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Dayton Most Metro

AIDS 5k Run/Walk/Jog Restgistration Now Open

April 5, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

On Sunday, April 17, 2011 students from the Boonshoft School of Medicine will be holding the AIDS 5k Run/Walk/Jog.  We invite you, your friends and family to join us to help a great cause!  All registrants will receive a race t-shirt as well as be entered into a raffle to receive some awesome prizes. Also, on race day, breakfast and snacks will be provided (bagels, juice, fruit, etc).  Top finishers for each age and gender group will receive awards.  The details of the race and how to register are as follows:

·         What:  WSU Boonshoft School of Medicine AIDS 5k Benefit

·         Where: Wegerzyn Gardens Metropark, 1301 E. Siebenthaler Ave, Dayton, OH, 45414

·         When:  Sunday, April 17th, Race begins at 9:30 am, registration opens at 8 am

·         Why: All proceeds go to the AIDS Resource Center of Ohio and Miami Valley Positives 4 Positives.

·         Register Online:  http://www.active.com/running/dayton-oh/aids-benefit-5k-2011

·         Register in person: On race day at the site

·         Cost: $20 before race day, $25 day of race.

We hope you’ll be able to attend!

Ryan Hamilton, Lindsey Hogle, and Scott Seider
WSU Boonshoft School of Medicine AIDS 5k Co-Chairs

Filed Under: Runners Tagged With: AIDS, Boonshoft School of Medicine, Run, Walk, WSU

I Will Stay In Dayton If….

April 4, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 4 Comments

In a recent article on CNBC.com (March 23), Bert Sperling, known for his expertise on best places to live, eat and retire (just to name a few), shared some wonderful insight on where he sees Dayton in the near future. He comments that, “Dayton’s industrial heritage is transitioning to today’s new technologies;” he believes the City has all the right assets for an economic comeback.

Photo courtesy of Joel Spitsnaugle and Val Smith

With our award winning, nationally recognized universities and colleges, a thriving healthcare industry and expanding military base, Sperling believes Dayton is poised to bounce back.  So what will it take to keep Dayton moving in the right direction? What will get people, particularly those elusive and desirable college graduates and young professionals, to come and stay in Dayton?

According to a survey conducted by updayton, a local initiative launched in 2008 to attract and retain young talent in the area, hundreds of young professionals pointed to four specific areas that needed improvement – they will stay if they have access to more jobs, better neighborhoods, increased diversity and more nightlife and entertainment options. Young creatives have spoken, and updayton is dedicated to making their voices heard.

Each year updayton hosts the Young Creatives Summit to engage and empower young people to implement their own solutions to meet these needs. This year’s Summit, to be held on Friday, April 15 at the Dayton Convention Center, will bring together nearly 200 young professionals and creatives to craft and implement four unique projects to address these pressing issues. To strengthen these efforts, updayton has partnered with organizations focused on solutions for each of the key concerns to work closely with these highly energized volunteers.

Summit attendees interested in creating more livable neighborhoods will partner with CityWide Development to provide vital input on current neighborhoods in and around downtown and on the development of a new neighborhood near Brown Street.

Photo by William Murdock Photography

Other projects include working with the Human Relations Council to make Dayton an immigrant friendly city, creating a new entertainment option for First Friday in cooperation with the Downtown Dayton Partnership and partnering with the Southwestern Ohio Council on Higher Education (SOCHE) to connect more college students and recent college graduates to local internships.

Linking the talent of the young professionals with the resources of these organizations greatly increases the potential for success and sustainability. Volunteers from the Summit may decide to focus on small manageable projects in order to serve the mission of the larger organization, but often times it is the small steps that lead to big results. Collaboration is key in moving Dayton forward; updayton is grateful for the support of these four partner organizations.

To register or get more information about the 2011 Young Creatives Summit, click here.

Filed Under: The Featured Articles, Young Professionals Tagged With: Business, civic engagement, convention center, Dayton, Networking, updayton, Young Professionals

A Window of Opportunity To Change Lives

April 1, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

This coming Monday April 4,  Linda Vista, Inc. is hosting its 2011 Window of Opportunity Luncheon at 12:00 noon at the Holiday Inn, 2800 Presidential Drive.  The Mistress of Ceremonies will be local television personality Marsha Bonhart. Featured speakers include the Honorable Barbara Gorman of Montgomery County Common Pleas Court and Amos Otis, President of SoBran.

The luncheon is the first fund raiser for Linda Vista. Funds raised will be used to support the organization’s efforts to transition homeless women and their children to permanent housing.

“Linda Vista provides housing and a high quality program that teaches self-sufficiency to homeless women ready for change. Linda Vista provides the women with a clear vision to the future for themselves and their children,” says Carmen Gooden, founder and executive director of Linda Vista. More than a way to raise dollars, this event seeks to enlighten a broader spectrum of the community about the staggering number of homeless women and children in need of housing and support services how Linda Vista is working to meet that need.

Since opening its doors in 2006, the Linda Vista has become a recognized provider of homeless services by the City of Dayton and Montgomery County homeless solutions program. For twenty-four months, residents participate in life skills sessions, job readiness training, parenting classes and personal development workshops. The children are enrolled in an on-site after school program and on the weekends and during school breaks, participate in cultural, sports and arts activities.

Nearly two hundred (200) women and their children have been referred to Linda Vista for housing and services from 2006 – 2010. Over the last three years, Linda Vista has maintained a 80% success rate for a positive exit (clients exit to permanent housing) and has maintained 100% capacity since 2009.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXiDhqoXSy0 ‘]

Carmen and her staff seek to inspire the community to take a step forward to provide a caring and loving facility for women where they can regain and perpetuate their self-dignity in a challenging world. It is their firm belief that it “takes a community to heal a community.”

As one of the graduates of the program stated, “Life is a journey, but we are not defeated anymore.”   Strong, meaningful words, from a person that has a new life, a successful life thanks to Linda Vista.

Open a window of opportunity for a deserving family by attending this event. Tickets can be purchased for $35.00 by calling 277-9663 or 397-6537.

Filed Under: Charity Events, Getting Involved Tagged With: Bonhart, children, fund raiser, homelessness, linda vista, opportunity, women, youth

Summit offers opportunity to grow professionally and personally

March 28, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Updayton has opened registration for this year’s Young Creatives Summit. Since 2009, this annual event has brought hundreds of young people together to discuss and craft initiatives in response to the economic and societal issues facing Dayton. This year brings a strengthening of the core mission to give young people a say in the future of the region and changes that guarantee to keep the event fresh and exciting.

2011 Young Creatives Summit

Graphic Design by CreativeFuse

Attendees from the Summit emerge energized and equipped to take a project from concept to completion. Past projects include the street level beautification of the Wayne Avenue corridor, the establishment of DaytonMostMetro.com as the region’s online magazine and a number of other projects focused on entrepreneurism, volunteerism, active nightlife and positive Dayton stories.

The focus of the Summit is on project ideas and implementation, but even the best ideas can’t succeed without the right resources. To ensure greater success, the Summit offers professional development opportunities for attendees to discover resources, strengthen their skills, and network with key community and business leaders.

Every year, the Summit provides top notch speakers to share information on topics of interest to up-and-coming young professionals. From social media to project management to getting noticed, attendees walk away with information they can use and a new contact that may lead to their next big opportunity.

New this year, the professional development sessions have been revamped to increase attendees’ interaction with the speaker, provide opportunities to hear more than one topic and ensure all attendees, regardless of skill level, walk away with some new tips or resources. Bring plenty of business cards to share as you participate in these “best practices” conversations with experts and peers.

Here is a sneak peak of the topics and the speakers for this year’s Summit:

  • Telling Your Story – Learn how to increase visibility for your business, organization or cause from communication experts Sharon Howard, Director of Marketing and Communications of the Dayton Development Coalition and Amelia Robinson, seasoned reporter for Dayton Daily News. They’ll show you how to tell your story to the community, media and partners.
  • Social Media – Shana Douglas and Leah Moon of CultureMASH, a social media organization that assists non-profits in building awareness in the region, share the best ways to use social media tools to educate and build awareness for your cause. Sure you know Facebook and Twitter – but do you know what they can do for you?

We want your ideas

  • Demystifying Local Government – Dayton City Commissioner Nan Whaley and Director of Planning and Community Development Aaron Sorrell breakdown the steps needed to get through the “red tape” that may stall your projects. They’ll provide hints on how to work with the City for greater success and fewer headaches.
  • Project Management and Leadership – Paul Piechota, Executive Director for the Center for Competitive Change at the University of Dayton, and Kelly Geers, Director of Government Programs for the Dayton Development Coalition, provide tips on the best way to approach a project, how to manage each step along the way, and how a little early planning can save a lot of trouble-shooting later.
  • Dayton Gems – Think there’s nothing to do in Dayton – think again! Bill Pote, founder and publisher of DaytonMostMetro and Lisa Grisby, co-publisher and writer for DaytonMostMetro and founder of Dayton Dining, provide the insiders’ view of how to discover hidden gems in the region and what resources can plug you into the scene. From entrepreneurism to entertainment – Dayton has something for everyone.
  • The Greater Downtown Dayton Plan – Here Dayton Grows Again! Sandy Gudorf, Executive Director for the Downtown Dayton Partnership and Shelley Dickstein, Assistant City Manager for the City of Dayton, provide updates on the three year community initiative that is “the Plan” for the city. Learn more about what’s happening in your city and how young creative can make an impact.

Don’t miss out on this great opportunity to grow professionally and personally. More details can be found by clicking here. If one moment can change everything, one will one afternoon do? Find out on April 15!

Filed Under: The Featured Articles, Young Professionals Tagged With: civic engagement, conference, Creative, Dayton, professionals, summit, talent, volunteer, Young

Celebrating Life & Health-Volunteers NEEDED!!

March 24, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

There is a wonderful mythical law of nature that the three things we crave most in life — happiness, freedom, and peace of mind — are always attained by giving them to someone else.” ~Peyton C. March

Celebrating Life & Health is the area’s largest community health fair that offers attendees 100s of free medical tests, services & products to ensure their good health and identify potential risk-factors.

The event has grown like…… never before (5000+ people) & we are expecting an even larger turnout this year due to the continued poor economy, loss/cut of health insurance or no health insurance for a great number of people in our community.

The growth of the event puts us in need…we are in need of volunteers to help in a variety of capacities the day of the event.

Volunteer by yourself, with friends, with family or in groups…but please volunteer! There are morning & afternoon shifts…Bring the Whole Family!!

This year’s event takes place on Saturday, April 16, from 10am – 3pm.

To volunteer – please contact the Levin Family Foundation directly @ 937-223-5433;
email- [email protected] or register online at www.levinfamilyfoundation.org.

If you can’t volunteer but would like to help by being a sponsor or know someone that would like to sponsor the event…please contact Debbie Fox @ 937-223-1669.

Thank-you for your consideration…Without your help the event cannot continue to grow…Without your help 1000s of people will go without…

Filed Under: Volunteer Opportunities

New Music for New Dance – Dayton Ballet

March 22, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 4 Comments

(submitted by Dayton Ballet)

Kettering Health Network and the Miriam Rosenthal Memorial Trust present Dayton Ballet’s New Music for New Dance – the culmination of a year-long choreography and music competition on March 24-27, 2011 at the historic Victoria Theatre.

Selected through a national competition sponsored by The Miriam Rosenthal Memorial Trust Fund, three composition and three choreography finalists will present their collaborations accompanied by an exciting new twist – live music with the Dayton Ballet Orchestra, under the direction of conductor Dr. Tim Olt.

While New Music for New Dance was a national competition, three choreographer finalists (Daniel Karasik, Susanne Payne and Cydney Spohn) have southern Ohio connections. Two composer finalists (Jesse Ayers and Jeff Olmsted) have had music premiered in Ohio. Jeff Olmsted has also had a composition premiered by the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra. The third composition finalist, James Barry, is from New York.

An overall winner of the choreographic competition will be announced, in a special ceremony immediately after the Saturday night, March 26 performances.

New Music for New DanceNew Music for New Dance was the brain-child of Dayton Ballet Director Dermot Burke. “There is simply never enough music crafted specifically for the intricacies of dance – there is definitely a need for it,” says Burke. “New Music for New Dance addresses that need as well as provides opportunities for composers and choreographers to expand repertoire and exposure. Because the Miriam Rosenthal Memorial Trust Fund chose to support this adventure, the project could have an exponential effect on the careers of the artists, on the Miami Valley community, and on the music and dance world.”

Performances of Dayton Ballet’s New Music for New Dance will play Thursday, March 24 at 8 p.m.; Friday, March 25 at 8 p.m.; Saturday, March 26 at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m.; and Sunday, March 27 at 3 p.m.

Tickets are on sale now and start at $20! Call Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630 or (888) 228-3630 or visit online at www.ticketcenterstage.com.  Ticket Center Stage hours are Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday Noon-4 p.m. and two hours prior to each performance.

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews, The Featured Articles

Nick Clooney – George’s Dad and So Much More (Win Tickets!)

March 21, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Nick Clooney(The following was submitted by Tamera Geesling of the Junior League of Dayton)

Besides having a famous son, Nick Clooney has earned his own reputation as a legend in the broadcasting biz.  Nick is an award-winning journalist, author and television personality and will be in Dayton on April 7, 2011, to speak at the Junior League of Dayton’s Town Hall Lecture Series.

Reporter, Journalist, Television Show Host, Author, Activist – Nick Clooney has worn many hats during his distinguished career.  He has accumulated numerous awards and honors for his work, including three Emmy nominations for his work researching and introducing “golden era” movies for the American Movie Classics (AMC) channel and was named one of the “best in the business of television news” by the  Washington Review of Journalism.

In addition to hosting the The Nick Clooney Show, he garnered national attention for his coverage of the 1977 Beverly Hills Supper Club Fire in northern Kentucky.  Clooney continued to focus on hard news, and helped the ABS affiliate, WKRC-TV, become a solid #1 in local news rankings.

Clooney is also known for having a son who has achieved success in the acting and directing fields.  In 2006, Clooney and his son, George, travelled to the war-torn region of Darfur and filmed the documentary, A Journey to Darfur. The film has been shown throughout the world and was released on DVD in 2008, with proceeds donated to the International Rescue Committee.

The Town Hall Lecture Series is sponsored by its media partners, ThinkTV and Times Community Newspaper.  The Nick Clooney lecture is presented by Freund, Freeze & Arnold: A Legal Professional Association.  To date, the Town Hall Lecture Series has raised over $1.8 million to support local JLD community programs, such as POWER (Program of Wellness Education and Resources), a children’s advocacy program in partnership with The Children’s Medical Center of Dayton, and the Holiday Hunt, an annual tradition of the Dayton Holiday Festival.

Tickets are $31 each (plus handling) and can be ordered by calling 937-228-3630 or online at www.ticketcenterstage.com.  Doors open at 9:00 a.m. and the lecture begins at 10:00 a.m. at the Schuster Center in Downtown Dayton.

DaytonMostMetro.com has a pair of FREE TICKETS to give away – simply fill out the form below and then click the Facebook Recommend button in the Social Share section.  As soon as we get at least 50 FB “recommends” then we’ll draw a random name from the entries.  Please make sure your mailing address is correct as we’ll be mailing the tickets to the winner, and make sure you are available at 10am on April 7 for the event.  Good luck!

The Junior League of Dayton is an organization of women who are committed to promoting voluntarism, developing the potential of women, and improving communities through effective action and leadership of trained volunteers.  Its purpose is exclusively educational and charitable.  For more information about the JLD and its community programs, visit www.jldayton.org.

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Filed Under: Charity Events

Where Am I? – March 21, 2011

March 21, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 2 Comments

Here is the second installment in our new Where Am I? contest – if you know where the following picture was taken, simply fill out the form below with the correct answer and you’ll be entered to win a $25 gift certificate to The Wine Loft at The Greene.  Next Monday – a new picture and another chance to win!  Last week’s picture was taken of a hand-painted bench at Dayton International Airport – congratulations to Vanessa Pinto who won our first gift certificate (over 50 people entered!).  For those who didn’t win or didn’t get a chance to play, here is your chance for this week.  Just fill out the form below with the correct answer to be entered to win.

This week’s hint: Court

(thanks to Teri Lussier for creating these weekly installments)


This "Where Am I" series sponsored by The Wine Loft

This week’s contest is closed

Filed Under: Where Am I?

Dale Walton’s Rock N’ Roll Circus at Gilly’s [PHOTOS]

March 20, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 2 Comments

Dale Walton hosted and performed at his inaugural Rock N Roll Circus held at Gilly's jazz club on Saturday, March 20. Photo @ 2011 Frank H. Coleman Jr./DaytonMostMetro.com.

Dale Walton recruited a rock-solid lineup of performers and artists for the first (but hopefully not the last) mind-blowing Dale Walton’s Rock N’ Roll Circus. Held at Gilly’s night club in downtown Dayton, this experience had to be seen to believed, as it was a multi-sensory experience enjoyed by all ages.

While musical acts The Rubbles, Team Void and c. wright’s Parlour Tricks aurally assaulted the audience with blistering sets, artist Mike Elsass lent his brushes, paint and canvas to any willing patrons, creating pieces of “community art” that visually interpreted the night’s festive atmosphere.

Add to that a gang of two-steppin’ clowns, an impromptu sword swallowing spectacle, and the pyro-acrobatics of Soul Fire Tribe, and we had the makings of something special.

I’m not sure what to call Dale Walton’s manic vision.

Call it magical.

Call it a “jam”boree.

Call it an experiment.

Just call me when the next one comes ’round.

[album: http://www.daytonmostmetro.com/wp-content/plugins/dm-albums/dm-albums.php?currdir=/wp-content/uploads/dm-albums/1st Rock N Roll Circus/]

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Dayton Music Tagged With: c. wright, C. Wright's Parlour Tricks, dale walton, gilly's night club, gladgirl hulce, rock n roll circus, Soul Fire Tribe, Team Void, the rubbles

Young Professional Night at DPO

March 20, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Like the famous quilts made by an isolated African-American community in Gee’s Bend, Alabama, composer Michael Daugherty’s work is a patchwork of various crosscurrents intertwining American guitar rock and southern folk music with contemporary classical music to “create a colorful and unique tapestry of sound.”  This Thursday March 24 and Saturday March 26 at the Schuster Center in Downtown Dayton, guitarist DJ Sparr joins Neal Gittleman and the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra as the audience discovers how the iconic rock instrument fits into the classical setting with Daugherty’s “Gee’s Bend” for Electric Guitar & Orchestra as well as works by Enescu and Dvorák.
DPO is offering a special discount for the 3/24 8pm show to anybody in one of Dayton’s young professional groups (Generation Dayton, Dayton Bar Association/Young Lawyers, updayton, Dayton Ballet Barrre and “40 under 40” winners) – great seats for only $12 plus $2 appetizers starting at 6pm and a “Take Note” talk at 7pm before the show.  Call 228-3630 and mention your YP group to get your specially-priced tickets.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qK_EAr6tnZY’]

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, The Featured Articles, Young Professionals

Blue Sky Project Looking for Creative-Minded Teens

March 18, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

The following was submitted by Peter Benkendorf of Blue Sky Project.

If you have teens, work with teens, know any teens or are one, Blue Sky Project, the international summer art making community is looking for 40 teens from the Dayton region to collaborate with five contemporary artists selected from applications from around the world.
Hosted by the University of Dayton, Blue Sky Project is committed to producing ambitious and meaningful works of public, contemporary art. It includes a strong youth development component and an emphasis on art making as community-building. Blue Sky’s objectives are threefold:·  Provide an environment for the Resident Artists to extend their own artistic exploration and studio practice in a unique collaborative setting with youth;·  Develop the leadership, self-awareness, critical-thinking, communication and collaborative skills of the Youth Participants through Blue Sky Project’s unique contemporary art-making process;·  Enhance the vibrancy of the community through increased engagement and creative energy.

Past artists have included painters, sculptors, dancers, writers, musicians and filmmakers. Art produced at Blue Sky has been exhibited around the world and sold in galleries in New York, Chicago and Houston.  Here is what past youth participants have had to say about this one-of-a-kind program:

“Blue Sky took me out of my comfort zone, improving my overall confidence and creativity in every angle of my personality.” – Chris Miskell, Miamisburg (Chris’s poem “To Me You are a Work of Art” became the centerpiece of art Rodney Veal’s performance installation of the same name.)

“Before Blue Sky, I did not think there was anything in Dayton for me. I did not see it as fun or artistic. At Blue Sky we were taken seriously. Now I know what I want to do with my life. I want to be an architect.” – Meriel James, Dayton

“Blue Sky changed everything. It has brought out a passion I did not know I had in me. It made me realize that I can start a revolution through art if I focus on the things I really care about.” – Emily Coughlin, Oakwood.

Blue Sky is offered without cost to the youth participants. Only forty (40) positions are available for the 2011 season.  Youth should be committed to exploring their creative spirit. Acceptance into the program is NOT portfolio- or audition-based. More information and applications, please visit www.blueskydayton.org. Application deadline is April 11

Byzantine, by Blue Sky Project artist Katherine Mann from 2009 is currently on two-year loan to the United States Embassy in Cameroon, Africa, having been juried into the State Department's Art in the Embassies program.

Filed Under: Visual Arts

Aaron Kim and the Xenia China Inn

March 17, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Xenia China Inn

The following was submitted by Juliette Rocheleau of the updayton Entrepreneurship Team, and is the second in a series of  articles about Dayton-area entrepreneurs.

Xenia China Inn was a Chinese restaurant found on Main Street in Xenia, Ohio for twenty years. In early 2008, the family business shut its doors and left many with sad hearts and growling stomachs. At the end of 2010, Aaron Kim re-opened Xenia China Inn at a new location (417 W. Second Street, Xenia, OH 45385). The surrounding parts of Dayton perked up at the prospect of once again enjoying the Inn’s cuisine.

Kim committed several months of hard work in order to re-open his business. He used a variety of different sources for the start-up cash, including funds saved in the bank and profit from selling personal items. “Whatever it takes,” said Kim. “I scraped as much as I could to get it open.” Working over a year on the project, the citizens of Xenia anticipated the restaurant opening eagerly. Kim explained, “I didn’t really have to advertise it. People missed my old restaurant, so they kept their eyes open.”

Kim was born in South Korea and in 1981 moved to Los Angeles. It wasn’t until Kim was seventeen that he moved to Dayton. Kim attended school and helped his parents with their business. When Kim’s mother, Buk Sil Park, bought Xenia China Inn, she asked her son to join the business venture. Kim explained, “I told her, ‘Sure, family business sounds good.’ So, we opened up the restaurant in Xenia.”

Kim currently works alongside his wife, Mary. With the restaurant opening the fall of 2010, Kim’s average workweek is sixty hours or more. Kim said, “That’s what it takes—a lot of dedication.” He has learned that owning your own business has its hardships, but an entrepreneur has no choice. “You’ve got to have the drive to get it done. We spend a lot of hours, but we do what it takes,” said Kim. Together, Aaron and Mary have two young girls. He admits how difficult it is, spending so much time away from his daughters. He explained, “It’s tough, because I have my two little girls who I spent a lot of time with when I was off. But somebody’s got to make the egg rolls.”

Even though he spends much of his time working, Kim explain that the restaurant business is a group effort. According to Kim, “It’s more like teamwork. Everybody has to do their own part. Otherwise, it doesn’t work.” Kim strives to keep up a happy, “paradise” atmosphere for his employees. Kim re-hired a handful of employees when Xenia China re-opened and brought new faces into the mix as well. “If you get the right crew, the atmosphere is right and everybody gets along. Then it should be a fun job,” said Kim. He stressed it was important to have a welcoming environment, especially in the winter. He explained, “You arrive and food’s around and the place is warm—you can’t get anything to go wrong.”

With this attitude, it isn’t surprising that Kim’s favorite part of the job is his customers. He explained their gratitude for his perseverance in re-opening the restaurant is what makes the job worth it. He said, “That gives me strength. It gives me energy.”

The Kim family is looking to expand Xenia China Inn’s menu this summer. Having friends who are farmers, Kim hopes to use fresh, local food in the dishes he serves. He said, “I’d like to do more fruits and such, maybe some salads, some other fresh food.” Japanese ginger dressings and Asian style salads might appear in the kitchen soon. He said, “It depends on how it goes. I can’t predict it all—day by day, you don’t know what’s going to happen.”

A resident of the Dayton area for thirty years, Kim admits that Dayton has qualities that may be both negative and positive. “Life goes at a slower pace here than in any other big city. I like that,” said Kim. He also views the people of Dayton as one of the area’s positive aspects, explaining, “The people here are nice. I grew up in the big city, and I think that living here has made me more laid-back.”

Kim likes the measured rhythm of the city, which makes him appreciate life more. “It seems like the big cities rush, rush, rush—and then your life goes by in the blink of an eye,” said Kim. “Dayton is not really in the fast-paced track, but that’s the advantage that we have.”

Working as a small business owner in the Dayton area, Kim’s advice to aspiring entrepreneurs is simple and straightforward: “Don’t do it unless you’re willing to deal with all the obstacles.” According to Kim, in the dog-eat-dog world of business, an aspiring business owner needs to know the venture is a roller coaster. “It always goes up and then it’ll come right back down. You have to stay in there.”

Along with courage to experience the ride, Kim believes a future entrepreneur needs to be happy.  He said, “Just think of it as another day in paradise.” Once you’ve mastered those two necessary traits, Kim stresses the importance of focusing on what you can control. Simply, he says, “Go with your heart, and that’s it.”

Owning and running your own business is a tough, full-time job. Along with hard work and constant drive, Kim says it’s necessary to be thankful, too. “I’m happy that I’m here.” He said, “Thank God that we are healthy, because that’s really all that matters.” In the end, Kim stresses the importance of “hanging in there.” He said, “Just when you think you’ve done it all, think again.” According to Kim, entrepreneurship is a constant learning experience, stating, “You’ve got your goal and your dream, and you can’t give up. Even when you finally get there—keep going.”

Filed Under: Dayton Entrepreneurs Tagged With: updayton Entrepreneurship Team

Where Am I? – March 14, 2011

March 14, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 3 Comments

We have brought back our Where Am I? series, and this time we have an incentive to play!  For the next 8 weeks starting today we’ll post a picture of a place somewhere in the Dayton Region.  If you know where it is, simply fill out the form below and you’ll be entered to win a $25 gift certificate to The Wine Loft at The Greene.  Next Monday – a new picture and another chance to win!

Need a hint this week?  Ok, how about “DAY”.

Photo credit: TLussier

This "Where Am I" series sponsored by The Wine Loft

This week’s contest has expired

October 27, 2010 Where Am I? was from the Pontecorvo Ballet Studios, home of the Gem City Ballet. This mural is from the building at First and Webster, but in 2011 they moved to a larger home in Springboro.

Filed Under: Where Am I?

Film Review – Cedar Rapids (B+)

March 12, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Cedar Rapids
@ The Neon
March 11, 2011
Grade: B+

Ed Helms (The Hangover, The Office) somehow summons a more naive and innocent Andy Bernard in his portrayal of Tim Lippe in Cedar Rapids. Lippe is a trustworthy, small town insurance salesman whose lifetime of honesty and insurance adjusting has culminated in a dream assignment, a trip to the ASMI insurance convention in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Lippe’s task while in Cedar Rapids is to take home the coveted “2 Diamond” insurance award which goes to the agency that most closely sells insurance the way God would.

Lippe quickly learns during his first trip to the convention that Cedar Rapids is full of distractions that will not allow him to concentrate solely on the 2 Diamond award. The convention is an eye opening experience, as the very green Lippe encounters many insurance agents who view Cedar Rapids as a sort of Hedonism of the Midwest. One such agent, Dean Ziegler (John C. Reilly), Lippe has been expressly instructed to avoid. Of course, Lippe winds up sharing a room with Ziegler and discovers that avoiding him is impossible. Reilly’s Ziegler is a combination of every alcoholic blowhard you’ve ever encountered. Loud, obnoxious and frequently hilarious.

Spellbound by Ziegler, a morally ambiguous love interest named Joan Ostrowski-Fox (Anne Heche), and the lure of alcohol, drugs and sex that are readily available at the convention hotel, the impressionable Lippe loses sight of his task and allows himself to be consumed by Cedar Rapids the way a 21-year-old might react to seeing Vegas for the first time. Between Ziegler pressuring the group to let loose and their other roommate Ronald (Isiah Whitlock Jr.) serving as a voice of reason, Lippe humorously bounces back and forth between uncharacteristic debauchery and adhering to his nerdy, insurance-centric persona.

An 80 minute conversation between Ed Helms and John C. Reilly would likely be entertaining, so it’s no surprise that pairing them up, letting them develop characters at opposite ends of the moral spectrum and placing them in an absurd scenario resulted in funny scene after funny scene. The actual plot of the movie at times becomes an afterthought, as the directionless conversations between the four main characters take over. Fortunately, this was not problematic. It was more so the ridiculous dialogue between the characters than their circumstances that had The Neon opening night crowd guffawing throughout.

As endearing and captivating as Ed Helms was, it was really John C. Reilly who the audience wanted to see. He turned in the best comedic performance I’ve seen in some time, delivering all the humor you’d expect out of a drunken, divorced, loudmouthed insurance salesman.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9VspqcwtJQ’]

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton, On Screen Dayton Reviews Tagged With: cedar rapids, Dayton Film Review, Dayton Movies

DAI’s New Must See Exhibit – “Creating the New Century”

March 11, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

John Alexander - Ship of Fools

John Alexander - "Ship of Fools"

The Dayton Art Institute has a new exhibit that opens tomorrow (3/12/2011) called “Creating the New Century” – an amazing collection of 70 pieces created by 69 different artists after the year 2000 in a wide range of styles and techniques.  The collection is owned by James F. Dicke II – an Ohio businessman and artist himself (who also sits on the DAI Board of Trustees), and it includes several thought-provoking works that deal with modern-day social and political issues, along with many whimsical pieces that are simply fun to take in.

The exhibit has been put together masterfully by DAI in the special exhibit wing of the museum, and it includes several video displays featuring interviews with the artists themselves as well as QR Codes by ScanDayton.com that link visitors with smartphones to additional videos and information about individual works.  The exhibit is free for DAI members, $10 for adults and $8 for students and seniors, and it runs through July 10, 2011.

What makes this exhibit exciting is the collection itself – an eclectic mix of paintings, drawings and sculptures with a modern vibe that contrasts greatly with the more historic pieces that many have come to expect at DAI.  I was able to preview the exhibit this past Wednesday and was amazed – especially after listening to John Alexander (an artist whose work “Ship of Fools” is part of the collection) and Ellie Bronson – the author of the exhibit catalog.  Hearing the stories behind the art really completes the experience, and I encourage visitors to check out the videos and smartphone guides as they tour the exhibit.  Below are just a few examples of what you’ll see… and when you check out the exhibit yourself we’d love to hear your thoughts here.  Bravo to DAI’s new Director/CEO Janice Driesbach and the rest of her team – you’ve put together a winner!

Will Cotton - "Candy Curls"

Will Cotton - "Candy Curls"

Marilyn Minter - "Bloodshot"

Marilyn Minter - "Bloodshot"

Inka Essenhigh - "Spring"

Inka Essenhigh - "Spring"

Disclaimer – DAI has a paid banner ad for “Creating The New Century” on DaytonMostMetro.com

Filed Under: The Featured Articles, Visual Arts

Film Review – Barney’s Version (A-)

March 9, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Barney’s Version
@ The Neon
March 3, 2011
Grade: A-

Of course Paul Giamatti (Sideways, Cinderella Man) plays Barney Panofsky, the hero of Barney’s Version. If you ever find yourself in need of an actor to dominate a role that calls for an insecure, self destructive, witty, snarky, alcoholic, Giamatti should be at the top of your list.

Barney's First Marriage

At first, it seems as though Barney is cursed. The movie begins with an older Barney. Seemingly innocent, lonely and depressed. Shortly thereafter, the audience is surprisingly and refreshingly shown a young, vibrant Barney about to begin his first of three failed marriages. When this first marriage ends tragically, I thought, “Is this just going to be a series of unfortunate events that results in a beaten down man?” As the story progresses, however, it becomes apparent that Barney is a ticking time bomb, too paranoid or drunk to realize that he doesn’t have it half bad. Because his insecurities and paranoia will not allow him to accept his good fortune, Barney inevitably self destructs.

The source of Barney’s neuroses probably stem from the fact that the women and friends with which he surrounds himself are infinitely more beautiful and well-liked than he. A fact that loudly pronounces itself to Barney when his third wife, Miriam (Rosamund Pike), who is the only of his three wives he actually loves, announces that she needs a week to herself. What should have been a harmless week apart for a long-married couple with two grown children plagues Barney. While Miriam is away, Barney’s insecurities come bubbling up as his mind attacks itself with thoughts of losing the best part of his life. In response to imagined dangers, Barney launches a very real preemptive strike that destroys his final marriage.

Barney’s Version is actually quite lighthearted and humorous despite the personal hells that the audience experiences alongside Barney. Much of the humor is provided by Barney’s father, played by Dustin Hoffman. Hoffman is as likable as always and serves as an example to Barney of what life can be like if you allow yourself to enjoy it. The two are more friends than father-son and Barney  seems to be at his happiest when in the company of his dad.

The final tragedy Barney endures, the progression of Alzheimer’s that robs him of his charm and wit, at first seemed like a throw-in to me. Like an unnecessary evil that the audience could have done without. But, as some time has passed since I saw Barney’s Version, I find myself rethinking that stance. I’m wondering now if that terrible disease finally gave Barney’s brain a rest. A chance to let the self-loathing evaporate and to allow Barney to simply observe, rather than destroy.

Whether the Alzheimer’s was relevant or not, Barney’s Version is tremendously entertaining thanks in large part to Giamatti who convincingly conveys decades of a complicated man’s life.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCufeuu21pw’]

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton, On Screen Dayton Reviews Tagged With: barney's version, Dayton Film Review, Dayton Movies

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