17 June 22-28, 2023 New Times b e s T o f m i a m i ® 2 0 2 3 miaminewtimes.com | browardpalmbeach.com Get the Best of Both Worlds: An Amazing Education and South Beach Ocean Views (305) 728-1120 QUALIFY FOR AN F1 VISA JUMPSTART YOUR DREAM CAREER Are you looking to study in the United States? Miami Media School is waiting for you to make your dream a reality. Qualify for an F1 Visa and Follow Your Dreams at Miami Media School! to his work. That work was deservingly spot- lighted in last year’s HBO documentary En- dangered, which featured Juste and three other journalists discussing how freedom of the press is under attack abroad and in the U.S. It’s been said in industry circles that if you want to know what’s going on in Miami, figure out where Juste is. You’ll find him in hurri- cane-ravaged suburbs, at protests against po- lice brutality, inside the homes of vulnerable migrants, and anywhere else history is being made in the moment. B E S T F L AC K Orlando Rodriguez Miami Police Department miami-police.org As a reporter, it’s important to ask the hard questions and awaiting those answers can often be long and fraught — but never when they’re directed at Miami Police Department spokes- man Orlando Rodriguez. Rodriguez respects tight deadlines, assists with public-records re- quests, and responds to inquiries seemingly 24/7 (sometimes within minutes!). Rodriguez has never dodged a request for comment or ghosted us completely unlike other media liai- sons with other public agencies (we’re glaring at you, City of Miami). B E S T B O O K B Y A LO C A L A U T H O R If I Survive You Jonathan Escof ery @J_Escof ery (Twitter), @esco_out_n_play (Instagram) You’d be forgiven for thinking Jonathan Escoff- ery’s 2022 debut, If I Survive You, is a memoir. Throughout much of the book, the author, who was raised in Miami by Jamaican parents, uses second-person narration to tell the story of Tre- lawny, a Jamaican-American boy growing up in Miami in the ’90s and coming of age in the post- recession aughts. (“On the day you are sched- uled to begin the sixth grade, a hurricane named Andrew pops your house’s roof open.... Nor do you share your concern that in Miami, great city of cons, you’re as likely to wind up getting your organs harvested as you are to make a profit here.”) The book, a compilation of eight related short stories, reads like a novel, telling a continuous story while jumping back and forth in time and closing with Trelawny scrapping to buy his father’s sinking home in Cutler Ridge. It’s a fairy-tale ending fit for Mi- ami and what Trelawny describes as the Magic City’s “aroma of promise”: that at any time, “you are a single lucky break from becoming one of the haves.” B E S T R E CO R D S TO R E Technique Records 880 NE 79th Street Miami, 33138 786-717-6622 techniquerecords.com There are few places on this peninsula where discophiles can uncover a rare reissued vinyl in mint condition and a well-worn copy of the 2 Live Crew’s As Nasty as They Wanna Be under the same roof. Praise Technique Records, which has been providing Miami vinyl aficio- nados with a trove of more than 20,000 new and used records since 2017. While you can pe- ruse all of Technique’s inventory on its website, it’s worth browsing the aisles of the 79th Street headquarters to take in the giant posters for cult-classic movies, the vast selection of DVDs and VHS and cassette tapes, and a staff eager to help you navigate the row upon row of sonic treasures. Arts & Entertainment