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  • Hygher Level performs at Fear The Chausso 5 at Squarehead Venue in Naples. Squarehead is a new venue in the industrial area of Naples that promotes live music. This was a rare occasion for Fort Myers and Naples hip hop artists to come together for one show.
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  • Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church.Members clasp hands during a final song and prayer at Macedonia on Third Ave. N. in Naples. This church started in 1929 near where Crayton Cove is now, a part of town formerly called Ditch Bank. By the 50s, Naples black families left Ditch Bank to make way for development by the Cove, moving to River Park. The churchs current home at 1006 Third Ave. N. opened in 1954, after the Watkins family, owners of the Naples Beach Hotel & Golf Club, donated land.
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  • Clotilde Otranto, resident conductor for the Naples Philharmonic. Ambience Cover. Lexey Swall/Staff
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  • Rappers EbGb, and Colby Roderick, a.k.a. Steady, a member of Hygher Level, and others hang out after the Fear The Chausso 5 concert at Squarehead Venue in Naples. This was a rare occasion for Fort Myers and Naples hip hop artists to come together for one show.
    HipHopDreams 36.jpg
  • A young woman is detained in the back of a Naples Police car after authorities raided a home for drugs in River Park East. When you have young peoples trying different stuff, like drugs, you have to have an understanding person dealing with (them), Pastor Joe Williams says. If theyre going to be abused by the church theyll say Well, I might as well and stay out doing the same thing Im doing. ... You got to know how to deal with people and most important, show them love. Love is great. Love is powerful. Love can stop death.
    River Park 02.jpg
  • EbGb spends a night off at home with his wife, Chantel, and their Chihuahua, Pumpkin, in Naples, Fla. EbGb's home is his sanctuary where he tries to keep things mellow.
    HipHopDreams 40.jpg
  • Residents from the Gordon River Apartments in Naples receive free groceries to from a mobile pantry on Thursday evening. The Coller County Hunger and Homeless Coalition, partnered with Meals of Hope, St. Matthew's House, Collier Harvest, Capital Grille and the Harry Chapin Food Bank offered a hot meal to the Gordon River Park Apartment community and handed out about 50 pounds of groceries to families through a mobile pantry. The organizations are working to offer these free services to different low income communities each week in Collier County. Researchers at the University of Florida were retained by NCEF to update a child well-being study done in 2005 to see where the nonprofit organization has made inroads to improve the health and quality of childrens lives. The 53-page status report on child well-being was completed this past week, just as this years wine festival is set for Jan. 28-30. The reports findings will be studied in detail over the next few months to decide what makes the most sense for future endeavors, especially with multi-year strategic initiatives. For certain, a hunger initiative is on the horizon, according to John Scot Mueller, a trustee and vice chairman of the grant committee. Lexey Swall/Staff  James Klynn has brainstorming session during a Wednesday night get together at his house in Northeast Naples.
    River Park 10.jpg
  • Ernie Bordon, "EbGb," gives a performance at the Apple Store in Naples, Fla. as iTunes featured artist. EbGb says he gives the same performance for 10 people as he would for 10,000. "I make music that I would like, even if it wasn't my own shit. I think more people should do that. When you make music for yourself?you're going to touch certain people. You have to do you, 100 per cent of the time."
    HipHopDreams 35.jpg
  • Intro lyrics are taped to the wall inside a closet where members of Freedom Hall record in Naples, Fla.
    HipHopDreams 27.jpg
  • Roommates and creative partners Joshua Giha, right, James Klynn, and Jeremy Evans, left, host a party at their home in Naples, Fla. The friends later formed Freedom Hall, a collective of artists who come together to create music. "Hip hop is a number of different things. It's a culture. Hip hop is self expression. it came from a group of people who didn't have anybody to speak for them, so they started their own."
    HipHopDreams 13.jpg
  • Naples hip hop artist Kendell Meares, a.k.a. James Klynn helps his girlfriend and fellow Freedom Hall member, Passion Ward, get through a song she's recording for Freedom Hall's first album. Freedom Hall was originally named after Klynn's apartment -  a place for artists to come together to create and share ideas. It was adapted into the name of their group which includes, Ward and three other friends, Rossini Morisma, Joshua Giha and Jeremy Evans.
    HipHopDreams 11.jpg
  • A member of Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church prays for her community during worship service in Naples. Macedonia started serving the black community in Naples in 1929.
    River Park 16.jpg
  • Girls dance to the music of EbGb at Loft 59 night club in Naples, Fla.
    HipHopDreams 24.jpg
  • EbGb performs at Loft 59 in Naples, Fla. "I?m selfish when I get on stage and get on the microphone,? Eb said. ?I feel like I just want to yell and scream, direct attention. It?s a natural reaction.?
    HipHopDreams 31.jpg
  • Ruth Pierre, 10, right, and others from the Gordon River Apartments, wait in line to receive a box of groceries to from a mobile pantry on Thursday evening. The Coller County Hunger and Homeless Coalition, partnered with Meals of Hope, St. Matthew's House, Collier Harvest, Capital Grille and the Harry Chapin Food Bank offered a hot meal to the Gordon River Park Apartment community and handed out about 50 pounds of groceries to families through a mobile pantry. The organizations are working to offer these free services to different low income communities each week in Collier County. Researchers at the University of Florida were retained by NCEF to update a child well-being study done in 2005 to see where the nonprofit organization has made inroads to improve the health and quality of childrens lives. The 53-page status report on child well-being was completed this past week, just as this years wine festival is set for Jan. 28-30. The reports findings will be studied in detail over the next few months to decide what makes the most sense for future endeavors, especially with multi-year strategic initiatives. For certain, a hunger initiative is on the horizon, according to John Scot Mueller, a trustee and vice chairman of the grant committee. Lexey Swall/Staff  James Klynn has brainstorming session during a Wednesday night get together at his house in Northeast Naples.
    River Park 11.jpg
  • "Mother" Annie Mae Perry, then 96, leads more than 200 people in a processional to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. tree in River Park East. Mother Perry, as she is affectionately known by the community, was a matriarch of River Park. A midwife for 25 years, she delivered 514 babies. I felt just like they was mine, she said. Felt just like my children. Mother Perry was a leader by example for the community, working to make sure her children had an education in an age of segregation. She was a founding member of the Naples NAACP.
    River Park 03.jpg
  • Joe Williams places his hand on his great-grandson Charlie Porter, 4, one day while hanging out together on his porch in Naples. "The Bible say if you want to be loved, first you got to show love," Williams said. "And when you show love, you gain love."
    River Park 08.jpg
  • Rev. Warren Adkins, background, who has been a member of Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church for 58 years and its pastor for 36, sings The Lords Prayer over Kamora Johnson, 15, as she is held by members of the church, Alma Williams, left, and Barbara Denson during a Sunday service. Macedonia is Naples' oldest black church and is located in River Park. The church is central to many in the community and offers several youth programs for area kids.
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • EbGb, Ernie Bordon portraits
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  • James Klynn, who hails from Brooklyn originally, drops his first solo album, Imagination Industry. "Think we crazy? Maybe come get a snails view. Look up at the world and tell me you won't wanna rebel, too." - James Klynn, "To Live in Jerusalem"
    HipHopDreams 12.jpg
  • James Klynn, from left, Josh Giha, Taylor Crosley and Rossini Morisma wait in Giha's bedroom - and the make-shift studio - as their music uploads to their internet site. Dropping an album for underground artists like Klynn and his partners means uploading the tracks to the internet and spreading the word via social networks.
    HipHopDreams 14.jpg
  • Earline Avant, second, from left, daughter of Annie Mae Perry, is held up by her family as she looks in to the casket of her mother during Perry's funeral. "She's the best earthly friend I ever had," said Avant about Mother Perry when she addressed the crowd of more than 500 people. Mother Perry died at the age of 98. Her funeral lasted three and a half hours.
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  • "Mother" Perry is greeted by family during her 98th birthday party as her daughter Pearline Dixon, left, sits nearby in case she needs anything. Mother Perry is the head of five generations of her family.  A midwife for 25 years, she delivered 514 babies. I felt just like they was mine, she said, contralto voice deepening with her smile. Felt just like my children.
    River Park 04.jpg
  • Rev. Joe Williams, 73, watches over the neighborhood from his porch, a daily activity, with his great-grandsons Eric Porter, 3, left, and Charlie Porter, 4. The boys, and their older brother, have lived with Williams since 2008 when they witnessed their mother get shot and killed by her friend's ex-boyfriend. Williams has lived in his home since 1963 and raised several of his grandchildren. He jokes that he sits on the porch with the phone in his hand so he can call the cops if anyone starts "aggravatin'" him.
    River Park 07.jpg
  • Jose Vega, 9, from left, Jonathan Perez, 7, and Vega’s brother, Michael Rodriguez, 6, hang on the fence surrounding the George Washington Carver Apartments in River Park — one of several low-income complexes in the area. A proposed sale of the apartments is a recurring issue, raising questions about the longevity of subsidized housing contracts. Such a sale could change the face of the community and displace hundreds of families.
    River Park 20.jpg
  • The ninth of twelve children, Nick Chandler grew up in the River Park Apartments in world of poverty, abuse and drugs. At 17, he went to prison for the first time. He ended up in prison seven times, serving for a total of 22 years. Now in his late 40's, Chandler is trying to turn his life around and wrote a book about his experiences, though he's the first to admit that it's been a struggle. "I started doing coke when I was 16. I went to selling ... and I seen the fast money and I got hooked on that and the coke, and then I had to support my habit. Things just went like that until I wasted 22 years of my life."
    River Park 09.jpg
  • Christine Jones, 4, waves to the ice cream man, Larry Ozturk, as he drives in to her community at the Gordon River Apartments. "This area has changed so much in the past couple years," said Ozturk who drives through River Park every day and has watched generations grow up and move out of the area.
    River Park 12.jpg
  • Tyquasia Morgan, 18, right, sits on the porch with Rev. Joe Williams, a regular evening occurrence. Morgan lives with her grandma and great grandma who have been neighbors with Williams since 1963. Morgan, like many in the neighborhood, calls Williams granddad.
    River Park 18.jpg
  • A lot of peoples forget where they come from and that is one thing that you never should do, said Rev. Warren Adkins, pastor of Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church. We never should forget where we come from, because you may have to go back that route again. In the lifetime of this church, race relations have shifted from forced segregation to legally mandated integration  and now the Sunday bulletin includes a quote from the countrys first black president.
    River Park 14.jpg
  • Rose Tavernier, 9, plays cops and robbers near her home at the Gordon River Apartments. The area is prime real estate based on it's location near the water. Residents of the property often deal with rumors of evictions and raised rents as ownership changes hands.
    River Park 01.jpg
  • Brothers Eric Porter, 3, right, and Keylijah Williams, 5, center, get a drink after dinner in the home they share with their great-grandfather Joe Williams. The boys and their other brother have lived with Williams and their grandparents, Shirley Williams and Charlie Byrd, since their mom was killed in Lehigh Acres in October 2008. "They're lovable kids," said Williams. "I look at them and feel sorry because of their mother - she loved her kids." The three boys were in the house when their mom and her friend were shot.
    River Park 19.jpg
  • Joe Williams, center, talks privately to a girl who grew up in the neighborhood on a recent afternoon in front of his River Park East home. Williams is approached daily by people in the community asking for advice. Should I fight a foreclosure? What major should I choose? Should I terminate this unwanted pregnancy?
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  • Eric Porter, 3, is being raised by his grand parents and great-grandfather in River Park. His mother, Shaniqua Williams, 22, was shot and killed in front him and his siblings in 2008. Eric, the youngest, doesn't speak his mother or the incident.
    River Park 13.jpg
  • TimWes, bottom, records a video with Gutta Slim and Naples rapper, Sho Zoe, for a song called "Flaggin' and Flexin'" on Lemon Street in Fort Myers, Fla. The Fort Myers police showed up to the video shoot because an anonymous caller said they saw suspicious activity taking place. The police only asked if there were any guns involved. TimWes explained that his music goes against that.
    HipHopDreams 17.jpg
  • Ernie Bordon, a Naples, Fla. rapper who goes by "EbGb," has been waiting his whole life to show the world what he can do with his music. He signed with Orange Glow Music, Inc. in Bonita Springs, Fla. and has spent a year recording new music. He feels like he's on the verge of making it.
    HipHopDreams 28.jpg
  • Freedom Hall, a collective of musicians and hip hop artists from Naples, perform their second-ever show in front of the Sydney & Berne Davis Art Center during Art Walk in Fort Myers. The group has conciously chosen to play shows at venues that cross cultural lines. Their style of music is issue-based. They hope to enlighten as much as entertain.
    HipHopDreams 23.jpg
  • EbGb looks through new clothes at a store in the mall in Naples to freshen up his image with help from his former A&R George Garzon. EbGb is pretty set in his image and doesn't want to change his look or style based on the commercialization of the hip hop industry. He's steadfast in staying true to himself. His "signature" look is an oversized black t-shirt and jeans. Other than a single gold chain, he refuses to wear anything that sparkles.
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  • "Black lights producing harps from heaven." Light filters in from outside revealing the silhouette of Robert Pigozzi, a.k.a. "Wizeass," as he records a mixed tape in a marijuana haze at the home of Ernie Bordon, a.k.a. "EbGb," in East Naples.
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  • EbGb records in the studio at Orange Glow Music, Inc. in Bonita Springs, Fla. EbGb has very firm ideas about his music and the direction he wants it to go. It has taken time for him to release some of the control during the creative process. To this date, Orange Glow has invested more than $400,000 in recording costs on EbGb. The producers plan to make a trip to New York with the best songs to pitch Eb to major record labels.
    HipHopDreams 38.jpg
  • EbGb works with producer Tony Catania on a song for his album Black Light District in the studio at Orange Glow Music, Inc. EbGb has recorded about 60 songs with Orange Glow Music in the past year. His working relationship with Catania during that time has reached a point of mutual respect. On this night they had differing thoughts about the direction of a song they were creating, but Catania convinced EbGb of his idea by showing him a video on youtube for visual inspiration. EbGb has very firm ideas about his music and the direction he wants it to go. It has taken time for him to release some of the control during the creative process. To this date, Orange Glow has invested more than $400,000 in recording costs on EbGb. The producers plan to make a trip to New York with the best songs to pitch Eb to major record labels.
    HipHopDreams 37.jpg
  • TimWes works out in the backyard of a friend's home. TimWes believes that he has a responsibility to the community to rap about a legitimate lifestyle. "Athletes rappers: once you reach that lifestyle, you automatically a role model, 'cause the kids gonna look up to you. So, whatever you do, they gonna live by that."
    HipHopDreams 16.jpg
  • TimWes records the song "Unborn Child ? originally by the late rapper, Tupac Shakur ? in the closet studio of producer Dang Dizzle. Dizzle's studio is a room he rents from his sister-in-law in Lehigh Acres, Fla. TimWes, who is expecting his first child, calls himself Mr. ReceiptMoney, meaning he makes his money the legal way. "I'm in my own lane. I'm not competing," he said comparing himself to other rappers. "I'm the only one talkin' bout legal money."
    HipHopDreams 01.jpg
  • Timothy Powell, a.k.a. TimWes, looks at his own reflection in the computer as he works on music at his home in Fort Myers. TimWes didn't ever think about becoming a rapper until a friend told him he should try it. "The most important part to me, truthfully ? and most people probably don't wanna hear this ? first thing first, it's about the money to me. If I didn't know there was a million dollars at the end of this tunnel, I probably wouldn't pursue it as much as I'm pursuing it."
    HipHopDreams 15.jpg
  • Kimberly Daniels, a.k.a. Kim Cartelle, center, a female rapper in Fort Myers, and others wait for the start of the Ford Entertainment Awards Show at Alliance for the Arts in Fort Myers. The show was an attempt to bring unity within the hip hop community in Fort Myers and recognize the work of local artists.
    HipHopDreams 18.jpg
  • EbGb, his wife, Chantel, left, and friend, Chris Brenon, make a video for Eb's song, 3-2-1 at Orange Glow Music, Inc. The video required acting, something that was new for the three. While Brenon managed to keep a straight face, Eb and Chantel got the giggles.
    HipHopDreams 39.jpg
  • Kim Cartelle, an aspiring hip hop artist in Fort Myers, waits to go on stage at a graduation party inside a Chinese food restaurant. Before she was set to perform, a group of teenagers in a party bus showed up and took over the mic. When they left, so did many of the guests. When she finally did perform, her cd wasn't working and she got in to an argument with the DJ saying it was his fault. She left disgusted.
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  • Freddie Mediina isn't a musician, but was the mastermind forming the group Hygher Level in Fort Myers. Medina had their logo tattooed to his chest.
    HipHopDreams 21.jpg
  • Local rappers participate in Mic Check Monday at 105.5 The Beat in Fort Myers. Mic Check Mondays was born after the station's program director, Scrap Jackson, left, put out an offer over the radio for local rappers to come spit a verse on air. He was shocked at the turnout. Almost 200 local artists came for the hopes of an opportunity.  ?There?s so much to being successful in hip hop and it?s not just having talent,? said Scrap ?Scrappy? Jackson, a D.J. and program director at 105.5 The Beat. ?It?s having swagger, having a certain person carry that talent, team of people around you, create your own movement if you will, a street team and viral media to quantify to a record label.?
    HipHopDreams 20.jpg
  • A crowd gathers to watch Fort Myers hip hop artists TimWes and Gutta Slim record a video at Clemente Park in Fort Myers. Local artists often collaborate on songs. Although, many will say that there is no unity.
    HipHopDreams 09.jpg
  • Fort Myers hip hop artist Alvester Conner, a.k.a. Gutta Slim, records a video in front of his brother's home on Polk Street in Fort Myers with Mami-based rapper, "Bad Guy."  Gutta Slim's music speaks of growing up in Fort Myers ? sometimes referred to as ?Li?l Pakistan? for the harsh street life ? and calling out fakers for singing about a life they don?t lead. ?Y?all startin? to piss me off, acting real but inside ... you know you?re soft. Never been in no block, never been in that cell. You?re just a studio gangsta livin? fairytales.? ? Gutta Slim, ?Fairytales?
    HipHopDreams 06.jpg
  • Vonbitt Robinson, right, and Angelica Tirado hang out outside of The Reserve night club in Fort Myers after a 420 Celebration on April 20, 2011. Promoters uses nights like this to host artists in a VIP section and network with possible local acts.
    HipHopDreams 04.jpg
  • Squeezing between a bed, a computer desk and a couch are seven members of the hip hop group, Hygher Level - a group of 10 emcees who have banded together for a "strength in numbers" approach breaking in to the hip hop scene. Here they gather at the home of Colby Roderick, a.k.a Steady, in Cape Coral, Fla.
    HipHopDreams 02.jpg
  • "Music man, through and through. God must've known what he was doing when he gave me these hands." - Ebgb, "Let It Ride"
    HipHopDreams 33.jpg
  • Promoter Shannon Fuller, background, puts on a bikini car wash to help promote hip hop artist Theodore Wilson, left, a.k.a "Hylo Griffix," album "Full Clip" at a gas station on U.S. 41 in San Carlos Park, Fla. Melissa Rogers, second from left, came to be a bikini girl, help wash cars and support her friend and his pursuit of his music.
    HipHopDreams 19.jpg
  • Alvester Conner works six days a week in telemarketing. On the seventh day, he?s Gutta Slim, a 22-year-old rapper, self-dubbed the ?new voice of Lee County.? Gutta Slim grew up with absent parents and stints in jail. His music speaks of growing up in Fort Myers ? sometimes referred to as ?Li?l Pakistan? for the harsh street life ? and calling out fakers for singing about a life they don?t lead. ?Y?all startin? to piss me off, acting real but inside ... you know you?re soft. Never been in no block, never been in that cell. You?re just a studio gangsta livin? fairytales.? ? Gutta Slim, ?Fairytales? lyrics
    HipHopDreams 10.jpg
  • Gail McIntosh, from right, and Tifffany Carter, Nana McCarter, 10, left, and Cisalyn Thomas, second from left, dance to to the song "In My Project" by Fort Myers rappers TimWes and Buck Town Gutta Gutta during a block party video shoot at Clemente Park in Fort Myers.
    HipHopDreams 05.jpg
  • Mami-based artist "Bad Guy" comes to Fort Myers to record a video with Fort Myers hip hop artist Alvester Conner, a.k.a. "Gutta Slim," in Fort Myers. The song called "Fairytales" calls out artists for being "studio gangstas." There's a lot of controversy over hip hop artists who pretend to be something they aren't in their music.
    HipHopDreams 03.jpg
  • EbGb, records at the home studio of friend and fellow musician Nate Augustus. EbGb and Augustus created the term "Swamp Hop" as a way to describe the music they make - which they think has a disctinctly South Florida Sound.
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  • Plies, raised in Fort Myers, performs at Level Night Club on East Sunday. Plies is a controversial figure in Fort Myers. He is the most successful rap artist to come out of Southwest Florida and many believe he should give back to his community and help bring up other artists in the industry. City officials unsuccessfully tried ot ban hip hop shows from Fort Myers after a bouncer was stabbed following a Plies concert.
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall, Fort Myers, Fla.
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall, Fort Myers, Fla.
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall, Fort Myers, Fla.
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall, Fort Myers, Fla.
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall, Fort Myers, Fla.
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
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  • Freedom Hall, Fort Myers, Fla.
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  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
    120407_FreedomHall287.jpg
  • Freedom Hall portraits in Fort Myers, Fla. James Klynn, Passion Ward, Josh Giha, Rossini Morrisma, Maeva Kem, Jeremy Evans
    120407_FreedomHall271.jpg
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Lexey Swall

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