

Some residents fear their homes might be total losses, or that they won’t be able to foot bills that can run in the thousands if their homes can be picked up and moved. Many mobile homes are only mobile in name, and cannot be picked up and moved. WLRN Pine Isle Mobile Home Park after a rain. “There’s been a lot of wrongdoing in this park and I would like to see justice,” said Julie Mallock, who has lived here for 15 years and expected to live here for the rest of her life. Planes from the Homestead Air Force Base shriek overhead while peacocks call on the ground below. The area is lightly wooded, with old oaks and royal palm trees jutting up in between fruit trees and shrubs. Not all of the lots have homes on them, and many residents have already picked up and left. The 43.7 acre site has 317 mobile home lots that are restricted to residents ages 55 and above. “Some of these people here moved in the last year, and I would really feel cheated - that the place would be sold out from under them.” “It’s kind of shocking to have this place close up, although there’s been rumors for years about somebody buying the park,” said Chuck Baldwin, a retired Miami-Dade Public Schools teacher who has lived in the park since 1998. The notice would put them out of their homes by October 31. The park was sold in November for nearly $13 million, according to county property records, but residents received a six month notice of eviction from the new owners in mid-March. The planned closure of Pine Isle Mobile Home Community would impact around 40 households that live in the park, according to attorney Nejla Calvo. The loss of trailer park lots, which rent for $400 a month per home, comes at a time when studies have found South Florida to be the most unaffordable metro area in the nation, especially for the elderly.


Check out the trailer to see exactly what’s going on inside Ken’s home.A Homestead trailer park for people who are 55 and older has been sold and residents warned that they will have to leave the premises within six months. “Night’s End” premieres on Shudder March 31. When we asked her advice for other women directors, she told us, “Find your squad, put in the work, tell the stories that are missing. Reeder’s most recent feature, 2019’s “Knives and Skin,” screened at the Berlinale. A loved one jokingly asks if there are “are there any weird bloodstains on the floor or blood-curdling screams in the hallways,” and some folks online are convinced that “it’s all just a big hoax.” But Ken maintains that “it’s really happening. “Some folks have commented that maybe my apartment is haunted,” he says. Ken opens up about his creepy new home to his subscribers. A trailer for Jennifer Reeder’s latest sees Ken (Geno Walker, “Chicago Fire”) struggling to sleep and trying to make a name for himself online, where he posts videos focused on long life tips, management tips, and divorced dad tips. An anxious shut-in moves into a haunted apartment following a nervous breakdown in “Night’s End.” What sounds like a recipe for disaster proves to be just that.
