Connect with us

Southeast

Bob Graham, former Florida governor and US senator, dead at 87

Published

on

Bob Graham, former Florida governor and US senator, dead at 87

Former Democratic Senator and two-term Florida Gov. Bob Graham has died at 87.

Graham’s family announced the death Tuesday evening in a statement posted on X by his daughter Gwen Graham.

“As a legislator, Florida’s 38th Governor, and a United States Senator, Bob Graham devoted his life to the betterment of the world around him,” the family announced. 

“The memorials to that devotion are everywhere – from the Everglades and other natural treasures he was determined to preserve, to the colleges and universities he championed with his commitment to higher education, to the global understanding he helped to foster through his work with the intelligence community, and so many more,” the family said.

HERE’S WHAT I’D LIKE YOU ALL TO REMEMBER ABOUT MY DEAR FRIEND SEN JOE LIEBERMAN

Advertisement

Former Florida first lady Adele Graham and ex-Sen. and Florida Gov. Bob Graham in the audience as the Democratic Progressive Caucus of Florida hosts a gubernatorial candidate forum as part of the Florida Democratic Party’s annual fundraiser at the Diplomat Beach Resort in Hollywood, Florida, on June 17, 2017. (Al Diaz/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

His family remembered Graham for being a devoted grandfather and for his love for Florida.

“Bob Graham would tell people his favorite title was not Governor or Senator. It was the name his grandchildren gave him: Doodle. ‘When I’m really good, they call me Super Doodle,’ he liked to say,” the family said.

“For 87 years, Bob Graham was so much more than really good,” they said. “He was a rare collection of public accomplishments and personal traits that combined to make him unforgettable. As his family, we will never forget his love for us, the love he had for Florida, the United States, and the world, and the love so many people showed him. We thank God for the gift of his life.”

Most of the Democratic Presidential candidates showed up tonight for the Democratic Committee presidential dinner. (Michael Williamson/The The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Advertisement

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-C.A., remembered Graham as a “patriotic American.”

“It was with the deepest respect and sadness that I learned of the passing of Senator Bob Graham: a patriotic American and a great Member of the United States Senate,” she wrote in a X post. 

LINDA BEAN, OUTDOORS STORE L.L. BEAN HEIRESS AND GOP DONOR, DEAD AT 82

“It was my privilege to work closely with Senator Bob Graham when he was serving as Chair of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,” she wrote. “He brought his love for his family and for his state of Florida to the Senate, where he served with immense dignity and courage.”

Florida Sen. Rick Scott (R-F.L.) thanked Graham for dedicating “his life to our state”

Advertisement

“Bob Graham was a good man and a great Floridian who dedicated his life to our state,” Scott said. “His legacy will live forever, not because of any title he held, but for what he did with those opportunities to improve Florida and the lives of families in the Sunshine State.”

“Ann and I are heartbroken to learn of his passing,” he said. “He and Adele have been so kind to our family and we will cherish the time we spent together. Please join us in praying for the Graham family and all who mourn Bob’s passing.”

Former Governor of Florida and Senator Bob Graham attends Democratic vice-presidential nominee Tim Kaine meeting with Local Mayors and Elected Officials for a policy Meeting at Southwest Focal Point Senior Center on August 27, 2016 in Pembroke Pines, Florida. (Johnny Louis/FilmMagic)

The former senator was among the earliest opponents of the Iraq war and was critical of former President George W Bush’s Iraq occupancy policies in 2003 following the removal of Saddam Hussein.

During his 18 years in Washington, Graham worked across the aisle, particularly with Florida Republican Connie Mack during their dozen years together in the Senate.

Advertisement

He served in the senate from 1979-1987.

After leaving public life in 2005, Graham spent much of his time at a public policy center named after him at the University of Florida and pushing for legislation to require more civic classes in the Sunshine State’s public schools.

Graham was one of five members selected for an independent commission by  in June 2010 to investigate a massive BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico that threatened sea life and beaches along several southeastern Gulf states.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Advertisement



Read the full article from Here

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Southeast

Guy Fieri once had ‘nothing else to sign’ on the beach but postcards; now, he’s built a food TV empire

Published

on

Guy Fieri once had ‘nothing else to sign’ on the beach but postcards; now, he’s built a food TV empire

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Twenty years ago, a contestant named Guy Fieri on the second season of what was then “The Next Food Network Star” showed up at the South Beach Wine & Food Festival with little more than spiked hair and ambition.

“He came to that festival that year and was walking around signing postcards because he had nothing else to sign,” recalled Lee Brian Schrager, founder of the South Beach Wine & Food Festival and its New York City counterpart.

Today, Fieri is one of the most recognizable faces in food on television. But, in 2006, he was just another up-and-comer working a crowd on the sand.

Speaking to “Fox & Friends” from Miami Beach, Florida, Friday morning, Fieri said he wasn’t chasing TV fame.

Advertisement

“I was doing what I wanted to do,” he told Steve Doocy while walking the beach. “I wanted to be a great dad. I wanted to be a great husband. I wanted to be a chef. I wanted to own my own restaurant. So, I had accomplished the things I wanted in life and never really saw the other side of it.”

South Beach Wine & Food Festival founder Lee Brian Schrager and celebrity chef Guy Fieri pose for a photograph back in 2009. (South Beach Wine & Food Festival)

Two decades later, Fieri still comes back.

“He’s been part of our festival every year since he won ‘Food Network Star,’” Schrager told Fox News Digital.

The knack for spotting and elevating talent is part of the festival’s legacy as it marks its 25th year in Miami Beach.

Advertisement

GORDON RAMSAY SLAMS ‘STUPID’ OZEMPIC-INSPIRED RESTAURANT MENU TREND

Schrager recalled a similar instinct with Giada De Laurentiis. When her agent suggested she might be ready the following year, Schrager pushed back.

“I said, ‘I don’t want her next year. I want her this year so she’ll remember where she got her big start,’” Schrager said.

Giada De Laurentiis, pictured here in 2015, was another celebrity chef who got her start at the South Beach Wine & Food Festival. (Manny Hernandez/Getty Images)

Yet the festival doesn’t claim to have created celebrity chefs.

Advertisement

“We don’t take responsibility for turning anyone into a superstar,” Schrager told Fox News Digital. “We do take some credit for giving them a platform and putting them in front of their fans.”

“Rock stars became chefs and chefs became rock stars.”

Over the past 20 years, the platform has grown alongside the broader transformation of food culture. 

“Rock stars became chefs and chefs became rock stars,” Schrager said.

OZEMPIC BOOM COLLIDES WITH AMERICA’S EATING HABITS AS RESTAURANTS SHRINK PORTIONS

Advertisement

What began as a one-day wine event on the campus of Florida International University evolved after Schrager was tasked with reimagining it. His directive was to “make it better — not bigger, but better.”

Schrager had a solution.

The South Beach Wine & Food Festival is where chefs like Fieri “became rock stars,” said Schrager, founder of the South Beach Wine & Food Festival.  (Jason Koerner/Getty Images)

“Move it to the beach, partner with the Food Network, get all their celebrities and make it more than just local,” Schrager said.

Today, the festival draws marquee names from the culinary world as well as from music and entertainment. Among those who showed up for Thursday night’s Burger Bash event were comedian Bert Kreischer and Cloud 23 hot sauce founder Brooklyn Peltz Beckham.

Advertisement

Chefs don’t get paid for appearances at the festival.

“If it’s somebody new, the first question out of their agent’s mouth is, ‘Oh, what’s the honorarium? What’s the fee?’ I’m like, ‘Zero,’” Schrager said.

Brooklyn Peltz Beckham is among the celebrities to attend the food festival for free. (Scott Roth/Invision/AP)

The model works, Schrager said, because the festival operates as a nonprofit benefiting FIU’s Chaplin School of Hospitality & Tourism Management.

Advertisement

“Everyone’s doing it to support the cause, or they’re doing it because they want to do it,” Schrager said. “It’s not a bad place to be in the middle of winter.”

Schrager, left, appears along with Rachael Ray and Brooklyn Peltz Beckham onstage at the South Beach Wine & Food Festival’s Burger Bash. (Scott Roth/Invision/AP)

The festival has raised more than $50 million for student scholarships.

“To me, that’s why we do it,” Schrager said.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE STORIES

Advertisement

Along the way, the festival has outlasted many imitators and weathered shifting food trends by staying nimble.

“We listened to the consumers,” Schrager said. 

Fieri, left, and a shirtless Bert Kreischer share a moment onstage at the South Beach Wine & Food Festival. (Jason Koerner/Getty Images)

“There was never any ego involved in this festival.”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

He added, “Our goal was never to be the biggest.”

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

“It happens that we turned out to be the biggest, but being the best, or at least doing our best, has always been the most important to me.”

Related Article

6 foods even Guy Fieri refuses to eat — some common, some bizarre

Read the full article from Here

Continue Reading

Southeast

Florida Senate passes Teddy Bridgewater Bill, allowing coaches to use personal funds for student welfare

Published

on

Florida Senate passes Teddy Bridgewater Bill, allowing coaches to use personal funds for student welfare

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Teddy Bridgewater has become something of a martyr in Florida.

While coaching at Miami Northwestern High School, the former NFL quarterback admitted to providing players with financial benefits, including Uber rides, meal costs and physical therapy for the team.

His actions led to his suspension last summer, but they are closer to being legal after a bill was signed in the state.

 

Advertisement

Miami Northwestern’s Teddy Bridgewater raises the state trophy after the team’s win over Raines in the Class 3A championship Dec. 14, 2024. (Chet Peterman/Special to The Post/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

Florida lawmakers on Thursday passed Senate Bill 178, the Teddy Bridgewater Bill, which requires “the Florida High School Athletic Association to adopt bylaws authorizing a head coach to support the welfare of a student by using personal funds to provide certain effects to the student.”

The bill says the coach must report the use of funds to the association, “providing that such use of personal funds is presumed not to be an impermissible benefit, etc.”

The bill will now go to Florida’s House of Representatives.

Speaking to the media in August after signing a one-year deal with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Bridgewater explained his thought process behind the events that led to his suspension.

Advertisement

Detroit Lions quarterback Teddy Bridgewater on the sideline in the fourth quarter at Bank of America Stadium Aug. 25, 2023. (Bob Donnan/USA Today Sports)

“Honestly, I think everyone knows that I’m just a cheerful guy, a cheerful giver as well. I’m a protector. I’m a father first before anything,” he began. “When I decided to coach, those players became my sons, and I wanted to make sure that I just protect them in the best way that I can. I think that’s what came about.” 

He reached out on social media asking for donations “so I no longer have to take from my personal funds to keep smiles on these young men’s faces and remind them that they matter.”

“Miami Northwestern is in a tough neighborhood, and sometimes things can happen when kids are walking home and different things like that,” Bridgewater said at the time. 

“So, I just tried to protect them, give them a ride home instead of them having to take those dangerous walks. I just want people to continue to see me for the person that I’ve been from the time I arrived in the NFL, from the time that I arrived at the University of Louisville, just a humble guy who has a big heart and a cheerful giver.”

Advertisement

Detroit Lions quarterback Teddy Bridgewater runs off the field in 2023. (Junfu Han/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

Bridgewater was a one-time Pro Bowler in 10 years in the NFL and coached the school to a state title.

Fox News’ Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter

Advertisement

Related Article

Brett Favre blasts NFL for no longer appealing to 'true' fans: 'There's been a slight shift'



Read the full article from Here

Continue Reading

Southeast

Trump airport renaming advances amid controversy. Here are others named for presidents

Published

on

Trump airport renaming advances amid controversy. Here are others named for presidents

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Despite backlash over Florida lawmakers approving a bill to rename Palm Beach International Airport after President Donald Trump, the move would place him among a growing list of commanders in chief whose names already greet travelers on airport terminals across the country.

If finalized by Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Federal Aviation Administration, Palm Beach International would become the ninth commercial U.S. airport named after a president, joining hubs from New York to Houston.

The name change would go into effect on July 1 if signed into law, according to reports, making Trump the first to receive the honor while still in office. 

Palm Beach International Airport holds particular significance, as it is located just minutes from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, which serves as his primary residence.

Advertisement

Following approval by the Florida House and Senate, some Democrats in the Sunshine State pushed back, citing concerns over the cost of rebranding and what they described as a lack of community input, Fox News Digital previously reported.

Palm Beach International Airport is located just minutes from President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida. (Greg Lovett/Palm Beach Post/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

White House Communications Director Steven Cheung, meanwhile, took to X to say the name “has a GREAT ring to it.”

SHOCKING AIRPORT SECURITY BUSTS REVEAL BIZARRE AND HIDDEN ITEMS TUCKED AWAY IN LUGGAGE

Here are eight commercial airports that already bear the names of former presidents.

Advertisement

Palm Beach International Airport could soon be renamed after President Donald Trump. (Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

1. Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport (SPI) 

Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport in Springfield, Illinois, was renamed in 2004 to honor the 16th president, whose longtime home and political base were in the state capital. 

Lincoln’s name was added to the airport’s existing name — the facility first opened as Capital Airport in 1947 — according to the Sangamon County Historical Society.

2. Dickinson Theodore Roosevelt Regional Airport (DIK) 

Dickinson Municipal Airport opened in 1959 and was later renamed Dickinson Theodore Roosevelt Regional Airport to honor President Theodore Roosevelt, reflecting the region’s connection to the nearby Theodore Roosevelt National Park and the president’s legacy in the North Dakota area, according to reports.

Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport was renamed in 2014 to honor the Kansas-raised 34th president. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Advertisement

3. Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport (ICT)

Wichita’s airport was renamed Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport in November 2014 to honor the 34th president, who considered Kansas his home state, following a citizen-led petition effort, according to the airport’s website.

4. John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK)

Sen. Edward F. Kennedy participated in a 1963 ceremony renaming New York International Airport in tribute to the late President John F. Kennedy. (Bettmann)

John F. Kennedy International Airport was renamed just weeks after Kennedy’s assassination in November 1963, with New York City officials voting in December to change the name from Idlewild Airport in his honor. 

The new name was formally unveiled on Christmas Eve 1963, making it one of the swiftest presidential airport renamings, according to “The Bowery Boys,” a popular New York City history blog.

Advertisement

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

5. Gerald R. Ford International Airport (GRR)

Gerald R. Ford International Airport in Grand Rapids was renamed in 1999 to honor the 38th president, a longtime Michigan resident who represented the area in Congress for more than two decades before ascending to the White House, according to the airport’s website.

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport was renamed in 1998, nearly a decade after Reagan left office. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

6. Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA)

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport was renamed in 1998 after Congress passed legislation changing the name from Washington National Airport to honor the 40th president, according to the airport. The bill was signed into law by President Bill Clinton, marking the first time the airport’s name had been changed since it opened in 1941. The renaming came nearly a decade after Reagan left office.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE STORIES

Advertisement

7. George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH)

Houston Intercontinental Airport was renamed in 1997 to honor former President George H.W. Bush, becoming George Bush Intercontinental Airport four years after he left office, according to the Texas State Historical Association. 

The change recognized Bush’s longtime ties to Houston, where he lived and built much of his political career.

George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston was renamed in 1997 to honor the 41st president. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

8. Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport (LIT) 

In March 2012, Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport was unveiled, replacing the former Little Rock National Airport/Adams Field designation to honor the former president, a native Arkansan, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for their long-standing ties to the southern state.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

Fox News Digital’s Charles Creitz contributed to this report.

Related Article

Major airport could soon be renamed after Donald Trump under new GOP bill

Read the full article from Here

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending