Memphis Flyer 9.14.17

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FEATURING 09.14.17 1490TH Issue

FREE

Donald Juengling of the Memphis Comic Expo

Blowin’ in the Wind P3 Don Lifted’s Alero P19 Next Door Eatery BRYAN ROLLINS

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EXCELSIOR! The amazing, shocking, terrifying, incredible, uncanny story of the Mighty Memphis Comic Expo


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CARRIE BEASLEY Senior Art Director CHRISTOPHER MYERS Advertising Art Director JEREMIAH MATTHEWS BRYAN ROLLINS Graphic Designers 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, LEWIS 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 Publisher JENNIFER OSWALT Chief Executive Officer JEFFREY GOLDBERG Director of Business Development BRUCE VANWYNGARDEN Editorial Director MOLLY WILLMOTT Special Projects Director KEVIN LIPE Digital Manager LYNN SPARAGOWSKI Distribution Manager MATTHEW PRESTON Social Media 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

I was loading a couple of items into my car in the lot at the Midtown Home Depot when a man approached with a bucket filled with what appeared to be a spray bottle, wadded newspapers, and rags. “Excuse me, sir,” he said. “I’m not begging, but if you’ll let me, I can clean your car windows for you. I’ll make ’em look like new.” I hesitated, debating whether to give him a buck and wish him the best or let him clean my windows, which were admittedly pretty gross, thanks to my dogs drooling as they rode along, noses to the wind. “I used to do detail at Bud Davis Cadillac,” he said, closing the deal. “I’ll make ’em look good.” I was in no real hurry, so I opted to let him do his thing. It became apparent that this guy took his trade seriously. He sprayed each window inside and out and wiped them down until they were showroom clean. It took him a minute or two to do each window. He didn’t miss a spot, not even the corners. As he worked, we talked. He told me he’d had his bag stolen two nights earlier while he was sleeping outside. “They took my ID and my extra clothes and my tennis shoes,” he said. “I’m trying to make enough today to eat and get back into a shelter tonight. And get some clothes.” He was wearing flip-flops, an old T-shirt, and a pair of too-large shorts belted with a rope. He was hard and thin as bone. “I don’t usually dress like this,” he said. And I believed him, though I know I’m not supposed to believe homeless people’s stories. I know I’m supposed to be cynical, and I’m supposed to know that all they’re really doing is hustling money from me so they can go buy a drink. I don’t care, honestly. I’d want a drink, too, if I lived on the street and made my living wiping down people’s car windows in parking lots. I’d want a lot of drinks. That said, I don’t pay much attention to the rotating cadre of sign-holding folks at various stoplights around town. There’s something fishy about that situation — something suspiciously entrepreneurial. And I don’t have a problem blowing off the young, healthy looking guy who stands in front of Walgreens and hits everyone up for change on the regular. I mean, c’mon, man. Again? But if I think I might be in the presence of a human being who is genuinely down and out, I’ll usually listen and I’ll usually learn something — and more often than not, I’ll give them money. Yeah, I’m a sucker, right? Like I said, I don’t care. Life is short. Help somebody out. It won’t kill you. The man at Home Depot cleaned my windows like it meant something to him, like he was proud of his work, like it wasn’t a tired hustle. When he finished, I looked in my wallet and saw two twenties and three ones. I gave him a twenty and his eyes went soft, and he said, “Thank you. You don’t know how N E WS & O P I N I O N much I appreciate this,” and I believed THE FLY-BY - 4 him. NY TIMES CROSSWORD - 5 He shook my hand and I got in my POLITICS - 8 nice car with its shiny, clean windows EDITORIAL - 10 and drove off feeling some kind of way VIEWPOINT - 11 — maybe sad, maybe grateful, maybe a COVER — “EXCELSIOR!” little of both. BY BRYAN ROLLINS There are a lot of folks out there & CHRIS DAVIS - 12 who are hurting, broke, homeless STE P P I N’ O UT — lost souls in the high weeds of WE RECOMMEND - 16 life. At a time when many of us are MUSIC - 18 LOCAL BEAT - 19 contributing money and food and AFTER DARK - 20 supplies to help the victims of the CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 24 recent hurricanes in Florida and BOOKS - 36 Texas, it’s good to remember that FOOD - 38 there are other people, just down SPIRITS - 41 the street in Memphis, Tennessee — FILM - 42 blowing in the wind. 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 ALEX GREENE Music Editor CHRIS DAVIS, MICHAEL DONAHUE MAYA SMITH, JOSHUA CANNON Staff Writers JESSE DAVIS Copy Editor JULIE RAY Calendar Editor

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

OUR 1490TH ISSUE 09.14.17

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THE

fly-by

f ly on the wall

N OTAB LE Tennessee’s porn-busting, fetus-rights fighter, Trump fan, and gubernatorial hopeful Mae Beavers stopped by WBIR’s studio in Knoxville to make a big announcement. “I don’t believe I’m too conservative at all,” she said. Q U O TA B L E “Hold on, I’m peeing.” — polite if immodest drug suspect Alexis Bloodworth, who was caught peeing in the backyard of a home. Then she stood up and gave her drugs to the police.

September 14-20, 2017

N EVE R E N D I N G E LVI S Fly on the Wall likes to reserve this headline for stories about the real, true Elvis and his posthumous impact on Memphis and the world. But Kingly cosplayers sometimes generate headlines so unexpected it would be wrong not to share. Consider this nugget from the U.K. website Devonlive. com: “Elvis man banned from every karaoke in town after playing maracas.” “I’ve had my liberty taken away from me,” said Elvis impersonator Richard Carpenter.

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FAT C HAN C E When you see a tanker driving through Midtown sporting an “Inedible Fat Not Intended for Human Food” sticker, it really does get you to thinking about the word “intended.”

{

Questions, Answers + Attitude

W E E K T H AT W A S By Flyer staff

Protests, statues, & cannabis Thousands spent on protests, council gets tough on statues, & lawmakers look at legalization. P R OTEST SPENDING The Memphis Police Department (MPD) spent more than $55,000 in overtime in the last two weeks of August manning rallies and protests aimed at the city’s Confederate statues. MPD spent just under $9,000 for on-duty officers to keep a presence at Health Sciences Park and Memphis Park, home to the controversial Confederate statues. The figures were presented to Memphis City Council members last week. Council members asked if boarding up the statues or adding more cameras around them would allow for fewer patrols. But MPD officials said that the around-the-clock patrolling would continue indefinitely and that the patrols are solely to protect people, not the statues. F I G HTI N G O N FO R D R EAM E R S The city’s immigrants and their advocates said they were disappointed but not deterred about the TrumpAdministration decision last week to drop the the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. DACA now allows young undocumented immigrants to avoid deportation. U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the federal government would wind the program down over the course of the next six months. Eliminating DACA will affect about 8,000 young people in Tennessee. Officials with the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition and Latino Memphis said they will push for legislation to protect them. C O U N C I L C O U LD “U N LEAS H TH E D O G S” The Memphis City Council unanimously agreed last week to an ordinance that would initiate the removal of Confederate statues from the city even if the Tennessee Historical Commission (THC) denies the city’s waiver. City council attorney Allan Wade told council members the ordinance was the best way to legally remove the statues, noting it erodes federal protections for equal access to public parks. Wade said he wants to allow the THC to “do the right thing” with a vote scheduled for next month. If it doesn’t, then this ordinance will “unleash the dogs,” he said.

By Chris Davis. Email him at davis@memphisflyer.com.

Edited by Toby Sells

C O O K C O NVE R S I O N U N D E R WAY Work can begin on the Cook Convention Center as city

council members approved $21 million in loans for the project. Revamping the convention center is a piece of the larger Bicentennial Gateway Project to revitalize the Pinch District and surrounding areas. “G O O D FAITH” CAS ES R EVI EWE D Two cases heard last week by the Tennessee Supreme Court could give police more room for mistakes in search and seizure procedures. The court decisions could allow “good faith” exceptions to rules that would throw out evidence if police make technical or clerical errors. “The adoption of this exception for a constitutional violation erodes our citizens’ rights to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures as guaranteed by the United States and Tennessee Constitutions,” Tennessee Justice Sharon G. Lee wrote in a dissenting opinion last year. C A N N A B I S G R O U P S TA R T S W O R K The first meeting of the task force to review medical cannabis legalization in Tennessee is slated for next week in Nashville. State lawmakers agreed to form the group after legislation to start a medical cannabis program in Tennessee failed in the legislature this year. Memphis Rep. Raumesh Akbari is the only West Tennessee member of the committee. The meeting is to be the first of three that will bring reviews of medical cannabis to Knoxville in October and Memphis in November.


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Crossword ACROSS 1 One of the Great Lakes 5 Menacing cloud 10 Sony offering 14 Saint’s home, for short 15 Place for a barbecue 16 Rich finish? 17 “Don’t give up” 19 Rather powerful ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE engine 20 Brown 21 Some plants 23 Value 25 Spooky quality 28 Smoothie fruit 29 Popular cookie 31 Taking things for granted on April Fools’ Day and others 32 “Time ___ …” 33 Track, in a sense 34 Not wait for Mr. Right, say 35 Huuuuuuuuge

Edited by Will Shortz

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No.

No. 0131

37 Loose, now DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 40 Powerful D.C. 1 Vase style 14 15 16 lobby 2 Compatriot of 41 Raiser of 17 18 19 Mao awareness, for short 3 Noted father-or20 21 22 son singer 44 Not accidental 23 24 25 4 Ancient New 45 In opposition Mexican 46 Guru, maybe 28 29 30 31 5 Part of a crib 47 Straightens 32 33 34 6 Living ___ 49 Firm parts: Abbr. 35 36 50 Hockey team, 7 Major Asian e.g. carrier 37 38 39 40 4 51 Words on a 8 Attire jacket 44 45 46 9 Like melancholy 53 Risked a ticket musical keys 47 48 49 Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past 55 Construction puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 10 The poor staples … onoreach puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Read about and comment Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords. 50 51 52 a hint to this 11 Not go along puzzle’s theme 55 56 12 Prefix with lateral 53 54 59 Famous Amos 13 Bedevil 59 60 61 60 Rocker Steve 18 Girl’s name that 61 “Don’t go!,” e.g. 62 63 64 may precede Ann 62 Obnoxious one 63 Subject of some 22 One may be starting in sports PUZZLE BY HOWARD BARKIN codes 36 Actress Wilson of 43 Features of 54 Autho 23 What’s shaken 64 Scandinavian wrote Boston accents “Mrs. Doubtfire” when you say capital insan “Shake!” 45 Milieu of the 37 Sch. with the long ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE FX series “The 24 Big letters in George W. Bush horrib Americans” electronics Presidential E P I C P O E M B R O W S E 46 Poetic stanza Library D E M O T A P E S H R E W S 25 Ones moving far 56 Burie 48 Like government from home 38 Corral K E P T A T I T C Y C L I C bonds O D E T S S H U S A L M A 26 Fifth in a group 39 Strips at 57 Pull ( 49 German of eight breakfast C E N A B O O Z E S I M P preposition H E D P U D D I N G N E A 27 Saginaw-to-Flint 41 Tough, tenacious 51 Oil qtys. 58 Noted S I Z E S Q U O T E D sorts dir. pseud 52 They burn J A C U Z Z I Q U I X O T E 29 Bit of beachwear 42 Wild blue in sh A LollowO N Z O G U I D O writin yonder 53 Racing letters F R E 30 ___ way FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 LY F IS H MP Vook, A F FRIDAY, N F A I RSEPTEMBER E B F F 22 @MEA eb on Fac gra m MUD ISLAND AMPHITHEATRE I InKstaitEter A MUD F U ISLAND Z Z Y AMPHITHEATRE W Y L E 33 It may be added Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,0 &Tw test n to alcohol puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). T foArdceotR O S R E B C A G E S ails TICKETS ON SALE NOW O Z A R K S TICKETS T O MON A SALE T O FRIDAY, E S 34 Pitiful Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com APRIL 21 AT 10 AM R A AT G TICKETMASTER.COM T OAT TICKETMASTER.COM P T• CHARGE W O • BY PCHARGE E NBY800-745-3000 C E PHONE: PHONE: 800-745-3000 35 Hit the gas pedal Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentc 5 S M E A R Y E L M T R E E S hard E X T O L

E P I C F A I L U R E

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S T A T A S C E S L E T E B U L E T O N S H A A M O R I D A B U C M A L E L E B L O A T A L U M S

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S T P R R E Y M K E A D R I L A

Y A E N A G N H O U O L A D S S O O F F R A A N S T Y E S S P O A P S

B O A R D A V I A

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63 Sean who played Mikey in “The Goonies” 66 Band with the hit “Whip It” 67 Pope who excommunicated Martin Luther 68 Elbow, maybe 69 Garden of ___ 70 Puzzlemaker Rubik 71 Strength

DOWN 1 Help at the entrance to a mall 2 Aladdin’s monkey 3 Courage in battle 4 Basketball Hall-of-Famer Dan 5 Plush fabric 6 Eyebrow’s shape, roughly 7 Criticize severely 8 Skillful 9 Peanut, for one 10 One of the A’s in N.A.A.C.P.: Abbr. 11 Roomie 12 Woman who sings “Burn” in “Hamilton” 13 Affix again, as a badge 19 Word before air, fire or water 21 Tolerated 23 Hearty drink 24 Willing to do 25 Everyone, in Dixie

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30 Give a lickin’

33 “___ your lip!”

35 First winner of horse racing’s Triple Crown, 1919

36 Disguised, briefly 37 Staring

39 Item that might be fervently wanted by a prisoner

40 Start of an idea

41 President after Grant 42 Encroach on someone’s land 47 “The Simpsons” bus driver 48 “That’s a fine ___ of fish!” 49 Devon cathedral city 52 Rod Stewart’s “Maggie May,” e.g. 53 Had title to 54 Work on a loom

56 Hawk’s hook

57 Maki, temaki or uramaki

59 Black, in poetry

62 Prefix with planet 64 “Now ___ seen it all!” 65 Just-minted

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

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32 Hilarity, in Internet-speak 34 One side of the Pacific 38 *Branches in a storm? 43 6’11” Channing of the N.B.A. 44 Partridge’s tree, in a Christmas song 45 Color TV pioneer 46 Put together, as a team 50 Ham on ___ 51 Singer Scaggs with the 1976 hit “Lowdown” 52 Front of a boat 55 *Its arrival may be signaled by a ding 58 So-called “house wine of the South” 60 What you might use when you say “Giddyup!” 61 Words that can follow the ends of the answers to the starred clues

NEWS & OPINION

ACROSS 1 Pulling a rabbit out of a hat, e.g. 6 Kazakhstan’s ___ Sea 10 Computer company with the slogan “Explore beyond limits” 14 Embarrass 15 Was a passenger 16 It’s always getting stepped on 17 Sign of life 18 *Vessel with a large hold 20 Camera part 22 “Seinfeld” stock character? 23 *What a family spends together at the dinner table 26 Competitor of Secret 27 Predecessor of the CW 28 Mauna ___ 29 Scout’s shelter 31 Back on a boat

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CITY REPORTER By Maya Smith

Rhodes student pens “hate-filled” opinion piece on alt-right site. A Rhodes College student faced backlash last week after he posted an opinion piece on an alt-right website that the college president called a “hate-filled essay.” In the post published last Wednesday on AltRight. com, Nick Pietrangelo identified himself as a Rhodes student and ridiculed a statement by a group of his peers on their support for those impacted by the end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. “We, the undersigned student leaders at Rhodes College, are deeply disturbed by the Department of Justice’s announcement that DACA will be suspended,” said the campus-wide email. “Aside from the estimated fiscal impact of this decision, there is also a deeply personal impact.” The letter was signed by the Rhodes’ senior class president and was supported by a number of leaders from other campus organizations like the Panhellenic Council, the Gender & Sexuality Alliance, the Black Student Association, and more. Pietrangelo, a graduate of Christian Brothers High School and former Rhodes soccer player, wrote that the letter is “silly” and “incredibly stupid.” He added that DACA is an illegal and unconstitutional program. He asked, “what makes these ‘Dreamers’ so special that they don’t have to follow the laws of the land just as American citizens have to?” This “special treatment,” Pietrangelo said, is the

exact opposite of American values, continuing that “America is for AMERICANS.” He said those who are in violation of the law should be punished and “not coddled and rewarded [which is] almost always at the expense of white citizens.” He proposed that institutions like Rhodes should not show compassion or concern for the struggles of “criminals, fags and transgenders, girls who get knocked up and then regret it, and Black Lives Matter thugs.” Instead, they should express “outrage at such heinous acts like abortion, Islamic terrorism, sodomy, or White Genocide.” Pietrangelo wrapped up his post yearning for a society free of minorities. “Like the media, the Millennials and social justice warriors will always posture and cry crocodile tears over issues like the DACA announcement. …” he said. “Millions of normal and hard-working White folks don’t give a damn about these ‘Dreamers’ and instead harbor their own dreams of a society with free Whites, free of the troublesome burden of minorities. And one way or another, we will get what we want. Never forget that.” Rhodes’ president Marjorie Hass sent a disapproving statement to the school’s community Friday. “In my view, a good way to respond to bigoted or

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POLITICS By Jackson Baker

Commission Votes to Relocate Statues

September 14-20, 2017

Like Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland and the Memphis City Council, the chief officials of Shelby County government lent the weight of their authority on Monday to the current effort to relocate the controversial downtown statues of Confederate president Jefferson Davis and rebel cavalry commander Nathan Bedford Forrest. The action came in the form of a resolution, co-sponsored by a a bipartisan group of County Commissioners, that supported the Council’s prior action in urging the state Historical Commission at its forthoming October 13th meeting to hear a request for a waiver allowing local action to relocate the statues. County Mayor Mark Luttrell was on hand to give his personal endorsement to the resolution, which would ultimately pass 11-0. The only non-votes on the commission were those of Terry Roland, an absentee on Monday, and new commission chair Heidi Shafer who gave her opinion that the commission, lacking any specific authority over the statues, had no legal “standing” to pursue the matter. During debate on the resolution, several commissioners supported the goal of relocating the statues, and none directly opposed it. Commissioner Mark Billingsley of Germantown did propose a more circuitous route to that goal, however, introducing an amendment for a two-week delay in voting so as to secure an opinion from the county’s own historical commission. He was initially supported by Commissioner David Reaves of Bartlett, who agreed that a “unified, dignified process” of sounding out more opinion would allow the resolution to fare better with the state commission. Reaves said, however, that he did not object to removing the Forrest memorial, including his grave, to Elmwood Cemetery the original place of Forrest’s interment. Reaction to the Billingsley proposal from other commissioners was unfavorable, in any case. Commissioner Van Turner of Memphis cited Martin Luther King’s statement that “justice delayed is justice denied” and said that an elongated process could mean that “our children’s children will be dead” before any action could be taken. Commissioner George Chism of Collierville and Memphis Commissioners Steve Basar, Eddie Jones, Regi-

nald Milton, and Walter Bailey (the latter being the resolution’s prime mover) then all spoke in succession for the resolution, Basar saying, “We’re not alone. A lot of people are doing this. It’s the right time to do this.” Finally, Mayor Luttrell supported the original resolution and gave his opinion that “these decisions should be made at the local level” and “could have been resolved weeks ago” if local government had been allowed to act on its own. He gave credit to “the temperament of the community” and the fact that “we’ve controlled emotions as well as we have.” Billingsley’s amendment for more circuitous action was defeated, with aye votes only from himself, Reaves, and Shafer. Then Billingsley and Reaves joined with the others to support the main motion. • Justin Ford, who last week entered an Alford plea in Criminal Court [for domestic misconduct] and received

Luttrell on local control of the statues a sentence of probation, may face an uncertain future in politics, and is term-limited, anyway. But the District 9 seat Ford occupies on the county commission could continue to stay in the family. That’s if cousin Edmond Ford Jr., now a member of the Memphis City Council, succeeds in his Democratic primary bid for the District 9 commission seat. Another term-limited member of the commission, Melvin Burgess, had his own announcement to make this week. After a spell of floating the idea of running for county mayor, Burgess says he’ll be running for the Shelby County Assessor position which current incumbent Cheyenne Jackson is vacating. Sean Lynch, currently an employee in the assessor’s office, has been a known candidate for the office for some

time and has a fair degree of support among establishment Democrats, but Burgess expressed confidence in his own chances of prevailing in a primary showdown. Burgess, whose service as commission chairman over the past year gave him visibility, said of Lynch, “He’s going to have to spend some money just to let people know who he is.” • Close on the heels of Democratic candidate Floyd Bonner’s kickoff of his campaign for sheriff two weeks ago at the Racquet Club, another big shoe dropped last Thursday when county Homeland Security director Dale Lane, a leading Republican candidate for the office, had his own kickoff affair in Millington. Lane’s was a homier affair, held at the Mid-South Auction Group & Marketplace in Millington, but, like current Chief Deputy Bonner, who was endorsed by his boss, outgoing Sheriff Bill Oldham, Lane had some bigtime backing, too. His came from Luttrell, who served two terms as sheriff himself, before his election as mayor in 2010. An obstacle to Lane’s announcement of the Luttrell endorsement was the fact that the mayor had been in Nashville and was still en route back to Memphis. That logistical problem was solved via some everyday technology: Lane got Luttrell on his cell phone and had him speak to the assembled crowd by holding the phone to a microphone. Luttrell noted the candidate’s impressive credentials, which included several important command positions, including that of chief inspector of the department’s patrol division and supervision of the department’s SWAT team and its training division. And finally, the mayor said, Lane had served “as our point person in Shelby County” as director of preparedness and homeland security. In his own remarks, Lane, a devout Christian, made a point of proclaiming, as he always does in his public appearances, the chief importance in his life of his faith and his family. He reminisced about having begun his law enforcement career 30 years ago as a member of the Millington police force. Lane said one of his chief preoccupations as sheriff would be that of youth violence, for which he proposed a multi-layered approach involving partnership with the faith-based and business communities, intervention via youth activities, and direct suppression by means of streetlevel enforcement.

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*All concerts are FREE every friday in september.

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*RAIN CONTINGENCY: If bad weather, the concert may be moved to the following Saturday or Sunday. Always stay tuned.

In commemoration of

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September 14-20, 2017

450 MULBERRY ST. • MEMPHIS, TN 38103 • civilrightsmuseum.org

Development (HUD), which has a vital role in the rebuilding and rehabilitation of devastated urban areas; and both the National Weather Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, whose job it is to foresee weather emergencies and prepare for them. The president also brandished his ax at the budget of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), calling for $3 billion worth of cuts and for the laying off of some 3,500 EPA employees. Only rearguard preventive action by Congress has so far kept most of this folly from taking place. Still, the president has indeed turned up in the general periphery of a few affected sites, marveling, campaign-style, at the turnouts, even when the crowds he is addressing are assemblages of dispossessed people gathered at relocation points, and (upon being pressed to do so) actually interacting with victims, to the point of picking up a child or two. Trump has even made bold to praise the emergency efforts of the very federal agencies that his budget proposals would eviscerate. There is hypocrisy in this, and opportunism, obviously, but we do not begrudge the president for taking advantage of events in order to buttress his popularity. Nor do we discount the possibility of genuine sincerity in his attempts at compassion. This is a man who, to give him his due, feeds on the emotional responses of crowds, and if first-hand exposure to the needs of a stricken population helps enlighten him on the duties and profound responsibilities incumbent on him and the government he heads, so much the better.

C O M M E N TA R Y b y G r e g C r a v e n s

True Story:

Love one another. It’s that simple.

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have taken a modest bump upward. It does not take an Einstein to figure out the reason why. Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, while catastrophe for Texas, Florida, and areas adjacent to both states, were, for Trump, the ill winds that, a la the proverb, could still blow somebody some good — the somebody being the government-bashing, divider-in-chief himself, forced by circumstance to represent all the people. Or at least to pretend to, in show-and-tell photo ops in Texas, with more to come in Florida, presumably, when the weather clears. Never mind that Trump, for all we know, still disbelieves in climate change as being anything more than a hoax dreamed up by the Chinese — who, ironically, have seemingly addressed themselves faithfully to the strictures of the Paris climate agreement of 2015, meanwhile becoming world leaders in an important environmental industry, the production of solar panels. Trump, meanwhile, has, by his action to peremptorily withdraw from that international accord, attracted the the world’s scorn for himself and its patronizing pity for the nation that he was elected to represent. To borrow from the lingo of the president’s own tweeting style: Sad! Sadder yet is the fact that, in advance of these eminently predictable weather disturbances, geometrically increasing in both frequency and intensity, Trump released a budget calling for Draconian cuts in funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA); for the Department of Housing and Urban

www.firstcongo.com Phone: 901.278.6786 1000 South Cooper Memphis, TN 38104 Sunday Worship 10:30 am


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VIEWPOINT By Corey Strong

Restart the Party The newly elected leader of Shelby County’s revived Democrats looks to a rosier future.

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These are all issues that have dominated the news cycle locally in one way or another and that the SCDP and “big D” elected officials have to be better champions of, or why did we elect them in the first place? We cannot stop being Democrats after elections, and we can never stop working to install our values in our community. The SCDP must champion its democratic values in and out of election season. If the SCDP becomes the true home of democratic values, attracts good candidates to run on those values, and champions those values day in and day out, we will not only win elections but see a truly blue Shelby County that is a clear reflection of our values. This is what Democrats have been telling me since the charter was pulled, and if we listen to them, they will come back home to the party. Corey Strong, a former naval officer and current special projects director at Shelby County Schools, is the newly elected chairman of the Shelby County Democratic Party, which was allowed to re-form this year by the state party after a year of decertification.

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If the SCDP becomes the true home of democratic values, attracts good candidates to run on those values, and champions those values day in and day out, we will see a truly blue Shelby County.

YOUR GOOD NEWS COMES IN THREES.

NEWS & OPINION

Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing: The third reason we don’t vote for Democrats is that the SCDP hasn’t stayed focused on the main thing — which is our values. Elections and winning are fun — and so are all the little things that come with that — but the purpose of all of it is to make sure our values are present in our community and its governance. We have had any number of local issues that SCDP should champion on a daily basis: An economy too strongly based on low-income jobs, a government that doesn’t spread resources to communities in need, threats to our clean water and green spaces, discrimination based on people’s backgrounds or lifestyle, opportunity for a good education, protection of and access to health care — particularly for women — and the list goes on.

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Democrats are the majority in Shelby County but have been too afraid and disorganized to show it at the polls. I place the reasons why Democrats don’t vote for Democrats into three categories that can be best described through life lessons I have learned from great teachers and mentors I have had the privilege of knowing. First, you have to be Brilliant at the Basics. Then, you have to make sure you Ride the Right Horse. And, finally always Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing. Brilliant at the Basics: I worked for a captain on one of my warships in the Navy. This captain took over a ship with all types of material problems and very low morale, and he had to prepare the ship for an upcoming deployment. While everyone was concerned about high-level combat-systems training and complex battle problems, he understood if you don’t do the little things — like fixing what’s broken, you can never move to the bigger items. The first reason Democrats don’t vote for Democrats in Shelby County is that the party has failed at the basics. The Shelby County Democratic Party (SCDP) must talk to its base, use that conversation to define its values and platform, and put a basic plan in place to execute on that platform. Elections, and policy campaigns, rallies and fundraisers are all important, but if you don’t talk to your voters and communicate a platform and plan to address their issues, they won’t vote at elections, participate in campaigns, march at your rallies, or give you money. Ride the Right Horse: The second reason people haven’t voted for Democrats is that the SCDP has had a bad habit of riding the wrong horse when picking candidates. A candidate needs to be one people can believe in. That belief resides in people who have a strong professional record or reputation, have demonstrated a spirit of service, haven’t lost multiple elections in the past, and who pledge to support the values and platform of the party. We have frequently supported major candidates who have poor professional or civic reputations — and sometimes none at all — and who have lost election after election. And when they get into office saying they will support our vague platform, they consistently work against that for their own personal gain with no accountability from the SCDP. Without a good horse, you cannot win a race. The SCDP must be the home of democratic values over anything else.


! R O I S L E C X E

But when duty calls he transforms into Using the power of smoke and mirrors to make Memphis a little cooler, fight lowered expectations, and to honor the hard-working men and women working in the trenches at DC, Marvel, and all the indies, too — writing, drawing, coloring, and assembling our nation’s finest comic books.

ifying, The amazing, shocking, terr e Mighty th incredible, uncanny story ofpo Memphis Comic Ex

By day Donald Juengling is a mild-mannered writer and comic book store manager.

So what’s troubling you, Donald Juengling? Are you angry?

In this exciting issue you’ll thrill to stories of the Memphis Comic Expo, which returns to the Agricenter September 16th-17th. You’ll be amazed by popular comic book creators happy to meet fans, sign autographs, and banter with the cosplayers. You’ll be shocked to discover how it almost didn’t happen this year.

Yes, I was in just yesterday and there was a man, about 5’ 10”, brown hair looked like he’d never brushed it, and he was leaning on the boxes.

There is going to be an Expo …

I don’t know. It’s like I'm a stressful person by I mean, just sitting nature. around having a soda watching Leave It to Beaver on TV, I'm revving to 10. It's hard to be that stressed out all the time. Organizing this big thing with very little money ... Is that why you said there would be no Memphis Comic Expo this year?

September 14-20, 2017

...

Comics made an impression on me at a young age. When I was 5, the girl across the street that I had a big crush on had a birthday party, and I bought her a Star Trek comic. It was so hard to give it to her.

My family didn’t indulge me.

I know what I said. But there is going to be a Memphis Comic Expo.

Eventually I got a job at Comics & Collectibles. At first they even paid me in comics. I’ve been working with the store some way or another for 30 years now.

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It’s a long story ...

Memphis Comics? That’s not in our neighborhood. Maybe we’ll go another day ...

And that’s really bad for the comics …

I’d like to complain to the manager.

I’ve seen a lot of things change ...

This person was leaning on the boxes. You know what? This is the manager.


There are a lot of ways to be a fan, and comic book culture is arguably so much bigger than people who’re really into comics.

So you started the Expo in 2014 because you resented modern comic conventions being more about movie stars ...

The Memphis Comic Book Expo has brought in guys like artist George Perez, who’s worked on everything, and the Hernandez Brothers who created Love & Rockets.

I love comic creators, the artists, the writers. People like Jack Kirby who created the Fantastic Four and the Hulk, who’d be 100 this year if he were still alive, and who should have been a billionaire but wasn’t. None of this stuff would exist without these guys.*

So it was the stress of putting it all together that made you cancel the show.

In the next couple of years I’d like to bring in Frank Miller*, but I know he’s going to be expensive. We’ve gone up against competition like CooperYoung Festival and still had thousands of people come out.

*see page 14! I lost track of time and hadn’t slept.

Yes. No! It’s complicated.

I thought “I’m ruined.” I'm going to to drive down to the bridge and jump off.

It was the first day of the first Memphis Comic Expo, and I was delirious.

And that’s when this flood of people started coming in. It was incredible, and every year since I’ve tried to recreate that vibe.

I thought it was showtime, but when I went upstairs to the ticket booth and looked outside, there wasn’t a single person. Earlier this year, we said we weren’t going to do the show.

I started the Expo because it wasn’t fair that Little Rock, Arkansas, was bringing in artists like Bernie Wrightson and Memphis wasn’t.

Time passed.

My dad wasn’t a quitter.

I thought about my father, who was always there anytime I needed an ounce of courage.

All these years, I’ve watched while you’ve enabled comic abuse, letting customers lean on the comic book boxes while browsing, crushing them, ever so slightly.

My father passed away right before Christmas. We knew he was sick, but he was tough as a coffin nail and we thought we had more time.

Allow me to introduce myself.

And I thought, “I have to do this.”

“I have to do this one for him.”

I am THE NEW MANAGER! And it’s my turn to lean on YOU!

Not so fast, Donald Juengling ... or should I call you

EXPO-MAN!

to be CONTINUED… on the next page

COVER STORY m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

... Like cosplay, which is HUGE.

When I was a kid, you didn’t go out dressed like Batman unless you wanted to get beat up. With TV shows like Arrow, Arrow The Flash, Preacher Preacher, Marvel’s Netflix shows, the movies, T-shirts …

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THE REST OF THE STORY … Like they say in the funny pages: “BAM!” “BOOM!” “CRASH!” ExpoMan defeats the evil New Manager. And his alter-ego, Donald Juengling, is bringing the Memphis Comic Expo back to the Agricenter this weekend with its original motto firmly in place: Creators come first. Juengling hopes that his dedication to artists and writers will continue to make his show a destination for serious fans at a time when graphic fiction is huge, but more fans still consume comic book properties by way of bigbudget films like Wonder Woman and Spider-Man: Homecoming or television shows like Arrow and Legion.

Tim Burton’s Batman hit the silver screen in 1989, three years after comic book artist/author Frank Miller’s Dark Knight series reinvigorated the superhero genre, introducing readers to a more mature, novelistic version of the World’s Greatest Detective. Although Christopher Reeve’s Superman had been popular a decade earlier, Burton’s film marks the true beginning of Hollywood’s serious romance with the funny books. Since that time, there have been more than 70 major Hollywood films based on superheros originating in the Marvel and DC universes, and at least 17 more are already in the works. That figure doesn’t account for independently originating properties like Hellboy, Ghost World, or Kick-Ass, among others. Television has proven to be an ideal medium for cross-product universebuilding and serialized storytelling, and between network, cable, and streaming services, there will soon be more than 20 comic and superhero-inspired shows to choose from. “It’s huge,” Juengling says of the seemingly inexhaustible supply of comic book products making the jump into new mediums. “That’s why it’s important to make sure we appreciate the creators. Because without these guys, none of that other stuff would

September 14-20, 2017

kevin don’t

bluff Kevin Lipe on the Memphis Grizzlies before, during, and after the game.

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memphisflyer.com/blogs/BeyondTheArc • @FlyerGrizBlog

even exist. Who knows, maybe next year the Comic Expo will be all media stars.” Juengling has learned that great responsibility brings great stress — and sometimes great disappointment. This year’s biggest Expo guest, Russ Heath, had to cancel for health-related reasons. Heath’s the nonagenarian

“I love comic creators. None of this stuff would exist without these guys.” who created the Haunted Tank while working in the trenches for DC’s war and horror divisions in the 1940s and 1950s. If you don’t know the name, you may be familiar with military aircraft renderings. Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein — an artist whose name you probably do know — modeled two of his most

famous paintings, Blam and Brattata, after frames Heath created for DC’s AllAmerican Men of War title. “These guys really deserve all the recognition they can get,” Juengling says, and — as if powered by the force of some mysterious and occult hand — the list of artists he’s bringing to town continues to grow. POW! The Memphis Comics Expo, Saturday, September 16th, 10 a.m.6 p.m.; Sunday, September 17th, 10 a.m. -5 p.m. at the Agricenter, 7777 Walnut Grove Rd. $75. Comic creators coming to this year’s Expo include Gene Ha, artist for Alan Moore’s Top 10, and Chris Burnham, the No. 1 New York Times best-selling artist of Batman Incorporated and co-creator of Nameless with Grant Morrison. Kyle Baker created Nat Turner and has won 8 Eisner awards; Darick Robertson is the artist and co-creator of Transmetropolitan with Warren Ellis and Happy with Grant Morrison; Ty Templeton is known for work on Batman Adventures; Bob McLeod co-created the New Mutants with credits that include Hulk, Amazing Spider-Man, Venom, and Wolverine. And many, many more. In addition to writers, artists and cosplayers, the Memphis Comics Expo welcomes Walter Jones the original Black Ranger from the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.


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steppin’ out

We Recommend: Culture, News + Reviews

There for You

Still connected

By Chris Davis

Quark Theatre co-founder/director Tony Isbell has a tidy description for Allen Barton’s play, Years to the Day: “It’s sort of like if David Mamet had written a play set in a version of our world with a slightly different history.” For those familiar with Mamet’s work, particularly early one-acts like Sexual Perversity in Chicago, and less-frequently produced dramas like The Old Neighborhood, that’s not a bad summary. Years to the Day is a funny, angry, frustrated, frustrating rant of a play about the way we live now that’s difficult to make sound half as dynamic as it should. The plot: Two middle-aged guys named Dan and Jeff — former college pals, still digitally networked — organize a face-to-face coffee reunion and discover, via contentious conversation, a vast gulf of difference between connecting and being connected. Imagine a smartphone-era My Dinner with Andre featuring a Trump fan and Bernie bro in a world without Trump or Bernie. “Politics and the personal are irrevocably intertwined,” Isbell says. “It’s sort of like what happens on Facebook when you discover that an old college chum has completely changed his political stripes. Or maybe he was ‘that way’ all along, and it just never came up. Can you remain friends with someone who has a radically different view of the world?” Who doesn’t ask that question several times a week these days? A Downtown Memphis Commission program for pop-up businesses has provided Quark with a temporary home. Years to the Day is being presented at 7 N. Main, September 8th through 29th. The non-traditional venue accomplishes the most wonderful thing that can happen when theater is produced in environmental and reclaimed spaces — when you first encounter it, it seems like a glowing out-of-place vision. Like “Something unexpected,” as Tennessee Williams once wrote of essential theater. “Something you aren’t used to.” Quark’s motto is “small and essential,” and the young company’s sophomore effort starring Adam Remsen and David Hammons, measures up. QUARK THEATRE PRESENTS “YEARS TO THE DAY” AT 7 N. MAIN, THROUGH SEPTEMBER 29TH. $15. QUARKTHEATRE.COM

Tour de Fiction Books, p. 36

Gary Busey The Last Word, p. 47

New and healthy options at Next Door Eatery and Mama Gaia Food News, p. SATURDAY September 16

September 14-20, 2017

FRIDAY September 15

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Steve Miller Band Memphis Botanic Garden, 8:30 p.m., $40 Joker, smoker, or midnight toker? Head on down to the Botanic Garden for this concert by the ’70s super-hit maker. Young Frankenstein Elmwood Cemetery, 7:30 p.m., $15 Classic Mel Brooks monstermovie spoof, the final in the Cemetery Cinema series, with funds going toward the upkeep of Elmwood. Tickets are presale only: elmwoodcemetery.org.

Booksiging by Kathleen Wickham Novel, 6 p.m. The first signing in the new bookstore. Kathleen Wickham signs and discusses We Believed We Were Immortal: Twelve Reporters Who Covered the 1962 Integration Crisis at Ole Miss. Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Harrell Performing Arts Theatre, 7 p.m., $12-$20 Musical based on a Bible story about the jealousy caused by a fabulous coat.

12 Angry Jurors Theatre Memphis, 8 p.m., $25 Drama about what “presumption of innocence” really means. The Mid-South Maze Agricenter International, 4-10 p.m., $7 It’s back! This year, the maze’s theme is “Bee-lieve Memphis” with a design featuring a honeycomb and a bee. Includes the jumping pillow, the corn cannon, and the haunted maze returns in October.

The Music of Julian Edwin “Cannonball” Adderley Crosstown Arts Gallery, 7-9 p.m., $10 Bill Hurd, Sylvester Sample, Alvie Givhan, Gerard Harris, and Renardo Ward perform in this tribute to the master of the “hardbop” style of jazz. Cooper-Young Festival Cooper and Young, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Massive arts-and-crafts festival with tons of live music. Fall Book Fair Cordova Branch Library, 2-4:30 p.m. An event for book lovers, with a meet-and-greet with local authors, readings, demos, and more.


These sneaks were made for tradin’.

For Kicks “Aw, man, my first pair? I’d have to ask.” Adam Ghueder, the founder of SneakFest along with Jerry Khammavong, Sherman Harper, and Reginald Jones, doesn’t recall his first pair of sneakers, but he suspects they were Chuck Taylors. “They never go out of style,” he explains. The first SneakFest was in March 2014, held in the Cook Convention Center. (“Go big or go home” was the idea.) Ghueder had previously attended such an expo in Atlanta and thought the idea would translate well in Memphis. So he hooked up with fellow sneakerheads Khammavong, Harper, and Jones. On September 16th, the eighth SneakFest will be held at the Agricenter. Ghueder describes SneakFest as sort of like a flea market, drawing from 600 to 800. Vendors sell new and used shoes, with prices ranging anywhere from $20 to $2,000. There’s sports memorabilia, clothing, and accessories for sale as well. Some vendors are set up to make repairs or do customizations. Fest-goers, and this is key, are encouraged to bring their own sneakers — as many as they can carry — to sell or trade. Ghueder says he’s seen plenty of folks swap shoes then and there. He’s seen them walk out of the facility in their socks. The Kanye Yeezy Boost is the hottest thing going, according to Ghueder. But it was another Kanye product that brought in an eye-popping figure: A rare Nike Air Yeezy, signed by Kanye, was bought for $20,000. Needless to say, they are not for wearing. As for Ghueder’s own prized shoe, it’s the Air Jordan “Bred” in red and black. SNEAKFEST SNEAKER EXPO AT THE AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16TH, 1-6 P.M., $20. SNEAKFEST.ORG

Hill Country Boucherie and Blues Picnic Home Place Pastures (1513 Home Place, Como) 5 p.m.-2 a.m., $5-$90 A snout-to-tail dinner with dancing and more. Booksigning by Larry Dodson Hickory Ridge Mall, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. The former Bar-Kays lead singer signs his new memoir And the Band Played On.

SUNDAY September 17

TUESDAY September 19

Bruno Mars FedExForum, 8 p.m., $30-$128 Uptown Funker Bruno Mars performs tonight.

Booksigning by Reed Farrel Coleman Barnes & Noble Wolfchase, 7 p.m. Reed Farrel Coleman signs and discusses his latest novel, Robert B. Parker’s The Hangman’s Sonnet.

E.T. the Extra Terrestrial Malco Paradiso, 2 p.m. A screening of the Steven Spielberg alien classic in honor of its 35th anniversary. Encore screening Wednesday, September 20th. The Secret Sisters Buckman Arts Center, 7 p.m., $30 Old-style harmony, a la the Everly Brothers, from sisters Laura and Lydia Rogers.

The King and I The Orpheum, 7:30 p.m., $25-$125 Touring production of the Rodgers & Hammerstein hit The King and I about the relationship between the King of Siam and a British schoolteacher. Running through September 24th.

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

Bill Skarsgård (above) oozes evil as Pennywise the (murderous) Clown in the new adaptation of Stephen King’s It. Film, p. 42

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

SNEAKFEST.ORG

By Susan Ellis

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Turn Up the Volume Music Export Memphis aims to expose the city’s musicians to the world.

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with MICHAEL DONAHUE memphisflyer.com/wesawyou

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little over two years ago, local publicist and longtime Memphis music fan Elizabeth Cawein had a big idea. Inspired by recent trips to major music industry events such as Austin’s South By Southwest and Nashville’s Americanafest, where she saw little representation of or from Memphis, Cawein decided take on the mantle herself. “My vision was to build a system that benefits musicians and also drives results for the business and tourism communities,” says Cawein. “I’m passionate about this city and our musicians. I’m passionate about telling their story. I felt strongly that we were missing an opportunity to both perpetuate and reinvigorate the Memphis brand as a music city.” To get the ball rolling, Cawein pitched the idea that would become Music Export Memphis to Phil Trenary and Amy Daniels at the Greater Memphis Chamber, who quickly got on board with the project. With their support, she was able to target a presence at the 2016 Americanafest as her inaugural event. Dubbed the Memphis Picnic, the showcase was an overwhelming success. “We got some phenomenal earned media at Americanafest last year,” says Cawein. “Our artists were covered in No Depression, Paste, American Songwriter, and more.” From there, Music Export Memphis more or less took off like a rocket ship. Cawein has since staged another Memphis Picnic at South By Southwest, created a songwriters exchange program with the city of Liverpool (U.K.) called “Memphis to the Mersey,” and attracted a worldwide music conference, the Music Cities Convention, to Memphis. The conference, which focuses on the role of

music in civic life, will take place at the Halloran Centre October 25th-27th. This weekend Cawein will be out on the road again promoting Memphis music — back at Americanafest, where the journey began. The second annual Memphis Picnic at Americanafest, which takes place on Saturday, September 16th at the Filming Station in Nashville, should be nothing short of an extravaganza celebration of all things Bluff City. In addition to a stacked lineup of local performers, including Crockett Hall, Juju Bushman, Loveland Duren, Grace Askew, and the Rusty Pieces, the event will also feature edibles from the Rendevous, Corky’s, and MemPops, libations from High Cotton Brewing Company and Old Dominick Distillery, a Grizzlies photo booth,

Elizabeth Cawein of Music Export Memphis. a program of Memphis-made music videos curated by IndieMemphis, and a pop-up vinyl-only record shop run by Shangri-La Records. “I swear, I’ve never done an event that was as seamless and killer as our Americanafest event last year,” says Cawein. “I just kept waiting for something to go wrong! But we have almost doubled the number of partners represented at this event, which I’m excited about. With these events, I always want to showcase as much Memphis stuff as I possibly can — the lineup of music is the main course, and the food, drinks, and extras from

Memphis are the side items.” Beyond Americanafest, Cawein already has a few next steps in mind. Her new big idea is an ambassador’s program of sorts, which would see Music Export Memphis providing tangible tour support (i.e., money) to local artists to help get them out on the road and spread the gospel of Memphis and Memphis music. “The reality is, they already are [ambassadors],” she says. “I want to give them a little bit of training on the talking points of why Memphis is a great place to visit and live, send them out with promotional merchandise, and cut them a check to support their tour.” “I think my point here is that, for the most part, my ideas do not require a ton of overhead, a ton of administration. They utilize existing structures and organizations — for example, bringing in our partner the New Memphis Institute to help us with some training for the touring artists on you-should-live-inMemphis facts — and finding ways to maximize things that are already happening, such as artists touring outside the city.” Cawein has also recently put a board of directors for Music Export Memphis in place, so that her vision isn’t the only one guiding the organization moving forward. “I’m excited to get out of the curation business,” she says. “I’ll always enjoy having input on that, but I think deferring to the board — a group of people who really bring varied experiences in Memphis music and varied connections to different scenes — will make this work better, more effectively, and will make Music Export Memphis better able to tell the entire Memphis music story. This was never about me picking artists for a showcase or an opportunity; I just want to facilitate the opportunity. So I’m excited to see what we can do together in 2018.” For more information on Music Export Memphis, visit www. musicexportmemphis.org.

TROY GLASGOW

STD TEST

M U S I C F E AT U R E B y J . D . R e a g e r


L O C A L B E AT B y A l e x G r e e n e

Holding On first verse of the first song. And it’s all downhill from there. Along the way, he struggles with his relationship, his boss, his school, and poverty. But he makes it clear that his hometown was no picnic either. “Family became opponents, all they repping is Memphis/ It offers nothing to poets, offers nothing to loners/ Wasn’t born in the system of 3-6, Elvis, and Jordans.” The struggles evoked in Alero also came as he tried to developed his musical skills. “I was trying to record a record in the closet of my dorm,” he says. “And my plan was to spend six months making the record, finish the record, then spend the next six months going back and forth to New York. I was gonna get on, get connections, meet people. And I got kicked outta school, so I didn’t get to do any of that.” Instead, he returned home. But it wasn’t until much later that he could reflect on the experience creatively. In the intervening years, he found his voice as an artist, earning a degree from the University of Memphis. “My major was Studio Arts … but my main focus when I came out of college was painting. Now, it’s photography and video work.” Degree in hand, he turned inward to create Alero. “I started the first song in November 2014, and I finished writing, recording, and producing it by the middle of 2015. And then spent the rest of 2015 just sitting on it, mixing it, being very meticulous.” This period was heavily influenced

Don Lifted by his listening habits. “I’m attracted to Kanye West, Common, J Dilla’s production. … But the album I was listening to a lot around the album’s creation was Coldplay’s Ghost Stories. It was about his divorce. Very minimal. And there was a record by Dawn Golden, who I sampled twice.” Performing such personal material now can still be difficult for Matthews, though he feels he’s gained some perspective on the pain. Listeners need not resign themselves to utter despair. By the final cut, “Holding On,” Matthews finds room for hope. “We’re not holding on for nothing” rings the track’s chorus, and at last it seems Don Lifted has drawn strength from his exile. Alero will be available for download September 14th. The CD, including a deluxe booklet of lyrics and original photographs, is for sale exclusively at Shangri-La and Goner Records.

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

The album that Memphis hip-hop artist Don Lifted drops this Thursday has been a long time in the making. Named after the car he drove when living through a particularly harrowing time, Alero will provide him no small measure of catharsis. After nearly seven years, Don Lifted will finally be able to exhale. With neither the broad social commentary of Marco Pavé nor the street life debauchery of Yo Gotti, Don Lifted, aka Lawrence Matthews, takes his lyrics to a personal place to fashion a work of art-as-therapy. The album details a stressful period when Matthews and his high school girlfriend ventured east for college and they confronted the challenges of living away from home. “The story takes place from September 2010 and into 2011. It was six months, but it felt like two years,” he recalls. “We just were clashing. But also it was just being thrown into the world, adulthood, alone. We both were going through a kind of hell. I slept in the car a lot. I was sick a lot, so I’d take cough medicine so I could record music, instead of being sniffly; so I could go to class, go to work.” The car became a kind of sanctuary for Matthews. “Kappa, Sigma, Omega, Alpha, Kappa, them Deltas/ Futures, degrees and shelters and I am only a nigga/ Carpetbagger from Memphis, they’ll never see me as bigger/ I’m clapping, but I’m pretending, depression down to my tendons, these terrors, they cloud my vision.” So goes the

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

JARVIS HUGHES

Don Lifted rises above his pain with Alero.

19


BRUNO MARS FEDEXFORUM SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17TH

WILL HOGE NEW DAISY THEATRE SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17TH

EMILY BARKER LAFAYETTE’S MUSIC ROOM SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17TH

After Dark: Live Music Schedule September 14 - 20 Alfred’s 197 BEALE 525-3711

Gary Hardy & Memphis 2 Thursdays-Saturdays, 6-9 p.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.; Lisa G and Flic’s Pic’s Band Saturdays, Sundays, 12:30 p.m.; Blind Mississippi Morris Sundays, 5 p.m.; Memphis Jones Sundays, Wednesdays 5:30 p.m.; Doc Fangaz and the Remedy Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m.

Blue Note Bar & Grill 341-345 BEALE 577-1089

Queen Ann and the Memphis Blues Masters Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.

Blues City Cafe

September 14-20, 2017

138 BEALE 526-3637

20

Blind Mississippi Morris Fridays, 5 p.m., and Saturdays, 5:30 p.m.; Brad Birkedahl Band Thursdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.; Nathan Belt & the Buckles Friday, Sept. 15, 9:30 p.m., and Saturday, Sept. 16, 9:30 p.m.; Earl “The Pearl” Banks Saturdays, 12:30 p.m., and Tuesdays, 7 p.m.;

Brandon Cunning Band Sundays, 6 p.m., and Mondays, 7 p.m.; FreeWorld Sundays, 9:30 p.m.

Thursdays, 5-8 p.m.; Karaoke Mondays-Thursdays, Sundays, 8 p.m.; Live Bands Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.

Club 152

King’s Palace Cafe

152 BEALE 544-7011

Live Music WednesdaysSundays, 7-11 p.m.; Live DJ Wednesdays-Sundays, 11 p.m.; Third Floor: DJ Tubbz Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.; The Rusty Pieces play Bike Night on Beale Wednesdays, 6-9 p.m.

FedExForum 191 BEALE

Bruno Mars Sunday, Sept. 17, 8 p.m.

Handy Bar 200 BEALE 527-2687

The Amazing Rhythmatics Tuesdays, Thursdays-Sundays, 7 p.m.-1 a.m.

Tori Tollison Thursday, Sept. 14, 8-11 p.m.; The Hollows Friday, Sept. 15, 8-11 p.m.; The Driftwood Ramblers Saturday, Sept. 16, 8-11 p.m.; Guitar Center Recital Sunday, Sept. 17, 1-3 p.m.; Q107.5 Bruno Mars Bash Sunday, Sept. 17, 4-6 p.m.; Memphis Music Monday Third Monday of every month, 6-9 p.m.

Itta Bena 145 BEALE 578-3031

Nat “King” Kerr Fridays, Saturdays, 9-10 p.m.

King Jerry Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grille Chris Gales Solo Acoustic Show Mondays-Saturdays, 12-4 p.m.; Eric Hughes solo/acoustic

Rum Boogie Cafe Blues Hall

King’s Palace Cafe Patio 162 BEALE 521-1851

Sonny Mack Mondays-Fridays, 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

Hard Rock Cafe 126 BEALE 529-0007

159 BEALE

162 BEALE 521-1851

David Bowen Thursdays, 5:309:30 p.m., Fridays, Saturdays, 6:30-10:30 p.m., and Sundays, 5:30-9:30 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 15, 5:30-8:30 p.m.; FreeWorld Friday, Sept. 15, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., and Saturday, Sept. 16, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Jeff Crosslin Saturday, Sept. 16, 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Sensation Band Sunday, Sept. 17, 7-11 p.m.; Eric Hughes Band Mondays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Gracie Curran Tuesdays, 8 p.m.midnight; Plantation Allstars Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.

182 BEALE 528-0150

Memphis Bluesmasters Thursdays, Sundays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Vince Johnson and the Plantation Allstars Fridays, Saturdays, 4-8 p.m., and Sundays, 3-7 p.m.; Juke Joint Allstars Friday, Sept. 15, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Delta Project Saturday, Sept. 16, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Brian Hawkins Blues Party Mondays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Chris McDaniel Tuesdays, Wednesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight.

Silky O’Sullivan’s

168 BEALE 576-2220

Big Don Valentine’s Three Piece Chicken and a Biscuit Blues Band Thursdays, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Cowboy Neil Friday, Sept. 15, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Juke Joint Allstars Saturday, Sept. 16, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.

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.

Dirty Crow Inn 855 KENTUCKY

Nancy Apple Thursdays, 8 p.m.; 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.

Flying Saucer Draught Emporium 130 PEABODY PLACE 523-8536

The Rusty Pieces Friday, Sept. 15, 6-9 p.m.; Songwriters with Roland and Friends Mondays, 7-10 p.m.

I Am an American Wednesday, Sept. 20, 7 p.m.

South Main Ghost River Brewing 827 S. MAIN 278-0087

Sunday Evening with James Godwin Sunday, Sept. 17, 5-7:30 p.m.

Electric Church Sundays, 2-4 p.m.

Huey’s Downtown 77 S. SECOND 527-2700

Soul Shockers Sunday, Sept. 17, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.

Mud Island Amphitheatre 125 N. FRONT 576-7241

NEEDTOBREATHE Saturday, Sept. 16.

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.

Rum Boogie Cafe

Purple Haze Nightclub

182 BEALE 528-0150

140 LT. GEORGE W. LEE 577-1139

Young Petty Thieves Thursdays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Pam and Terry

DJ Cody Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.

Loflin Yard

Paulette’s

The Rusty Pieces Sunday, Sept. 17, 6:30-9:30 p.m.

The Silly Goose 100 PEABODY PLACE 435-6915

7 W. CAROLINA

RIVER INN, 50 HARBOR TOWN SQUARE 260-3300

117 BARBORO ALLEY 249-6580

Salsa Night Saturdays, 8:30 p.m.-3 a.m.

225 S. MAIN 529-4299

330 BEALE 525-8981

Belle Tavern

Rumba Room 303 S. MAIN 523-0020

The Halloran Centre

New Daisy Theatre The Toadies Thursday, Sept. 14, 8 p.m.; Valentino Khan Friday, Sept. 15, 7 p.m.; Will Hoge Sunday, Sept. 17, 8 p.m.; Lettuce with Maddy O’Neal Tuesday, Sept. 19, 7 p.m.

Sundays, 10 p.m.

831 S. Cooper 831 S. COOPER

The band Camino, Strong Martian, Terry Prince & the Principles, Chandler Murphy, the Ellie Badge Saturday, Sept. 16 at 7 p.m.

Bar DKDC 964 S. COOPER 272-0830

Brandon Taylor Thursday, Sept. 14; Mighty Souls Brass Band Friday, Sept. 15; Steve Selvidge Saturday, Sept. 16; Danny & The Spanks Sunday, Sept. 17; Devil Train Monday, Sept. 18; David Cousar Tuesday, Sept. 19; Linda Heck Wednesday, Sept. 20.

DJ Dance Music Mondays-

GRIZZLIES SEASON TICKETS ON SALE NOW

DISNEY ON ICE OCTOBER 6–8

FOO FIGHTERS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24

JANET JACKSON WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6

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Join eight Disney Princesses as they embark on an adventure as Disney On Ice presents Dream Big. Tickets available!!

Eleven-time Grammy Award winning rock band is bringing the Concrete and Gold Tour to FedExForum. Tickets available!

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Get tickets at FedExForum Box Office | Ticketmaster locations | 1.800.745.3000 | ticketmaster.com | fedexforum.com


FUN

After Dark: Live Music Schedule September 14-20

Boscos 2120 MADISON 432-2222

Sunday Brunch with Joyce Cobb Sundays, 11:30 a.m.2:30 p.m.

Canvas 1737 MADISON 443-5232

Karaoke Thursdays, 9:30 p.m.; Kyle Pruzina Live Mondays, 10 p.m.-midnight.

Celtic Crossing 903 S. COOPER 274-5151

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, 8 p.m.; Mobias Pieces Friday, Sept. 15, 9 p.m.; Backsliders Saturday, Sept. 16, 10 p.m.; David Collins Jazz Sunday, Sept. 17, 6-9 p.m.; Don and Wayde Tuesdays, 7-10 p.m.; Karaoke Wednesdays, 9 p.m.

Dru’s Place 1474 MADISON 275-8082

Karaoke Fridays-Sundays.

Growlers 1911 POPLAR 244-7904

Crockett Hall Tuesdays with the Midtown Rhythm Section

Hi-Tone 412-414 N. CLEVELAND 278-TONE

The Dirty River Boys, Micky & The Motorcars Thursday, Sept. 14, 9 p.m.; Drab Majesty, Pyramid Club, the Pop Ritual Friday, Sept. 15, 9 p.m.; P.O.S Saturday, Sept. 16, 9 p.m.; Snapboitye Sunday, Sept. 17, 7 p.m.; Emery Monday, Sept. 18, 7 p.m.

Huey’s Midtown 1927 MADISON 726-4372

The Bel Airs Sunday, Sept. 17, 4-7 p.m.; The Natchez Brothers Sunday, Sept. 17, 8:30 p.m.midnight.

Lafayette’s Music Room 2119 MADISON 207-5097

Heath N’ Company Thursday, Sept. 14, 6 p.m.; The Spazmatics Thursday, Sept. 14, 9 p.m.; Ryan Peel Friday, Sept. 15, 6:30 p.m.; 901 Heavy Hitters Friday, Sept. 15, 10 p.m.; 3RD Man Saturday, Sept. 16, 11:30 a.m.; Chris Johnson Saturday, Sept. 16, 3 p.m.; The Michael Brothers Saturday, Sept. 16, 6:30 p.m.; Devil Train Saturday, Sept. 16, 10 p.m.; Joe Restivo 4 Sunday, Sept. 17, 11 a.m.; Jimmy Davis Sunday, Sept. 17, 4 p.m.; Emily Barker Sunday, Sept. 17, 8 p.m.; The Singer & the Song: Susan Marshall, David Cousar, McKenna Bray, Richard Alan Ford Monday, Sept. 18, 6 p.m.; Anne McCue Tuesday, Sept. 19, 8 p.m.;

Breeze Cayolle & New Orleans Wednesday, Sept. 20, 5:30 p.m.; Brandon Taylor & Radio Ghost Wednesday, Sept. 20, 8 p.m.

FOR EVERYONE!

Lindenwood Christian Church 2400 UNION 458-8506

Jacquie Cruz, Gary Klarenbeek, and Chris Nemec Sunday, Sept. 17, 4 p.m.

Wristbands Every Day!

Midtown Crossing Grill 394 N. WATKINS 443-0502

Natalie James and the Professor Saturdays, Sundays, 11 a.m.3 p.m.; “The Happening” Open Songwriter Showcase Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30 p.m.

Minglewood Hall 1555 MADISON 866-609-1744

Paul Cauthen, Kelsey Waldon Thursday, Sept. 14, 7 p.m.; MONTU, Agori Tribe Saturday, Sept. 16, 8 p.m.; MoneyBagg Yo Birthday Bash Wednesday, Sept. 20, 8 p.m.

Murphy’s 1589 MADISON 726-4193

Aquarian Blood with Trouble Boys Thursday, Sept. 14; River City Cadillacs Friday, Sept. 15, 6-9 p.m.; The Fast Mothers Saturday, Sept. 16.

P&H Cafe 1532 MADISON 726-0906

Rock Starkaraoke Fridays; Open Mic Music with Tiffany

September 21 - October 1 ALL YOUR FAVORITE RIDES + ALL NEW ATTRACTIONS ATTRACTIONS ARE FREE WITH FAIR ADMISSION WRISTBANDS OR RIDE TICKETS REQUIRED FOR RIDES

continued on page 23

Petting Zoo

Fearless Flores Family

World of Wolves

Pig Races

Tiger Encounter

Frontier Village

CASH GIVEAWAY! First 3,000 people get up to $100 each!

GRIZZLIES | HUSTLE OPEN PRACTICE & SCRIMMAGE Free Admission & Parking

Presented by

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SEPT. 27

SATURDAY

SEPT. 30

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m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

Karaoke Thursdays, 9 p.m.midnight; Dantones Friday, Sept. 15, 10:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.

Tuesdays, 9 p.m.; The Menzingers Wednesday, Sept. 20, 7 p.m.-1 a.m.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Blue Monkey 2012 MADISON 272-BLUE

21


20

September 14-20, 2017

MGPLIVE.COM

ADDRESS: 37 South Cooper Memphis, TN 38104 ONLINE: www.hattiloo.org

22

BOX OFFICE: 901.525.0009


After Dark: Live Music Schedule September 14 - 20 continued from page 21 Harmon Mondays, 9 p.m.midnight.

The Phoenix 1015 S. COOPER 338-5223

The Phoenix Blues Jam Tuesdays, 8-11 p.m.

Railgarten 2160 CENTRAL

The Rusty Pieces Tuesday, Sept. 19, 6-9 p.m.

Rhodes College West Campus

Poplar/I-240 East Tapas and Drinks 6069 PARK 767-6002

Eddie Harris Thursdays, Fridays, 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Van Duren Solo Tuesdays, 6-8 p.m.

Neil’s Music Room 5727 QUINCE 682-2300

Jack Rowell’s Celebrity Jam Thursdays, 8 p.m.; Eddie Smith Fridays, 8 p.m.; Memphis Connectors Saturday, Sept. 16, 8 p.m.; Flashback Sunday, Sept. 17, 4-7

South Memphis

9 p.m.; The Bar Misfits Sunday, Sept. 17, 5:30 p.m.; The No Hit Wonders Wednesday, Sept. 20, 8 p.m.

4-7 p.m.; The Chaulkies Sunday, Sept. 17, 8:30 p.m.-midnight; The Pistol & the Queen Tuesday, Sept. 19, 6-9 p.m.

Old Whitten Tavern

T.J. Mulligan’s Cordova

2465 WHITTEN 379-1965

FireHouse Community Arts Center

Live Music Fridays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.

985 S. BELLEVUE 948-9522

RockHouse Live

Voices Open Mic Variety Show Third Friday of every month, 7 p.m.

5709 RALEIGH-LAGRANGE 386-7222

Live Bands Fridays, Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Open Mic Mondays Mondays, 8 p.m.-midnight; Live Music Tuesdays, Wednesdays,

8071 TRINITY 756-4480

The Southern Edition Band Tuesdays.

Frayser/Millington Huey’s Millington 8570 U.S. 51 N.

Royal Blues Band Sunday, Sept. 17, 8-11:30 p.m.

Huey’s Southwind 7825 WINCHESTER 624-8911

Gary Escoe’s Atomic Dance Machine Sunday, Sept. 17, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.

Huey’s Germantown 7677 FARMINGTON 318-3034

The Dantones Sunday, Sept. 17, 8-11:30 p.m.; Davis Coen & The Change Wednesday, Sept. 20, 6-9 p.m.

Russo’s New York Pizzeria & Wine Bar 9087 POPLAR 755-0092

Live Music on the patio Thursdays-Saturdays, 7-10 p.m.

613 UNIVERSITY 843-3775

Iren Zombor & Brian Ray: The works of Chopin and Shostakovich Sunday, Sept. 17, 3 p.m.

North Mississippi/ Tunica

Senses Nightclub

BankPlus Amphitheater at Snowden Grove

2866 POPLAR 249-3739

Unique Saturday Saturdays, 10 p.m.-3 a.m.

6285 SNOWDEN, SOUTHAVEN, MS (662) 892-2660

Old Dominion Thursday, Sept. 14, 7:30 p.m.; Chris Stapleton Friday, Sept. 15, 7 p.m.

Wild Bill’s 1580 VOLLINTINE 207-3975

The Wild Bill’s Band Fridays, Saturdays, 11 p.m.-3 a.m.

Dan McGuinness 3964 GOODMAN, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-890-7611

Acoustic Music Tuesdays.

Gold Strike Casino

University of Memphis

1010 CASINO CENTER IN TUNICA, MS 1-888-245-7829

Kellie Pickler Saturday, Sept. 16, 8-9:30 p.m.

The Bluff 535 S. HIGHLAND

Hollywood Casino

DJ Ben Murray Thursdays, 10 p.m.; Ben Bradford Friday, Sept. 15, 10 p.m.; 17th Floor Saturday, Sept. 16, 10 p.m.; Bluegrass Brunch with the River Bluff Clan Sundays, 11 a.m.; Shaw Davis Wednesday, Sept. 20, 10 p.m.

1150 CASINO STRIP RESORT, TUNICA, MS 662-357-7700

Live Entertainment Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.

Horseshoe Casino & Hotel AT CASINO CENTER, SOUTH OF MEMPHIS, NEAR TUNICA, MS 1-800-303-SHOE

East Memphis Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School

Skid Row with Great White Friday, Sept. 15.

60 N. PERKINS EXT. 537-1483

The Secret Sisters Sunday, Sept. 17, 7-9 p.m.

Huey’s Southaven Sweet Tea Jubilee Sunday, Sept. 17, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.

551 S. MENDENHALL 762-8200

Intimate Piano Lounge featuring Charlotte Hurt MondaysThursdays, 5-9:30 p.m.; Larry Cunningham Fridays, Saturdays, 6-10 p.m.

Huey’s Poplar 4872 POPLAR 682-7729

John Angotti Sunday, Sept. 17, 8:30 p.m.-midnight.

Memphis Botanic Garden 750 CHERRY 636-4100

Steve Miller Band Friday, Sept. 15, 8:30 p.m.

Mortimer’s 590 N. PERKINS 761-9321

Van Duren Solo Thursdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

Various locations SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION

30 Days of Opera.

Tunica Roadhouse p.m.; Eddie Harrison Mondays, 6-10 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 Cheffie’s Cafe 483 HIGH POINT TERRACE 202-4157

Songwriter Night hosted by Leigh Ann Wilmot and Dave “The Rave” Saturdays, 5-8 p.m.

8 p.m.-midnight.

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

Jim Messina Wednesday, Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m.

Hadley’s Pub 2779 WHITTEN 266-5006

Almost Famous Friday, Sept. 15,

Shelby Forest General Store 7729 BENJESTOWN 876-5770

Steak Night with Tony Butler and the Shelby Forest Pioneers Fridays, 6-8 p.m.; Robert Hull Sundays, 12:30-3:30 p.m.; Cecil Yancy Sunday, Sept. 17, 12:303:30 p.m.

Collierville Huey’s Collierville 2130 W. POPLAR 854-4455

The Brian Johnson Band Sunday, Sept. 17, 8-11:30 p.m.

Cordova Huey’s Cordova 1771 N. GERMANTOWN PKWY. 754-3885

2 Mule Plow Sunday, Sept. 17,

1107 CASINO CENTER, TUNICA, MS 662-363-4900

Old Millington Winery 6748 OLD MILLINGTON 873-4114

Eddie Harrison and Debbie Jamison Sunday, Sept. 17.

Pop’s Bar & Grill 6365 NAVY 872-0353

Possum Daddy or DJ Turtle Thursdays, 5-9 p.m.; CeCee Fridays, 8 p.m.-1 a.m.; Possum Daddy Karaoke Wednesdays, 6-10 p.m. and Saturdays, 7-11 p.m.

Live Music Fridays, Saturdays.

Raleigh Stage Stop 2951 CELA 382-1576

Blues Jam hosted by Brad Webb Thursdays, 7-11 p.m.; Triple X Saturday, Sept. 16, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Alex Ward’s Pig-N-Whistle Dance Party Sunday, Sept. 17, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Open Mic Night and Steak Night Tuesdays, 6 p.m.-midnight.

Germantown

West Memphis/ Eastern Arkansas

Germantown Performing Arts Center

EACC Fine Arts Center Gallery

1801 EXETER 751-7500

EAST ARKANSAS COMMUNITY COLLEGE, 1700 NEWCASTLE, FORREST CITY, AR

Adrian Cunningham Friday, Sept. 15, 7 p.m.; Intro to Songwriting Tuesday, Sept. 19, 7 p.m.

Steven Curtis Chapman Saturday, Sept. 16, 7:30 p.m.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Folk’s Folly Prime Steak House

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

7090 MALCO, SOUTHAVEN, MS 662-349-7097

23


At Lichterman Nature Center

SCARECROWS September 15 November 17

CALENDAR of EVENTS:

Sept. 14 - 20

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.

TH EAT E R

Germantown Community Theatre

Lost in Yonkers, heartfelt comingof-age story set in 1942 about a family coping with the challenges of staying together during World War II and the struggles to balance love with tough times. www. gctcomeplay.org. $24. Fri., Sat., 8 p.m., and Sun., 2:30 p.m. Through Sept. 17. 3037 FOREST HILL-IRENE (453-7447).

Harrell Performing Arts Theatre

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, the Musical, given a dazzling coat of many colors by his father Jacob, Joseph’s brothers take him to Egypt and sell him into a life of slavery. A talent for interpreting dreams is a ticket to a better life. www.colliervilleartscouncil.org. $12-$20. Fridays, Saturdays, 7 p.m., and Sundays, 2:30 p.m. Through Sept. 24. 440 POWELL, COLLIERVILLE (853-3228).

Hattiloo Theatre

Fetch Clay, Make Man, inspired by the actual friendship between Muhammad Ali and Hollywood actor Stepin Fetchit, the play explores how each dealt with being a black public figure shaping identity in the face of outside forces. www. hattiloo.org. $26-$30. Sundays, 3 p.m., Saturdays, 2 & 7:30 p.m., and Thursdays, Fridays, 7:30 p.m. Through Oct. 15.

Shipibo pot, work by Juan Rojo in “Cross Cultural” at Jay Etkin Gallery through October 14th

37 S. COOPER (502-3486).

The Orpheum

Stomp in the Swamp BBQ & Bidding Sunday, September 17 5 - 8pm

September 14-20, 2017

5992 Quince Rd / Mem., TN 38119

901.636.2210

The King and I, www.orpheummemphis.com. $25. Tues., Sept. 19, 7:30-10 p.m., and Wed., Sept. 20, 7:30-10 p.m. 203 S. MAIN (525-3000).

Theatre Memphis

12 Angry Jurors, blistering character study of the American melting pot centered around the U.S. judicial system, story of a single juror holding the rest of the jury from a guilty verdict in a patricide trial. www.theatrememphis.org. $25. Sundays, 2 p.m., Saturdays, 8 p.m., and Thursdays, Fridays, 7:30 p.m. Through Oct. 1. 630 PERKINS EXT. (682-8323).

A R TI ST R E C E PT I O N S

Crosstown Arts

Artist reception for “Auto-da-fé,” exhibition of new works by Robert Fortner. www.crosstownarts.org. Fri.-Sat., Sept. 15-16, 5-10 p.m. 430 N. CLEVELAND (507-8030).

Featuring handmade cachapas, arepas, empanadas, Venezuelan soup, and more

Try our delicious made-from-scratch baked goods and fresh coffee, too! VENEZUELA’S NATIONAL DISH

Pabellon Criollo

24 4509 Summer Ave. just west of Perkins 746-6666 / @caimanvzla

TOPS Gallery

Opening reception for “Late Works,” exhibition of sculptures and collages by Marja Vallila. www.topsgallery.com. Fri., Sept. 15, 6-8 p.m. 400 S. FRONT.

OT H E R A R T HAPPE N I NGS

Casting Demonstration

O N G O I N G ART

Art of Caring

METAL MUSEUM, 374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380), WWW.METALMUSEUM.ORG.

Art Museum at the University of Memphis (AMUM)

Enjoy lakeside mingling, art auction, refreshments, and more benefiting Baptist Reynolds Hospice House and Kemmons Wilson Family Center for Good Grief. $40. Thurs., Sept. 14, 6-9 p.m. FEDEX EVENT CENTER SHELBY FARMS, 415 GREAT VIEW (227-7123), WWW.BAPTISTARTOFCARING.ORG.

Beatles at the Ridge Authors and Artists Symposium

Featuring panel of Beatles authors, artists, filmmakers, and musicians for the Summer of Love: 50th Anniversary event near The Studio, 123 Main in downtown Walnut Ridge, AR. Fri.-Sat., Sept. 15-16. WWW.BEATLESATTHERIDGE.COM.

Café Conversations

Dr. Ari Eisenberg, Rhodes College Assistant Professor of History, will lead a discussion on “Portraying the Other: Gender, Race, and Representation in American Art” inside Café Brooks by Paradox. Wed., Sept. 20, 6-7:30 p.m. MEMPHIS BROOKS MUSEUM OF ART, 1934 POPLAR (544-6209), WWW. BROOKSMUSEUM.ORG.

Call to Artists for MCA Holiday Bazaar & Fund-raiser

Open call, any local artist may submit, no cost to apply. See website for more information and submission form. Through Oct. 2. WWW.MCA.EDU.

Saturdays, Sundays, 3 p.m.

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. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 10 a.m.-9 p.m., and Fridays, Saturdays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. CROSSTOWN ARTS, 430 N. CLEVELAND (507-8030), WWW.CROSSTOWNARTS.ORG.

Emerging Memphis Designer Project Applications

Apply to be a part of the runway shows with our Emerging Memphis Designer Project. For more information, visit website. Through Sept. 15. WWW.MEMPHISFASHIONWEEK.ORG.

“Stargazer Garden” Flower-Folding

Stop by and fold a paper flower for collaborative art installation. Mondays-Fridays, 9:30 a.m.5:30 p.m. CROSSTOWN CONCOURSE (FORMERLY SEARS CROSSTOWN), N. CLEVELAND AT NORTH PARKWAY, WWW.CROSSTOWNARTS.ORG.

“The Quick and the Dead,” exhibition of drawings and obituaries by Chris Honeysuckle Ellis. www. memphis.edu/amum. Through Sept. 23. “Stopping in Memphis,” exhibition of work by Justin Bowles, Alan Duckworth, Meredith Olinger, Alex Paulus, Esther Ruiz, Jared Small, and Jill Wissmiller. www. memphis.edu/amum. Through Sept. 23. “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

“Rebirth of Crosstown,” exhibition of paintings by Tom Stem and photographs by Jamie Harmon depicting Crosstown’s construction and rebirth. www.anfa.com. Through Oct. 5. 1500 UNION (278-6868).

Belz Museum of Asian and Judaic Art

“Chinese Symbols in Art,” ancient Chinese pottery and bronze. www. belzmuseum.org. Ongoing. 119 S. MAIN, IN THE PEMBROKE SQUARE BUILDING (523-ARTS).

Bingham and Broad

“My Kin Is Not Like Yours,” exhibition of works by Debra Edge. Ongoing. 2563 BROAD (323-3008).


CALENDAR: SEPTEMBER 14 - 20

60 N. PERKINS EXT. (537-1483).

Circuitous Succession Gallery

“Stream of Consciousness,” exhibition of paintings by Brian Bundren. www. curcuitoussuccession.com. Through Sept. 25. 1789 KIRBY PARKWAY.

David Lusk Gallery

“Making Marks,” exhibition of works by Greely Myatt. www.davidluskgallery.com. Through Sept. 30. 97 TILLMAN (767-3800).

DeSoto Arts Center

“A Cast of Blues,” exhibition of face casts in resin of blues musicians who have helped shape the face of the blues by Sharon McConnellDickerson. (662-404-3361), desotoarts.com/events.html. Through Oct. 7. 660 W. COMMERCE, HERNANDO, MS.

The Dixon Gallery & Gardens

“Fidencio Fifield-Perez and Vanessa González: Location, Location, Location,” exhibition of work utilizing maps to open up discussions on migration and ceramic and installation work processing the challenges of immigration. www.dixon.org. Through Sept. 24. “Edward Giobbi: An Artist Comes to Memphis,” exhibition of works influenced by

Opening reception for “Late Works” by Marja Vallila at TOPS Gallery, Friday, September 15th

4339 PARK (761-5250).

Eclectic Eye

“Seeing Things My Way,” exhibition of photographs transposed onto metal and canvas by Bob Pierce. www. eclectic-eye.com. Through Sept. 20. 242 S. COOPER (276-3937).

FireHouse Community Arts Center

Mosal Morszart, exhibition of works by Black Arts Alliance artist. www.memphisblackartsalliance.org. Ongoing. 985 S. BELLEVUE (948-9522).

Fratelli’s

“Painters at the Garden,” exhibition of original paintings by students from garden art classes. www.memphisbotanicgarden.com. Through Sept. 30. 750 CHERRY (766-9900).

Jay Etkin Gallery

“Cross Cultural,” exhibition of tribal and contemporary work. www.jayetkingallery. com. Through Oct. 14. 942 COOPER (550-0064).

L Ross Gallery

“The Story Continues,” exhibition of hand-pigmented papers and acrylics on canvas and carved wood sculpture by Lisa Jennings and acrylics and mixed media on panels often sealed with beeswax by Jeni Stallings. www.lrossgallery.com. Through Sept. 30.

MOONSHINE

BALL

5040 SANDERLIN (767-2200).

Marshall Arts Gallery

“Love of Art” and “Memphis,” exhibition of work by Nikki Gardner and Debra Edge by appointment only. (647-9242) Ongoing. 639 MARSHALL (679-6837).

Memphis Botanic Garden

“Rustic Memories,” exhibition of folksy style paintings by Nancy JF Woods. www. memphisbotanicgarden.com. Through Sept. 30. 750 CHERRY (636-4100).

Memphis Brooks Museum of Art

“By the Book: A Tribute to Dolph Smith,” exhibit focusing on Dolph Smith’s artist notebooks, featuring six on display. Also includes the work of 11 artists who have worked with Smith. Through Nov. 26. “About Face,” exhibition located in the Education Gallery highlighting the different ways artists interpret the connection between emotion and expression. www.brooksmuseum.org. Ongoing. “Drawing Memory: Essence of Memphis,” exhibition of works inspired by nsibidi, a sacred means of communication among male secret societies in southeastern Nigeria by Victor Ekpuk. www.brooksmuseum.org. Ongoing. 1934 POPLAR (544-6209).

Memphis College of Art

“Horn Island 33,” exhibition of artwork as part of the outcome of an 11-day annual trip by MCA students, faculty, and alumni to Horn Island, a barrier island off the coast of Pascagoula, MS. mca. edu/event/horn-island-33/. Through Sept. 29.

RUNAWAY JUNE SEPTEMBER 23

DAVID ALLAN COE OCTOBER 13

1930 POPLAR (272-5100).

Metal Museum

“Cascadian Lines,” exhibition of works by Christopher Gerber in the museum store. www.metalmuseum.org. Through Nov. 12. Master Metalsmith: David Secrest, exhibition by sculptor and blacksmith well known for his incorporation of textures and patterns in forged iron, fabricated steel and bronze sculptures, and furniture. www.metalmuseum.org. Through Dec. 31. “With Love, From Brent,” exhibition of nearly 200 pieces of jewelry created over the course of his life as gifts

continued on page 26

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT TICKETMASTER.COM OR BY CALLING 1-800-745-3000.

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

“Memphis Stories,” exhibition of new works by Meghean Warner. www.buckmanartscenter.com. Through Sept. 18.

Italian Renaissance masterpieces by one of the founding trustees of the Hugo Dixon Foundation (which formed the Dixon Gallery and Gardens). www.dixon.org. Through Sept. 24. “Power and Piety: Spanish Colonial Art,” exhibition of paintings, sculptures, religious objects, and decorative art from the 17th through 19th centuries influenced by Spanish Colonial Caribbean. www.dixon.org. Through Sept. 24. “Made in Dixon,” exhibition showcasing the colorful and joy-filled artwork created by artists of all ages in the Dixon’s educational programs. www.dixon.org. Ongoing.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Buckman Arts Center at St. Mary’s School

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25


CALENDAR: SEPTEMBER 14 - 20 continued from page 25

DAN C E

for his wife, mother, daughter, and sister-in-law alongside cards and letters drawn and written by L. Brent Kington. www.metalmuseum.org. Through Oct. 15.

Brooks Milongas

374 METAL MUSEUM DR. (774-6380).

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.

Overton Park Gallery

MEMPHIS BROOKS MUSEUM OF ART, 1934 POPLAR (544-6209).

“Surfaces,” exhibition of ink, pencil, and mixed-media work by Rebekah Laurenzi. Through Oct. 6.

Crosstown Getdown

Meet up in the Central Atrium by the main staircase where Jessie Jones will provide free instruction in Cha-cha Slide, the Hustle, and line dancing followed by a dance party with a live DJ. Thurs., Sept. 14, 6-8 p.m.

1581 OVERTON PARK (229-2967).

Playhouse on the Square

“I’m Truly Sorry for Your Loss & Other Pleasantries,” exhibition of new work by Kristen Rambo. mca.edu. Sept. 19-Oct. 24.

CROSSTOWN CONCOURSE (FORMERLY SEARS CROSSTOWN), N. CLEVELAND AT NORTH PARKWAY, WWW. CROSSTOWNARTS.ORG.

66 S. COOPER (726-4656).

Rhodes College, Clough Hall

“Fathom,” exhibition of sculpture and video intertwining notions of ritual, alchemy, and formal exploration by Ryan Rasmussen. www.rhodes. edu. Through Oct. 14. 2000 N. PARKWAY (843-3000).

Ross Gallery

“Home/Away From Home” and “Signals,” exhibition of work by Terry Kenney and Chuck Johnson. www.cbu.edu. Through Oct. 5. CHRISTIAN BROTHERS UNIVERSITY, PLOUGH LIBRARY, 650 E. PARKWAY S. (321-3000).

Slavehaven Underground Railroad Museum

“Images of Africa Before & After the Middle Passage,” exhibition of photography by Jeff and Shaakira Edison. Ongoing. 826 N. SECOND (527-3427).

Talbot Heirs

Debra Edge Art. Ongoing. 99 S. SECOND (527-9772).

Step Afrika TOPS Gallery

“Late Works,” exhibition of sculptures and collages by Marja Vallila. www.topsgallery.com. Sept. 15-Nov. 11. 400 S. FRONT.

Tops Gallery: Madison Avenue Park

“Sad Men on Bad Afternoons,” exhibition curated by Daniel Fuller featuring the work of Natalie Labriola, Joseriberto Perez, Lauren Taylor, and Kandis Williams. www.topsgallery.com. Through Sept. 17. 151 MADISON (340-0134).

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).

12 Angry Jurors at Theatre Memphis through October 1st

Professional dance Company dedicated to the tradition of stepping. Presented by the Warfield Concert Series. Free. Thurs., Sept. 14, 7:30-9:30 p.m. PHILLIPS COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE, 1000 CAMPUS (870-338-8327), WWW.WARFIELDCONCERTS.COM.

C O M E DY

WKNO Studio

“Score: A Twenty Year Retrospective,” exhibition of paintings on everything from canvas, advertising signs, record album covers, to the female body by Garen Shrader. (458-2521), www.wkno. org. Free. Through Sept. 29. 7151 CHERRY FARMS (458-2521).

OPERA

30 Days of Opera

Check Opera Memphis website for pop-up opera events in Memphis and the Mid-South. Through Sept. 30.

Dru’s Place

Alex Stypula’s Rage Out Tour, stand-up comedian performs. Mon., Sept. 18. 1474 MADISON (275-8082).

P&H Cafe

You Look Like A Comedy Show, features six comedians battling it out for three rounds with witty insults and jabs that start with the phrase “You Look Like.” See Moth, MK Gannon, Tootie Two Times, Amber Glaze, and others. (225-3241133). $8. Sat., Sept. 16, 9-11:30 p.m. 1532 MADISON (726-0906).

VARIOUS LOCATIONS, SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION, WWW.OPERAMEMPHIS.ORG.

continued on page 28

Treasures In The Ozarks 2017

September 14-20, 2017

Arts-N-Crafts Show Sept. 23 -24 Hardy, Arkansas

Jim Messina SEPTEMBER 20 / 7:30pm

Talented singer-songwriter, played with artists like NEIL YOUNG. Member of Buffalo Springfield, co-founder of bands – POCO – LOGGINS & MESSINA. Hits include YOUR MAMMA DON’T DANCE and CRAZY LOVE. 26

Handcrafting Artisans Only www.facebook.com/ treasuresintheozarks

Tickets & Info – BPACC.ORG

BOX OFFICE HOURS / 10AM TO 2PM / M – F / 901.385.5588

Funded with A&P Tax Revenues


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CALENDAR: SEPTEMBER 14 - 20

continued from page 26 PO E T RY / S PO K E N WOR D

David Rogers’ “Big Bugs” at Memphis Botanic Garden

Cordova Branch Library

Fall Book Fair, all book lovers and book clubs invited. Featuring meet-and-greet with Mid-South’s authors, new books, readings and demonstrations, light refreshments, and networking. www.livingbreathingpoetry.com. Free. Sat., Sept. 16, 2-4:30 p.m. 8457 TRINITY (415-2764).

Epiphany Lutheran Church

Centering Prayer, opportunity for silent contemplation, followed by inspirational poetry and readings. www. epiphanylu.org. Sundays, 5 p.m., and Wednesdays, noon. 7887 POPLAR (861-6227).

B O O KS I G N I N G S

Booksigning by Daren Wang

Author reads and signs The Hidden Light. Wed., Sept. 20, 5:30 p.m. BURKE’S BOOK STORE, 936 S. COOPER (278-7484), WWW. BURKESBOOKS.COM.

September 14-20, 2017

Booksigning by Dr. Jim Bailey, Dr. G. Scott Morris, & Dr. Clarence Davis

Authors discuss and sign Healthy City Town Hall. Sat., Sept. 16, 3 p.m. NOVEL, 387 PERKINS EXT. (9225526), WWW.NOVELMEMPHIS.COM.

Booksigning by Kathleen Wickham

Author discusses and signs We Believed We Were Immortal: Twelve Reporters Who Covered the 1962 Integration Crisis at Ole Miss in conversation with Otis Sanford. Fri., Sept. 15, 6 p.m. NOVEL, 387 PERKINS EXT. (9225526), WWW.NOVELMEMPHIS.COM.

Booksigning by Larry Dodson

Author and member of the Bar-Kays discusses and signs memoir, And the Band Plays On. Sat., Sept. 16, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.

28

HICKORY RIDGE MALL, 6075 WINCHESTER (795-8844).

Booksigning by Reed Farrel Coleman

Author discusses and signs The Hangman’s Sonnet in the Robert B. Parker’s Jesse Stone series. Drake Hall of 98.1 The Max will join the conversation. Tues., Sept. 19, 7-8 p.m. BARNES & NOBLE, 2774 N. GERMANTOWN (386-2468), STORES.BARNESANDNOBLE.COM/ EVENT/9780061875878-0.

LECT U R E /S P EA K E R

Campaign Nonviolence: Evening with Swamiji

Hindu leader from India speaks on topic. Connect the dots between war, poverty, racism, climate change, and the epidemic of violence and join forces for a culture of peace. Thurs., Sept. 14, 7 p.m. FREEDOM’S CHAPEL DOC CHURCH, 961 GETWELL (244-7661), WWW. CNVMEMPHIS.ORG.

Campaign Nonviolence: Peace Walk Interfaith Labyrinth

Various faith leaders speak on topic. Connect the dots between war, poverty, racism, climate change, and the epidemic of violence and join forces for a culture of peace. Sat., Sept. 16, 11 a.m. UNITY CHURCH OF PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY, 9228 WALNUT GROVE (753-1463), WWW.CNVMEMPHIS.ORG.

I am. Amen.: Hank Willis Thomas Lecture

Globally-renowned artist and a co-founder of the artist-driven super PAC, For Freedoms speaks. His work is meant to initiate race, politics, and art dialogue particularly relevant to Memphis. Free. Thurs., Sept. 14, 6-8:30 p.m. MEMPHIS COLLEGE OF ART, 1930 POPLAR (272-5100), WWW.MCA.EDU.

Preparing the Landscape for Winter

Joellen Dimond, Tennessee State University, will speak on topic in Tipton County Extension Agent “B” wing. Thurs., Sept. 14, noon. AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (752-1207), WWW.AGRICENTER.COM.

TO U R S

Calvary Episcopal Church Tours

Docent-led tours discuss stained glass windows, architecture, and symbols in Christian art. In addition, private tours are available by appointment for a suggested donation of $10 per person. Free. Saturdays, Sundays, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. CALVARY EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 102 N. SECOND (525-6602), WWW.CALVARYMEMPHIS.ORG.

Herbarium Visit and Workshop

Meet at Rhodes College Frazier Jelke Science Center to tour Herbarium, which stores dried plant specimens with our guide Sarah Hatfield. Class will continue at the Dixon. Includes power press, and all supplies. $15 members, $25 nonmembers. Sat., Sept. 16, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW. DIXON.ORG.

Jimmy Ogle’s Elmwood Regarded as one of the most entertaining storytellers in the city, Ogle weaves a delightful fabric of Memphis history that all will enjoy. Register online. $20. Sat., Sept. 16, 10:30 a.m. ELMWOOD CEMETERY, 824 S. DUDLEY (774-3212), WWW.ELMWOODCEMETERY.ORG.

E X POS/SA LES

AAGM Trade Show

Open to all Memphis area management company and property personnel. Advanced registration is required. For more information, visit website. Wed., Sept. 20, 5-8 p.m. AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (757-7777), WWW.AAGM.ORG.

continued on page 30


C E L E BRATIN G

C E L E B R AT I N G

Presented by:

Dr. Thomas Motley , Volunteer since 1998

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 30TH • 5–8PM Visit select retailers to sample wine from around the world as we celebrate our 30th birthday! Enjoy live music, a caricature artist, a photo booth, live mural painting and more. Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 at the event. All proceeds benefit Make-A-Wish Mid-South. Get your tickets now at pourandexplore.eventbrite.com

c h u rc h h e a l th.org

901-753-4484

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

“It is so rewarding to come here and simply practice medicine. Helping people is really what it’s all about.”

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

YEARS OF CARING

29


CALENDAR: SEPTEMBER 14 - 20 continued from page 28

Cooper Young 4-Miler Party Pumper Uppers

B.Y.O.G. (Bring Your Own Groom) Bridal Show

Revolutions is the “pace car” for the run and will pump up the Light the Way party-goers. Meet at the Cooper-Young Trellis, on the street between Memphis Made and Bluff City Sports. Costumes and noise-makers are welcome. Free. Fri., Sept. 15, 6:30-7:30 p.m.

Plan the perfect wedding for you and your guests. Food tasting, music, games, and more. Free. Sun., Sept. 17, 2-4 p.m. TUNICA RIVER PARK, 1 RIVERPARK DR , ROBINSONVILLE (368-6782), WWW.MIDSOUTHWEDDINGSHOW.COM.

REVOLUTIONS COMMUNITY BICYCLE SHOP, 1000 S. COOPER (INSIDE FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH) (7266409), WWW.REVOLUTIONSMEMPHIS.COM.

Oliver Peoples, Alain Mikli, and Starck Trunk Show Unique handmade eyewear and sunglasses that are retro iconic Americana as well as French Designs. Thurs., Sept. 14, 12-4 p.m.

Cornhole Tournaments at Ghost River Brewing Co. Weekly tournament with a 70 percent payout. Format and number of teams paid based upon number of entries. All teams guaranteed two games. $25 team. Thursdays, 6-9 p.m.

EYEWEAR GALLERY, 428 PERKINS EXTD. (763-2020), WWW.EYEWEARGALLERY.COM.

Memphis Comic Expo

Meet artists and writers. Sat.-Sun., Sept. 16-17.

GHOST RIVER BREWING, 827 S. MAIN (278-0087).

AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (757-7777), WWW.AGRICENTER.COM.

OM Memphis

Couch-to-5K Program SneakFest Sneaker Expo

THE EDGE DISTRICT, MADISON, MARSHALL, AND MONROE, WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/OMMEMPHISMUSIC/.

Gathering of “sneakerheads” and urban fashion connoisseurs based in a buy, sell, and trade environment featuring footwear, apparel, and accessories. Bring sneakers to buy, sell, or trade. $20. Sat., Sept. 16, 1-6 p.m.

Rhea Lana’s of Germantown/Collierville

AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (7577777), WWW.SNEAKFEST.ORG.

30-day pop-up record shop and micro lounge. Closed on Monday. Through Sept. 18, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.

Children’s consignment event. For more information, visit website. Sun., Sept. 17, 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Mon., Sept. 18, 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Tues., Sept. 19, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., and Wed., Sept. 20, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (501690-5110), WWW.GERMANTOWN.RHEALANA.COM.

Shop Her Closet Consignment

Items can be brought every Tuesday, 9-6 p.m. or by appointment. Open to the public 9/1. Sales benefit Memphis Fashion Design Network. Free$25. Through Sept. 30.

S P O R TS / F IT N E S S

Bass Pro Shops MS River Monsters Catfish Tournament & Angler Roundup Featuring catfishing vendors, food, music, games, live weigh-in, seminars, prizes, celebrity guests, and more. Free. Fri.-Sat., Sept. 15-16, 8 a.m.-10 p.m. BASS PRO PYRAMID, 1 BASS PRO (853-6490), WWW.MSRIVERMONSTERS.COM.

THE LAB BY MEMPHIS FASHION NETWORK, 64 FLICKER (404-583-3760), WWW.MEMPHISFASHIONDESIGNNETWORK.COM.

Sensation Band 7-11pm

Benefits Shelby County Books from Birth and Emmanuel Center after-school program. Includes 200-meter dash for kids 16 and under. After-party with food, drink, awards, line dancing, live DJ. $20. Sat., Sept. 16, 9 a.m.-noon. CHURCH OF THE HOLY COMMUNION, 4645 WALNUT GROVE (767-6987), BOOKIT5K.RACESONLINE.COM.

Cardinals Fantasy Camp

44 campers aged 27 and older will receive instruction from some of the best in baseball and play four games under the management of a former Cardinals player. Benefits the Cardinals Kids Cancer Center at Mercy. See website for more information. Thur.-Sun., Sept. 14-17.

Led by a seasoned track coach/health and wellness educator to introduce inexperienced exercisers to a program that will get them across the finish line of a 5K. Tuesdays, Fridays, 7:30-9:30 a.m. Through Nov. 9. SHELBY FARMS, VISITOR’S CENTER, 6903 GREAT VIEW DRIVE NORTH (767-7275), WWW.SHELBYFARMSPARK.ORG.

Get Right 4 the Night

Get fit and have fun with Kellye Crawford. $10. Tuesdays, 6:45 p.m. FIREHOUSE COMMUNITY ARTS CENTER, 985 S. BELLEVUE (948-9522), WWW.MEMPHISBLACKARTSALLIANCE.ORG.

The Symetra Tour’s Murphy USA El Dorado Shootout

Murphy USA is excited to once again bring the Symetra Tour, recognized as “Road to the LPGA,” to southern Arkansas. Free. Fri.-Sun., Sept. 15-17, 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m. MYSTIC CREEK GOLF CLUB, 191 CLUB HOUSE (870-837-2500), WWW.ELDORADOSHOOTOUT.COM.

continued on page 32

MIDTOWN 725-PIES (7437)

Monday’s

Tuesday’s

Book It 5K Run/Walk

AUTOZONE PARK, THIRD AND UNION (721-6000), WWW. CARDINALS.MLB.COM.

Sunday’s

Eric Hughes Band 8pm-12am

Cemetery Cinema: Young Frankenstein at Elmwood Cemetery, Friday, September 15

R BE M E T P SE

September 14-20, 2017

19th-Gracie Curan & the High Falutin Band 8pm-12am 26th-Vince Johnson & The Plantation Allstars 8pm-12am

Wednesday’s

Vince Johnson & the Plantation Allstars 8pm-12am

Thursday’s

Young Petty Thieves 8pm-12am

Friday & Saturday 9pm-1am

Sept. 15th,16th, 29th & 30th- Freeworld Sept. 22nd & 23rd- Sensation Band

KEEPING THE BLUES ALIVE for 32 years

30

182 BEALE STREET | MEMPHIS, TN | 901.528.0150 www.rumboogie.com

DELIVERS DOWNTOWN 5-777-PIE (743) WWW.ALDOSPIZZAPIES.COM


31

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m


CALENDAR: SEPTEMBER 14 - 20

20% OFF

ONE ITEM *EXCLUDES JEWELRY*

continued from page 30 West Fight On: Cycle Run Walk

Full suite of fitness activities for the entire family to ensure that no cancer patient in the Mid-South fights alone. Sat., Sept. 16, 7 a.m.-1 p.m.

3525 MYNDERS AVE | MEMPHIS, TN 38111

SHELBY FARMS, VISITOR’S CENTER, 6903 GREAT VIEW DRIVE NORTH (767-7275), WWW.WESTFIGHTON.ORG.

M E ETI NGS

Fantastical Writers of the Mid-South

For writers who specialize in science-fiction/fantasy/etc. Second Thursday of every month, 7 p.m. BARNES & NOBLE, 2774 N. GERMANTOWN (386-2468).

Lupus Support Group

Our mission is to ensure that patients in Memphis with lupus, as well as their caregivers, family, and friends, have a safe and supportive place to connect. Free. Third Saturday of every month, 1-3 p.m. NESHOBA COMMUNITY RESOURCE CENTER, 7715 E HOLMES (7552250), WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/ CURELUPUSTN/.

SEPTEMBER 14

ALEX CUBA

Memphis 3.0 Meetings

Meeting held at Raleigh Community Center, Whitehaven Golf Course & Ballroom, McFarland Community Center, and Memphis Leadership Foundation. See website for more information. Thurs., Sept. 14, 5:30-7 p.m., and Wed., Sept. 20, 5:30-7 p.m.

September 14-20, 2017

MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES NIGHT S P O N S O R E D B Y:

SEPTEMBER 15

JONATHAN BLANCHARD

VARIOUS LOCATIONS, SEE WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION, WWW.MEMPHIS3POINT0.COM.

SEPTEMBER 16

COUNTRY BLUES FESTIVAL S P O N S O R E D B Y:

SEPTEMBER 17

TROUT FISHING IN AMERICA S P O N S O R E D B Y:

32

LEVITTSHELL .ORG

CONCERTS BEGIN 7PM

UN LESS OTH ERWISE NOTED

Olive Branch Genealogy Club

Wed., Sept. 20, noon. B.J. CHAIN LIBRARY, 6619 HWY 305 (662-895-5900).

T.O. Fuller State Park Monthly Meeting Call for more information. Third Wednesday of every month, noon. T.O. FULLER STATE PARK, 1500 MITCHELL (543-7581).

Alex Stypula’s “Rage Out” Tour at Dru’s Place, Monday, September 18th KIDS

Boys Hip-Hop Classes

For boys ages 5-10. $135 per semester session. Wednesdays, 6 p.m. Through Nov. 1. BALLET ON WHEELS DANCE SCHOOL & COMPANY, 2085 MONROE, WWW.BALLETONWHEELS.ORG.

Kids in the Garden (ages 7-10)

Gardening session that will give kids a chance to experience nature up close and learn the basics about planting and garden design. Snack and tools included. Reservations required. $10 members, $15 nonmembers. Sat., Sept. 16, 10:30 a.m.-noon. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW. DIXON.ORG.

“Pictures Tell the Story”

Students can reenact the historic “I Am A Man” photograph ad part of MLK50 campaign. School representatives must call the museum to schedule sessions. Through Dec. 31. ERNEST WITHERS COLLECTION GALLERY & MUSEUM, 333 BEALE (523-2344), WWW.THEWITHERSCOLLECTION.COM.

S P EC IA L EVE NTS

2017 Classic Car Show

Timeless automobiles benefiting Collierville Education Foundation. Free for spectators, $25 car show participants. Sat., Sept. 16, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. CENTRAL CHURCH, 2005 WINCHESTER, COLLIERVILLE (8348735), WWW.COLLIERVILLECARSHOW.COM.

8th Annual White to Black Belt: Silent Auction & Wine Tasting Fundraiser

Featuring live music, silent auction, wine tasting, door prizes, and more benefiting MTKD Scholarship Fund, a 501(c)(3) non-profit affiliate of Midtown Taekwondo. $40. Fri., Sept. 15, 7-11 p.m. CLARK TOWER, TOWER ROOM, 5100 POPLAR (725-5552).

Campaign Nonviolence Interfaith Peace and Justice Vigil

Community leaders speak of their work and vision for a nonviolent Memphis. Partnering organizations include the Viswayogi Foundation, MIFA, National Civil Rights Museum, and others. Free. Sun., Sept. 17, 3-5 p.m. NATIONAL CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM, 450 MULBERRY (266-2464), WWW.PACEEBENE.ORG.

David Rogers’ Big Bugs Representing eight different species, this nationally recognized traveling art exhibit features 10 giant wooden bug sculptures towering up to 18 feet tall. Sept. 16-Dec. 31. MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN, 750 CHERRY (636-4100), WWW.MEMPHISBOTANICGARDEN.COM.

DNA Riverboat Cruise 2017

Pre-boarding party featuring food, music, prizes and auction. $25. Sun., Sept. 17, 4-7 p.m. THE FRONT PORCH AT BEALE STREET LANDING, 251 RIVERSIDE DR, WWW.MEMPHISDNA.ORG.

Igniting Hope

Evening of fellowship, entertainment, and dinner. Guest speaker Darrow Miller explores why women are crucial to developing nations. Matched funds from event benefit Women of Hope Intl. Free. Sat., Sept. 16, 6-9 p.m. SECOND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 4055 POPLAR (454-0034), WWW.WOMENOFHOPEINTERNATIONAL.ORG.


CALENDAR: SEPTEMBER 14 - 20 You Look Like a Comedy Show at the P&H Cafe, Saturday, September 16th

South Memphis Farmers Market

Thursdays, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Through Nov. 30. SOUTH MEMPHIS FARMERS MARKET, CORNER OF MISSISSIPPI BOULEVARD AND SOUTH PARKWAY EAST, WWW. SOMEFM.ORG.

Memphis Fighting Game Community

Play, learn, and compete in the classic arcade tradition with local players. Various fighting games such as Street Fighter, Tekken, and Injustice. Equipment player-provided. BYO controller. $5. Third Sunday of every month, 1-5 p.m. Through Sept. 30.

F I LM

The 15 Film Series

Films in the series will engage with three themes: Memphis history, art, and spatial justice. Free. Thursdays, 6 p.m. Through Sept. 30.

GREATER MEMPHIS MAGIC ARENA, 7505 HWY 64, WWW.MEMPHISFGC.COM.

CLAYBORN TEMPLE, 294 HERNANDO, WWW.ONLOCATIONMEMPHIS.ORG.

Memphis Parent Family Choice Awards

Vote for your favorite family friendly places in Memphis. Visit website to vote. Through Sept. 30. WWW.MEMPHISPARENT.COM.

continued on page 34

MLK50 Concert Series and Community Event

Featured artists include Carmen Hicks 9/15, Devin Crutcher 9/22, and Karen Brown 9/29, spoken word artists, MLK speeches, food trucks, and a Sip & Shop at museum store. Free. Fridays, 6-8 p.m. Through Sept. 30. NATIONAL CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM PLAZA, BETWEEN MAIN AND CIVIL RIGHTS MUSEUM, WWW.CIVILRIGHTSMUSEUM.ORG.

H O L I DAY EVE N TS

Mid-South Maze

Featuring corn maze, haunted hayride, and haunted maze. For more information, visit website. $5-$15. Sept. 15-Nov. 4. AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (757-7777), WWW.MIDSOUTHMAZE.COM.

FO O D & D R I N K EVE N TS

Don’t miss the craziness of Party Like a Pirate Day at the Fitz!

Bartlett Station Farmers Market Saturdays, 8 a.m. Through Sept. 23.

BARTLETT STATION MUNICIPAL CENTER, 5868 STAGE.

Big Bugs Picnic

Creep, crawl, or flitter your way through buggy activities. Bring a picnic, or grab some grub from an onsite food truck, then enjoy your picnic spread on the lawn. Sat., Sept. 16, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

HOT PIRATES & WENCHES FREE PARTY FAVORS LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FREE PIRATE DRINKS LIVE RADIO REMOTES & PRIZES

MEMPHIS BOTANIC GARDEN, 750 CHERRY (636-4100), WWW.MEMPHISBOTANICGARDEN.COM.

CASINO PROMOTIONS

Visit website to subscribe for weekly produce delivery. $20-$35. Through Sept. 30.

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Cooper Mountain Wine Dinner

FLEMING’S PRIME STEAKHOUSE, 6245 POPLAR (7616200), WWW.FLEMINGSSTEAKHOUSE.COM.

OVER 700 PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED. 4 WAYS TO WIN!

Food Truck Fridays

Fridays, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Through Sept. 29. THE DIXON GALLERY & GARDENS, 4339 PARK (761-5250), WWW.DIXON.ORG.

Food Trucks for Lunch and Dinner

Located in the parking lot on Germantown Parkway in front of the ShowPlace Arena. Wednesdays, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. & 5 p.m. Through Oct. 11. AGRICENTER INTERNATIONAL, 7777 WALNUT GROVE (7577777), WWW.AGRICENTER.COM.

Hill Country Boucherie and Picnic

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Chefs and friends use every part of the animal for a true Southern boucherie. To follow there will be a Hill Country Blues Picnic and dance. $5-$90. Sat., Sept. 16, 5 p.m.-2 a.m.

Friday, September 29 & Saturday, September 30 • 8pm TICKETS START AT $25

HOME PLACE PASTURES, 1513 HOME PLACE (662-2925808), WWW.HOMEPLACEPASTURES.COM.

Tickets available at Fitz Gift Shop or call

Memphis Farmers Market Wednesday Market

Wednesdays, 4-7 p.m. Through Sept. 27. COURT SQUARE, AT N. MAIN AND COURT, WWW.MEMPHISFARMERSMARKET.ORG.

Music at St. Mary’s

Hear Wednesday Morning Musicians at Eucharist in Sisters’ Chapel followed by a community breakfast. Wednesdays, 8 a.m. ST. MARY’S CATHEDRAL, 700 POPLAR (527-3361), WWW.STMARYSMEMPHIS.ORG.

FitzgeraldsTunica.com • 1-662-363-LUCK (5825) • Must be 21 and a Key Rewards member. See Cashier•Players Club for rules. Tax and resort fee not included in listed price. 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. Management reserves the right to cancel, change and modify the event or promotion. Gaming restricted patrons prohibited. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700.

at 800-745-3000 or ticketmaster.com

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Special guest Memphian Michael Hughes from Willamette Valley will be available during Chef Craig Dorff dinner with wine pairing. $89. Fri., Sept. 15, 6:30-9 p.m.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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CALENDAR: SEPTEMBER 14 - 20

continued from page 33 Aircraft Carrier Guardians of the Sea

Find yourself aboard a carrier alongside 6,000 highly skilled sea and air personnel, in the midst of a giant war simulation. See website for more information including show times. Through Nov. 17. CTI 3D GIANT THEATER, IN THE MEMPHIS PINK PALACE MUSEUM, 3050 CENTRAL (636-2362), WWW. MEMPHISMUSEUMS.ORG.

niversary. Bring your own lawn chairs. Fri., Sept. 15, 7-10 p.m. SHOPS OF SADDLE CREEK, 7509 POPLAR, SUITE 1 (753-4484), WWW.SHOPSOFSADDLECREEK.COM.

E.T. The Extra Terrestrial 35th Anniversary

Sun., Sept. 17, 2 p.m., and Wed., Sept. 20, 7 p.m.

Cemetery Cinema: Young Frankenstein

Evening of outdoor film including a short film produced by Propaganda TV will start the show. Fri., Sept. 15, 7 p.m. ELMWOOD CEMETERY, 824 S. DUDLEY (774-3212), WWW.ELMWOODCEMETERY.ORG.

MALCO PARADISO CINEMA, 584 S. MENDENHALL (682-1754), WWW.MALCO.COM.

Hispanic Film Festival

Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month. All movies in Spanish with English subtitles at the University Center Theater by Department of World Languages and Literatures. Free. Through Oct. 9, 7-9 p.m.

Cinema at the Creek: Dirty Dancing

September 14-20, 2017

“The Story Continues” by Lisa Jennings at L Ross Gallery

Enjoy free movie, food and drinks available for purchase from Memphis MoJo Cafe, MEMPopS, and Piece & Love Pie Co, to celebrate 30th an-

UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS, UNIVERSITY CENTER (678-2507), WWW.MEMPHIS.EDU.

Tues., Sept. 19, 7 p.m.

MALCO PARADISO CINEMA, 584 S. MENDENHALL (682-1754), WWW.MALCO.COM.

Outflix 2017

Featuring 14 features, six documentaries, and 26 shorts. $8-$150. Through Sept. 14. OUTMEMPHIS: THE LGBTQ CENTER OF THE MID-SOUTH, 892 S. COOPER (278-6422), WWW. OUTFLIXFESTIVAL.ORG.

SpacePOP: Not Your Average Princesses Sat., Sept. 16, 10:30 a.m.

MALCO PARADISO CINEMA, 584 S. MENDENHALL (682-1754), WWW.MALCO.COM.

Time Warp Drive-In

Movies start at dusk. See website for theme and movie line-up. Sat., Sept. 16. MALCO SUMMER 4 DRIVE-IN, 5310 SUMMER ((901)681-2020), WWW. MALCO.COM.

JOIN US FOR THE 2017

Purse A U C T I O N

Fun, Food and Fashion 34

Lupin the 3rd: The Castle of Cagliostro

Thursday, October 26, 2017 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. TM

The University Club of Memphis 1346 Central Avenue | Memphis, TN 38104

Tickets: $50 | www.wfgm.org


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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m


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B O O KS By Richard J. Alley

Dance on Pedals New novel sees fiction alongside truth in 1928 France.

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f you’re like me, around the time Memphis social media was blowing up over news that Zach Randolph would be wrapping his dishes in newspaper in preparation for a move west last July, you were caught up in the drama of supersprinter Peter Sagan’s disqualification from this year’s Tour de France following his fracas in Stage 4 of the race. I know, I’m still upset about it, too. My schedule over those weeks was simple: watch the present-day Tour coverage live in the morning, followed by reading The Invisible Mile (Picador), David Coventry’s novel set during the 1928 race, at night. Through the eyes of a domestique, the youngest rider on the team, we witness the unveiling, mile by mile, of the Ravat-Wonder cycling team of New Zealand/ Australia, the first English-speaking team allowed in the storied race begun in 1903. (I’m sure you caught that there — it’s a 1928 Australian team, and Sagan has been accused of knocking Mark Cavendish, an Australian, from his ride during a final sprint in 2017. It’s uncanny.) Along the way, the young rider carries in his panniers memories of home and a sister whose fate we learn along the journey. His memories of the first World War, too, become vivid with each revolution of his machine’s gears. While a fan of the race, I was unfamiliar with some of the names from the past as the announcers of today’s Tour de France rarely take us back beyond the career of Eddy Merckx. So as I read, I made frequent pit stops on Google to learn how easily truth can draft in behind such elegant lies. There was indeed an Australian/New Zealand team first introduced to the 1928 Tour de France, and it was led by Hubert Opperman and Harry Watson, just as in the novel. Other characters such as Camille Van de Casteele were actual participants as well. The Invisible Mile is a long look at the

Tour de France in its infancy. Today’s participants ride from one day’s finish to the next day’s start aboard luxury motor coaches with masseuses, team doctors, and personal chefs. Their gear is the most high-tech, up-to-date available and, in most cases, is designed for each rider. It is science on pedals. But aren’t most sports these days? Science in pads, science swinging a bat, science running a faster and faster mile. The constant for professional athletes (for most, anyway, as the dollar sign is still the ultimate measure of a personal best) is heart. And the men of the earliest Tour de France had it in torrents as they trudged up the same mountains they do today — the Pyrenees, the Alps — on machines made of heavy steel, not feather-weight carbon fiber, while carrying their own spare tubes across their backs and bags full of gears to be changed out manually depending on ascent or descent. Once at the finish, they searched for lodging and for restaurants that were still open, as they may have finished a stage in darkness or in early morning. Coventry puts us in that mindset, taking us to the flat plains and rocky outcrops of France with poetry mingled into his peloton of prose to fit us on the saddle so we can see and feel the road ahead. “I shouted at myself as I climbed,” Coventry writes. “My bones felt the terror of my muscles as they stretched and shrank. Trying to take me up and up, they seemed to bend to the effort. I say this, but we were barely pedalling. And it’s a heavy agony. I thought only to cry when we hit the snowline. The pain was exquisite and I could not comprehend how my body kept working me onwards. It was deep, it was everywhere, surrounding every part of me. I felt myself become damaged; I felt every muscle disintegrating, lungs and heart turning to bloody pulp in my chest. But I went on, and it’s not a case of knowing how, rather it is the case that we did.”


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F O O D N E W S B y L e s l e y Yo u n g

Seconds

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rosstown Concourse is at it again with another addition to their fun selection of eating places. Next Door Eatery, a sister restaurant to The Kitchen, opened at the end of last month and should prove to maintain a steady clientele through lunch and dinner. The concept is the same as The Kitchen — locally sourced, clean eating that tastes good. Next Door aims to lower the cost and make the food even more accessible. “We tried to create a menu with a broad appeal that would reach a wide audience,” Colin Ness, director of operations for all of the Next Doors, says. “We are trying to limit the no vote.” That includes trying to reach vegetarians, vegans, and the gluten-free audience. In addition to a nice variety of salads, there’s the Roasted Veggie Bowl with seasonal veggies served over quinoa and topped with sunflower seeds and their

cilantro tahini dressing ($11.95); Veggie Tacos ($9.95); and a Beet Burger ($8.95), as well as a nice selection of Snack & Share bites and appetizers. One of their most popular items is their burger, which can be ordered “50/50” — a patty mixed with cremini mushrooms to cut down on the calories ($11.95). They offer daily specials, soups, craft cocktails, a patio, and an environment that mixes contemporary and rustic styles. “We want to offer something to the construction worker who is looking for an incredible tasting burger to families, millennials, urban professionals, and everything in between,” Ness says. The Crosstown location is the second Next Door to open, the first being in Boulder, literally (I literally mean literally) next door to the first Kitchen. The Memphis location was the first expansion out of state, and there are more in the works. The Kitchen and Next Door were

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Cheft Drury Baswell (left); Friday’s special — fish and chips launched by Kimbal Musk, Jen Lewin, and Hugo Matheson in an effort to serve healthy food that is responsibly sourced and tastes good. The nonprofit The Kitchen Community grew out of this effort, which uses a percentage of profits from the restaurants to build Learning Gardens in schools across the country so that students can learn the importance of real food. There are around 100 gardens in Memphis so far. “We couldn’t be more excited about the team we’ve put together in Memphis,”

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Ness says. “Being in Crosstown Concourse is such an exciting and unique opportunity. How could we not be a part of it?” Next Door Eatery, 1350 Concourse, Suite 165, 779-1512, nextdooreatery.com. Hours 11 a.m. to close daily.

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SECONDS expand. They just didn’t know it would happen so quickly. “We were talking to Philip West and Dorothy Pugh [of Ballet Memphis], telling them what we were up to at the time, and we were not even open at Crosstown yet,” Philipp says. One thing led to another, and the four of them quickly realized they were all on the same page. “They were considering food and beverage options, and we were telling them about our concept of offering food that is healthy, delicious, and fast,” Philipp says. “We were what they were looking for. They just didn’t know it before they met us.” Just five months after launching their first restaurant, the couple is offering Mama Gaia 2.0 in the exquisitely archimania-designed Ballet Memphis in Overton Square. The architectural firm won an award for the Crosstown Mama Gaia space already. This one is round and all windows and light with touches of Elektra Eggleston — daughter to the photographer — textiles in green leaf patterns. This space offers some options the other does not, such as the Copia Petitzza, a pizza made out of pitas with ovenroasted zucchini, eggplant, peppers,

onion, and leeks over olive basil sauce and topped with cheese (vegan option offered) and basil ($7.50), as well as Pita Wedges served with house-made tzatziki sauce ($3), quinoa patties made for dipping in marinara sauce ($4), and a full coffee bar (my personal fave). And there are cocktails. “Everything is made fully organic with fresh-squeezed juices and herbs,” general manager Cy Washer says. That means organic vodka, gin, and tequila. As of now, they haven’t found organic rum and bourbon, so they offer non-GMO versions. The Crosstown Cooler comes with fresh-squeezed cucumber and lime, mint, and The Botanist gin, and the Allegro is puréed berries with vodka ($9-$11). Due to space and a few other restraints in the electrical department, there are a few things left off the menu, but look for brunch with waffles and crepes, a tastily stocked grab-and-go cooler, and a thoughtful calendar of events to come. “We are so happy to be in Overton Square and are looking forward to finding out what’s going on and do some programming around that as well as what’s going on with the Ballet,” Philipp says. Mama Gaia, 2144 Madison, 214-2449, mamagaia.net. Hours are Mon.-Sat, 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sun., 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

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September 14-20, 2017


S P I R ITS By Andria Lisle

Indian Summer Time for curries and kormas — and the drinks that go with them.

Turmeric, ginger’s brilliantly colored and more pungent cousin, is a key ingredient for making curries. It also amps up a drink. On Liquor. com, I found a delicious cocktail called the Lunar Eclipse. The drink takes 24 hours to prepare, because you must infuse vodka with a stick of chopped turmeric overnight. Once you’ve strained the infusion, combine 2 ounces of vodka with 1 ounce carrot juice, ¾ ounces of both honey and lemon juice, and 2 dashes of Angostura bitters. Shake in an ice-filled shaker, strain into a rocks glass over ice, and garnish with a celery stick. Don’t have time for that? Try a turmeric gin and ginger. Add 4 ounces gin, ½ teaspoon ground turmeric, and the juice of ½ lime to a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake and strain into highball glasses filled with ice, then top with an equal amount of ginger beer. Drink, and repeat.

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margarita. Just combine 1 ¼ cup fresh or frozen mango slices, ½ cup of gold rum, ¼ cups each of fresh lemon juice and honey, 2 tablespoons of plain Greek yogurt, a pinch of kosher salt, and ½ teaspoon of ancho chili powder. Pulse in a blender, add 4 cups of ice, and puree until smooth. I frequently make a slight variation, using peaches instead of mango and adding ½ teaspoons each of almond extract, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Tamarind, a shrub that produces an acidic, pod-like fruit that’s popular in Indian food, makes a great cocktail base. You might have to work a little to locate tamarind juice (I recommend checking the Asian or Mexican aisle of the grocery store, shopping at an international market, or ordering from Amazon), but filling a highball glass with ice, 1 ½ parts each vodka and tamarind juice, and 3 parts lemon-lime soda couldn’t be easier.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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very September, when most people begin ordering pumpkin spice everything, I go full-tilt for Indian flavors. Crisp, cool mornings make me yearn for butter chicken, coconut stew with garam masala, vegetable curries, and kormas. Thanks to the intrepid recipe writers at The New York Times, I’ve discovered that Indian cooking is not unlike Creole or Cajun cuisine: start with a trinity of garlic, onion, and peppers, then add protein, vegetables, liquids, and layers of spices. I know my variations on traditional Indian food are lacking authenticity, but they taste delicious. And regardless of origination, the heady, complex tastes that result in the pot are deserving of thoughtful beer or wine accompaniments. Beer-wise, my favorite for Indian food is, not surprisingly, a good IPA. India Pale Ale got its name from British brewers who made their product for export to India. So-called “India Ale” made its debut in Madras and Calcutta in 1827; within 15 years, the hoppy, high-gravity beer which was specially formulated to survive the overseas journey, became equally popular on its home turf. I prefer Wiseacre’s Ananda, brewed less than two miles from my front door. When pairing wine with Indian cuisine, listen to the experts: Everyone from the editors at Food & Wine to the sommeliers at Wine Folly recommends that you counterbalance the spiciness of the food with slightly sweet wine that’s served cold. Rosés go exceptionally well with vindaloos, and the acidity of Reislings perfectly set off the flavors of curries. Just stay away from anything oaky. Many spices that are essential components of Indian food, it turns out, contain tannins. Cloves, tarragon, cumin, and cinnamon all contain the astringent biomolecule, which makes high-tannic wines — especially reds — a poor choice for pairing. Always go crisp and zippy, and avoid dry wines. Indian flavors also carry over to cocktails. It’s easy to doctor up a homemade lassi, the Punjab region’s frothy, yogurt-based drink. Bon Appetit has a recipe for a frozen rum-mango lassi that’s as simple as making a

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41


FILM REVIEW By Chris McCoy

Attack of the Clowns It is the atmospheric Stephen King adaptation of your nightmares.

J

ohn Carpenter’s 1978 Halloween must be regarded as one of the most influential films of all time. Horror films have been around since the dawn of moving pictures, but the smashing success of The Exorcist in 1973 and Jaws in 1975 had loosened film investors’ purse strings and given the genre back some of the respectability it had squandered at the drive-in. But it was Halloween that would define the horror vibe for the next decade, horror’s silver age. Today, ’80s horror is associated with the over-thetop gore of the slasher movie, exemplfied by Friday the 13th. But the original Halloween is not really like that. After a shocking start, it’s a creepy, slow burn that gets its power from the familiarity of the soon-to-be-deceased teenage characters, particularly Jamie Lee Curtis’ breakthrough performance as Laurie, the original Final Girl. In the ’80s, a big part of the appeal of horror was as a cinematic depiction of teen life. No film did that better than Wes Craven’s

1984 A Nightmare on Elm Street, which launched the career of a guy you might have heard of, Johnny Depp. It is ostensibly a Stephen King adaptation, but it owes as much to A Nightmare on Elm Street as it does to its source material. King’s gritty, working-class characters from his 1970s potboilers like Carrie were a big influence on the horror auteurs of the ’80s, and by the time he finished It in 1986, he was watching his own ideas thrown back at him on the screen. Of course, after The Shining, King was on his way to being the most adapted writer in all of film history. That has resulted in some all-time classics, like Stand by Me and The Shawshank Redemption, and also big balls of dumb like Maximum Overdrive and this summers’ eye roller The Dark Tower. It is definitely a mark on the good side of the King ledger. We first meet Bill Denbrough (Jaeden Lieberher) in his bedroom in Derry, Maine, making a paper boat for his little brother Georgie (Jackson Robert Scott) to sail in the rushing storm gutter on a rainy

Meet the Losers Club — (left to right) Oleff, Grazer, Wolfhard, Jacobs, Lieberher, Lillis, and Taylor day. Bill is sick, so Georgie goes out alone, and when the boat gets swept into the sewer, he meets Pennywise (Bill Skarsgård). Lured by his boat — and an entirely plausible story about a super-fun circus that lives in the sewer — Georgie goes a little too far and becomes the first victim in a wave of missing children that sweeps through the small community. The next summer, 1989, Bill and his friends in the Losers Club — Chubby new kid Ben (Jeremy Ray Taylor), bespectacled loudmouth Richie (Finn Wolfhard), schlubby germophobe Stan (Wyatt Oleff), overprotected Eddie (Jack Dylan Grazer), and the home-schooled farm kid Mike (Chosen Jacobs) — set out to find the truth behind the disappearances while dodging the malevolent attention of a gang of bullies, led by budding psychopath Henry Bowers (Nicholas Hamilton). Meanwhile, Beverly Marsh (Sophia Lillis) is having some bully troubles of her own. The town mean girls have branded her a slut and unpopular loser. (As she says before getting

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Jose Llana and Laura Michelle Kelly in Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The King and I. Photo by Matthew Murphy.


FILM REVIEW By Chris McCoy trash water dumped on her “Which is it? Make up your mind!”) Fleeing her abusive father, she finds a natural kinship with the Losers Club and catches the eye of both Bill and Ben. The kids start to have visions invoking their worst fears, entertwined with the town’s dark past of murder, disappearance, and racist riots, which get more intense and dangerous as they close in on Pennywise, a malevolent supernatural force that feeds on fear. And what better way to generate fear than by manifesting as a clown? Sharp-eyed genre observers will note that this is all very Stranger Things — right down to the presence of Wolfhard, who will return as the young hero Mike on the hit show next month. They share the core

appeal of the plucky band of young nerds solving supernatural mysteries in the 1980s and the influences, which include The Goonies and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, currently still in theaters after a surprisingly successful 40th anniversary re-release. It delivers the atmospheric horror and jolts of big scares, but the core of the film is the chemistry and talent of its young ensemble cast. It turns into what Tarantino has called a “hang out movie,” and in this case, you’ll be hanging out in a sewer with a bunch of nerds and a scary clown — and having a blast. It Now playing Multiple locations

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THE LAST WORD by Randy Haspel

SBUKLEY | DREAMSTIME

Gary Busey

He sat there seething, stone-faced, jaw clenched, his surgically resectioned hair lacquered down and bobby-pinned into a ducktail, staring straight ahead, lest he glance left or right at the assembled dignitaries and media professionals all doubled over laughing at him — not with him. His customary orange spray tan had been transformed into a glowing burnt umber atop his blushing face. He grimaced and made a little wave, but, that aside, he never cracked a smile. The night was April 30, 2011. The occasion was the annual White House Correspondents dinner, and Barack Obama was getting some payback for Donald Trump’s idiotic promotion of “birtherism,” the racist idea that Obama was not born in the U.S. and was thus unqualified to be president. Trump claimed to have sent an investigatory team to Hawaii to verify his theory. “They couldn’t believe what they’re finding,” he said. So, with Trump in the audience, it was only appropriate that Obama preface his remarks with a large-screen display of his long-form birth certificate. “No one is happier … to put this birth certificate matter to rest than the Donald,” the president said. “That’s because he can finally get back to focusing on the issues that matter, like: Did we fake the moon landing?” Donald squirmed as the president continued, throwing barbs at Trump’s pet reality TV show, The Apprentice. “Just recently … the men’s cooking team did not impress the judges from Omaha Steaks. There was a lot of blame to go around, but you, Mr. Trump, recognized that the real problem was a lack of leadership. And so ultimately, you didn’t fire Lil John or Meatloaf. You fired Gary Busey. And these are the kind of decisions that would keep me up at night.” The crowd howled; Trump scowled. In fact, Obama had just ordered the raid on Osama bin Laden, which took place the following day. I’m convinced that it was from that night of public humiliation that Trump’s vow for revenge emerged and materialized into a political campaign reeking with hatred and dependent on a backlash toward our first black president. I’ve heard of pendulum swings, but this one was straight out of Edgar Allan Poe. Now, it seems I have company. The president’s ghoulish pal, Roger Stone, said, “I think that is the night that he resolves to run for president. I think he [was] kind of motivated.” His sycophant, Omarosa Manigault, a controversial contestant and documented liar from the first season of The Apprentice, who now makes $180,000 a year as a presidential hireling, proclaimed, “Every critic, every detractor, will have to bow down to President Trump. It’s everyone who ever doubted Donald, whoever disagreed, whoever challenged him. It is the ultimate revenge to become the most powerful man in the universe.” Revenge is the fever which motivates his Obama-obsessed presidency. His singular agenda is to overturn the policies and achievements of his predecessor and destroy the legacy of Barack Obama. According to the Washington Post, in his first six months, Trump has passed no new legislation, but managed to roll back 16 executive actions, 63 cabinet level decisions, and 14 acts of Congressional review. His scorched-earth approach to governing is diametrically opposed to all things Obama, regardless of the consequences. Just look at his cabinet. Almost every pick was chosen with the intent of destroying the agencies they were appointed to oversee. Here’s a sampling: Rex “Tea for the” Tillerson, Secretary of State: Former CEO of Exxon Mobil with close Russian ties. No government or public service experience. Steve Mnuchin, Secretary of the Treasury: Trump’s campaign finance chairman and former Goldman Sachs employee. Former owner of OneWest Bank, called a “foreclosure machine” by its detractors, which initiated foreclosures on active duty military families. Initially failed to disclose over $100 million of hidden assets in the Cayman Islands. Blamed it on the “complicated” disclosure forms. Jeff Sessions, Attorney General: Denied a judgeship in 1986 for his racist past. Mike Pompeo, CIA Director: Tea Party Kansas congressman who served on the House Intelligence Committee. Advocated the resumption of waterboarding, black sites, and the reinstatement of government programs that harvest communications of U.S. citizens. Ryan Zinke, Secretary of the Interior: Strong supporter of coal and oil exploration. Claims climate change is not a “proven science.” Wilbur Ross, Secretary of Commerce: Billionaire involved in the coal and steel industries. Implicated in the 2006 Sago, West Virginia, mine disaster which killed a dozen men because of overlooked safety concerns. Ben Carson, Director of HUD: Lived in urban Detroit as a child. No bureau management or government experience. Betsy DeVos, Secretary of Education: Long-time advocate of charter schools and voucher programs. Wants to require government to pay for private school tuition. No experience in public education. Refused to rule out defunding public schools. Billionaire Republican donor and sister of Blackwater mercenary organization founder Erik Prince. Rick Perry, Secretary of Energy: Famously stated that he wanted to eliminate the Department of Energy. Oops. Scott Pruitt, Director of EPA: Former oil industry lobbyist. As Oklahoma Attorney General, Pruitt repeatedly sued the EPA over Obama regulations limiting carbon emissions. This deconstruction of the Obama presidency continues as the city of Houston is bailing out from one hurricane, while another chews up the state of Florida. And there are two more storms out there after these two. For a moment, it looked like it was the Lord’s will to take out Mar-a-Lago, but at the last minute, Hurricane Irma made a left turn and said, “Screw it. I’m going to Disney World.” It’s estimated that Hurricane Harvey will cost taxpayers $160 billion, and the cost of Irma is sure to be higher. When hurricane season ends in November, I guess we just won’t be able to afford Trump’s billionaire’s tax cut anymore. Donald Trump is the Republican opposite of Teddy Roosevelt. While TR said, “Speak softly and carry a big stick,” Trump’s slogan should be, “Speak loudly and carry a small dick.” All this winning is upsetting my stomach. Please excuse me while I go take a Trump. Randy Haspel writes the “Recycled Hippies” blog.

m e m p h i s f l y e r. c o m

So much winning is tough to take.

THE LAST WORD

Blow Hard

47


MINGLEWOOD HALL

9/20: MoneyBagg Yo Birthday Bash 9/27: Laughs for Relief Funnymaine & DeAngelo Williams 9/28: Marshall Tucker Band Methodist Healthcare Fundraiser 10/3: Portugal. The Man w/ Lido & Maybird 10/4: Lecrae 10/7: Judah & The Lion w/ The Academic 10/13: Maren Morris w/ Ryan Hurd 10/18: Spoon w/ Mondo Cozmo

Est. 1942

Celebrating 75 Years

UPCOMING: Thu Sept 14 - Toadies w/ Local H Fri Sept 15 - Daisyland w/ Valentino Khan Sun Sept 17 - Will Hoge w/ Dan Layus (Of Augustana) Tue Sept 19 - Lettuce Fri Sept 22 - Daisyland 2nd Anniversary w/ Adventure Club Sat Sept 23 - Andy Mineo w/ Social Club Misfits, Wordsplayed Sun Sept 24 - Tank Tues Sept 26 - ZZ Ward Mon Oct 2 - Falling In Reverse / All That Remains Tue Oct 3 - Morgan James Wed Oct 4 - Blue October Sat Oct 7- WellRED Comedy Tour Sat Oct 7 (11pm)-Daisyland w/ Riot Ten Fri Oct 13 - Daisyland w/ Space Jesus Sat Oct 21- Yngwie Malmsteen Thu Oct 26 - Highly Suspect Fri Oct 27 - Daley Sat Oct 28 - Alice in Daisyland: Halloween w/ The Crystal Method Fri Nov 3 - Daisyland w/ Borgore Sat Nov 4 - Issues Mon Nov 6 - Cannibal Corpse Fri Nov 10 - The Jesus and Mary Chain Sat Nov 18 - Daisyland w/ Slander Sun Nov 26 - Poptone Wed Nov 29 - Hollywood Undead Tue Dec 5 - Daisyland w/ Snails Mon Dec 11 - Kamasi Washington Sat Dec 16 - Daisyland w/ Figure and Midnight Tyrannosaurus NEW DAISY THEATRE | 330 Beale St Memphis 901.525.8981 • Advance Tickets available at NewDaisy.com and Box Office

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768 S. Cooper • 901.207.5343 FREE BREWERY TOURS 4 P.M. SATURDAY & SUNDAY

GONER RECORDS

HAPPY HOUR | MON–FRI 2–7 | $1 OFF ALL DRINKS MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

PINT NITE

2f1

FAT TIRE HUMP DAY

DRAFTS

WHISKEY FLIGHTS 2 OFF

$

New/ Used LPs, 45s & CDs. We Buy Records! 2152 Young Ave 901-722-0095

Coco & Lola’s

MidTown Lingerie Show YOUR lace with Cosabella !! www.cocoandlolas.com

Finest lace - Coolest place 710 S. Cox|901-425-5912|Mon-Sat 11:30-7:00

The Coach House @ Loflin Yard

loflinyard.com • 7 W. Carolina Ave • 249-3046

3

$

5PM–CLOSE

THURSDAY

FISH & CHIPS TRADITIONAL IRISH SEISUIN EVERY OTHER TUESDAY

$200 IN PRIZES STARTS AT 7P SUNDAY

FRIDAY

BRUNCH

TUESDAY

$

MARTIN & TAYLOR 6:30 – 9:30P

FOR A CAUSE

CHRIS JOHNSON EVERY OTHER

STARTING AT 8PM

4 SHOOTERS a 16 OZ. PINTS $6 BOMBS a SPECIALTY COCKTAILS

TRIVIA

PATIO SESSIONS

LIVE MUSIC b 6P HOUSE DJ 10P

LIVE IRISH MUSIC EVENINGS

T CANDY COMPANY Stay up to date with

SATURDAY

DJ TAZ b 10P

The Treasures In The Ozarks Arts N Craft Show will be held within the foothills of the beautiful Ozark Mountains beside the famous Spring River in Hardy, AR on September 23,24. Saturday hours are 9am-5pm, Sunday 10am-4pm. Our show features handcrafting artisans only from a variety of art & craft genres. A fabulous show in a gorgeous setting, it’s a perfect weekend getaway! Come join us!! facebook.com/treasuresintheozarks

PIERCER WANTED at NO REGRETS TATTOO.

Must have minimum 2 years experience, portfolio, and Tennessee piercing license or a current license in good standing from another state. Please send all resumes to:

NOREGRETSMEMPHIS@GMAIL.COM

MORGAN AC & HEATING Floor Furnace, Wall & Central Heat. Call 901-774-COOL

FABULOUS CARPET CARE Steam Clean 3 Rooms For $99. “It’s Thorough, Dries Quickly & Stays Clean Longer - Or It’s Free.” Call 901.282.5306

CHIP N’ DALE’S ANTIQUES 3457 Summer Avenue Memphis, TN 38122 EVERYTHING ON SALE! Open Tues-Sat | 901-452-5620


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