Gainesville restaurants to be featured on Guy Fieri's 'Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives'
According to an Alachua County press release, the first episode to include a Gainesville eatery is titled "African, Sicilian & Sausage," and will feature Fehrenbacher's Meats & Eats, a butcher shop, retail store and deli located in the 4th Ave Foot Park. The show will air Friday at 9 p.m. on the Food Network.
According to the release, filming for the show also took place at Bingo Deli & Pub, Germain's Chicken Sandwiches, Humble Wood Fire Bagel Shop, The Paper Bag Deli and Uppercrust Bakery.
Local news: Gainesville dining scene expands with new Indian, Mexican restaurants serving up bold flavors
Visit Gainesville, Alachua County partnered with Working Food Kitchens, a local nonprofit whose mission is to "cultivate and sustain a resilient local food community" to introduce the "Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives" production team to local culinary entrepreneurs, the release said. The production team was provided with gift bags, which included food samples and local information.
The release notes that the county in recent years has served as the backdrop for "dozens of diverse projects, including a major streaming series, documentaries, and commercial shoots for local, national, and international brands."
"Our county's unique blend of scenic beauty, rich culture, and supportive infrastructure makes it an ideal location for filmmakers," said Tourism and Economic Development Director Jessica Hurov in the release. "We are committed to fostering a welcoming environment for the film industry."
This article originally appeared on The Gainesville Sun: Gainesville restaurants to be featured on Food Network series
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
8 hours ago
- Fox News
Valerie Bertinelli cries over ‘emotionally excruciating' personal struggle as she battles to stay sober
Valerie Bertinelli became emotional as she opened up about her battle to maintain her sobriety while experiencing "emotionally excruciating feelings." The 65-year-old former Food Network star, who has been sober since January 2024, recently took to Instagram to post several videos in which she candidly addressed fighting the urge to drink during a difficult time in her life. "I've been going through some really intense, uncomfortable, sad, emotionally excruciating feelings the last few days, and I want to drink. I want to numb it. I don't want to feel it," Bertinelli admitted. She continued, "But my logical mind is like, 'No, you don't want to do that. You don't want to numb it. You know what will help you feel better is to just feel the feelings. Get through to the other side. Have a good cry.' And yet, I can't cry." The "One Day at a Time" alum shared that she was also struggling with resisting indulging in unhealthy food as she dealt with her emotions. Over the past few years, Bertinelli has spoken out about her health journey and her decision to stop weighing herself. "I want to eat it away too," she said. "Like I want eat something that I know isn't necessarily going to put a lot of vitamins and minerals and fiber and protein into my body. The things that my body needs. Because I just want to numb these f---ed-up feelings." "So you know what I'm gonna do?" Bertinelli told her followers in another clip. "I'm going to come on the internet and slice a watermelon because I love watermelon." "It's watermelon season, and a watermelon will make me feel better, but it won't make me numb my feelings," she added as she teared up. The two-time Emmy Award winner proceeded to set a watermelon on a cutting board and began carving the fruit. "Slice the watermelon with me, OK?" Bertinelli told her fans. "We're going to eat watermelon, but I'm not eating too many feelings." "I'm going to feel my feelings while I slice the watermelon," she added with a laugh. In a follow-up video, Bertinelli began to cry as she sliced the watermelon. "It's gonna taste really good," she said as she displayed the watermelon which she cut in half. "This is my favorite time of year. It's watermelon season." Bertinelli emphasized the importance of facing painful emotions in a subsequent clip. "I have these feelings," she said. "I'm not going to talk about why I have them, where they came from, but I do want to talk about feelings and how when we suppress them, when we numb them, it only makes them stronger." "And it doesn't make us feel better about ourselves," she continued. "What happens is when we numb them, we feel bad about what we've done to numb the feelings. So then that adds on to whatever shame that we may have about those feelings. And it just adds an extra layer of shame, which is what we don't want. We just wanna be, like if we're sad, we just wanna to be sad. We just want to be sad." Bertinelli explained that choosing to eat healthy food like watermelons made her "happy." "Because it tastes so good and it's got vitamins and water and fiber and minerals," Bertinelli said. "And I'm not numbing my feelings," she said while continuing to cry. "I just know that I feel sad and it's just a feeling. It'll pass. Because I'm strong, and I'm good. I just happen to feel sad right now, and I'll get through it, and so can you. We don't have to drink alcohol or eat food to numb feelings that we just need to feel, so that these feelings can then feel heard." "Feelings are information," Bertinelli continued in the last video of her slideshow. "So now, every time I want to wallow in my sadness, which I don't want to do — I'm just going to have a bite of watermelon and ask my feelings what they want to tell me," she said as she lifted up a container of sliced watermelon. "Hope this was helpful," the actress concluded with a laugh. Bertinelli reiterated her message in the caption of her post, writing, "Feel your feelings. Do your best not to numb them. Feelings are information. Ask them what they need. Feel them. Get to the other side." In a follow-up post, Bertinelli shared a more cheerful update as she expressed her gratitude to her followers for their support. She noted how she felt less alone after fans posted their own stories of struggling with painful feelings in the comments. "Hey, just a quick thank you," the TV personality said with a smile. "I sometimes am incredibly surprised and reminded and and being reminded of how many amazing people there are out there So I just wanted to say thank you and thank you for sharing with each other in my comments section, supporting each other, supporting me. I support you." "It's just a really great feeling when you don't feel alone in feeling something," she continued. "And I ended up eating the whole watermelon that day and I'm not ashamed of that," Bertinelli added with a laugh. "Because I still felt all my feelings. I got to the other side and I'm in a better place and I am just grateful." "And even for those of you that wrote how offended you were, you know that you don't have to actually watch my videos and you don't have to comment that you can just keep going. It's OK. I'm not going to disturb your world if you don't want me to, but to all the rest of you, thank you. I just love that we're doing all this together."


New York Post
11 hours ago
- New York Post
Art advisor to the stars Barbara Guggenheim slept with clients, once ripped off Sylvester Stallone: Lawsuit
A high-powered art advisor who worked with Tom Cruise and Sylvester Stallone is an unethical, abusive liar who slept with clients and dealers, got kickbacks and urged her former partner to whore herself out to close deals, according to a bombshell lawsuit. Barbara Guggenheim, 78, who is not believed to be related to the famed museum family, once urged her young employee Abigail Asher — who later became her partner — to 'wear leather and be provocative' and 'that she should never go to a client's home unless she was prepared to sleep with him,' Asher alleged. Asher, 61, was 'exploited, controlled and threatened by' Guggenheim for nearly 40 years before the two agreed to split in 2023 — only to have Guggenheim spy on her and falsely accuse her of stealing more than $20 million from their company, Asher alleged in court papers first reported by ArtNews. Advertisement 3 Barbara Guggenheim and Abigail Asher worked together from 1987 until 2024, when Guggenheim sued Asher in Manhattan. This week, Asher filed her own explosive claims against Guggenheim. Patrick McMullan via Getty Images 'It should go without saying that art advisors with fiduciary duties to their clients should not become sexually involved with other art dealers or experts who are on the opposite side of deals they are orchestrating for clients,' Asher said in the lawsuit. 'But Guggenheim violated this rule — a lot.' Advertisement Whenever Asher, who began working for Guggenheim in 1987, spoke up about Guggenheim's behavior the older woman allegedly 'threatened to destroy Asher with her 'secret weapon'' — her then-husband, powerhouse Hollywood attorney Bert Fields, who repped Cruise, Michael Jackson, George Lucas and the Beatles. In 1995 the two agreed to evenly share the company's profits and expenses but Asher said she was generating far more than Guggenheim, including nearly $20 million in deals during their last decade together. She also claimed Guggenheim charged their company, West Village-based Guggenheim Asher Associates, for outrageous expenses, such as $3,000 in dance lesssons; an $8,000 spa trip in California; a $12,500 African safari; $36,000 for Fields' 2022 funeral; $48,000 for a party at the Wolfgang Puck-owned Spago in Beverly Hills; and more than $400,000 for car services. 3 A lawyer for Guggenheim called her former business partner's allegations 'libelous nonsense.' Getty Images for Barneys New Yor Advertisement Guggenheim was also known to send erratic and 'incomprehensible' emails, an example of 'a serious mental decline, which further damaged relationships,' Asher claimed. In 2023, the two restructured their company, and instead of equally splitting revenue and costs, each worked for their own earnings — a change that sent Guggenheim's finances 'into freefall,' Asher claimed in her lawsuit. It's not the first time someone accused Guggenheim of wrongdoing. In 1989, Stallone sued her in Los Angeles for fraud, claiming he shelled out $1.7 million for the painting, 'Pieta,' by Adolphe William Bouguereau, and owned by Guggenheim's pal, Stuart Pivar, who'd been unable to sell it. 3 Sylvester Stallone sued Guggenheim in 1989, accusing her of fraud. Getty Images for Netflix Advertisement Guggenheim was sleeping with Pivar at the time, Asher alleged. The piece had numerous 'slashes' in it and wasn't worth what he paid, Stallone claimed. The case was later settled. Guggenheim filed her own lawsuit against Asher in August 2024, accusing her of misappropriating more than $20 million from their business and secretly starting her own competing company. Guggenheim's August 2024 lawsuit against Asher 'is a transparent act of retaliation by a disgruntled former partner,' said Luke Nikas, an attorney representing Asher who said Guggenheim refused to 'retract her false accusations [or] acknowledge her wrongdoing.' Guggenheim's attorney, William Charron, ripped Asher's allegations as 'libelous nonsense.' 'Ms. Asher rolls out a litany of supposedly horrible acts by Ms. Guggenheim. So why did Ms. Asher keep working with her for nearly 40 years?' the lawyer said. 'Asher was stunned to see the extent of Guggenheim's misconduct,' Nikas told The Post, noting she was unaware of most of it until she prepared her lawsuit. Asher is seeking unspecified damages, while Guggenheim is seeking more than $20 million in damages.


UPI
2 days ago
- UPI
Trisha Yearwood talks 16th studio album, performs on 'Today'
July 18 (UPI) -- Trisha Yearwood is back with new music. She released her 16th studio album, The Mirror, on Friday, and took to the Today City Concert stage to perform such songs as her new track "Bringing the Angels" and her 1991 hit "She's in Love with the Boy." Yearwood, 60, shared that she co-wrote each of the 15 songs on her new album. "It took some friends of mine who are great writers to say, 'You are a writer and we're gonna write,' and they really just kept at me to write and here we are," she said. "I've made an incredible career of singing other people's songs," she added. "...It just feels like when you write them yourself, there's another layer and it's that you have to be a certain kind of vulnerable to do that... And I know I couldn't have done that earlier in my career." In March, she was memorialized with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She is also known for her Food Network show, Trisha's Southern Kitchen. Trisha Yearwood performs live on NBC's 'Today'