, Leon, live forever. Chris Dempsey Now, Melngailis is telling her side of the story in a new memoir, 'The Girl With The Duck Tattoo,' and an exclusive interview with The Post. 'That guy took control of me and my mind, for the most part. He dragged me into a delusion,' she said of Strangis. '[People like that] put you in a state of fear and you end up trapped. It puts you in a situation where you don't see your way out.' She claims he is to blame for driving her restaurant into the ground after promising he could help her expand the business — and make her beloved dog, Leon, live forever. The Post has reached out to Strangis for comment. 15 Melngailis was convicted of grand larceny, among other crimes. 15 Her then-husband, Anthony Strangis, also served time for the crimes. Melngailis, who grew up in Massachusetts, was a Manhattan culinary darling before her arrest. She gave up a career in finance to pursue a degree from the French Culinary Institute — a gamble that paid off when she and then-boyfriend Matthew Kenney, a star chef in the city's vegan world opened their first restaurant, Commissary, in 2001, followed by Pure Food and Wine in 2004. The couple split a year later and Melngailis bought out Kenney's stake, throwing herself completely into the restaurant. As former employee Benito Borjas-Fitzpatrick told The Post in 2016, 'She was obsessed. She worked constantly. Sometimes she would even sleep at the restaurant.' It was a celebrity hotspot just as veganism was becoming super trendy. And it brought Melngailis her own fans, including Alec Baldwin — with whom, she claims in her memoir, she had an emotional affair. Baldwin even met his future wife, Hilaria, at Pure. 15 Pure Food and Wine was a hit with A-listers such as Woody Harrelson (left, with Melngailis, her then boyfriend and business partner Matthew Kenney, and actor Jason Lewis). Getty Images 15 The Gramercy restaurant served a raw vegan menu. Victoria Will Melngailis writes in her memoir that Strangis, who also went by the name Shane Fox, came into her life through Baldwin, after the two men had a Twitter exchange in 2011. 'Then [Strangis] followed me, and I followed him back. He started commenting on my posts, and soon, our own back-and-forth ensued. It quickly moved to direct messages,' Melngailis writes. 'He said his name was Shane Fox. 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The staff was also wary of Strangis. 15 Matthew Kenney split from Melngailis and left the restaurant in 2015. Michael Sofronski 15 Among the dishes served at Pure Food and Wine: Zucchini and green zebra tomato lasagna . Michael Sofronski 'He had an air of an Italian-style gangster . . . walking with a big gait and speaking in a cryptic fashion about money,' said former longtime bartender Daniel Schubmehl. Suddenly, employees claimed in 'Bad Vegan,' their once-dedicated boss was rarely around. Despite the duo's high living — spending around $2 million at casinos and on luxury travel and jewelry, according to the Brooklyn DA's office — Melngailis failed to make payroll five times in 2014. According to an indictment, she transferred nearly $1.6 million from her businesses to her personal bank account. When she went AWOL in early 2015, Pure, along with a One Lucky Duck juice bar she had opened next door, shuttered. It reopened a few months later, thanks to funding from wealthy patrons — only for the staff to walk out after not being paid again. 15 Melngailis' book is available now. Chris Dempsey Melngailis told employees the issue was due to her having changed banks; in a media interview, she chalked it up to slim margins and expensive ingredients. Accused of owing nearly $2 million to investors, employees and the IRS, Melngailis and Strangis disappeared — and she was dubbed the 'vegan Bernie Madoff.' But Melngailis, who writes in her memoir that she and Strangis were 'jointly liable' for the financial damages, claims she didn't want to run. 'He [Strangis] took me away. I was screaming my head off in the car,' she told The Post. 'I didn't want to leave. I didn't run. I wasn't aware that we were fugitives on the run. He just took me away.' In the memoir, she details psychological and sexual abuse by Strangis. 15 'I wasn't aware that we were fugitives on the run,' Melngailis said, claiming Strangis 'took me away.' Chris Dempsey The couple weren't seen for nearly 10 months, sparking a manhunt. In May 2016, they were arrested at a $99-a-night Fairfield Inn & Suites in Sevierville, Tenn. — tracked down by police after ordering a Domino's pizza. 'I never thought I was doing anything wrong. That's why it's been really painful… ' Melngailis told The Post. 'I did bad things but I paid my debt to society. At no point in time did I really — I never had the intention of doing anything bad. The last thing I would have ever wanted to do is not pay my employees.' She pleaded guilty to tax fraud, grand larceny and conspiracy to defraud in May 2017 and served four months behind bars. Strangis pleaded guilty to four counts of grand larceny and served a year and three days in lock-up. 15 Melngailis served four months at Rikers for her crimes. R Umar Abbasi 15 Melngailis filed for divorce from Strangis, seen here at a New York State Courthouse in 2017, in 2018. Stefan Jeremiah 'It was very surreal. Wherever you are, you just adapt,' Melngailis told The Post of her time at Rikers Island. 'I could see Manhattan from the dorm I was in. It's very strange to be locked up and have a view across the way of Manhattan. 'It's still on me to figure out how to address everything. I'm not going to lie, it's been hard when people are kind of yelling at me based on this false narrative of what happened and calling me a criminal,' she said. 'Someone will slide in [my DMs] and call me a grifter based on that narrative for which they [Netflix] profited. It's frustrating.' She's referring to the Netflix docu-series 'Bad Vegan,' in which she was interviewed — and which, she claims, did her dirty. 'It's been really painful because with what the director and producers made from selling the show to Netflix — all [my] debt could have been paid. I got $75,000, which I used to pay back the employees, so they were covered early on,' Melngailis told The Post. 'But beyond that I didn't get anything for my participation. But they profited a lot.' 15 Melngailis has dreams of reopening Pure Food and Wine. In January 2024, New York Magazine's Grub Street reported that Melngailis was set to participate in a second documentary — documenting the reopening of Pure Food and wine in its old location — with 'Bad Vegan' producer and former customer Mark Emms, as well as the former restaurant's landlord Jeffrey Chodorow. 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'Obviously, we both have a perspective on why, but I'm not going to demean the process we went through in any way. I only know I tried. And she tried as well. It's a shame.' For now, Melngailis — who said she is paying her own rent on the apartment — said, 'Everything is in limbo. 'I feel like that restaurant is meant to be there,' she said of the old location. 'That restaurant — everybody wants it back. That place is so special. There's a reason why people used to describe it as special. It needs to come back in the right way, with the right energy behind it.'

Work continues, but Tinley Park's Harmony Square still set to debut on Friday
Work continues, but Tinley Park's Harmony Square still set to debut on Friday

Chicago Tribune

time6 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Work continues, but Tinley Park's Harmony Square still set to debut on Friday

After more than a year of construction and over $38 million spent, Tinley Park's Harmony Square, an outdoor music and performance venue with retail space, apartments and townhouses, is set to open Friday, June 18. Construction was still at full throttle last week, but despite a few recent heavy storms, village officials said the work is on schedule with only minor projects left. Amanda Gaus, Tinley Park events specialist, said Friday the square's turf still needs to be finalized, mulch needs to be put down and items for the stage, such as speakers and lighting, need to finished. Eventually, she said, there will be more landscaping, such as perennial flowers plants, outside of the mulch and turf planned for the 2-acre square. The property is 6 acres total, including the planned townhouses and apartments, according to the village. 'Harmony Square has been a key component of our vision for a first-class downtown for many years now, and it's exciting to be here as it transitions from a dream to reality,' Tinley Park Mayor Michael Glotz said in a statement late June. A structure across from the stage, called Studio 67, also still needs to be finished, but Gaus said there are just 'cosmetic' final touches left. The building will be used as a reservable VIP space for events such as birthday parties and includes a rooftop area. Several projects are completed, such as a water feature, or splash pad, which will be showcased in the opening events Friday and is planned to be converted into a synthetic ice rink in the winter. In March, the village also reopened Teehan's, a popular Irish bar, after purchasing the property for $200,000 as part of the Harmony Square project. Other completed projects include replacement of a sidewalk ramp, parkway restoration and other miscellaneous structural projects, according to the Tinley Park website. The grand opening for the square, at 6700 North Street, will begin at 7 p.m. Friday with a ribbon-cutting ceremony, followed by food and drink vendors, speeches by elected officials, special deals on village merchandise for residents and a concert by the rock band BoDeans. Friday's events will be followed by a block party from 2-10 p.m. Saturday and noon to 7 p.m. Sunday at the square. It will include live music on two stages, food and drinks, rides and games. After its weekend launch, Gaus said, the square will dive into programing, with events such as the farmers market, community band series, seasonal light shows, movie showings, possible streaming of popular sports games and even an instrument zoo where children can play with a variety of instruments. Gaus said this could transition into free music lessons in the square and said large games, like Connect Four, would be added to the square. 'It's a third space,' Gaus said. 'It's not where you live, it's not where you work, it's where you go to have time off or have a picnic, have fun with friends, that kind of thing, that third place to go and see and do things.' The square ultimately fulfills the city's new 'life amplified' branding that leans into providing more live music in the area, Gaus said. Although construction on Harmony Square began in 2024, Gaus said the village has planned for a community space like this since the early 2000s, as Tinley Park bought the 3.3-acre property from Tinley Park Elementary District 146 in 2005. Specific details for the space changed several times, Gaus added. The village approved several multimillion-dollar contracts fulfilling a variety of purposes, including plumbing and decorative woodwork, for the property in the past year, including a $7.8 million contract last September, a $24.5 million contract last May and a $6.8 million contract last March. A few projects will be completed after the grand opening, Gaus said. During the first few weeks, 175th street will be closed for improvements, a project Gaus said the village aims to finish possibly by mid-August. As a part of this project, power in the area was shut off from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. July 9 in order to install a 4-inch gas pipe. West Point Builders, which is developing a portion of the village's land under the Harmony Square project, plans to build a five-story, mixed-use building with 63 apartments above commercial spaces on North Street, east of Oak Park Avenue and east of Harmony Square. West Point also plans to build 60 townhouses on the former site of Central Middle School. The village is also scheduled to replace almost 11,000 feet of old water pipes in the next year, according to the Tinley Park website, which also said concrete work for this project started on 171st Street the week of July 7. Parking is also ongoing and 'won't necessarily change,' Gaus said, as the village would adapt for each event and is providing a shuttle service from the 80th Avenue train station for events next weekend to avoid increased traffic downtown. Harmony Square is bordered by 172nd and 173rd streets on the north and south, and the 67th Avenue and 67th Court on the east and west. Gaus said she is looking forward to the square's opening. 'We're just really making sure that it's launched and that it's that really great place to go downtown,' Gaus said.

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