- Sale!Fort Lauderdale, Florida / USA - 5/12/2020: Kimberlee Falkenstine posing with Chris Nelson protesting the shutdown at Broward County Government Center post arrest by police on South Miami Beach from Covid 19 Coronavirus. Chris is known as the Target Guy where he staged a protest walking throughout a Target store and posting it up on YouTube. This stunt gained local and national media attention. It even pulled Dee Snider of Twisted Sister into the mix.
- Sale!Bromeliads, air plants, and spanish moss attached to cedar and oak trees in Tall Cypress Natural Area in Coral Springs Florida managed by Broward County Parks.
- Sale!Racoon looking for for food by way of handout, people and garbage receptacle cans at Tall Cypress Natural Area a Broward County Park in Coral Springs.
- Sale!September 2021 Coral Springs Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu team with Rafael Rebello (born October 16, 1980) is a Brazilian mixed martial artist who formerly competed in the bantamweight division for the World Extreme Cagefighting, and now currently competes in the bantamweight division of Fight Time Promotions. Rafael trains with the fighting stable American Top Team and is the Head Trainer at American Top Team Deerfield Beach.
- Sale!Plantation, Florida / USA - 9/15/2020: African American couple with a smaller male and larger overweight female showing midriff gut shopping at mall and texting on phone wearing covid 19 face mask. #blm #blacklivesmatter
- Sale!Miami, Florida, USA - September 25th, 2021 - square Vaccines Save Lives sign for the Covid-19 vaccination on a large tile wall with a shot cartoon icon image in black and white text at Frost Museum.
- Sale!Nearly five years after the Mustang’s last major redo, fervent fans of Ford’s seminal pony car might have been hoping for an all-new 2010 model—especially considering the new Dodge Challenger and Chevy Camaro models with which it will compete. Instead, Ford has launched a thoughtful upgrade, improving the areas that most needed help. Number one was the interior, which had a retro look but consisted of hard plastic panels pieced together with numerous seams. From behind the wheel, the most obvious change is an instrument panel that stretches from door to door and from the base of the windshield to the top of the center console. This thermoplastic olefin molding feels squishy and looks rich. The twin-cowl theme of the current car continues, but it’s upgraded with more metallic trim and less plated plastic, a new instrument cluster with fully round dials, and an optional nav system with a huge, eight-inch screen and the latest version of the Ford/Microsoft Sync telematic system. Outside, the new model is plainly a face lift rather than an all-new design, bearing a closer resemblance to the ’69 Stang than the current car. The four-light grille—the inner two are actually large fog lights—and the kicked-up rear fender lines come straight from the ’69 car. Otherwise, the sheetmetal is beveled at both ends, and there’s a pronounced hood bulge—the new model looks both more muscular and a bit smaller than the current one, which in some ways seems like a cleaner and more coherent design.