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How to watch Tennessee vs. Florida FREE live stream today

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How to watch Tennessee vs. Florida FREE live stream today


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GAINESVILLE, FL – The No. 20 Tennessee Volunteers head to Florida to take on the Gators in a primetime SEC matchup today, Saturday, Nov. 22. Kickoff is slated for 7:30 p.m. Eastern on ABC.

If you’ve cut ties with your cable provider, there are still ways you can tune in. Several streaming services will broadcast the game live and you can watch on Fubo (free trial), DIRECTV (free trial), Sling (promotional offers as low as $4.99) and the ESPN streaming app.

The SEC is packed with teams that are filled with dogs that look to do nothing but win. Tennessee has been part of that club this season; among the teams in the AP Top 25, they hold the lowest rank in the conference at No. 20.

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On the other side of the field is a Florida squad with a losing record, but they get to play the role of spoiler.

A look at Tennessee

The Volunteers offense has been on fire this season. The squad ranks second in points per game (43.4), second in total yards per game (495.0), and third in passing yards per game (318.3).

They score at a rate that makes the rest of their conference look silly, as far as how they prepare to get the ball into the endzone.

It was further shown in their recent 42-9 blowout win over New Mexico State. In a game where they were bouncing off the loss to Oklahoma, the defense was sturdy and held the Aggies run game to 27 yards on the day, while quarterback Joey Aguilar completed 73.9% of his passes for 204 yards, one score and two interceptions.

Now they get to prepare for a Florida squad who’s earned all three of their wins on home turf.

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Within the rivalry, the last time they won consecutive games was the 2003 and 2004 season.

Tennessee players to watch

Joey Aguilar

One of the best quarterbacks in college football, Aguilar ranks eighth in passing yards (2,941) and ties for ninth in passing touchdowns (22) within all of college football.

Continuing his play at this rate could help the Volunteers creep into the College Football Playoff.

DeSean Bishop

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Bishop has been a sturdy back that’s kept the run game afloat, ranking sixth in yards (770) and fourth in touchdowns within the SEC.

Watch No. 20 Tennessee vs. Florida for free on FuboTV

A look at Florida

A 3-7 record isn’t enough to make the College Football Playoff, and with only two games remaining on the schedule, Florida can say goodbye to meeting the six-win requirement to make a bowl game.

However, the Gators can spoil the seasons of their peers, especially the Volunteers. Doing so would end a three-game skid for the Florida squad.

The Gators offense ranks 12th in passing yards (217.1) and 15th in points (20.8) within the conference. The defense ties for 12th in points allowed (23.6) and ranks 12th in rushing yards allowed (143.2) in the conference.

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Florida players to watch

DJ Lagway

The sophomore quarterback could be better, with a 12 touchdowns-13 interceptions ratio to his name.

Jadan Baugh

Baugh has been solid with 808 rushing yards and six touchdowns.

Watch No. 20 Tennessee vs. Florida for free on DIRECTV

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Who is announcing Tennessee vs. Florida?

With this primetime matchup being broadcasted on ABC, it will be announced by Chris Fowler (play-by-play), Kirk Herbstreit (analyst) and Holly Rowe (sideline reporter).

What are the latest odds for Tennessee vs. Florida?

Note: These odds are as of Friday afternoon.

Spread: TENN (-4, -112) | FL (+4, -108)

Moneyline: TENN (-205) | FL (+170)

Odds courtesy of DraftKings

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Check out more information on how to watch the No. 20 Tennessee vs. Florida game today on TV and streaming services:

What: No. 20 Tennessee vs. Florida college football

When: Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025

Time: 7:30 p.m. Eastern

Where: Ben Hill Griffin Stadium | Gainesville, Fla.

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Channel: ABC

Best streaming options: Fubo (free trial), DIRECTV (free trial), Sling (promotional offers as low as $4.99), ESPN streaming

About Fubo

Fubo, which offers a free trial, has three main packages: Pro costs $79.99/month; Elite is $89.99; Premier is priced at $99.99. Cancel before the free trial ends to avoid being charged. Fubo includes access to more than 185 sports, entertainment and news channels. You can record games, TV shows, movies and more.

About DIRECTV

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DIRECTV, which also gives customers a free trial, offers four packages if you continue with the service after your trial ends: Entertainment for $69.99; Choice for $84.99; Ultimate for $109.99; and premier for $159.99. Choice offers the most channels for sports enthusiasts.

About Sling

Sling TV users can get a Day Pass for $4.99; Weekend Pass for $9.99; Week Pass for $14.99; Monthly Pass for $45.99 (and get half off your first month); and Season Pass for $199.99 for 5 months, then $45.99 per month thereafter. You can also subscribe to either the Blue package or the Orange package depending on your viewing preferences. Sling Blue allows up to three streams at a time and Sling Orange allows one stream at a time.

About ESPN

ESPN now offers an Unlimited Plan for $29.99 per month (or $299.99 for entire year) and a Select Plan for $11.99 per month (or $119.99 for entire year), which replicates its previous coverage of select games and broadcasts on ESPN Plus.

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Hollywood stars shine in Naples, Fort Myers: Movies shot in SW Florida

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Hollywood stars shine in Naples, Fort Myers: Movies shot in SW Florida


Zombies shuffle through downtown Fort Myers. A group of kids fight to save Cape Coral’s burrowing owls. Dakota Fanning kisses a boy on a Captiva Island beach.

And the cameras are rolling to capture it all.

Film crews have visited Southwest Florida many times over the years, and so have some of Hollywood’s biggest stars: Denzel Washington. Jayne Mansfield. Reese Witherspoon. Sean Connery. Drew Barrymore. Joe Pesci. Jessica Lange. Woody Harrelson. And many more.

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To celebrate the upcoming Academy Awards on March 15, we’re taking a look at some of the biggest movies shot over the last seven decades in Fort Myers, Naples and other parts of Southwest Florida. One of them even won an Oscar for Best Actor (Jessica Lange in “Blue Sky”).

‘NIGHT MOVES’ (starring Gene Hackman, Jennifer Warren, Edward Binns and Melanie Griffith)

The film: Film noir about a Los Angeles private investigator (Gene Hackman) hired to find a client’s runaway daughter. His search takes him to the Florida Keys.

Year released: 1975

Director: Arthur Penn

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Production: Some scenes were shot on Sanibel Island. The rest were filmed in California and Wakulla Springs, Florida. “Night Moves” was directed by Arthur Penn, who also directed the movie classics “Bonnie and Clyde,” “Little Big Man,” “The Miracle Worker” and “Alice’s Restaurant.”

Rotten Tomatoes score: 83%

Sample review: “‘Night Moves’ is one of the best psychological thrillers in a long time, probably since ‘Don’t Look Now’ … If you like private eyes, find it.” — Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun Times

‘BLUE SKY’ (starring Tommy Lee Jones, Jessica Lange and Powers Boothe)

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The film: Drama about a nuclear cover-up involving a U.S. Army nuclear engineer (Tommy Lee Jones) and his wife (Jessica Lange). 

Year released: 1994

Director: Tony Richardson

Production: Some scenes were shot in Fort Myers and North Captiva Island. Lange won an Academy Award for Best Actress for her role. The film was finished in 1991, just before the death of its director.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 79%

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Sample review: “What makes it feel like a Hollywood film from another era is its belief that character can drive a movie; that there is nothing more fascinating than the complexities of the human heart.” — David Ansen, Newsweek

‘WIND ACROSS THE EVERGLADES’ (starring Christopher Plummer, Burl Ives, Gypsy Rose Lee and Peter Falk)

The film: Christopher Plummer plays a crusading Audubon Society agent who takes on bird poachers in the Florida Everglades. The bad guys want the birds’ feathers for women’s hats.

Year released: 1958

Director: Nicholas Ray

Production: Filming took place in the town of Chokoloskee, just south of Everglades City. The movie marked the big-screen debut of actor Peter Falk.

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“Wind Across the Everglades” was written and produced by brothers Budd and Stuart Schulberg. Budd Schulberg is best known for his Academy Award-winning screenplay for the classic 1954 drama “On The Waterfront.” Director Nicholas Ray is best known for the 1955 James Dean classic, “Rebel Without A Cause.”

Rotten Tomatoes score: 55%

Sample review: “Canada’s Christopher Plummer is suitably heroic and rock-jawed in this lively but chaotic action drama. He’s a dedicated conservationist who invades the Florida swamps and tries to stop red-bearded Burl Ives from slaughtering the wild birds.” — Clyde Gilmour, Maclean’s Movies

Read more: Christopher Plummer’s early film fame came in the Everglades in Collier County                                                                                   

‘THE FAT SPY’ (starring Phyllis Diller, Jack E. Leonard, Brian Donlevy and Jayne Mansfield)

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The film: “The Fat Spy’s” over-stuffed, head-scratching story spoofs the 1965 beach-party movie “Beach Blanket Bingo.” A group of teenagers search for buried treasure on a (mostly) deserted island — that is, when they’re not dancing and singing to knock-off rock songs like “Do the Turtle.”

Meanwhile, the island’s owner enlists his daughter and her rose-loving romantic interest to stop the teens. And the owner’s twin brother and the villainous Camille Salamander search everywhere for the long-lost Fountain of Youth.

Year released: 1966

Director: Joseph Cates

Production: The movie was shot in Cape Coral in 1965 as a publicity stunt orchestrated by Cape Coral developers Gulf American Land Corp. That’s why the city’s name is mentioned often in the film and why scenes are shot at tourist-friendly spots like the Cape Coral Yacht Club, the beach, the Iwo Jima memorial and former tourist attraction Cape Coral Gardens, including shots of its rose garden, fountains and popular porpoise show.

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“The Fat Spy” was one of Mansfield’s last roles. She would die in a car crash in 1967.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 23%

Sample review: “As a film reviewer, I get to see an awful lot of movies — not to mention a lot of awful movies. However, every now and then, it is possible to come across a film that goes beyond just being bad. … The 1966 feature ‘The Fat Spy’ falls into that unique category.” — Phil Hall, Film Threat

Read more: ‘The Fat Spy’ and the year Hollywood came to Southwest Florida

‘OUT OF TIME’ (Denzel Washington, Eva Mendes and Sanaa Lathan)

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The film: In this crime thriller, the police chief (Denzel Washington) of fictional Florida town Banyan Key begins an affair with a married woman who says she has terminal cancer. To pay for her treatment, he steals money confiscated in a drug bust. But then the woman and her abusive husband die in a suspicious fire, the money disappears and the chief is the prime suspect.

Year released: 2003

Director: Carl Franklin

Production: Multiple Florida locations were used to create the fictional town of Banyan Key, including Boca Grande. The opening five minutes of the film were shot in downtown Boca, where dozens of local extras showed up for filming in 2002. 

Rotten Tomatoes rating: 64%

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Sample review: “It’s all very ‘Body Heat,’ which is to say, we’ve seen it all before. … ‘Out of Time’ (is) a well-performed, perfectly watchable thriller that’s nonetheless as generic as its title.” — Moira Macdonald, Seattle Times

‘HOOT’ (starring Luke Wilson, Brie Larson, Tim Blake Nelson and Logan Lerman)

The film: A group of kids try to save a burrowing-owl habitat from bad-guy developers building a pancake restaurant. The comedy is based on Carl Hiaasen’s novel of the same name. It’s set in Coconut Cove, a fictional town based on Cape Coral — a city famous for its burrowing owls.

Year released: 2006

Director: Wil Shriner

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Production: “Hoot” was filmed mainly on Florida’s east coast, including Fort Lauderdale, but parts were shot in Lee County’s Boca Grande and Gasparilla Island.

Rotten Tomatoes rating: 26%

Sample review: “While the novel is drenched in Hiaasen’s wit, sense of adventure and aggressive environmentalism, the film emerges as a vanilla comedy, only slightly more interesting than most.” — Toddy Burton, The Austin Chronicle

‘DAY OF THE DEAD’ (starring Lori Cardille, Terry Alexander, Joseph Pilato and Jarlath Conroy)

The film: With this horror classic, director George A. Romero completed the zombie trilogy that started with 1968’s “Night of the Living Dead.” The story follows a group of scientists and soldiers hiding in a Florida bunker as they try to solve the zombie outbreak that’s taken over the world above.

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Year released: 1985

Director: George A. Romero

Production: Most of the underground filming took place in a limestone mine in Wampum, Pennsylvania. But above-ground scenes were shot in downtown Fort Myers, and the bunker’s elevator-platform entrance was built in a Sanibel Island field.

Downtown Fort Myers doubled as the city of the dead. The movie’s opening scene sees local extras, dressed as zombies, pouring out of Sidney & Berne Davis Art Center and shambling along the River District’s streets.

That scene helped inspire the now defunct Zombicon festival, where people dressed up as zombies every year and recreated the scene for the annual “zombie walk.” The festival ended after a fatal shooting in 2015.

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Rotten Tomatoes score: 81%

Sample review: “It’s an intelligent, well-written, excellently played movie, with top flight gore/horror effects, perverse humor and a provocatively bleak vision. … An inventive gore-fest, and one of the best horror movies of the eighties.” — Kim Newman, Empire

‘SWEET HOME ALABAMA’ (starring Reese Witherspoon, Josh Lucas, Patrick Dempsey, Candice Bergen, Fred Ward, Dakota Fanning and Thomas Curtis)

The film: Romantic comedy about a New York fashion designer (Reese Witherspoon) who returns to Alabama to get a divorce after six years of separation.

Year released: 2002

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Director: Andy Tennant

Production: Some scenes were shot at South Seas Island Resort and its nearby beach. The filming involved actors Dakota Fanning, 7, and Thomas Curtis, 9, kissing and playing younger versions of Reese Witherspoon and Josh Lucas. Another scene shows Witherspoon and Lucas also kissing.

The scenes were originally supposed to be shot in Georgia, but the weather was too cold there. Most of the film was shot in New York and Georgia.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 38%

Sample review: “With its overlong running time and egregiously sluggish pace, ‘Sweet Home Alabama’ comes off as a sporadically amusing yet entirely ineffective romantic comedy that ultimately squanders an expectedly charismatic turn from star Reese Witherspoon.” — Dave Nusair, Reel Film Reviews

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‘COUPE DE VILLE’ (starring Patrick Dempsey, Daniel Stern, Arye Gross, Annabeth Gish)

The film: In this comedy-drama, three bickering brothers drive a 1954 Cadillac from Detroit to Florida to deliver the car for their mother’s birthday.

Year released: 1990

Director: Joe Roth

Production: Some scenes from “Coupe de Ville” were shot in Cape Coral and Fort Myers.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 0%

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Sample review: “There is something deadening about the kind of formula picture where you know with absolute certainty what is going to happen, and how, and why. And ‘Coupe de Ville’ is composed of so many formulas that they must have a template for it in screenwriting school.” — Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun Times

‘PALMETTO’ (starring Woody Harrelson, Elisabeth Shue and Gina Gershon)

The film: An ex-convict (Woody Harrelson) gets entangled in a fake kidnapping scheme that goes horribly wrong. Based on the James Hadley Chase novel “Just Another Sucker.”

Year released: 1998

Director: Volker Schlöndorff

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Production: Some scenes were shot in downtown Fort Myers with Woody Harrelson. Others were shot in Charlotte County, Palmetto and Sarasota, Florida.

Rotten Tomatoes rating: 39%

Sample review: “Another film noir chump meets blond poison in the Florida-set ‘Palmetto.’ … Director Volker Schlondorff brings scant dramatic urgency to a potentially nifty dissection of a badly botched felony.” — Mike Clark, USA Today

“GONE FISHIN’” (starring Danny Glover, Joe Pesci and Rosanna Arquette)

The film: Two New Jersey buddies go fishing in Florida in this wacky Disney comedy. They’re soon involved in a string of mishaps involving a stolen boat and car, hurricanes and more.

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Year released: 1997

Director: Christopher Cain

Production: “Gone Fishin’” was filmed throughout Southwest Florida, including Fort Myers, Estero, Marco Island, Bonita Springs, Big Cypress Swamp and Everglades National Park.

A stuntwoman died during filming when a boat lost control and hit her boat near Goodland Bay. Her husband and other people on the set also had minor injuries.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 4%

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Sample review: “The mis-pegged comedy/adventure — there is a dearth of both — inexplicably boasts a first-rate cast. But the plot and dialogue are third-rate.” — Nick Charles, New York Daily News

‘JUST CAUSE’ (starring Sean Connery, Blair Underwood, Laurence Fishburne, Ed Harris and Kate Capshaw)

The film: In this crime thriller, a Harvard professor and former lawyer (Sean Connery) investigates a 25-year-old case involving a black man (Blair Underwood) convicted for the horrific murder of an 11-year-old girl. It’s set in Ochopee.

Year released: 1995

Director: Arne Glimcher

Production: “Just Cause” was filmed on location in Fort Myers, Bonita Springs and Collier County. 

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Rotten Tomatoes score: 26%

Sample review: “Despite its tendency to tread well-traveled roads, ‘Just Cause’ is filmed with enough energy and craft that, for the majority of its one-hundred minute running time, it’s reasonably entertaining.” — James Berardinelli, ReelViews

MORE MOVIES WITH SWFL CONNECTIONS: ‘Adaptation,’ ‘Ace Ventura: Pet Detective’

These movies prominently feature Southwest Florida, but they weren’t actually shot here:

  • “Terror Inside” (2008): Corey Feldman and Tanya Memme star in this independent film shot in Orlando but with some scenes set in Fort Myers and Cape Coral.  It was written and directed by Cape Coral resident Joe Lenders.
  • “Adaptation” (2002): This loose adaptation of Susan Orlean’s non-fiction book features scenes set in Florida, including Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park. But the movie actually was filmed in Los Angeles. It stars Nicolas Cage and Meryl Streep.
  • “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective” (1994): The Jim Carrey comedy features a scene set in Collier County — including a billboard that says “Welcome to Collier County” — but the movie was actually shot in the Miami area, according to online movie database IMDb.

Connect with this reporter: Call 239-335-0368 or email crunnells@gannett.com. Or connect on social media at Charles Runnells (Facebook), @charlesrunnells (Twitter) and @crunnells1 (Instagram).



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Florida State men’s hoops vs. SMU: Preview, how to watch, game thread

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Florida State men’s hoops vs. SMU: Preview, how to watch, game thread


Florida State men’s basketball (16-14, 9-8) finishes off its regular season with a Senior-Day matchup against SMU (19-11, 8-9). The Seminoles fell to the Mustangs 83-80 earlier in the year after trailing by double digits in the second half.

Luke Loucks’ team is coming off a 2-0 roadtrip, most recently, with a victory over Pitt on Wednesday night. The Noles finished the 2025-26 season winning five-straight road games, a feat the school has not accomplished since 1992. While Georgia Tech and Pitt, the two schools the Seminoles saw on the road trip, are not exactly Duke and North Carolina, stats like these show the progress Loucks has made in only his first year at the helm.

The shocking success in the rookie head coach’s first season makes Saturday a vital game in the ACC standings, something that felt impossible back in January when FSU was 0-5 in conference play. Florida State needs some help, but with a win today and favorable results across the league, the Noles could end up as a #7 seed in the ACC tournament, earning a bye and avoiding Duke’s side of the bracket.

Part of the reason the #7 seed is even in play for Florida State is SMU’s recent struggles. The Mustangs are currently on a three-game losing streak after seemingly being too far ahead for the Noles to chase down. The three defeats did come from the two California ACC schools on their West Coast trip and a home defeat to red-hot Miami, so not exactly the easiest games, but the Noles will take any schedule breaks they can get.

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Today’s game tips off at 2:00 PM ET on ACC Network.



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‘An ideological guest list’: Trump invites Latin America’s rightwing leaders to Florida summit

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‘An ideological guest list’: Trump invites Latin America’s rightwing leaders to Florida summit


Donald Trump will welcome the leaders of at least 10 Latin American countries to a palm-dotted golf resort in Miami on Saturday as the president continues his quest to transform the US’s standing in the region and outmuscle China.

Since returning to power last year, Trump has launched a dramatic – and at times deadly – crusade to, as the Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth, put it, “reclaim our back yard”.

Vows to “take back” the Panama canal were followed by airstrikes on alleged narco boats in the Caribbean and Pacific, overt meddling in Brazil’s judicial system, threats of military intervention in Mexico and Colombia, and, most startlingly, the abduction of Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, and the use of Predator drones to help kill one of the world’s most wanted drug bosses, El Mencho, in Mexico.

Trump has also rescued Argentina’s president, the radical libertarian Javier Milei, with a multibillion-dollar bailout, and interfered in Honduras’s recent election in support of the eventual rightwing winner. He recently suggested a “friendly takeover” of Cuba, as his administration seeks to strangle the country’s struggling communist regime into submission by cutting off its oil supply, despite UN warnings of a humanitarian “collapse”.

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“As a critic of him, I’m the first to admit there has not been a presidency since perhaps Kennedy that has had such a profound effect on Latin America, in so many spheres of activity. The effects are real,” said a former US ambassador to Panama, John Feeley, who has likened Trump’s behaviour to that of the ruthless fictional mob boss Tony Soprano.

Trump officials describe his “Don-roe Doctrine” – a revamp of the 19th-century Monroe Doctrine by which President James Monroe sought to keep European powers out of the Americas – as an attempt to reduce Beijing’s regional footprint and impose Washington’s will through economic and military pressure.

On Wednesday, the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told reporters that Saturday’s invitation-only Shield of the Americas summit was designed “to promote freedom, security and prosperity in our region”.

Trump’s guest list includes the rightwing presidents of Argentina, Bolivia, El Salvador and Paraguay but excludes the leftist leaders of three of Latin America’s biggest economies: Brazil, Mexico and Colombia.

“This is the VIP level of the Latin America Trump Club – and this meeting really does seem to be conceived as a way to add a clear benefit to membership at that level,” said Brian Winter, the editor-in-chief of Americas Quarterly magazine.

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Winter said the conclave would be attended by “ideological fellow travellers Trump likes to take photos with”. “There doesn’t appear to be anything really earth-shattering or momentous on the agenda [although] it will surely include security, migration [and] the questions of Venezuela and Cuba.”

Trump’s Latin American aficionados have been celebrating their trip to Florida. “Paraguay will be present at this important meeting that will strengthen cooperation and joint work in favour of the security and stability of our nations,” its president, Santiago Peña, wrote on Instagram alongside an image of his invitation.

Paraguay’s president, Santiago Peña, at the inaugural Board of Peace meeting in Washington last month. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Chile’s ultra-conservative president-elect, José Antonio Kast, who has promised a Trump-style immigration crackdown after he takes power next week, will also attend, as will Ecuador’s president, Daniel Noboa, who this week trumpeted joint anti-drugs operations with the US.

On Thursday, one of Trump’s most powerful officials, Stephen Miller, hinted at more such collaboration, claiming the region’s drug traffickers could only be defeated with military force.

“Not a single one of your nations should tolerate the existence of a single square mile of territory that is under the control of any entity other than the sovereign governments of your country,” Miller told Latin American military heads, calling drug cartels “the Islamic State and the al-Qaida of the western hemisphere”.

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Winter said rubbing shoulders with Trump made sense for rightwing politicians keen to show voters they were tough on crime. “Security is the number one issue in Latin America today and the Trump administration is in a unique position to help in a way that produces domestic political benefits for these leaders. Nobody has the intelligence, much less the firepower, that the US does … Virtually every government in the region is eager to have access to the intelligence that only Washington can provide,” he said, noting how Mexico’s leftwing president, Claudia Sheinbaum, accepted the CIA’s help in tracking down El Mencho.

But Trump’s Latin America strategy has also caused alarm and outrage in capitals such as Brasília and Bogotá, where officials view Maduro’s capture and US attempts to suffocate Cuba as a flagrant violation of international law.

“Cuba isn’t going hungry because it doesn’t know how to produce [food] … Cuba is going hungry because they don’t want Cuba to have access to the things that everyone has a right to,” Brazil’s leftwing president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, said this week.

For now, however, such criticism has – like Europe’s response to Trump’s Iran attacks – been cautious, with politicians reluctant to offend the US president. Even Colombia’s outspoken leftwing president, Gustavo Petro, has toned down his anti-Trump rhetoric, and held a friendly meeting with the US president in the White House last month.

“What’s interesting – and somewhat surprising – is that at least so far, many countries are going along with this, whether out of convenience or fear,” Winter said. “Even some of the governments that are deeply uncomfortable with the Don-roe Doctrine are keeping their protests to themselves [and] seeking constructive relationships with Trump while quietly scrambling to diversify their relationships so that they depend less on the US.”

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Benjamin Gedan, the director of the Stimson Center Latin America programme, said the summit’s “ideological guest list” exposed the failure of Trump’s “theatrical” doctrine, and the White House’s inability to work with Latin America’s key countries.

“Brazil and Mexico comprise together more than half of the population in the region [and] more than a half of all economic activity … Throw in Colombia and you’ve got the two biggest South American countries. All [of them] completely on the outside of a US hemispheric policy – and this is the hemisphere the US supposedly dominates and [where it] demands pre-eminence,” Gedan said.



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