Florida
Random Florida Fact: This iconic restaurant launched in Florida on April 1, 1983. Here’s the story
ORLANDO, Fla. – Note: This story is originally a special episode of the News 6 podcast Your Florida Daily. Tap the player above to listen.
It’s hard to believe there was once a time when America was not obsessed with chicken wings.
In the 1970s and ‘80s, most American restaurants featured a formal fork-and-knife menu and provided a space for adults to dress up for dinner with their spouse or family.
But in October 1983, a new chain hit the dining scene that rocked the casual dining concept.
It featured a sign out front offering “Clams, wings, shrimp and oyster roasts.”
It had a laid-back, beach-side social atmosphere where you could sit down for a round of cold beer, watch some sports on TV and order these things called Buffalo-style chicken wings.
Oh, and one important thing I should mention: the waitresses were hot.
That chain, as you probably already know from the title of this story, is Hooters.
It’s now been more than 40 years since Hooters was founded in Clearwater, Florida, and say what you want about those skimpy orange and white outfits, the company estimates it’s employed more than 450,000 “Hooters Girls” over the last four decades.
The origin story of Hooters
“That all started with Lynne Austin, who they were having a Jose Cuervo contest on Clearwater Beach,” said Edward C. Droste, one of the founders who by all accounts came up with the idea of hiring gorgeous women as servers at his new restaurant.
Ed Droste is one among those later known as the “Hooters Six,” comprised of L.D. Stewart, Gil DiGiannantonio, Billy Ranieri, Dennis Johnson, Kenny Wimmer and Ed Droste.
Droste was a real estate executive at the time, flipping properties all over South Florida.
He and his buddies would go to different places for lunch and this one roadside restaurant in Dania Beach called Tarks had it all.
Tarks had good food, beach vibes and every class of customer. Ed thought, “How can I reproduce this in Clearwater?”
On April 1, 1983, he and his buddies — without any prior restaurant experience — launched Hooters Inc.
“We were pretty clueless,” Droste said. “So this was just six guys getting together saying, ‘Hey, we got to try this.’”
As you could imagine, opening day was interesting.
“It was empty. There were two carpenters and a plumber that came in and I was so glad to see him I bought their lunch, and then got lectured by my partners that we’re not going to get rich buying everybody’s lunches and dinners when they come in. So the pressure was on,” Droste said.
‘Flying by the seat of our pants’
It actually took months for the concept to catch on.
In the meantime, Droste and his team came up with funky promotions to drum excitement about those Buffalo chicken wings.
“Renting a chicken costume and running around in traffic,” Droste remembers.
One day, a boat sank next to the Clearwater causeway and gave Droste an idea.
“I saw it sitting there just totally facing all this traffic and we went got a six pack of beer and a can of paint. And we painted Hooters on the side of it.”
Which led to even more publicity.
But the greatest thing that ever happened to Hooters was hiring Lynne Austin.
The first Hooters Girl
Lynne Austin had just won a swimsuit contest on the beach when Droste jumped out his boat and swam over to talk to her.
“I put my business cards in a plastic bag and tried to chase down the winner. I said, ‘Hey, we’re going to open a restaurant,’ and she blew it off.”
Lynn eventually came around and became the first poster model for the brand new restaurant.
So, Ed and the gang are still doing all kinds of goofy promotions and capitalizing on the popularity of their scantily clad employees.
At one point, the company started Hooters Air, an airline which was not Ed’s idea.
“I always said, though, there are only two things I would not want to have: a Hooters airline, and I wouldn’t want to have a Hooters hospital.”
In 1992, Hooters is the official sponsor of a NASCAR underdog named Alan Kulwicki.
At the Hooters 500 in Atlanta, 170,000 fans watched from the stands when Alan Kulwicki won the Winston Cup.
“In our Hooters car, and it was the Hooters 500,” Droste said.
The Hooters brand is on top of the world — literally. In 1996, Hooters opened its first restaurant overseas in Singapore.
In 1997, the legal trouble began.
Legal battle of the sexes
The first lawsuit was filed by three guys who were told they weren’t allowed to be servers at Hooters, because they were men.
“They charged us with failure to hire men in the position of the Hooters girl position and we kind of thought it was kind of a joke,” Droste said.
That case was just the first of many lawsuits, including a few from women who said they were sexually harassed at work or racially discriminated against.
Hooters settled out of court in each case and, ultimately, federal regulators backed off the discrimination charges.
Chain experiences shrinkage
Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the chain was expanding quickly and by 2013, there were around 430 locations around the world.
There was also competition.
“I’m curious what you thought of the term ‘Breastaurant.’ Do you like that label?” I asked.
“We don’t like it at all,” Droste said. “And it didn’t come out ‘til a few years into it. We don’t judge people. We’re not for everybody. And, you know, I would say the imitators of us put so much more of an emphasis on that.”
Hooters now has closer to 300 locations.
Critics say the decline is because you can get a better chicken wing somewhere else these days. Droste says the COVID pandemic was a big hit and pointed to a major side effect of that rapid expansion.
“It’s hard to get that kind of consistency.”
Hooters philanthropy
It’s also worth mentioning that Hooters has done a lot of good.
Its stores in Florida have raised half a million to a million a year for the Moffitt Cancer Research Institute.
Hooters has a campaign called “Give a Hoot” which has raised more than $9 million over the years for the V Foundation to fund breast cancer research.
Droste’s wife Marsha, a former Hooters Calendar Girl, plays a big role in their philanthropy.
“She was at the front of all this breast cancer stuff for the anniversary and she’s really good at it,” he said.
Restauranting is a risky business.
Lots of other successful restaurants have closed over the years and Hooters is one of the few chains that has held up to the competition.
Even though the company’s gone through several ownership changes over the years – Hooters is actually two different privately held companies – it helped change the way we go out to eat.
Hooters has a unique place in American pop culture – and it doesn’t look like it’s going anywhere.
Copyright 2023 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.
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Florida
Florida State football: South Alabama DB Nehemiah Chandler commits, will transfer to FSU
Chandler’s bio from usajaguars.com:
At Georgia Tech: Saw action in one game during his freshman season … used the season as a redshirt year.
High School: Rated as a three-star prospect by Rivals, 247Sports and ESPN … First-team all-district honoree … Versatile athlete played cornerback, wide receiver and quarterback over the course of his prep career … Four-year letterwinner earned one letter apiece at four different high schools … Began high school at Westside H.S. in Jacksonville, Fla. as a freshman (2020), then moving to the Tallahassee area, where he attended Godby H.S. as a (2021) and Munroe H.S. (2022) as a junior before returning to Jacksonville to attend Wakulla H.S. as a senior (2023) … Helped lead Wakulla to an undefeated regular season and berth in the Florida 2S state playoffs as a senior in ‘23 … Coached at Wakulla by Barry Klees … Also played basketball … Honor roll student.
Florida
Here are the top 10 political stories from Southwest Florida in 2025
Local voters weighed in. City Councils pushed back. School boards flipped. Yet, in Southwest Florida, 2025 proved that political gravity still pulls hard toward Tallahassee.
From airport governance fights and higher education shakeups to school board drama and rare recall elections, the year was defined by clashes over who holds power.
Florida Politics has curated the top stories that capture the moments that shaped local government and education across Southwest Florida in 2025. Familiar figures returned, institutions were reshaped, and community pushback met an increasingly centralized political reality.
Together, they tell the story of a region grappling with state influence, voter intent and the limits of local control.
New College expansion plans unsettle Sarasota’s higher education landscape
New College of Florida spent much of 2025 at the center of a high-stakes tug-of-war over control of Sarasota’s cultural and academic institutions, with support from DeSantis, who repeatedly floated proposals that would dramatically expand the school’s footprint.
The year opened with a DeSantis proposal to strip Florida State University of control over The Ringling Museum complex and place the internationally recognized cultural assets under New College’s management. Lawmakers ultimately shelved that plan in the Spring, along with a separate concept that would have placed New College in charge of the University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee campus.
But the issue resurfaced late this year in far more concrete form. DeSantis’ December budget proposal revived the push by directing a wholesale transfer of all USF Sarasota-Manatee campus facilities to New College. Around a week later, New College Trustees approved a new comprehensive plan that showcases plans for rapid expansion if certain political hurdles are cleared. And New College continues to hold out hope for a land purchase from the Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport.
The renewed proposal underscores the DeSantis administration’s commitment to reshaping New College into a larger, more influential institution in Sarasota and Manatee counties.
Naples Airport Authority overhaul ignites home rule fight
A push by Collier County lawmakers to overhaul governance of the Naples Airport Authority became one of Southwest Florida’s most contentious political storylines of 2025, exposing deep rifts between state legislators, city officials and aviation stakeholders.
The effort, led by Rep. Adam Botana, aims to replace the long-standing structure of the city-appointed Naples Airport Authority with an elected board. Supporters argue the airport serves the broader region and should be accountable to all Collier County voters, while critics warn the move would dilute Naples’ control over its own destiny and undermine home rule.
Tensions escalated after the Airport Authority rejected millions in federal aviation grants and Naples City Council attempted, but later abandoned the effort, to expand its oversight of airport development. Those decisions fueled frustration among pilots, tenants and some lawmakers, who questioned the board’s composition and its dependence on city politics.
The dispute spilled into public view through sharply worded exchanges between city and state leaders, highlighting broader friction over local authority, taxation and the Legislature’s growing role in municipal affairs. Despite vocal opposition from the City of Naples, Botana’s proposal advanced steadily, winning unanimous support from the Collier legislative delegation and clearing its first House committee without debate.
The bill is positioned to place all five Airport Authority seats on the 2026 ballot if approved by the Legislature in the new year.
Karen Rose, Bridget Ziegler and Sarasota education politics come full circle
Sarasota County’s education politics in 2025 were defined by reversals, returns and unresolved controversy, as familiar figures cycled back into power despite voter pushback and lingering scandal.
The year began with fallout from the 2024 election, when voters rejected several conservative Sarasota County School Board candidates aligned with Gov. Ron DeSantis, including incumbent Karen Rose. But DeSantis remedied that months later by appointing Rose back onto the School Board months later to fill a vacancy, effectively restoring her to office despite her recent electoral defeat.
The dance did not stop there. Rose’s return placed her once again alongside Bridget Ziegler, whose influence on the School Board has persisted despite national scrutiny. Ziegler, a co-founder of Moms for Liberty, remained on the board after a 2023 sex scandal involving her husband, former Florida GOP Chair Christian Ziegler, made headlines and fractured political circles. That dispute continued in 2025, when the Ziegler’s sued the City of Sarasota and police detectives alleging constitutional violations stemming from an investigation that ultimately produced no criminal charges.
Although Rose once called for Ziegler’s resignation in the early days of the scandal, the two women reemerged in leadership roles by year’s end. Once re-installed by DeSantis, Rose helped return Ziegler to the School Board Chairmanship. Simultaneously Rose herself advanced through confirmation to a powerful regional post on the State College of Florida Board of Trustees, another DeSantis appointment.
Together, their political resurgence underscores a broader theme that defined Sarasota’s education landscape in 2025. Voter backlash did not translate to lasting change, and controversies that once seemed career-ending have become ammo in court.
Schools of Hope expansion triggers backlash in Sarasota and across the state
Florida’s Schools of Hope program emerged as one of the most volatile education fights of 2025, with Sarasota County becoming an early focal point for the growing backlash against a state mandate that allows charter schools to claim space in public school buildings.
Budget language approved for the 2025–26 fiscal year dramatically broadened the program, allowing “Hope operators” to claim space inside any public school deemed underused, regardless of academic performance or local approval. Because every school district contains an opportunity zone, the change effectively opened thousands of campuses statewide to potential charter incursions.
In Sarasota County, Miami-based charter networks quickly signaled interest in occupying space inside campuses with strong academic track records. The letters of intent stoked fears that successful public schools could be forced to share classrooms, cafeterias and playgrounds with outside operators with no ties to the community, and without compensation for use of space and resources.
DeSantis defended the policy as a targeted intervention aimed at struggling communities, insisting most Floridians would never notice the schools being created. But data shows the program’s reach extends well beyond traditionally underserved areas. By Fall, bipartisan frustration had spilled into the Legislature. A bill filed by Sen. Darryl Rouson aims to repeal the co-location requirement entirely, arguing the policy amounted to an unfunded mandate that forced districts to subsidize private operators.
Sarasota’s experience is one of many similar tales in communities across the state, forcing communities to scramble to either respond or fight to protect classrooms from what many view as forced takeovers. Rouson’s SB 424 will be one to watch during the 2026 Legislative Session.
Fort Myers immigration vote triggers Uthmeier
In Fort Myers, a split City Council vote rejected an agreement with federal immigration authorities triggered a rapid response from state leaders. Attorney General James Uthmeier warned the city risked being labeled a “sanctuary” jurisdiction and suggested Council members could face removal from office. The standoff highlighted how little room local governments had to maneuver on immigration policy once Tallahassee drew a hard line.
Florida land purchase ends in court dispute over contaminated land
In Collier County, pushback took a more personal note. Parker Collier, matriarch of a powerful real estate family, sued a former adviser for defamation after allegations surfaced that contaminated land had been sold to the state as part of a major conservation deal. The case opened a bitter dispute that blends environmental concerns, political influence and the limit of public accountability on high-dollar land deals.
Fort Myers Beach voters force the recall of two Council members
On Fort Myers Beach, voters delivered one of the rarest rebukes in local politics: A successful recall. Residents ousted Town Council members Karen Woodson and John King — although King’s case is tied up in court — over support for a controversial high-rise redevelopment at the site of the Red Coconut RV Park after it was destroyed by Hurricane Ian. The vote marked the county’s first successful recall in decades.
Enos resignation opens door for Karen Rose
Board Chair Tim Enos resigned mid-year to return to his former role as chief of the Sarasota County Schools Police Department. His departure reopened questions about continuity and control, temporarily leaving the board evenly split and handing Gov. DeSantis another appointment to tilt the board’s direction. He used that appointment on Rose.
Sarasota school board debates anti-discrimination policy
Board members also reconsidered the district’s long-standing anti-discrimination policy, weighing whether to replace explicit protections for specific groups with language more in line with federal guidance under President Donald Trump. Critics warned the change could weaken safeguards for vulnerable students and staff, while supporters framed it as compliance amid legal and political uncertainty.
Tension over Tom Edwards support for inclusion
Political tensions sparked again when local Republicans called for openly gay Board member Tom Edwards to resign after he accepted a leadership role with a nonprofit focused on inclusion. Edwards brushed off the demand as partisan noise, but the episode reflected how school governance in Sarasota remains entangled in culture-war politics.
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