Episodios

  • Here’s what’s next for Orlando teen who invented device with potential to help 2.2 billion people
    Jul 8 2024
    A teen inventor helping the visually impaired now focuses on artificial intelligence and saving the world from oil spills. Tiffani Gay is heading into her senior year of high school. She also hopes to catch the attention of her dream university, Harvard. The world has changed a lot since Gay last appeared on Florida’s Fourth Estate. After going viral on our YouTube channel, Gay got a call from the Tamron Hall Show. “Without you, I don’t think I would have gotten that opportunity,” Gay said. She has become known around the world for her invention that can help visually impaired people navigate using radar instead of guide dogs or a cane. “I’m getting replies from inventors in Switzerland and inventors here locally asking to collaborate on a host of different projects,” Gay said. “The next project I’m working on is an electromagnetic system that is capable of separating oil from water.” She recently won first place from NOAA for her research in this field. She is hoping to one day use the technology to help animals impacted by oil spills in the ocean. Another new passion involves social issues. Gay has noticed one common theme in her science classes. “It’s kind of overbearingly full of men right now,” she said. Gay was one of two girls in her high-level science classes. “I felt like making a mistake would make me and all of the other women in the room look less intelligent,” she said. So, she and her partner in class co-founded Girls Who Code. Every Wednesday, they mentor 2nd to 4th grade girls. The little ladies started out shy. “As the months passed, I watched them become more interactive with the classroom,” Gay said. Gay and her friend brought in robots and made the classroom a living breathing experience. This busy high schooler said keeping this intense schedule isn’t easy, but a tight-knit friend group keeps her grounded. “We are the closest friend group ever,” Gay said., She went to prom with a group of girls who had been together since middle school. She looks to them for balance. “Just having that great group of friends who are all really ambitious has been very important to me,” Gay said. As for the future, Gay will have a lot of options for college. One institution stands above the rest. “For me right now my dream college is Harvard University,” she said. She is researching there this summer. Gay appreciates the university’s options for research during undergraduate years. She’s also very interested in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Wherever she goes, we will keep you updated as she takes over the world. You can hear more from Gay on Florida’s Fourth Estate. The podcast is available from wherever you listen to podcasts or anytime on News 6+. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    25 m
  • Here’s what homeowners need to know about Florida’s ‘Sinkhole Alley’
    Jul 2 2024
    If you live in Florida, you have probably heard of sinkholes. It’s when the ground caves in, often bringing down everything on top of it. Roads, businesses and homes have all been impacted. Dr. Manoj Chopra has researched sinkholes and erosion at the University of Central Florida and said much of Central Florida is part of “Sinkhole Alley.” “It goes all the way from Hillsborough County, and close to Tampa, all the way up to Daytona, and it goes through our areas of Maitland and Winter Park,” Chopra told Florida’s Fourth Estate hosts Matt Austin and Ginger Gadsden. Lake Eola actually started as a sinkhole. Chopra said part of the lake collapsed through the aquifer and filled with water. He said much of the lake is shallow, but the part that collapsed is very deep. He pointed out that Lake Rose in Winter Park also started as a sinkhole. It caused a car dealership to collapse and some of the cars were never recovered. Chopra said there is an easy way to see if a lake started as a sinkhole. “If you fly over Central Florida, if you see those really round lakes, they’re probably sinkholes, because a sinkhole is typically a funnel that fails the surface and falls in,” Chopra said. While they are pretty from the sky, they can be concerning and dangerous in residential areas. The engineering professor said if you have a home in the impacted area, you should check out the Florida Geological Survey map of Sinkholes and learn the history of the area. Chopra said there are two types of sinkholes: ones that form under sand usually produce depressions before the limestone underneath gives way, but when the ground has a layer of clay under it, like the one in Seffner that suddenly collapsed and killed a man in his sleep, there are little to no warning signs. Chopra said that’s because the clay acts as a barrier, everything falls apart below, then once everything is gone, the clay barrier falls and everything on top comes tumbling down too. If you want to make sure the land you are living on is safe Chopra said you can talk to Central Florida experts or get a geotechnical firm to come out and bore into the ground. To learn more about sinkholes and how they are formed check out Florida’s Fourth Estate. You can download the podcast from wherever you listen to podcasts or watch anytime on News 6+. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    22 m
  • ‘It was absolutely surreal:’ Florida man finds ancient fossil at beach
    Jun 27 2024
    Alex Lundberg said he has been hunting for fossils for 20 years, but nothing prepared him for what he recently pulled out of the water. About 10 minutes into a fossil hunting trip to Venice Beach, Lundberg said he spotted something that looked like a piece of wood stuck in the sand. He told Florida’s Fourth Estate hosts Matt Austin and Ginger Gadsden that he dove down about 25 feet and started dusting it off. “I kind of recognize it as it’s probably mammoth ivory or mastodon tusk,” he said. After about 20 minutes the marine biologist was able to unearth it and realized it was indeed a 4-foot-long, 70-pound mastodon tusk. The animals, which scientists say date back about 23 million years, went extinct about 10,000 years ago. Lundberg said finding something this old in one piece is unusual. “It was absolutely surreal. I have been fossil hunting for 20 years and I never thought I would find something like this. We find broken pieces of tusk all the time down there, just small pieces, but usually, they don’t stay intact like this they fall apart or storms break them up. I mean the fact that this one stayed in one piece is so surreal and so exciting,” he said. After cleaning and drying out his discovery, Lundberg said he has been keeping it at his house. “It’s actually sitting in a Christmas ornament box next to my bed,” he said. Lundberg hopes he will get to keep it and pass it down to his grandkids, but first, he has to report his finding to the state. “All vertebrate fossils in Florida found on public land or public water technically belong to the state unless they say otherwise. As amazing as that tusk is, the Florida Museum has way better stuff. They have whole skeletons so hopefully they are not interested in it and I get to keep it, but we will see when it comes time to report it,” he said. You can learn more about Lundberg, his epic find and how he got his start as a fossil hunter on Florida’s Fourth Estate. The podcast can be downloaded from wherever you listen to podcasts or watch anytime on News 6+. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    15 m
  • Is that a rock or a 12-foot alligator? How to tell the difference.
    Jun 11 2024
    John Ruggeri’s office is unlike most others. It does not have traditional air conditioning. But it does have a massive fan. That fan pushes him and his guests through a massive lake surrounded by alligators. He is a captain at Boggy Creek Airboat Adventures and has been taking people on tours of Lake Tohopekaliga for the past 15 years. Florida Fish and Wildlife recently reported Lake Toho, as the locals call it, has 6,316 gators in it. That’s the 11th most of any body of water in the state of Florida. With so many, you might think it would be easy to spot an alligator, but Ruggeri told Matt Austin and Ginger Gadsden on Florida’s Fourth Estate, that spotting one during the late spring and summer months is harder because it’s hot and the gators are doing everything they can to stay cool. That includes camping out under lily pads in the shallow area of the lake. So when you think you are looking at a rock, it may just be a 12-foot alligator. Ruggieri, who has been piloting airboats since 2008 said, “It’s not so much by training your eye as it is training your brain. Once you can lock in and learn what those signatures are it becomes second nature after that.” Ruggie said his passion for taking pictures of wildlife has also trained him to spot the small eyes and tip of the alligator’s nose poking out among the plants in the water. If you hop aboard a ride with Ruggieri you may not come out an expert, but he will use his expert skills to help you spot the wildlife in their natural territory. Don’t be surprised when you hear him shouting out, “Hey guys look over here to your right,” “It looks like a rock with eyeballs,” and “That’s a gator’s head right there” much like he did when he took Matt and Ginger on a ride into natural Florida. You can learn more about Ruggieri, how he went from the Bronx to the Sunshine State, and how he accidentally became an airboat captain when he got here, on Florida’s Fourth Estate. You can download the podcast from wherever you listen to podcasts or watch any time on News 6+. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    11 m
  • ‘I’m an equal opportunity butt kicker:’ Former WWE wrestler knocking out autism stigma
    Apr 22 2024
    Many people know Matt Morgan for his days as a wrestler taking on opponents like Ric Flair. Morgan said Flair stepped out of retirement to help him launch his career to the next level. Following his wrestling career, Morgan has stepped into a new arena. He is now the Deputy Mayor of Longwood and is using his position to help people with autism find the resources they need. During a recording of Florida’s Fourth Estate, Morgan told Matt Austin and Ginger Gadsden his son Jackson has helped spur his passion. “He was diagnosed as non-verbal autistic,” Morgan said. “He pushes and nudges us in the direction of things that he wants.” He said his son and others on the spectrum experience the world differently. As Morgan and his wife have worked to provide Jackson with the resources he needs he said they found many great things worth sharing. So the couple is bringing those resources together this weekend during the Second Annual Longwood Walk for Autism and Inclusion. He said not only will families have the opportunity to come out and enjoy therapy pets and cartoon characters, but they will also be connected with more than 50 Central Florida vendors that cater to people who are neurodiverse. The event is free. It will be held Saturday, April 27 from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. at Reiter Park in Longwood. You can learn more about the event and Morgan’s career as a wrestler on Florida’s Fourth Estate. You can download the podcast from wherever you listen to podcasts or watch anytime on News 6+. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    32 m
  • ‘I thought it was a scam:’ Florida woman survives 3 weeks on reality show in African wilderness
    Apr 22 2024
    Michelle Armogida loves spending time outdoors tending to her farm in Brevard County, but she never imagined she would be spending three weeks outside with a complete stranger. Armogida said it all started when she and her husband were watching their favorite TV show. “Every time we would watch he would say, ‘Oh my gosh babe, you are so much better than these people. Why don’t you sign up?’ And at first I was like, ‘Ha ha very funny,’ but after he had said it multiple times, I finally went, ‘Well he’s not wrong.’ So then I was like, ‘You know what? I’m going to sign up.’ It was a super quick, five-minute, I didn’t even fill out the entire application. I submitted it just to get him off my back. Had no hopes of ever being contacted.” Then she said the producers from “Naked and Afraid” actually reached out. “They sent me an email and I thought it was a scam, I thought it was like fake,” said Armogida. She figured out, it was legit and soon after she was dropped off in South Africa with a stranger, sans clothes. The new duo was left to create their own shelter, hunt for food and survive for 21 days. Armogida told Matt Austin and Ginger Gadsden on Florida’s Fourth Estate her unique upbringing prepared her for the opportunity. “I grew up in Western Washington on a small homestead where we grew our own food and we were just backed up to the forest where my brothers and sisters and I would go out into the forest barefoot all day every day and we’d build forts and we would find food to eat that, who knows, didn’t kill me, I’m still here today. And we would just live as like wild forest children. So, I’m very comfortable in that environment,” Armogida said. She also told Matt and Ginger she was a hiker for many years and knows how to identify food in the wild. “I have a long extensive background in wild edible identification and foraging, mushrooming as well. I am also a huntress,” Armogida said. Since her interview on Florida’s Fourth Estate, Armogida announced her next big challenge to premiere on Discovery Channel will be on Naked and Afraid XL. That show will be available on May 12 on Discovery Channel. Her previous show can also be streamed on Max and Discovery+. Learn more about Armogida’s military service, farm in Mims, and what it was like to survive in South Africa for three weeks on Florida’s Fourth Estate. The podcast is available from wherever you listen to podcasts and anytime on News 6+. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    22 m
  • Take a cruise without leaving Florida. Here’s how
    Apr 11 2024
    When people think about hopping on a cruise ship they think about driving to the coast, boarding a boat, and setting sail, but, now you can enjoy the water while staying inland by hopping aboard the Barbara Lee. It is a 1986 river ship that takes people through Lake Monroe and into the St. John’s River. It can fit up to 300 people and if you come out on a Friday night, the new owner said you can enjoy the experience for as little as $25. Michelle Wyatt recently purchased the St. Johns Rivership Co. with the goal of letting more people know about the hidden gem. She said it has been in operation for 40 years, but only started offering tickets online since she purchased it. Wyatt told Matt Austin and Ginger Gadsden on Florida’s Fourth Estate owning a piece of Florida history is a point of pride for her. “Steamboats, riverships have been in Sanford for over 100 years now and the fact that we are the last one really speaks to me,” Wyatt said. She also enjoys the fact that people visit her to celebrate life’s biggest milestones. “We have had a number of people married on the boat that come back year after year to celebrate their anniversary,” Wyatt said. She said birthday celebrations are also popular aboard the Barbara Lee. “We had three centenarians on the same cruise, celebrating their Birthday, it was 100, 102, and 105,” Wyatt said. Cruises range from two to four hours and if you are lucky you may even spot some unique wildlife. “We actually have bull sharks in this river. They suspect that they come in to give birth and then they head back out to the ocean, but yes there are bullsharks in this water especially if they have young,” Wyatt said, Wyatt said guests also enjoy seeing manatee and osprey. She is renovating the ship but said she is also holding on to the history that attracted her to it in the first place. “The words we are going for is ‘historical elegance.’ You know that old Florida feel which is encompassed by the paddle wheels and obviously the decoration throughout it, and the lighting.” You can get your ticket to hop onboard the Barbara Lee here. You can also learn more about the boat, how you can get behind the wheel and the woman who left a tech career to run this unique operation on Florida’s Fourth Estate. You can download the podcast from wherever you listen to podcasts or watch anytime on News 6+. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    14 m
  • Florida town designed to be next NYC didn’t work out. Here’s why
    Apr 1 2024
    Sanford is charming and inviting. It boasts a growing craft beer scene and enough restaurants and small shops to keep you engaged all weekend long. But, the original plans for the city were much larger. Brigitte Stephenson is the museum curator at the Sanford Museum. She talked to Matt Austin and Ginger Gadsden on Florida’s Fourth Estate about what almost was. “Henry Sanford originally came down here in Florida and realized after the American Civil War that Florida was probably going to be a place that’s going to rebound, mainly because of citrus,” she said. Sanford had a wealth of knowledge about the citrus industry and was even inducted into the Citrus Hall of Fame for his experimental gardens and groves. So when he came to the area that is now named in his honor, he thought it was the perfect spot to design a city because it was the end of the line for riverboats on the St. John’s River. “We were going to become the gateway city. The idea was that we would be the gateway to South Florida,” Stephenson said. For a while, Stephenson said Sanford was the major Central Florida town in the area thanks in part to investors in the United Kingdom pouring into Henry Sanford’s Florida Land and Colonization Company. But she said, “There are several different factors for why we didn’t become what Orlando is today.” One reason is people who were focused on agriculture didn’t want to grow. She said another is because, “We had a mayor on the eve of the great recession, turns out he was embezzling money.” The fact that Henry Flagler built a railroad system to the Keys also cut into the plan of establishing Sanford as the gateway to the South. Still, the town continued to establish itself as a citrus hub, despite controversy within the workforce. “Henry Sanford tries originally hiring the local population, he does not think they do a good job and fires them. Then he tries bringing in people who were formerly enslaved, that were Black from Monticello, Florida in this area. Now, most of the people he fired before were white and very upset that they viewed these people were taking their jobs and tried to conduct a series of basically intimidation and murder to drive out these workers in the area,” Stephenson said. She pointed out, “That’s the reason we have Georgetown, which is a historically Black community that was recently inducted in the National Register.” To help overcome this issue, Henry Sanford brought in Swedish workers. “Underneath the contract labor law, he is able to bring in Swedes and they have to work for him for five years and that would pay for their room, and boarding, and passage and they would eventually get a little bit of property in what is the area that we call New Upsala.” After overcoming the heat, Stephenson said those families quickly assimilated and pointed out you will still meet a lot of people with Swedish last names in the area. “But unfortunately, we had a freeze in 1895 and 1896 that destroyed our citrus industry and instead of being like, ‘Welp, I give up,’ the people of Sanford decided to do another luxury crop and they chose celery,” Stephenson said. You wouldn’t know it, based on prices today, but Stephenson said, “It used to be considered one of the most expensive vegetables” and that “You can actually look at old hotel menus, like The Waldorf, and it’s like blanched celery is as much as like filet mignon or something like that, it’s wild.” However, the celery gold mine also fizzled out after Stephenson said farmers over-inflated the industry to the point celery was no longer considered a unique commodity. Despite the fact Sanford didn’t become everything Henry Sanford planned for it to become, Stephenson said it’s still a great place to call home. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    16 m