Axios Miami

June 12, 2025
👋 Good Thursday morning.
🌦️ Weather: Mostly sunny, high near 86. Chance of showers and thunderstorms.
✨ Sounds like: "Good Vibrations," The Beach Boys
- 🙏 Rest in peace to legendary band leader Brian Wilson, whose family announced yesterday that he died at 82.
Today's newsletter is 873 words — a 3-minute read.
1 big thing: 🚀 NASA's science spend

NASA spends hundreds of millions of dollars in Florida on average each year through its scientific missions, a recent analysis shows.
Why it matters: The space agency's science efforts bear the brunt of the cuts in the Trump administration's proposed budget, down nearly 50% to $3.9 billion.
The big picture: Science represents about 30% of NASA's overall budget and includes missions like space telescopes, robotic probes and satellites that gather data about Earth's changing climate.
By the numbers: NASA spent an average of $489 million on science annually in Florida across fiscal 2022-2024, according to data from The Planetary Society, a pro-space nonprofit.
- The numbers represent obligations involving "research grants, contracts and cooperative agreements," the group says.
Zoom in: Nearly 20 active science missions would be canceled under Trump's NASA budget, the Planetary Society says, representing more than $12 billion in taxpayer investments.
The bottom line: Congress, not the president, sets NASA's budget — but Trump's proposal suggests he believes the agency should be focused on human spaceflight rather than a broader scientific mission.
2. 👨🏻🦲 Pitbull applauds his "baldies"
Ladies love him. Everyone wants to be him — bald head and all.
- Pitbull, the Miami native and club-rap superstar, is embracing a viral trend where fans shown up to his concerts wearing bald caps and fake beards to copy his signature look.
Why it matters: It's the latest iteration of the concert uniform, as the New York Times describes it, popularized by artists like Taylor Swift, Beyoncé and — historically — the late Florida singer Jimmy Buffett.
Catch up quick: The social media-fueled phenomenon started after COVID-19 but has gone "to a whole other level" during Pitbull's current European tour, the rapper — real name Armando Christian Pérez — told BBC News.
- The globe-trotting Cuban-American artist, nicknamed Mr. Worldwide, has always been a favorite target for fan imitation: His quotable lyrics ("Dale!"), nostalgic party anthems and trademark look have made his brand eternally durable.
The latest: Masses of fans showed up to his London concert on Monday in full Pitbull regalia, turning the crowd into a "sea of nude latex," the Times reported.
- "To wander among the Pitbulls feels like Halloween night, if Halloween had only one costume option and it was Pitbull," Times reporter Callie Holtermann wrote.
- "I'm pretty sure every party shop in London is sold out of bald caps," a fan told the newspaper.
- Pitbull, ever the business man, even started selling a "Mr. 305 kit" with a bald cap and bowtie for $19.99.

Outside the O2 Arena, fans told the Times that it was "one big inside joke" or "mob mentality" that motivated them to draw on fake mustaches with liquid eyeliner and cut up stockings to make bald caps.

What they're saying: Pitbull told the BBC it's "an honor" and makes him "very happy" to have fans dress as him for his shows.
- "To be able to motivate and inspire them, and see that they feel that it's deeper than just music, like they're a part of a movement and have a purpose in what we got going on, that to me is priceless."
🦅 The bottom line: "So to all the baldies, thank you, I appreciate you — and they're the baldies because we soar high like bald eagles."
3. Catch me up: Undocumented foster child controversy
Florida child welfare authorities handed over a 17-year-old undocumented foster child to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, in potential violation of Department of Children and Families rules. (Miami Herald)
✈️ South Florida-based Silver Airways ceased operations yesterday after a failed attempt to find a buyer in bankruptcy proceedings. (South Florida Sun Sentinel)
🌀 President Trump said he would like to see FEMA largely eliminated "after the hurricane season." (Bloomberg News)
4. ☀️ Your weekend planner
We're halfway through June! It's Pride Month! And Father's Day weekend! And there's plenty of happenings around town.
🏳️🌈 Laser Evening: Pride Month Edition combines music with a laser show in the Frost Planetarium's 67-foot dome.
- Friday, Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science, 7pm-11pm
- Tickets, adults $15, children $12
🥳 Bookleggers 13th Birthday Party: Celebrate Miami's only free bookstore with free books, complimentary drinks, tarot readings, live music and more. Plus, you can help raise money to support the shop's mission.
- Friday, Bakehouse Art Complex, 6pm-10pm. Free
🎞️ "Remember the Times:" Enjoy a tribute to the "golden era of Black American sitcoms from the 1970s-1990s" with live music, theater, dance, poetry and film.
- Friday, Sanctuary of the Arts, 7:30pm
- Tickets, $10+
🏖️ 2nd Annual Juneteenth Beach Bash at Historic Virginia Key Beach Park celebrates freedom, culture, and community with live music, food and family-friendly entertainment.
- Saturday, 12pm-4pm. Free
🖼️ Celebrate Juneteenth at the Pèrez Art Museum Miami: Honors the "legacy, creativity and resilience of Black artists." Enjoy live performances and workshops during the museums' family-friendly Free Second Saturdays.
- Saturday, 11am. Free
5. 🎨 1 skateboard show to go
Sommer here! I swung by El Fresco in Little Havana on Tuesday night to see NICE DECK, an exhibit featuring original work on skate decks.
- The one-night-only event was part of the gallery's "Vinyl Tuesdays," a monthly event that pairs art and music from a DJ.
The intrigue: The outside patio was full of guests by the time we left, and the makeshift skate lot out back had a handful of skateboarders.


🙏 Martin is watching an old video of the Beach Boys performing "God Only Knows."
😋 Sommer had a delicious meal at Double Luck last night. (Stay tuned for a review!)
This newsletter was edited by Kristen Hinman.
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