MUD ISLAND RIVER PARK PROPOSALS P6 • AMERICAN IDIOT P30 • KUNG FU PANDA 3 P40
02.04.16 1406TH ISSUE
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ANDREA MORALES
Memphis Burning The horrific lynching of Ell Persons was national news in 1917, then forgotten. Nearly 100 years later, his story is coming back to life.
RAM
COCK
MONKEY
1943, 1955, 1967, 1979, 1991, 2003, 2015: Elegant and creative. You are timid and prefer anonymity. You are most compatible with Boars and Rabbits, but never the Ox.
1945, 1957, 1969, 1981, 1993, 2005, 2017: A pioneer in spirit, you are devoted to work and quest after knowledge. You are selfish and eccentric. Rabbits are trouble. Snakes and Oxen are fine.
1944, 1956, 1968, 1980, 1992, 2004, 2016: You are very intelligent and are able to influence people. An enthusiastic achiever, you are easily discouraged and confused. Avoid Tigers. Seek a Dragon or a Rat.
HAPPY CHINESE NEW YEAR from
HORSE
1942, 1954, 1966, 1978, 1990, 2002, 2014: Popular and attractive to the opposite sex. You are often ostentatious and impatient. You need people. Marry a Tiger or a Dog early, but never a Rat.
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BOAR
1947, 1959, 1971, 1983, 1995, 2007, 2019: Noble and chivalrous. Your friends will be lifelong, yet you are prone to marital strife. Avoid other Boars. Marry a Rabbit or a Sheep.
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DOG
1946, 1958, 1970, 1982, 1994, 2006, 2018: Loyal and honest, you work well with others. Generous, yet stubborn and often selfish. Look to the Horse or Tiger. Watch out for Dragons.
RAT
1936, 1948, 1960, 1972, 1984, 1996, 2008, 2020: You are ambitious, yet honest. Prone to spend freely. Seldom make lasting friendships. Most compatible with Dragons and Monkeys. Least compatible with Horses.
FOR THE PAST 3 YEARS!
RABBIT
2
MONKEY
The Chinese Zodiac consists of a 12 year cycle. Each year of which is named after a different animal that imparts distinct characteristics to its year. Many Chinese believe that the year of a person’s birth is the primary factor in determining that person’s personality traits, physical and mental attributes and degree of success and happiness throughout his lifetime. To learn about your birth among the 12 signs running around the boarder. If born before 1936, add 12 to the year you were born to find your year.
SNAKE
1940, 1952, 1964, 1976, 1988, 2000, 2012: You are eccentric and your life complex. You have a very passionate nature and abundant health. Marry a Monkey or a Rat late in life. Avoid the Dog.
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1941, 1953, 1965, 1977, 1989, 2001, 2013: Wise and intense with a tendency towards physical beauty. Vain and high tempered. The Boar is your enemy. The Cock or Ox are your best signs.
DRAGON
YEAR
1939, 1951, 1963, 1975, 1987, 1999, 2011: Luckiest of all signs, you are also talented and articulate. Affectionate, yet shy. You seek peace throughout your life. Marry a Sheep or Boar. Your opposite is the Cock.
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TIGER
1938, 1950, 1962, 1974, 1986, 1998, 2010: Tiger people are aggressive, courageous, candid, and sensitive. Look to the Horse and Dog for happiness. Beware of the Monkey.
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OX
1937, 1949, 1961, 1973, 1985, 1997, 2009: Bright, patient, and inspiring to others. You can be happy by yourself, yet make an outstanding parent. Marry a Snake or Cock. The Sheep will bring trouble.
JUSTIN RUSHING Advertising Director CARRIE O’GUIN HOFFMAN Advertising Operations Manager JERRY D. SWIFT Advertising Director Emeritus KELLI DEWITT, CHIP GOOGE Senior Account Executives SHAWNA GARDNER, ALEX KENNER Account Executives CRISTINA MCCARTER Sales Assistant DESHAUNE MCGHEE Classified Advertising Manager BRENDA FORD Classified Sales Administrator classifieds@memphisflyer.com LYNN SPARAGOWSKI Distribution Manager ROBBIE FRENCH Warehouse and Delivery Manager BRANDY BROWN, JANICE GRISSOM ELLISON, ZACH JOHNSON, KAREN MILAM, RANDY ROTZ, LOUIS TAYLOR WILLIAM WIDEMAN Distribution THE MEMPHIS FLYER is published weekly by Contemporary Media, Inc., 460 Tennessee Street, Memphis, TN 38103 Phone: (901) 521-9000 | Fax: (901) 521-0129 letters@memphisflyer.com www.memphisflyer.com CONTEMPORARY MEDIA, INC. KENNETH NEILL Chief Executive Officer MOLLY WILLMOTT Chief Operating Officer JEFFREY GOLDBERG Director of Business Development BRUCE VANWYNGARDEN Editorial Director KEVIN LIPE Digital Manager LYNN SPARAGOWSKI Distribution Manager JACKIE SPARKS-DAVILA Events Manager KENDREA COLLINS Marketing/Communications Manager BRITT ERVIN Email Marketing Manager ASHLEY HAEGER Controller JOSEPH CAREY IT Director CELESTE DIXON Receptionist
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LETTER FROM THE EDITOR • OUR 1406TH ISSUE 02.04.2016 “Nobody remembers who won second place.” — Walter Hagen That tweet came from Donald Trump a few weeks back. It returned to haunt him Monday night, when The Donald came in second to Ted Cruz in the Iowa caucuses. And once again, America was left asking the question: Why do we start this whole process in Iowa? A white, rural, fundamentalist state that was won by Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum in the previous two election cycles? It makes no sense. But it was a weird week for everybody: An internet argument raged for days between Atlanta rapper B.o.B. and scientist Neil deGrasse Tyson over whether the earth is flat. Seriously. Apparently, the flat-earth movement is not dead, and B.o.B. isn’t buying this “the earth is round” nonsense. Actually, I suspect that if the GOP presidential candidates learned that a significant number of potential voters were flat-earthers, they’d whip out their “I’m not a scientist” line when confronted with the question. Speaking of questionable science … Trump did the near-impossible and turned Fox News’ Megyn Kelly into a paragon of tough-minded journalism by skipping the most recent GOP debate, in which we learned that no matter the question, the answer is always: Get rid of Obamacare, kill ISIS, stop immigration, and Hillary Clinton will be a horrible president. For example, when asked a question about Kim Davis, Chris Christie went full-9/11 and then promised he would destroy ISIS. To prevent gay marriage, I suppose? I don’t know. We learned that soon-to-be-former-candidate Ben Carson can memorize the opening lines of the Constitution and that he stacks words like Jenga sticks. My favorite quote: “Putin is a one-horse country.” Ted Cruz tried to make a joke about Trump, but it fell flat, and Bette Midler tweeted that he couldn’t improvise a fart at a baked bean dinner. Which was much funnier than Ted’s line. Also, Ted likes mandates. A lot. John Kasich tried hard to bring some sense to the occasion, but he will likely soon return to his role as the other brother Daryll on Newhart. Oh yeah, Facebook deaths this week included Joe Cocker (again), Pete Seeger (again), and Yanni, who is still alive, to the disappointment of many. In local news, it was the week that the Grizzlies found themselves and the Tigers stayed lost. Overton Park advocates and the Memphis Zoo remained entangled in a battle over the Greensward parking issue, with the zoo showing all the grace of a tranquilized elephant running the high hurdles. Or Jeb Bush in a debate. Your call. N EWS & O P I N I O N And Flyer reporter Toby Sells broke LETTERS - 4 the story that District Attorney Amy THE TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE - 4 THE FLY-BY - 6 Weirich and her assistant Stephen Jones SPORTS - 10 were being hit with a censure by the POLITICS - 12 Tennessee Supreme Court’s Board of EDITORIAL - 14 Professional Responsibility for their VIEWPOINT - 15 COVER STORY actions in the trial of Noura Jackson. “MEMPHIS BURNING” This led to an epic comment battle BY MARTHA PARK - 16 on the Flyer website, with one fellow STE P P I N’ O UT suggesting that the DA’s office was a WE RECOMMEND - 20 “powder cake” ready to implode. MUSIC - 22 AFTER DARK - 24 Which reminds me of the time a BOOKS - 28 Flyer intern once wrote, “It’s a doggy dog THEATER - 30 world out there.” CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 31 And indeed it is. FOOD - 37 FILM - 40 Bruce VanWyngarden THE LAST WORD - 47 brucev@memphisflyer.com C L AS S I F I E D S - 43
YOUNG PRETTY THIEVES FEBRUARY 5 & 6
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CARRIE BEASLEY Senior Art Director CHRISTOPHER MYERS Advertising Art Director DOMINIQUE PERE, BRYAN ROLLINS Graphic Designers
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CONTENTS
BRUCE VANWYNGARDEN Editor SUSAN ELLIS Managing Editor JACKSON BAKER, MICHAEL FINGER Senior Editors BIANCA PHILLIPS Associate Editor CHRIS MCCOY Film and TV Editor CHRIS SHAW Music Editor RICHARD J. ALLEY Book Editor CHRIS DAVIS, TOBY SELLS Staff Writers JESSE DAVIS, LESLEY YOUNG Copy Editors JULIE RAY Calendar Editor JOSHUA CANNON Editorial Intern
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MY CARE MY WAY IS
What They Said...
Letters and comments from Flyer readers
SEEING A PROVIDER TODAY!
you would see that congestion disappear. Brady seems like a naysayer, a narrowminded leader who can’t solve problems. We need leaders with forward and innovative thinking. Greg Russell
Book your appointment online now. Schedule, change, or cancel an appointment all with a click.
Planned Parenthood Greater Memphis Region
GREG CRAVENS
About Richard Cohen’s Viewpoint column, “Time to Get Real” … Bernie Sanders is a charmer, but when you come down to reality, there’s only Hillary and her “plans” who can take on the GOP. The Republicans would picture Bernie with images from the Soviet Union so fast your head would spin. Cohen says Hillary has a lot of plans like it’s a bad thing. It’s good to have real, working plans, not just fake plans where things are free with no real way to pay for them. Bernie’s cool on a poster, but Hillary is your gal. Elizabeth L. Miller
About Toby Sells’ interview with Chuck Brady of the Memphis Zoo … As a former National Park Service The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation 620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018 ranger who has worked in parks where For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550 For Release Tuesday, May 19, 2015 civilization and parks often run together — sometimes bringing with them parking challenges — I find it mindboggling that Brady has not been able to Edited by Will Shortz No. 0414 Crossword 40 Chicken ACROSS 64 Flower parts that 1 2for 30 3years to come up with a solution ACROSS 31 Rogen and 49 Sounds of preference? MacFarlane open to release the zoo’s atrocious parking situation. 1 Giddy-brained 1 Rule ending in 52 satisfaction Dwarf planet 32 Bit of mind 5 Buenos ___ reading, briefly? discovered in If Brady were a14 park superintendent, their contents 1947 10 Golfer’s bagful 41 Counter 2005 35 Introductory 14 ___ 10 and up he would have been replaced by now drawing class 53 Group of dishes (info on a game intelligence? for a new number box) 17 4 Sharp36 Total 65 It’s “sim” in São with someone who could take care of household, say of letters of the 15 Garbo who said alphabet used in 56 Tire swing site “I want to be the parking problem. And the problem this puzzle 42 On no occasions, Paulo 57 Luck o’ the ___ alone”Whammy 11 37 Prefix with is deeper than just20 the greensward: The 21 58 Razor brand 16 $15/hour, e.g. cultural to Nietzsche 59 Formal letter 17 “Way to go!” zoo clear-cut several acres of old-growth 38 Tip collector for opener 14 Chief John 19 “___ for real?” many an amateur (“Can you believe 60 Protection performer forest a few years 24 ago and fenced off 43 1990s collectible that guy?”) Duncan, e.g. 39 ___ show (part of 61 Olympian DOWN 20 Place for a Louganis (from the public) more old-growth an old carnival) hammer and 40 Certain NCOs stirrupPort alternative 44 Move like a fly acreage. Its current overflow parking has 15 27 DOWN 21 Hurries, quaintly 41 Tip for remedying 1 Mauritianleftmoney mistakes? 1 Paid attendance parts of the greensward a dust bowl 22 Employee of a 2 Old Turkish V.I.P. Respectful paranoid king 43 Prepare oneself 16 Jungle swinger? 46 huge rutted-out areas, even more 24 Victory, in 3 Stuff stored in 44 Urban grid 30 31 32 2 One bit with German lockers makeup appeal evidence of its destruction of parts of 25 Nervous giggles 17 Opportune 4 P.E.I. hours 46 South American monkey Overton Park. 26 Underscore 5 Texas A&M team 3 54-Down’s PUZZLE BY BRUCE HAIGHT 39 47 Mother ___ 29 One saying some52 Meets I also have to question his statement 18 many 911 6 Like “Alas,”Like say marked-down 26 Exile of 1979 39 Actress Charlotte 48 Alexander who 48 “Blue Moon” clothing: Abbr. inthat “75,000 visitors would be turned servedco-star three and others 30 Moor 27 Mega- times a calls lyricist 7 “Cheers” 55 actor Daphne million du40 Number of hills presidents 40 can easily find free Roger ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE away.” Those people “The Forbidden in Roma 28 Popular farm 49 Sagan’s 8 Greek H Maurier, e.g. dog specialty: Abbr. S L E “Under E P S S O Oa N Glass B U S 19 42 ___ Pieces streets with a 9 Didn’t go Y E L L O W S U B M A R I N E 29 Rocker Bob Kingdom”parking on neighboring anywhere 50 “Present” 41 entrance. And if S H E Bell” S L E A V writer I N G H O M E 43 Saddle straps short walk to the zoo 31 Fathers 10 Sad, to Sade 56 D.C.-based44 Leaves news T I M E A U S S I E T A S in, in a 51 ___ beetle G R R Q U A N T 11 Hidden treasures 33 Art Deco notable he isinso concerned about “citizens who way 4 Big letters 34 Crux B R A Blueprint V A S A L B U M 12 Lead-in to net inits. 20 54 40-Down minus 45 Country singer can’t afford the zoo” and42 his free Tuesday M U R A L U V U L A F A B 13 Dealers in 36 Where Korea is quattro Clark bowling alleys W H E additions N I M S I X T Y F O U R futures? 37 Wine region of program, why did he eliminate the free S R A L I S L E L O R R Y 18 ___ kebab57 Japanese for Italy 46 Ankle bones 55 Tease, with “on” T E R R A G E R M A N 23 Users of locker Tuesday of March, A N C Corroborated H O I R S One getting theprogram in the month44 Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than5 7,000 past “finger pressure” 22 rooms: Abbr. L B A R A M I N O M I N E puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). and why does he limit it to an extremely 24 Org. that listens P A P E R B A C K W R I T E R Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. for alien signals show on few thehours of the day H E R Renowned E C O M E S T H E S U N which 24 52 on Tuesdays, 53 59 Word onyoungtwo Crosswords for solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords. A R I A Y E S H O N O R S 25 Portion for the road? creates congestion in those limited 1920s raider plate Monopoly hours? Open it up56 all day, and I bet squares 10/19/15 6:35 AM
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About Bruce VanWyngarden’s Letter From the Editor, “Wrestling With the Truth” … “How do you monetize the digital product at a level that pays for a decentsized news staff?” Bingo. That’s the central conundrum of the newspaper business these days. And make sure that 4staff includes 5 6a competent 7 8copy editor 9 10 or three. I’m appalled at what I see passing 15 as “final product” in so much content these days. Does anybody read this stuff? 18 I’m not talking about the Flyer specifically; it’s true of everything that gets offered up as news these days. 22 (Spoken as the totally biased spouse of a former dedicated editor who got the axe26 25 a few years ago in a broad-stroke staff reduction at a mid-state daily). John Shouse
Edited by Will Shortz
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So what Brady’s saying is, if I’m heading downtown for an event, and I see all that greenspace in Health Sciences Park (or whatever it’s called), I can just pull onto the grass and park under the trees? After all, it is public space. No? I can’t do that? If I do my car will be towed? I’m so confused. Jeff
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation 620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018 (901) 725-1717 For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550 2430 Poplar Avenue www.plannedparenthood.org/memphis For Release Saturday, May 16, 2015
FLYER_quarter_MCMW_1015.indd 1
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I would love to see the zoo and the Levitt Shell’s foundation collaborate on a parking garage. Zoo visitors could use it during the day, and folks coming to concerts at the shell could use it at night. Karen Casey
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About Michael J. LaRosa and Bryce Ashby’s cover story, “American Dreamers” … Thank you for the story on local higher-ed opportunities for Latino students. I applaud my alma mater, CBU, for standing with these students in accordance with its Lasallian 43 mission. I do question why your story pictures the students at Rhodes 45 46 neither 47 48 College, a school one attends. It’s misleading and does a disservice to both 54Immaculate Conception and CBU. Aimee Lewis 57 58 61
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f l y o n t h e w a l l Its Name Is Mud {
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
DINO FAIL Have you been looking for the perfect toy to teach friends and family about inappropriate touching? If so, you may want to check out this T-Rex/ Stegosaurus combo currently available at a Family Dollar near you. Here’s how it works: The T-Rex has a yellow button where his junk should be, and he hollers real loud whenever someone mashes it. Wouldn’t you?
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THE GLAMOROUS LIFE Speaking of junk, you’ve got to wonder what’s going through a person’s mind while they’re stuffing drugs into a bodily orifice. This week, Shelby County Sheriff’s deputies smelled weed when they pulled over a silver BMW with obscured license plates. The cops found a blunt, some heroin, a little Xanax, a veritable panoply of drug paraphernalia, and, of course, a woman with her pants undone. Sandra Bigham realized the jig was up and admitted to stuffing a contact lens case full of crack into her vagina, a.k.a. God’s crack purse. IT’S A SIGN The Backyard Burger on Perkins near Poplar is offering Memphis diners an opportunity to savor the flavor of an upscale running shoe. YUM!!!
By Chris Davis. Email him at davis@memphisflyer.com.
Edited by Bianca Phillips
CITY REPORTER By Joshua Cannon
A look at proposals for redeveloping Mud Island River Park. At least 20 different uses — from a zoo to a 400-foot fountain — have been proposed for Mud Island River Park since 1910. Various visions to improve daily attendance have failed to flourish. More than $300 million have been poured into the park, but it hemorrhages $2 million in annual operational costs. That’s why Riverfront Development Corporation (RDC) is back to the drawing board. After posting a request for qualifications, the RDC received proposals last month from five potential redevelopers with ideas for the park, ranging from a skate park to an upgraded amphitheater to a 500-room resort and spa. RDC issued the request to “make sure the individual parties were qualified in that they had done or been materially involved in projects of this magnitude in the past,” RDC President Benny Lendermon said. ML Professional Properties, RVC Outdoor Destinations, Bass Pro Shops, Memphis Equity Brand Management, and Mansion America, LLC, now have until Feb. 24th to explain how they plan to design, develop, finance, construct, maintain, operate, and manage their proposals. Revitalizing the underutilized Mud Island River Park is
no simple feat. Though RDC is in the preliminarily stages of choosing a firm, a hotel could take years to build, while the amphitheater might only take months to refurbish, Lendermon said. How the makeover will be funded is uncertain, but footing the bill mostly with private dollars rather than pulling from the city budget is crucial for the master plan. “We are looking at a public/private partnership to bring new capital to Mud Island to both invigorate it and to pay for deferred maintenance issues that the city does not really have the funds to pay for currently,” Lendermon said. “That is our hope. We will not know if any of these ideas accomplish that goal until we receive the final proposals and begin negotiations.” Below are selected details from each of the redevelopment firm’s proposals: ML Professional Properties: • Add three new bridges, and split the lanes — one for bikers and joggers and one for walkers and sightseers. One would be designed like the Nashville entertainment and pedestrian bridge.
Q&A with Phillip Ashley Chocolatier and founder of Phillip Ashley Chocolates At the Grammy Awards on February 15th, performers, presenters, and guests will get a taste of Memphis — literally. Everyone at the Grammys will get one of Memphis chocolatier Phillip Ashley’s golden pralines, a pyramid-shaped, 68 percent, single-origin dark chocolate praline laced with 23-karat gold leaf dust. Each golden praline retails for $79. Ashley, who creates artful chocolates in his Cooper-Young shop, was named the official chocolatier of the Grammy Awards gift lounge. It’s not his first award show, though. Ashley’s chocolates were handed out at the Oscars in 2013. The award shows are just one step in his plan to spread his Memphis-made chocolates across the nation. In January, Ashley began selling several of his chocolate collections through luxury brands Neiman Marcus and Horchow. Dubbed the “real-life Willy Wonka” by Forbes magazine, Ashley creates chocolates that double as works of culinary and visual art. Each chocolate is hand-painted and boasts wild flavor combinations, such as apricot and gorgonzola dulce or bacon caramel shortbread. — Bianca Phillips Flyer: What’s the plan for the Grammys? Phillip Ashley: We’re doing the chocolate for the gift lounge for the performers, presenters, and media. That’s February 12th through the 14th when people are coming to rehearse or media is coming to work on pre-stories. We’re also doing the chocolates for the 30 performers’ dressing rooms. So, like, Adele is opening, and LL Cool J is the host.
We’re doing personalized gift towers for each one of those performers. We’re doing the media room the night of the Grammys, and we’re doing 6,170 pralines for the after-party. They’re going to build a big pyramid of our chocolates, and people will be handing them out. And this chocolate is coated in gold? We put flecks of gold inside the praline, and we dusted them with gold dust. We use a makeup brush, and a little dust goes a long way. It’s $160 for a gram of gold dust. How did this happen? They contacted me. I went to a summit in L.A. a few years ago, just another entertainer/artist event. We did chocolates there, and turns out, some of their representatives were there. They contacted me last spring, and they said they liked my stuff. Your chocolates are now being sold through Neiman Marcus and Horchow. Are you on a quest for world domination? The goal was always to grow our corporate gifting business, which is something we’re constantly going after and doing luxury retail from a wholesale perspective. We’re based in Memphis
• Develop an area called the River’s Edge on the west bank and model it after the River Walk in San Antonio, Texas. • Construct a water park at the end of the River Walk. Turn it into an ice skating rink during the winter. • Convert the museum into a mixed-use area like the City Museum in St. Louis, Missouri. • Build a U-shaped fishing pier at the west side of the island. • Build a dog park. • Build a skateboard park.
THE MORRIS AND MOLLYE FOGELMAN
International
JEWISH Film Festival
RVC Outdoor Destinations: • Create a new main, north entrance, and incorporate Greenbelt Park. • Consider renovation or demolition of the Harbor Landing building with a focus on corporate events and weddings. Take advantage of overnight lodging. • Get guests on the water with boat and kayak rentals, as wells as guided fishing and eco-tours. Bass Pro Shops: • Bass Pro Shops did not submit a formal proposal to the RDC by the Jan. 15th deadline. However, they requested in a letter “to still be considered a qualified development partner and have the opportunity to submit a more defined plan in the future.” • Should they not be chosen as the master developer, Dunham asked to have “a representative on the RDC team and have ongoing involvement in the design and development process.” Memphis Equity Brand Management: • Build a 500-room resort hotel and spa, “which might carry the Marriott flag.” • Construct a monorail that will stop near the hotel lobby. • Create a parking garage to accommodate 500 spaces for the hotel and 500 EDITED BY spaces for visitors to the River Park.
DOUGH Tue, Feb 16 • 7:30pm at Malco Paradiso
THE OUTRAGEOUS SOPHIE TUCKER
Feb 24 • 7:30pm Z PROD FILMS PRESENTS A FILM BY MELISSA DONOVAN “ZEMENE” Wed, at Malco Ridgeway Cinema ZEMENE CHRISTO TSIARAS DINA GUTTMANN CINEMATOGRAPHER MELISSA DONOVAN Presented with Thu, Feb 18 • 7:30pm SOUND DESIGN BY JESSE FLOWER AMBROCH MUSIC BY JAY FLOOD ADDITIONAL MUSIC BY JILL KING BOBIndie TELSONMemphis TEZETA BAND Mansion America, LLC: • Update the visual aesthetics of the Mud Island Amphitheater. PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY MELISSA DONOVAN THE LAST
How did you get into the gourmet chocolate business? It was kind of a crazy idea just dreaming about chocolate. I said, why isn’t anyone in real life doing what Willy Wonka did? I would have ideas for chocolates flavors, like barbecue or bleu cheese. We have a chocolate that reminds you of an orange dreamsicle that’s blood orange, vanilla bean, and tequila. I wanted to come up with imaginative combinations. Do you ever have combinations that don’t work out? Yeah, when you’re pushing the envelope, sometimes you have to re-work things or rein it in. I’ve worked on it long enough to be able to create a formula base so I can plug things into the equation. Does your staff taste-test? Oh yes, I’ll hand them a spoon and say, try the ganache. Funny enough, I taste them for balance and all those things. But once the final product is made, I never eat it. They’re like little pieces of art. When I started, I planned to do it the old-world way with everything hand-rolled, rustic style, hand-dipped. And then somebody asked for 1,500 pieces, and I said, that’s the last time I’m doing that. The molded shapes and the painting came in large part from me figuring out a better way to produce at a higher rate. They’re mini-sculptures, and Golden Praline the way they looks ties into the ingredients. My dad is our head painter. He retired from being a basketball coach for 38 years. All of the chocolates that are going out, he paints. It takes someone who can be methodical and disciplined.
MENTSCH
Sat, Feb 20 • 8pm
TOUCHDOWN ISRAEL Sun, Feb 21 • 1pm
DELI MAN Sun, Feb 21 • 6:30pm See jccmemphis.org for details about our Deli Dinner!
ONCE IN A LIFETIME Tue, Feb 23 • 7:30pm In partnership with Facing History and Ourselves
NICKY’S FAMILY Thu, Feb 25 • 7:30pm
APPLES FROM THE DESERT Sat, Feb 27 • 8pm
FRONT OF THE CLASS Sun, Feb 28 • 1pm
All films will be at the Memphis Jewish Community Center unless noted otherwise.
Feb 16–28 jccmemphis.org/film Memphis Jewish Community Center
6560 Poplar Memphis, TN (901) 761-0810 jccmemphis.org
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
and always will be, but I never wanted to be a mom-and-pop. We wanted to mass produce but with a high level of handcrafted, artisan work.
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• Re-establish a handicap walk ramp to the seating area. • Establish an in-house ticketing system. • Establish an entertainment calendar including musicians, comedians, touring variety and theatrical shows, and a televised annual music event.
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3.18.16 | 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. Joseph’s – Laurelwood Shopping Center | 417 S. Grove Park Rd.
3.19.16 | 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Baptist Memphis Education Center | 6027 Walnut Grove Rd.
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Finding Justice
{
S TAT E A F F A I R S B y To b y S e l l s
Amy Weirich
and had asked for it repeatedly but were told by Jones that no further evidence in the case existed. Jones and Weirich were both represented by Burch, Porter, & Johnson attorney Jef Feibelman in the discipline case in 2014. In a letter to the TBPR at the time, Feibelman said Jones’ failure to give up the evidence “was simply a mistake” and that it didn’t merit discipline. “Respectfully, it would simply be intolerable to practice law in an environment in which a mistake — which happens to all of us — would give rise to a finding of unethical
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behavior,” Feibelman wrote at the time. Both Jones and Weirich now face hearings in their cases by a panel convened by the TBPR. Weirich has said she’ll fight the charges. “Nothing done by myself or by my co-counsel in this trial should warrant disciplinary action,” she said.
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A state board that polices Tennessee’s attorneys wants to discipline Shelby County District Attorney (SCDAG) Amy Weirich and a top attorney in her office for misconduct in the 2009 capital murder trial of Noura Jackson. This story first broke on The Memphis Flyer’s website last week. The Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility (TBPR) is the investigative unit of the Tennessee Supreme Court. The board receives complaints against attorneys, reviews those complaints, and if they’re credible, the board convenes a hearing, such as a criminal court trial with evidence, witnesses, and more. Depending on the outcome of the hearings, attorneys can face a range of discipline. They can be disbarred, suspended, or face a censure, which is a sharp, public criticism that carries little material penalty. Jackson was convicted in 2009 of the second-degree murder of her mother Jennifer. That conviction was overturned by the Tennessee Supreme Court in 2014 because of the misconduct in the trial by the SCDAG’s office. Jackson accepted a plea deal last summer and is now completing a 15-year sentence. The board wants a censure for Weirich because she violated Jackson’s Fifth Amendment right not to testify in the trial. In her closing argument, Weirich turned to the jury and “stated in a loud tone of voice: ‘Just tell us where you were! That’s all we’re asking, Noura!’” As Weirich said this, she turned, walked toward Jackson and pointed at her. Weirich said she was only summarizing testimony from Jackson’s aunt earlier in the trial. The TBPR found that Weirich was commenting on Jackson’s constitutional right of silence, implying that Jackson had something to hide. The TBPR has also targeted Assistant District Attorney Stephen Jones for discipline. He argued the Jackson case with Weirich in 2009, and the TBPR said he hid evidence that could have helped Jackson’s attorneys. The board said Jones knowingly withheld a statement from Andrew Hammack, one of Jackson’s friends who had been a suspect in the case. The defense could have used the statement to impeach Hammack and, perhaps, to further probe his role in the crime, the petition said. It was information “known to the prosecutor that tended to negate the guilt of the accused,” it said. Jackson’s defense attorneys, Valerie Corder and Arthur Quinn, knew of Hammack’s statement during the trial
NEWS & OPINION
JUSTIN FOX BURKS
Two of Shelby County’s top prosecutors face Tennessee Supreme Court hearings on alleged misconduct.
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he games must be played. However uncomfortable the next six weeks may become for the Memphis Tigers and their beleaguered head coach, at least 11 games remain on the schedule (counting at least one in the American Athletic Conference tournament). As of this writing, the Tigers are 13-8 with a 4-4 mark that has them tied for seventh place in the 11-team AAC. If the empty seats at FedExForum and calls for Josh Pastner’s job have been unsettling to this point, just wait for the reaction to a nosedive — if a nosedive occurs — while 68 other programs book tickets for next month’s Big Dance. Last Saturday’s loss at SMU can be viewed one of two ways. Glass half full: The Mustangs are a tier above every other team in the AAC (as the standings indicate), making a loss — even a blowout — on the team’s home floor nothing worthy of teeth-grinding. Glass half empty: The dramatic gap in talent between the SMU roster and the one at Pastner’s disposal accentuates how far this program has fallen, and how large the gap has become between reality as a Memphis Tiger and the dreams of a Sweet 16 (let alone Final Four) appearance. Forget the Tigers’ horrid record against ranked teams under Pastner. For now, the U of M program needs to find ways to merely beat its own league’s elite: SMU, Connecticut, and Cincinnati. Since moving to the AAC from Conference USA in 2013, the Tigers are now 4-12 against this trio of league exemplars. You can’t compete for national championships unless you can compete for your conference title. Which makes this week at FedExForum maybe the biggest two-game home stand of the 38-year-old Pastner’s career. Sweep Connecticut (here Thursday) and Cincinnati (Saturday), and the Tigers will find themselves, at worst, tied in the loss column with the Huskies and Bearcats this time next week. Split these games or (teeth-grinding time) lose both, and we can consider the nosedive underway. This is the collateral effect of the home loss to East Carolina on January 24th. Memphis must knock off a team it’s not expected to beat. One, at the very least. Can the Tigers sweep this week’s contests? So much must happen to counter what we’ve seen of late. Freshman star Dedric Lawson is averaging 14.4 points and 9.0 rebounds this
season, but averaged 8.5 points and 6.0 boards in the Tigers’ two narrow losses at UConn and Cincinnati last month. Lawson must make a difference against an AAC power before we can consider him truly among the best freshmen in Tiger history. Trahson Burrell must be the player who came an assist shy of a triple-double in the loss to ECU, and not the one who found himself benched (for disciplinary reasons) in the second half at SMU. And the Tigers simply must find offensive support for their “Big Three” of Lawson, Shaq Goodwin, and Ricky Tarrant Jr. Two starters against the Mustangs — Sam Craft and Markel Crawford — failed to score. “Organizing” the team (Craft’s specialty) and marking the opponent’s top gun (Crawford’s) are important, but Tiger opponents have taken to sagging on Lawson and Goodwin. Points must be generated elsewhere.
The U of M program needs to find ways to merely beat its own league’s elite. Surely the Tigers welcome turning a page on the calendar, having finished a 4-5 January highlighted only by the narrow win over Temple at home and a road beat-down of UCF. Pastner and his staff would be wise to erase (or hide) any indication of the January stumblefest. Make February a season within a season. Take the two big games this week, then focus on winning four — if not five — of the remaining six. (SMU comes to town February 25th). Six wins this month would put the team on the cusp of 20 when we next turn the calendar to March where college basketball’s elite are separated from the hoi polloi. This team knows what’s being said about its performances to date. “I’ve been here a while,” said Goodwin after the Temple win, “and I know how they do Coach Pastner. My sophomore year, I asked him why, and he said, ‘You gotta win. You gotta win big games.’ We’ll accept that. We’ll man up on that. But we pay attention to it, and we’ll get it right once we get on a winning streak.” If a winning streak is to happen for the 2015-16 Memphis Tigers, it will start this month. Would it be enough to erase January, to lower the temperature on Josh Pastner’s hot seat? We’ll soon have some answers.
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NEWS & OPINION
Robin Spielberg
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
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POLITICS By Jackson Baker
There’s an 8th District Race! Yes, yes, in the wake of the Iowa caucuses, it would appear that the forthcoming March 1st Super Tuesday presidential primary in Tennessee is going to be hard-fought in both parties. And the down-ballot primaries for the one local race, that of general sessions clerk, will no doubt pick up some extra votes from the overflow. But another political contest, involving any number of prominent local politicians, came out of nowhere on Monday to loom as this year’s feature race-to-be on the August 4th state primary ballot. The outlook for this year’s race for the 8th District congressional seat transformed itself from a ho-hum incumbency-reelection effort into what is certain to be a hard-fought, free-for-all, with the surprise announcement that incumbent Republican congressman Stephen Fincher of Frog Jump, in Crockett County, would be bowing out after completing the present term, his third. Fincher’s stated reasons were of the sort that could certainly be taken literally, though they hinted at unsaid reasons that the state’s political class will doubtless spend a good deal of time guessing about. “I have decided not to seek re-election to the 8th
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Congressional District seat this year,” the Republican congressman and well-known gospel singer said, in a prepared mid-morning news release. “I am humbled by the opportunity to serve the people of West Tennessee, but I never intended to become a career politician. The last six years have been the opportunity of a lifetime, and I am honored to have been given the chance to serve.” But, while political observers were still scratching their heads in amazement, a small host of ambitious Republican politicians swung into action. Almost instantaneously came an announcement from radiologist/radio magnate George Flinn, who has sought the seat before, that he would be a candidate in the 8th again this year. Flinn, a former Shelby County commissioner and frequent candidate for several other positions, suggested he had intended to challenge for the seat even before Fincher’s announcement and, by implication, might have Five hopefuls: (from l) Flinn, Kustoff, Kelsey, Leatherwood, and Basar.
influenced the incumbent’s decision: “I have been traveling in West Tennessee for the past few months and listening to citizens talk about their lives, what is happening in our community. The overwhelming facts are that Congress has not been doing enough to address our needs. I have heard all of our concerns, and I am convinced that we must act. We are headed in the wrong direction, but we can fix things. That is why I am running for U.S. Congress in the 8th District of Tennessee.” In rapid-fire order came announcements from other hopefuls, most of them clearly ad hoc statements prepared in haste. There was this from former U.S. Attorney David Kustoff, who had previously run for Congress in the 7th District, much of which is now in the 8th District: “I want to thank Congressman Fincher for his service to our country and for fighting for conservative values in Washington. I strongly believe our state deserves a congressman who will continue the fight for Tennessee values and principles, and that is why I will be candidate for the 8th Congressional District. “ And, not long after that, came word from Shelby County Register Tom Leatherwood, who had also previously sought election from the 7th. Said Leatherwood, who was already trying out the rudiments of a campaign speech: “I am throwing my hat into the ring
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Fincher’s surprise withdrawal has every ambitious Republican in Shelby County hopping … and there’s room for more.
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for the 8th congressional seat. I believe I have a very strong, proven conservative record which will resonate in the district, having served two terms in the state Senate, where I helped kill a state income tax twice. I also served on the Senate Finance Committee, where we had to tell people no in order to balance the budget. This is the type of discipline I can bring to Washington.” Virtually back-to-back announcements then came from state Senator Brian Kelsey and Shelby County Commissioner Steve Basar that they intended to seek the 8th District seat as well. Kelsey, who has long been expected to seek an open congressional seat, wasted no time in picking up a petition for the 8th District race at the Shelby County Election Commission and featured a photo of that act on his Twitter page. Basar, who had already floated a trial balloon for a candidacy in the 9th District against Democratic incumbent Steve Cohen, said a race in the 8th, where his domicile is, seemed a more obvious route to Congress. Neither Flinn’s entry nor Kustoff ’s nor Leatherwood’s might have been unexpected, given their prior attempts at congressional service. Besides running in the 8th District in 2010, when he finished third in a three-way GOP primary race, Flinn ran unsuccessfully in 2012 as the GOP nominee against 9th District incumbent Cohen. He is well-known for his almost Trump-like willingness to self-fund his political races to the tune of millions. Kustoff sought the 7th District seat in a four-way GOP primary in 2002 that also included then county commissioner, now state Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris and then City Councilman Brent Taylor. That race was won by current incumbent Marsha Blackburn. Reapportionment after 2010 resulted in the transfer of most of the east Shelby County portion of the 7th district into the 8th, which already included a generous section of northern Shelby County. Leatherwood pointed out that he won 62 percent of the Shelby County vote in a 2008 direct primary challenge to Blackburn and that his Senate district included Tipton and Lauderdale counties, which also are contained in or overlap the 8th District. The county register also notes that Shelby County has accounted for as much as 55 percent of the total 8th District vote since the new district lines were established after the 2010 census. That fact, the prominence of Shelby County in the 8th District, and especially of the Republican-dominated portions of Shelby County, may well have influenced Fincher’s decision not to seek reelection this year. He might have had thought processes similar to those of Blackburn, who did well in Shelby County against
three natives of the county in the 2002 GOP primary but, as noted, lost the county to Leatherwood in 2008, and subsequently lobbied to move the western boundary of her district out of Shelby County. Several Shelby Countians, including current Memphis City Council Chairman Kemp Conrad (who may yet be heard from this year), had in previous years thought out loud about a challenge in the 8th District, and have become a crowd, now that the district is an open seat. Deadline for the Republican and Democratic primaries is April 7th. The Democratic front has been quiet apropos the 8th, but don’t expect that to last.
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E D ITO R IAL
Modest Brags Given the fact that, even in Nashville, people were preoccupied on Monday with the forthcoming caucus results in Iowa, Governor Bill Haslam’s State of the State address garnered somewhat less traction than it normally
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would. Not that his address wasn’t well received. The governor’s brag-bag of boasts and proposals was like a decently packed post-Christmas stocking, containing a fair number of comestibles, even if lacking in the surprise hardwares — an unexpected wristwatch, a brand-new iPhone —that can give the annual gift-giving ritual the sense of holiday-style delight. Or, to paraphrase Gertrude Stein, there was not much there. Conspicuously missing in the governor’s message was any mention of the two great issues that have been more addressed in statewide commentary and political cross talk than any others over the past year — Medicaid expansion and infrastructure repair. No Insure Tennessee pitch as with last year’s speech and no substitute proposal for accessing the billions of federal dollars still lying in wait for the state’s indigent population and struggling hospitals. No highway tax or any other concrete proposal (pun very much intended) for dealing with Tennessee’s deteriorating highways, roads, and bridges. There was a small revenue surplus to feel good about and a modest boost in the state rainy-day fund, but these did very little to diminish a sense of continuing austerity. Nor, given the continuing blockage of Medicaid funds, did the governor’s statements concerning a “really well-run” TennCare system raise many pulses. And his satisfied proclamations concerning the state’s plans for its diminishing real estate may have gratified the outsource lobby, but they gave the rest of us something of an empty-nest feeling. To be sure, there is some good news on the education front, including an
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investment, said Haslam, of “more than 414 million in new dollars in Tennessee schools, more than $200 million of that toward increases to teacher salaries.” The boast that went with that was less edifying. As the governor said, “we’re not investing in the same old public education system in Tennessee.” The raise in standards he claims to have achieved is disputed by many serious educators, and what he calls the “expanded education options for children” could also be described as the draining away of local responsibility for education as the state Achievement School District, unmonitored by any elected body, picks off schools, keeping them from thriving local initiatives such as the iZone program of Shelby County Schools. State employees will come in for some pro forma (and long overdue) pay increases, although Haslam accompanied this bit of lagniappe with some coldshower rhetoric regarding “the hard work and discipline of our departments” as mediated by “the conservative fiscal strategy employed by the General Assembly, our constitutional officers, and this administration.” The governor used much of his address to lavish praise on the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency and the state’s first responders. He did not dwell much on Tennessee Promise or his various initiatives to boost adult education in Tennessee, but he is no doubt entitled to some commendation for these efforts. All in all, his State of the State address recalled that old line about it being “the thought that counts.” Thought is fine, but we cannot escape the feeling that a little more action would have counted more.
C O M M E N TA R Y b y D a n z i g e r
VIEWPOINT By Eric Gottlieb
Our Central Park by suing for management authority over part of the Greensward. They plan to install a parking surface, a prospect that is unacceptable to park users. The zoo clearly views Greensward parking as a permanent entitlement, not an interim measure. The Old Forest is another wonderful Overton Park amenity. It is heavily used by runners, cyclists, and walkers; it is an educational resource; and it provides the tonic of wilderness for city dwellers. It is home to an uncommonly wide range of plant and animal species. Sadly, the zoo has done significant harm to this ecosystem and threatens further injury. In 2008, without warning or soliciting public comment, it clear-cut four acres of rare, old-growth urban forest to make way for its Teton Trek exhibit, which was built in such a way as to expose park users to the kind of industrial views that they go to the park to escape. The zoo plans to develop an additional 17 acres of forest, again with no scheduled opportunity for public comment. Such development would radically and permanently damage the Old Forest. The zoo should honor its stated values: “The biodiversity of ALL [emphasis theirs] flora and fauna have value and as a zoological and botanical garden we have a responsibility to support their preservation. The destruction, degradation, or loss of functional ecosystems and the species that occupy them is unacceptable.” Memphians are tired of the zoo management’s elitist and destructive tactics. “Save the Greensward” signs are present in hundreds of yards and businesses around town. Our elected officials have received hundreds of emails criticizing the zoo. Letters to the editor, responses to zoo board members’ editorial columns, and posts on the zoo’s own Facebook feed tilt heavily against the zoo’s heavy-handed tactics. The zoo’s characterization of its critics as a “vocal few” is demonstrably inaccurate. The zoo is a beloved Memphis institution, but we have accommodated their selfish behavior long enough. We taxpaying Memphians want our park back. It is time for zoo leaders to solve the problem created by their failure to plan for adequate parking within their own boundaries. Whatever form this solution takes, this much is clear: All Greensward parking must end, and no additional park land can be allocated to the zoo. Eric Gottlieb is a proud Memphian, a daily commuter through Overton Park, and a member of the Memphis Zoological Society.
NEWS & OPINION
Some describe the clash over the Memphis Zoo’s frequent and unacceptable practice of parking cars on Overton Park’s Greensward as an absurd battle over a grassy lot. In fact, it is about the right of Memphians to actively craft their urban environment. When I moved to Memphis in 1998, Overton Park’s playgrounds were in disrepair, its infrastructure was crumbling, and crime was common. Today, Overton Park is thriving, thanks to the work of the Overton Park Conservancy and the advocacy and volunteer efforts of park users. Every day, a diverse spectrum of Memphians enjoys renovated playgrounds, large picnic tables for family reunions, a weekly farmers market, fenced dog parks, and more, all without charge. The Memphis Zoo has also grown during that period, adding four major exhibits, most recently the Zambezi River Hippo Camp, but not one additional parking spot. In response to increased parking pressure, the zoo was temporarily permitted to park cars on Overton Park’s Greensward during times of peak demand. The Greensward is not an unused field or stretch of vacant land. It is an integral aesthetic design feature of the park, offering pastoral views created with specific scale and proportion. Parking cars there is akin to erecting a cell tower in the middle of the zoo’s beautiful China exhibit. Nevertheless, park users endured this ill-conceived stopgap measure in silence for many years. Unfortunately, Greensward parking has increased and now occurs on virtually all weekends and holidays when the weather is nice, exactly when people want to use the park. Even when cars aren’t present, tire ruts carved in the soil make the area unsightly and unsuitable for intended uses such as walking, playing Frisbee and soccer, and kite-flying. In response to rising calls to end Greensward parking, the zoo has sabotaged the efforts of community partners seeking alternative parking solutions. For example, the zoo actively discouraged its members from using shuttles during a trial run in 2014. They refused to partner in or contribute financially to the OPC’s expert-led, public traffic and parking study currently underway. Recently, the zoo has become more aggressive. They uprooted 27 trees to accommodate more cars, trees that were donated to the OPC by a long-time park supporter and planted in memory of her mother. They are attempting a landgrab
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
The Memphis Zoo/Overton Park controversy is really about the right of Memphians to craft their environment.
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Memphis Burning
THE HORRIFIC LYNCHING OF ELL PERSONS WAS NATIONAL NEWS IN 1917, THEN FORGOTTEN. NEARLY 100 YEARS LATER, HIS STORY IS COMING BACK TO LIFE.
Last winter, with a scrawled list of the streets and landmarks mentioned in 100-year-old newspaper articles, I drove east through Memphis, past Shelby Farms, to what I believed might have been the place where a black woodchopper named Ell Persons was burned alive before thousands of spectators. I walked along the edge of the Wolf River, unsure whether this was the place. The river was narrower than I expected, and the bridge was newer than I thought it should have been. There were no markers, no wooden crosses or makeshift memorials like I see so often marking the site of a murder or a deadly car crash. There
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was nothing but the wind and the winter sun warming the cool air.
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The lynching of Persons is a story no one told me about my home. I never heard Persons’ name in a history class or read about the lynching in a textbook. I first encountered Persons’ story in my own reading, years after I finished high school in Memphis and moved away for college. When I went looking for the site where Persons was lynched, there was nothing to suggest whether I was in the right place. A group of local Memphians is looking to change that. In the year since I first went looking for the site of Persons’ lynching, an as-of-yet unnamed group of ministers, professors, scholars, and churchgoers, inspired by Equal Justice Initiative founder Bryan Stevenson’s speech at the Facing History and
Ourselves annual fund-raising dinner, found their mission: to identify and place historical markers at all lynching sites in Shelby County. Though Persons was not the only victim of lynching in Shelby County, his murder is unique for its surviving details — the case was breathlessly reported in local news leading up to the lynching — and for its spectacle. Thousands of people attended Persons’ lynching, which was, according to some newspaper accounts, the first to be carried out in broad daylight. In the spring of 1917, a 16-year-old white girl named Antoinette Rappel was found raped and murdered in Memphis, near the Macon Road Bridge. Rappel had been decapitated,
COVER STORY BY MARTHA PARK PHOTOGRAPHS BY ANDREA MORALES
Two abutments remain the only markers at the site of Ell Persons’ 1917 lynching where the old Macon Road bridge once stood.
reported that passenger trains entering Shelby County were being searched by the armed mob. Persons was handed over to the mob when they discovered him on a Memphis-bound train. Some speculate that the police gave up Persons in an attempt to avoid the riot that would form in Memphis if he was legally protected and granted a fair trial. But even if Persons had avoided the mob and made it to court, almost all local attorneys had refused to serve in his defense. Upon his capture, local papers announced he would be burned the next morning. By eight o’clock on the morning of the lynching, reporters estimated that 3,000 people had gathered to watch.
Clipping from a 1917 newspaper article about Persons’ lynching (top); Randall Mullins (left) of Responding to Racism; Steve Masler, historian and manager of exhibits at the Pink Palace Museum.
Some people had been camped out at the bridge for over 24 hours. By nine o’clock that morning, the road leading to the bridge was blocked by traffic for a mile and a half. A teacher at Central High School in downtown Memphis came to class that morning to find 50 boys absent, missing class to attend the lynching with their families. Some children brought notes from home asking that they be excused early from school in order to go to the lynching. The Memphis Press reported an old man on crutches “hobbled and bemoaned the fate that might keep him from arriving on time.” Vendors set up stands among the crowds and sold sandwiches and snacks. Though Rappel’s mother requested that Persons be burned on the spot where they found her daughter, the mob cleared a different space, on the other side of the levee, which they argued would allow the crowd a better view. Persons was hauled to the cleared space, where containers of gasoline were poured over his body. As the fire started burning at his feet, two men ran up from the crowd and sliced off his ears. Other people rushed forward to claim souvenirs but were held back. Some spectators complained too much gasoline had been used and Persons would burn too quickly. Once Persons’ charred corpse had cooled, he was dismembered.
OVERTON HIGH SCHOOL’S FACING HISTORY STUDENTS COMBINE EFFORTS WITH RESPONDING TO RACISM TO MEMORIALIZE LOCAL LYNCHING SITES WITH HISTORICAL MARKERS. Members of the crowd took Persons’ head and drove with it to Beale Street in downtown Memphis, where they threw the head at a group of black pedestrians. The severed head was photographed and printed on postcards. Though all accounts of lynchings are horrific, there is something particularly, intimately painful about a lynching in one’s own hometown. Newspaper accounts reported that none of the mob wore masks or attempted to conceal their identities. Among those thousands continued on page 18
COVER STORY m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
her body left under a bridge along the Wolf River. Suspicion fell quickly on Persons, who lived near the site of the murder. Persons was arrested twice, interrogated twice, and released twice before being captured a third time and reportedly beaten into a confession. In anticipation of a trial — and, ostensibly, to keep him from being lynched — local law enforcement moved Persons to a Nashville jail. As it came time for his arraignment, two police officers accompanied Persons on a train bound for Memphis. An organized mob had set up roadblocks and staked out railroad stations, looking to intercept Persons as he headed back into town. A local paper
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continued from page 17 of witnesses and the few who’d actively captured a man, taken him from police custody, and burned him alive in public, no one feared punishment. The Chicago Defender printed a photo of the charred head above a description of the horror following Persons’ lynching: “This head was taken and thrown in Beale Street, the district occupied by the business of the Race, by men who make their money off the earnings of the Race. It is the same of all America.”
…
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“I hope that our work will move even beyond historical markers to create spaces where we practice reverence for the victims of racial violence as well as learn and stay in touch with the facts,” Reverend Randall Mullins, retired United Church of Christ minister, said of the group’s work to memorialize lynching sites. The project is inspired by the work of the Equal Justice Initiative, based in Montgomery, Alabama, which has identified nearly 4,000 lynchings across the South between 1877 and 1950. The Equal Justice Initiative hopes to collect samples of soil from each lynching site to be placed in a memorial to honor all victims of lynching. Twenty-one of these lynchings took place in Shelby County, but only three of the sites have been identified so far. Only one — the 1892 lynching of People’s Grocery co-owners Thomas Moss, Will Stewart, and Calvin McDowell — has been recognized with a historical marker. Steve Masler, an anthropologist and the manager of exhibits at the Pink Palace Museum, heard about the group and contributed his research, as well as a space for biweekly meetings to research and locate the remaining lynching sites. The group will appeal to county or state historical commissions for the markers to be put in place. “Some people think historical markers are just throwing this up in their faces,” Masler said, “but lynching is just as much a part of our history as everything else.” The project is in its early stages. It will take time to comb through old, often unreliable, newspaper sources and locate the places these terrible events took place. Once markers are in place, the group hopes these sites will be incorporated into local education through organizations like Facing History and Ourselves. The group is also interested in creating meditative spaces at the sites, which would include sculpture or other artwork, in addition to the historical markers. Margaret Vandiver, a retired professor of criminal justice and the author of Lethal Punishment: Lynchings 18 and Legal Executions in the South, got involved with the project through
research for her book. She is interested in the legacy of lynching in the present day. “Until white people look at this and look at it hard,” she said, “we’re going to be stuck where we are.” For Reverend Mullins, it comes down to telling the truth about our history. “I am angry,” he said, pounding his hand on the arm of his chair, “I am angry that my history teachers didn’t tell me enough of the truth.” Mullins added that he hopes this project “will reveal the tragic connections between our history and the ways systemic racism and white supremacy continue to be present in most of the institutions
of our society.”
… These tragic connections should be clear to anyone paying attention. To point to just a couple of examples, in 2015, United States police officers killed 1,138 people, and a disproportionately high number of them were black. The NAACP reports that African Americans represent nearly 1 million of a total 2.3 million incarcerated people. Reverend Earle Fisher, senior pastor at Abyssinian Missionary Baptist Church, compared efforts to memorialize
At Overton High School, Dr. Marilyn Taylor’s Facing History students Zoëy Parker and Alexis Sledge discover the story of Persons’ lynching (top). Tom Carlson and Randall Mullins address the Responding to Racism group at the New Olivet Baptist Church (bottom). lynching sites to the removal of the Confederate flag from government buildings. Both gestures, he said, are mostly symbolic. “And symbols are important,” he said, “but they are not the end-all, be-all.”
… A year after I first went looking for the site of Persons’ lynching, I realized I had not found the right place. So I tried again, with the help of directions provided by Steve Masler. I drove east on Summer, to the putt-putt golf course, and parked near a Twice-theIce machine. I grew up out here, just down Summer, at a little Methodist church parsonage nestled in scant woods. For the four years I lived there, I passed the site every day on the way to school, and I never knew it. I walked along the driving range behind the putt-putt golf course, following an impression in the grass which marks the location of the old Macon Road. I walked through brambles and thorny bushes, listening to the dry grass whispering against my legs and the traffic streaming past on Summer. As I walked along the banks, I caught a glimpse of sun-bleached concrete behind me — a pair of bridge abutments, remnants of the old Macon Road bridge where Persons was killed. I gained and lost sight of the abutments as I climbed and descended the low hills running along the riverside. When I reached the abutments, I could see they were streaked with years of rain and covered in patchy moss, with pieces of rebar sticking out at odd angles. Those worn abutments resembled old, oversized headstones, but there on the banks of the river where Persons was murdered, there are no monuments or markers. Only a silence. So little is known about the life Persons lived on this land, near this river — how quiet it must have been at night, how he must have known the Wolf River’s cycles by heart. I wondered if Persons ever came to the river to cool
off, cupping cool water in his palms on hot summer days. I imagined the crowds gathered there, the heat of their bodies as they jostled each other, everyone straining to catch a glimpse of a man on fire. Standing on the banks of the Wolf River, I was struck by the disappearance of the past’s land in today’s terrain. The river has been rerouted, the old Macon Road has long been destroyed. In the decades since Persons’ lynching, it’s as if the earth has been physically recoiling from what happened here, erasing and reshaping the land and water, obscuring the story.
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… I don’t think it’s possible to claim a place selectively, to cherry-pick its history. We have a responsibility to reckon with the whole history of our home places, even the stories deliberately left out of the history books, even the places left unmarked, the names we no longer know. May of 2017 will mark 100 years since Persons was killed. By then, hopefully there will be some sign for those looking to learn the stories of this particular place. Vandiver said that the lynching of Persons “did have national repercussions,” but “in local memory, it almost disappeared.” The fact that Persons’ name is known at all, that he did not become one of many lynching victims whose names have been lost or willfully forgotten, might be thanks in part to the fact that the NAACP sent James Weldon Johnson, the writer, educator, lawyer, and civil rights activist, to Memphis as a field secretary to investigate Persons’ death. After spending 10 days in the city, talking with reporters, law enforcement officials, and locals, Johnson found there was no evidence suggesting Persons was guilty of Antoinette Rappel’s murder. When Johnson visited the land where Persons had been lynched, the grass was still blackened and charred. An American flag had been planted there, to mark the spot. In the years since Johnson visited Memphis to investigate Persons’ lynching, the burned patches of earth have turned to tall grass, and the American flag is long gone. After his visit to Memphis, Johnson wrote, “I tried to balance the sufferings of the miserable victim against the moral degradation of Memphis, and the truth flashed over me that in large measure the race question involves the saving of black America’s body and white America’s soul.” Martha Park is a writer from Memphis, living in Virginia. She is the Philip Roth Resident in Creative Writing at Bucknell University’s Stadler Center for Poetry.
AARON LEWIS
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March 18
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February 21
PICKING UP THE PIECES April 29
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Tickets available online at Ticketmaster.com or by calling 1-800-745-3000.
COVER STORY m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
In addition to working for more honest representations of our history, Fisher urges people to also support those who are working for the city’s present and future — organizations like the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center, Manna House, Stand for Children, Grassroots Coalition, REACH, and Room in the Inn. “As much as I applaud the efforts of the group and stand in solidarity with them, we have to move beyond the symbolic to the more substantial.” This, he said, “requires courage and commitment beyond conversation.” Some of Memphis’ history is still hot to the touch, impossible to conceal. Downtown, the sight of the Lorraine Motel, where Martin Luther King Jr. was shot, still stings like a new burn. The public parks named after Confederate generals are populated by Civil War heroes on horseback, their bronze coattails waving in a preserved gust of wind, while other parts of Memphis’ history seem to be hidden.
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February 20 | Rodney Carrington
May 28 | Foreigner
March 5 | Merle Haggard
July 22 | Brian Wilson Pet Sounds 50th Anniversary Tour
April 1 | The Moody Blues
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We Recommend: Culture, News + Reviews
Love & Murder
Mayhem, murder, and a sympathetic serial killer
By Chris Davis
A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder is stuffed with the kind of surreal Edwardian mayhem and gallows humor one can usually only find in an Edward Gorey etching. The Tony-winning musical tells the story of Monty, a poor, down-and-out bastard who discovers he might inherit a vast fortune. The only thing standing between him and the money is the entire D’Ysquith family. “Roles like this don’t come around that often,” says Kevin Massey, who plays Monty, the sympathetic serial killer in the Broadway tour of Gentlemen’s Guide. John Rapson, who stars as every single member of the doomed D’Ysquith family, concurs. “You need an actor who feels comfortable using everything in their tool belt every night,” he says. Like another musical murderer, Sweeney Todd, young Monty is driven by a sense of righteousness and revenge. But Monty’s more creative than Stephen Sondheim’s famous demon barber, and a real charmer. “Life has weighed on Monty,” Massey explains. “He’s lost his mother and is madly in love with this woman, Sibella, who also treats him like dirt. At some point, it clicks: The best way to get revenge and the fortune is to knock these people off. But he’s not Lizzie Borden.” “Monty’s a really easy character to get behind,” Rapson adds. “He’s not stabbing people in the back or shooting them. He’s helping some real idiots who are already doing dangerous things into the next world. These are some really odious people raised with an intense set of class distinctions. The first song I sing is, ‘I don’t understand the poor,’ and that, very quickly, puts audiences in the mind of who these people are. A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder is vaudeville-inspired silliness, full of wordplay and visual puns. If you’re in the market for a thoroughly modern show with a throwback sensibility and a body count that rivals Game of Thrones, this is your ticket. “A GENTLEMAN'S GUIDE TO LOVE AND MURDER” AT THE ORPHEUM THEATRE FEBRUARY 9TH-14TH. $25-$125 WWW.ORPHEUM-MEMPHIS.COM
Mardis Gras in Memphis Food News, p. 38
Some readers’ beginnings Books, p. 28
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
FRIDAY February 5
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First Friday Woodruff-Fontaine House, 5-8 p.m., $15 Tonight’s theme is “Gilded Courtship” and will cover courting customs and romantic gestures from the turn of the century into the 1920s.
Street Beat Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School, 7 p.m., $25 A performance by this ensemble that includes a mash of multicultural music, graffiti, theatrical lighting, urban dance, and more.
Memphis Arts Collective Valentine Extravaganza Crosstown Arts, 6-9 p.m. A holiday market featuring metal work, glass, pottery, vintage art, and more.
Winter Plant Sale Memphis Botanic Garden, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Annual sale of indoor and outdoor plants, garden gifts, and more. Continues Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
“Blind Navigator” Crosstown Arts, 6-9 p.m. Opening reception for this exhibition of work by Clare Torina and Alex Paulus. The show includes collaborative installations. CHEF + FARMER + MAKER 387 Pantry, 6:30 p.m., $15 A panel discussion on the state of Memphis’ culinary scene. Featured panelists include chefs Andrew Ticer and Michael Hudman, Michael Hanna of Hanna Farm, Jonathan Burlison of Pigasus Cured Meats, Wilson Gardens’ Leslie Wolverton, and Marshall Bartlett of Home Place Pastures.
Hearts & Flowers Shops of Saddle Creek North, noon-8 p.m. A Valentines market featuring artwork, including jewelry, fiber art, and metalware, from area artists. Through February 14th. Moon Mouse The Orpheum, 6:30 p.m., $15 Show about a mouse who wants to be cool. Part of the Orpheum’s Family Series.
Have you got the moves?
Y’all Come
By Chris Davis
Do you like to do it alone? If so, you may want to register to compete in the Air Sex Championships at the Hi-Tone this week. So what is an “air sex” competition exactly? It’s like an air-guitar contest, only instead of tickling an imaginary fretboard, competitors pleasure an imaginary partner. “We have really embraced the sex-positive nature of the show,” says Chris Trew, who founded the Air Sex competition eight years ago. “We don’t care what you look like; we don’t care what you’re into. This show celebrates sex in a way no other comedy show really can.”
Do people train for this? Some people decide to do it the night of the show. They’ve had a few drinks, and their friends are encouraging them. Those can lead to some fun routines. But what we really want are the people who know right now that they are going to show up in this kind of costume and choreograph a routine to this song. That’s when the show really takes a leap. Ice skating has moves like the triple Lutz and sit spin. Are there signature Air Sex moves? We don’t usually say things like, “Oh, he went with the classic camel clutch. So many things could happen, and we like to stay in the moment. The final round has the feeling of the end of a basketball game and there’s 10 seconds on the clock and you’re down one and you have the ball. The whole thing is presented like the sex WrestleMania or Super Bowl.
Animated action and stalled starts at sea Film, p. 40 SATURDAY February 6 Polar Bear Plunge and Chili Cook-off Mud Island, 3 p.m. Participants plunge into the Mississippi for this annual event benefitting Special Olympics Greater Memphis.
Works of Heart Memphis College of Art, 7 p.m. Annual auction of heart-shaped works by area artists. Participating this year are Murray Riss, Tootsie Bell, John Robinette, Lester Jones, Valerie Berlin, and others.
2016 Memphis Open Racquet Club of Memphis, 10 a.m., $10-$120 The tournament kicks off today with qualifying rounds. Besides the tennis, there will be nightly entertainment, including a concert by the popular doubles duo the Bryan Brothers.
Fantastic Failures Amurica World Headquarters, 7-8:15 p.m., $10 An evening of storytelling about failures from Sean Mosley.
Cirque du CMOM Children’s Museum of Memphis, 7 p.m.-midnight, $150 The theme for this year’s party is “Havana Nights.” There will be rhumba dancing and cocktails plus a Cuban street scene with classic cars and palm trees. Half Pints for Half Pints Memphis Made Brewing Tap Room, 7-10 p.m., $50 Party with food, music, and beer — nothing wrong with that. Proceeds go to Peabody Elementary’s Friends of Peabody.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
AIR SEX CHAMPIONSHIPS AT THE HI-TONE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10TH, 8 P.M. $10. WWW.AIRSEXWORLD.COM
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AIR SEX CHAMPIONSHIPS
Flyer: Are the competitors winners from other cities, or can Memphians compete? Chris Trew: The Memphis Air Sex Championships is exclusively for Memphis residents. Someone will win and move on when we do our Southern Air Sex Regional Championships later in the year.
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M U S I C F E AT U R E B y J o s h u a C a n n o n
Memphis’ Mega Man Garrett Galtelli on his new project.
G
arrett Galtelli’s drum and bass project Z340 appeared overnight with a 10-track album uploaded online, but that doesn’t mean the project was rushed. Galtelli, who plays bass in local screamo outfit Neev — and has floated in and out of other local bands — told the Flyer something has always been “lingering in my head that needed to be set free.” Hiding away in his Midtown apartment for the better half of 2015 resulted in a Björk-andFlying Lotus-influenced electronic record rooted in his childhood interests: jazz music, computer programming, and the Mega Man X (MMX) series. We sat down with Galtelli to decipher the coded song titles and Mega Man references that frame his latest contribution to the Memphis music scene. –Joshua Cannon Memphis Flyer: What sparked the idea for this project? Garrett Galtelli: To be honest, I’ve had this idea since high school. It started when I first heard the background music on old MMX games. I loved the
astral sound and wanted to create it and share it with others. I’ve always had a passion for drums and bass and house music. I love fast-paced beats, ambient melodies, and deep bass, so I figured I’d throw it all together. It’s not exactly the music I enjoy but mainly the sounds in particular. I always loved material by artists like LTJ Bukem, E-Z Rollers, Makoto, Photek, Flying Lotus, Gold Panda, Telefon Tel Aviv, and especially Björk.
There’s this one song by Björk called “Crystalline.” At the beginning, it’s very ambient and subtle, but what really gave me chills, goose bumps, and the thrill ride I was looking for in my own music was the unexpected ending to that song where she just explodes into the most incredible D-and-B breakbeat I think I’ve ever heard in my entire life. I think that sound has bled through into some of the tracks on the album for sure.
How long did you work on it, and why did you keep it to yourself? I decided to keep it to myself until I was finished because my family and friends and mutual acquaintances knew me as a strings musician my entire life. I’ve been in several bands, but there was still something else lingering in my head that needed to be set free. Everybody knew me as a band musician. A year later, I finished the 10th track for the album and decided it was time to drop it without caring about judgment.
Some jazz influence bleeds through these songs, too. What age were you introduced to the genre, and how does it shape your music? I first started learning jazz music and jazz theory when I was in the seventh grade. I got my first bass guitar in sixth grade, and I had a very wonderful teacher at my school who was very patient and made the learning process feel more “one-on-one.” Even in a fully loaded classroom, he was able to teach us individually at times. I loved stuff like Miles Davis and of course John Coltrane, as well as Dave Brubeck and several others. I was probably almost 11 years old or 12 years old at the time it started, and I just went on from there.
In what ways did your influences bleed through these songs?
Tiger Blue Tiger Blue
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MeMphis www.memphisflyer.com/blogs/TigerBlue/ Tiger Blog
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MEMPHIS’ MEGA MAN happen, so I thought it might be best to just keep my mouth shut and my hands open. You also play in a band named Neev. How is writing music for this project different than your solo stuff? It’s on the complete opposite spectrum. Totally different genres. The music is different because in Neev I collaborate with four other brains instead of just one, and each of them has their own level of creativity. When you put all of that together, there’s a huge sense of reward after you have a final product. What’s the story behind the song titles? For the non-coders, what do they translate to in English? Back in the days when coding was a big part of my life, I had to communicate to other users using a different language made up of characters instead of letters. We called this language “1337” text or “l-l@ x04” text or honestly whatever you want to call it. It was made up of Unicode and other symbols from your typical PC character map.
I’m more passionate about the sound than I am the message. I would rather there not be a message and just have pure ear-pleasure. I don’t feel like every song needs a message behind it. As long as your ears enjoy it, nothing else really matters. Sometimes words can be misconstrued, and I didn’t want that to
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Do you have any desire to add vocals to the tracks? The 10th track is actually the only song on the album I did vocals on. They’re taken from a nursery rhyme that was sung to put me to sleep when I was younger, and I never forgot it. With this project,
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Garrett Galtelli is Z340
And the Mega Man references? Basically all of the track titles are related to the Mega Man X series since that was one of my favorite games back when I was younger. The artist image I used [for the cover], however, is of another character from the series named Zero. He’s my favorite and quite possibly the strongest character in the series. He will always be my favorite video game character of all time, hence why I go by the name “Z340” with this project.
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FRANK FOSTER SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6TH MINGLEWOOD HALL
R5 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9TH CANNON CENTER
DEERING AND DOWN SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6TH BAR DKDC
After Dark: Live Music Schedule February 4 - 10 Earl “The Pearl” Banks Tuesdays, 7 p.m.
Club 152 152 BEALE 544-7011
Alfred’s 197 BEALE 525-3711
Karaoke Thursdays, TuesdaysWednesdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., and Sundays-Mondays, 10 p.m.-2 a.m.; Mandi Thomas Fridays, Saturdays, 6-9 p.m.; DJ J2 Fridays, Saturdays, 9:30 p.m.-5 a.m.; The 901 Heavy Hitters Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.-2 a.m.; Flyin Ryan Fridays, Saturdays, 2:30 a.m.; Memphis Jazz Orchestra Sundays, 6-9 p.m.
B.B. King’s Blues Club 143 BEALE 524-KING
The King Beez Thursdays, 5:30 p.m.; B.B. King’s All Stars Thursdays, Fridays, 8 p.m.; Will Tucker Band Fridays, Saturdays, 5 p.m.; Lisa G and Flic’s Pic’s Band Saturdays, Sundays, 12:30 p.m.; Blind Mississippi Morris Sundays, 5 p.m.; Memphis Jones Sundays, Wednesdays 5:30 p.m.; Doc Fangaz and the Remedy Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m.
Blue Note Bar & Grill 341-345 BEALE 577-1089
Queen Ann and the Memphis Blues Masters Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
FedExForum 191 BEALE STREET
Barry Manilow Wednesday, Feb. 10, 7 p.m.
Flynn’s Restaurant and Bar 159 BEALE
Eric Hughes Thursdays, Fridays, 5-8 p.m.; Karaoke ongoing, 8:30 p.m.; Chris Gales Tuesday-Saturday, noon-8 p.m.
Handy Bar 200 BEALE 527-2687
Bad Boy Matt & the Amazing Rhythmatics Tuesdays, Thursdays-Sundays, 7 p.m.-1 a.m.
Itta Bena 145 BEALE 578-3031
Susan Marshall Fridays, Saturdays, 7-10 p.m.
Jerry Lee Lewis’ Cafe & Honky Tonk 310 BEALE 654-5171
Blues City Cafe 138 BEALE 526-3637
1st Floor: Mercury Blvd. Mondays-Thursdays, 7-11 p.m.; 1st Floor: Super 5 Fridays, Saturdays, 10:30 p.m.-2 a.m.; After Dark Band Sundays, 7-11 p.m.
King’s Palace Cafe 162 BEALE 521-1851
David Bowen Thursdays, 5:309:30 p.m., Fridays, Saturdays, 6:30-10:30 p.m., and Sundays, 5:30-9:30 p.m.
King’s Palace Cafe’s Patio 162 BEALE 521-1851
Mack 2 Band Mondays-Fridays, 2-6 p.m.; Fuzzy Jeffries & the Kings of Memphis Thursdays, 6:30-10:30 p.m.; Nate Dogg and the Fellas Fridays, Saturdays, 6:30-10:30 p.m.; McDaniel Band Saturdays, 2-6 p.m.; Cowboy Neil Sundays, 2-6 p.m., and Mondays, 6:30-10:30 p.m.; Chic Jones Sundays, Tuesdays, 6:3010:30 p.m.; Sensation Band Wednesdays, 6:30-10:30 p.m.
King’s Palace Cafe Tap Room 168 BEALE 576-2220
Don Valentine Thursdays, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Mississippi Bigfoot Fridays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Chic Jones, Blues Express Fridays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., and Saturdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Delta Project Friday, Feb. 5, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Cowboy Neil Saturdays, 8:30 p.m.-midnight; Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
New Daisy Theatre 330 BEALE 525-8981
Cradle of Filth Tuesday, Feb. 9, 8 p.m.
Rum Boogie Cafe
days, 4-9 p.m.; Dueling Pianos Thursdays, Wednesdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-3 a.m., and Sundays, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.midnight.
182 BEALE 528-0150
Vince Johnson and the Boogie Blues Band Thursday, Feb. 4, 8 p.m.-midnight, Friday, Feb. 5, 8 p.m.-midnight and Saturday, Feb. 6, 8 p.m.midnight; Memphis Blues Society Jam Sundays, 7-11 p.m.; Shaun Apple Monday, Feb. 8, 7-11 p.m., and Tuesday, Feb. 9, 7-11 p.m.; Little Boys Blue Wednesday, Feb. 10, 7-11 p.m.
Rum Boogie Cafe’s Blues Hall 182 BEALE 528-0150
Memphis Bluesmasters Thursdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Plantation Allstars Fridays, Saturdays, 3-7 p.m.; Shaun Apple Friday, Feb. 5, 8 p.m.midnight, and Saturday, Feb. 6, 8 p.m.-midnight; Memphis Mambo Combo Saturday, Feb. 6, 3-7 p.m.; Low Society Sundays, 8 p.m.-midnight; The Dr. “Feel Good” Potts Band Mondays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Brian Hawkins Blues Party Monday, Feb. 8, 8 p.m.midnight; McDaniel Band Tuesdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Silky O’Sullivan’s 183 BEALE 522-9596
Barbara Blue ThursdaysFridays, Wednesdays, 7-9 p.m., Saturdays, 5-9 p.m., and Sun-
The Halloran Centre 225 S. MAIN 529-4299
Howes Jazz Trio Saturday, Feb. 6, 7-9:15 p.m.
Memphis Sounds Lounge 22 N. THIRD 590-4049
Grown Folks Music first Thursday of every month, 7:30 p.m.
Blind Bear Speakeasy 119 S. MAIN, PEMBROKE SQUARE 417-8435
Live Music Thursdays-Saturdays, 10 p.m.
Mollie Fontaine Lounge 679 ADAMS 524-1886
Dim the Lights featuring live music and DJs first Saturday of every month, 10 p.m.
Brass Door Irish Pub
Paulette’s
152 MADISON 572-1813
RIVER INN, 50 HARBOR TOWN SQUARE 260-3300
Live Music Fridays.
Brinson’s 341 MADISON 524-0104
Melting Pot: Artist Showcase Thursdays, 7-11 p.m.
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts
Live Pianist Thursdays, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays, 5:30-9 p.m., Sundays, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., and Mondays-Wednesdays, 5:308 p.m.
The Plexx
255 N. MAIN 576-1200
380 E.H. CRUMP 744-2225
Double J Smokehouse & Saloon
Purple Haze Nightclub
124 E. G.E. PATTERSON 347-2648
140 LT. GEORGE W. LEE 577-1139
R5 Tuesday, Feb. 9, 7 p.m.
Live Music Thursdays, 7-11 p.m., Fridays-Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
Earnestine & Hazel’s 531 S. MAIN 523-9754
Amber Rae Dunn Hosts: Earnestine & Hazel’s Open Mic Wednesdays, 8-11 p.m.
Old School Blues and Jazz Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.
DJ Dance Music ongoing, 10 p.m.; Neo Soul Saturdays featuring Tamara Jones Monger, Carmen, Pat Register first Saturday of every month, 7-10:30 p.m.
Riverfront Bar & Grill 251 RIVERSIDE
Local Music Fridays, 6-8 p.m.
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
Brad Birkedahl Band Thursdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.; The Memphis 3 Sundays, 6 p.m., and Mondays, 7 p.m.; FreeWorld Sundays, 9:30 p.m.;
The Johnny Go Band Thursdays, 7-11 p.m., and Sundays, 7-11 p.m.; Rockin’ Rob Haynes & the Memphis Flash Fridays, 7-11 p.m., and first Saturday of every month, 7-11 p.m.; Live Band Karaoke
first Friday of every month, 11 p.m.-3 a.m., and Saturdays, 11 p.m.-3 a.m.; The Memphis House Rockers Wednesdays, 7-11 p.m., and Saturdays, 3-7 p.m.; Gary Hardy & Memphis 2 Sundays, 3-7 p.m., and Mondays, 7-11 p.m.
GRIZZLIES VS. MAVERICKS SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6
The first 4,000 fans receive the second of four MOUNT GRIZZMORES featuring Mike Conley. 901.888.HOOP · GRIZZLIES.COM
24
BARRY MANILOW WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10
This Grammy, Tony, and Emmy award winning musician and special guest MICHAEL LINGTON are heading to FedExForum. TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
MONSTER JAM FEBRUARY 12–13
The world’s premier Monster Jam truck series is returning to FedExForum for two shows. TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
HILLSONG UNITED TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16
Australian-based worship group brings their EMPIRES TOUR with special guests REND COLLECTIVE. TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
GET TICKETS AT FEDEXFORUM BOX OFFICE / TICKETMASTER LOCATIONS / 1.800.745.3000 / TICKETMASTER.COM / FEDEXFORUM.COM WHAFF_160204_Flyer.indd 1
1/27/16 10:44 AM
Bhan Thai
Lafayette’s Music Room
Sports Junction
1324 PEABODY 272-1538
2119 MADISON 207-5097
1911 POPLAR 244-7904
Karaoke Thursdays, 9 p.m.midnight; Ross Rice Friday, Feb. 5; Piper Down Saturday, Feb. 6.
Boscos 2120 MADISON 432-2222
JESSE RIGGINS
Sunday Brunch with Joyce Cobb Sundays, 11:30 a.m.2:30 p.m.
The Buccaneer 1368 MONROE 278-0909
BIG EYES AT THE HI-TONE Seattle, Washington’s Big Eyes stop through Memphis on their winter tour this Monday at the Hi-Tone. Currently on the road in support of their new Local Celebrity EP released by Don Giovanni Records, Big Eyes are one of the few pop-punk bands over the past five years to be able to dabble in multiple facets of the larger underground scene, winning fans over from indie rock, punk, and garage rock contingencies. Their 2012 single “Back From the Moon” (released on Richmond’s Grave Mistake Records) put the world on notice that guitarist Kait Eldridge knew her way around a hook, and the hype has been building around the band ever since. Taking cues from the Ramones, the Descendents, and even Cheap Trick, Eldridge writes pop-punk anthems for those in their early to mid-20s, though it’s entirely possible that Big Eyes could mesh well with the Warped Tour crowd if Eldridge so desired. The band has released splits with like-minded rockers Audacity and Mean Jeans and toured the U.S. extensively over the last few years. As for Don Giovanni, the indie label seems to have a knack for finding bands similar to Big Eyes, releasing records for Screaming Females, Downtown Boys, and the Ergs!, while also serving as home to more delicate groups like Waxahatchee. Rounding out the bill is Ryan Azada, the guitarist who is often accompanied live by 2015 breakout artist Julien Baker. Azada also played in the band Small Fires and has been a promoter behind shows at Crosstown Arts and the short-lived venue 1372 Overton Park. — Chris Shaw Big Eyes and Ryan Azada, Monday, February 8th at the Hi-Tone Small Room, 8 p.m. $10. Rumba Room 303 S. MAIN 523-0020
Salsa Night Saturdays, 8:30 p.m.-3 a.m.
The Silly Goose 100 PEABODY PLACE 435-6915
DJ Cody Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.
Onix 412 S. MAIN 552-4609
South Main Sounds 550 S. MAIN 494-6543
Jordan Allena EP Pre-Release Party Friday, Feb. 5, 8-11 p.m.
Celtic Crossing 903 S. COOPER 274-5151
DJ Tree Fridays, 10 p.m.; DJ Taz Saturdays, 10 p.m.; Jeremy Stanfill and Joshua Cosby Sundays, 6-9 p.m.; Candy Company Mondays.
The Cove 2559 BROAD 730-0719
Jazz with Ed Finney and Friends Thursdays, 9 p.m.; Big Barton Friday, Feb. 5, 9:30 p.m.; The Pistol & the Queen Saturday, Feb. 6, 10 p.m.; Justin White Mondays, 7 p.m.; Richard James Tuesdays, 7 p.m.; Anne Schorr Wednesdays, 7 p.m.; Karaoke Wednesdays, 10 p.m.
Hi-Tone 412-414 N. CLEVELAND 278-TONE
South Main Neo Soul and R&B first Thursday of every month, 710 p.m.; Smooth Jazz Fridays first Friday of every month, 8-11 p.m.; R&B first Saturday of every month, 8-11 p.m.
Southern Avenue Thursday, Feb. 4; Special Riders, Gringos Saturday, Feb. 6, 6 p.m.; Process of Suffocation, Engulfed in Blackness Saturday, Feb. 6, 9 p.m.; Devil Train Mondays, 8 p.m.; Dave Cousar Tuesdays, 11 p.m.; MOTO, Toy Trucks Wednesday, Feb. 10.
Bar DKDC 964 S. COOPER 272-0830
Maitre D’s Friday, Feb. 5, 10:30 p.m.; Deering and Down Saturday, Feb. 6, 10:30 p.m.; Steve Selvidge and Rod Norwood Wednesday, Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m.
Lume, Greyscale, Dying Whale, Brian Hillhouse Thursday, Feb. 4, 9 p.m.; Los Cantadores with Chickasaw Mound Friday, Feb. 5, 9 p.m.; Turkuaz, Ghost Note Friday, Feb. 5, 9 p.m.; Bob Marley Tribute Saturday, Feb. 6, 9 p.m.; Big Eyes, Ryan Azada Monday, Feb. 8, 9 p.m.; Open Mic Comedy Night Tuesdays, 9 p.m.
Midtown Crossing Grill 394 N. WATKINS 443-0502
Memphis Ukelele Meetup Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m.
Minglewood Hall 1555 MADISON 866-609-1744
Frank Foster Saturday, Feb. 6, 8 p.m.; Madeon “Pixel Empire” Tour Sunday, Feb. 7, 7 p.m.; Artistik Lounge Featuring Devin Crutcher every third Sunday, 7-11 p.m.
Murphy’s 1589 MADISON 726-4193
Show Me the Body Friday, Feb. 5; Sanguine, Spline, Chokehold Prophecy Saturday, Feb. 6.
Otherlands Coffee Bar 641 S. COOPER 278-4994
M.A.M.A. presents Andy Cohen Saturday, Feb. 6, 8 p.m.
P&H Cafe 1532 MADISON 726-0906
Rock Starkaraoke Fridays; Open Mic Music with Tiffany Harmon Mondays, 9 p.m.midnight.
The Phoenix 1015 S. COOPER 338-5223
Live DJ Fridays.; Live music Saturdays.; Karaoke Wednesdays.
Wild Bill’s 1580 VOLLINTINE 207-3975
The Soul Connection Fridays, Saturdays, 11 p.m.-3 a.m.
University of Memphis Triple S 1747 WALKER 421-6239
Fun-Filled Fridays first Friday of every month, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Ubee’s 521 S. HIGHLAND 323-0900
Karaoke Wednesdays, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.
University of Memphis, Harris Concert Hall INSIDE THE RUDI E. SCHEIDT SCHOOL OF MUSIC 678-5400
Voyage à Paris: French Art Song Recital with Kyle and Lexa Ferrill Sunday, Feb. 7, 3-4:30 p.m.
East Memphis Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School 60 N. PERKINS EXT. 537-1483
Street Beat Friday, Feb. 5, 8-10 p.m.
Dan McGuinness Pub 4694 SPOTTSWOOD 761-3711
Acoustic with Charvey Tuesdays, 8:30 p.m.; Karaoke Wednesdays, 8 p.m.
El Toro Loco 2809 KIRBY PKWY. 759-0593
Karaoke and Dance Music with DJ Funn Mondays, 7-10 p.m.
Bluezday Thurzday Thursdays, 8-11:45 p.m.; Cowboy Bob’s Roundup Mondays, 8-11:45 p.m.; Memphis Songwriters Association second Tuesday of every month, 6:30-9 p.m.
continued on page 27
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Blue Monkey 2012 MADISON 272-BLUE
Reba Russell Trio Thursday, Feb. 4, 6 p.m.; Alvin Youngblood Hart’s Muscle Theory Thursday, Feb. 4, 9 p.m.; Jo Jo Jefferies and Ronnie Caldwell Friday, Feb. 5, 6:30 p.m.; Almost Famous Friday, Feb. 5, 10 p.m.; Susan Marshall & Friends Saturday, Feb. 6, 11 a.m.; Pam & Terry Saturday, Feb. 6, 6:30 p.m.; Maitre D’s Saturday, Feb. 6, 10 p.m.; Joe Restivo 4 Sundays, 11 a.m.; Mardi Gras Week Feb. 8-13, 11-midnight; John Paul Keith & Friends Monday, Feb. 8, 6 p.m.; Travis Roman Tuesday, Feb. 9, 5:30 p.m.; Breeze Cayolle and New Orleans Wednesday, Feb. 10, 5:30 p.m.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Two Peace Saturdays, 7-10:30 p.m.
25
ballystunica.com Bally’s Tunica and RIH Acquisitions MS II, LLC have no affiliation with Caesars License Company, LLC and its affiliates other than a license to the Bally’s name. Must be 21 or older. Gambling Problem? Call 1-888-777-9696.
WEEK FEBRUARY 4 - FEBRUARY 10 THURS, FEB 4 FIRST FLOOR
Mercury Blvd
DJ Nyce
7:30-11:30PM
11:30PM-4:30AM
FRI, FEB 5
FIRST FLOOR
School of Rock 6-9PM I-69 9:30PM-12:30AM Big Al’s 90’S Extravaganza 10:30PM-2:30AM THIRD FLOOR
DJ Crumbz ALL NIGHT SAT, FEB 6 Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
FIRST FLOOR
26
Super 5 11:00PM-3AM THIRD FLOOR
DJ Tubbz & Crumbz ALL NIGHT
kevin don’t
bluff
SUN, FEB 7
SUPER BOWL PARTY WITH FOOD & DRINKS SPECIALS
DJ Nyce 11:30PM-4:30AM MON-WED FIRST FLOOR Mercury Blvd DJ Tubbz 11PM-3AM 152 BEALE ST • DOWNTOWN MEMPHIS • 901.544.7011
Kevin Lipe on the Memphis Grizzlies before, during, and after the game. memphisflyer.com/blogs/BeyondTheArc • @FlyerGrizBlog
After Dark: Live Music Schedule February 4 - 10 continued from page 25
Bartlett
Folk’s Folly Prime Steak House Stax Museum of American Soul Music
5868 STAGE
Grif ’s Gifts Live - Welcome to the Stage Mondays-Sundays, 6-7:30 p.m.
Dan McGuinness 3964 GOODMAN, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-890-7611
Live Bands Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Open Mic Mondays Mondays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Live Music Tuesdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
926 E. MCLEMORE 946-2535
Shelby Forest General Store
Stax Fresh Trax first Thursday of every month, 6-9 p.m.
Unwind Wednesdays Wednesdays, 6 p.m.-midnight.
Mesquite Chop House 3165 FOREST HILL-IRENE 249-5661
Pam and Terry Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.
7729 BENJESTOWN 876-5770
Tony Butler Fridays, 6-8 p.m.
Fox and Hound Sports Tavern
Live Entertainment Wednesdays-Sundays, 6 p.m.
6565 TOWNE CENTER, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-536-2200
Karaoke Tuesdays, 9 p.m.
978 REDDOCH 767-6940
Fitz Casino & Hotel 711 LUCKY LN., TUNICA, MS 800-766-5825
Fox and Hound Sports Tavern
5101 SANDERLIN 763-2013
Howard Vance Guitar Academy
Acoustic Music Tuesdays.
2016 Hyundai Sonata
Live Music Thursdays, 5 p.m.; Karaoke Tuesdays.
Hollywood Casino
First Friday at Five Coffee House Concert first Friday of every month, 5 p.m.
1150 CASINO STRIP RESORT, TUNICA, MS 662-357-7700
Live Entertainment Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
Mortimer’s 590 N. PERKINS 761-9321
Van Duren Thursdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Horseshoe Casino Tunica
T.J. Mulligan’s
In Legends Stage Bar: Live Entertainment Nightly ongoing.
1021 CASINO CENTER, TUNICA, MS 800-357-5600
1817 KIRBY 755-2481
Karaoke Tuesdays, 8 p.m.
The Windjammer Restaurant Karaoke ongoing.
Poplar/I-240 East Tapas and Drinks 6069 PARK 767-6002
Carlos & Adam from the Late Greats Thursdays, 7-9 p.m.; Elizabeth Wise Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m.
Neil’s Music Room 5727 QUINCE 682-2300
Jack Rowell’s Celebrity Jam Thursdays, 8 p.m.; Eddie Smith Fridays, 8 p.m.; Skyking Saturday, Feb. 6, 8 p.m.; Gene Nunez and Debbie Jamison Tuesdays, 6 p.m.; Elmo and the Shades Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Owen Brennan’s THE REGALIA, 6150 POPLAR 761-0990
Lannie McMillan Jazz Trio Sundays, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
263
1870 COVINGTON PIKE • 901.388.8989
786 E. BROOKHAVEN CIRCLE 683-9044
per mo
$
Arlington/Eads/ Oakland
Charlie Belt and Friends Thursday, Feb. 4, 8 p.m.midnight; Charlie Belt and Friends Thursday, Feb. 4, 8 p.m.; Twin Soul Weekend Friday, Feb. 5, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., and Saturday, Feb. 6, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Twin Soul Friday, Feb. 5, 9 p.m., and Saturday, Feb. 6, 9 p.m.; The Original Sunday Funday with Almost Famous Sunday, Feb. 7, 5:30-9:30 p.m.; Hadley’s Pub Musician Jam Wednesday, Feb. 10, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Rizzi’s/Paradiso Pub
Old Whitten Tavern
Summer/Berclair Barbie’s Barlight Lounge
4381 ELVIS PRESLEY 332-4159
661 N. MENDENHALL
Karaoke with DJ Stylez Thursdays, Sundays, 10 p.m.
Maria’s Restaurant 6439 SUMMER 356-2324
Karaoke Fridays, 5-8 p.m.
The Other Place Bar & Grill 4148 WALES 373-0155
Karaoke Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., and Wednesdays, 8 p.m.midnight.
2779 WHITTEN 266-5006
6230 GREENLEE 592-0344
Live Music Thursdays, Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.; Karaoke and Dance Music with DJ Funn Fridays, 9 p.m.
2800 WHITTEN 379-1965
Live Music Fridays, 9 p.m.1 a.m.; Karaoke with Ricky Mack Mondays, 10 p.m.1 a.m.; Open Mic with Susie and Bob Salley Wednesdays, 8 p.m.
Cordova Bahama Breeze 2830 N. GERMANTOWN PKWY. 385-8744
Karaoke Mondays, 8-11 p.m.
Fox and Hound Sports Tavern 819 EXOCET 624-9060
Karaoke Tuesdays, 9 p.m.
T.J. Mulligan’s Cordova 8071 TRINITY 756-4480
The Lineup Tuesdays, 8 p.m.midnight.
Germantown Germantown Performing Arts Center 1801 EXETER 751-7500
Love Changes Everything: Kallen Esperian in Concert Saturday, Feb. 6, 7:30 p.m.
Tunica Roadhouse 1107 CASINO CENTER, TUNICA, MS 662-363-4900
Live Music Fridays, Saturdays.
Wadford’s Grill & Bar 474 CHURCH, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-510-5861
662DJ, Karaoke/Open Mic Saturdays, 7-11 p.m.
Raleigh Stage Stop 2951 CELA 382-1576
#GH301158 MSRP $22700 SIGN AND DRIVE $263 PER MONTH, 10K PER YEAR $0.20 PER MILE EXCESSIVE MILEAGE $3000 LEASE CASH AND $500 VALUE OWNER REBATE OR $21200 AFTER $500 DEALER DISCOUNT AND $500 REBATE AND $500 VALUE OWNER REBATE. RESIDUAL $12485-INCLUDES ALL REBATES & INCENTIVES-PF $498.75-EXCLUDES T,T&L-WAC-SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS-OFFER VALID THRU END OF MONTH
Marlowe’s Ribs & Restaurant
Possum Daddy’s Karaoke Saturdays, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.
Sign & Drive Zero Down!
GOSSETTHYUNDAI.COM
Hadley’s Pub
5960 GETWELL, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-890-2467
Pam and Terry Thursdays, 7-10 p.m.
GOSSETT HYUNDAI Whitehaven/ Airport
Mesquite Chop House
Russo’s New York Pizzeria & Wine Bar 9087 POPLAR 755-0092
Live Music on the patio Thursdays-Saturdays, 7-10 p.m.; Half Step Down Fridays, 7-10 p.m.
North Mississippi/ Tunica Bally’s CASINO CENTER DRIVE IN TUNICA, MS 1-800-38-BALLY
Young Pretty Thieves Friday, Feb. 5, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., and Saturday, Feb. 6, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
The Crossing Bar & Grill 7281 HACKS CROSS, OLIVE BRANCH, MS 662-893-6242
Karaoke with Buddha Tuesdays, Thursdays, 8 p.m.midnight.
Open Mic Blues Jam with Brad Webb Thursdays, 7-11 p.m.
West Memphis/ Eastern Arkansas Southland Park Gaming & Racing 1550 N. INGRAM, WEST MEMPHIS, AR 800-467-6182
DJ Crumbz Thursdays, 8 p.m.; Club Night Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.; Live Band Karaoke Sundays, 7:30 p.m.; Karaoke Tuesdays, 7 p.m.; Boot Scootin’ Wednesdays, 7 p.m.
The New Backdour Bar & Grill 302 S. AVALON 596-7115
Ms. Ruby Wilson and Friends Sundays, 7 p.m.-midnight; Karaoke with Tim Bachus Mondays, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.; DJ Stylez Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Intimate Piano Lounge featuring Charlotte Hurt Mondays-Thursdays, 5-9:30 p.m.; Larry Cunningham Fridays, Saturdays, 6-10 p.m.
South Memphis
Ice Bar & Grill 4202 HACKS CROSS 757-1423
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
551 S. MENDENHALL 762-8200
Bartlett Municipal Center
RockHouse Live 5709 RALEIGH-LAGRANGE 386-7222
27
AT THE PINK PALACE OUR NEW PLANETARIUM It’s out of this world and in your backyard!
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
And see our new exhibit, opening February 6: Nature Unleashed: Inside Natural Disasters
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B O O KS By Richard J. Alley
Connections Read early, read often.
L
ast month, the American Library Association (ALA) announced its 2016 book award winners. Among the winners is Last Stop on Market Street by Matt de la Peña, awarded the John Newbery Medal for the most outstanding contribution to children’s literature. The book is illustrated by Christian Robinson. The Randolph Caldecott Medal for the most distinguished American picture book for children went to Finding Winnie: The True Story of the World’s Most Famous Bear, illustrated by Sophie Blackall and written by Lindsay Mattick. Reading is an important part of childhood. It’s how we learn the language and how stories and thoughts are formed. Many times books are our first peek into the many different cultures around the world and how relationships work and society functions. More than a solitary endeavor, reading is how we become storytellers. Eudora Welty wrote in One Writer’s Beginnings, “Long before I wrote stories, I listened for stories. Listening for them is something more acute than listening to them. I suppose it’s an early form of participation in what goes on.” What children want is to participate and to be included, to be made to feel like they matter and that they have something worth offering. A week after the ALA’s medal winners were announced last month, the National Day of Service, celebrating Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, took place. In Memphis, a group of motivated teens worked with the nonprofit Memphis Challenge on the project, “Tell Me a Story: Service Through Storytelling.” The organization, founded in 1989, encourages high-achieving students of color to return to Memphis after college to help enrich the community through their newfound expertise and connections. The project brought together high school students to write and produce specialized storybooks and poems for
children. Throughout January, they took their books to locations across the city for story hours, which included a digital presentation, book reading, and small group discussions about “how we all have gifts that we can use to serve and what service means to today’s generation.” The program was so successful that there are plans to continue it throughout the year. Books can be the means for us to connect to our community and to better connect with our children. The Thirty Million Words project out of the University of Chicago has shown that some children, mainly those of a lower socioeconomic status, hear 30 million fewer words by their fourth birthday than others, and that the children who hear more words sooner are better prepared by the time they enter school. The initiative emphasizes vocal interaction with young children, and certainly reading to them is a big part of that. There are so many options out there for young readers today, from the picture books of early childhood to books on wizards and dragons and teens thrown into epic battles of life or death. The lists of titles and descriptions can become like white noise, which is why I recommend the services of a good librarian. My mother used to visit the library at the corner of McLean and Peabody in Midtown and ask the librarians there what they recommended for her kids’ age groups. She would bring home stacks of books, and, once my sisters and I had read through them or had them read to us, she’d return them for more. No doubt the teenage storytellers of Memphis Challenge had their literary beginnings with Caldecott and Newbery awards winners and with the public library. Hopefully they’ll continue their quest to learn more and to share their stories with others, because it is in that sharing that a love for reading flourishes. To learn more about Memphis Challenge, visit memphischallenge.org.
The 2016
Memphis magazine
Fiction Contest $1,000 GRAND PRIZE
TWO $500 HONORABLE MENTION PRIZES* DEADLINE: February ENTRY FEE: $10
15th
per story
for rules and further details, EMAIL RICHARD@MEMPHISMAGAZINE.COM OR GO TO MEMPHISMAGAZINE.COM, AND CLICK ON FICTION CONTEST. *Honorable mentions awarded only if quality of entries warrants.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
BURKE’S BOOK STORE • BOOKSELLERS AT LAURELWOOD MEMPHIS MAGAZINE
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Sponsored by:
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901-278-8965
bianca phillips
TuT-uncommon AnTiques
CookIn cRunk
421 N. Watkins St Memphis, TN 38104
• Retro Furniture • Pottery & Glass • Collectibles & Art We replace stones in costume jewlery.
Wed - Sat 11-5 Sun 12-4
These family classics, minus the meat, eggs, and dairy products, help keep Southern food-ways alive while allowing vegans, vegetarians, and anyone who cares about good eatin' to enjoy this fingerlickin' down-home fare. The book is available at: • Amazon • The Booksellers at Laurelwood • Five In One Social Club
For more info or to order a copy, go to vegancrunk.blogspot.com
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
Real people Real needs Real solutions Real people Real needs Real solutions
visit mifa.org to volunteer.
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Sex, Drugs, Rock On stage: The Other Place, American Idiot, Lion in Winter.
SoutH iN thE diRTy Eatin’ Vegan
• Huge selection of jewelry precious and costume, 1850 to 1950
T H E AT E R B y C h r i s D a v i s
visit mifa.org to volunteer.
G
o to The Other Place. It’s not an uplifting play, this story of Dr. Juliana Smithton, a biophysicist developing drugs to treat dementia while losing her grip on reality. She has brain cancer. Or maybe she doesn’t. Her husband is screwing around. Or not. Her daughter’s dead in a ditch, or maybe she’s dropping by the family’s second home and bringing the twins. No, it’s not uplifting. But for fans of good acting and unconventional mysteries, its arrival at Circuit Playhouse is fantastic news. Go to The Other Place. You’ll see Kim Sanders play a woman who’s come home to drown her sorrows in wine and Chinese takeout only to find a stranger in the kitchen who wants to hug it out. This scene between Sanders and Kim Justis is funny, tense, hard to watch, impossible not to watch, and as fine a thing as anyone is likely to perform on a stage probably ever. Go to The Other Place, where Michael Gravois vividly falls apart and pulls himself together after taking more than anybody could ever be expected to bear. Go to The Other Place, where Kinon Keplinger shows, once again, that he’s among the most versatile character actors in town. Go to The Other Place. Director Dave Landis and his first-rate cast and crew have served up 90 minutes of bracing uncertainty. Good stuff, not to be missed. At Circuit Playhouse through February 21st
People who are bored are also boring, and the junkie life is a study in redundancy. These are just a few of the hurdles any production of American Idiot has to overcome. Playhouse on the Square’s production of the Green Day musical fails to clear any of them, though it might get some extra lift if somebody would just TURN UP THE BAND! Director Gary John La Rosa felt like much of American Idiot’s story had been lost in Broadway’s noisy assault. To correct for this, he placed the band behind the scenery and pushed it to the back of the theater. It’s a good theory, and an enormous miscalculation. American Idiot isn’t a traditional musical. It’s a sonic screed responding to 20thcentury excess and 21st-century wars — a collage of sights and sounds that remind us of just how fractured and confusing life could be at the turn of the most-recent
century. The story — if you can call it that — revolves around three young bros from the burbs striking out on their own and making life choices that turn out badly. Plot points related to addiction, a failing marriage, and combat are prosaically grafted to a heap of mostly catchy songs. It ain’t rock-and-roll unless it upsets the parents, and, to the show’s credit, people got up and left when Alexis Grace (Whatsername) and Nathan McHenry (Johnny) stripped down for the big sex scene. It’s an easy way to shock, but I knew how the fleeing couples felt. I was embarrassed and wanted to leave every time an actor with no business playing guitar plunked his way through music he never should have been asked to play in the first place. At POTS through February 14th The banter that makes The Lion in Winter such a joy when it clicks can also be the filigreed anchor that drowns the old show in its own stilted cleverness. James Goldman’s play appears to revolve around a power struggle between King Henry II of England, his wife Eleanor, and three sons who want to replace daddy on the throne. But the play’s central conflict is raw barbarism in all out war with civilization. Director Irene Crist’s production of Lion gets a lot right. Jack Yates’ unit set The Lion projects an air of impregin Winter nability, but his compact at Theatre castle is a subtle shape Memphis shifter and as pliable as it needs to be. Andre Bruce Ward’s costumes are the perfect mix of thick fur pelts, rough textile, metal, and fine fabric. Jeremy Allen Fisher’s lighting lacks texture, but that’s a small complaint. It’s also one of the very best examples I’ve seen locally of using lighting to edit out all the stuff we don’t need to see. The problem is, there’s just not a lot action to frame. There are key aspects of Henry Charles K. Hodges simply fails to communicate. The king’s not some sage older gentleman reflecting on youthful indiscretions. He’s still able to behead rivals while bedding contessas, milkmaids, courtesans, novices, whores, gypsies, jades, and little boys. Hodges’ Henry is too much the victim of his family tragedy and not enough the swinging dick whose preoccupations set all the bloody nonsense in motion. Eleanor is a plum role, and Christina Wellford Scott’s head fits the crown. At Theatre Memphis through February 7th
CALENDAR of EVENTS:
February 4 - 10
Street Beat, high-energy acrobatics, urban dance, audience participation, and percussive everyday-objects-turned-intoinstruments. www.buckmanartscenter.com. $25. Fri., Feb. 5, 8-10 p.m. 60 N. PERKINS EXT. (537-1483).
Circuit Playhouse
The Other Place, a successful drug company scientist finds her life falling to pieces. Fact blurs with fiction, and the past and the present collide with devastating results. www. playhouseonthesquare.org. Thursdays-Saturdays, 8 p.m., and Sundays, 2 p.m. Through Feb. 21. 51 S. COOPER (725-0776).
The Evergreen Theatre
Guilt, Lies, and Lust: The Stage Play, the legend of Kingston Blackmon continues in this suspenseful ride of seduction, betrayal, and scandal. Presented by Inner City South. (5120207), innercitysouth.com. $18. Sundays, 2-4:45 p.m., and Fridays, Saturdays, 7-9:45 p.m. Through Feb. 14. 1705 POPLAR (274-7139).
First Congregational Church
Memphis Matters, audience members share personal stories of their lives and then watch as the Playback actors interpret the story through experimental theater, movement, and improvised live music. (264-0841), www. playbackmemphis.org. $12-$15. Sat., Feb. 6, 7:30-9 p.m. 1000 S. COOPER (278-6786).
Germantown Community Theatre
Love Letters, this two-person show is one of A.R. Gurney’s most beloved works. A 50-year love affair carried out through the art of the pen. The production closes with a special Valentine’s Day performance. www. gctcomeplay.org. $24. Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m., and Sundays,
2:30 p.m. Through Feb. 14.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art
3037 FOREST HILL-IRENE (754-2680).
Pitch-Your-Peers: Centennial Celebration at the Brooks, Thurs., Feb. 4, 5-7 p.m.
Hattiloo Theatre
The Brothers Size, pulsing with the rhythms of the Louisiana bayou, this lyrical tale of brotherly love explores the tension between fear and desire on the elusive road to freedom. www.hattiloo.org. $18-$26. Thurs.-Sat., 7:30 p.m., and Sun., 3 p.m. Through Feb. 7.
1934 POPLAR (544-6209).
Memphis Jewish Community Center’s Shainberg Gallery
Opening reception for “Tennessee Craft — Southwest Show,” exhibition of work by participating artists in collaboration with fellow artists. www. jccmemphis.org. Sun., Feb. 7, 1-3 p.m.
37 S. COOPER (502-3486).
The Historic Ruffin Theater
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, join Tom and Huck and many other lovable characters in this unforgettable tale told by Mark Twain. This production is not a musical, but it is full of live bluegrass music and singing. www. officialruffintheater.com. $10. Fri., Sat., 7-9 p.m., and Sun., 2-4 p.m. Through Feb. 7.
6560 POPLAR (761-0810).
Shops of Saddle Creek
Opening reception for “Hearts & Flowers,” specially crafted Valentine’s Day wishes in glass, metal, fiber, and more. Sure to help cupid’s arrow find its mark. www.winterartsmemphis.com. Fri., Feb. 5, 5-8 p.m. POPLAR AND WEST FARMINGTON.
113 W. PLEASANT (504-8889).
WKNO Studio
National Civil Rights Museum
Frederick Douglass: The Making of an American Prophet, powerful story of Frederick Douglass, the American slave who escaped to freedom and became one of the most prominent abolitionists of his day. Q & A to follow www.civilrightsmuseum. org. Fri., Feb. 5, 5:30 p.m. 450 MULBERRY (521-9699).
The Orpheum
A Gentleman’s Guide to Love & Murder, the heir to a family fortune sets out to jump the line of succession by eliminating the eight relatives who stand in his way. All the while juggling his mistress, fiancée, and threat of landing behind bars. www. orpheum-memphis.com. $25$125. Feb. 9-14. 203 S. MAIN (525-3000).
Playhouse on the Square American Idiot, follows the journey of a new generation of young Americans, lead by friends Johnny, Tunny and Will, as they struggle to find meaning in a post-9/11 world, borne along by Green Day’s electrifying score. $22-$35. Sundays,
Reception for “Trophies Through the Lens: African Wildlife Safari,” photographs by Jack Kenner and students, includes short films of African scenes and rhythms. www.wkno.org. Sat., Feb. 6, 2-6 p.m. 7151 CHERRY FARMS (458-2521).
Work by Clare Torina and Alex Paulus in “Bland Navigator” at Crosstown Arts
King Henry II of England. www. theatrememphs.org. $25. Fri., Sat., 8 p.m., Sun., 2 p.m., and Thurs., 7:30 p.m. Through Feb. 7.
2 p.m., and Thursdays-Saturdays, 8 p.m. Through Feb. 14. 4th Annual “NewWorks @ TheWorks” competition, two scripts will receive full productions during the 2017-18 season and cash prizes. See website for full details. www.playhouseonthesquare.org. $15. Through May 30.
Night Shift, cabaret and variety show featuring HEELS, Requiemma, Just Larry, Dan Castillo, and OAM Audio with hostess Katrina Coleman. (283-3814), www.theatreworks.com. $15. Every first Friday, 11:45 p.m.
66 S. COOPER (726-4656).
Theatre Memphis
The Lion in Winter, modern classic of historical fiction pits Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine (after a decade of imprisonment for her part in a rebellion) against her husband
2 SHOWS: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20 THE ORPHEUM THEATRE
630 PERKINS EXT. (682-8323).
TheatreWorks
2085 MONROE (274-7139).
A R T I ST R E C E PT I O N S
Circuitous Succession Gallery
Opening reception for Lawrence Jasud, www.circuitoussuccession.com. Fri., Feb. 5, 6-9 p.m. 500 S. SECOND.
Crosstown Arts Gallery
Opening reception for “Blind Navigator,” exhibition of new individual and collaborative work by New York-based artist Clare Torina and Memphisbased artist Alex Paulus. www. crosstownarts.org. Fri., Feb. 5, 6-9 p.m. 422 N. CLEVELAND.
OT H E R A R T HAP P E N I N G S
Artist Lecture: James Bockelman
Talk will highlight the artist’s most recent series of abstract paintings on paper. Sat., Feb. 6, 1-2 p.m.
Jay Etkin Gallery
SCOTTISH RITE, 825 UNION, WWW. CIRCUITOUSSUCCESSION.COM.
942 COOPER (550-0064).
Call to Artists: ArtWorks Exhibition
Artist reception for David Hall, Fri., Feb. 5, 6-9 p.m.
Memphis Botanic Garden
Opening reception for “Light and Shadows,” exhibition of painting and sculpture by Agustin Díaz and Francisco Gonzalez. www.memphisbotanicgarden.com. Sun., Feb. 7, 5-7 p.m. 750 CHERRY (636-4100).
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! (901) 525-3000 • ORPHEUM-MEMPHIS.COM
Fine-craft and art disciplines only (no soap, candles, or food) for show Mar. 3-6. Exhibition fee is $250, no application fee. Email four photos of work and a booth shot, winterarts@bellsouth.net. Through Feb. 29. VARIOUS LOCATIONS, CALL FOR INFORMATION.
continued on page 32
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
TH EAT E R
Send the date, time, place, cost, info, phone number, a brief description, and photos — two weeks in advance — to calendar@memphisflyer.com or P.O. Box 1738, Memphis, TN 38101. DUE TO SPACE LIMITATIONS, ONGOING WEEKLY EVENTS WILL APPEAR IN THE FLYER’S ONLINE CALENDAR ONLY.
THE INTERNATIONAL SENSATION
STOMPONLINE.COM
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C A L E N DA R: F E B R UA RY 4 - 1 0 continued from page 31
feathers smoothed daily Never feel ruffled again.
From hair styling to manicures and make-up application, Feathers Spa at The Peabody is the ultimate salon experience. Packages or single session treatments are available. Mon. - Fri. 9:00am - 8:00pm; Sat. 8:00am 8:00pm; Sun. 9:00am - 6:00pm. For appointments: 901.261.4400.
Call to Artists for “Secret Artwork in the Medicine Cabinet”
Seeking artwork for exhibitions held the last Friday of every month. $15 submission fee. Ongoing. CIRCUITOUS SUCCESSION GALLERY, 500 S. SECOND, CIRCUITOUSSUCCESSION.COM.
Civil Rights in Songs, Live! Local artists perform and discuss music that was inspired by the civil rights movement. Free. Tues., Feb. 9, 10:30-11:30 a.m. COSSITT LIBRARY, 33 S. FRONT (415-2766).
Cooper-Young Art Tours For more information, featured artists, and pop-up performances, visit website. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m. COOPER-YOUNG DISTRICT, CORNER OF COOPER AND YOUNG, WWW.COOPERYOUNG.COM.
DinnerStage with Hudson & Saleeby
“Remembering Our Fallen”
Belz Museum of Asian and Judaic Art
BASS PRO PYRAMID, 1 BASS PRO (291-8200), WWW.BASSPRO.COM.
119 S. MAIN, IN THE PEMBROKE SQUARE BUILDING (523-ARTS).
“Winter Wonderlands”
The Blues Foundation
THE ANNESDALE PARK GALLERY, 1290 PEABODY (828-3685), GREENMANSIONSMEMPHIS.COM.
421 S. MAIN.
Traveling photo memorial of Tennessee fallen soldiers. A small ceremony will be held on opening day. Through Feb. 7.
Living art terrariums by Nancy Morrow; music by Mississippi John McDowell. Sat., Feb. 6, 2-5 p.m.
Works of Heart
Art lovers bid on over 100 works created by leading artists. Ticket includes appetizers, wine, and beer. Big Heart Lounge features complimentary cocktails, special hors d’oeuvres, and other treats. $75-$200. Sat., Feb. 6, 7-10 p.m. MEMPHIS COLLEGE OF ART, 1930 POPLAR (888-4342), MEMPHISCAC.ORG.
“Chinese Symbols in Art,” ancient Chinese pottery and bronze. www.belzmuseum.org. Ongoing.
“Cast of Blues,” exhibition of life casts by Sharon McConnell-Dickerson. www. blues.org. Through April 30.
Box Gallery
“Acolytes,” exhibition curated by Holt Brasher and Trevor Simpson. Through Feb 9. 3715 CENTRAL.
Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School
“Wabi Sabi: The Beauty of Imperfection in Nature,” exhibition of new works by Rachel Darnell and Lana Chu. www.buckmanartscenter.com. Through Feb. 15. 60 N. PERKINS EXT. (537-1483).
$40. Fri., Feb. 5, 7-9 p.m. BARTLETT PERFORMING ARTS AND CONFERENCE CENTER, 3663 APPLING (385-6440), WWW.BPACC.ORG.
Fantastic Failures: An Evening with Sean Mosley
149 Union Avenue . Memphis, TN 38103 901.261.4400 . www.peabodymemphis.com
Storytelling about failures, because success is boring to hear about. $10. Sat., Feb. 6, 7-8:15 p.m.
AMURICA WORLD HEADQUARTERS, 410 CLEVELAND.
Gallery Talk for “Sunset/Sunrise”
Artists will speak about Studio Nong International Collective and Residency Program. Sat., Feb. 6, 3 p.m. HYDE GALLERY, INSIDE THE MEMPHIS COLLEGE OF ART’S NESIN GRADUATE SCHOOL, 477 S. MAIN, WWW.MCA.EDU.
N!e O W WE lingeri
t phis! d bes Vote in Mem shop
Memphis Arts Collective Valentines Extravaganza
NEW YEAR. NEW LOOKS. NEW ARRIVALS.
Featuring metal work, glass, pottery, photography, textiles, jewelry, vintage art and accessories, and more. Wine and light food offered on Friday. Fri., Feb. 5, 6-9 p.m., and Sat., Feb. 6, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. CROSSTOWN ARTS, 430 N. CLEVELAND (833-9533), MEMPHISARTSCOLLECTIVE.COM.
Open call for Memphis LGBTQ Artists Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
Looking for artists who explore LGBTQ themes in their work to participate in a project that integrates art and outreach in LGBTQ communities. For more information, call or email rogap16-rhodes.edu. Ongoing.
MIDTOWN LINGERIE 901.425.5912 Open: MON-SAT 11:30am - 7pm Located: 710 S. Cox
32
O N G O I N G ART
Art Museum at the University of Memphis (AMUM)
“Africa: Art of a Continent,” permanent exhibition of African art from the Martha and Robert Fogelman collection. Ongoing.
MEMPHIS GAY AND LESBIAN COMMUNITY CENTER, 892 S. COOPER (860-304-4773), WWW.MGLCC.ORG.
142 COMMUNICATION & FINE ARTS BUILDING (678-2224).
Open call for “Queer On!” Scripts
“Out of Africa,” exhibition with work by Noel Jones, Kayode Karunwi, Anthony Lee, Zeinu Mudeser, Joshua Strydom, and Kiersten Williams. www. artvillagegallery.com. Through Feb. 26.
New Works Competition focusing on Queer Youth Theatre will accept 10-minute plays/ pieces for review. For more information and submission guidelines, visit website or email carly@playhouseonthesquare.org. $5 entry fee per submission. Through April 30. PLAYHOUSE ON THE SQUARE, 66 S. COOPER (726-4656), PLAYHOUSEONTHESQUARE.ORG.
Art Village Gallery
410 S. MAIN (521-0782).
Banks House Gallery & Gift Shop
DeSoto Arts Council winter show, www.desotoarts.com. Ongoing. 564 W. COMMERCE.
Opening for Lawrence Jasud at Circuitous Succession Friday
Cafe Pontotoc
“Exploration in Imagination,” exhibition of mixedmedia works by Elayna Scott, inspired by nature and her travels. Ongoing. 314 S. MAIN (249-7955).
Church Health Center Wellness
Doris Gunn-Stevens, exhibition of paintings in oil and acrylic. www. memphishealthcenter.org. Through Feb. 14. 1115 UNION (761-1278).
Clough-Hanson Gallery “de|constructing home,” exhibition of multimedia work by Brent Green and Heather
C A L E N DA R: F E B R UA RY 4 - 1 0
The Dixon Gallery & Gardens
“Amalgamations,” exhibition of digital reimagining of the Dixon Gallery and Gardens permanent collection by Joshua Brinlee. Through April 3. “Painting American Progress: Selections from the Kattner Collection and More,” exhibition of The Nina and Keith Kattner Collection of American paintings, on long-term loan to the Dixon, offering incredible examples of American art. Through April 3. Pinkney Herbert, exhibition of abstract paintings. Through April 3. “The Voyage of Life,” exhibition of four allegorical landscapes by Thomas Cole (1801-1848). www.dixon.org. Through April 3. 4339 PARK (761-5250).
Eclectic Eye
“The Blues,” exhibition of Memphis vignettes printed in cyanotype by Jennifer Balink. www.eclectic-eye.com. Through Feb. 24.
L Ross Gallery
10th anniversary exhibition, paintings, sculpture, and mixed media by gallery artists. www. lrossgallery.com. Through Feb. 27. 5040 SANDERLIN (767-2200).
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art
“Clare Leighton and Thomas W. Nason: Common Threads,” exhibition by masters in the medium of wood engraving, exceptional in expressing the simplicity and integrity of rural subjects. Through March 13. “Families in Art,” exhibition featuring images of family at work and play, as well as quiet depictions of the complexities of those unique human connections. Through Feb. 21. “Wonder, Whimsy, Wild: Folk Art in America,” exhibition of American folk art from New England and the Midwest made between 1800 and 1925. www.brooksmuseum.org. Through Feb. 28.
242 S. COOPER (276-3937).
1934 POPLAR (544-6209).
Fogelman Galleries of Contemporary Art, University of Memphis
Memphis Jewish Community Center’s Shainberg Gallery
33rd Annual Juried Student Exhibition, exhibition featuring work by 41 University of Memphis undergraduate and graduate students. www.memphis.edu. Through Feb. 5.
“Tennessee Craft: Southwest Show,” exhibition of work by participating artists in collaboration with fellow artists. www.jccmemphis.org. Feb. 7-28.
Morton Museum of Collierville History
“Slaves and Slaveholders of Wessyngton Plantation,” exhibition of personal accounts, artifacts, and films from a 13,000-acre tobacco plantation in Robertson County examining the institution of slavery and its impact on the state and the nation. www. colliervillemuseum.org. Through March 5, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 196 MAIN, COLLIERVILLE (457-2650).
National Civil Rights Museum
“Cultural Heroes,” exhibition of oversized sculpture by Alan LeQuire. www.civilrightsmuseum.org. Through Feb. 25. 450 MULBERRY (521-9699).
NJ Woods Gallery and Design
“Dog Gone It,” exhibition of work by Debra Edge. Ongoing. 2563 BROAD.
Playhouse on the Square
“An Exploration in 3D Printing,” exhibition of work by MCA instructor Adam Hawk. www.mca.edu. Through Feb. 21. 66 S. COOPER (726-4656).
Ross Gallery
“Interwoven,” exhibition of textiles and drawings by Jennifer Sargent. (321-3243), www.cbu. edu/gallery. Through Feb. 25.
3715 CENTRAL.
6560 POPLAR (761-0810).
CHRISTIAN BROTHERS UNIVERSITY, PLOUGH LIBRARY, 650 E. PARKWAY S. (321-3000).
Fratelli’s
Metal Museum
Soulsville, USA
“Perchance 2,” exhibition of paintings by Chere Labbe Doiron. www.memphisbotanicgarden.com. Through Feb. 27. 750 CHERRY (766-9900).
Hyde Gallery
“Sunset/Sunrise,” exhibition of work by artists in the Studio Nong International Collective and Residency Program. www.mca.edu. Through Feb. 5. INSIDE THE MEMPHIS COLLEGE OF ART’S NESIN GRADUATE SCHOOL, 477 S. MAIN.
“Residence of the Heart,” exhibition of jewelry using contemporary gold granulation techniques by Douglas Harling. Through March 6. “Taiwan International Metal Crafts Competition,” exhibition of objects and jewelry of Taiwan. www. metalmuseum.org. Through March 13. 374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380).
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
RHODES COLLEGE, 2000 N. PARKWAY (843-3442).
Artist reception for David Hall at Jay Etkin Gallery Friday
“Frozen Landscapes,” exhibition of multi-media work by Judith Dierkes. www.soulsvillefoundation.org. Through March 31. CORNER OF MISSISSIPPI AND WALKER.
FEB 9-14, 2016 • THE ORPHEUM THEATRE continued on page 34
Tickets: 901-525-3000 • Orpheum-Memphis.com
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Benning. www.rhodes.edu. Through Feb. 20, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
33
C A L E N DA R: F E B R UA RY 4 - 1 0 continued from page 33 TOPS Gallery
“Cops,” exhibition of work by Marlous Borm, David Deutsch, Paul Edwards, Leo Fitzpatrick, Kevin Ford, Stephen Lack, Lester Merriweather, Scott Reeder, Walter Robinson, Tom of Finland, and Ernest Withers. www.topsgallery.com. Through Feb. 6. 400 S. FRONT.
WKNO Studio
“Trophies Through the Lens: African Wildlife Safari,” exhibition of over 50 photographs by Jack Kenner and students taken in South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Kenya. www.wkno.org. Through Feb. 29. 7151 CHERRY FARMS (458-2521).
OPERA
r e t n i
-w d i m
e l sa
Love Changes Everything: Kallen Esperian in Concert
Opera Memphis welcomes back Bluff City legend Kallen Esperian for an evening of opera, musical theater, and more featuring the Memphis Symphony Orchestra and special guests. Sat., Feb. 6, 7:30 p.m.
Hi-Tone
Don’t Be Afraid of the Comedy, Memphis, an evening of comedy hosted by Josh McLane featuring Derek Sheen, Kyle Kordsmeier, Jowa Horn, and William Loden Jr. (490-0335), www.hitonememphis.com. $5. Tues., Feb. 9, 8:15 p.m. Air Sex Championships, this is exactly what you think it is — the art of pelvic storytelling and pure imagination. www.airsexworld.com. $10. Wed., Feb. 10, 8 p.m. 412-414 N. CLEVELAND (278-TONE).
Midtown Crossing Grill
Homeroom: Not Your Average Comedy Show, stand-up from Blacksmith Comedy and with added chaos as comedians face challenges themed around something most of us can relate — school. Free. Fri., Feb. 5, 8 p.m. 394 N. WATKINS (443-0502).
P&H Cafe
Open Mic Comedy, Thursdays, 9 p.m. 1532 MADISON (726-0906).
floor to concert hall. Candid interviews with pianists including Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Harry Connick Jr., and Marcus Roberts. Free with reservation. Tues., Feb. 9, 7-8 p.m. GERMANTOWN PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, 1801 EXETER (751-7500), WWW.GPACWEB.COM.
Munch and Learn
Bring your own lunch; sodas and water will be supplied. Guest speakers talk about various subjects in the Hughes Pavilion. Free with gallery admission. Wednesdays, 12-1 p.m. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.
Sexuality and the Christian Faith
Human sexuality is one of the most debated topics of our time. This lecture offers the opportunity to respectfully share what the Christian faith teaches concerning human sexuality. Free. Fri., Feb. 5, 7 p.m. GRACE EVANGELICAL CHURCH, 9750 WOLF RIVER BLVD. (756-7444), GRACEEVAN.ORG.
GERMANTOWN PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, 1801 EXETER (257-3100), WWW.OPERAMEMPHIS.ORG.
DA N C E
Open Call Dance Auditions for Dream Girls
Seeking male and female dancers ages 12 and up for jazz, modern, ballet, and hip-hop dance roles. Register online. Sat., Feb. 6, 12:30-1:30 p.m. BALLET ON WHEELS DANCE SCHOOL & COMPANY, 2085 MONROE, WWW.BALLETONWHEELS.ORG.
Shrine Tea Dance
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
It’s the right time to save during our Mid-Winter Sale! We invite you to compare us to the franchise shops. You’ll find quality, selection, and great prices at 1910 Frame Works.
February 2-6 • 20% OFF all custom framing • 50% OFF all unframed prints • 30% - 70% OFF framed art • 30% OFF everything else We have thousands of frame & matte styles and colors to choose from!
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2029 Union Avenue 901-274-1910
Featuring Noble Sounds Orchestra and the Bankers. Semi-formal attire. BYOB. $10. First Sunday of every month, 2-6 p.m. AL CHYMIA SHRINE CENTER, 5770 SHELBY OAKS (377-7336), SHRINE-DANCE-MEMPHIS.COM.
C O M E DY
PO ET RY /S PO K E N WO R D
Brinson’s
Strictly Hip-Hop Sunday, featuring open mic, live band, and DJ. $5, ladies free. Sundays, 5 p.m. Melting Pot: Artist Showcase, open mic night hosted by Darius “Phatmak” Clayton. $5. Thursdays, 7-11 p.m. 341 MADISON (524-0104).
Chuckles Comedy Club
“Works of Heart” at Memphis College of Art Saturday
“The Sixth Mass Extinction: Threats, Consequences, and Challenges”
Professor Michael Collins from Rhodes College will speak on topic including local species and system examples. Sun., Feb. 7, 1:30-3 p.m.
LOL Memphis Sketch & Improv Comedy Show, featuring improv games and sketch parodies. Cast members perform small sets throughout the show to introduce what’s coming next. (654-8594), $10. Second Monday of every month, 7-9 p.m.
The HUB
2170 YOUNG (272-7210).
$15. Sat.-Sun., Feb. 6-7.
1700 DEXTER.
Triple S
MEMPHIS COOK CONVENTION CENTER, 255 N. MAIN (576-1200), TENNCOMICCON.COM.
The Cove
Comedy with Dagmar, open mic comedy. www.thecovememphis.com. Sundays, 7-9 p.m. 2559 BROAD (730-0719).
Flirt Nightclub
Trippin on Thursday, hosted by K-97 Funnyman Prescott. Thursdays, 6 p.m. 3659 S. MENDENHALL (485-1119).
LoveSpeaks, Fridays, 11 p.m.2 a.m.
BENJAMIN L. HOOKS CENTRAL LIBRARY, 3030 POPLAR (415-2700).
515 E.H. CRUMP.
Java Cabana
Open mic nite, www.javacabanacoffeehouse.com. Thursdays, 8-10 p.m.
Fun-filled Fridays, open mic poetry, jazz music, and networking mixer. (421-6239), $5. First Friday of every month, 8 p.m.-midnight. 1747 WALKER (421-6239).
LECT U R E /S P EA K E R
ArtSavvy Jazz Series: Note by Note Documentary Screening Follows the creation of a Steinway concert grand from forest
C O N F E R E N C ES/ C O NVE NT I O N S
Tennessee Comic Con
TO U R S
Tours at Two
Join a Dixon docent or member of the curatorial staff on a tour of the current exhibitions. Free for members. $5 nonmembers. Tuesdays, Sundays, 2-3 p.m. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.
C A L E N DA R: F E B R UA RY 4 - 1 0
Summer Ave.
Best Kept Secret
Happy Valentines Day!
3401
Come and Get Your Love a
Free
Pair of Earrings.
No Purchase Necessary Lingerie Adult Novelties Fantasy Costumes Body Butters Valentines Baskets
THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.
E X POS/SALES
Green Your Home Winter Plant Sale
Choose from a beautiful selection of house plants, custom potting, and container arrangements (your pot or ours), unique terrariums, and specialty garden gift items. Fri.-Sat., Feb. 5-6, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN, 750 CHERRY (636-4100), MEMPHISBOTANICGARDEN.COM.
SPORTS / FITNESS
2016 Memphis Open
One of the longest-running American tournaments on the ATP World Tour and the only indoor ATP event contested in the United States is celebrating its 40th anniversary. $10. Feb. 6-14. RACQUET CLUB OF MEMPHIS, 5111 SANDERLIN (765-4400), WWW. MEMPHISOPEN.COM.
Baylor Watch Party Saturdays.
DOUBLE J SMOKEHOUSE & SALOON, 124 E. G.E. PATTERSON (347-2648).
Ping Pong Tournament For more information and registration, visit website. $20. Tue.-Wed., Feb. 9-10.
2016 Memphis Open at the Racquet Club of Memphis M E ETI NGS
Healing Planet Spa Night
Care for women with cancer and other catastrophic illnesses featuring dinner, massage, facials, nails, hair/ wigs, and footbaths. Free. Second Monday of every month, 6:30-9:30 p.m. COOPER WALKER PLACE, 1015 S. COOPER (338-5223).
Memphis Astronomical Society
Held in the Assisi Hall Science auditorium. First Friday of every month, 8 p.m. CHRISTIAN BROTHERS UNIVERSITY, 650 E. PARKWAY S. (321-3335), WWW. CBU.EDU.
Meristem Women’s Book Club
Read and explore written works by women and LGBT authors. Second Wednesday of every month, 7 p.m. MEMPHIS GAY AND LESBIAN COMMUNITY CENTER, 892 S. COOPER (278-6422), WWW.MGLCC.ORG.
Padres Comprometidos Six-week program provides families with the tools, information, and vital tips they need to understand the importance of a higher education. Through Feb. 17, 5:30 p.m.
LATINO MEMPHIS, 6041 MT. MORIAH EXT., SUITE 16 (366-5882), WWW. LATINOMEMPHIS.ORG.
KIDS
RACQUET CLUB OF MEMPHIS, 5111 SANDERLIN (765-4400), WWW. MEMPHISOPEN.COM.
AutoZone Kids Fun Day
Tai Chi
RACQUET CLUB OF MEMPHIS, 5111 SANDERLIN (765-4400), WWW. MEMPHISOPEN.COM.
Classes held near Woodland Discovery Playground. $8. Wednesdays, 3 p.m. SHELBY FARMS, 500 N. PINE LAKE (767-PARK), WWW. SHELBYFARMSPARK.ORG.
Festival of tennis for the kids. Sat., Feb. 6, 5-7 p.m.
Cookies with Cookie Monster
Kids and kids-at-heart will enjoy cookies, free ice cream with three-bag purchase, and pictures with Cookie Monster. Saturdays, noon-4 p.m. MAKEDA’S COOKIES DOWNTOWN, 488 S. SECOND (644-4511), MAKEDASCOOKEIS.COM.
Exploring Color and Design with Paul Klee with Kerrie Rogers
Children 7 and up learn about primary, secondary, complementary, and analogous colors by creating color wheels. $150. Mondays, 4-5:30 p.m. Through Feb. 16.
Keep It Sexy! 3401 Summer Ave.
901.425.5455 • www.bestkeptsecret901.com • bestkeptsecretmem@yahoo.com
FLICKER STREET STUDIO, 74 FLICKER (767-2999), FLICKERSTREETSTUDIO.COM/ADULTART-CLASSES.
Moon Mouse
Bullied and picked on by the “cool” rats, Marvin the mouse is labeled as a loser and a geek. To get away from the continuous badgering, he retreats into his science books and a world of fantasy. $15$30. Fri., Feb. 5, 6:30-8:15 p.m. THE ORPHEUM, 203 S. MAIN (525-3000), WWW.ORPHEUM-MEMPHIS.COM.
Saturday Storytime: Silly Wonderful You
Funny and tender love letter from a parent to a child expresses how life is so new and different and filled with love with a little one around. Activity to follow. Free. Sat., Feb. 6, 11-11:30 a.m. BARNES & NOBLE, 2774 N. GERMANTOWN (386-2468), STORES. BARNESANDNOBLE.COM
Tuesday Toddler Storytime: I Love You Just Like This
Hear all about the ways that Elmo loves you. Color an Elmo valentine after the story. Free. Tues., Feb. 9, 11-11:30 a.m. BARNES & NOBLE, 2774 N. GERMANTOWN (386-2468), STORES. BARNESANDNOBLE.COM
continued on page 36
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Celebrate 40 years with garden docents who will be available to discuss specific highlights in the Woodland garden. Emphasis on plants and design representative of Memphis shade garden conditions. Saturdays, 10 a.m.-noon. Through Dec. 31.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Woodland Garden Tours
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C A L E N DA R: F E B R UA RY 4 - 1 0 continued from page 35
WOODRUFF-FONTAINE.COM.
The Ultimate Big Game Viewing Party
S P EC IAL EVE N TS
Nature Unleashed: Inside Natural Disasters
LAFAYETTE’S MUSIC ROOM, 2119 MADISON (207-5097).
Cirque du CMOM
Immense geological and meteorological forces shaped our planet and our world. Explore the fascinating science behind natural phenomena and their impact on human lives. $12.75. Feb. 6-May 1.
A cultural wonderland of mambo dancing and salsa kings, focusing on Cuban traditions and Havana flair. Benefiting Children’s Museum of Memphis. $150. Sat., Feb. 6, 7-11 p.m. CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF MEMPHIS, 2525 CENTRAL (320-3170), WWW.CMOM.COM.
First Friday: Gilded Courtship
Enjoy annual exhibition of the courting customs and romantic gestures from the turn of the century into the 1920s. Learn the history of many of the traditions we still practice today. Free for members, $15 nonmembers. Fri., Feb. 5, 5-8 p.m. WOODRUFF-FONTAINE HOUSE, 680 ADAMS (526-1469), WWW.
Watch the game on the 12-foot HD projector and enjoy food and drink specials. Free-$25. Sun., Feb. 7, 5 p.m.
MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
HOLIDAY EVENTS
Dancing Mardi Gras Party
Dance to the live New Orleans-style music of Breeze Cayolle. $15. Thurs., Feb. 4, 7-10 p.m. RHITT’S ON REX, 5683 S REX (274-2309).
Take Your Seat Kick-Off Campaign: Love Song To Memphis
Mardi Gras Week
Celebrate Mardi Gras with a special menu featuring NOLA classics red beans and rice, king cake, muffalettas, and hurricanes. Live music featuring Big Sam’s Funky Nation on Thursday. Free. Feb. 8-13, 11-midnight.
Featuring Joyce Cobb and Southern Comfort Jazz Orchestra. Call for reservation. Free with reservation. Tues., Feb. 9, 7:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS, HARRIS CONCERT HALL, INSIDE THE RUDI E. SCHEIDT SCHOOL OF MUSIC (678-2541), WWW. MEMPHIS.EDU/MUSIC.
LAFAYETTE’S MUSIC ROOM, 2119 MADISON (207-5079).
FOOD & DRINK EVENTS
Bendy Brewski Yoga
Yoga and beer pairing. Beginner-friendly, fun yoga followed by a pint. No experience necessary. No watchasana. $15. Thursdays, 6-8 p.m. HIGH COTTON BREWING CO., 598 MONROE (896-9977).
Champagne Sunday
Celebrate the opening of “Contemporary Classics,” work that has a contemporary viewpoint of a classic piece of jewelry or object, with champagne, chocolate, cupcakes, and wine. Free. Sun., Feb. 7, 12-2 p.m. METAL MUSEUM, 374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380), WWW. METALMUSEUM.ORG.
CHEF+FARMER+MAKER
Roundtable discussion on the current state and role of our local food culture in building Memphis as a capital of culinary innovation and exploration. $15-$30. Fri., Feb. 5, 6:30-9:30 p.m. 387 PANTRY, 387 S. MAIN (734-2911).
Half Pints for Half Pints
Three-hour party featuring food, beer, and music. Watch the Grizz game in the brewery’s new private lounge. Enjoy a silent auction benefiting Peabody Elementary. $50. Sat., Feb. 6, 7-10 p.m.
Fridays and Saturdays in February • 6pm-10pm Plus a Bonus Drawing on Sunday, February 14 Having a players card is your key. Every hour, three numbers will be randomly selected. If the last three digits of your Key Rewards card matches the three selected numbers in the exact order, you win a guaranteed minimum of $500 CASH!
MEMPHIS MADE BREWING COMPANY, 768 S. COOPER (2075343), WWW.HALFPINTS.ORG.
Polar Bear Plunge and Chili Cook-off
Heat up with some chili and cool down with a plunge benefiting Special Olympics. Sat., Feb. 6, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. MUD ISLAND RIVER PARK, 125 N. FRONT (576-7241), WWW. SPECIALOLYMPICSMEM.ORG.
If there is not an exact match, $500 will be added to the next prize pool each hour. If the prize pool is not won by the end of the drawing night, the prize amount rolls over to the next drawing day.
THAT’S NOT ALL THE WINNING!
Earn entries every day with your Key Rewards card.
5X ENTRIES ON SUNDAYS 10X ENTRIES ON MONDAYS
5 winners will be selected every half hour to win $250 in Promo Cash. (6:30pm, 7:30pm, 8:30pm & 9:30pm)
$
45,000 TOURNAMENT SERIES
Tuesdays in February REGISTRATION: 1PM–7:15PM • TOURNAMENT: 2PM–8PM
BIG GAME
VIE WIN G PART Y Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7 • 4PM-10PM Free beer • $1 Hot Dogs Wing specials at the Indulge Café Watch on all TVs throughout the casino and on the 10’ wide big screen!
EXTRA DAY! EXTRA PLAY! FEBRUARY 29 ALL DAY
Visit on February 29 and earn points playing slots toward an EXTRA Promo Cash offer on two Mondays in April!
POINT VALUE
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12 Video Poker play earns half the stated amount.
Must be 21 and a Key Rewards member. See Cashier • Players Club for rules. Management reserves the right to cancel, change and modify the event or promotion with notice to the Mississippi Gaming Commission where required. Gaming restricted patrons prohibited. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700.
FILM
Walking with Dinosaurs: Prehistoric Planet 3D
Experience a year in the life of dinosaurs. $9. Through March 4. CTI 3D GIANT THEATER, IN THE MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
The Tournées French Film Festival
Opening night reception with introduction by Prof. Evelyn Perry at 6:30 p.m. See website for list of films. Tues., Wed., 7 p.m. Through Feb. 10. RHODES COLLEGE, BUCKMAN HALL, ROOM 110. WWW.RHODES.EDU/CONTENT/TOURNEES.
5pm–7pm and 9pm–11pm • All Machines
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Playback actors interpret audience members’ personal stories at First Congregational Church Saturday
Wider Angle Foreign Film Series: Amour Fou
Inspired by true events, young romantic-era Berlin lovers agree on a suicide pact. Free. Wed., Feb. 10, 6-8 p.m. BENJAMIN L. HOOKS CENTRAL LIBRARY, 3030 POPLAR (4152726).
F O O D F E AT U R E B y A r i L e Va u x
Superfood An ode to the pomengranate.
Linguine con Funghi e Formaggio For two big portions: Half-pound linguine — a thick but not enormous handful. 3/4 cup mix of fresh basil, oregano, and
parsley 1/3 cup mix of freshly grated Parmesan and Romano cheeses 5 cloves garlic, mashed 2 cups mushrooms (you can use a mix of white button, crimini, portobello, morel, oyster, and shiitake) 1 tablespoon butter 3 tablespoons olive oil 1/4 cup pine nuts 1 lemon 1/2 cup pomegranate seeds Heat two quarts of water with 1/8 cup of salt. Add the pasta when boils. While cooking the pasta, chop the herbs, grate the cheese, mash the garlic, and slice the mushrooms. When the linguine is al dente (just a receding sliver of a dry, white center), remove noodles and toss them generously in olive oil. Set aside. In a large skillet or wok, combine butter and 2 tablespoons olive oil on medium heat. Add pine nuts and the mashed garlic. Toss the nuts just until they start to brown. Don’t overbrown. Add the mushrooms and stir/toss them in. Season with 1/4 teaspoon of fresh ground pepper and a “kiss” of salt. When the fungus starts to brown, toss in the herbs, then the pasta, then add the lemon juice. Transfer the fragrant mixture onto a large plate, and garnish with handfuls of pomegranate seeds, and the rest of the grated cheese. Squeeze a quarter lemon over the loaded plate, and place the remaining quarter lemon on top.
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peutic outcomes similar to what may be happening in rats, you would have to eat a lot of pomegranates and might want to consider juice. You could make your own juice by purchasing the fruit and watching videos on YouTube about how to seed them without making a colossal mess. When buying pomegranates, look for firm fruits with rounded, rather than sunken, skins. Ultimately the best way to determine the quality or ripeness of a particular batch of fruit is to open one. If you find a keeper, go buy some more from the same batch and store them in the fridge. The fruit’s fridge-life can be extended for months by wrapping them in paper towels and storing in a paper bag at the bottom of the fridge where there isn’t much activity. You want to leave the wrapped pomegranates unbothered, with as few vibrations as possible. Like bottles of wine, the less they’re disturbed, the better they’re preserved. What you should never do is buy packaged pomegranate seeds, which have a relatively short shelf life and have been the source of multiple decidedly non-super outbreaks of food-borne illness. Linguine con Funghi e Formaggio owes its magic, in part, to its garnish of pomegranate seeds. It may appear to be almost an afterthought, but it really completes the dish.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
areas that support opium poppies, like Afghanistan and Mexico, which means eating them could help steer rural economies away from the narcotics business. Though it can be messy, it’s hardly a chore to interact with a pomegranate. The leathery pentagonal orb glitters from the inside like a crystal-filled geode when you open it. The juicy seeds, dense with flavor, sugar, and acid, are refreshing and joyful to munch on. Some people eat the arils with spoons by the bowlful. A sprinkled handful on a meal can transform it, as we will see in a moment in the recipe for Linguine con Funghi e Formaggio, or linguine with mushrooms and cheese. But first, lest we forget, there are some truly compelling superfood-y reasons to like pomegranate. Antioxidants, vitamins, blah blah, sure. Meanwhile, research published in 2013 suggests that pomegranates can cause dramatic improvement in rodents with Alzheimer’s. The team then set out to determine what compound or compounds in pomegranates were behind this activity. A follow-up study published in December of 2015 looked at the ability of several suspected pomegranate compounds to pass from the blood to the brain, which would be a crucial quality for an Alzheimer’s treatment. None of the entries on their list of suspects, it turned out, were able to cross from the blood into the brain. But the team discovered that one of the suspect molecules is broken down by gut bacteria into smaller molecules called urolithins, which do pass the blood/brain barrier. Urolithins have also been shown to be anti-inflammatory, and to remove Alzheimer’s-related plaque from cultured brain cells. Remember, if one aspires to thera-
EXC I
PLMRUE | DREAMSTIME.COM
T
he idea that certain foods can make you smarter, faster, stronger, or even younger has led to the recent proliferation of “superfoods,” purported to do such things. This angle on health and well-being has opened big doors for marketers of food, writers of listicles, and those with the resources to pursue the superfoods lifestyle. But it’s buyer beware for consumers who wade into this $140 billion-a-year industry, because one thing many superfoods can surely do is cleanse your bank account. The pomegranate, while often named in the company of superfoods, deserves a spot above this fray. Yes, it is a superfood, not just for the eater but for the earth, and even for humanity. And for what it’s worth, we’ve been eating them for a long time. Many Biblical scholars believe the pomegranate was the real-life inspiration for the forbidden fruit. Whether or not we owe the original sin to this original superfood, civilizations and cuisines have been built on those ruby red, fleshy arils, which is what the angular sacks that contain seeds and fruit are called. The trees are tolerant to high heat and low precipitation, are generally easy to grow, and can produce huge crops. The fruits can be stored for months and shipped slowly, helping to make pomegranates climate-friendly and adapted to a planet that is already heating up. This adaptability, along with growing demand for the fruit, have caused a surge in pomegranate trees being planted. Pomegranate orchards are replacing apple orchards in parts of India that are now too hot for apple growing. Meanwhile, pomegranate trees thrive in many of the same
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F O O D N E W S B y L e s l e y Yo u n g
Let the Good Times Roll Mardi Gras in Memphis.
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
Owen Brennan’s was one of Memphis’ original New Orleans ambassadors, taking home Best of trophies year after year. They’ll be Mardi Gras-ing it up this year with a celebratory menu of $5 small plates and drink specials. Their holiday menu will offer crawfish beignets with crawfish tails, andouille sausage, and tasso ham fried in a beignet and served with sriracha tartar sauce; Cajun calamari served with agrodolce and remoulade sauces; king cake; hurricanes; Mardi Gras Ritas; and Mardi Gras Mosas. They’ll also turn it up a notch with jazz music and a
bead throw from the indoor balcony. Owen Brennan’s Restaurant, 6150 Poplar, 761-0990 brennansmemphis.com Lafayette’s is the new old kid on the block. After 38 years of shuttered windows, the Midtown music fixture reopened with a balcony that models those characteristic of the Big Easy. This week, from Monday, February 8th through Saturday, February 13th, chef Jody Moyt will serve up Carnival food specials such as red beans and rice for $4 a cup; muffalettas for $12 served on authentic Gambino bread shipped in from NOLA with mortadella, salami, homemade olive relish, and roasted red peppers; and king cake, either by the slice or whole — yes, the whole ones will have babies. “We’re the Mardi Gras spot in Overton Square. We’ve got the double-decker balcony out front and a mezzanine inside. We’ll have a horn
Owen Brennan’s
Hungry Memphis: A Very Tasteful Food Blog Thanks Memphis for voting us the Best Indian Restaurant! Memphis Flyer's 2015 Best of Memphis readers' poll
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For the big holiday, English will be offering drink specials as well as a bread pudding baby lottery, meaning one dish of bread pudding will have a king cake baby, and the lucky diner will receive dinner for two. The Second Line, 2144 Monroe, 590-2829 secondlinememphis.com
1720 Poplar at Evergreen 278-1199
by Susan Ellis
Dishing it out daily at
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band that will get a train going through the restaurant. It will be a big party. We’ll be as close to Mardi Gras as you can get without going down South,” Moyt says. Lafayette’s Music Room 2119 Madison 207-5097 lafayettes.com Chef Max Hussey at eighty3 Food & Drink at the Madison Hotel downtown says he loves Cajun cuisine and has been recognized with several awards for his gumbo. The New Orleans cuisine enthusiast added a Mardi Gras special to his menu for a limited time. For $15, revellers can get a crawfish po’boy and a cup of traditional New Orleans-style gumbo, made with clam and seafood stock, crawfish, shrimp, okra, scallops, lobster, rice, and creole seasonings. The special menu will run from Friday, February 5th to Tuesday, February 9th. eighty3 Food & Drink, 83 Madison, 333-1224 eighty3memphis.com It’s pretty much always Fat Tuesday at the Bayou. “Our menu is already suited for it,” owner Bill Baker says. This year on the big day they’ll have a crawfish boil as well as king cake, and the New Orleans-inspirited Mighty Souls Brass Band will carry you away to Frenchmen on their tuba, trombone, sax, et al. “It will start to pick up midafternoon, and by evening it will get crazy. We’ll have a bunch of beads. Beads will get thrown. Laissez le bon temps roulez,” Baker says. The Bayou, 2094 Madison, 278-8626 bayoubarmemphis.com
JUSTIN FOX BURKS
T
he first American Mardi Gras was celebrated in 1703 in what is now Mobile. The first krewe was the Masque de la Mobile. By 1718, New Orleans was a thing, and by the ’30s (the 1730s), they were doing Mardi Gras too. With a vengeance. In 1875, Louisiana Governor Henry Warmoth signed the Mardi Gras Act, designating Fat Tuesday as a legal holiday. Somewhere in there the first pot of gumbo was made, and by the Great Depression, the Martin brothers threw some potatoes and roast beef gravy on French bread, and the first po’boys were served to New Orleans streetcar workers on strike. Just as much as New Orleans is le centre Americain for all things Mardi Gras, its identity is also inseparable from its distinct cuisine. Mardi Gras is just around the corner — Mardi, February 9th — and area restaurants are offering some traditional New Orleans dishes and signature drinks to save you the six- (or five or four-) hour trip. (And running around like an amateur.) Chef Kelly English is synonymous with Louisiana in these parts — he’s a native — and if Mardi Gras means traditional New Orleans cuisine, it’s a party all year-round at his restaurant the Second Line. His menu of po’boys, including the O.G., short for original gangsta, short for the Martin brothers concoction of French fries and gravy; chicken and andouille gumbo; and barbecue shrimp will make you think you need to cross the neutral ground to go make some groceries.
Locality ✴ Guide
COLLIERVILLE Bangkok Alley Bonefish Grill Booyah’s Cafe Grill Cafe Piazza Ciao Baby! Corky’s Ribs & BBQ El Mezcal El Porton Firebirds Gus’s Fried Chicken Huey’s Jim’s Place Grille La Hacienda Mary’s German Restaurant Memphis Pizza Cafe Mulan Asian Bistro Pig-N-Whistle The Sear Shack Sekisui Silver Caboose Square Beans Coffee Whaley’s Pizza Wolf River Cafe CORDOVA Bombay House Bonefish Grill Butcher Shop Corky’s Ribs & BBQ Crazy Italians East End Grill El Mezcal El Porton Flying Saucer Fox & Hound Friday Tuna Gus’s Fried Chicken Huey’s iSushi Jim ’N Nick’s Bar-B-Q La Hacienda Pasta Italia Petra Cafe Presentation Room Sekisui Shogun Skimo’s TJ Mulligan’s DOWNTOWN Agave Maria Alcenia’s Aldo’s Pizza Pies Alfred’s The Arcade Automatic Slim’s Bangkok Alley Bardog Tavern B.B. King’s Blues Club Bedrock Eats & Sweets Belle Bistro Bleu Blind Bear Bluefin
EAST MEMPHIS 4 Dumplings Acre Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen Another Broken Egg Cafe Asian Palace Bangkok Alley Belmont Grill The Booksellers Bistro Broadway Pizza Brookhaven Pub & Grill Buckley’s Grill Buntyn Corner Cafe Carrabba’s Italian Grill Casablanca Cheffie’s Café Ciao Bella City East Bagel & Grille Corky’s Ribs & BBQ Dan McGuinness Pub Dixie Cafe El Mezcal El Porton El Toro Loco Erling Jensen Fino’s Folk’s Folly Foozi Fox & Hound Fratelli’s The Grove Grill Gus’s Fried Chicken Half Shell Happy Mexican Hog & Hominy Houston’s Huey’s Interim Jack Pirtle’s Chicken
Jim’s Place Restaurant & Bar Julles Posh Food Co. Las Delicias Lisa’s Lunchbox LYFE Kitchen Lynchburg Legends Mac’s Burgers Marciano Mayuri Indian Cuisine Mellow Mushroom Memphis Pizza Cafe Mi Pueblo Mortimer’s Mosa Asian Bistro Napa Cafe New Hunan Old Venice Pizza Co. One & Only BBQ Patrick’s Porcellino’s Craft Butcher Rotis Cuisine of India Sakura Sekisui Pacific Rim Skewer Soul Fish Cafe Sports Bar & Grille Swanky’s Taco Shop Tamp & Tap Triad Three Little Pigs Bar-B-Q Tokyo Grill Whole Foods Market GERMANTOWN Asian Eatery Belmont Grill Chili’s Corky’s Ribs & BBQ El Porton Germantown Commissary Las Tortugas Mellow Mushroom Memphis Pizza Cafe Mister B’s Mulan Asian Eatery New Asia Petra Cafe Royal Panda Russo’s Sakura Soul Fish Cafe Staks Swanky’s Taco Shop West Street Diner MEDICAL CENTER Arepa & Salsa Evelyn & Olive Sabrosura Trolley Stop Market MIDTOWN Abyssinia Alchemy Aldo’s Pizza Pies Alex’s Tavern Al-Rayan Bar-B-Q Shop Bar DKDC Barksdale Restaurant Bar Louie Bari Ristorante e Enoteca Bayou Bar & Grill Beauty Shop Beeker’s Belly Acres Bhan Thai Blue Monkey Blue Nile Boscos Squared Bounty on Broad Broadway Pizza The Brushmark Cafe 1912 Cafe Eclectic Cafe La Roux by DeJaVu Cafe Ole Cafe Society Casablanca Celtic Crossing Central BBQ City & State City Market The Cove The Crazy Noodle The Cupboard Dino’s Grill Ecco on Overton Park El Mezcal Fino’s from the Hill Frida’s Mexican Restaurant Fuel Cafe Golden India Hammer & Ale Haute Monde Sweet and Savory Bar Huey’s I Love Juice Bar Imagine Vegan Cafe India Palace Jack Pirtle’s Chicken Jasmine Thai
Java Cabana Kwik Chek LBOE Local Gastropub Mardi Gras Maximo’s Memphis Pizza Cafe Midtown Crossing Molly’s La Casita Muddy's Mulan Asian Bistro Murphy’s Next Door Old Zinnie’s Otherlands Payne’s P&H Cafe Peggy’s Petra Cafe Express Red Zone Relevant Roasters Restaurant Iris Robata Ramen & Yakitori Bar Saigon Le Schweinehaus Sean’s Cafe The Second Line Sekisui Side Street Grill Slider Inn Soul Fish Cafe Stone Soup Cafe Strano Sicilian Kitchen Sweet Grass Tart Tsunami Young Avenue Deli PARKWAY VILLAGE/FOX MEADOWS Blue Shoe Bar & Grill Leonard’s Pancho’s POPLAR/I-240 Amerigo Benihana Blue Plate Cafe Brooklyn Bridge Capital Grille China Dragon Fleming’s Frank Grisanti’s Heritage Tavern & Kitchen Humdingers Moe’s Southwest Grill Mosa Asian Bistro Owen Brennan’s River Oaks Salsa Seasons 52 Wang’s Mandarin House RALEIGH El 7 Mares Hideaway Restaurant & Club Los Reyes
MEMPHIS IS BLESSED WITH LOTS OF TALENT, WE SALUTE YOU MR. AL KAPONE
SOUTH MEMPHIS Coletta’s Four Way Restaurant Interstate Barbecue Jack Pirtle’s Chicken Uncle Lou’s Southern Kitchen
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
CHICKASAW GARDENS/ U OF M A-Tan Avenue Coffee Bella Caffe Brother Juniper’s Camy’s The Choo Derae Restaurant El Porton El Toro Loco The Farmer Jack Pirtle’s Chicken Just for Lunch La Baguette La Hacienda Los Compadres Lost Pizza Co. Lucchesi's Beer Garden Medallion Osaka Pete & Sam’s Raffe’s Deli Republic Coffee Rock’n Dough Pizza Co. RP Tracks Woman’s Exchange
Blue Monkey Blue Plate Cafe Blues City Cafe Bon Ton Cafe The Brass Door Burrito Blues Cafe Keough Cafe Pontotoc Capriccio Grill Central BBQ Chez Philippe City Market Cordelia’s Table Coyote Ugly Cozy Corner DeJaVu Double J Earnestine & Hazel’s Eighty3 Felicia Suzanne’s Ferraro’s Pizzeria & Pub Five Spot Flight Flying Fish Flying Saucer The Green Beetle Gus’s Fried Chicken Happy Mexican Hard Rock Cafe Huey’s Itta Bena Jack Pirtle’s Chicken Jerry Lee Lewis’ King’s Palace Cafe Kooky Canuck Little Tea Shop Local Gastropub Lunchbox Eats LYFE Kitchen Maciel’s The Majestic Grille Marmalade McEwen’s Mesquite Chop House Miss Polly’s Mollie Fontaine Lounge Office at Uptown Café Onix Oshi Burger Bar Paulette’s Pearl’s Oyster House Pig on Beale Pink Diva Cupcakery Rendezvous Rizzo’s Diner Rumba Room Rum Boogie Cafe Sekisui Silky O’Sullivan’s Silly Goose South of Beale South Main Sushi Spaghetti Warehouse Spindini Tamp & Tap Texas de Brazil Tin Roof Tug’s Westy’s Yao’s Downtown China Bistro Zac’s Cafe
SUMMER/BERCLAIR Asian Palace Central BBQ The Cottage El Kora El Palmar Elwood’s Shack High Pockets Los Picosos Lotus Nagasaki Inn Pancho’s Panda Garden Taqueria La Guadalupana WEST MEMPHIS The Cupboard Pancho’s WHITEHAVEN China Inn Hong Kong Jack Pirtle’s Chicken O’ Taste & See Valle’s Italian Rebel WINCHESTER East End Grill Formosa Half Shell Huey’s Rancho Grande TJ Mulligan’s
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FILM REVIEW By Chris McCoy
Pandalicious Jack Black is back in Kung Fu Panda 3.
I
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
t’s a good time to be an animation fan. Television is filled with cutting-edge work, from Adventure Time to Adult Swim. In theaters, the reign of Pixar has produced a string of masterpieces, the latest of which was last year’s Inside Out. Even though it’s been overshadowed by Pixar, and still extruding corporate product like Rise of the Guardians, DreamWorks Animation has stepped up its game after years of floundering in the Shrek doldrums, led by a panda who does kung fu. Has there been a more obvious-only-in-hindsight film premise in recent memory than Kung Fu Panda? Once those three words were spoken in the DreamWorks executive suite sometime in the middle of the last decade, it was inevitable that they would be followed by “Get me Jack Black!” Po, the dumplingobsessed, orphan panda turned dragon warrior, is the perfect conduit for Black’s hyperkinetic charisma. It would be hard to imagine the franchise banking a billion and a half bucks without Black providing Po’s animus. But this installment of the panda’s adventures in the stylized feudal Chinese setting of the Valley of Peace has more going for it than just Black. It seems to be one of those rare bits of corporate synergy where the right players were assembled, beginning with director Jennifer Yuh Nelson, a 43-year old Korean American whose work on Kung Fu Panda 2 made her the highest-grossing female director of all time. For this installment, Nelson shares the big chair with longtime DreamWorks animator Alessandro Carloni, and their direction keeps Kung Fu Panda 3 nimble and assured.
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The film opens in the spirit realm, where Grand Master Oogway (Randall Duk Kim), having achieved ultimate enlightenment, is chilling on a Roger Deaninspired floating rock, when he is attacked by his old enemy Kai (J.K. Simmons). The immortal bull-being wants to collect Oogway’s qi, or spiritual energy, and use it not to conquer at Scrabble (where qi is valuable because it is a “q” word you can play without a “u” in your rack, and also because its alternate spellings “ki” and “chi” are legal words), but to bring the entire world under his hoof. Any movie that starts off with a bull and turtle battling through the astral plane with magical, zero-G kung fu has my attention. Meanwhile, back in the land of the mortal anthropomorphic animals, Po’s teacher Master Shifu (Dustin Hoffman) is retiring and appointing Po as his
Kung Fu Panda 3 packs a punch for DreamWorks and for fans of animation. successor at the Jade Temple kung fu school, just in time for our hero to fight off an onslaught by Kai and his pop-up army of jade zombies. Po’s worldview is further shattered by the arrival of his long-lost father, Li Shan (Bryan Cranston), who offers to take him home to the secret, Shangri-la-like village of pandas to perfect his knowledge of qi (which will get you 33 points on a Triple Word Score). Po’s adopted father Mr. Ping (legendary character actor James Hong, who achieved immortality as Lo Pan in Big Trouble in Little China) is suspicious, and tags along for the journey, leaving Po’s sidekicks the Furious Five to fight a rear-guard action against the rampaging Kai.
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FILM REVIEW By Chris McCoy Flowing freely between styles inspired by anime, Pixar, and Asian woodcuts, Kung Fu Panda 3 is easily the most visually lush film DreamWorks has ever produced. The combination of the over-the-top aesthetic of Chinese wuxia films with the Western animated tradition, where animals like Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny assume human traits, has produced a cool, original cross-cultural mashup. Like the work of Jackie Chan (whose Master Monkey is all but neglected in this film), the meticulously choreographed fight sequences are played for slapstick. The basic concepts and iconography, while they may sound confusing in a review, are easily grasped by kids raised on Dragon Ball Z. Po’s journey of self-acceptance lacks the psychological insight of Inside Out, but what it lacks in sophistication it makes up for in good-spiritedness. Kung Fu Panda 3 may be empty calories, but it tastes pretty good going down.
Chris Pine in The Finest Hours
Kung Fu Panda 3 Now playing Multiple locations
…
They say on the internet that excessive use of sports metaphors is the sign of a weak critic. That’s why the best thing about The Finest Hours is that it allows me to unleash a torrent of nautical metaphors while retaining my final sliver of self-respect. Fortunately for everyone, sailors have many words for failure. The Finest Hours is becalmed from the beginning, when we see Coast Guard sailor Bernie Webber (Chris Pine) meeting cute with Cape Cod hottie Miriam Pentinen (Holliday Grainger), 1952-style. The movie wants you to believe they’re instantly falling in love, but the two actors mix like oil and water, so the clumsy sequence is just the first of many slow boats to China director Craig Gillespie books us on. Storm clouds, both real and metaphorical, start to gather about the time Miriam breaches Eisenhower-era patriarchal protocol by asking Bernie to marry her at an especially boring dance. He feeds her a line about asking permission from his commanding officer before a lucky nor’easter blows up and throws our young hero and his crew of misfits into action on the high seas. The Finest Hours is based on a true story about the rescue of the crew of the SS Pendleton, an oil tanker that
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continued on page 42 DNSOU-25396 Feb 2.18 Sammy Memphis Flyer Jr NP Ad 6.975x9.25.indd 1
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FILM REVIEW continued from page 41 broke apart and sank off the coast of Massachusetts during a powerful storm. In the long history of movies about military heroes, very few, if any, concern the Coast Guard. So it’s kind of a shame that the film adaptation of the service’s bravest exploit is so dreadfully boring and uninspired. The film’s most compelling moments come onboard the Pendleton, a rusting hulk of a tanker run into disaster by an unseen captain who goes down with the first half of his ship. The group of scalawags trapped in the stern of the broken ship find their reticent leader in engine man Ray Sybert (Casey Affleck), whose ingenuity and resolve in keeping half a ship afloat makes him a more compelling character than our alleged hero Webber. Affleck’s performance is this imperfect storm’s sole ray of light, but Pine is the one with the functioning boat, so he gets top billing. The young, untested Bernie’s mad fight through the storm should be the story’s dramatic heart, but it turns into a repetitive slog through the dark waves. There are a few good shots, such as when the tiny boat with the catchy name CG-
Grainger gives the worst performance of the young year. Her character Miriam is a poorly written, off-theshelf “strong woman,” but Grainger walks her off the plank into harpy territory. Her lame subplot, which involves forgetting her coat and getting stuck in a snowbank, hits low tide when a single tear rolls down her face as she stares, bored, off into the middle distance. For that fleeting moment, it seems that she and the audience are in the same boat. — CM A slow boat to boredom 36500 plunges underwater through giant, pounding waves, but director Gillespie spoils the fun by recycling them too often. For an $80 million Disney production, The Finest Hours’ effects look singularly unconvincing. The men of the CG-36500 are clearly on a soundstage getting buckets of water thrown on them. Despite the hurricane force winds blowing blinding snow and freezing spray in their faces, they never look cold. Nor do they take common-sense precautions like wearing goggles, or, in Pine’s case, a hat. The one thing
they do remember to bring along are clichés, so you won’t be at all surprised when Pine proclaims “Not on my watch!” Things are bad out on the ocean, but they’re worse on the shore, where
−
MOVIES
The Finest Hours Now playing Multiple locations
SINCE
1915
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Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies PG13 Hail, Caesar PG13 Carol R The Revenant R
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Jane Got a Gun R Dirty Grandpa R The 5th Wave PG13 The Boy PG13 Ride Along 2 PG13 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi R The Revenant R The Hateful Eight R
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GRAPHIC ARTIST Needed ASAP experience a PLUS. Send resume to. Midtown locationjbranch@spikner.com or fax it to 901-725-1572. PHONE ACTRESSES From home. Must have dedicated land line and great voice. 21+. Up to $18 per hour. Flex HRS./ most Wknds. 1-800-403-7772 Lipservice. net (AAN CAN)
THE KARDASHIAN WORKSHOP Learn how to brand like a Kardashian to build a successful business.For Female Entrepreneurs, Models, and Entertainers. Saturday-June 11, 2016, 2pm-4pm, Memphis, TN, Price: $149. Seating is Limited. Reserve your spot today!Coachmymillion@gmail.com
TRAINING SPECIALIST A medical analytics software company located in Downtown Memphis is seeking a candidates with experience or degree in Healthcare Administration to schedule and conduct training calls with customers, determine implementation and report requirements, and provide additional training support as required. Requires a person with strong project management, interpersonal, organization and time management skills. Submit cover letter and resume to jobs@remitdata.com
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BILINGUAL DENTIST Needed for Dental Office in South East Memphis Area. Send all inquires, Mail: P.O. Box 70406, Memphis, TN. 38107 Fax: (901)524-0976 or Call: (901)524-0970
CLEAN AND PINK Is a upscale residential cleaning company that takes pride in their employees & the clients they serve. Providing exceptional service to all. The application process is extensive to include a detailed drug test, physical exam, and background check. The training hours are 8am-6pm Mon-Thur. 12$-19$hr. Full time hours are Mon -Thu & rotating Fridays. Transportation to job sites during the work day is company provided. Body cameras are a part of the work uniform. Uniform shirts provided. Only serious candidates need apply. Those only looking for long term employment need apply. Cleaning is a physical job but all tools are company provided. Send Resume to cleannpink@msn.com COPELAND SERVICES, L.L.C. Hiring Armed State Licensed Officers/Unarmed Officers Three Shifts Available Same Day Interview 1661 International Place 901-258-5872 or 901-818-3187 Interview in Professional Attire
CUSTOMER SERVICE A medical analytics software company located in Downtown Memphis is seeking candidates with Associates degree in Computer Systems Technology and customer service experience to be a member of our Implementations Team. This position is responsible for implementing, servicing, troubleshooting customer accounts. The position also imports, formats, extracts, and analyze customer data. Great position for a recent college graduate. Submit cover letter and resume to jobs@remitdata.com
SAM’S TOWN HOTEL & Gambling Hall in Tunica, MS is looking for the next Direct Marketing Pro, is it you? We need someone who has excellent organizational skills, knows Direct Mail and Database Marketing, previous Casino Marketing experience preferred. Must have strong written and oral communication skills and the ability to meet deadlines in the fast paced casino environment, proficient in Microsoft Office, CMS and LMS. Must be able to obtain and maintain a MS Gaming Commission Work Permit, pass a prescreening including but not limited to background and drug screen. To apply, log on to boydcareers.com and follow the prompts to Tunica. Boyd Gaming Corp is a drug free workplace and equal opportunity employer. Must be at least 21 to apply.
HEALTHCARE Are you in need of an elder care provider? Days, evenings, overnight, 24 hrs. Excellent refs. 901-496-2429, 901-846-2267
HOSPITALITY/ RESTAURANT CAMY’S IS NOW HIRING ALL POSITIONS: Asst. Managers, Drivers, Cooks. Apply in person 2886 Walnut Grove Rd. Anytime. No Phone Calls. SILKY O’SULLIVAN’S On Beale is looking for food runners, servers & barbacks. Come in and fill out an application. 183 Beale St
USIC LOCATE TECHNICIAN Daytime, full-time Locate Technician positions available! • 100% PAID TRAINING • Company vehicle & equipment provided • PLUS medical, dental, vision & life insurance Requirements: • Must be able to work outdoors • HS Diploma or GED • Ability to work OT and weekends • Must have valid driver’s license with safe driving record Apply today: www.usicllc.com EEO/AA
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USIC LOCATE TECHNICIAN Daytime, full-time Locate Technician positions available! 100% PAID TRAINING Company vehicle & equipment provided PLUS medical, dental, vision & life insurance Requirements: Must be able to work outdoors HS Diploma or GED Ability to work OT and weekends Must have valid driver’s license with safe driving record Apply today: www.usicllc.com EEO/AA
Classic apartment community featuring 1 & 2-bedroom high-rise units; 1, 2 & 3-bedroom garden units, & 2 and 3-bedroom townhomes. Conveniently located: Easy access to premier retailers, chic eateries, fresh markets & live entertainment venues that are just minutes away.
567 Jefferson Ave Phone: (901) 523-8112 567 Jefferson Ave | Memphis, TN 38105-5228 Email: edison@mrgmemphis.com Phone: (901) 523-8112 | Email: edison@mrgmemphis.com
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Houses & Duplexes for Rent ALL AREAS Visit us @ www.lecorealty.com come in, or call Leco Realty, Inc. @ 3707 Macon Rd. 272-9028
COMPUTER INFORMATION AND SYSTEMS MANAGER
seeking candidates with a Bachelor’s degree in IT, Comp. Sci., Comp. Sys. Eng. or related field + 2 years’ work exp. in IT, Comp. Sci., Comp. Sys. Eng. or related field w/ know. of relevant 3rd party technologies (Microsoft, PL/SQL Oracle and Java) for the position of APPLICATION SUPPORT SPECIALIST to provide critical business system analysis, support, and direction, for multiple applications for client projects.
seeking candidates with a Master’s degree in Computer Science, Software Engineering or related field + 3 years’ work experience in Software Engineering, Computer System Analyst or Senior Programmer (or a Bachelor’s degree in specified fields + 5 years’ progressive work experience in specified occupations), with knowledge of relevant 3 rd party technologies (Microsoft, Oracle and Java) for the position of
Play a key role as tech. consultant and subject matter expert throughout lifecycle of assigned applications / projects. Has primary responsibility of supporting applications, defining strategy, fielding questions and writing reports. Guides and directs team of 2 Application Support Specialists. Installs, configures, maintains and troubleshoots software applications and supports Service Delivery Director and client. Position in Memphis, TN. TO APPLY visit 4th Source, Inc.’s career page on its website @ http://www.4thsource.com/Careers/ to submit electronic application for position and resume.
4TH SOURCE, INC.
SENIOR SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGER
to manage the development and provision of IT solutionsand services to Company’s clients and provide leadership to IT teams delivering the services. Position collaborates with Company’s executive client account managers to support client’s strategy, to maintain client relationship and to ensure exceptional delivery of IT services. Position is in Memphis, TN. Occasional short term international travel to Company office(s) in Mexico is required.
TO APPLY please visit 4th Source, Inc.’s
career page on its website @ http://www.4thsource.com/Careers/ to submit electronic application for position and resume.
memphisflyer.com
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SOFTWARE DEVELOPER APPLICATIONS 4TH SOURCE, INC.
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AN ICON IN THE MIDTOWN NEIGHBORHOOD 1 & 2 BR units all with courtyard views Plenty of off st pkg w/ laundry services on site A MUST SEE!! $675/mo + $400 dep CALL 272-8658, CELL 281-4441
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HELP WANTED • REAL ESTATE
901 575 9400 classifieds@memphisflyer.com IT/COMPUTER COMPUTER INFORMATION AND SYSTEMS MANAGER 4TH SOURCE, INC. is seeking candidates with a Master’s degree in Computer Science, Software Engineering or related field + 3 years’ work experience in Software Engineering, Computer System Analyst or Senior Programmer (or a Bachelor’s degree in specified fields + 5 years’ progressive work experience in specified occupations), with knowledge of relevant 3rd party technologies (Microsoft, Oracle and Java) for the position of SENIOR SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGER to manage the development and provision of IT solutions and services to Company’s clients and provide leadership to IT teams delivering the services. Position collaborates with Company’s executive client account managers to support client’s strategy, to maintain client relationship and to ensure exceptional delivery of IT services. Position is in Memphis, TN. Occasional shortterm international travel to Company office(s) in Mexico is required. TO APPLY please visit 4th Source, Inc.’s career page on its website // www.4thsource.com/Careers/ to submit electronic application for position and resume. SAI TECHNOLOGIES LLC is seeking 4 professional for Fulltime employment (40 hours a week) for the positions of 2 Programmer Analysts, 1 QA Analyst and 1 Systems Analyst at 8295 Tournament Dr, Ste#150, Memphis, TN 38125 at competitive salary.Job Summary for Programmer Analyst:Analyze, Design, Develop & Test general computer applications software or specialized utility programs or application User Interfaces, Object Oriented Programming using Core Java, J2ee, Struts, Spring MVC, WebServices SOAP & REST, JSP, HTML, CSS, JQuery, Angular JS, Web, CRM, Web Services, VB Script and HP-ALM, Perl and Shell Scripting for UNIX servers and Mediation Zone Applications, Oracle, SQL SERVER and MySQL databases, Mercury ITG, Bugzilla, Mercury Quality Center, JIRA, Visual Source Safe, WinCvs, Rational Clear Case, TortosieSVN. Educational Requirements: Masters in Comp Sci or Applications or Electronics Electrical Engg and 2 yrs of exp as comp software professional.
Job Summary for QA Analyst:Develop load testing plans to handle peak volumes, Analyze performance test results and provide recommendations, Design, develop and execute load tests using Load Runner, Neoload, Jmeter and Microsoft VSTS, C, Java Script, Identify performance bottlenecks and work with product teams to fix performance issues, Be a SME for cross functional teams on performance. Educational Requirements: Bachelors in Comp Sci or Applications and 5 years of exp as comp software professional.Job Summary for Systems Analyst:Identify & document business requirements & create mapping documents. Create adjunct data to document required data transformations, etc. Healthcare - Claims Adjudication process, NASCO claims processing, HIPAA 4010/5010, ICD9/ICD10, & EDI transactions like 834, 835, 837 & 27X) Analysis, Design, Development & testing application. Perform GAP analysis, risk engineering, Cost benefit analysis, SWOT analysis, ROI analysis & User Acceptance Testing (UAT). In-depth knowledge of data modeling & mapping; Creating Use Case Models, Activity Diagrams & State Chart diagrams. Create Entity Relationship Diagrams (ERD) & design using UML & Visio for application development projects involving Agile, Rational Unified Process (RUP)& Waterfall processes. Work on Industry standards, such as HIPAA, SOX, ISO, Six Sigma, & Capability Maturity Model (CMM). Educational Requirements: Masters in Comp Sci or Applications or Electronics Electrical Engg and 2 yrs of exp as comp software professional.Job Summary for QA Analyst:Develop load testing plans to handle peak volumes, Analyze performance test results and provide recommendations, Design, develop and execute load tests using Load Runner, Neoload, Jmeter and Microsoft VSTS, C, Java Script, Identify performance bottlenecks and work with product teams to fix performance issues, Be a SME for cross functional teams on performance. Educational Requirements: Bachelors in Comp Sci or Applications and 5 years of exp as comp software professional. Job Summary for Systems Analyst:Identify & document business requirements & create mapping documents. Create adjunct data to document required data transformations, etc. Healthcare - Claims Adjudication process, NASCO claims processing, HIPAA 4010/5010, ICD9/ICD10, & EDI transactions like 834, 835, 837 & 27X) Analysis, Design, Development & testing application. Perform GAP analysis, risk engineering, Cost benefit analysis, SWOT analysis, ROI analysis & User Acceptance Testing (UAT). In-depth knowledge of data modeling & mapping; Creating Use
Kimbrough Towers
Case Models, Activity Diagrams & State Chart diagrams. Create Entity Relationship Diagrams (ERD) & design using UML & Visio for application development projects involving Agile, Rational Unified Process (RUP) & Waterfall processes. Work on Industry standards, such as HIPAA, SOX, ISO, Six Sigma, & Capability Maturity Model (CMM). Educational Requirements: Masters in Comp Sci or Applications and 2 years of exp as computer software professional. All 4 positions requires travel with in USA. We offer comprehensive benefits. To apply send your resume to Attn: HR, Sai Technologies, 8295 Tournament Dr, Ste#150, Memphis, TN 38125. SOFTWARE DEVELOPER APPLICATIONS 4TH SOURCE, INC. is seeking candidates with a Bachelor’s degree in IT, Comp. Sci., Comp. Sys. Eng. or related field + 2 years’ work exp. in IT, Comp. Sci., Comp. Sys. Eng. or related field w/ know. of relevant 3rd party technologies (Microsoft, PL/SQL Oracle and Java) for the position of APPLICATION SUPPORT SPECIALIST to provide critical business system analysis, support, and direction, for multiple applications for client projects. Play a key role as tech. consultant and subject matter expert throughout lifecycle of assigned applications / projects. Has primary responsibility of supporting applications, defining strategy, fielding questions and writing reports. Guides and directs team of 2 Application Support Specialists. Installs, configures, maintains and troubleshoots software applications and supports Service Delivery Director and client. Position in Memphis, TN. TO APPLY visit 4th Source, Inc.’s career page on its website //www.4thsource. com/Careers/ to submit electronic application for position and resume.
SALES/MARKETING CONTEMPORARY MEDIA, INC. (CMi), NOW HIRING SALES REP/ ACCOUNT REP Contemporary Media Inc., locally owned and operated publisher of Memphis magazine, The Memphis Flyer, Memphis Parent, and Inside Memphis Business is looking for a full-time sales person to join our team.Must have proven sales experience, excellent communication skills (both written and oral) and be a selfstarter. Candidate must be highly organized and able to thrive in a high volume, fast-paced and team-oriented environment. Knowledge of the local market a plus. Compensation package commensurate with experience, plus company paid benefits. SKILLS NEEDED Print, digital, event sponsorship, and mobile selling experience High level cold calling Negotiation skills High competency in MS Office or Google Drive products Ability to communicate effectively to a large group. Compensation package commensurate with experience, plus paid company benefits. Send cover letter and resume to: hr@ contemporary-media.comEOE. No phone calls please.
Fe b r u a r y 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 6
• Parquet wood flooring • 9 foot ceilings • 24 hour Fitness & Laundry Centers
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HISTORIC CLARIDGE HOUSE Condominiums at 109 N. Main: 2BR/2BA, $1150/mo; Another 2BR/2BA, $1150. Indoor pool, work out room, roof top patio. Call (901) 331-3807.
MIDTOWN APT 199 S MCLEAN Completely renovated 2BR/1BA, gated, free wifi. Immediate availability. $995/mo. Call Chelsea 461-2090 or Tom 483-7177. CENTRAL GARDENS 2BR/1BA, hdwd floors, ceiling fans, french doors, all appls incl. W/D, 9ft ceil, crown molding, off str pking. $720/mo. Also 1BR, $610/mo. 8336483.
Cost - $120.00/week
Winter Wonderland! Here at the
New Huntington Hills FREE move in Gifts!
MIDTOWN
APARTMENTS
MOVE-IN SPECIAL! • AFFORDABLE!
1029 Peabody Ave, Memphis, TN 38104
1 BR $475/mo 2 BR $590/mo
$25 APPLICATION FEE • $200 SECURITY DEPOSIT
1, 2, and 3 Bedrooms
888-446-4954
$99 MOVE IN SPECIAL!
9 - 6 M,T,W,F Thursday 9 - 7 Saturday by Appointment Only
2872 Coach Dr | Memphis, TN 38128 Call 901-372-9309
www.KimbroughTowers.com
665 TENNESSEE STREET 1BR/1BA, $1100/mo.Call MTC (901) 756-4469
482 WILLIAMS AVE #101 3BR/2BA, electric gate around property, CH/A, kitchen w/ stove, dishwasher, W/D hook-up. $750/ mo includes yard maintenance. Call 901-834-3561
Studios,1 1& & 2 bedroom Studios, 2 BR apartments, apartments, duplexes, and duplexes, and houses are homes are Now Available NOW AVAILABLE for occupancy! for occupancy! 1214 Overton 1214 Overton ParkPark 901/276-3603 (901)276-3603 Office hours – Monday – Friday 9 A.M. – 6 P.M. Office Hours: Saturday – 10 A.M. – 5 P.M. Monday-Friday Saturday: 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
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Reserve your new home today at the historic Kimbrough Towers
648 RIVERSIDE 1BR/1BA, $1100/mo.Call MTC (901) 756-4469
GENER AL HOMES FOR RENT
Overton Place Communities Overton Place Communities
Experience
• Controlled access building • Garage parking available
DOWNTOWN LOFT/ CONDO
THE WASHBURN Ideal Location. Stunning Spaces. One of a Kind. 60 S. Main St. Memphis TN. 901.527.0244 thewashburn.com
NEW ANTIQUE BUSINESS For Sale: 3403 Summer Ave. Call Mike at (731) 438-1537 or (901) 729-6855.
COME ON OUT!
• Historic Central Gardens District
MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN Come visit the brand new Cleaborn Pointe at Heritage Landing. Located just minutes from historic Downtown Memphis. 2BR Apts & Townhomes $707; 3BR Apts & Townhomes $813. Community Room, Computer Room, Fitness Room. A smoke free community. 440 South LauderdaleMemphis, TN 38126 | 901-254-7670.
BUSINESS FOR SALE
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Unique Community Features Include
DOWNTOWN APTS
901-521-1617 OFFICE:
360 S Camilla St. 38104
fpmemphis.com
REAL ESTATE • SERVICES 2304 YORK 2BR/1BA, $700/mo. Call MTC (901) 756-4469
SHARED HOUSING CAREGIVER NEEDED Female caregiver needed in Christian home to assist with nightly healthcare in exchange for free room & board. Lakeland area, Leave message. 901-386-3736
NICE ROOMS FOR RENT S. Pkwy & Wilson. Utilities and Cable included. Fridge in your room. Cooking and free laundry privileges. Some locations w/sec. sys. Starting at $435/mo. + dep. 901.922.9089
MIDTOWN ROOM for rent near medical district. Very safe, private entrance. Fully furnished. $120/wk plus dep. 901-725-3892. MIDTOWN ROOMS FOR RENT Central Heat/Air, utls included, furnished. 901.650.4400 NEAR WHITEHAVEN 2 furnished rooms for mature lady in Christian home, nice area on bus line. Non smoker. Wifi & TV’s in each room. $425/mo + deposit, includes utilities. Must be employed or retired. 901-405-5755 or 901-236-4629.
ROOMS FOR RENT Clean, furnished, CH/A, cable, utilities, WD included. I-40/Whitten area. $110/wk. Owner/Agent 901.461.4758 ROOMS FOR RENT For rent In Midtown Area: Furnished rooms ideal for student or retirees. Includes living/dining room. Off street parking. Close to stores, restaurants & bus. 356.9794 SHARED HOUSING near Bartlett. 2br, private bath. Nonsmoking, reasonable rent. Bridgett 901-314-9734
VW • AUDI MINI•PORSCHE
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U OF M HOMES FOR RENT
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Also Servicing
1280 CAROLYN DR. 3BR/1.5BA, $895/mo. Call MTC (901) 756-4469
Mini • Porsche Factory Trained Experience Independent Prices
544 S.REESE Lg. 4BR/3BA, CH/A, all apps including WD. Excellent Neighborhood. $1250/mo. 525-2525. wkends 753-3722
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TH E LAST WO R D by Susan Wilson
Tom Hardy’s Lips
Tom Hardy
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
I get Wuthering Heights, Rebecca, and Jane Eyre confused. I always remember that Heathcliff and Catherine are in Wuthering Heights because of that Monty Python sketch where they act it out in semaphore. Obviously, as problems go, this isn’t a bad one. There are just all those wailing women and wives in attics and silent, deeply disturbed men; who can keep up? I tried to watch a movie adaptation of one of these not too long ago. I don’t remember which because they’re all the same, but this had Tom Hardy in it. I couldn’t pay attention to the story because of Tom Hardy’s lips. Have you seen them? Tom Hardy is to lips as Milton Berle was to, er, uh, comedy. Here’s the thing. For every John Irving or Henry James novel I read, I read about 10 Nora Roberts romances. I know I’m supposed to be all cool and hip and be like, oh, I only read David Foster Wallace out loud to Honduran orphans while eating organic acorn tofu in the porch chair my ironically suspendered husband carved from a fallen Appalachian birch maple — very rare — and drinking yaupon beer. Sometimes I’ll watch the movie first, then read the book. That way I can make my holier-than-thou friends’ heads explode. I’ve read some good stuff this way. I’ve also seen some bad stuff this way. Brief Interviews with Hideous Men comes to mind. People love to rag on Nora because of her formula. There’s a meet cute, they hate each other, they acknowledge their mutual attraction but ignore it, and they end up in an adorable restored bungalow. Like John Irving doesn’t have a formula? Kid has attachment to strange object, there’s a bear, someone is horribly mutilated or somehow disfigured, something gets blown up, and they end up in Amsterdam. Because I love Steve Yarbrough doesn’t mean I have to hate Vince Flynn. What would we do when we’re stranded in the Charlotte airport if it weren’t for Vince Flynn? Just because I absolutely have to have a bologna sandwich with mayonnaise and Doritos on pasty white bread a couple times a year doesn’t mean I can’t appreciate Amish chicken breasts stuffed with chard and turnips in a balsamic reduction. I think women are particularly susceptible to secret shames because of Lululemon. First, whenever I see that name, in my head I pronounce it “Lulu Mon,” and I imagine happy steel drummers and jerk chicken. I think even my father knows what Lululemons are, and he thinks a “crack whore” means she’s good at her job. But in case you get out even less than my father, these things I speak of are fancy, stretchy yoga pants. Except in Jackson, Mississippi, where they are fancy middleaged-woman-running-up-to-Whole-Foods pants. These yoga pants are well-made, expensive, and their size XL is a 12. Gentlemen, you might be confused. It’s like finding a great pair of Sansabelts and they only go up to a 32. So ladies such as myself, who could really use a good yoga class or 10, can’t wear them. Did I mention they’re expensive? Less than a yard of Spandex that you can’t even put in the dryer, and they won’t make your Cow Face Pose any easier for you. Anyway, you get your Lululemons and your mandatory copy of Eat, Pray, Love, and then you start eliminating stuff from your diet. And I’m not talking through digestion. You give up wheat, nuts, beans, rice, and start drinking green kale sludge with chia seeds sprinkled on top. Your friend, a reader of Important Books, gives you Deepak Chopra, and you’re off. You hide your Michelob Ultra behind your organic goat’s milk. You realize you’ve never read anything by Joyce Carol Oates, so you buy her entire oeuvre used from Amazon but act like they’re old and came from an independent book store. You start using the word “encounter” instead of “meet.” You want cool, but let me tell you something: You will never be cool. Read what you want. Eat fast food every now and then. Preferably something with the word “poppers” in the name. You know what? If you love Red Lobster cheddar biscuits, order them! Those biscuits are delightful. If your socalled friends can’t handle the truth of you, dump them. You don’t need that kind of negativity in your life. What you need is more biscuits. Susan Wilson also writes for yeahandanotherthing.com and likethedew.com. She and her husband Chuck have lived here long enough to know that Midtown does not start at Highland.
THE LAST WORD
FEATUREFLASH | DREAMSTIME.COM
On literature, Lululemons, Red Lobster biscuits, and cool.
47
MURPHY’S
Visit our website for live music listings or check the AfterDark section of this Memphis Flyer KITCHEN OPEN LATE, OPEN FOR LUNCH! 1589 Madison • 726‑4193 www.murphysmemphis.com
YOUNGAVENUEDELI.COM 2119 Young Ave • 278‑0034
2/3: $3 Pint Night! 2/4: Memphis Trivia League 2/6: UFC 196 WERDUM VS. VELASQUEZ 2/7: Come Watch the Super Bowl on Our Big Screen! 2/13: Zigadoo Moneyclips FAT TUESDAY SPECIAL! 3 Absolute Cocktails ‑ Buy 1 & Keep The Glass! Kitchen Open Late! Now Delivering All Day! 278‑0034 (limited delivery area)
GONER RECORDS New/ Used LPs, 45s & CDs. We Buy Records! 2152 Young Ave 901‑722‑0095
$CASH 4 JUNK CARS$ Non‑Operating Cars, No Title Needed. 901‑691‑2687
TIN ROOF MEMPHIS
315 Beale St | 901‑527‑9911 Upcoming Shows: 2/2: WILLIAM MICHAEL MORGAN 7:30p 2/2: ROXI LOVE 2/3: SEAN APPLE 2/4: JOHN WESLEY SATTERFIELD 2/5: MAD HATTERS 2/6: OCEAN STREET 2/7: SUPER SUNDAY AT THE ROOF Tix at TinRoofMemphis.com
THE FIXERS An Association of Attorneys Let Us Handle It! 901.761.3045 www.meethefixers.com
DENTIST
with GENERAL DENTAL PRACTICE and SMILES with PORCELAINS at SPT DENTAL CONVENIENTLY located REASONABLY priced at 2682 Lamar Ave SPT Dental, Dr Brown 901‑454‑1200.
Coco & Lola’s MidTown Lingerie Valentines Day = Lingerie! 11 shopping days left!! www.cocoandlola’s.com 5 star rated! * * * * * * 710 S. Cox|901‑425‑5912|Mon‑Sat 11:30‑7:00
COOK/CHEF WANTS TO RENT SPACE
MINGLEWOOD HALL
ON SALE FRIDAY: A Day To Remember [5/6] Wrestling [2/28] 2/4: NXT Wrestling‑ SOLD OUT 2/7: Madeon w/ DJ Scotty B 2/8: Clark Beckham ‑ FREE SHOW 2/12: Judah & The Lion w/ Kristin Diable 2/23‑25: STAX Music Academy 2/26: Sister Hazel 2/27: Gary Clark Jr. w/ Muddy Magnolias 3/9: Wolfmother w/ Deep Valley 3/11: August Burns Red, Between The Buried and Me, The Faceless, Good Tiger 3/12: V3Fights Live MMA 3/26: NPC Elite Physique Championships 4/23: Lucero Family Block Party w/ St. Paul and the Broken Bones 5/18: Snarky Puppy
1884 LOUNGE
2/6: Frank Foster 2/12: The Break‑Up Show 2/14: Drivin’ N’ Cryin’ w/ Great Peacock and Thomas Wynn & the Believers 2/18: HONEYHONEY w/ Cicada Rhythm 2/19: Dylan LeBlanc 2/26: ZOOGMA & Turbo Suit Zoot Suit Tour 3/1: U of M Music Residency w/ The Bluff City Soul Collective 3/8: THAT 1 GUY 3/23: Kung Fu 3/25: Autolux 4/21: Elle King (SOLD OUT) 5/13: Unknown Mortal Orchestra MORE EVENTS AT MINGLEWOODHALL.COM
ROCKHOUSE LIVE Midtown 2586 Poplar 324‑6300 M ‑ Open Mic Tu ‑ 2.50 Pint Night Wed ‑ Comedy Night & 5.99 Steak Night Th‑ Karaoke w/ DJ Egg Roll F ‑ Krulove Sat ‑ Grape Sun ‑ Super Bowl Sycamore View 5709 Ral‑Lag 386‑7222 M ‑ Karaoke & 5.99 Steak Night Tu ‑ River Rat Poker Wed ‑ Singers Anonymous Th ‑ Karaoke w/ Ricky Mac F ‑ Grand Theft Audio Sat ‑ Jonez’n Sun ‑ Super Bowl WINTER SPECIALS BOTH LOCATIONS Monday‑Friday : 11am‑4pm $2 Select Domestics and Fireball $3 Jäger, Jack Fire and well liquors $4 Cuervo and house wines $5 Burger and Fries Tix ‑ rockhouselive.com
DOG GROOMER IN TRAINING I will groom your small to medium size dog for free in exchange for the experience it will offer me. Call Judy 901‑491‑4391.
I BUY RECORDS! 901.359.3102.
HAVE YOU TRIED THAT CRAZY WRAP THING?
In convenience or small grocery store for hotwing and fast food deli. Contact Darlene 901.257.8901
It Works! Independent Distributor Brittany Gersky | 313‑505‑8592 website: www.tummytime.itworks.com email: itworkswithbrittany@outlook.com
TIME 2 CLEAN CARPET CLEANING
VALENTINE’S SPECIAL
3 rooms $40; 5 rooms $75; up to 8 rooms $100. Any room over 12x12 will be considered 2 rooms. Call 314‑5962 for more info
Suboxone Treatment Center for Narcotic Addiction. Patients in Tennessee, Mississippi, and Arkansas are treated. Call 901‑848‑2234 for info & appointment
BUCCANEER LOUNGE since 1967 2/3: Rue Snider, Steven Chopek, Bryan Hartley 2/4: Southern Ave. 2/6: Special Riders & Gringos (early show), Process of Suffocation w. Engulfed in Blackness (late show) 2/7: Super Bowl Party! 2/8: Devil Train 2/9: Dave Cousar
1368 MONROE • 278‑0909
WaterBed Supplies & Sheets Call (901) 496‑0492
DACH ORIENTAL IMPORTS Largest Martial Arts Supplier Since 1979
Kung Fu DVD’s $10.00 www.dach.us • 4491 Summer•901.685.3224 Tues – Sat 11:00 – 6:00
Dinner, Drinks & Carriage Ride Only $87.50 Steak & Shrimp Dinner for Two. Reserve Now for Feb 12th ‑14th. Call 901.543.3278 Westy’s ‑ 346 N. Main Downtown
TUT‑UNCOMMON ANTIQUES 421 N. Watkins St. 278‑8965 1500 sq. ft. of Vintage & Antique Jewelry. Retro Furniture and Accessories. Original Paintings, Sculpture, Pottery, Art & Antiques. We are the only store in the Mid‑South that replaces stones in costume jewelry.
VALENTINE’S SATURDAY ALBUM PROMO ‘ROCK THE WORLD TOUR’ BY ALFRED BROWN’S S O A EXPERIENCE 8 pm at THE PLEXX 380 E H Crump $20 Inside Old Metro Shopping Center BYOB FEB 13 Spotlighting “BLUESMOBILE” This FRI & SAT Live BLUES N JAZZ To Reserve, Please Call 901‑744‑2225 BYOB
OVERTON CHAPEL
Church Rental, Weddings, Receptions, Seminars, Events, Etc. Now Accepting Bookings! 53 E. Parkway S., Memphis, TN 38104 Contact: Charles Lawing 901.359.5398 Contact: Susan Wampler 901.361.7330 State Of The Art Sound, Video, Lighting & Video Streaming.