11.17.16 • 1447TH ISSUE
free All the Protests P6 Latinos in Trumpland P6 20 Years of Erling Jensen P36
DAVID ROSEBERRY
Moonlight P40
Music FUTURE THE MEMPHIS MUSIC INITIATIVE IS PUTTING PROFESSIONAL MUSICIANS IN THE CITY'S CLASSROOMS, WITH DRAMATIC RESULTS.
BMW Certified Pre-Owned
bmwusa.com/cpo
FORGET WRAPPING PAPER, TEAR UP THE ROAD.
November 17-23, 2016
THIS HOLIDAY SEASON ENJOY 0.9% APR FOR 72 MONTHS ON ALL 2013 & 2014 CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED BMW 3 SERIES.*
ROADSHOW BMW 405 N. Germantown Parkway, Cordova, TN 38018 901.365.2584 | roadshowbmw.com *0.9% APR for 72 months at $14.27 per month per $1,000 financed applies to 2013 and 2014 Certified Pre-Owned BMW 3 Series. Offer available from participating BMW dealers to eligible, qualified customers with excellent credit history who meet BMW Financial Services credit requirements. Not all customers will qualify. Available only at authorized BMW Centers through BMW
2
Financial Services, LLC. Valid through 1/3/17. See your authorized BMW Center for complete details and other finance offers.
OUR 1447TH ISSUE 11.17.16
JUSTIN RUSHING Advertising Director CARRIE O’GUIN HOFFMAN Advertising Operations Manager JERRY D. SWIFT Advertising Director Emeritus KELLI DEWITT, CHIP GOOGE Senior Account Executives ALEX KENNER Account Executive ROXY MATTHEWS 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 CELESTE DIXON Accounting Assistant JOSEPH CAREY IT Director KALENA MCKINNEY Receptionist
National Newspaper Association
Association of Alternative Newsmedia
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 9PM –1AM
1-900 BAND NOVEMBER 18 & 19
JANINE LECLAIR NOVEMBER 25
DR. ZARR’S
Amazing Funk Monster NOVEMBER 26
JAMIE BAKER & THE VIPS
DECEMBER 2 & 3
www.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.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
CARRIE BEASLEY Senior Art Director CHRISTOPHER MYERS Advertising Art Director JEREMIAH MATTHEWS, BRYAN ROLLINS Graphic Designers
Why The Fuss? Last Tuesday night, as those of us who were charged with creating the Flyer cover story awaited election returns, a pattern became obvious: Donald Trump was winning in places he wasn’t supposed to win. This was a surprise to nearly everyone — pundits, pollsters, Democrats, and Republicans, alike. The Wall Street Journal later reported that even Trump and his top staff expected to lose. As Jackson Baker wrote and rewrote the topper on his cover story, and as our print deadline of midnight approached, it appeared that Hillary Clinton’s path to the White House was almost nonexistent. We didn’t know Trump had won, but it sure seemed likely. For those of us in the Flyer newsroom, and indeed for much of the country, it was truly a “WTF?” moment. How did everybody get it so wrong? How did this already bizarre campaign get even more bizarre? So, we went with the now-infamous “WTF?” cover and went home to bed. The next morning, the calls and comments started flooding our phonelines and our Facebook page. We got dozens of emails. For the first few hours, almost without exception, the messages from our readers were overwhelmingly, even heart-warmingly supportive, the general sentiment being “Thank you for expressing exactly what I feel.” “Thank you for being a sane voice in the wilderness,” etc. Then, as the papers began getting delivered to the outer reaches of our circulation — the suburbs, north Mississippi — the other side began to be heard from. “How could you put such horrible profanity on your cover?” “What about the children who see this?” And my favorite, variations of: “I’m a long-time, loyal reader, and I will never buy your publication again!” The irony of Trump supporters worrying about “profanity” was apparently lost in translation. Then we started getting photos of Flyers being tossed into dumpsters and ugly personal threats. So it went for a couple days — back and forth — but overall, the positive reactions far, far outweighed the negative. Trump’s election shook the great majority of our regular readers to the core. The Flyer’s “base” is, and always has been, thinking, progressive people — accepting of racial, gender, and cultural diversity, environmentally aware, pro-women’s rights. Though it’s possible he may surprise us, Trump represents the polar opposite of all of that. Indeed, his first announced staff appointment was Steve Bannon, an anti-Semite who runs Brietbart.com, a white supremacist website. His possible choices to head the EPA (a climate change denier), Justice (Rudy Giugliani), Immigration (a “build the wall” guy), Interior (Sarah Palin!) are a further indication of just how hard-line this administration may be. Hispanics and Muslims are terrified of deportation and harassment. African Americans and Jews fear the legitimizing of alt-right racism. LGBTQ folks fear renewed discrimination and a repeal of their right to marry. Environmentalists fear a rollback to the era when corporations could pollute our air and water with impunity. Pro-choice voters fear the overturning of Roe v. Wade. The people who care about these things are our people — Flyer people. The Trump administration will likely challenge progressive ideas in ways we haven’t seen in decades, so we all had better be ready to stand up and be heard. It isn’t Democrat N E WS & O P I N I O N versus Republican anymore, it’s sanity NY TIMES CROSSWORD - 4 versus a rollback to the Dark Ages. THE FLY-BY - 6 And yes, it’s frightening to think what POLITICS -10 could happen to our country, but it’s EDITORIAL - 12 also an opportunity to get organized and VIEWPOINT - 13 reconnect with our core beliefs. We won’t COVER — “FUTURE MUSIC” back down, and neither will our readers BY CHRIS DAVIS - 14 and supporters. Thank the folks who disSTE P P I N’ O UT play our racks. Patronize and thank our WE RECOMMEND - 18 advertisers. They’re a big part of this. MUSIC - 20 We’re Memphis progressives, we’re a AFTER DARK - 22 community, and we need to recognize the CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 26 inherent power we have if we speak out FOOD - 36 SPIRITS - 39 as one. So, onward into the breach, my FILM - 40 friends. WTF. C L AS S I F I E D S - 44 Bruce VanWyngarden LAST WORD - 47 brucev@memphisflyer.com
CONTENTS
BRUCE VANWYNGARDEN Editor SUSAN ELLIS Managing Editor JACKSON BAKER, MICHAEL FINGER Senior Editors TOBY SELLS Associate Editor CHRIS MCCOY Film and TV Editor CHRIS SHAW Music Editor RICHARD J. ALLEY Book Editor CHRIS DAVIS, JOSHUA CANNON, MICAELA WATTS Staff Writers JESSE DAVIS, LESLEY YOUNG Copy Editors JULIE RAY Calendar Editor
3
For Release
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation 620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018 For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550 For Release Monday, April 4, 2016
Crossword
Edited by Will Shortz
No. 0229
Crossword ACROSS 26 Kennedy and 46 Gap fillers, of ACROSS 37 Auto with the 60 Once-ubiquitous slogan red fixture seen 1 Apelike Bush 41, but sorts “Zoom-zoom” along London 1gotcha” 1991 Scorsese/ 7 “Ah, streets 38 ___ populi 11 4.0 is a great 62 Out of neutral no other U.S. one, inDe brief Niro 39 2/29/16, e.g. … 64 Feel sick 47 “My response or a hint to the 14 Frigid time, 65 Become less full, presidents circled squares collaboration climatically as the moon was …,” in this puzzle speaking 66 Quality of a diva 15 Repair 41 German article 9 Something informally 67 ___ Equis 28 Chuck 16 Male sheep 42 Louvre pyramid (Mexican beer) architect 17 Witty remark exciting to play 68 Things dyed for 18 The past, from 44 “Well, I ___ hand Easter 48 “Grey’s Anatom 29 “Mum’s the a feminist to you …” with 45 itRegret 69 Call for help standpoint 20 Social slight actress with fi word” 2115 Crafty Fragile Norse god 46 Gullibility fabric 1 KidsDOWN in the fam 22 Loud laughs 48 Kidnappers’ straight Emmy demands 2 Clickable 31 image Little, in made from 23 “No more for me, thanks” 50 How to address a 3 Waiter’s handout nominations king 26 ___ Crunch certain plant 4 ___ pentameter Lockerbie (Quaker cereal) of a 5 Long, long ___ 28 Milan opera fibers51 Area rectangle = 50 Hands on dec 6 Ping-Pong table house length x ___ divider 32 Cross collections, 31 Reason to stare 52 Tiny bit off intoTough space 16 leather 7 on“CantheweA/Cturnin e.g. 51 Hand wringer’s 54 “Quickly!,” in an 34 Mine find here?!” order 28 “I’m ___ it” 55 Ballad, e.g. 40 Somewhat 35 Finnish telecom 8 Look for (McDonald’s cry giant Amscrayed 56 Helper: Abbr. 17 43 Aquafina rival slogan) 9 Fermi of physics 57 Edible part of a 33 Roughneck’s sunflower 47 Lipton item 29 Scent ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 10 Newspaper attached to a staffers, in brief 18 One getting 30 Johnny Rotten’s 52 string workplace 58 “Iliad,”Flip e.g. punk band, with 11 Where the 9/11 49 Scooby-Doo’s pal “the” Memorial is lots of take-out12 The 59 “Iliad” locale 31 Scary experience 51 Becomes fuller, “P” of 53 Bridge tolls, e for an user inLSDthe far as the moon PRNDL 35 It’s orders? 61 Female sheep 32 Intense hatred 13 Schumer and 52 Apple tablet Poehler northwest 33 What male 62 Tech giant with a 53 Its postal lions have that 19 Edward VII or 19 Highly striped blue logo abbreviation lionesses lack competitive, as a is also an personality exclamation 36 Wall St. debut 63 VIII, in India: 21 Possible 37 Product of Greek Actress VardalosDOWN result of a cracked pipe Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past Abbr. culture? puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 24 More macho Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. 1 They might 25 ___ gin fizz 20 ___ nullius Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords. 27 Tropical insect 38 Moderately dry that “marches” spook spelunk (no one’s 39 True property) 2 Where the San Antonio Spurs 21 Pioneering 40 Splitting words used to play labor leader 41 “Mr. ___” (Styx Samuel 3 Blowhard hit) 22 Was suddenly 4 Job ad inits. successful 42 Blow hole? Less Fuel….Less Pollution….Less Stress 5 Broccoli bit 24 Nullius ___ (of no 45 Winner’s prize on legal force) “RuPaul’s Drag 6 Like pain after 25 Like NSFW links U” treatment, oft 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
14 17
10
11
29
24
36
40
43
45
47
48
50
59
41
44
46
58
37
39
42
33
27
31
38
32
22
26
35
13
19
25
30
34
12
16
21
23
52
9
18
20
28
8
15
49
51
53
54
55
56
60
61
62
64
65
66
67
68
69
57
63
PUZZLE BY JOEL FAGLIANO
South Line at Central Station introduces a new way of living in downtown’s newest destination. Live better on the South End ... everyone’s doing it. Pet Friendly Eco-Friendly Features November 17-23, 2016
Your very own orchard
@SouthLineMemphis @SouthLine38103
4
@SouthLineMemphis
636 South Front Street Memphis, TN 38103 901.486.1595 southlinememphis.com
T H A Y E R
H A T E R S
I V A N I V
D R I N K S T O
R O M A N I A N
E C O N O M I C
S J U S E I T M L L T I L E T S R E P S S E E K A M U P K I D O S O W S S H T A I S T L P A E A N
T A M I A M I L E O P A R D
I D E N T I T Y
N E S A T S E A
D E R M I S
D I P S O
C O S T A
A L P A C H I A S N L L O V E A W A S I L R A L B I E N T O B
L E A S H L A W
F O R K E E P S
I N T U N E
T E E M E D
SHARE THE RIDE
7 Nails
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S P L A Y
D I S C S
T O O M E Y
I G U A N A S
F O N Z
H O V H E V U L O S L K S A I L R E A E R B
L E G O
E M R R O P E D W A Y A B O V E A U N T I E E N V I N E E T N I T A I S O O P O L I T I C O P H N O B U T S A Y A A I R S R O I N PROGRAM Z O O L T U R E G A W K E R T G I C H C R A S H S I T E B MIDSOUTHCLEANAIR.ORG O A T E A S E U M P I E E X A R M I A N D E N N Y
R E M A P
8 Stop sign? 9 Unwanted attention 10 Checks out 11 Adds with a whisk
12 Makeshift coaster, mayb
E S P Y S
13 Reason to hol your nose 14 Gen ___ (millennials)
21 Yellow-flowere plant producin sticky resin
THE PERFECT HOLIDAY GIFT
Just Got Better.
GIVE A ONE-YEAR SUBSCRIPTION TO MEMPHIS MAGAZINE!
PLACE YOUR ORDER ONLINE AT MEMPHISMAGAZINE.COM OR CALL 901.521.9000. Orders must be received by Monday, December 19th to guarantee delivery by December 24th.
USE CODE: HOLFLY16
NEWS & OPINION
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
For just $15 your gift recipient will receive 12 issues of the South’s best city magazine, including our annual Dining Guide and City Guide PLUS a 3.5 oz bar of delicious Dinstuhl’s Milk Chocolate.
5
THE
fly-by
f ly on the wall { N EW TU M B LEWEAVE Tumbleweaves — the lost wigs and all-too-familiar hair pieces we see blowing down the sidewalk — are so 2015. The future belongs to abandoned sex toys. This adorable, pink butt plug was spotted in the Cooper-Young neighborhood, standing bolt upright in the middle of the street.
November 17-23, 2016
This raises a lot of questions. Questions like, Did it just fall out? Were words exchanged? Did somebody say, “It’s not you, it’s me?” Anyway, if you or somebody you love lost a butt plug while visiting the Cooper-Young neighborhood, don’t call me. I didn’t touch that thing.
6
TRUMPED Here’s a weird headline from The Commercial Appeal that seems to say a little something about America’s clueless white patriarchy. “County elects woman, Trump,” tells the story of an unusual Texas town that voted to put Donald J. Trump in the White House, while also voting to put some woman somewhere else entirely. In the first sentence, we’re told the woman’s also a black Democrat who was running for sheriff. The woman (aka Zena Stephens), finally gets a name down in the fourth paragraph.
By Chris Davis. Email him at davis@memphisflyer.com.
Questions, Answers + Attitude Edited by Toby Sells
W E E K T H AT W A S By Flyer staff
Protesting, a protest, and a protest Memphians let their voices be heard all over town this week. Bitcoin, anyone? (Seriously, anyone?) If you’re looking for a little non-Donald-Trump-related, WTF?kinda news, here it is: Memphis got a Bitcoin ATM last week. The machine from Coinsource is the first in the city and the third in the state. So, if you know how Bitcoin works and you, y’know, have some, head on out to the ATM close to the corner of Dudley and Linden. Take it to the street Trump’s election was marked with rallies, unity walks, and protests in Memphis last week, just as in many other major cities. Hundreds gathered in at least three separate actions at Planned Parenthood, downtown, and Midtown. “This is the worst election result we’ve had in my lifetime and maybe the country’s history,” said Congressman Steve Cohen to a group gathered at Overton Park Friday. “It’s scary the racist
Trumping Latinos
and xenophobic statements that were said about people by candidates, and the tolerance of them. It’s really important that people come out and show that they don’t believe in this and they don’t endorse it.” Memphis Police Department officers offered security and traffic protection during the actions. Dairy plan thumbed down Midtown neighbors scored a win Thursday against a development they said would bring more noise and more congestion from the Prairie Farms dairy facility on Madison, though dairy owners said they will carry on with their expansion plans. Turner Holdings LLC, owner of the milk plant, hoped to convert a now-empty back lot adjacent to the plant into a space for “vehicle maintenance, repair, warehousing, and temporary parking of trucks and trailers.” The company is beginning a $10 million expansion of the 80-year-old dairy that would add capacity and about 30 percent more
{
CITY REPORTER By Joshua Cannon
Memphis Latinos fear for the lives they’ve built in an uncertain future ahead. Shaking in the cold with his mother, Alex Ortiz, 10, stood in his underwear at the Mexico border — his father’s alcoholism and death threats behind them in Honduras, the United States in front of their eyes. He gripped her hand as they crossed the river into Eagle’s Pass, Texas, where they were granted a six-month stay at a U.S. Border Patrol Station. Soon they’d be reconnected with family in Memphis, and, soon, they would overstay their visas. “I remember driving over the bridge into Memphis from Arkansas and seeing the skyline,” Ortiz, now 24, says. “I had never seen anything like it. Coming here as a young kid, it was all an adventure to me. I just saw it as an experience to explore a new place.” It was 2003 when Ortiz and his mother arrived in the United States, nine years prior to President Barack Obama’s executive order that founded the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) immigration program. The initiative protects from deportation those who emigrated to the U.S. before the age of 16, and grants them work authorization and a social security number. About 13,000 immigrants have qualified for DACA in Tennessee, said Lisa Nikolaus, the policy manager with the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition. With the same executive authority that created the initiative, President-elect Donald Trump could, and likely will, sign it
Alex Ortiz, now 24, emmigrated to Memphis when he was 10 years old. away. Trump said last week immigration would be a top priority and said Sunday he’ll immediately deport 2 million-3 million undocumented immigrants. He’s standing firm on rhetoric that fueled his campaign: “When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best … they’re rapists.” Overturning DACA would
truck traffic to the site. Neighbors and interested Midtowners protested, telling members of the Land Use Control Board (LUCB) last week that the dairy’s trucks are loud, smelly, and already create congestion around the site, just a stone’s throw from the revitalized Overton Square entertainment district. Many said they hoped the dairy would move out of Midtown completely. The LUCB denied the company’s request. But the Memphis City Council will have the final vote on the matter. Standing Rock blocked Security guards blocked access at the Clifford Davis Odell Horton Federal Building to Memphis citizens protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline. About 50 protestors hoped to enter the building and file their grievances with the Memphis offices of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Ganja green light Arkansas voted last week to approve medical marijuana for residents with qualifying conditions, becoming the first state in the Bible Belt to do so. The Arkansas Medical Marijuana Amendment, or Issue 6, was approved on a margin of 53 percent-47 percent.
Correction: A story last week incorrectly stated the homeless youth shelter proposed by OUTMemphis was to be built in Orange Mound. The shelter is planned for a site near Cooper-Young.
7
NEWS & OPINION
have devastating consequences, Nikolaus said. “It would have a ripple effect not just for these people and their families, but to the businesses that employ them, to our local economy,” Nikolaus says. “It would drive them underground and be a huge devastation for our state.” Ortiz, who grew from a fifth-grader who couldn’t speak English to the valedictorian of his high school class, was a sophomore in college on a full scholarship when he qualified for DACA. The program granted Ortiz opportunities like interning with Congressman Bennie G. Thompson, a member of the Committee on Homeland Security. “DACA took me from having a lot of insecurity about what I was going to do with my life to having some ground to stand on,” Ortiz says. Mauricio Calvo, executive director of Latino Memphis, said he doesn’t think the president-elect will be able to implement many of his complex and expensive campaign promises. He fears, though, Trump will make immigrants the scapegoat for the country’s economic challenges. Calvo hopes the Trump administration will instead create strategic comprehensive immigration reform through bipartisan efforts. “Latinos are, and will remain, an important part of our local economy,” Calvo said. “In many ways, we are literally and figuratively helping to build our amazing city, the place that we all now call home.”
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Weirich pleads ignorance Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich said publicly last week she had no knowledge of any payment made to a witness as she prosecuted Andrew Thomas. Thomas’ case is now under review by a federal appeals court here. At issue is a $750 payment made to a witness in the case. If Weirich knew about the payment, she would have had to disclose it to Thomas’ attorneys during his murder trial here in 2001. But the fact was never revealed to his attorneys or to juries hearing the case. But Weirich claimed she never knew about the payment, an assertion backed up by a letter to the appeals court last week by Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery.
YOU { CAN Wet Dream DO A LOT WITH CITY REPORTER B y To b y S e l l s
Memphis likely won’t see water taxis any time soon.
$1
Visit give365memphis.org to see how a dollar a day can help you make a positive impact in Memphis.
November 17-23, 2016
Join us! 2017 grant theme announcement party at Clayborn Temple on December 7
m o o r l l a B e s e n i l a B Book your Holiday
Parties with us!
The Best Catered Affairs Begin Here... 8
www.balineseballroom.com
330 N. Main Street • Memphis, TN • 901.522.1144 Jon Yoder Photography
Many leaders have imagined the whir of outboard motors pushing water taxis through the Wolf River Harbor for at least six years, but a new state report douses that dream with a cool glass of muddy river water. High capital costs and heavily subsidized operations highlight the report from the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT). But the death knell for the project, which Riverfront Development Corp. (RDC) president Benny Lendermon said he heard at least six months ago, was the disqualification of amphibious vehicles (or duck boats) from the project. Water taxis first appeared in paper here in 2010, a part of the Mud Island River Park Land Use Study. They popped up again two years later in the Uptown West Master Plan. The very basic idea was to run the taxis up and down the Memphis riverfront, connecting key sites. Riders, mainly tourists, would catch one of three water taxis (large pontoon boats with outboard motors) at Beale Street Landing, according to the report authored by national transportation consulting firm TransSystems. The taxi would make a stop at Mud Island and continue to a landing dock under the A. W. Willis Bridge for walkable access to Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid. This plan would require taxi riders to enter and exit the boats and traverse walkways, which would all have to meet standards set forth in the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). This, Lendermon said, increased the cost of the project considerably and put it out of reach. He imagined a water taxi service that used large amphibious vehicles, commonly called duck boats. Using the boats would only require riders to enter and exit the vehicles once and
Some leaders have long dreamed of having water taxis here.
without the need for dock landings. But the study said federal funds would not support the vehicles because they are considered tourist vehicles and not strictly for transportation services. “The bottom line is if you’re going to say amphibious vehicles are not allowed and not funded by the Federal Transit Authority, then there’s no way a water taxi system is feasible in Memphis,” Lendermon said. The study projects about 21,000 one-way trips per year. One-way tickets would cost $5. Round-trip tickets would be $7. Here’s where the report drops a cold bucket of reality. Building the dock landings, buying the boats, and more would cost between $4 million and $12 million. That kind of money would get the project off the ground, and then it would cost about $660,000 a year to run it. Furthermore, the study says the water taxi service would never become a self-sustaining business venture. Each one-way trip (from Beale Street Landing to Bass Pro or back the other way) would require a subsidy of $26.63, or about $580,300 annually. If fares from taxi riders were to cover the project’s entire cost, oneway tickets would have to be $31, and there would be no round-trip tickets available, the study says. This, of course, would severely limit ridership and would likely make the project unfeasible. Lendermon said the study, which took 18 months to complete but no local money, ends the conversation of a Memphis water taxi service.
care for one another
churchhealth.org/give AD.Flyer.Half.Page.Rebrand.8.24.16.indd 1
Charles Dickens
901.327.6000 LiteracyMidSouth.org
1256 Union Avenue Suite 200 Memphis, TN 38104 901-252-3434
WE’RE ON A ROLL The City of Memphis is increasing our recycling efforts through our new CART program. In the coming months, all single-family homes (and dwellings with four or fewer units) will receive a new recycling cart. Funded in Part By:
TO LEARN MORE, VISIT:
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
of which every man has plenty; not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some.”
Donate Blood. Support Research. Get Paid.
NEWS & OPINION
“Reflect upon your present blessings,
10/3/2016 9:16:49 AM
www.MemphisRecycles.com
9
POLITICS By Jackson Baker
Winds of Change The unexpected victory of Donald Trump in the presidential race will likely open up career opportunities for fellow Republicans — including some in the Memphis area. One possible beneficiary is lawyer John Ryder, a longtime eminence in GOP affairs. Ryder has served as local Republican chairman, as a member of the Republican National Committee from Tennessee, and, currently, as general counsel to the RNC. After the census of 2010, Ryder headed up the Republican Party’s redistricting efforts nationwide, and the map he helped create has strongly reinforced the GOP’s hold on districts in the U.S. House of Representatives. A partner at the Harris Shelton law firm of Memphis, Ryder was named Republican Lawyer of the Year in a ceremony in Washington, D.C., last month. That follows a year in which he served as a Trump delegate to the GOP convention in Cleveland and was a key member of that conventions’ rules committee. Considering that Ryder, as general counsel, has essentially been the right-hand man of RNC
John Ryder (l) with Reince Priebus at RNC Memphis meeting in 2014 chairman Reince Priebus, and that Priebus has just been designated by Trump to be the new president’s chief of staff, the question arises: Is Ryder a prospect to succeed Priebus as head of the RNC? “That would be a decision reached by the presidentelect,” Ryder said Monday in a telephone conversation that took place as he drove to Nashville, where he teaches a course at Vanderbilt. “We’re going to see what happens.
A lot of different paths are going to open up in the next few weeks, and I’m looking to where I can best be of service to the republic.” Ryder emphasized that “nothing’s been discussed so far.” As for the possibility of his being offered other positions in the official GOP network that stands to be expanded in the new administration, Ryder said, “I’m not particularly looking for anything. I’m not particularly expecting anything.” Elsewhere locally, Shelby County Commissioner Terry Roland, who served as Trump’s West Tennessee chairman, said he expected to have a say in whatever patronage positions might be available in his bailiwick. Meanwhile, Tennessee Democrats may be looking to change direction in the wake of yet another election in which they failed to advance. Except for one upset win, that of Democrat Dwayne Thompson over GOP state Representative Steve McManus in state House District 96 (Cordova, Germantown), Democratic candidates lost all the legislative races in which they challenged Republicans. The net result was a loss of one seat in the House, which means that there will be 25 Democrats and 74 Republicans in the House come January; the state Senate
Salvation Army Battle of the Bells Pre-Party 11.16 / 6:30pm
Sister Lucille 11.17 / 7pm
November 17-23, 2016
Chris Ingram Comedy Show 11.18 / 9pm
Common Rarity 11.19 / 7pm
Night of R&B and Soul 11.19 / 9pm
Memphis Blues Society Jam Night 11.20 / 7pm
Lee Sharp Homecoming Show 11.23 / 7pm
10
126 Beale Street Memphis, TN 38103 901-529-0007 hardrock.com/memphis
JACKSON BAKER
Local Republicans see new opportunities beckoning; state Democratic structure may be in for serious overhauling.
THE BEST
POLITICS
ENTERTAINMENT IN TUNICA
GOO GOO DOLLS
CELTIC WOMAN
WITH SPECIAL GUEST SAFETYSUIT DECEMBER 2
HOME FOR CHRISTMAS – THE SYMPHONY TOUR DECEMBER 10
THE COMMODORES
BLACKBERRY SMOKE
DECEMBER 30
WITH SPECIAL GUEST THE STEEL WOODS FEBRUARY 11
ON SALE THIS FRIDAY AT 10AM
ON SALE THIS FRIDAY AT 10AM
CHRIS JANSON
BARENAKED LADIES
FEBRUARY 17
MAY 5
UPCOMING SHOWS December 17 | Boyz II Men & En Vogue January 6 | Willie Nelson & Family March 3 | Dropkick Murphys Tickets available online at Ticketmaster.com or by calling 1-800-745-3000.
Must be 21 years or older to gamble or attend events. Know When To Stop Before You Start.® Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700. ©2016, Caesars License Company, LLC. All rights reserved.
7777_T3_4.575x12.4_4c_Ad_V3.indd 1
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
the winning campaign. As indicated, this was the upset win of Thompson, a genial human resources administrator and longtime Democratic activist, over state Representative McManus, a GOP legislative mainstay, in District 96. Under the circumstances of the 2016 election cycle, which not only strengthened the GOP super-majority in Tennessee but put Donald Trump into the presidency and gave the Republicans control of the U.S. Senate and House, it is astonishing that Thompson should have won election to the state House from a suburban Shelby County district. It is doubly astonishing that he unseated an incumbent Republican to do so. Not only was Thompson the only Democrat in Tennessee to unseat a Republican, he believes himself to be the only Democrat in the South to have done so. Thompson’s victory over McManus, who had been serving as chairman of the state House banking and insurance committee, was by the total of 351 votes out of almost 28,000 cast, and that ultrathin margin can be attributed to oldfashioned work ethic on the winner’s side and what has to be reckoned as complacency and over-confidence on the loser’s. McManus’ campaign war-chest totaled $155,754.59 as of the third-quarter financial-disclosure deadline, dwarfing Thompson’s $5,088.20. Thompson later received an infusion of financial aid from the Tennessee Democratic Party: $1,500 in a direct outlay on top of a $13,100 in-kind contribution in the form of a “polling survey.” In October, Thompson’s total expenditures of $13,817 were almost equal to McManus’, and the Democratic challenger targeted his campaign money well, spending some of it on some modest internet advertising that pointed out, among other things, the fact that he had a military record. McManus’ confidence may also have stemmed from the fact that he had easily dispatched Thompson in their first matchup, in 2014, with 62 percent of the vote to Thompson’s 38 percent. Thompson was determined to prove that District 96 was a swing district, composed of a working-class/middleclass mix that was susceptible to a Democratic appeal. He boasts that he and his campaign team knocked on a total of 12,000 doors in the course of the campaign, focusing on issues ranging from Cordova’s traffic problems to skepticism about charter schools and the need for reviving Governor Bill Haslam’s dormant Insure Tennessee program for Medicaid expansion, which, he emphasized to voters, had been blocked in McManus’ committee in the special legislative session of 2015.
NEWS & OPINION
remains at its current level: five Democrats and 28 Republicans. The Republican legislative super-majority holds tight. And that’s not a satisfactory set of affairs for Bill Freeman, the wealthy Nashville businessman who is the chief Democratic donor in Tennessee and, as he made clear in a visit to Memphis earlier this month, has ambitions of running for governor in 2018. Likening the party’s electoral showing to a dismal season in the NFL, Freeman told the Nashville Tennessean that, “we’ve got to look at every option, including a new chair.” The current chair, Mary Mancini of Nashville, has no intention of giving up the job, however, and has said she will run for another two-year term. One of Freemen’s closest associates is former state party chairman Chip Forrester, who has served several chairmanship terms in different decades, who served Freeman as campaign manager in his unsuccessful race for Nashville mayor last year, and will probably head up a Freeman gubernatorial campaign in 2018 if there is one. But there is no indication so far that Forrester is looking at another run at the party chairmanship, and Freeman is talking up Holly McCall, who early in the year declared for House District 65, then held by bad-boy Republican incumbent Jeremy Durham, an accused sexual predator. She eventually lost her bid for the seat to Sam Whitson, the Republican who ousted Durham in the GOP primary. In a letter to members of the state Democratic executive committee emailed on Monday, Freeman put the kernel of his argument this way: “First and foremost, for all the effort that we focused on in Tennessee, we gained absolutely no ground in the state senate and had a net loss of one seat in the state house. Instead of moving the needle forward, we went backward. This is unacceptable. … We should have done better and done it more robustly. I believe we need new leadership to do so.” Of Mancini, Freeman said, “She is a fine person and clearly committed to serving our party, but we have failed to grow as we all had hoped for during these past two years. … The poor results we have seen this past Tuesday show clearly that we need a change.” Pointedly, Freeman made reference to “a critical statewide race for the United States Senate in 2018,” and said, “We must rebuild our party to have the infrastructure in place so that our Democrat nominees for governor and U.S. senator have the party machinery in place to succeed.” Tennessee Democrats — and Mancini — did, however, have one legislative victory in the recent election that nobody saw coming except the participants in
11
11/14/16 4:35 PM
E D ITO R IAL
Lesson Lost So, all right, what happened? Hillary Clinton was supposed to win. And we mean that word in its original sense — as a close cousin to the word “assumed.” Everybody so supposed — not just Democrats, but a substantial number
November 17-23, 2016
of Republicans, as well, including Donald Trump himself, who in his day-after photo op with President Obama in the Oval Office, had that deer-in-theheadlights look that we associate with the rudest of shocks. Let us posit this as a truism: If you’re the Democratic nominee running for President, you should not only use previous presidents of your party as surrogates on the stump, you should — very clearly and seriously — take their advice on strategy. In the aftermath of Hillary Clinton’s defeat, it got leaked about that her very husband, former President Bill Clinton, had advised strongly that she hit the rustbelt states of Michigan, Wisconsin, et al. hard in the last days of the campaign, not only with her physical presence but with specific reference to the hardships of economic privation and depressed wages and job opportunities in those states and with even more specific remedies for those circumstances. To their everlasting discredit, the powers-that-be in her campaign dismissed this advice — presumably as something old-fashioned and left over from Bill Clinton’s own former successes with those themes in those states. Remember, “It’s the economy, stupid”? Well, it was the economy, still. Nobody in charge seemed to remember that Secretary Clinton’s Democratic primary opponent, Bernie Sanders, defeated her in those states with those issues. Nobody in charge seemed to imagine that her Republican opponent could defeat her in the same states with the same issues. But
12
he did. Instead, the Clinton campaign seemed fixated on the concept of Donald Trump as misbehaver and sexual marauder and devoted her late TV advertising almost entirely to that idea — hoping, it would seem, that the suburban professional classes that the campaign was focused on instead would be affronted by evidence of Trump’s boorishness and could thereby be weaned away from their Republican voting habits. As an example of just how amnesiac the Clinton campaign was, nobody seemed to recall that daily accusations of sexual impropriety, followed up with an actual impeachment, had failed utterly to dent the public popularity of the aforesaid President Bill Clinton in 1998. That was the year, post-Monica Lewinsky, when the Democrats went on, after all the GOP’s fuss and moralistic bluster, to run up numerous successes in the off-year congressional elections. This was just one mistake by the Hillary Clinton campaign, but it was a fundamental one. Not all the largesse from big-money donors in the world (and her campaign got much of it, vastly more than Trump) could substitute for the kind of focus on working-class economic issues that has guided every victorious Democratic national campaign from FDR on. The section of the voting population that Mitt Romney so arrogantly called “the 47 percent” is still the source of Democratic victories. There is no “Stronger Together” without this component. There is no Together at all.
C O M M E N TA R Y b y D a n z i g e r
NATIONAL CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM PRESENTS
V I E W P O I N T B y Fr a n k M u r t a u g h
Doomsday Squared Donald Trump’s victory was horrific enough to make the Cubs’ triumph look benign to a Cardinal fan. Aroldis Chapman. (Please fates, let this photo-op happen.) Long live the Cubs. Honestly. Should Lucifer himself show up at my doorstep, I’d trade four more championships for Wrigleyville to reverse the election result that makes Donald Trump America’s 45th president. Barack Obama brought intelligence, decency, compassion, grace, and humor to the White House, qualities we know (especially now) are not a given. Obama was not a perfect president (we’ve yet to see one), but he became a face and voice for the United States that the rest of the world grew to like. It’s hard to imagine our friends in South America, Europe, or Asia warming up to the idea of Trump in their living rooms. This is unhealthy in an age when the world is connected more than it’s ever been. Oceans are no longer enough to practice isolationism. Build walls, and, instead of keeping the baddies out, you’re actually closing yourself in. Donald Trump has no conception of this, especially in metaphorical terms.
I considered Hillary Clinton’s election last week a certainty. Foolish me.
TH E AME RI CAN SLAVE TRADE FROM 18 0 8 TO 18 6 5
8 boards total,
Slave Auction ; ca. 1831; The Historic New Orleans Collection, 1941.3
AN EXHIBITION FROM THE HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION
ENDS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
My single greatest fear about a Trump presidency? The reports that Trump doesn’t read. Take away interest and cu450 MULBERRY • MEMPHIS, TN 38103 • CIVILRIGHTSMUSEUM.ORG riosity, and a man is little more than the flesh and blood you see in front of you. If CURATED BY MADE POSSIBLE IN PART BY we are not learning, if we are not exploring, we are settling for standards defined by others, standards that may or may not enhance the growth of mankind. And we are prone to limiting exploration in the interest of a perceived comfort zone. This is the world I believe Trump embraces. There is no “art of the deal” in world Love one another. It’s that simple. NCRM-MphsFlyer_PurchasedLivesAD10-10-16.indd 1 11/8/16 10:37 AM affairs. Profit alone cannot and should First Congregational Church True Story: not be the compass guiding an American president. Compromise. Flexibility. A willingness to listen to those who disagree. These are the traits of this counShe wanted her retirement try’s greatest presidents: Washington, years to be her best years. As Lincoln, both Roosevelts. They made a volunteer at First Congo policy — and got their way — without walls, metaphorical or otherwise. www.firstcongo.com I’m prepared to endure the Chicago Phone: 901.278.6786 Cubs’ reign. Donald Trump’s? Like so 1000 South Cooper much of the world, I intend to hold tight Memphis, TN 38104 to the people and values I love. Frank Murtaugh is managing editor of Sunday Worship 10:30 am 13 Memphis magazine and covers sports for the Flyer.
she’s creating the legacy she dreamed of.
NEWS & OPINION
How quickly doomsday is redefined. As a third-generation St. Louis Cardinals fan, my universe was permanently altered on November 2nd, when the Chicago Cubs ended 108 years of miserable baseball and won the World Series. Billy Goats and Bartman became afterthoughts when Theo Epstein’s latest creation took Game 7 in Cleveland with perhaps the best team assembled since the late-1990s New York Yankees. For those of you insisting we should all — Cardinal fans included — take at least a small measure of joy in the Cubbies finally escaping lovable-loser status, I’ll remind you that a significant part of Cubs culture is hating anything remotely associated with the franchise of Musial, Gibson, Ozzie, and Yadi. In marital terms, make an enemy of my wife, and you’ve made two. Dark baseball days ahead for yours truly. Then, of course, came November 8th. And perspective on misery. On madness. On the reshaping of what we considered order, normalcy. Watching the election returns Tuesday night felt like slowly impaling myself with a long sword, however impressive CNN’s John King’s mastery of the “Magic Wall” might have been. A person unfit for the U.S. presidency in ways we didn’t even measure an election cycle ago — he grabbed their what? — was elected to be leader of the free world. As North Carolina and Florida went full Donald, as Michigan and Wisconsin established their Trumpish standards, the world was left to consider the next four years under the watch of a man whose disregard for those who don’t look like himself (especially his actual self) threatens the comfort level of every such person in the country. I’ve felt the shock of elections before. When Peyton Manning’s Heisman Trophy was given to Charles Woodson in 1997, I told myself I’d never again consider the result of a vote a certainty. Human opinion is too varied, too cynical, too easily persuaded by today’s weather, stock market report, or promise of walls to keep out all the baddies. But I considered Hillary Clinton’s election last week a certainty. Foolish me. Foolish 60 million of us. The irony of these two violent twists — as I see them — of American history’s timeline? Hillary Clinton is a Cubs fan. Think she wouldn’t have relished welcoming Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, and friends to the White House in a few months? Now we’ll likely see the American president insist on comparing his hand size with that of Jake Arrieta or
C OVE R STO RY BY C H R I S DAV IS
FUTUREMusic
DAVID ROSEBERRY
THE MEMPHIS MUSIC INITIATIVE IS PUTTING PROFESSIONAL MUSICIANS IN THE CITY'S CLASSROOMS, WITH DRAMATIC RESULTS.
I
November 17-23, 2016
t’s a Thursday morning, and the band room at White Station Middle School is filling up fast. “Look, a baby bass,” one young player shouts, joyously embracing a new smaller-sized upright and plucking strings up and down the neck. “It’s adorable,” another student squeals, and an admiring crowd gathers round. The classroom starts to hum with conversation and the sound of instruments coming out of their cases. In an instant, the practice space is too full to navigate easily, which means it’s time for orchestra director Kristi Harrington to raise her baton and start the class. Harrington is a challenging director, pushing her sixth-, seventh-, and 14 eighth-grade students to play music at a high school level. While Harrington
MMI fellows offer music instruction and mentoring in 37 Memphis schools. works on a Beethoven piece with most of her orchestra, Marisa Polesky, a first-chair violinist for the Memphis Symphony Orchestra, takes a smaller group of string players out into the hall. Polesky is one of the Memphis Music Initiative’s 13 music-in-school fellows.
Her presence has made it possible for White Station’s students to explore chamber music. She works with several small performance ensembles within the orchestra, giving them the tools they need to work autonomously, leading their own rehearsals without
the aid of a conductor. “Working in small groups and working independently is a really big deal,” Harrington says. “It helps the orchestra, because when the players come back together as a group, they’re better listeners. It improves every aspect of their playing and adds an extra layer to what we do.” “What did everybody think about that piece we just played,” Polesky asks her students after a solid first runthrough of a potential performance piece. The unanimous answer from her students: “It’s too easy!” Memphis Music Initiative founder Darren Isom asks a radical question about music education: “How do we make sure music is seen as a fundamental part of a proper
“Music teaches you about life, and life teaches you about music.� This isn’t some proposed magic bullet aimed at improving ACT scores. MMI’s teaching fellows aren’t evangelists for any special music curriculum or style of learning. Instead, the program hires artists already active in the community and matches individual personalities and skill sets with teacher interest and the unique needs of participating school programs. MMI’s director of in-school programs, Lecolion Washington, describes the matching process as a cross between speed dating and a fraternity/sorority bid night. The teachers pick their fellows, the fellows pick their teachers, and everybody works together with a team of MMI coaches to create dynamic teaching opportunities for music programs of every shape and size. In addition to having a fellow in the classroom year round, MMI also creates field trips and clinic opportunities for the schools it partners with. This semester, for example, Harrington’s classically oriented students will take a workshop with country fiddler Ryan Joseph, best known for his work with Grammy winner Alan Jackson. The aim is to create as many connections and experiences as possible. “Last year we went to see New Ballet Ensemble’s Nut ReMix,� Harrington says. She thought her players could learn from the Memphis company’s
CULTURE
Club
Memphis Music Initiative Founder Darren Isom is a seventhgeneration New Orleans native who took his schooling on the East Coast, got his start in not-for-profit consulting in San Francisco, and came to Memphis three years ago to work with ArtsMemphis in developing engagement strategies.
Memphis Flyer : Let’s start by talking origin stories. What inspired MMI and the fellows program? Darren Isom : I joke all the time that arts engagement is a euphemism for helping a white organization talk to black people. It wasn’t any different in Memphis. Memphis is a phenomenally interesting city. It’s a city with an extremely vibrant music and arts culture. It’s also a city that’s controlled by a small percentage of the population that lives out in East Memphis who don’t always know what makes the city interesting. So they’re still peddling what was important 30 years ago, 40 years ago. So you have cultural gatekeepers who don’t know what culture they should be keeping the gate on. How do you shake that paradigm up? This work became about making sure that the true cultural makers in the city — which often come from the poor black and brown populations — get the attention and support they need and don’t suffer from the same kind of generational starvation cycle that we’ve offered black and brown organizations in black and brown cities that deal with segregation. That work went really well, and, coming out of that work, a set of funders said, “We’re a music city with a music legacy. How do we make sure we position music in a way that it can be used to drive youth and music outcomes? How do we make that happen?� And that’s when you were asked to stay on and develop the MMI project? I did a six-month project working with consultants in New York, San Francisco, Oakland, New Orleans, and Memphis, and put together a strategy. And if there are any nuggets or gems that stick, it’s this: I remember doing an interview with a grandmother who lived out in South Memphis. As someone who does engagement, you ask things like, “Why haven’t you visited this institution that’s here for you?� “What are the barriers there, etc?� I’m used to hearing the same three answers: “It’s too far away,� which is a geographic issue. “It’s expensive,� which is a cost issue, and, “I’m not sure what they’re doing,� which is a relevance issue. You see this in every city, and for each of those answers, there are workable solutions. As I was getting ready to leave — and maybe she offered this to me because I was a black consultant asking something she’s never been asked by a black consultant — she says, “And you know that place isn’t for us anyways.� That was the first time I’d heard anybody articulate this concept of something not being for them. I’m a black guy from a black city. I know what that means. That means you can offer a bus. You can make it free. You can even put up an installation about me and my culture, but ultimately you really don’t want me there. That’s the baggage of segregation. How do you overcome things like that? The work became making things that people see as being for Tchaikovsky redux, with its updated music and fusion of ballet, modern, world, and urban dance. “MMI opens doors that might not otherwise be there.� Opening doors is something Shayla Jones is interested in doing a lot more of. “I’m a trumpet player. That’s my profession,� she
Darren Isom
them. That’s theirs. They aren’t being invited, they own it. That became the Memphis Music Initiative. The idea that music education is enough sounds almost radical when you say it out loud. I joke sometimes that in New Orleans, after Katrina, they put music in the schools so kids would come back. There’s value to giving students things that make them look forward to school. Exactly. That counts for something. Second, the goal was to have music fellows who were coming from different backgrounds. Whatever you do, if it’s musical, we’re all about it. We wanted to bring these people into the schools and have them support instruction — and not just quality music instruction, but quality mentoring that lets students see what success looks like in life. It’s important, particularly in underserved communities, to position kids as cultural leaders and give them something they can own and be good at, as they struggle with other things. You have to be good at something to struggle with everything else. The fellows are MMI’s most visible element, but the strategy seems more comprehensive. We’re a granting organization. And we recognized that outside of school only five percent of kids had access to quality music activities. In other cities like New Orleans and Nashville that number’s closer to 20-25 percent. Children bloom where there’s opportunity, and there’s just a dearth of out-of-school music activities. Underserved communities are where you double down on youth programs, especially after school and in the summer, when kids are likely to lose what they’ve learned or get involved in negative activities. We work in a grant-making role with groups that are already working with children — groups like Stax Music Academy and the Visible Music College. We want to make it so when you walk into any space created for youth activity, you should be able to engage in a high-quality music-related activity. Because this is Memphis. This should be available at any Boys Club or Girls Club or the YMCA. If you walk into an organization that serves kids, you should have an opportunity to explore music.
says. “And I’m a vocalist, too.� Jones learned how to play at Memphis’ Overton High School, where she graduated in 2006. “That experience shaped my whole future,� she says. “And I don’t have any other formal training.� Jones started working the wedding circuit as a horn player as soon as she
graduated. She’s played on cruise ships, been a studio musician, and played with an impressive list of area artists, including Valerie June, Hope Clayburn, and the Bluff City Soul Collective. In college, Jones majored in psychology continued on page 17
COVER STORY m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
DARIUS WILLIAMS
educational experience for kids?â€? The question is radical because it cuts hard against the not-for-profit grain, and decades of research justifying art in schools only by showing some measurable relationship between arts engagement and improved test scores in reading, math, and other core subjects. “There’s a lot of research on that topic,â€? Isom allows, in his prelude to a more direct thesis. “What we’re saying is this: Music engagement itself is valuable enough.â€? The Memphis Music Initiative (MMI) is a grant-making organization that’s grown up inside of ArtsMemphis but is slated to become an independent entity in January. The anonymously funded art and artist-forward program pays a diverse team of Memphis rockers, songwriters, hip-hop producers, sidemen, soulsters, and symphony players a living wage to stay in Memphis, make music here, and work with MMI to enhance school music programs, while connecting young players to regional institutions and the broader Memphis music community. Â
15
We would like to
November 17-23, 2016
Thank All of Our
vendors, sponsors and patrons for participating in this year's event. We sincerely appreciate
all of your support.
16
FUTURE MUSIC continued from page 15 because she didn’t see a future in music. “I thought I’d keep it as a hobby,” she says. Life had other plans. Like all the other in-school fellows, Jones teaches 20 hours a week. She splits her time between two schools — the diverse and collegiately oriented Maxine Smith STEAM Academy in Midtown and Memphis Business Academy in North Memphis, where the student body is mostly black and Hispanic. “The two schools couldn’t be more different,” Jones says. “It’s important for young girls [at both locations] to see what I do,” Jones says. “There aren’t a lot of female trumpet players out there, and I’m successful at what I do, so it’s encouraging.” Jones shares her professional experiences with students, pulling out her horn, teaching by example, and helping other brass players develop their tone and style. “It’s always encouraging to let them know something is going on in the world outside,” she says.
in a school or church choir.” The mentor and his student agreed it was something that needed to change. Lebo’s been playing trombone with the MSO for four seasons, while continuing to perform as a featured player and soloist in orchestras all over the Southeast. Becoming one of Memphis’ music fellows allowed him to move to Memphis and make the city his full-time base of operations. “I was looking for an opportunity to be based in Memphis and not bounce around,” Lebo says in a phone interview from South Carolina, where he was rehearsing for a weekend gig. “I moved to Memphis this summer, right after I
got the phone call. Now I can be there in the city and really be a part of it.” Washington understands that music can just be a beautiful thing — music for music’s sake — or it can make a statement about the city where it’s being played and the things that city values. Opera Memphis’ recent production of Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro was a collaboration with Washington’s Prizm Chamber Orchestra and inspired by his vision of a cast and crew that are diverse as the city of Memphis. “It was transformative,” says Washington, who founded Prizm in 2005. “Most people could count the number of
classical musicians they’ve seen who are black on one hand. And here was an orchestra with 20 people of color. It was special, being able to be around that and having it all be such high quality.” Washington, who’s been helping Isom develop the MMI’s fellows program since before the pilot launch in 2014, wants MMI to facilitate more transformational experiences. “We looked at other teaching artist programs,” he says. “But we wanted to innovate. We wanted to make something that uniquely speaks to the musicians we have in Memphis, the students we have in Memphis, and the schools we have in Memphis.”
One of the things that sets MMI’s music fellows program apart from other engagement programs is the special focus it places on empowering its teaching musicians to be performing musicians. The 20-hour work week is designed specifically to give fellows the time and financial support they need to grow as working artists outside the classroom. MMI makes regular professional development opportunities available, and academic calendars mean summers off, allowing for touring schedules. It also allows musicians who might have chosen to live elsewhere to put down roots in Memphis. Wes Lebo gets excited by breakthrough moments. “I have this philosophy that music teaches you about life, and life teaches you about music,” he says. The MMI fellow was most recently inspired while working with a young horn player at Ridgeway High School who was more into sports than music. Lebo, who also plays second-chair trombone with the Memphis Symphony Orchestra, remembers singing the melody line, trying to help the young musician develop a better sense of musicality, when the student started singing along. “And he had this beautiful voice,” Lebo says, still amazed. “Kids are usually too intimidated to do that, but he wasn’t. And I couldn’t believe he wasn’t singing
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19 8PM SEE IT AT FITZ LIVE ON PAY-PER-VIEW ON BIG SCREEN AND ALL TVS ON CASINO FLOOR
FitzgeraldsTunica.com • 1-662-363-LUCK (5825) • Must be 21. Management reserves the right to cancel, change, and modify the event. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700.
COVER STORY m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
This isn’t some proposed magic bullet aimed at improving ACT scores.
17
steppin’ out
We Recommend: Culture, News + Reviews
Hello, Dolly
Righteous ghosts
By Susan Ellis
Kevin Cain collects dolls. But not just ordinary dolls — haunted dolls. Cain will be appearing, along with some of his dolls, at this weekend’s Memphis Comic and Fantasy Convention as the guest of Historical Haunts Memphis. Before Cain was into dolls, he was into the paranormal. He came by it naturally. The house he grew up in in Alabama was built on an Indian burial ground, and his childhood was punctuated by otherworldly footsteps and voices. He later joined SCARe (Spirit Communications and Research) of Alabama, and then, a few years ago, a friend told him about a doll she had recently bought that was creeping her out. The doll, circa-1980s, posed in a crawling position and wearing a bonnet, was onced owned by a little girl named Patty, whose mother was a prostitute. The story goes that Patty died after mistaking a bag of drugs for candy. Patty’s doll was now singing and talking to the woman’s granddaughter. Cain took the doll and conducted an ESP session. Listening to a recording of the session later, Cain heard the doll say, in totally ’80s style, “Righteous.” So Cain collects dolls, as well as other haunted items — paintings, toys, tools, mirrors … Some are good spirits, some negative, he says. He has now about 170 dolls, some newer, some antique, mostly larger, like Raggedy Ann, but not one Barbie. Cain says he does have favorite dolls, Patty among them. But he makes sure to bring different dolls to different events. Otherwise, he says, “It might tick them off.”
JUSTIN FOX BURKS
AN EVENING WITH THE HAUNTED DOLLS, MEMPHIS HILTON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH, 9 P.M. $25. HISTORICALHAUNTSMEMPHIS.COM
Just in case the U.S.A. goes all Hunger Games, here’s your survival guide. The Last Word, p. 47
Erling Jensen celebrates 20 years as Memphis’ go-to chef. Food News, p. 36
November 17-23, 2016
FRIDAY November 18
18
Playhouse on the Square’s 47th Birthday Celebration Playhouse on the Square, 6-10 p.m., $15-$25 A fund-raising birthday party for Playhouse with entertainment from the company, food and drink, memorabilia, and more. “Unfolding Shores” David Lusk Gallery, 6-8 p.m. Opening reception for new works by Maysey Craddock, which take on the “in-between,” “slippages between here and there.”
66th Annual Holiday Bazaar & Fund-raiser Memphis college of Art, 5-10 p.m., $25 This hugely popular artists market, featuring work from MCA students, faculty, and staff, returns after taking last year off. Tonight is the Early Bird sale and reception, and tomorrow’s bazaar runs from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. “Retos y Retratos” Crosstown Arts, 6-9 p.m. Opening reception for this exhibit featuring portraits of 25 area Latino/a artists and samples of their work presented by Centro Cultural Latino de Memphis and Crosstown Arts.
Cider Smash Campfire Party Memphis Botanic Garden, 6-8 p.m., $12 Campfire party for the whole family, during which a cider press is used to smash apples. Plus, there will be spiced cider, hot dogs, and s’mores. Reservations required: 636-4131. Nut ReMix Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, 7:30 p.m., $15-$50 New Ballet Ensemble’s annual Memphis-ized take on The Nutcracker. Jookin’ hero and NBE alum Lil’ Buck will make an appearance.
Rhapsody in Black The Orpheum, 6:30 p.m., $15 One-man show performed by LeLand Gantt following his journey to understand and transcend racism. George Winston Germantown Performing Arts Center, 8 p.m., $25-$50 Folk pianist George Winston performs his summer show featuring spring and summer songs and more from his upcoming releases.
Cranksgiving Memphis
Crank It Up By Susan Ellis The first Cranksgiving Memphis was held in 2012. It’s based on a national event, a “food drive on wheels,” founded in 1999. During the national event, riders go on a grocery-store scavenger hunt for canned foods or other items to donate to food banks. The original Memphis Cranksgiving followed this mold to a degree, with the first years featuring 40-mile rides with riders donating money to the Mid-South Food Bank. In recent years, as the city has expanded its bike paths and generally become more bike-friendly, the Memphis Cranksgiving has similarly evolved. Jim Steffen, of the Bikesmith, took charge this year after Memphis Cranksgiving driving force Carter Chappell moved out of town. The event is held over two days, with a mountain-bike/cross-country bike race Friday night on the Wolf River Trails and a cyclocross race at Sam Cooper and East Parkway on Saturday. The change from the one long ride to two races, says Steffen, was designed to make the event more inclusive and more spectator- and familyfriendly. There’s a kids’ ride on Saturday, and everyone, from beginners on, can participate in the 40-minute cyclocross. “If you want to do one lap, you can,” Steffen assures. Another change: All proceeds now go to the Urban Bicycle Food Ministry (UBFM), a nice fit for this cycling-centric event. During the kids’ cyclocross, participants will get a drawstring bag to pick up socks, blankets, and caps at various stops to donate to UBFM. An afterparty at the Bikesmith follows Saturday’s cyclocross race. There will be awards, raffles, food, and beer from High Cotton. CRANKSGIVING MEMPHIS, FRIDAY-SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH-19TH. FACEBOOK.COM/CRANKSGIVINGMEMPHIS
GREAT MUSIC & DELICIOUS CUISINE NOVEMBER 17
ELIZABETH COOK W/ OPENER JESSE AYCOK OF HARD WORKING AMERICANS & LAUREN BARTH
NOV 16
DEERING & DOWN 8PM NOV 17
ELIZABETH COOK 9PM
W/ OPENER JESSE AYCOK OF HARD WORKING AMERICANS & LAUREN BARTH
NOV 18
MEMPHIS FUNK-N-HORNS 10PM NOV 19
GRAHAM WINCHESTER & THE AMMUNITION 10PM
Funksgiving Clayborn Temple, 7-11 p.m., $8 A party for Clayborn Temple with old and new funk music from Bluff City Soul Collective and Southern Avenue.
TUESDAY November 22
Carrot Top Gold Strike Casino, 8 p.m., $29.95-$49.95 Comedian Carrot Top brings his trunk of props to Tunica.
Charlie Vergos High Cotton Brewing Co., 7:30 p.m. A rib tickler? Charlie Vergos, son of Rendezvous owner John Vergos, performs comedy tonight as part of the Tuesday Show comedy series.
Harvest Party The Warehouse, 7 p.m.-midnight, $75-$100 Music, food, and fun at this party benefiting the Cotton Museum. Santa Landing Memphis Pink Palace Museum, 9 a.m. Santa drops in via helicopter. Day includes activities on the lawn.
“Microcosm and More” Memphis Theological Seminary, 6-7:30 p.m. Opening and donor reception for this series by artist Rollin Kocsis, donated by William and Laura Ellen Wade.
MARCELLA & HER LOVERS 8PM NOV 21
PRIMAL STATIC 8:30PM NOV 22
JOHN KILZER 8PM NOV 23
JASON D. WILLIAMS 8PM
BOOK YOUR HOLIDAY PARTY WITH US! 2 1 1 9 M A D I S O N AV E N U E MEMPHIS, TN 38104 (901) 207-5097 L A FAY E T T E S . C O M
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Memphis Potters’ Guild Annual Holiday Show & Sale Memphis Botanic Garden, 5-8 p.m. Opening night for this annual show and sale with porcelain, earthenware, raku, and more from area potters. Continues through Sunday.
SATURDAY November 19
NOV 20
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight is audacious and experimental — the kind of film that sticks with you. Film, p. 40
19
M U S I C F E AT U R E B y C h r i s S h a w
Beach Boys, Boppers, and Burnouts
New Music Memoirs
I Am Brian Wilson: A Memoir by Brian Wilson and Ben Greenman Brian Wilson has long been the most interesting Beach Boy, but his struggles with mental health have sometimes overshadowed the fact that the California native has won two Grammy awards, in addition to writing some of the Beach Boys’ biggest hits like “I Get Around,” “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” and “God Only Knows.” Following the release of the Beach Boys’ 11th studio album, 1966’s Pet Sounds, Brian Wilson was hanging on by a thread. When it came time for the follow-up album, SMiLe, Wilson was in a downward spiral of addiction and mental illness, and the album’s release date was put off before being cancelled completely in May of 1967. Now, after many years of seclusion, a few tribute albums, and some live shows, Beach Boys fans finally get the scoop from the man himself, with help from author Ben Greenman. I Am Brian Wilson
isn’t necessarily for everyone who rocked out to “Help Me, Rhonda” in the ’60s, but it does provide a crucial blueprint of the rise and fall of one of America’s most interesting pop musicians. Wilson carefully answers questions that many die-hard fans have been wondering for years and doesn’t shy away from exploring the darker, less glamorous side of being in one of the most famous American bands of all time. Bop Apocalypse: Jazz, Race, the Beats, and Drugs by Martin Torgoff Martin Torgoff is the author behind Can’t Find My Way Home: America in the Great Stoned Age, 1945-2000
PAP SMEAR $155
November 17-23, 2016
NEW PATIENTS, EXAM ONLY
FREE IUDs
CHO CES
Memphis Center for Reproductive Health
20
1726 Poplar Avenue Memphis, TN 38104 901/274-3550 www.memphischoices.org
B EAC H B OYS, B O P P E R S, AN D B U R N O UTS
These books make the reader feel like they were at classic punk landmarks like the Oki Dog, the Masque, or the Strand. You can practically smell the sweat when Morris describes the violent mosh pits that took place at Circle Jerks shows. The book explores musicians’ use of drugs in great detail, starting at the beginning of the 20th century. Highlights include the birth of jazz in New Orleans, the start of swing in Kansas City, the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, and the birth of bohemian culture in cities and college campuses nationwide in the ’60s. While Bop Apocalypse covers a lot of ground in a short amount of time, Torgoff seamlessly weaves one decade into the next, giving the reader a feel for the era without inundating them with too much information. With the success of The
My Damage: The Story of a Punk Rock Survivor by Keith Morris As an enthusiast of Southern California punk culture, I devoured this book, finishing it in about a week while on the road this summer. Much like We Got the Neutron Bomb, Lexicon Devil, and Disco’s Out … Murder’s In!, My Damage does a terrific job of describing the setting for which some of the most memorable American punk rock would be created. These books make the reader feel like they were at classic punk landmarks like the Oki Dog, the Masque, or the Strand. You can practically smell the sweat when Morris describes the violent mosh pits that took place at Circle Jerks shows. But just like with any tell-all memoir, My Damage isn’t full of good times and “bet you wish you were there” anecdotes. Morris talks openly about his addiction to both alcohol and drugs, how those addictions shaped things in his life for better or for worse, and how he probably shouldn’t be alive to tell the tale. There’s also some pretty big let downs, including Greg Ginn (the lead guitarist of Black Flag) being way too involved with the nu metal travesty known as Korn. Let that sink in for a moment. As a Black Flag/Circle Jerks super fan, the book is a must. As someone who has little interest in what Morris did post Circle Jerks, the last third of the book is pretty hit or miss.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Just as Can’t Find My Way Home explored how drug use shaped the American cultural landscape during the post-war era, Bop Apocalypse dissects how American drug culture was born and how it shaped American music.
Drug Years and the success of the 1987 Torgoff documentary Elvis ’56, we could see Bop Apocalypse turned into a documentary soon. As for now, you’ll have to track down the book, which is available everywhere in January of 2017.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
— the book that the VH1 show The Drug Years was based on. And while the heinous marijuana term “jazz cigarette” should be forever removed from the American vocabulary, it’s safe to say that Torgoff knows a thing or two about drug culture.
21
MARY J BLIGE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20TH FEDEX FORUM
BRONCHO SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19TH HI-TONE
LIL DURK SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20TH NEW DAISY
After Dark: Live Music Schedule November 17 - 23 Alfred’s 197 BEALE 525-3711
Gary Hardy & Memphis 2 Thursdays-Saturdays, 6-9 p.m.; Roxi Love Thursday, Nov. 17, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; 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.; 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.; Memphis Mojo Tour Saturdays, 11:30 a.m.-4 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
November 17-23, 2016
Queen Ann and the Memphis Blues Masters Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
22
Blues City Cafe
Hard Rock Cafe
King’s Palace Cafe
Rum Boogie Cafe
Tin Roof
138 BEALE 526-3637
126 BEALE 529-0007
162 BEALE 521-1851
182 BEALE 528-0150
315 BEALE
Blind Mississippi Morris Fridays, 5 p.m., and Saturdays, 5:30 p.m.; Brad Birkedahl Band Thursdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.; Earl “The Pearl” Banks Saturdays, 12:30 p.m., and Tuesdays, 7 p.m.; Brandon Cunning Trio Sundays, 6 p.m., and Mondays, 7 p.m.; FreeWorld Sundays, 9:30 p.m.
Sister Lucille Thursday, Nov. 17, 7-10 p.m.; Comedy Night with Chris Ingram Friday, Nov. 18, 9 p.m.; Common Rarity Saturday, Nov. 19, 7 p.m.; Memphis Music Monday Third Monday of every month, 6-9 p.m.
Club 152
Kayla Walker Thursdays, 6-7 p.m.; Susan Marshall Fridays, Saturdays, 7-10 p.m.; Nat “King” Kerr Fridays, Saturdays, 9-10 p.m.; Susan Marshall Wednesdays, 6-8 p.m.
152 BEALE 544-7011
1st Floor: Mercury Boulevard Mondays-Thursdays, 7 p.m.; DJ Dnyce Sundays, 11 p.m., and Thursdays, 11:30 p.m.; DJ Tubbz Mondays-Wednesdays, 11 p.m., and Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.; 3rd floor: DJ Crumbz Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.; 2nd Floor: DJ Spanish Fly Fridays, Saturdays, 11 p.m.; 1st Floor: DJ Toonz Fridays, Saturdays, 11 p.m.; Sean Apple Sundays, 1 p.m.; Adam Levin Sundays, 1 p.m.; After Dark Band Sundays, 6 p.m.
FedExForum 191 BEALE STREET
Maxwell and Mary J. Blige Sunday, Nov. 20, 7 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
Jerry Lee Lewis’ Cafe & Honky Tonk 310 BEALE 654-5171
The Johnny Go Band Thursdays, Sundays, 7-11 p.m.; Rockin’ Rob Haynes & the Memphis Flash Fridays, Saturdays, 7-11 p.m.; Live Band Karaoke Fridays, Saturdays, 11 p.m.-3 a.m.; The Memphis House Rockers Saturdays, 3-7 p.m., and Wednesdays, 7-11 p.m.
King Jerry Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grille 159 BEALE
Chris Gales Solo Acoustic Show Mondays-Saturdays, 12-4 p.m.; Eric Hughes Thursdays, Fridays, 5-8 p.m.; Karaoke Mondays-Thursdays, Sundays, 8 p.m.; Live Bands Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.
David Bowen Thursdays, 5:309:30 p.m., Fridays, Saturdays, 6:30-10:30 p.m., and Sundays, 5:30-9:30 p.m.; Gracie Curran Friday, Nov. 18, 9:30 p.m., and Saturday, Nov. 19, 9:30 p.m.
King’s Palace Cafe Patio 162 BEALE 521-1851
Sonny Mack MondaysFridays, 2-6 p.m.; Cowboy Neil Mondays, Thursdays, 7-11 p.m., and Saturdays, Sundays, 2-6 p.m.; Sensation Band Tuesdays, Fridays, 7-11 p.m.; Fuzzy and the Kings of Memphis Saturdays, 7-11 p.m.; Chic Jones and the Blues Express Sundays, 7-11 p.m.; North and South Band Wednesdays, 7-11 p.m.
King’s Palace Cafe Tap Room 168 BEALE 576-2220
Big Don Valentine and the Hollywood Allstars Thursdays, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.midnight; Myra Hall Blues Band Friday, Nov. 18, 8 p.m.midnight, and Saturday, Nov. 19, 8 p.m.-midnight.
New Daisy Theatre 330 BEALE 525-8981
Daisyland XL feat. Grandtheft Saturday, Nov. 19, 10 p.m.; Lil Durk Sunday, Nov. 20, 8 p.m.; Lyfe Is Dope Wednesday, Nov. 23, 6 p.m.
Eric Hughes Band Thursday, Nov. 17, 8 p.m.-midnight; Pam and Terry Friday, Nov. 18, 5:30-8:30 p.m.; FreeWorld Friday, Nov. 18, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., and Saturday, Nov. 19, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Nancy Apple Duo Saturday, Nov. 19, 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Taylor Made Blues Band Sunday, Nov. 20, 7-11 p.m.; Gracie Curran Monday, Nov. 21, 8 p.m.-midnight, and Tuesday, Nov. 22, 8 p.m.-midnight; Kirk Smithhart Band Wednesday, Nov. 23, 8 p.m.
Rum Boogie Cafe Blues Hall 182 BEALE 528-0150
Memphis Bluesmasters Thursdays, Sundays, 8 p.m.midnight; Delta Project Friday, Nov. 18; Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars Friday, Nov. 18, 4-8 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 19, 9 p.m.1 a.m., and Sunday, Nov. 20, 3 p.m.; Plantation Allstars Fridays, 4-8 p.m.; Memphis Mambo Combo Saturday, Nov. 19, 4-8 p.m.; Brian Hawkins Blues Party Mondays, 8 p.m.-midnight; McDaniel Band Tuesdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Silky O’Sullivan’s 183 BEALE 522-9596
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.
Roxi Love Tuesday, Nov. 22, 6-10 p.m.
Blind Bear Speakeasy 119 S. MAIN, PEMBROKE SQUARE 417-8435
Live Music ThursdaysSaturdays, 10 p.m.
Brass Door Irish Pub 152 MADISON 572-1813
Live Music Fridays.
Center for Southern Folklore Hall 119 S. MAIN AT PEMBROKE SQUARE 525-3655
Delta Cats, Billy Gibson & Linear Smith Fridays, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Center for Southern Folklore 123 S. MAIN AT PEABODY TROLLEY STOP 525-3655
Zeke Johnson with Paulette Reagan Sunday, Nov. 20, 4-7 p.m.
Dirty Crow Inn 855 KENTUCKY
Bobbie & Tasha Wednesdays, 8-11 p.m.
Earnestine & Hazel’s 531 S. MAIN 523-9754
Amber Rae Dunn Hosts: Earnestine & Hazel’s Open Mic Wednesdays, 8-11 p.m.
Boscos
Java Cabana
P&H Cafe
2120 MADISON 432-2222
2170 YOUNG 272-7210
1532 MADISON 726-0906
1737 MADISON 443-5232
JONATHAN PUSHNIK
Karaoke Thursdays, 9:30 p.m.; Come Get This Laughter Friday, Nov. 18, 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m.
Celtic Crossing 903 S. COOPER 274-5151
BLACK DAHLIA MURDER AT THE HI-TONE This Tuesday night, heavy-metal legends Black Dahlia Murder bring their “Abysmal Predator” tour to the Hi-Tone. Formed in 2001, the Black Dahlia Murder entered the booming metal core (aka “melodic death metal”) scene of the early ’00s and helped solidify the genre as a profitable subsect of heavy metal. The band’s latest album, 2015’s Abysmal (released on Metal Blade Records) served as a farewell album for longtime guitarist Ryan Knight, who left the band in February of 2016. As is many times the case with top-tier hardcore and metal bands, the “Abysmal Predator” tour featured some of the biggest names in modern hardcore and metal, including Napalm Death, Pig Destroyer, Power Trip, and Abnormality. But by the time the tour rolls into Crosstown, death-metal band Abnormality will be the only group from the package joining the Black Dahlia Murder. Instead, locals Vera and Prophasis will round out the weekday metal show. Formed in 2012, Vera got off to a strong start in the local Memphis metal scene but cooled down before making a comeback of sorts earlier this year. While the band hasn’t released new music since January of 2015, the uptick in live gigs could mean new music is on the way. MFG Promotions, the local production company responsible for bringing many a hardcore and metal show to the Hi-Tone and most recently RockHouse Live, has pre-sale tickets available for Tuesday night’s show on their Facebook page. — Chris Shaw The Black Dahlia Murder, Abnormality, Vera, and Prophasis, Tuesday, November 22nd at the Hi-Tone. 7 p.m. $ 15-$17. EntreMemphis
Purple Haze Nightclub
287 MADISON 410-1400
140 LT. GEORGE W. LEE 577-1139
Share the Stage Concert Series 2016 Friday, Nov. 18, 7-11 p.m.
DJ Dance Music MondaysSundays, 10 p.m.
Huey’s Downtown
Rumba Room
77 S. SECOND 527-2700
303 S. MAIN 523-0020
The King Beez Sunday, Nov. 20, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.
Salsa Night Saturdays, 8:30 p.m.-3 a.m.
Paulette’s
The Silly Goose
RIVER INN, 50 HARBOR TOWN SQUARE 260-3300
100 PEABODY PLACE 435-6915
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, 5:30-8 p.m.
DJ Cody Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.
GRIZZLIES VS. TIMBERWOLVES SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19 GRIZZLIES PHONE WALLET for first 10,000 fans. Presented by Pinnacle Financial Partners. 901.888.HOOP · GRIZZLIES.COM
Bar DKDC 964 S. COOPER 272-0830
Jack Oblivian Friday, Nov. 18; Sharp Balloons Saturday, Nov. 19; Maitre D’s perform The Beatles’ Revolver Wednesday, Nov. 23.
Blue Monkey 2012 MADISON 272-BLUE
Karaoke Thursdays, 9 p.m.midnight.
MAXWELL & MARY J. BLIGE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20
Touring together for the first time ever on the co-headlining THE KING AND QUEEN OF HEARTS WORLD TOUR. TICKETS AVAILABLE!
Jeremy Stanfill and Joshua Cosby Sundays, 6-9 p.m.; Candy Company Mondays.
The Cove 2559 BROAD 730-0719
Ed Finney and the U of M Jazz Quartet Thursdays, 9 p.m.; Blues Kings Friday, Nov. 18, 10 p.m.; The Bluff City Backsliders Saturday, Nov. 19, 10 p.m.; Justin White Mondays, 7 p.m.; Don and Wayde Tuesdays, 7-10 p.m.; Karaoke Wednesdays, 10 p.m.
Dru’s Place 1474 MADISON 275-8082
Karaoke Fridays-Sundays.
Eternal Peace Missionary Baptist Church 1251 S. WILLETT
“We Will Revive Our Souls with the Gospel of God’s Word” 2016 Fall Revival Tues.Thur., Nov. 15-17, 7-9pm.
Hi-Tone 412-414 N. CLEVELAND 278-TONE
Terry Prince & the Principles, Carmon & Page, the Ellie Badge Thursday, Nov. 17, 9 p.m.; CBDB Thursday, Nov. 17, 9 p.m.; Fingertrick with Cedar Planks Friday, Nov. 18, 9 p.m.; Least of These, Bradley Hathaway, You the Few Saturday, Nov. 19, 9 p.m.; Broncho, China Gate Saturday, Nov. 19, 9 p.m.; The Black Dahlia Murder Tuesday, Nov. 22, 7 p.m.
Huey’s Midtown 1927 MADISON 726-4372
Joe Restive Four Sunday, Nov. 20, 4-7 p.m.; Southern Avenue Sunday, Nov. 20, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.
The Salvation Army Kroc Center
800 E. Parkway S. 7298007 Battle of the Bells Saturday, Nov. 19, 6 p.m.
Lafayette’s Music Room 2119 MADISON 207-5097
Jeremy Stanfill and Joshua Cosby Thursday, Nov. 17, 6 p.m.; Elizabeth Cook with Jesse Aycok of Hard Working Americans and Lauren Barth Thursday, Nov. 17, 9 p.m.; John Nemeth Duo Friday, Nov. 18, 6:30 p.m.; Memphis Funk-NHorns Friday, Nov. 18, 10 p.m.; Susan Marshall & Friends Saturdays, 11 a.m.; Johnny Mac Saturday, Nov. 19, 3 p.m.; The River Bluff Clan Saturdays, 3 p.m.; Pam and Terry Saturday, Nov. 19, 6:30 p.m.; Graham Winchester and the Ammunition Saturday, Nov. 19, 10 p.m.; Joe Restivo 4 Sundays, 11 a.m.; Larry Raspberry & the Highsteppers Sunday, Nov. 20, 4 p.m.; Marcella and Her Lovers Sunday, Nov. 20, 8 p.m.; John Paul Keith & Friends Mondays, 6 p.m.; Ryan Peel, Travis Roman, and Brennan Villines Monday, Nov. 21, 6 p.m.; Paul ‘Snowflake’ Taylor Tuesday, Nov. 22, 5:30 p.m.; John Kilzer Tuesday, Nov. 22, 8 p.m.; Breeze Cayolle and New Orleans Wednesdays, 5:30 p.m.; Jason D. Williams Wednesday, Nov. 23, 8 p.m.
Midtown Crossing Grill 394 N. WATKINS 443-0502
Memphis Ukelele Meetup Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m.
Murphy’s 1589 MADISON 726-4193
The Fast Mothers Friday, Nov. 18; Ransom Album Release Saturday, Nov. 19.
Otherlands Coffee Bar 641 S. COOPER 278-4994
Blues Benefit for Monic Center Friday, Nov. 18, 8 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 19, 8 p.m.
HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS SATURDAY, JANUARY 7
Catch the action as the Harlem Globetrotters returns once again for a fun-filled night for the whole family. TICKETS AVAILABLE!
Rock Starkaraoke Fridays; Open Mic Music with Tiffany Harmon Mondays, 9 p.m.midnight; Comedy Hosted by Christine Marie Tuesday, Nov. 22.
Rhodes College, Hardie Auditorium 2000 N. PARKWAY 843-3000
Orchestra/Wind Ensemble Concert: “Attention les apaches!” Friday, Nov. 18, 7:30 p.m.
Sports Junction 1911 POPLAR 244-7904
Live music Saturdays.
Wild Bill’s 1580 VOLLINTINE 207-3975
The Wild Bill’s Band Fridays, Saturdays, 11 p.m.-3 a.m.
Young Avenue Deli 2119 YOUNG 278-0034
wARM with Space 4 Lease Saturday, Nov. 19.
University of Memphis Ubee’s 521 S. HIGHLAND 323-0900
Karaoke Wednesdays, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.
East Memphis Dan McGuinness Pub 4694 SPOTTSWOOD 761-3711
Karaoke Wednesdays, 8 p.m.
Folk’s Folly Prime Steak House 551 S. MENDENHALL 762-8200
Intimate Piano Lounge featuring Charlotte Hurt Mondays-Thursdays, 59:30 p.m.; Larry Cunningham Fridays, Saturdays, 6-10 p.m.
continued on page 25 m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Canvas
Michael Koppy Friday, Nov. 18, 8 p.m.
RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS THURSDAY, JANUARY 12
This American funk rock band will bring THE GETAWAY TOUR to FedExForum. TICKETS AVAILABLE!
GET TICKETS AT FEDEXFORUM BOX OFFICE / TICKETMASTER LOCATIONS / 1.800.745.3000 / TICKETMASTER.COM / FEDEXFORUM.COM WHAFF_161117_Flyer.indd 1
11/14/16 11:23 AM
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Sunday Brunch with Joyce Cobb Sundays, 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
23
PURPLE HAZE NIGHTCLUB
urple Haze Nightclub Book Your Holiday Parties with us Just Off Beale 140 LT. GEORGE W LEE AVE, MEMPHIS, TN 38103 ww.purplehazenightclub.com
Book Your Holiday Parties
with us Full Service Party Venue! TICKETS ON SALE FRIDAY AT 10AM!
140 LT. GEORGE W LEE AVE, MEMPHIS, TN 38103 901-577-1139 • www.purplehazenightclub.com
JUST OFF
BEALE
November 17-23, 2016
WEDNESDAY MARCH 8 8:00PM
MIDTOWN 725-PIES (7437)
DELIVERS DOWNTOWN 5-777-PIE (743)
24
WWW.ALDOSPIZZAPIES.COM
After Dark: Live Music Schedule November 17 - 23 continued from page 23
Karaoke Tuesdays, 9 p.m.
Huey’s Poplar 4872 POPLAR 682-7729
Pamela K Ward Band Sunday, Nov. 20, 8:30-11:30 p.m.
Whitehaven/ Airport Marlowe’s Ribs & Restaurant 4381 ELVIS PRESLEY 332-4159
Karaoke with DJ Stylez Thursdays, Sundays, 10 p.m.
Hillbilly Mojo Thursday, Nov. 17, 7 p.m.; Full Circle Friday, Nov. 18, 9 p.m.; Thump Daddy Saturday, Nov. 19, 9 p.m.; Wolf River Rednecks Sunday, Nov. 20, 5:30 p.m.; Furious George Wednesday, Nov. 23, 8 p.m.
Frayser/Millington
Fox and Hound Sports Tavern
4212 HWY 51N 530-0414
819 EXOCET 624-9060
Harpo’s Hogpin Live Music Saturdays, 9 p.m.
Karaoke Tuesdays, 9 p.m.
Ice Bar & Grill 4202 HACKS CROSS 757-1423
Unwind Wednesdays Wednesdays, 6 p.m.-midnight.
Mesquite Chop House 3165 FOREST HILL-IRENE 249-5661
Pam and Terry Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.
Russo’s New York Pizzeria & Wine Bar
Mortimer’s
9087 POPLAR 755-0092
Live Music on the patio Thursdays-Saturdays, 7-10 p.m.
590 N. PERKINS 761-9321
Van Duren Solo Thursdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
North Mississippi/ Tunica
T.J. Mulligan’s 1817 KIRBY 755-2481
Karaoke Tuesdays, 8 p.m.
The Crossing Bar & Grill 7281 HACKS CROSS, OLIVE BRANCH, MS 662-893-6242
The Windjammer Restaurant
Karaoke with Buddha Tuesdays, Thursdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Dantones Band Friday, Nov. 18, 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m.
786 E. BROOKHAVEN CIRCLE 683-9044
Karaoke ongoing.
Poplar/I-240
Dan McGuinness
East Tapas and Drinks
3964 GOODMAN, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-890-7611
Acoustic Music Tuesdays.
6069 PARK 767-6002
Eddie Harris Thursdays, Fridays, 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Carlos & Adam from the Late Greats Thursdays, 7-9 p.m.; Elizabeth Wise Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m.; Van Duren Solo Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m.
Fox and Hound Tavern 6565 TOWNE CENTER, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-536-2200
Live Music Thursdays, 5 p.m.; Karaoke Tuesdays.
Neil’s Music Room 5727 QUINCE 682-2300
Jack Rowell’s Celebrity Jam Thursdays, 8 p.m.; Eddie Smith Fridays, 8 p.m.; TripleX with Trey Bruce Saturday, Nov. 19, 8 p.m.; Reba Russell Trio and Wayne Russell Art Show Sunday, Nov. 20, 5:3010 p.m.; Debbie Jamison & Friends Tuesdays, 6-10 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.
Summer/Berclair
Gold Strike Casino 1010 CASINO CENTER IN TUNICA, MS 1-888-24K-PLAY
2015 Fiat 500 Sport
$
15988 or $184mo GOSSETT FIAT 1901 COVINGTON PIKE • FIATUSAOFMEMPHIS.COM • 388.8989
FT615901-MSRP 23695-GOSSETT DISCOUNT $7707-$3500 DOWN-75 MO@3.25 APR-INCLUDES ALL REBATES & INCENTIVES PF $498.75-EXCLUDES T,T&L-WITH APPROVED CREDIT-SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS-OFFER ENDS 11/30/16
Barbie’s Barlight Lounge 661 N. MENDENHALL
Possum Daddy’s Karaoke Saturdays, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.
Cheffie’s Cafe 483 HIGH POINT TERRACE 202-4157
Leigh Ann Wilmot and Dave “The Rave” Laman Fridays, 6-9 p.m.
High Point Pub 477 HIGH POINT TERRACE 452-9203
Pubapalooza with Stereo Joe Every other Wednesday, 8-11 p.m.
Maria’s Restaurant 6439 SUMMER 356-2324
Karaoke Fridays, 5-8 p.m.
Arlington/Eads/ Oakland/Lakeland Rizzi’s/Paradiso Pub 6230 GREENLEE 592-0344
Live Music Thursdays, Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.; Karaoke and Dance Music with DJ Funn Fridays, 9 p.m.
Bartlett Bartlett Performing Arts and Conference Center 3663 APPLING 385-6440
Mr. Otis’ Dance Bootcamp Showcase Friday, Nov. 18, and Saturday, Nov. 19.
Old Whitten Tavern
Huey’s Cordova
2800 WHITTEN 379-1965
1771 N. GERMANTOWN PKWY. 754-3885
Live Music Fridays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
RockHouse Live 5709 RALEIGH-LAGRANGE 386-7222
Live Bands Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Open Mic Mondays Mondays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Live Music Tuesdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.
Shelby Forest General Store 7729 BENJESTOWN 876-5770
Tony Butler Fridays, 6-8 p.m.
Collierville Huey’s Collierville 2130 W. POPLAR 854-4455
The Deftonz Sunday, Nov. 20, 8-11:30 p.m.
2 Mule Plow Sunday, Nov. 20, 4-7 p.m.; The Heart Memphis Band Sunday, Nov. 20, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.
T.J. Mulligan’s 64 2821 N. HOUSTON LEVEE 377-9997
Brian Johnson Band Friday, Nov. 18, 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.
T.J. Mulligan’s Cordova 8071 TRINITY 756-4480
The Southern Edition Band Tuesdays.
Germantown Germantown Performing Arts Center 1801 EXETER 751-7500
An Evening with George Winston Friday, Nov. 18, 8 p.m.; GPAC Youth Symphony Winter Concert Sunday, Nov. 20, 3 p.m.
Carrot Top Saturday, Nov. 19, 8 p.m.
Hollywood Casino 1150 CASINO STRIP RESORT, TUNICA, MS 662-357-7700
Live Entertainment Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.
Huey’s Southaven 7090 MALCO, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-349-7097
The Chaulkies Sunday, Nov. 20, 8 p.m.-midnight; Karaoke Night Mondays, 8-10 p.m.
Tunica Roadhouse 1107 CASINO CENTER, TUNICA, MS 662-363-4900
Live Music Fridays, Saturdays.
Raleigh Stage Stop 2951 CELA 382-1576
Open Mic Blues Jam with Brad Webb Thursdays, 7-11 p.m.
West Memphis/ Eastern Arkansas
Huey’s Southwind
Southland Park
7825 WINCHESTER 624-8911
1550 N. INGRAM, WEST MEMPHIS, AR 800-467-6182
Memphis All Stars Sunday, Nov. 20, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.
Huey’s Germantown 7677 FARMINGTON 318-3034
Breeze Cayolle and New Orleans Sunday, Nov. 20, 8-11 p.m.
Live Music Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.; Live Band Karaoke Wednesdays, 7 p.m.
The New Backdour Bar & Grill 302 S. AVALON 596-7115
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
5101 SANDERLIN 763-2013
2779 WHITTEN 266-5006
Cordova
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Fox and Hound Sports Tavern
Hadley’s Pub
25
CALENDAR of EVENTS: NOVEMBER 17 - 23
continued from page ??
T H EAT E R
The Evergreen Theatre
Drag Me Under the Mistletoe, the holiday program for Krisko County, put together by Maybelline and Mary Kay, are holding auditions at the Krisko County Elk’s Lodge. www.theatreworksmemphis. org. $25. Fri.-Sat., Nov. 18-19, 8 p.m. 1705 POPLAR (274-7139).
The Halloran Centre
Rhapsody in Black, written and performed by Leland Gantt, this one-man show explores Leland’s personal journey to understand and eventually transcend racism in America. www.orpheum-memphis.com. Fri., Nov. 18, 6:30 p.m. 225 S. MAIN (529-4299).
Hattiloo Theatre
The House That Will Not Stand, set in New Orleans in 1836, after French rule. Two daughters, Agnès and Odette, long for romance. When a handsome bachelor comes calling, a family secret is revealed, and the household is rocked to its core. www.hattiloo.org. Through Nov. 20. 37 S. COOPER (502-3486).
Memphis Hunt & Polo Club
The Shakespeare Brunch: The Winter’s Tale, featuring brunch, drinks, and abbreviated Shakespeare readings. Readings are preceded by a buffet with cash bar. Cocktail/ business casual. www.tnshakespeare.org. $40. Sun., Nov. 20, 12:30-3:30 p.m. 650 S. SHADY GROVE (683-2783).
New Discovery Christian Church
Aladdin, Jr., theatrical education program for students ages 6 and up. Performance by students on December 17th. www.kudzuplayers. com. Thursdays, 5-6:30 p.m. Through Dec. 17.
November 17-23, 2016
961 VINSON ROAD.
26
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.
Playhouse 51
Artist Lunch
Auditions for Both Sides, original comedy with cold readings from the script for a cast of three women and two men ages 20 to 60-plus. www. playhouse51.com. Fri., Nov. 18, 7-9 p.m., and Sat., Nov. 19, 10 a.m.-noon.
Featuring music and full lunch while you meet the artists and community. Free. Sun., Nov. 20, noon. INSIGHT GALLERY, 4063 SYKES.
Call to Artists: Arts Accelerator Workshop
Visual artist grant available. For more information, registration, and workshops, see website. Through Jan. 16, 2017.
8077 WILKINSVILLE (872-7170).
Playhouse on the Square
Peter Pan, matinee performance on New Year’s Eve will be a special family performance featuring an early evening ball drop and pictures with the cast of characters from Neverland. www.playhouseonthesquare. org. $25-$40. Fridays, 7 p.m., and Saturdays, Sundays, 2 p.m. Through Dec. 31.
WWW.ARTSMEMPHIS.ORG.
Call to Artists for UrbanArt Public Art
Artist opportunities for murals, sculptures, and more. See website for registration and more information. Ongoing. WWW.URBANARTCOMMISSION.ORG.
Casting Demonstration Saturdays, Sundays, 3 p.m.
66 S. COOPER (726-4656).
METAL MUSEUM, 374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380), WWW.METALMUSEUM.ORG.
Theatre Memphis
One Ham Manlet, adaptation and solo performance piece of Hamlet by Ryan Kathman. www.theatrememphis.org. $25. Fri., Sat., 8 p.m., and Thurs., 7:30 p.m. Through Nov. 19.
Coloring for Adults
Relax as you color and listen to music. A variety of coloring sheets and colors provided, but feel free to bring your own. Sat., Nov. 19, 1-4 p.m.
630 PERKINS EXT. (682-8323).
TheatreWorks
The Cemetery Club, two widows make a monthly trip to the cemetery to visit their husbands’ graves. Sam, the neighborhood butcher, invites questions about moving on and what it means to want more. www.theatreworksmemphis.org. $15. Sun., 2 p.m., and Fri., Sat., 8 p.m. Through Nov. 20. 2085 MONROE (274-7139).
Universal Parenting Place
PlayBack Memphis, bringing stories to life in a safe space to unlock healing, transformation, and joy. Families Welcome. (207-3694), Free. Third Thursday of every month, 4:30-6 p.m. LEMOYNE-OWEN COLLEGE, 990 COLLEGE PARK.
“Fine Places” at Marshall Arts Gallery through December 5 A R T I ST R E C E PT I O N S
Crosstown Arts
Opening reception for “Retos y Retratos,” exhibition of portraits of Latin artists and samples of their work. www. crosstownarts.org. Fri., Nov. 18, 6-9 p.m. 430 N. CLEVELAND (507-8030).
David Lusk Gallery
Opening reception for “Unfolding Shores,” exhibition of paintings and drawings by Maysey Craddock. www. davidluskgallery.com. Fri., Nov. 18, 5-8 p.m. 97 TILLMAN (767-3800).
Fogelman Galleries of Contemporary Art, University of Memphis
Opening reception for “Unsolicited,” exhibition of Fall 2016 BFA Thesis work by four graduating seniors of the University of Memphis Department of Art: Ashli Aaron, Claire Brumleve, Michelle Ventrini, and Su WeiChu. www.memphis.edu. Fri., Nov. 18, 5-7:30 p.m. 3715 CENTRAL.
Memphis Botanic Garden
Opening reception for Thom Kostura Art Show, www.memphisbotanicgarden.com. Wed., Nov. 23, 4-6 p.m. 750 CHERRY (636-4100).
Memphis Theological Seminary
Artist reception for “Microcosm and More,” exhibition series by Rollin Kocsis donated by Dr. William and Laura Ellen Wade. www. memphisseminary.edu. Tues., Nov. 22, 6 p.m. 168 E. PARKWAY S. (458-8232).
OT H E R A R T HAP P E N I N G S
Art After Dark
Galleries and gardens will be open late. Featuring light refreshments, entertainment, and a cash bar. Free with admission. Every third Thursday, 6-8 p.m. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.
LUCIUS E. & ELSIE C. BURCH JR. LIBRARY, 501 POPLAR VIEW, COLLIERVILLE (457-2600), WWW.COLLIERVILLELIBRARY.ORG.
Crosstown Arts Digital Lab
Six-station computer lab supports Memphis’ creative community by providing artists and musicians full access to industry-standard art- and music-making technology. Fridays, Saturdays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., and Tuesdays-Thursdays, 10 a.m.-9 p.m. CROSSTOWN ARTS, 430 N. CLEVELAND (507-8030), WWW.CROSSTOWNARTS.ORG.
Memphis Magazine’s Fiction Contest
Authors must live within 150 miles of Memphis. Entries must be postmarked by February 1, 2017. For more information, see website. $20. Through Feb. 1, 2017. WWW.MEMPHISMAGAZINE.COM.
CALENDAR: NOVEMBER 17 - 23
MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN, 750 CHERRY (636-4100), WWW. THEMEMPHISPOTTERSGUILD.COM.
Open Crit
Monthly critique event where visual artists are invited to bring new and/or in-progress studio work for critical feedback and group discussion particular to each artist’s practice. Tues., Nov. 22, 6-8 p.m. CROSSTOWN ARTS, 430 N. CLEVELAND (507-8030), WWW.CROSSTOWNARTS.ORG.
O N G O I N G ART
The Annesdale Park Gallery
Robyn Horn, exhibition of wood sculptures and abstract paintings. Through Dec. 6. “Night Women,” exhibition of mixed-media portraits of Black women depicting haunting gazes that captivate and command attention. www. theannesdaleparkgallery.com. Through Nov. 30. 1290 PEABODY (208-6451).
Art Museum at the University of Memphis (AMUM)
“This May Surprise You,” exhibition featuring Aztec culture. www.memphis.edu/amum. Through Dec. 17. “Africa: Art of a Continent,” permanent exhibition of African art from the Martha and Robert Fogelman collection. Ongoing. 142 COMMUNICATION & FINE ARTS BUILDING (678-2224).
ANF Architects
Peggy McKnight & Cecil C. Humphreys Jr. exhibition of paintings and sculptural/ cast pieces. www.anfa.com. Through Jan. 7, 2017. 1500 UNION (278-6868).
“Chinese Symbols in Art,” ancient Chinese pottery and bronze. www.belzmuseum.org. Ongoing. 119 S. MAIN, IN THE PEMBROKE SQUARE BUILDING (523-ARTS).
Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School “Pattern Recognition,” exhibition of new works by Jennifer Sargent. www.stmarysschool. org. Through Dec. 12.
Edge Arts
“Memphis Minimalism,” photography by Stephanie Wexler, Jon W. Sparks, Joey Miller, Houston Cofield, and Tim Barker. Through Nov. 27. 600 MONROE (262-6674).
FireHouse Community Arts Center Mosal Morszart, works by Black Arts Alliance artist. www.memphisblackartsalliance.org. Ongoing.
Jay Etkin Gallery
Roy Tamboli, exhibition of paintings. www.jayetkingallery.com. Through Dec. 3. 942 COOPER (550-0064).
L Ross Gallery
“Porch Song,” exhibition of found objects and retro print ephemera into imaginative works by Sloane Bibb. www. lrossgallery.com. Through Nov. 28. 5040 SANDERLIN (767-2200).
985 S. BELLEVUE (948-9522).
60 N. PERKINS EXT. (537-1483).
Clough-Hanson Gallery
“Over Time,” paintings by Beth Edwards. www.rhodes.edu. Through Dec. 4. RHODES COLLEGE, 2000 N. PARKWAY (843-3000).
Collierville Public Library
1934 POPLAR (544-6209).
Memphis College of Art
Artist of the Month: Margaret Williams, www.colliervillelibrary.org. Through Nov. 30.
2016 Fall BFA Exhibition, www.mca.edu. Nov. 23-Dec. 7. 1930 POPLAR (272-5100).
501 POPLAR VIEW PARKWAY (853-2333).
Memphis College of Art, Nesin Graduate School
Crosstown Arts
“Human Nature,” exhibition of the 2016 Fall MFA Thesis. www. mca.edu. Through Dec. 16.
“Retos y Retratos,” portraits of Latin artists and samples of their work. www.crosstownarts.org. Nov. 18-Dec. 3.
477 S. MAIN.
Memphis Jewish Home
430 N. CLEVELAND (507-8030).
The Art of Zoe Nadel Show and Sale, (756-3273), Through Nov. 30.
Diane’s Art, Gift, and Home
“Lineages,” exhibition of wire sculpture by Nikii Richey. Through Dec. 11.
36 BAZEBERRY (758-0036).
Metal Museum
1581 OVERTON PARK (276-7515).
The Dixon Gallery & Gardens
“A Sense of Wonder,” exhibition of sculptural works out of natural objects that reference organic elements of Earth and its atmosphere by Wayne Edge. Through Jan. 15, 2017. “Wild Spaces, Open Seasons: Hunting and Fishing in American Art,” exhibition exploring the multifaceted meanings of outdoor subjects in both painting and sculpture, ranging from the Colonial era to World War II. www.dixon.org. Through Jan. 15, 2017.
Opening reception for “Unfolding Shores” at David Lusk Gallery, Friday Fratelli’s
Fred Rawlinson’s Atelier Artists Show, www.memphisbotanicgarden.com. Through Nov. 28.
4339 PARK (761-5250).
750 CHERRY (766-9900).
Eclectic Eye
Insight Gallery
“Eye on Color,” exhibition of acrylic paintings on canvas or board by Debbie Crawford. www.eclectic-eye.com. Through Jan. 4, 2017. 242 S. COOPER (276-3937).
connections, and curiosity. Through Dec. 4. “Red Grooms: Traveling Correspondent,” exhibition of work by Red Grooms, a Nashville native who moved to New York City in 1956, a fascinating figure in postWorld War II American art and natural-born storyteller. Through Jan. 8, 2017. Rotunda Projects: Nnenna Okore, abstract objects fashioned from burlap, inspired by her immediate environment. Through April 2, 2017. Selections from William Eggleston’s Portfolios, exhibition of 18 photographs from most of the portfolios in the Brooks Museum’s collection. www. brooksmuseum.org. Through May 31, 2017.
InSight Gallery Exhibition, Through Dec. 30. 4063 SYKES.
Marshall Arts Gallery
“Fine Places,” exhibition of work by Tom Wixo, Sarah McFalls, Jessye McDowell, Eric Cagley, T. Michael Martin, and Mellow Mountain Coalition (Hamlett Dobbins & Tad Lauritzen Wright). Through Dec. 5. 639 MARSHALL (679-6837).
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art
“Cats and Quotes,” exhibition of felines from a variety of periods. Through Dec. 30. “Create. Imagine. Explore,” sculpture drawing all about creativity, communication,
“Tributaries: Cozette Phillips,” exhibition of sculpture. Through Jan. 22, 2017. Master Metalsmith: Hoss Haley, exhibition of sculpture works in steel, concrete, and bronze including White Series, Erratics, Torics, Coils, Spheres, and Ripples. www. metalmuseum.org. Through Jan. 1, 2017. 374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380).
National Civil Rights Museum
“The Purchased Lives,” exhibition covering a 57-year period from America’s abolition of the international slave trade through the end of the Civil War. www.civilrightsmuseum. org. Through Nov. 27.
Ross Gallery
“Abstract Thoughts,” exhibition of abstract art in acrylics and mixed media by Sandra Horton. Through Dec. 15. “Forge, Cast, Fabricate,” www. cbu.edu. Through Dec. 15. CHRISTIAN BROTHERS UNIVERSITY, PLOUGH LIBRARY, 650 E. PARKWAY S. (321-3000).
Scottish Rite
“Circuitous Succession Epilogue lll,” exhibition and third installment curated by Jason Miller within the circa-1909 Scottish Rite Building. www. circuitoussuccession.com. Through Jan. 25, 2017. 825 UNION.
St. George’s Episcopal Church
MGAL Winter 2016 Juried Art Exhibit, (754-7282), www. stgchurch.org. Through Dec. 28. 2425 SOUTH GERMANTOWN (754-7282).
TOPS Gallery
“Portraits of the United States Congress. 1986-87,” exhibition of 20 portraits by Judith Joy Ross. www.topsgallery.com. Through Dec. 3. 400 S. FRONT.
Village Frame & Art
Gallery Artists, exhibition of work by Charlie Ivey, Virginia Schoenster, Lou Ann Dattilo, and Matthew Hasty. Ongoing. 540 S. MENDENHALL (767-8882).
DAN C E
Brooks Milongas
Members of the Argentine Tango Society give lessons and tango demonstrations in the rotunda. Included with museum admission. Third Wednesday, Thursday of every month, 6:30 p.m. MEMPHIS BROOKS MUSEUM OF ART, 1934 POPLAR (544-6209).
Swing Dance Night featuring the Rhodes Jazz Band
Free swing dance lesson taught by Red Hot Lindy Hop. Thurs., Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m. RHODES COLLEGE, MCCALLUM BALLROOM OF THE BRYAN CAMPUS LIFE CENTER, 2000 N. PARKWAY (843-3000), WWW.RHODES.EDU.
450 MULBERRY (521-9699).
continued on page 28
OnDemand Catering & Events No event too big or too small.
Food • Decor • Flowers • Party Favors • Personal Coordinator • Activities • Venues • Hair • Make-Up Brand Ambassadors • Promotional Models • Mobile Mani/Pedi • Rates Starting As Low As $100
Call Us Today 662-570-9143
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Meet artists working in porcelain, stoneware, earthenware, raku, and other amazing ceramic techniques. Find unique handcrafted works representing the highest standards of the ceramicists’ art Fri., Nov. 18, 5-8 p.m., Sat., Nov. 19, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., and Sun., Nov. 20, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Belz Museum of Asian and Judaic Art
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
The Memphis Potters’ Guild Annual Holiday Show & Sale
27
CALENDAR: NOVEMBER 17 - 23
The Enchanted Forest at the Pink Palace, Your Home For the Holidays
Nov. 19 - Dec. 31, 2016
continued from page 27
B O O KS I G N I N G S
C O M E DY
Booksigning by Alysson Foti Bourque
Cafe Eclectic
The Wiseguys Present: Storytellers Unplugged, combines fast-paced improv, guest storytellers, and scenic improv. $5. Third Saturday of every month, 10:30 p.m. 603 N. MCLEAN (725-1718).
Canvas
Come Get This Laughter, local comedians Q. Wilson, Topher Shaw, Tony Quintero, and Rob Love will be bringing you the laughter all night. Also featuring music by El’Kevon Sullivan, Brandon Kareem, and MC Madame Mims. (596-1532). $10. Fri., Nov. 18, 8:30 p.m.-1 a.m. 1737 MADISON (443-5232).
E
IT I-FL PED
Author discusses and signs Alycat and the Thursday Dessert Day. Sat., Nov. 19, 10 a.m. THE BOOKSELLERS AT LAURELWOOD, 387 PERKINS EXT. (683-9801), WWW.THEBOOKSELLERSATLAURELWOOD.COM.
Booksigning by Steve Bradshaw
Author discusses and signs The Bell Trilogy mystery/ thriller books. Register to attend on library website. Mon., Nov. 21, 5 p.m. LUCIUS E. & ELSIE C. BURCH JR. LIBRARY, 501 POPLAR VIEW, COLLIERVILLE (457-2600), WWW.COLLIERVILLELIBRARY.ORG.
Free Mediation Clinic for Divorcing Parents
Get help filling out worksheets and meet Tennessee Supreme Court listed mediators. Free. Sat., Nov. 19, 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. TRAINING RESOLVED, LLC, 866 WILLOW TREE CIRCLE (609-6079), WWW.TRAININGRESOLVED.COM.
C O N F E R E N C ES/ C O NVE NT I O N S
MAGIC 2016: MidSouth GIS Conference
$75. Wed.-Thur., Nov. 16-17, 8 a.m. AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (452-2151), WWW.AGRICENTER.ORG.
The Cove
Santa lands on the Pink Palace lawn Saturday, Nov. 19 at 9am
Comedy with Dagmar, open-mic comedy. www.thecovememphis.com. Sundays, 7-9 p.m. 2559 BROAD (730-0719).
• Polar Express 3D • The Light Before Christmas 3D • Enchanted Forest • Season of Light Planetarium Show
Landers Center (DeSoto Civic Center)
Jeff Dunham, international comic/ventriloquist. (800745-3000), www.landerscenter.com. $46. Thurs., Nov. 17, 7:30-9:30 p.m. 4560 VENTURE, SOUTHAVEN, MS (662-280-9120).
High Cotton Brewing Co.
P!NK PALACE MUSEUM
Charlie Vergos, son of Rendezvous owner John Vergos, returns to Memphis with with a new 30-minute set he’s been honing over the past year. Also featuring D.J. Buckley and Aaron Weber from Nashville. Free. Tues., Nov. 22, 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Ready for the Holidays?
598 MONROE (896-9977).
COME TO OUR
P&H Cafe
Open Mic Comedy, Thursdays, 9 p.m. You Look Like, insult comedy show where every joke starts with the phrase “You look like...”. Comedians from across the country come to Memphis to participate, and there is a podcast of the show. $8. Sat., Nov. 19, 9-11 p.m.
ANNUAL HOLIDAY SHOW
1532 MADISON (726-0906).
November 17-23, 2016
PO E T RY / S PO K E N WOR D
LECT U R E /S P EA K E R
341 MADISON (524-0104).
“We Will Revive Our Souls with the Gospel of God’s Word” 2016 Fall Revival
Canvas
Open Mic, Sundays, 9 p.m. 1737 MADISON (443-5232).
MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN FRI., NOV. 18TH, 5:00 – 8:00 PM SAT., NOV. 19TH, 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM SUN., NOV. 20TH, 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM
28
Brinson’s
Strictly Hip-Hop Sunday, featuring open mic, live band, and DJ. $5, ladies free. Sundays, 5 p.m.
FREE ADMISSION
www.thememphispottersguild.com
Bring Life Into Your World, Love Into Your Life; Passion Into Your Heart.
MEMPHIS 2 0 1 6
Thanks Memphis for your votes
Germantown 2316 S Germantown Rd. Midtown 1149 Union Bartlett 6779 Stage Rd
901.753.2400 hollidayflowers.com
Memphis Potters’ Guild Annual Holiday Show & Sale, Friday - Sunday
Clayborn Temple
Spillit Story Grand Slam 2016: Education, brings together the best storytellers in Memphis vying for the title of Grand Master Storyteller of Memphis 2016. Raconteurs include Katie Martin, Evan Katz, Joy Arwood, Tom Simmermaker, Rattlebone Jones, Eilidh Jenness, Julia Hencel, and Teddy Crum. $20. Sat., Nov. 19, 7-9 p.m. 294 HERNANDO.
Featuring guest speaker Evangelist Bernard Mitchell. Tues.-Thur., Nov. 15-17, 7-9pm.
ETERNAL PEACE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH, 1251 S. WILLETT (725-9544).
“Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and the Triple Whammy of Geographic Disadvantage” Presentation by Dr. James H. Johnson Jr. who poses the question, “What would keep Dr. King up at night were he still alive today?” Sat., Nov. 19, 8:15-11 a.m. NATIONAL CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM, 450 MULBERRY (521-9699), WWW.CIVILRIGHTSMUSEUM.ORG.
TO U R S
Downtown Tour and Ghost Hunt
Unique two-hour tour and investigation hosted by a real paranormal investigator and TAPS family member. Meet and investigate a site which was the scene of a brutal murder in 1918. $20. Saturdays, 7:30 p.m. Through Dec. 17. THE BROOM CLOSET, 546 S. MAIN (497-9486), HISTORICALHAUNTSMEMPHIS.COM.
Haunted Pub Crawl
Informative and humorous walking tour of downtown Memphis restaurants, bars, and taverns. Macabre history and spirits with the spirits. Adults only. $20. Fridays, 7:309:30 p.m. Through Dec. 16. THE BROOM CLOSET, 546 S. MAIN (497-9486), WWW.HISTORICALHAUNTSMEMPHIS.COM.
continued on page 31
29
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Serving the Mid-South Since 1974
ROCKIN’ ARound the Christmas Tree! November 17-23, 2016
Join us for the Downtown Memphis holiday lighting party!
30
FRIDAY, NOV 18 5 - 7 pm Main Street at Peabody Place
Music by The MDs Carols by downtown Elementary School Lighting of 30-ft Holiday Tree by Mayor Jim Strickland Tap Box Beer Truck
Painting, Holiday FRee and Open to All! FaceTreats, Kid Fun!
• MAJOR RENOVATIONS • ROOM ADDITIONS
• COMPETITIVE PRICING • DESIGN/BUILD
WWW.NUPRIME.COM ®
CALL US TODAY (901)323-2248
Always wanted to teach? Arkansas State University Mid-South is hiring adjunct faculty for the following areas: •
English
•
Communications
•
Nursing
•
Digital Media
•
Allied Health
•
Hospitality Management
•
Sociology
•
Geography
•
Information Systems
For more info, visit
asumidsouth.edu/career-opportunities
2 000 West Broadway | West Memphis, AR | 870.733.672 8 | www.asumidsouth.edu
CALENDAR: NOVEMBER 17 - 23 continued from page 28 Memphis Mojo Tour
Ride along the original rock-and-roll bus with a local musician while hearing stories about how Memphis became the “Home of the Blues and the Birthplace of Rock-and-Roll”! Saturdays, 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Through Nov. 26. B.B. KING’S BLUES CLUB, 143 BEALE (527-9415), WWW.BACKBEATTOURS.COM/TOURS/MOJO.CFM.
Sprock and Roll Party Bike Tours
Drink and bike during dinner, lunch, and art tours in Midtown and downtown Memphis. See website for tour schedules. Ongoing. WWW.SPROCKNROLLMEMPHIS.COM.
Tours at Two
Olive Branch Genealogy Club
Will St. Amand from the Lafayette County Historical Society will speak on the society’s genealogical holdings. No dues and all are welcome. Free. Every third Wednesday, 12-2 p.m. Through Nov. 30. OLIVE BRANCH PUBLIC LIBRARY, 6619 COCKRUM (662-895-4365).
Wild Family Day
KIDS
2016 Chick-fil-A Daddy-Daughter Date Night
Enchanting evening just for dads and daughters at the Memphis Zoo. $18. Thurs., Nov. 17, 5:30-9 p.m. MEMPHIS ZOO, 2000 PRENTISS PLACE IN OVERTON PARK (333-6500).
Cider Smash Campfire Party
Weekly Meditation Group
Meets in Sisters’ Chapel to encourage and support the daily practice of morning and evening meditation. Includes a reading or a short taped talk, thirty minutes of silent meditation, followed by brief discussion. Free. Thursdays, 12-1 p.m. ST. MARY’S CATHEDRAL, 700 POPLAR (569-6326), HTTPS://ARTESIANMEDITATION.WORDPRESS.COM.
Join us for a cozy campfire for the whole family. Use cider press to smash apples, make hot spiced cider, and plant an apple seed to grow at home. Hot dogs, s’mores, and drinks will be provided. Reservations required. $8 members, $12 nonmembers. Fri., Nov. 18, 6-8 p.m. MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN, 750 CHERRY (636-4131), WWW.MEMPHISBOTANICGARDEN.COM.
Join a Dixon docent or member of the curatorial staff on a tour of the exhibitions. Free for members. $5 nonmembers. Tuesdays, Sundays, 2-3 p.m.
Family event featuring the exhibition “Wild Spaces, Open Seasons,” fun activities, music, games, art, and garden activities. Free. Sat., Nov. 19, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.
S P EC IA L EVE NTS
’80s Night at Celtic Crossing
Celebrate everything from the ’80s. DJ KO will start on the turntables playing hits from the decade. Dress to impress for the best ’80s outfit contest. Free. Fri., Nov. 18, 10 p.m.-2 a.m. CELTIC CROSSING, 903 S. COOPER (274-5151), WWW.CELTICCROSSINGMEMPHIS.COM.
continued on page 32
THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.
Woodland Garden Tours
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. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.
PLAY & EARN
Gift Card Giveaway
E X P OS/ SALES
2nd Annual Holistic Health Fair
Featuring vendors, movement and art demos, reiki, health screenings, and more. Sat., Nov. 19, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. NEW CHICAGO COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CENTER, 1036 FIRESTONE (543-0468).
Memphis Flea Market
$4. Sat., Nov. 19, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., and Sun., Nov. 20, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (452-2151), WWW.MEMPHISFLEAMARKET.COM.
F E S T IVALS
Sundays, Nov. 20 & 27 Earn 200 points to receive a $20 gift card of your choice to Macy’s, Walmart, Kroger or Bass Pro Shops.
Jewish Literary and Cultural Arts Festival
S P O RTS / F IT N ES S
The Chilly Chili 5K
Benefiting Concord Academy. Sat., Nov. 19, 9 a.m. MULLINS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 4 N. MENDENHALL (685-8253), WWW.CONCORDACADEMY.ORG.
30,000
$
PROMO CASH SWEEPSTAKES FRIDAYS & SATURDAY NOVEMBER 18-19 • 6pm – 10pm Twenty winners of $250 in Promo Cash between 6pm - 9pm. Five winners of $500 in Promo Cash at 10pm.
Tuesdays in November & December • 3pm
Earn 50 points for a free tournament entry.
Go Ape Treetop Adventure
Course in Shelby Farms Park open for its second season. Ongoing.
Polaris XP900 Giveaway ®
SHELBY FARMS, 500 N. PINE LAKE (767-PARK), WWW.GOAPE.COM.
Tough Man Wrestling Tournament for MDA
+ $10,000 IN CASH + 5,000 IN PROMO CASH
Big night of action with wrestlers from near and far, from yesterday and today, competing to see just who is the area’s MDA Tough Man. $10. Sat., Nov. 19, 5:30-9:30 p.m.
$
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26
SGWA ARENA/FAITH COMMUNITY CENTER, 7340 GREENBROOK PARKWAY (483-3926), SOUTHERNREVOLUTIONPROMOTIONS.WEBS.COM.
M E ETI N G S
B&B: Bold and Beautiful
Trans women of color who come together weekly for fellowship, dining together, and many other social events. Thursdays, 7:30 p.m. OUTMEMPHIS: THE LGBTQ CENTER OF THE MID-SOUTH, 892 S. COOPER (278-6422), WWW.MGLCC.ORG.
Delta Transmasculine
New group for transgender masculine folks. Fridays, 5 p.m. OUTMEMPHIS: THE LGBTQ CENTER OF THE MID-SOUTH, 892 S. COOPER (278-6422), WWW.MGLCC.ORG.
Earn 10x entries every friday, saturday and sunday!
21 SPECIAL FITZ HOTEL
$
ROOM RATE SUNDAY – THURSDAY To make your reservation, call 1-662-363-LUCK (5825).
FitzgeraldsTunica.com • 1-662-363-LUCK (5825) • Must be 21, and a Key Rewards member. See Cashier • Players Club for rules. Management reserves the right to cancel, change or modify the event or offer. Tax & resort fee not included in listed price. $21 Sunday-Thursday room rate valid now through November 30, and excludes Nov 24 & holiday periods. Advance hotel reservations required and subject to availability. $50 credit or debit card is required upon hotel check-in. Arrivals after 6pm must be guaranteed with a credit card. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
MEMPHIS JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER, 6560 POPLAR (761-0810), JCCMEMPHIS.ORG/LITFEST.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Featuring seven authors and one artist inresidence. For more information and event listings, visit website. $45-$200 member, $55-$240 nonmember. Through Nov. 19.
31
CALENDAR: NOVEMBER 17 - 23 continued from page 31 Amazing Scavenger Hunt Adventure
Guided from any smart phone, teams see the sights while solving clues, completing challenges, and learning local history. Available 365 days, sunrise to sunset. Use promo MEMPHISFLYER for special discount. Ongoing. (805-603-5620), WWW.URBANADVENTUREQUEST.COM.
“Black Holes”
Fully immersive journey through one of the most mystifying, awe-inspiring phenomena in the universe: a black hole. See website for schedule. $7. Through Nov. 18. SHARPE PLANETARIUM, MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Open House
Check out makerspace. Fridays, 6 p.m. MIDSOUTH MAKERS, 2804 BARTLETT, WWW.MEETUP. COM/MIDSOUTHMAKERS.
Playhouse on the Square’s 47th Birthday Celebration
Open house featuring memorabilia, entertainment, food and drink, and kids room. Gift registry at Amazon.com, and wish-list on website. $25. Fri., Nov. 18, 6-10 p.m. PLAYHOUSE ON THE SQUARE, 66 S. COOPER (726-4656), WWW. PLAYHOUSEONTHESQUARE.ORG.
Seasonal Stargazing
Suicide Loss Survivors Day Memory Quilt Dedication Memory Quilt will be on display, as well as the SLSD Memory Tree, and the SLSD Impact Statement Board. Those who have lost a loved one to suicide can find hope and healing by participating in the event. Thurs., Nov. 17, 6-9 p.m. BOOYA’S, 954 W POPLAR.
“Voices of the Civil Rights Movement”
Interactive exhibit commemorating the 50th anniversary of the march on Washington. Ongoing.
Hop through constellations, learn cool star names, and groove to planetarium space music in this full-dome audiovisual experience. See
NATIONAL CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM, 450 MULBERRY (521-9699), WWW.CIVILRIGHTSMUSEUM.ORG.
Opening reception for “Retos y Retratos” at Crosstown Arts, Friday
Whet Thursday
An Evening with Spirit with Kalila Smith and Sid Patrick
Led by internationally known psychics and mediums from New Orleans. Their evenings with spirit are healing and insightful. Many people will receive messages from spirit. $45. Sat., Nov. 19, 8 p.m. MEMPHIS HILTON, 939 RIDGE LAKE (497-9486), WWW.HISTORICALHAUNTSMEMPHIS.COM.
An Evening with the Haunted Dolls
Evening with Kevin Cain, who will be bringing his dolls and doing a short talk on collecting haunted dolls and items, book signing, and investigation of his dolls. $25. Fri., Nov. 18, 9 p.m.
SATURDAY November 17-23, 2016
DEC. 10 DOWNTOWN
100 S. MAIN ST. 12:30-3PM
MIDTOWN
752 COOPER ST. 4-7PM
MONETARY DONATION OR UNWRAPPED TOY BENEFITING
TOYS FOR TOTS PICTURE WITH SANTA. CRAFTS. GOODIES. DOWNTOWN
32
901-5-777-PIE
MIDTOWN
901-725-PIES
MEMPHIS HILTON, 939 RIDGE LAKE (497-9486), WWW.HISTORICALHAUNTSMEMPHIS.COM.
“Firefall”
Ssee how the impacts from comets and asteroids have mercilessly shaped Earth’s surface. $7. Through Nov. 18. SHARPE PLANETARIUM, MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Professional School of Beauty Grand Opening
Multi-discipline specialty school offering the only stand-alone program for licensees to attain the credentials needed to become a fully licensed instructor. Mon., Nov. 21, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. & 4-8 p.m. PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL OF BEAUTY, 1524 MADISON (205-9765).
Harvest Party
Enjoy live music from the Earnestine & Hazel’s House Band, dancing, classic Memphis food, silent auction, and open bar, benefiting the Cotton Museum. $75 members, $100 nonmembers. Sat., Nov. 19, 7 p.m.-midnight. THE WAREHOUSE, 36 G.E. PATTERSON (531-7826), MEMPHISCOTTONMUSEUM.ORG.
Jurassic Journeys
Tour through 4,000 square feet of dinosaurs as they move in their natural habitat. Through Dec. 30, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. DISCOVERY PARK OF AMERICA, 830 EVERRETT (731-676-3556), DISCOVERYPARKOFAMERICA.COM.
website for scheduling. $7. Through Nov. 18. SHARPE PLANETARIUM, MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Shelby Farms Volunteer Opportunities
Sign up to volunteer for Spooky Nights, Greenline Half Marathon, or Starry Nights. For more information and sign-up, visit website. Through Dec. 31. SHELBY FARMS, 500 N. PINE LAKE (767-PARK), WWW.SHELBYFARMSPARK.ORG.
Soles4Souls
Drive to collect shoes to help the poor. Gently worn and new shoes can be dropped off to benefit Soles4Souls. Call for more information. Through Dec. 31. KATIE LAMB STATE FARM, 811 TIMBER CREEK (567-8000).
Enjoy the museum after hours, participate in the foundry class, explore the galleries, enjoy a drink from the cash bar, food trucks, live music, and more. Free. Thursdays, 5-8 p.m. METAL MUSEUM, 374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380), WWW.METALMUSEUM.ORG.
Wolf River Greenway Dedication
Celebrate the completion of Memphis-based artist Colin Kidder’s “Raised River” sculpture. The event features an Opera Memphis performance, Wolf River Conservancy informational resources, and coffee and donuts. Sat., Nov. 19, 1-3 p.m. WOLF RIVER GREENWAY, THE NEWEST SECTION OF THE MEMPHIS GREENWAY ON HUMPHREYS BLVD. (452-6500), WWW.URBANARTCOMMISSION.ORG.
ATLAS IV HYDRATION:
Modified Myer’s No time to be sick? Try this one to speed up recovery and provide relief. TESTOSTERONE REPLACEMENT THERAPY WELLNESS INJECTIONS SINUS COCKTAILS IV HYDRATION THERAPIES BOTOX
your friendly neighborhood wellness center.
Clinic Hours: Mon-Fri 7am-6pm Sat-Sun 10am-2pm 14 N. McLean Blvd. (at Madison) 901.509.2738 atlasmenshealth.com
Thanksgiving at The South’s Grand Hotel november twenty-fourth Thanksgiving Brunch THE MEZZANINE
Thanksgiving Dinner CHEZ PHILIPPE
PEOPLE NEEDS REAL PEOPLE REAL NEEDS SOLUTIONS
REAL SOLUTIONS
org to Visit volunteer. mifa.org to volunteer.
3 pm — 8 pm $95 per person, Reservations: 901.529.4000
Thanksgiving Dinner CAPRICCIO GRILL
11 am — 10 pm $38 adults, $16 children 12 and under Reservations: 901.529.4000
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
$76 adults, $22 children ages 5-12 Reservations & Menu : peabodymemphis.com/holiday or 901.529.4000
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
10:30 am— 2:30 pm
33
CALENDAR: NOVEMBER 17 - 23 continued from page 32 H O LI DAY EVE NTS
Battle of the Bells
Kicks off the Salvation Army’s Red Kettles Campaign. Submit original song and be a part of a live audience performance. Judged by music pros. Free. Sat., Nov. 19, 6 p.m.
Holiday Science
THE SALVATION ARMY KROC CENTER, 800 E. PARKWAY S. (270-9120), SALVATIONARMYMEMPHIS.ORG.
MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Enchanted Forest
Guest starring Lil’ Buck and the Memphis Symphony Orchestra. 170 dancers take the stage in New Ballet Ensemble’s unique production fusing ballet, hip-hop, jookin’, Spanish and African dance, and more. $15-$50. Fri., Nov. 18, 7:30 p.m., Sat., Nov. 19, 5:30 p.m., and Sun., Nov. 20, 2:30 p.m.
Includes Festival of Trees, the Gingerbread Village, model train, pictures with Santa, and more. Nov. 19-Dec. 31. MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Holiday Bazaar Art Sale Carefully curated collection of fine art, accessories, and gifts created by MCA’s most talented faculty, students, alumni, and friends, benefiting the MCA scholarship fund. Fri.-Sat., Nov. 18-19. MEMPHIS COLLEGE OF ART, 1930 POPLAR (272-5100), WWW.MCA.EDU.
Zoo Lights
Watch as snow appears right before your eyes. See static electricity in action, and learn why tinsel is sticky. Play a holiday song using your palms. Participate in physical science demonstrations in the spirit of the season. $4-$5. Sat., Nov. 19, 12-1 p.m.
Featuring snow, holiday lights, Santa in his shop with reindeer, ice skating rink, ferris wheel, and more. Tree lighting at 5 p.m. on opening night. $7 members, $9 nonmembers. Nov. 18-Dec. 30, 5:30-9:30 p.m. MEMPHIS ZOO, 2000 PRENTISS PLACE IN OVERTON PARK (3336500), WWW.MEMPHISZOO.ORG.
A Tour of Tastabilities: Black History + Food Tasting Tour
Journey to enjoy delicious but generous tastings from three authentic Memphis restaurants and embrace Southern cuisines and Memphis’ food culture with Cristina of City Tasting Tours. $55. Thurs., Nov. 17, 9:45 a.m. WWW.CITYTASTINGTOURS.COM.
FO O D & D R I N K EVE NTS
Nut ReMix
Downtown Food Tours
CANNON CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, MEMPHIS COOK CONVENTION CENTER, 255 N. MAIN (726-9225), WWW.NEWBALLET.ORG.
Santa Landing
Santa arrives by helicopter to open the Enchanted Forest Festival of Trees, Sat., Nov. 19, 9 a.m. Santa’s landing and other lawn activities are free to the public, Enchanted Forest available for admission fee. Sat., Nov. 19, 9 a.m.
Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree
Featuring music, tree lighting, beer truck, holiday treats, and kids activities. Fri., Nov. 18, 5-7 p.m.
MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
PEABODY PLACE, 100 PEABODY PLACE.
Wolf River Greenway dedication at the Wolf River Conservancy, Saturday Scarecrow Contest
Groups and organizations create scarecrows on view through Thanksgiving. Free with admission. Through Nov. 21. LICHTERMAN NATURE CENTER, 5992 QUINCE (767-7322), WWW.MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.
Savor tastings at five popular eateries, interact with chefs and managers, and sample a range of local flavors while learning about Memphis historic landmarks. Meeting location disclosed with ticket purchase. $55. Saturdays, 1:30 p.m. VARIOUS LOCATIONS, SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION, WWW.CITYTASTINGTOURS.COM.
Happy St. Practice Day
Grand opening of the Pub at the Brass door and the first special practice day happening every 17th of the month leading up to St. Patrick’s Day. $10. 17th of every month, 7 p.m.midnight. Through March 17. BRASS DOOR IRISH PUB, 152 MADISON (572-1813).
Memphis magazine Readers’ Restaurant Poll
Vote for your favorite Memphis victuals. Through Nov. 30.
F I LM
Art of the Steal
Documentary about the controversial move of the Barnes Foundation, the world’s best collection of post-Impressionist art, from rural Merion, PA, to downtown Philadelphia. $5. Fri., Nov. 18, 1 p.m. MEMPHIS BROOKS MUSEUM OF ART, 1934 POPLAR (544-6209), WWW. BROOKSMUSEUM.ORG.
Barton Fink
Cult film written while experiencing difficulty with the script for Miller’s Crossing. $5. Sat., Nov. 19, 2 p.m. MEMPHIS BROOKS MUSEUM OF ART, 1934 POPLAR (544-6209), WWW. BROOKSMUSEUM.ORG.
The Big Sleep
Classic Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall film. Sun., Nov. 20, 2 p.m. MEMPHIS BROOKS MUSEUM OF ART, 1934 POPLAR (544-6209), WWW. BROOKSMUSEUM.ORG.
WWW.MEMPHISMAGAZINE.COM.
T. G . d r Sheppa
And Open to the Public!
November 17-23, 2016
*
34
THURSDAY, NOV. 17, 6:00 PM
- AFTER THE CEREMONY -
Open House at The Guest House at Graceland resort, including hot chocolate and Guest House tours.
*Scheduled to appear. Subject to change.
FREE ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS Santa, decked like the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll, to meet and take pictures with the kids.
Bring your family to experience an annual Memphis tradition as chart-topping country artist T.G. Sheppard flips the switch on the Christmas lights at Elvis Presley’s Graceland.
Visit Graceland.com/Holidays for more information! © EPE. Graceland and its marks are trademarks of EPE. All Rights Reserved.
M t Joy Bateman Author and illustrator of
®
The Art of Dining in Memphis 3 Thursday, December 1, at 6 pm
The Booksellers at Laurelwood 387 Perkins Extended, Memphis, 38117
TO YOU. GET SINGLE-GAME TICKETS TO 12 HOME GAMES OF YOUR CHOICE. OR SPLIT THEM UP AND GET TWO, FOUR, SIX, OR EVEN 12 TICKETS TO THE GAME OR GAMES YOU WANT TO SEE MOST. FOR TWO PRICE OPTIONS STARTING AT $120, VISIT GOTIGERSGO.COM.
starring special guest CHARLES “LIL BUCK” starring RILEY special guest CHARLES “LIL BUCK” RILEY
“THE SPIRIT ONSTAGE IS WONDERFUL!” New“THE YorkSPIRIT Times
ONSTAGE IS WONDERFUL!” New York Times
with the MEMPHIS SYMPHONY with the ORCHESTRA MEMPHIS AND BIG BAND SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA AND BIG BAND
THE CANNON CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS THE CANNON CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS FRI, NOV 18 7:30 PM • SAT, NOV 19 5:30 PM • SUN, NOV 20 2:30 PM FRI, NOV 18 7:30 PM • SAT, NOV 19 5:30 PM • SUN, NOV 20 2:30 PM
T I C K E T S
O N
T I C K E T S
S A L E :
O N
T I C K E T M A S T E R .C O M
S A L E :
T I C K E T M A S T E R .C O M
1 - 8 0 0 -74 5 - 3 0 0 0 | T H E C A N N O N C E N T E R B O X O F F I C E 1 - 8 0 0 -74 5 - 3 0 0 0 | T H E C A N N O N C E N T E R B O X O F F I C E
KATIE SMYTHE CEO & ARTISTIC DIRECTOR | PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF PATRICIA POSSEL | NEWBALLET.ORG KATIE SMYTHE CEO & ARTISTIC DIRECTOR | PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF PATRICIA POSSEL | NEWBALLET.ORG
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Food Champagne Prizes Live Music
WITH THE TOTAL CONTROL FLEX PACKAGE, YOU CAN BUY 10 SINGLE-GAME TICKETS AND GET TWO MORE FREE. HOW YOU USE YOUR 12 TICKETS IS UP
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
www.joysartofdining.com
TAKE TOTAL CONTROL.
35
F O O D B y L e s l e y Yo u n g
Built to Last Erling Jensen marks 20 years.
Erling Jensen serves up 20 years of culinary delights in Memphis.
JUSTIN FOX BURKS
I
f the foodie faithful were to track the history of the culinary scene in Memphis, they could almost date the chronology BE and AE, or “Before Erling” and “After Erling.” Born in Denmark 59 years ago, Erling Jensen made his Memphis debut in 1989 after answering a New York Times ad for a job at a Frenchtraditional restaurant named La Tourelle. Legend has it Memphis restaurateur Glenn Hays, who could also serve as a criterion for Memphis gastronomes, hired him over the phone. Jensen, who graduated from Tech College Aalborg in Denmark with a culinary degree, took the venerable eatery to new heights, garnering awards and recognition over his seven-year tenure at the turreted house on Monroe. In 1996, he ventured out on his own to open his eponymous eatery on Yates, with the vision of keeping it real, quite literally. “My vision has always been to stay within my European background — no cutting corners,” Jensen says. That means making all his sauces from scratch as well as his veal and fish stocks. That does not mean staying within any status quo. “My influences come from everywhere,” he says. “I’m all over the map. I do some Asian things, new American. There’s a lot of good stuff coming up now.” It all seems to have worked for the venerated chef. Erling Jensen: The Restaurant has made frequent appearances as “Best Restaurant” on various Memphis polls year in and year out. Some dishes have come and gone, and some have become a Jensen tradition. His rack of lamb has been synonymous with the Jensen name since his days in
HOME OF THE
ASK CHAR-GRILLED ABOUT OUR OYSTER DOWNSTAIRS PARTY ROOM.
ENU
PRIVATE PARTY SPECIALISTS
FRESH FISH DAILY
November 17-23, 2016
Memphis: A Very Tasteful Food Blog by Susan Ellis
FREE PARKING • ON THE TROLLEY LINE WALKING DISTANCE TO FEDEX FORUM & BEALE ST.
299 S. MAIN ST. • OPEN DAILY AT 11AM 901-522-9070
36
Hungry
PEARLSOYSTERHOUSE.COM
Midtown Location: 242 South Cooper East Memphis Location: 5502 Poplar
www.rawgirlsmemphis.com facebook.com/rawgirlsmemphis
Dishing it out daily at
MemphisFlyer.com
B U I LT T O L A S T
Midtown. The pasta with shrimp and scallops, his crab cakes, and his Dover sole are institutions. Most recently his bison burgers have made their way on to the list of reliables. The foodie faithful might just be wondering what’s next for the Memphis darling? A celebratory 20-year anniversary dinner, anyone? Starting Thursday, November 17th through Saturday, the 19th, Jensen will offer a special five-course dinner. The three days are sold out, but Jensen is considering adding a Sunday dinner if enough interest warrants the move. On the menu for those nights: Scallops with saffron vanilla sauce, Scottish pheasant breast with lingonberries, roasted lamb loin en croute with lobster glacé, and bison ribeye with foie gras and a demi glacé. The fact that it ends with his chocolate soufflé deserves its own paragraph. Each course is paired with wine. In the meantime, his energy is contagious. In addition to running a longstanding landing-place, where he can be found every other day and where he designs weekly menus, he’s at nearly every restaurant event in Memphis, and he has a 3-year-old little boy, Blake, to look after as well as a new wife. “I would say everything’s been going pretty good,” Jensen says. “It’s had its ups and downs, like everything, like life. “I try not to rest on any laurels. All the restaurants we have now. It’s crazy. It’s good. You have to be on your toes. You have to be on your toes every day.” To inquire about Sunday reservations, call (901) 763-3700. Erling Jensen: The Restaurant, 1044 S. Yates, ejensen.com.
SAVOR THE SEASON GIVE THE GIFT OF FRESH, HAND-CUT, PRIME STEAKS AND MORE. ORDER ONLINE
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
TO SHIP ANYWHERE IN THE U.S.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
“My vision has always been to stay within my European background — no cutting corners.”
551 S. MENDENHALL • 901-328-2245 • HUMPHREYSMEMPHIS.COM
37
RESTAURANT & BAR
DELICIOUS!
CUSTOMERS
WANTED. NO EXPERIENCE
NEEDED. FULL TRAINING
November 17-23, 2016
AVAILABLE.
STEAK SANDWICH THE ORIGINAL JACK PIRTLE’S WITH GRAVY, STEAK SANDWICH COMES SLAW & PICKLES COMBOS INCLUDES:
MEDIUM FRIES & 32 OZ. DRINK
APPLY WITHIN. (NO CAMELS OR ANYONE ELSE THAT CAN GO A WEEK WITHOUT A DRINK.)
73 MONROE • DOWNTOWN MEMPHIS
BARDOG.COM • 901.275.8752
38
Open: 10am-3am every day • Delivery: 11am-2pm / 5pm-2am 346 North Main, Memphis, TN 38103 (on the trolley line) westysmemphis.com
GET ONE 2 PC DARK DINNER
FREE
W/ PURCHASE OF ONE
2PC DARK DINNER & 2 MED DRINKS. WITH THIS COUPON.
Dine In & Drive Thru: 3571 Lamar Ave • 2520 Mt Moriah Drive Thru / Carry Out: 1217 S. Bellevue • 4349 Elvis Presley • 811 S Highland
2484 Jackson Ave • 1370 Poplar Ave • 890 Thomas
Facebook.com/Jackpirtles
Twitter.com/Jackpirtles1957
Write Us: Customer2jackpirtles@Gmail.com / Buses Welcome! We Accept All Major Credit Cards
Same S P I R ITS By Andria Lisle
T-Day Spirits to serve themselves. Or, if you can deputize a bartender, there’s nothing more sophisticated to serve than a classic Manhattan. Make it “local” by using Tennessee-distilled rye whiskey from Benjamin Prichard’s, Jim Beam, or Jack Daniel’s. Be sure to have something equally delicious on hand for non-drinkers, designated drivers, and kids. Cranberry juice and seltzer or sparkling cider are infinitely better options than Coke or water. Don’t ever question or single-out your guests who choose not to partake. If you’re tasked with bringing a bottle to a potluck Thanksgiving meal, there are other options beyond pairing a wine with turkey and dressing. Check with the host first, but perhaps you could purchase a bottle of port or sherry to savor with dessert. If you can afford it, spring for a bottle of Sauternes. Its zesty raisin, honey, and apricot flavor pairs well with pumpkin or pecan pie. If not, look for an aged wine with plenty of acidity and a long finish — something savory that won’t fight but can still hold its own with the sweetness on your plate. That said, if you bring a bottle of wine unprompted, don’t necessarily expect it to be served that day. Etiquette says that the wine is a gift to be saved for later. Bringing a bottle doesn’t mean that you get to dictate when it’s served. And whatever you do, don’t take that unopened bottle home with you. Finally, drinkers take note: Sip plenty of water with dinner. Never be the most inebriated person at the table. If you have the propensity to get loaded, don’t use this time to air your family grievances. And don’t drink and drive. In 2012, 42 percent of victims who died in traffic accidents during the Thanksgiving holiday — between Wednesday and Monday — were killed in crashes involving a drunken driver. That’s 174 people who won’t get to enjoy Thanksgiving this year. Thanks to apps like Lyft and Uber, it’s easier than ever to get home safely.
Low Price ______ Huge Selection ______ Unique Service WHITEHAVEN MIDTOWN 4049 Elvis Presley Blvd. 1620 Madison Ave. PARKWAY VILLAGE EAST MEMPHIS 3071 S. Perkins Rd. 729 N. White Station Rd. OAKHAVEN 3237 Winchester Rd.
MEMPHISCASHSAVER.COM
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
A
h, Thanksgiving. No gifts to buy, and, if you’re fortunate, plenty of food to eat. While you’re making your grocery list, don’t forget to purchase some good wine for the table. I traditionally lean toward a zinfandel or pinot grigio, but this year, I’m jumping on the Beaujolais nouveau trend. Its fruity flavors smack with the tartness of cranberry, and the relatively low calorie count (approximately 170 calories a glass) means that you can heap those mashed potatoes high. Plus, at about 12 percent by volume, Beaujolais nouveau is low-alcohol in comparison to pinot noir, merlot, or cabernet sauvignon. And it tastes best cool, but never cold — which allows you to free up more fridge space for your desserts and side dishes. In France, Beaujolais nouveau is released for sale on the third Thursday of November — or exactly one week before Thanksgiving Day here in the states. Beaujolais nouveau is produced from gamay grapes that are handpicked then put through an anaerobic fermentation process via a sealed container filled with carbon monoxide. The production method results in very little tannins, which enhances both its purplepink color and its fruity taste. Because Beaujolais nouveau is bottled and exported as soon as the fermentation process ends, it’s easy on the wallet, retailing between $8 and $16 a bottle, on average. Use the money you’ve saved to pick up a few bottles or boxes of “regular” red and white wine, so that your dinner guests have options. If you’re hosting this year’s meal, you might want to concoct a house cocktail to serve as guests arrive. Google “Thanksgiving cocktail,” and you’ll find hundreds of recipes. A punch or a mulled wine or cider could work well if you’re short-handed in the kitchen and want guests
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
Great ideas for Thanksgiving libations.
39
FILM REVIEW By Chris McCoy
On the Down Low Moonlight is a rapturous trip through a tragic young life.
R
November 17-23, 2016
ichard Linklater’s 2014 film Boyhood is rightly regarded as one of the 21st century’s masterpieces. It traces the story of one kid’s journey through adolescence, elevating the little details of life and change to epic storytelling by forcing us to look at them through the changing eyes of a boy trying to find his way in the world. But Boyhood had some detractors who say the film’s “universal” experience of growing up isn’t really so universal, because the main character, Mason, is a white kid living in a predominantly white community in Texas. Make Mason an African American from a poor, urban neighborhood, and you’d have a vastly different movie, they say. Moonlight seems determined to prove that proposition. I don’t really know what was in director Barry Jenkins’ head when he conceived of adapting the play In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue, but the
Naomie Harris plays Chiron’s mother.
Free is sexy. Good times don’t have to come with a price. Get your free condoms from any of our partners all over Memphis.
40
results speak for themselves. Jenkins’ lead character is Chiron, whom we first meet as a young boy living with his crack-addicted mother (Naomie Harris) in the Liberty City section of Miami. Shy and effeminate, Chiron is fleeing his classmate tormentors when he is rescued by Juan, a gangsta who finds his tough emotional exterior punctured by Chiron’s quivering vulnerability. Juan takes the terrified youngster back to his apartment where he and his girlfriend Teresa (Janelle Monáe) tend to the boy’s wounds and give him some food and compassion. One of Boyhood’s great selling points was its audacious experimental side. Linklater shot his film over the course of 11 years, with his stars aging in real time. Moonlight is also formally audacious, but in a different way. It is divided into three sections, showing Chiron in three different stages of his young life, each played by a different actor. Act one is called “Little,” after the name Chiron is given by the bullies at school. The second is “Chiron,” where the character is played as a high schooler by Ashton Sanders. The title of this segment suggests that we are seeing our hero’s real self. Chiron is still being bullied at school, and his mother’s addictions have
Mahershala Ali plays Juan with compassion in Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight. now spiraled out of control, but there is light in his world, too. His relationship with Teresa continues to be a positive in his life, even as Juan is now out of the picture. And he has some friends, the closest of whom is Kevin (Jharrel Jerome). One day, while sharing a blunt on the beach, Kevin and Chiron’s friendship bubbles over into something more carnal. For a moment, it seems Chiron may have a sort of happiness that has eluded him all of his life. But then comes a betrayal that seems as inevitable as it does tragic, and brutal violence. For the third act, set 10 years later, Chiron is played by Trevante Rhodes, a former college track-and-field athlete whose supple brawn instantly speaks volumes about where Chiron, now known as Black, has found himself — hardened against the world, but utterly alone, with neither the love of his family nor the comfort of a lover. Bringing three actors of such varying ages together to create a single, believable, and deeply sympathetic character is only the beginning of Jenkins’ achievement. He takes Monáe, a powerhouse singer and visionary afrofuturist musician, and transforms her into the film’s continued on page 42
Pick it up. Put it on. Do it right. FreeCondomsMemphis.org
a m a j a P Party!
Join us for a Pajama Party benefiting Abused Women Services of YWCA. Bring in a gently used pair of pajamas to donate and receive $10 off a new pair of pajamas.* (Limit 2 per customer) We will have milk, cookies and fun surprises for all! Adults only please.
TRY OUR MOUTH-WATERING SMOKED WINGS
855 Kentucky St
11AM-3AM
6:00 -
901.207.5111
*Excludes special orders, previous purchases & items already on sale. This offer can not be combined with other offers.
408 Perkins Ext | Memphis, TN 38117 | 901-682-7575 | trousseau.com |
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
TU
2 BER 2 M E V , NO M E S DAY 8 : 0 0 P
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
FOOD / DRINKS / PATIO
41
FILM REVIEW By Chris McCoy continued from page 40 lone source of quiet empathy. The cinematography is both subtle and deeply visceral, transitioning from fluid, expressive Steadicam swoops to Kubrickian tableaus at will. One long crossfade between Black’s car rolling down the interstate and the waves rolling in on a Florida beach creates the momentary illusion that he’s driving on water, and it has not been far from my mind since I saw Moonlight. The whole package is pulled together by the best musical score I’ve heard all year, created by composer Nicholas Britell, who previously scored Twelve Years a Slave. Britell combines the hip-hop that surrounds Chiron with twelve-tone, modernist
−
MOVIES
classical to create a fresh, original soundscape. Combined with Jenkins’ sweeping visual lyricism, they create a synergy rarely seen outside Spielberg/ Williams collaborations. Moonlight is an achingly beautiful film of tragedy, love, and yearning. Its themes of growing up and finding yourself among a kaleidoscope of shifting identities seems particularly necessary in this moment when kindness and compassion seem to be in short supply. As the saying goes, “Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.” Moonlight Now playing Ridgeway Cinema Grill
SINCE
1915
−
Ridgeway Cinema Grill CAFE • IMPORTED BEER & WINE • LUXURY SEATING
November 17-23, 2016
Fantastic Beasts PG13 The Edge of Seventeen R A Man Called Ove PG13 Doctor Strange PG13
Loving PG13 Moonlight R The Accountant R
IMPORTED BEER & WINE • EXPANDED CONCESSIONS • LUXURY SEATING • ALL DIGITAL CINEMA •
Fantastic Beasts PG13 3-D Fantastic Beasts PG13 Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk R Bleed For This R The Edge of Seventeen R Almost Christmas PG13 Arrival PG13
Shut In PG13 Doctor Strange PG13 Trolls PG Hacksaw Ridge R Boo! A Madea Halloween PG13
SPECIAL EVENTS: WEDNESDAY 11/30
Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) 7:00pm @ Paradiso
OPENS WEDNESDAY 11/23 Allied R Bad Santa 2 R Moana PG Rules Don’t Apply PG13
MALCO THEATRES CORPORATE EVENTS • MEETINGS CHURCH RENTALS • GROUP RATES EMAIL GROUPSALES@MALCO.COM
THURSDAY 12/1
VIP MOVIE TICKETS & CONCESSION VOUCHERS
7:00pm @ Paradiso
ORDER ONLINE AT MALCO.COM OR GROUPSALES@MALCO.COM
Rifftrax Holiday Special Double Feature
42
FULL MENU • IMPORTED BEER & WINE LUXURY SEATING
43
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
HELP WANTED • REAL ESTATE
901-575-9400 classifieds@memphisflyer.com ADOPTION HELP ME FULFILL my dream of becoming a Mom through the gift of adoption. Kelly 800-554-4833 Exp. Pd.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES PAID IN ADVANCE! Make $1000 A Week Mailing Brochures From Home! No Experience Required. Helping home workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity. Start Immediately! www.WorkingCentral.Net (AAN CAN)
EDUCATION AIRLINE CAREERS begin here ñ Get started by training as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800-725-1563 (AAN CAN) IRELAND HOME BASED Services has openings to provide home-based social services in several INDIANA cities, including Evansville, Bloomington and Indianapolis. If you have at least 5 years-experience working with children and/or families, please apply! Bachelor’s degree in Social Work, Sociology, Psychology or related field preferred, but not required. Therapists are required to license eligible.We offer full and part time positions. After 90 days, full time employees are eligible for paid time off, use of a company car, and medical/ dental/vision insurance. We also provide 7 paid holidays including your birthday. All staff receive a company phone and tablet. To learn more information about openings and to apply: www.ihbs.us/jobs EOE M/W/Vets/Disabled
HELP WANTED BOX OFFICE ASSISTANT Professional theatre company seeks individuals to work part-time in busy multi-show box office. Customer service skills a must. Some computer experience recommended. $8.50/hour. Send letter & resume: Amy Harwell, amy@playhouseonthesquare.org. PLAYHOUSE ON THE SQUARE, 66 S. Cooper, Memphis, TN 38104.
to boydcareers.com and follow the prompts to Tunica. Boyd Gaming Corp is a drug free workplace and equal opportunity employer. Must be at least 21 to apply. CLEAN AND PINK Is a upscale residential cleaning company that takes pride in their employees & the clients they serve. Providing exceptional service to all. The application process is extensive to include a detailed drug test, physical exam, and background check. The training hours are 8am-6pm Mon-Thur. 12$-19$hr. Full time hours are Mon ñ 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 COPPERSMITH Fourteenth Colony Lighting is searching for a mechanically inclined individual to learn the art of handcrafting copper lanterns. Applicant must have strong math skills and be a hardworking, dedicated employee who appreciates a stable work environment. Vacation, health insurance, 401K. Apply in person at 797 Roland, Midtown between 10am -noon or email resume to info@fourteenthcolonylighting.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
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.comEEO/AA
HOSPITALITY/ RESTAURANT BELMONT GRILL Now Hiring Cooks. Must be able to work days. Apply in person Mon-Fri, 2-4pm. 4970 Poplar @ Mendenhall. No phone calls please.
work history need apply. Molly’s La Casita 2006 Madison Ave. Overton Square area
RAFFERTY’S CORDOVA Servers, Hostess/Hostesses & Kitchen Help Positions available. We are looking for service minded individuals, that don’t mind working hard. We work hard, but make $. Apply in the store.505 N Gtown Pkwy VIET HOA MARKET 40 N. Cleveland St. looking for Food Processing WorkerPrevailing Wage:$32,698/yr. Skilled worker with at least two (2) years of job experience or training in food processing and inventory control. References required. Full-time. Prevailing pay. For more information, please email at vhfoodmem@gmail.com
MOLLY’S LA CASITA may be the place for you! Interviewing for a Server, that has several years of experience in a fast-paced, full-service restaurant. Must be a hard working, team player with excellent references looking for a full time position. Applications available 2-6 pm daily. No phone calls please. Line Cook / Prep Cook position also available. Only experienced with strong references and
Premier retailers, chic eateries, fresh markets & live entertainment venues • Townhouse, garden or high-rise units areto trolley justlineminutes away! • Adjacent • Located near historic Beale Street and AutoZone Park • BeautifulCall park-like setting today!
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.
N o v e m b e r 1 7- 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
570 S. Prescott #3 Charming Upstairs 1BR w/ deck, vaulted ceilings, sky light, spacious LR, big Kit. W/D, gas stove, fridge, plantation blinds. Porch w/swing. $725/mo
Jane W. Carroll Wadlington, Realtors
(901) 674-1702
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
YOU'VE NEVER SEEN MIDTOWN MEMPHIS LIKE THIS! Completely remodeled houses for lease! Beautiful hardwood floors, upgrades, appliances!
761 N. Avalon Street Memphis, TN 38107 3 bed, 1 bath, REDUCED $1350! 276 Garland Street #2 Memphis, TN, 38104 2 Bed, 1 Bath, $1100 + $200 utilities 1315 Goodbar Avenue Memphis, TN, 38104 4 Bed, 2.5 Bath, $1395
4948 BRIARCLIFF, 38117 3BR/2BA unique home in highly sought after area. Property is completely fenced and gated. Lovely well established landscaping, including many unusual ornamental Maple trees. Cantilevered front entry porch is 3/4 moon shaped with Red Quarry tile floor. Asking $305,000
Contact Dan Hoffman: phone: 901.335.9119 mobile: 901.335.9119
MAYBE THE PLACE FOR YOU! Interviewing for a SERVER, that has several years of experience in a fast-paced, full-service restaurant. Must be a hard working, team player with excellent references looking for a full time position. APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE 2-6 PM DAILY. No phone calls please. LINE COOK / PREP COOK POSITION ALSO AVAILABLE.
Visit us @ www.lecorealty.com come in, or call Leco Realty, Inc. @ 3707 Macon Rd. 272-9028
4948 BRIARCLIFF, 38117 3BR/2BA unique home in highly sought after area. Property is completely fenced and gated. Lovely well established landscaping, including many unusual ornamental Maple trees. Cantilevered front entry porch is 3/4 moon shaped with Red Quarry tile floor. $305,000Contact Dan Hoffman:phone: 901.335.9119 mobile: 901.335.9119 CENTURY 21 Maselle and Associates
• Close to UTHSC
V IEW H O U S ES AT
44
HOMES FOR SALE
Small •••• 1BR $575-$615 1Petsdiscounts &welcome 2-br high-riseReduced units Student Great downtown deposit •••• 2BR 1,viewsparking 2of$635-$685 & 3-br garden unitsof Covered $100 ••3BR $755-$785 2 and 3-br townhomes
EPMLEASING.COM
Houses & Duplexes for Rent ALL AREAS
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 salesperson 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.com EOE. No phone calls please.
The Edison The Edison
CHAR RESTAURANT Looking for talented, professional staff members in FOH & BOH. Service requires minimum 2 years waiting experience and extensive beverage knowledge. Apply in person on site Mon-Fri between 2 and 4.431 S. Highland Suite 120
WWW.
3707 Macon Rd. • 272-9028 lecorealty.com Visit us online, call, or office for free list.
SALES/MARKETING
Only experienced with strong references and work history need apply. M O L LY ’ S L A C A S I TA
901-260-0206
2006 MADISON AVE. (Overton Square area)
REAL ESTATE • SERVICES MIDTOWN HOMES
DOWNTOWN APTS
MIDTOWN CONDO Rare opportunity to own 2BR/2BA second floor unit with balcony & great view, 2195 Poplar, unit 205, Park Terrace Condos. Walk to Overton Square and Levitt Shell. Gated parking. $195,000 Crye-Leike, Realtors (901)766-9004 Mike Ward (901) 277-3869-Direct
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.
DOWNTOWN LOFT/ CONDO THE WASHBURN Ideal Location. Stunning Spaces. One of a Kind. 60 S. Main St. Memphis TN. 901.527.0244 thewashburn.com
TAXES *2016 Tax Change Benefits* Personal/Business + Legal Work By a CPA-Attorney Practicing in Midtown & Memphis Since 1989
901-575-9400 classifieds@memphisflyer.com EAST MEMPHIS APT
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.
983 JUNE ROAD #6 Great E. Memphis 2 BR, 1.5 BTH, 2nd flr. rental in gated Poplar East Apartments 1Min from Starbucks & I-240. Pool & Clubroom included. $890/mo. Call 508-0639.
EVERGREEN HISTORIC DISTRICT 1BR $495-$545, XLG Studio $450, W/D, hdwd flrs, Pets ok, porch. $25 credit ck fee. 901.452.3945
GENERAL APT
LUXURY MIDTOWN APT 1703 Locket Place: 3BR/2BA, full kitchen, all hardwood floors, secured parking, 2 fireplaces, 2 large balconies. Over 2000 sq ft. Centrally located. $1300/mo. 901.859.1725
HUNTINGTON HILLS APTS Plant your garden here at The New Huntington Hill’s Apartments and bloom great savings!! 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms. $99 Move-In Special! No application fee. 2872 Coach Dr., Memphis, TN 38128. Call 901.372.9309
MIDTOWN APTS FOR RENT Large 1 Br. Midtown Apt. Off Overton Square. Water incl. $575. Huge 3Br. 2 Bth. Apt. Midtown area. 1 mile from Overton Park. Water/gas incl, gated, hardwood floors, CH/A, onsite laundry $695. 2Br. Apt. $525-$575. Call 901-458-6648
MIDTOWN APT 1220 MADISON 1 & 2BR, ref, stove, garbage disp. DW. Hdwd flrs, ceiling fans. Some units remodeled. $650-775/mo. $400/dep. No Dogs. 901-484-6700
SHARED HOUSING ALL AREAS ROOMMATES.COM Browse hundreds of online listing with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Roommates.com (AAN CAN)
3 ROOM APT OR OFFICE For lease, three-room office OR apartment in midtown law firm building. Separate entrance, large rooms, friendly co-tenants. Perfect for start up, student, solo attorney. $650/ DON’T WAIT CELEBRATE mo. plus utilities. FREE (and fast!) WIFI THE NEW HUNTINGTON included. 901-672-7080 for more info.
(901) 272-9471
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 PRIVATE ROOM For one good person. All amenities, internet, Summer/240, $85/wk. Lv. Msg. 691-8724 ROOMS FOR RENT Clean, furnished, CH/A, cable, utilities, WD included. Midtown. $110/wk. Owner/Agent 901.461.4758 SOUTH MEMPHIS 2 furnished rooms for mature ladies in Christian home. Nice area on bus line, near expressway. Non smoker. $400/ mo, includes utilities, cooking/laundry privileges. Must be employed or retired. 901-405-5755 or 901-518-2198.
3 ROOM OFFICE OR APT For lease, three-room office OR apartment in midtown law firm building. Separate entrance, large rooms, friendly co-tenants. Perfect for start up, student, solo attorney. $650/ mo. plus utilities. FREE (and fast!) WIFI included. 901-672-7080 for more info.
SERVICES KEN MOVERS Best Prices In Town!$85 Per Hour - 4 Hour Minimum. Call 901.569.4084 TAXES Personal/Business + Legal work by a CPA-Attorney. Bruce Newman (901) 272-9471. newmandecoster.com
BUY, SELL, TRADE U OF M AREA APT 570 S. PRESCOTT #3 Charming Upstairs 1 BR w/ deck, vaulted ceilings, sky light, spacious LR, big Kit. W/D, gas stove, fridge, plantation blinds. Porch with swing $725 Jane W. Carroll, Wadlington, Realtors 902-674-1702
MIDTOWN ROOMS FOR RENT Central Heat/Air, utls included, furnished. 901.650.4400
COUNTING THE DAYS TO X-MAS 1726 Madison X-MAS IN NOVEMBER HEREAve AT Bruce Newman | newmandecoster.com HILL'S APARTMENT. Midtown Friendly!
OFFICE SPACE
CAL. KING BEDROOM SET Includes Chess/Armoire, Dresser. $600/obo. Call 901.305.6068 QUEEN BEDROOM SET Includes Chess/Armoire. $500/obo. Call 901.305.6068 SIDE-BY-SIDE FRIGERATOR Black. Call $400/obo. Call 901.305.6068
ANNOUNCEMENTS PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical, and continued support afterwards. Choose adoptive family of your choice. Call 24/7. 877-362-2401 (AAN CAN)
MASSAGE
DON’T WAIT CELEBRATE X-MAS IN NOVEMBER HERE AT THE NEW HUNTINGTON HILL’S APARTMENT.
$99.00
MOVE IN SPECIAL & NO APPLICATION FEE
1, 2, & 3 BEDROOMS
Transform Treat the condition- Transform your life! your life! Are you dependent or addicted to Opiate dependence •painkillers exists in all walks of life. •opiates •methadone •heroin? Introduction, maintenance, Private confidential, medical withdrawal in-office treatment. & counseling. Staffed by a suboxone Introduction, maintenance, certified physician. medical withdrawal & counseling.
SUBOXONE
SUBOXONE ZUBSOLV
2872 COACH DR | MEMPHIS, TN 38128 | 901-372-9309
VW • AUDI MINI•PORSCHE
German Car Experts
Specializing in VW & Audi Automobiles
Also Servicing
Mini • Porsche Factory Trained Experience Independent Prices
4907 Old Summer Rd.
(Corner of Summer & Mendenhall)
Staffed by
BUNAVAIL (901) 276-4895 for more information (901) 761-8100 for more information
(901) 761-3443 www.WolfsburgAuto.com
Call today for an appointment!
WILLIAM BREWER Massage Therapist (Health & Wellness offer) 377-6864
NUTRITION/HEALTH MAKE THE CALL TO START GETTING CLEAN TODAY. Free 24/7 Helpline for alcohol & drug addiction treatment. Get help! It is time to take your life back! Call Now: 855-732-4139 (AAN CAN) VIAGRA!! VIAGRA 52 Pills for only $99.00. Your #1 trusted provider for 10 years. Insured and Guaranteed Delivery. Call today 1-888-403-9028 (AAN CAN)
PET SERVICES CKC YORKIE PUPS So Gorgeous!!! 2 males - will be tinyDew claws removed, tails docked, 1st set of shots $600.00/obo. Call 901-258-8012
M.E. STUDIO APOGEE SOUND RECORDERS PRO-Tools 9. Up to 96 Tracks! Perfect for CD projects, Singer/Songwriters, Band Demos. Call or text 901.491.0415. apogeesound@yahoo.com
AUTO ‘99 DODGE TRUCK 1500 Parting out or for sale. $1000. Call Lemont 901.828.8036 CASH FOR CARS Any Car/Truck 2000-2015, Running or Not! Top dollar for used/damaged. Free Nationwide Towning! Call now 1-888-420-3808 (AAN CAN)
CLASSIFIEDS memphisflyer.com
COUNTING THE DAYS TO X-MAS
TOM PITMAN, LMT Massage The Way You Like It. Swedish/Deep Tissue - Relaxation, Hot Stones. Credit Cards. Call 761-7977. tompitmanmassage.com, tom@tompitmanmassage.com
45
DATING
901-575-9400 classifieds@memphisflyer.com
1 Month
FREE
with promo code:
MEMPHIS
FREE TO LISTEN AND REPLY TO ADS Free Code: Memphis Flyer
Your place or mine? The mobile hookup site for gay and bi men
FIND REAL GAY MEN NEAR YOU
(901) 888-0888 www.megamates.com 18+
Visit Squirt.org on your mobile to hookup today
Meet sexy friends who really get your vibe...
Try FREE: 901-896-2433 More Local Numbers: 1-800-811-1633
N o v e m b e r 1 7- 2 3 , 2 0 1 6
vibeline.com 18+
FREE TRIAL
901.896.2438
WARNING HOT GUYS! Safe & Honest. Trusted & Discreet.
Memphis
Private, Personal Adult Entertainers 901.527.2460 46
Discreet Chat Guy to Guy
A.Aapris/Best Entertainment Agency
901.888.0888 FREE to listen and reply to ads!
FREE CODE: Memphis Flyer For other local numbers call: 24/7 Friendly Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628
18+
1-888-MegaMates ©2014 PC LLC
MegaMatesMen.com
2687
TM
T H E L A S T W O R D B y Tr o y L . W i g g i n s
Surviving Trump
Last week, we made a bigot president-elect of the United States. Some folks are feeling partisan disappointment at this. Many others are flush with primal fear, like realizing that you’re trapped inside Jurassic Park just as the news that the raptors have escaped from their enclosure blares from a loudspeaker. But this is our reality, complete with roving bands of Trump supporters carving swastikas on any surface clean enough to bear the mark. If you’re black like me, or brown or Muslim or queer or trans or poor — people living oppressed pre-Trump — you’re probably figuring that this singular event marks the decline of America into the Hunger Games era. For me, waking up to an impending Trumplandia was like taking a sledgehammer to the chest. I sank into an emotional swamp of depression, disgust, and fear for myself, my friends, and my family. Being the target of good old, homegrown American hatred is nothing new for a lot of us, but the reality of life as a target of soon-to-be President Trump’s actual hatred and his forthcoming policies rooted in that hatred has the road ahead looking mighty decrepit. Facing this reality, how should we prepare to move forward along this road in the direction of progress and justice? Well, I don’t have all the answers, and I can’t tell you how you should be feeling right now. But I can tell you that we have options. Our resilience and resistance is nothing new. Without us and our refusal to be denied our place in the American tapestry, this country would be a bland, music-less republic full of sadness and weird Jell-O casseroles. Folks suffering from Trump-shock, take a moment to breathe. Or pray. Or cry. Or break some dishes, or swear your fealty to an ancient eldritch horror with tentacles for a head in exchange for the power to make humans spontaneously combust with a blink. Okay, maybe not the last one. But give yourself the time and space to react to this new, horrible reality. Forgive yourself for your fear, because that’s a normal emotion to feel when you’re facing down the hydra that is white supremacist cisheteropatriarchy — its singular goal is to disempower everyone who’s not a cisgender, straight, white dude. Take the time to process and right yourself. You’ll thank you for it. Once you right yourself, check on your people. You’re not alone in your grief and fear right now, and there are people in your networks who will need to lean on you. I wasn’t joking about those roving bands of Trump thugs; they’re real, they’re indiscriminate, and they are drunk at the seeming justification for their hatred. Find your people and cover them. Feed them. Let them vent if they need to. Squad up and watch each other’s backs. Come to their aid if you see them suffering from Trumpression. We’re going to need each other if we’re going to make it through this. After taking care of yourself and finding your squad, start the work of living and resisting. Despite what some think, you don’t have to accept the fact that a vulgar, racist, misogynistic, xenophobic bigot is our president. Especially when that president has made it very clear that he is going to work against everything that you stand for. Sure, he has a lot of power, but so does the Lich King — and he can be taken down in a 25-player raid. Now is the time to strategize. Gather and hunker down. Determine which representatives are true to your community’s interests and needs. Develop a longterm strategy for electing them to or placing them in key strategic positions. Understand that voting is not the penultimate resistance, but that equity and justice work also requires personal action — use your skills to support organizations and groups whose work aligns with your values. Read literature that broadens your worldview. Artists, create kickass art that challenges people. Community leaders, help those around you understand the gravity of our situation and listen to their ideas on progress. Galvanize yourself and others to work toward the common goal of equality and shared power. Begin to think and act strategically and intersectionally. And remember, there’s a difference between conversation and debate. Debate has a different aim than conversation; it is used to force people to concede a point, and ultimately silence them. Conversation is used to communicate, to share ideas and expand understanding. Conserve your energy, and work smart. Don’t fall into the trap of debating individuals when you should be conversing with your squad and working to make our systems equitable. Don’t jump too quickly to the blame game. Even though we know white people and their dedication to preserving systems that privilege them played a huge part in this mess (Trump won the white vote over Clinton in nearly every conceivable way, per exit polling data gathered by Edison Research for the National Election Pool. Feel free to debate your mother about that one), blaming them solves nothing. Hopefully, the ones among them who call themselves allies realize the work that they must do and are committed to doing it. So, take the time to right yourself, then brush yourself off. We have work to do, and we’re going to need all squads on deck. Ring the bells that can still ring. Troy L. Wiggins is a Memphian and writer whose work has appeared in the Memphis Noir anthology, Make Memphis magazine and The Memphis Flyer.
m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m
The Hunger Games
THE LAST WORD
A guide to handling the rocky road ahead.
47
MINGLEWOOD HALL Est. 1942
STILL ROLLIN’ AFTER 45 YEARS
Just Announced: Jan 19 ‑ The Cadillac Three Feb 17 ‑ Dan & Shay
Memphis’ #1 Head Shop Since ‘71
HE RIG T H IT
Coco & Lola’s MidTown Lingerie
Y!
YOUNGAVENUEDELI.COM 2119 Young Ave • 278‑0034 11/16: $3 Pint Night! Tarrapin Brewery Debut 11/17: Memphis Trivia League! 11/19: wARM w/ Space 4 Lease 11/26: Dead Soldiers 12/3: Devil Train 12/10: UFC 206 Cormier vs. Johnson 2 12/17: Chinese Connection Dub Embassy Kitchen Open Late! Now Delivering All Day! 278-0034 (limited delivery area)
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
GONER RECORDS
New/ Used LPs, 45s & CDs. We Buy Records! 2152 Young Ave 901-722-0095
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.
ROSIE’S HAULING SERVICE • Delivery & Pick Up Service • Light Debris & Junk Removal Call 901.512.7686
I BUY RECORDS! 901.359.3102
Curve appeal with Sass & Class ONLY fire is Hotter than COSABELLA !!! 710 S. Cox|901‑425‑5912|Mon‑Sat 11:30‑7:00
CHIP N’ DALE’S ANTIQUES 3457 Summer Avenue Memphis, TN 38122 901-452-5620 INVENTORY ARRIVING DAILY EVERYTHING ON SALE!
WE BUY USED BOOKS Visit www.burkesbooks.com for details Burke’s Book Store 936 S Cooper Street
FREE! November 16
‘til
READING RAMPAGE
Thanksgiving Day
Mention this ad and get a FREE 6 pk. of RAW Cones with any purchase of $10 or more!
VETTE HAS RELOCATED From Legend’s on Madison & 3rd to own shop at Weaves, Wigs & Styles 2552 Poplar Ste 217. We do all styles! Grand Opening This Thursday 11/17, Fri 11/18 & Sat 11/19. ‑Everything 1/2 Price. Call today for appointment 901.435.6824 Shop | 901.292.8835 Cell
I Buy Old Windup Phonographs & Records Esp. on labels: Gennett, Paramount, Vocalion, QRS, Superior, Supertone, Champion, OKeh, Perfect, Romeo, Sun, Meteor, Flip; many others. Also large quantities of older 45’s. Paul. 901‑435‑6668
WA
Pool Table • Darts • WI-FI • Digital Jukebox 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
12/1: Big Smo 11/26: Futurebirds w/ Thompson Springs 12/23: ZOOGMA MORE EVENTS AT MINGLEWOODHALL.COM
T
MURPHY’S
1884 LOUNGE
SMOK E
Upcoming: Nov 18 ‑Memphis Comedy Festival Amateur Hour Competition Nov 19 ‑ Daisyland w/ Grandtheft Nov 20 ‑ Lil’ Durk Nov 23 ‑ LYFE IS DOPE Nov 26 ‑ Daisyland w/ CASH CASH Dec 3 ‑ Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats SOLD OUT Dec 8 ‑ Donnell “Ashy Larry” Rawlings Dec 10 ‑ Daisyland w/ Bear Grillz Dec 15 ‑ Lita Ford Dec 31 ‑ NYE 2017 Daisyland w/ Blackout II Feb 1 ‑ Chippendale Mar 17 ‑ Reverend Horton Heat April 2 ‑ Mac Sabbath, Metalachi, Okilly Dokilly NEW DAISY THEATRE | 330 Beale St Memphis 901.525.8981 • Advance Tickets available at NewDaisy.com and Box Office
ON SALE FRIDAY: Juicy J w/ Bell [2/20] 11/19: V3Fights Live MMA 11/25: North Mississippi Allstars w/ Danielle Nicole Band 12/17: Lucero Family Christmas w/ Nikki Hill 2/18: Kathleen Madigan (Comedy) 3/29: Railroad Earth 3/31: Johnnyswim
3 LOCATIONS HIGHLAND STRIP
MIDTOWN
(across the tracks from the original)
2027 Madison Ave 901 590 0048 MIDTOWN
555 S Highland HIGHLAND STRIP 901 452 4731
Saturday November 19, 2016 Improve Your Reading Skills. Reading for efficiency, speed & comprehension. Mark your calendar! FREE Registration: 901‑743‑6421 (bring your mobile device or laptop but not required). 10am‑2pm. Seating limited. First come: First served! Ages 9‑adult. Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, 3745 Kimball Ave, Memphis, TN 38111. visit: www.holytrinityes.org
PHOTOGRAPHER/ VIDEOGRAPHER Special Events, Wedding, Engagements,
(across the tracks from the original) original)
NOW OPEN! 2027 Madison Ave 555 S Highland CORDOVA 901 590 0048 901 452 4731 NOW OPEN! 981 N Germantown Pkwy 901 654 3678 CORDOVA 981 N Germantown Pkwy 901 654 3678 whatevershops.com
Join our texting club and get 15% off your next purchase, whatevershops.com plus members-only discounts and offers! Text 51660 . Join our texting clubWHATEVER and get 15%tooff your next purchase! Message & data rates may apply* Text WHATEVER to 51660 . Message & data rates may apply*
901.414.3333 • WWW.URBANLUXESALON.NET 2093 UNION AVE • MEMPHIS, TN 38104
SPORTS TALK RADIO
Advertising/Sponsorship Sales Excellent part‑time income. Earn up to $1,800 1st month. Great Opportunity. Call 901‑527‑2460