Aisha Moktadier

  • Website offers free products for college community

    Website offers free products for college community

    Now students can satisfy their love for free things on Sumpto, a website created by University of Miami alumnus Ben Kosinski that allows students with a university email to reap benefits from taking simple surveys.

    “When I was at UM, I saw companies handing out free products, and I figured there had to be a way to provide them with easier access to students,” he said.

    The website allows students with a valid .edu email address to sign up and create a profile. The college-exclusive company acts as a community for students to interact with others across the United States. Once a student has joined, the company can discover what is happening on campuses across the country by asking questions and receiving answers on topics like academics, Greek life and college life.

    The site also allows for students to be awarded free products from big name brands from joining, taking surveys and using their favorite social media outlets to advertise the products they receive.

    Kosinski explained that the company works with brands such as Kraft, Uber, Mountain Dew and TripAdvisor. There are over 90,000 students currently using the site all around the nation.

    Kosinski began working on Sumpto a year after he graduated. He started out by creating a Beta site in conjunction with a web developer. After he launched the site, he began getting investors in October 2013.

    Kosinski isn’t the only UM alumnus at Sumpto. Matt Greenberg, another alum, began helping Kosinski during his senior year at UM by building Sumpto’s social media presence.

    “I started posting information on new rewards that could be claimed on the site and creating newsletters weekly,” Greenberg said.

    After graduating in the spring of 2014, Greenberg moved to New York City, where the company is based, to work on marketing and social media for Sumpto as the Community and Content Manager.

    Junior Gabriella Goodrich, who uses the site, is enthusiastic about Sumpto and its possibilities.

    “I think it’s a really great idea,” she said. “When my friends get free samples and tell me how they are I’m more inclined to buy them versus seeing an ad for them or something on TV.”

    Goodrich has received products such as The PocketBra, the Selfy case for the iPhone and free Uber credits.

    Moving forward, Kosinski plans to create an app for the site to continue to expand Sumpto for students to enjoy.

    “In the simplest sense, we want to be the company that brands think of when they want to reach the college demographic,” Greenberg said.

    Kosinski also offered some advice for students with their own business ideas.

    “Try to create something from your own experience,” he said. “Leverage your own experience as a strength.”

  • Sanibel offers affordable leisure, day trips

    Sanibel offers affordable leisure, day trips

    The more isolated Bowman’s Beach in Sanibel, Florida, offers visitors clear blue water and white sand and a hotel-free area to tan without worrying about blocked sun, on September 21, 2013. This beach is also great for shelling and is stocked with picnic tables and barbecues. Aisha Moktadier // Contributing Photographer
    Bowman’s Beach in Sanibel, Fla., offers visitors clear, blue water and white sand as well as a hotel-free area to tan. The beach is also known for shelling and is packed with picnic tables.
    Aisha Moktadier // Contributing Photographer

    The clear, blue ocean that glitters on either side of the Sanibel Causeway captures the beauty and tranquility that awaits visitors just over the bridge onto the narrow streets of Sanibel Island.

    Known for its shell beaches, Sanibel is filled with independently owned and affordable restaurants, hushed beaches, bike rentals and lanes, and art galleries. Located on Florida’s west coast, and only a 2.5-hour drive from Miami, the island makes a great location and affordable alternative for a day trip.

    Start the day right at Bowman’s Beach, located right off Sanibel-Captiva Road and Bowman’s Beach Road. This location offers up bright blue water, white sand and what seems like an ever-flowing sea breeze. Afraid of skyscraping buildings blocking your sun while you tan? Not here. Bowman’s Beach offers a peaceful atmosphere for tanning with no hotels in sight. There is also plenty of public parking and picnic tables.

    Once you’ve soaked up enough sun, head over to The Lazy Flamingo, a raw bar and grill that serves up ice-cold brews for $2.25, and seafood so fresh their tagline is, “If our seafood were any fresher, we’d be serving it underwater!”

    The restaurant offers up big food at small prices – like the Big Burger Burger for $9.99 or Dead Parrot Wings for $11.99, that are so hot they come with their own warning on the menu.

    Next up is a leisurely bike ride across the island. Drive over to Billy’s Rentals to rent a bike for only $5 for two hours. Separate bike lanes are found all over the island, weaving in and around the luscious tropical greens and gift shops. Bike over to the Bailey-Matthews Shell Museum to see themed exhibits and art (all made of shells) for only $9 per person, or check out the gift shops all over the island. She Sells Sea Shells is one of the most creative, as it offers gifts made of seashells for visitors to take home such as figurines, jewelry boxes and seashell flower bouquets.

    Head back to the beach to watch the sun set on the island, turning the ocean water into rich hues of orange and gold. Pack up your trunk with the remnants of a good day’s adventure, and let the peaceful sound and salty smell of the Sanibel waves linger as you make your way back down to Miami.

  • Miami’s hidden gem celebrates Cuban Culture

    Miami’s hidden gem celebrates Cuban Culture

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    A powerful sound of hands beating against bongos, mimicking the groove of the Latin music playing from a nearby storefront’s speakers mixes with trumpets blaring as tourists stroll over the path of domino tiles as their feet pitter-patter on the pavement leading to the infamous Domino Park.

    Some were huddling near a stand full of bright jewelry. The owner of the stand, a short older man with a thick Spanish accent told them, “This is coconut, this is shell,” as he pointed first towards the left side of the table, then to the right. “English or Spanish?” he asked each of them.

    Across the street, there is a building with a towering multi-colored ice cream cone with “Azucar” written in small, pink neon-lit letters. Beneath it, there is a tagline that reads “Homemade [Cuban] ice cream.”The inside of the store is lined with cushioned couches made of guayaberas and the floor is made up of replicas of Cuban tiles.

    The owner of the store, Suzy Batlle, explained that she went to Penn State University to learn the art of making ice cream after the bank industry started to falter, affecting her career.

    “My grandmother made ice cream many years ago in Cuba,” she said. “My love for ice cream came from her.”

    The store offers up Cuban-inspired flavors like mamey, café con leche, flan, and the most popular, Abuela Maria, which is filled with guava, cream cheese and Maria crackers.

    “I also take suggestions from my customers,” she explained. “Mantecado, which is a Cuban vanilla, was something I made with these guys from Domino Park.”

    “Little Havana,” which stretches west to east from Douglas Road to I-95 near 8th Street, got its name in the 1960s when the neighborhood began to emerge as being comprised of a largely Cuban population.

    Much of the Cuban population was fleeing to America in pursuit of escaping political persecution during this time. Today, it still keeps hold of its cultural ties to Cuba.

    Viernes Culturales, or “Cultural Fridays,” is a large cultural festival full of live music, domino games, local arts and crafts and dancing. Cultural Fridays take place on the last Friday of every month on Calle Ocho between 13th Avenue and 17th Avenue, from 7 to 11 at night.

    Little Havana sets itself apart from other areas of Miami because of how much importance the inhabitants put on keeping their cultural roots intact.

    On 14th Avenue and 8th Street, a McDonald’s is occupied by a group of locals who sell signature Latin American “panama hats,” underneath a banner advertising a new clubhouse quarter pounder. A couple blocks down you can try pizza Cubana and traditional Cuban sandwiches at La Esquina de La Fama restaurant and cafeteria. At Cuba Ocho, you can enjoy a mass collection of Cuban art created between 1850 and 1958.

    No matter what street you decide to cross, as long as you’re in Little Havana you’ll find an authentic slice of Cuban life waiting to be discovered.