Buy me a house!

On some blogs you'll see "Buy me coffee" or "Buy me dinner". I like to aim a little higher. So go ahead - buy me a house. I'll invite you over for dinner... and coffee.

Atlanta restaurants on Urbanspoon

Friday, November 20, 2009

How to view ALL friend updates on the new Facebook

Facebook recently made some changes to the way they display news updates from your friends. No longer are displays from all of your friends included, in fact, they have it setup as a default to only display updates from 250 friends, even though the friend limit is still 5,000. I would assume this was done to decrease load on their servers. Unfortunately, it also impacts a Facebook user's ability to stay virtually connected to each other, since you can't readily see all updates without manual intervention. Well, there is a pretty simple change you can make to display the news updates from all of your Facebook friends... here's how you do it.

As an FYI, this came to my attention because a couple gamers emailed me asking why they weren't seeing all of their friends' updates for different Facebook games, like Farmville, Mafia Wars, Mob Wars, Pet Society and other similar gamers.

Update: from comment #10, John...

"If your in Live Feed, and your not getting the Edit Options or the option to change the amount of friends is not there, just hide several different people or apps and try again. It should show up for you now. That's what i had to do".

Step one: From your Facebook home page near the top of your news feed you'll see a link that says View Live Feed, click it.

Step one: click the View Live Feed link

Step two: Scroll to the bottom of the page and click on the link that says Edit Options.

Step two: scroll to the bottom and click on Edit Options

Step three: An option popup will appear, now change the default setting from 250 to5000, as pictured below, and click Save.

Step three: change the nimber of friends to be shown to 5000 and click save

It should look like this before you click save.

Make sure it says 5000 and click Save

That's it, you're done.

If that doesn't work for you then you'll need to log out of Facebook, clear your browser's cookies and cache, and then login and perform the above steps. That should fix it and you will now see updates from all of your friends on Facebook. Anything I missed? Post it in the comments. Find this helpful? Share the link with your Facebook friends.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

HOW TO DEAL WITH A NEW BOSS

There are two times in your professional life when you’ll experience the anxiety and hope that comes with having a new boss: when you begin a new job and when your boss is the newbie. Both situations are fraught with potential landmines, but both are also opportunities to create a wonderful working relationship with your manager. These tips will help you make the most of having a new boss.

When You’re New

  • Get his ear early and often. The best way to impress a new boss and forge a smooth working relationship is to establish clear expectations. As soon as you’ve gotten a few days of orientation under your belt, request a meeting with your boss to discuss her priorities for you and how your success will be measured. That lets her know that doing well is important to you, and it gives you clear, measurable guidelines for your performance. Make a point of meeting regularly to talk through new priorities and any potential problems.
  • Communicate your feelings professionally. It’s typical for new employees to feel overwhelmed by the sheer volume of things they need to learn in a new job. And when most people feel overwhelmed, they become quiet, edgy, or even visibly irritated. Stay in tune with how you’re feeling and how you may be coming across to others. If you feel yourself shutting down or getting testy, it’s okay to say something like, “I really appreciate everything I’m learning, and if I seem quiet, it’s just because I’m processing it.” Your boss will understand.
  • Ride out the bumps—for a while. You’re going into your new job with high hopes, right? After all, you wouldn’t have signed on if you thought it would be dreadful. So it can be a shock if you discover that you don’t especially like your new boss. The best thing to do is give it time. Relationships can change, and the first few months are rarely a blueprint for how you’ll eventually interact with your boss. However, if your boss is doing anything illegal—or asking you to do anything illegal—run.
  • Check your ego at the door. It’s tempting to start making suggestions about how to improve things in your new office as soon as you arrive. And you might assume that your boss would welcome an “outside” opinion on things. Wrong. It’s important to get the lay of the land and understand how and why things work before you jump in and try to fix things that your boss may not want fixed. You’ll have plenty of opportunities later to voice an opinion.

When Your Boss is New

    • Rein in your expectations. Whether you had the most successful relationship in the history of the world with your previous boss—or it was so bad it made you physically ill—you’re likely thinking one of two things about the person sent to fill those shoes: it will be just the same (perfect or horrendous) or it will be completely opposite (perfect or horrendous). The truth is that few supervisor-employee relationships are that black and white; most are cordial, occasionally irritating, and occasionally joyful. So if you’re used to something on one end of the heaven-hell spectrum, make sure your expectations hover somewhere around “respectful.”
    • Take gossip with a grain of salt. Sometimes a boss’ reputation precedes her, and what’s being said isn’t pleasant. If you can’t find anyone with a kind word to say about her, you may be in for a bumpy road. But if some people think she’s great and others think she’s an ogre, there’s no need to panic. Realize that some personalities just don’t mesh and some employees aren’t the fantastic workers they think they are (and, hence, can get on the wrong side of a boss). The differing viewpoints are likely the result of inter-personal conflicts rather than proof that your new boss is awful.
    • Do listen to talk about his work habits. Asking peers about your new boss’ personality and quirks is fine, but asking about his work habits and what he considers important will go a long way toward preparing you to make a good first impression. If you learn that he’s a stickler for punctuality, for example, you can make absolutely certain you’re always on time or early for meetings.
    • Don’t show him the ropes unless asked. It may be tempting to try to show your new boss how things are done—either as a sincere gesture of kindness or as a power play—but it’s not a good idea unless you’re specifically asked to do so. Why? Your boss may already feel one step behind everyone else in the department, and, coupled with a supervisor’s desire to lead, it could rub him the wrong way. Offer to help in any way you can, but don’t overstep your boundaries.
    • Give her a break. You know your job, so you’re probably motoring along like usual. But your new boss is walking into a completely different situation, and whether she shows it or not, she’s nervous. If she seems distant or hard to get to know, cut her some slack for the first few weeks. She’s likely knee-deep in a learning curve, and this may not be an accurate reflection of her personality or management style. Reserve judgment until she’s established in her new role.
  • ref: http://www.jobgoround.com/how-to-handle-a-new-boss.html

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Top 15 Social Media Resources for Foodies

Ah, food… who doesn’t love food? It’s essential to our survival, of course, but more importantly, it acts as a universal language. Every culture has their own cuisine and we can communicate a lot about ourselves in how we assemble raw ingredients into delicious meals. But some of us like food more than others. So-called “foodies” are amateur gourmets who simply lovefood — eating it, talking about it, preparing it, and learning about it. And for foodies, the social web is an amazing playground.

There are thousands of great sites for foodies on the Internet, so this is hardly a comprehensive list, but below are 15 of the best sites for food lovers, divided into three categories: buying food, cooking food, and eating food. Have any other favorite foodie resources? Please leave them in the comments.


Buying Food


foodzie

1. Foodzie – The goal of Foodzie, which is kind of like Etsy for food, is to create an online marketplace for locally grown, handmade, and/or artisan foods. Foodzie allows people without access to high quality food from small producers a way to get that food via the mail, and it provides farmers and small artisan producers the opportunity to more easily reach a wider audience.

2. Foodoro – Foodoro launched shortly after Foodzie and is probably the site’s biggest competitor. Operating with the same goal of providing broader access to food from small, independent producers, Foodoro is less visually polished than Foodzie but has an equally impressive amount of delicious food for sale.

3. Amazon – Amazon’s Gourmet Food section is surprisingly good. It offers a large amount of food from high-end producers, often in bulk, at reasonable prices. I have often used the site to order harder-to-find food items like beluga lentils and vital wheat gluten.

4. Local Harvest – The best, freshest food comes directly from the farm to your table. Local Harvest lets you easily find organic and locally grown food for sale in your area from farmers’ markets, food cooperatives, community supported agriculture programs, and farm stands. In addition to thousands of local listings, they also have an online shop in the vein of Foodzie or Foodoro.

5. Locavore iPhone App – The $3.99 Locavore app for the iPhone not only finds local farmers’ markets across the United States, but it also lets you know what foods are in season and which foods are coming in season soon. The app is very helpful for both menu planning and finding farm fresh foods while you’re on the road.


Cooking Food


allrecipes

6. AllRecipes – AllRecipes is the mother of all recipe sites and the web’s most visited food site. With over 40,000 recipes, most submitted by users, with ratings and discussions, AllRecipes is a must stop for anyone searching for a recipe. When I’m trying to cook something new, I generally start at AllRecipes since it almost always has multiple versions of whatever it is I am planning to make.

7. Epicurious – It’s not as big as AllRecipes, but Epicurious is a lot more fancy. By combining recipes and articles from Gourmet and Bon Appétit magazines, Epicurious is one of the web’s best resources for recipes and cooking tips from some of the world’s top culinary minds.

8. Rouxbe – Rouxbe is an online cooking school and video recipe library, offering a large collection of how-to videos covering both basic and advanced cooking techniques and entire recipes. What really sets Rouxbe apart from other food video blogs is the production value and amazing video player. Rouxbe videos easily rival the cooking shows you’ll find on public television or the Food Network in terms of quality, both in content and production. Further, their Flash video player lets you jump between chapters, and recipe videos are accompanied by detailed text and image-based descriptions.

9. Foodista – You can’t cook great food until you learn the basics, and Foodista is a great place to turn when something stumps you in the kitchen. Foodista is a wiki-based food encyclopedia (meaning anyone can edit it) that includes entries for foods, tools, techniques, and even recipes (so you can apply your newfound food knowledge).

10. Nibbledish – If AllRecipes is the biggest community recipe site on the web, then Nibbledish (formerly Open Source Food) is easily the most beautiful. Nibbledish calls itself a “gastronomic hub where every visit will bring inspiration and a rumbling belly.” It’s also home to over 2,000 Creative Commons licensed recipes with photos. It’s that liberal license and the site’s mouthwatering photography that really make Nibbledish special.

BONUS: Food Network – The #1 place to find recipes from well-known Food Network TV stars. The site also offers videos of some episodes of its popular television programs.


Eating Food


yelp

11. YelpYelp – Sometimes you just want someone else to do the cooking, and Yelp is easily one of the best places to find a good restaurant. The crowd-powered site offers ratings and reviews of thousands of restaurants (and other local businesses) all over the United States.

12. Urban Spoon – Of all the challengers to Yelp in the local review market, Urban Spoon might be one of the best. The site combines user reviews with those of critics and food bloggers for thousands of restaurants. What really sets Urban Spoon apart, though, is their highly useful iPhone app that lets you easily find local restaurant options, filtered by cuisine, neighborhood, and price.

13. Chow – In addition to recipes and food blogs, Chow has a large directory of restaurants and bars in a handful of US cities. Each listing is linked to the site’s even larger foodie discussion community, so that visitors have quick and easy access to any forum thread that mentions that eatery.

14. The Ghetto Gourmet – A growing trend in North America is underground supper clubs. At these clubs, friends and strangers meet to eat freshly prepared gourmet food, usually made from farm fresh local ingredients and served family style. There are a sizable number of supper clubs operating across the US and Canada (and elsewhere in the world), but the Ghetto Gourmet is one of the largest networks, with many supper clubs meeting each month across the continent. The site has a calendar so you can find one near you, or start one of your own.

15. FriendsEat – FriendsEat is a social network for foodies that combines restaurant reviews for a large number of American cities with food blogs, recipes, and a Yahoo! Answers-style question and answer site.

Monday, July 27, 2009

"THE MAN DIET"

I call it that because Men do not want to read long books about what you can and can’t eat. Men don’t want complicated diet programs that require you to measure points. Men want a very simple set of rules to follow and he gave me only three.

1. Don’t eat anything that starts with the letter “C” (except Fruit, Veggies, and Meat)
2. Don’t eat anything white (except Fruit, Veggies, and Meat)
3. Only drink water

Don’t ask a lot of questions, just follow the simple rules.

Measure your heart rate using a monitor like those made by Polar, like the Polar F11.

Start your "Man Diet” and my Polar exercise program. I work out 6 times a week if possible and the exercises vary in length and difficulty each day. I’m not going to attempt to explain heart rate zones here, visit Polar or some other fitness site on the web and read up on it. Basically I have four 45 minute workouts in the 60-80% zone, one 35 minute workout in the 80-90% zone, and one hour and 10 minute workout in the 60-70% zone. Exercises consist of riding a stationary bike, running on a treadmill, running outside, swimming laps, and using an elliptical machine. Each session consists of only one of those activities and I do it solid for the duration of the exercise. The Polar monitor lets me know if I am going too hard or not hard enough. The surprising thing about starting to monitor my heart is I was actually working too hard previously. I had to slow down and get my heart rate into the correct zones.

Flatten Your Belly Fast

20 ways to turn your biggest excuse "I have no time" into a fat-burning weapon

Photographs by: Kate Powers
2 Comments | 59 Recommended
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Most of us men work harder at our jobs than on our bodies -- Men's Health editors included. Which is why, despite our image, not a single one of us walks around the office with his shirt unbuttoned while a wind machine exposes his abs. (Well, there was that one guy, but we got rid of him.)

We stay reasonably fit with weekly basketball games, some lunchtime runs or bike rides, and lifting in the company gym when we can. But we're regular guys who just as often get home too late to even think about hitting the gym. And though our cafeteria serveshealthy food, we've also been known to polish off the kids' shakes and fries, because it's easier than cleaning them off the car upholstery.

Which is how we arrived at this story. We asked some of the men on staff how they reconcile work and working out. Turns out everyone had an excuse, including long work hours, longer commutes, family commitments, and 467 irresistible cable channels. Then we grilled exercise, nutrition, and weight-loss experts for their fat-melting tips. None of that hide-the-remote-so-you're-forced-to-get-up-to-change-the-channel stuff. The result: fast and easy solutions to the real-world weight-loss problems most men battle.

No Time for Exercise

The 10-minute fix: Develop a backup workout. When your gym time is unexpectedly cut to about 10 minutes, try 100s -- rack up 100 repetitions of each of three exercises by doing one move after another without rest. "Just get through each with good form," says Scott Rankin, C.S.C.S. Rankin suggests doing as many repetitions on the lat-pulldown machine as you can (using about 70 percent of your maximum), then doing pushups until your form breaks. Next, do as many crunches as you can. Repeat the trio until you've completed 100 reps of each exercise.

The 15-minute fix: Invest in TiVo. Skipping commercials will save the average TV viewer enough time to squeeze in 15 minutes of strength training three times a week.

The 20-minute fix: Go hands-free. You know the rails on elliptical machines and treadmills? Ignore them. "Leaning on the rails removes a percentage of your weight from the workout, causing you to burn up to 30 percent fewer calories," says fitness researcher Wayne Westcott, Ph.D. What's more, propping yourself up means the smaller stabilizing muscles don't need to do their job of maintaining balance, which burns additional calories.

The 25-minute fix: Mix cardio with weights. "If you have under 30 minutes, the key is to keep moving," says Adam Ernster, C.S.C.S., a Beverly Hills–based personal trainer. Try doing two resistance exercises back-to-back, followed immediately by 60 seconds of intense cardio, such as running on a treadmill that's set at a high incline, hitting a heavy bag, or jumping rope. Rest no more than 30 seconds, then do another set of resistance exercises and cardio, Ernster says. And don't forget proper form throughout the set. Here's a sample routine:

Dumbbell squat-press (12 to 15 repetitions)

Swiss-ball crunch (15 to 20 repetitions)

VersaClimber (60 seconds)

Rest 15 to 30 seconds.

Pullup (10 to 15 repetitions)

Pushup (10 to 15 repetitions)

Jump rope (60 seconds)

Repeat each exercise set three times.

The 30-minute fix: Take a stroller. Buy a jogging stroller and put a kid in it. Congratulations -- you now have an exercise device that helps burn more calories than running. Texas A&M University researchers studied a group of people running at the same intensity for 30 minutes with and without a stroller. When the group ran while pushing a stroller (which held a 25-pound weight plate), their heart rates were 10 beats per minute higher than when they ran stroller-free. "The father can remain (or become) active and at the same time spend time with his child," says John Smith, Ph.D., lead author of the study. Bonus: You'll score points with your wife by taking the toddler out of her hair. She'll thank you later. Go to joggingstroller.com.

No Time for Breakfast

Fix #1: Redecorate. "Move the fruit bowl to a handy place so you can grab a piece or two on your way out the door," says Donald Hensrud, M.D., director of the Mayo Clinic Executive Health Program and editor-in-chief of Mayo Clinic's Healthy Weight for Everybody. Grab an apple, pear, banana, or some other fruit you can eat while driving. Shove an orange in your briefcase; it's your antidote to the afternoon slump.

Fix #2: Relocate. No time to make a bowl of filling, high-fiber oatmeal at home? That's okay. Have your breakfast at work instead. Quaker Express oatmeal comes in its own cup and takes only a shot of water and 30 seconds in the microwave to be ready to eat -- and there's no cleanup.

Fix #3: Pop a multivitamin. Open bottle, swallow pill. It takes 5 seconds, and the benefits will go a long way toward making sure your weight loss sticks. A low-calorie diet may not provide enough B vitamins, which are necessary to draw energy from food, says Tim Ziegenfuss, Ph.D., an exercise scientist at Pinnacle Institute of Health and Human Performance. Popping a multivitamin every day will help keep your energy levels up, ensuring that eating less doesn't sabotage your efforts to exercise more.

Too Much Coffee, Cola, Juice . . .

The fix: solve your drinking problem. Liquid calories sneak up on most dieters. Buy a 32-ounce Nalgene bottle, keep it full of water, and drink it down at least twice a day. If you feed your caffeine habit with regular infusions of 20-ounce colas, making the water switch will save you upwards of 400 calories a day -- that's 42 pounds in a year. What's more, fluid balance is crucial when you're exercising on a calorie-restricted diet, says Robert McMurray, Ph.D., a professor of sports nutrition at the University of North Carolina. You're burning protein along with fat, which increases your body's need for water.

Falling Back on Fast Food

Fix #1: Cook less, eat more often. You think choosing the drive-thru saves time, but with minimal planning (and some Tupperware), you can get much better food, much faster. "Put in the effort up front," Dr. Hensrud says. "It will save you time later." On Sunday, plan your meals for the week, go grocery shopping, and start cooking. Cook a week's worth of brown rice, then divide it into individual servings. Dish out the servings into five containers and grab one a day to eat with lunch. Other easy cook-ahead items:

Salmon fillets. Cook three extra, wrap them in plastic wrap, and store them in the fridge. Eat them cold or make salmon salad (one chopped fillet minus skin, a scant tablespoon of low-fat mayo or Dijonnaise, a tablespoon or two of sliced green onions, and a handful of halved grapes).

Boneless, skinless chicken breasts. Cook three extra. Chop one and add it to a salad, or slice it into strips and wrap it in a whole-wheat tortilla with lettuce, tomato, onion, two slices of turkey bacon, and a smear of guacamole.

Turkey bacon. Cook 10 to 12 extra strips and add them to sandwiches or salads for extra protein, or just grab a couple of strips for a snack.

Fix #2: Buy a rotisserie chicken. Pick one up in the grocery store's deli section instead of a burger and fries from your local grease merchant. Once you peel off the skin, the chicken is a terrific low-fat source of lean protein. It can feed one man for 3 or 4 meals or a family of four for a single meal. And dismembering it will help you practice your bird-carving skills, should you be called up for duty on Thanksgiving.

That Irresistible Restaurant Menu

Fix #1: Start with a salad. No exceptions. Skip the bacon bits and croutons (but you knew that), and ask for oil and vinegar or the house vinaigrette. You don't need to completely eliminate taste, either. "To me, a small amount of healthy fat and calories is worth it," Dr. Hensrud says. Eating nutritious, low-calorie vegetables, even if they're sprinkled with a little cheese, beats filling up on the free bread.

Fix #2: Eat the fish. Lean protein helps you feel full. Fish is an excellent source, and it may go a step further in helping you fight fat. Earlier this year, preliminary research at the University of Navarra, Spain, found that the eicosapentaenoic acid (you don't have to pronounce it, just eat it) found in fish like wild salmon, mackerel, and cod can stimulate the release of leptin, a hormone that's been linked to appetite control and the regulation of fat storage.

Fix #3: Go vegetarian, sort of. Every time you order pasta, automatically ask for a side of the vegetable of the day and dump it into the pasta dish. "Vegetables are free food, dietwise," Dr. Hensrud says, "and by eating more vegetables and less pasta, you shift the calorie count around in your favor." Add some wilted spinach or other greens to spaghetti or lasagna; drop steamed squash or broccoli into that fettuccine Alfredo you couldn't resist ordering. You really should resist cream-based sauces, though. Opt for the tomato sauce for all its cancer-fighting lycopene.

An Overdose of Television

The fix: Floor it. Just lie or sit on the floor instead of the sofa. Same time, same channel, more calories burned. "When you fall into that couch, you're just gone, but when you're sitting on the floor, you keep moving a little bit," says Charles Staley, C.S.C.S., a Phoenix-based strength coach. "You start in one position, then shift to another, then another." That kind of mini motion counts toward your total daily calorie burn, and it adds up: Earlier this year, Mayo Clinic researchers found that fidgety people burn up to 300 extra calories per day. And when you're on the floor, you're more likely to do a few crunches or pushups.

How to Incorporate Wheat Germ Into a Diet | eHow.com

When you are counting calories and cutting back on fat, you often also cut back on the amount of meat in your diet. Using wheat germ can help to compensate for any nutrients that you may be lacking from your lower meat consumption. Wheat germ is the embryo of the wheat kernel. The germ is the most nutritious portion of the wheat kernel but accounts for only 2 1/2% of its weight. During the milling of flour, the germ is usually separated from the bran and starch. The oil content of the germ makes it perishable and would significantly shorten the shelf life of flour. The following article will discuss ways to incorporate wheat germ into your diet.
How to Incorporate Wheat Germ Into a Diet | eHow.com

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Thursday, July 2, 2009

July 4th Fireworks!!!


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• Lenox Square Fourth of July Festival
3393 Peachtree Road NE.
Atlanta, GA 30326
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• 39th Annual Fantastic Fourth Celebration
Stone Mountain, GA.
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• Peachtree Street Parade and Road Race
Downtown Atlanta, GA.
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• Roswell Town Square
610 S Atlanta St.
Roswell, GA 30075
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• 4th of July Parade and Celebration at Hunter Park
8830 Gurley Rd.
Douglasville, GA 30075
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• Turner Field Fireworks
755 Hank Aaron Dr. SW.
Atlanta, GA 30315
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• Fourth Of July Celebration
168 S Clayton St.
Downtown Lawrenceville, GA 30045
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• July 4th Festivites and Fireworks at Will's Park
11925 Wills Rd.
Alpharetta, GA 30004
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• Six Flags Over Georgia 4th Of July Celebration
7561 Six Flags Pkwy.
Austell, GA 30168
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• Mall Of Georgia Fabulous Forth Celebration
3333 Budford Dr.
Buford, GA 30519
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• Light Up The Lake
7000 Holiday Rd.
Buford, GA 30518
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• Powder Springs July 4th Celebration at the Historic Town Square
4488 Pineview Dr.
Powder Springs, GA 30127
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• Country Club of Roswell 4th of July Celebration
2500 Club Springs Dr.
Roswell, GA 30076
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• 10th Annual Firework Extravaganza at Roswell High School
11595 King Rd.
Roswell, GA 30075
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• Fourth of July Festival and Fireworks
1369 Fourth Avenue
Auburn, GA 30011
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• 4th Annual Fireworks at Villa Rica Civic Center and Sports Complex
1605 Hwy. 61
Villa Rica, GA 30180
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• 1st Annual Dawson Day Thunder in the Sky Fireworks Extravaganza on July 3rd
445 Martin Rd.
Dawsonville, GA 30534
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• Forth of July Star Spangled Beach Party at Callaway Gardens
17800 US Hwy 27
Pine Mountain, GA 31822
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• Fourth of July Annual Celebration at Chateau Elan
100 Tue Charlemagne
Braselton, GA 30517
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• Fabulous Fourth at the Horse Park
1996 Centennial Olympic Pkwy.
Conyers, GA 30013
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• 4th Of July Pied Piper Parade and Concert
121 Sycamore St.
Decatur Square GA 30030
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• July Freedom Fest In Woodstock
8632 Main St.
Woodstock, GA 30118
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• 4th of July Fireworks Spectacular
2777 East Point Street
East Point, GA 30344
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• Sunflower Farm Festival
1380 Duren Road
Rytledge, GA 30663
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• Georgia Independence Day Festival
4361 Jonesboro Rd.
Hampton, GA 30228
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• American Legion's 4th of July Celebration at Laural Park
3100 Old Cleveland Highway
Gainesville, GA 30501
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• Fourth in the Park at Marietta Square
4 Depot St. NE.
Marietta, GA 30060
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