Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Strike Two

Makers of ostensibly disreputable “gross-out” comedies such as There’s Something About Mary and Me, Myself & Irene, the Farrelly brothers aren’t natural filmmakers. But their films have a combination of anarchic glee and palpable generosity that gives their work both a distinctive personality and sense of purpose. The result has been a body of work that hasn’t been taken as seriously as it should be. (There’s Something About Mary was a box-office smash and one of the best American films of the past decade but had no prayer of getting nominated for an Oscar.)

The main problem with the duo’s latest film the baseball-themed romantic comedy Fever Pitch isn’t the one I expected: that stars Drew Barrymore and especially Jimmy Fallon would be too low-wattage for filmmakers used to letting the likes of Ben Stiller, Jim Carrey, Jack Black, Cameron Diaz, and Matt Damon run wild. Rather, it’s that Fever Pitch is as close to “director-for-hire” as the Farrellys are liable to get. Right off the bat they share authorship with Nick Hornby, whose football-themed (right, soccer) book is the basis for the film. But the Farrellys are also working from someone else’s script, one produced by a team (Babaloo Mandel and Lowell Ganz) whose resume (A League of Their Own, Parenthood) reads anonymous but agreeable. The result isn’t a romantic comedy reflected through the Farrelly prism (as Mary and Shallow Hal were) but a more conventional film where the directors’ attempts to inject their own idiosyncrasies not so much the stray bits of only mildly effective slapstick and gross-out humor but the affectionately drawn band of misfits who make up Fallon’s “summer family” at Fenway Park come across as more awkward and forced than in films they can call entirely their own.

Even if you haven’t read Fever Pitch, the plot of the film will be familiar to you if you’ve read Hornby’s more popular High Fidelity or seen its more successful film adaptation. The romantic-comedy elements are wrapped around a funny but tortured self-critique of Peter Pan syndrome, a consideration of the rewards and limits of cultural obsession, and the way immersion in music or sports (or any number of other things Star Wars movies, perhaps?) can affect one’s interactions with other humans, especially members of the opposite sex, who tend to be less obsessive about those things.

In Fever Pitch, this takes the form of Ben (Fallon), a shlubby geometry teacher at East Boston High who is also an almost embarrassingly rabid Red Sox fan. (Confession: I’ve been a Sox fan for nearly 25 years and remember the torturous, thrilling ’86 post-season like it was yesterday, so I can relate.) But Ben is forced to confront his baseball jones when he becomes smitten with high-powered business exec Lindsey (Barrymore), a non-fan used to dating guys with more than jerseys and sneakers in their closets.

At its frequent best, Fever Pitch combines the Farrellys’ distinctive sunniness with a sportsaholic self-critique familiar from Ron Shelton’s underrated Tin Cup. But Fever Pitch lacks both Tin Cup‘s sexiness (Kevin Costner and Rene Russo’s grown-up courtship dance trumps Barrymore and Fallon’s puppy love) and conceptual rigor. The rawness with which Tin Cup exposed its hero’s empty machismo is why it wasn’t quite the hit Shelton’s previous sports flicks were. Fever Pitch edges into this kind of critique of Ben he turns down a romantic getaway to Paris because it conflicts with a midseason Fenway homestand but pulls back. Maybe because the Farrellys share Ben’s obsession or, more likely, because the filmmakers, in this one case, are too nice for their own good.

So Fever Pitch lets Ben off a little too easy, disrupting the gender balance required of the greatest romantic comedies. For most of the movie, Fever Pitch seems as accessible to women viewers as men. (My wife’s favorite part: when Ben explains that he and his friends like to scout the players and “talk about which to keep, which to get rid of” and Lindsey guilelessly responds, “And the Red Sox ask for you opinion?” Needless to say, she could relate.) But it ultimately embraces a boy’s fantasy, and Lindsey’s late-film revelation that she’s the one who’s been selfish rings hollow.

You have to wonder if the movie would have been different had the Red Sox not decided to reverse 86 years of history in the midst of the film’s production, vanquishing the dread Yankees and seizing the World Series title. Faced with something as incredible as the 2004 postseason, perhaps it’s hard to fault the Farrellys (New England boys themselves) for giving in to the rush.

Chris Herrington

Sahara, the new action film with Matthew McConaughey and Penélope Cruz, is based on the novel of the same name by Clive Cussler. I haven’t read Cussler’s novel or any other of his work, though he did pen the book that later became the movie Raise the Titanic (1980). Jason Robards was in that film. He later scoffed at the movie (which was a turkey), claiming he only did it for the money. Robards and his then-wife were remodeling their home, so they called the film Raise the Bathroom. A quarter-century later, Cussler has penned yet another book that has become yet another stinker.

Cussler’s Raise the Titanic characters are back in Sahara but with distinctly 21st-century updates. McConaughey replaces stately Richard Jordan’s Dirk Pitt, William H. Macy stands in for the late Robards’ Admiral James Sandecker, and quirky clown Steve Zahn takes over ex-Navy Seal Al Giordino for grizzled character actor M. Emmet Walsh. These intrepid fellows work for the National Underwater and Marine Agency (a real organization founded by Cussler). Pitt is a lifelong devotee of an old legend of an ironclad Civil War ship that mysteriously crossed the ocean to Africa during wartime, bearing treasure and, perhaps, death. When a gold Confederate dollar shows up on the black market, Pitt knows he must be near the ship and borrows the good admiral’s speedboat and buddy Al to head to Mali where, surely, they will find the ship. That’s the first of two plots.

Plot two: Drs. Eva Rojas (comely Cruz) and Frank Hopper (Glynn Turman) are in Africa examining patients with distinctly plague-like symptoms. People are getting very sick and dying very fast, and though they work for the World Health Organization, nobody will take them seriously. So they trek on alone to find the source of the illness. Their appeals for help to a stylish French billionaire only put them into greater danger, as he is connected to Mali’s baddest, toughest evil warlord whose political and financial ambitions are not remotely bothered by this plague. In fact, the plague serves as a distraction from his diabolical plans, which involve solar energy, toxic waste, and warlording in general. Bwa-ha-ha-ha!

Astonishingly, Pitt and Rojas encounter each other a number of times (Africa sure is small, ain’t it?), even though they are searching for different things. But, just as all you have to do to make a Reese’s cup is combine chocolate and peanut butter, all you have to do to connect the dots between a horrifying biohazard with an ironclad Civil War treasure is well, I don’t know. And after seeing Sahara, I don’t think I can recall how they figure out that the ship and the source of the plague are in the same place. But thank God Pitt and Rojas do or the Atlantic Ocean would be in a heap of trouble. Trust me.

If it pleases the court, I accuse Sahara of being utterly, completely, and totally ordinary. Nothing distinguishes this from its many source materials (James Bond, Indiana Jones, and Robert Langdon of The Da Vinci Code have all had DNA stolen in order to construct, nefariously, Dirk Pitt), nor does it seem to try very hard on its own. The buddy relationship is just like any other in movies, and the tepid romance is tacked on and extraneous. (Yawn.) In fact, there is more chemistry between McConaughey and Zahn. Pitt introduces pal Al as his “wife,” and then, when asked how long they have “been together,” Al answers “since kindergarten.” They are more a couple than Rojas and Pitt seem to want to be. (Rojas and Pitt don’t even kiss.) But who cares? The movie is put together well enough (by Michael Eisner’s son Breck), implausible but fun, unimportant but diverting, unattractive but well-paced. McConaughey is colorful enough (in fact, one Web site commenter referred to him as “orange looking” in this), and Cruz, not very good in this role, is at least nice to look at.

Sahara‘s not bad. It’s just not at all good. Shouldn’t “not good” be bad enough? You tell me. n

Categories
Cover Feature News

Cell Mates?

O n April 4th, nine FBI agents executed a search warrant at the Raleigh home of a convicted felon named Rafat Jamal Mawlawi, a Syrian with dual citizenship in the United States. Mawlawi is suspected of organizing a scam to illegally bring Moroccan men into the United States by arranging sham marriages and engagements to women from Memphis.

What the FBI found was much more troubling: a hidden stash of loaded weapons and ammunition clips, $34,000 in cash, two pictures of Mawlawi shouldering a rocket-propelled grenade launcher, a gruesome videotape of war casualties with Arabic text and voiceover, and more than 20 passports to Morocco, Syria, Iran, and other Middle Eastern countries.

The agents were members of the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force. As outlined by prosecutors and agents in a federal courtroom last week, what they found could be evidence of a possible terrorist link in Memphis or something less sinister, as has proven to be the case in other investigations of Middle Easterners caught up in our legal system. The FBI investigation is ongoing.

“Mr. Mawlawi was a danger to the community,” assistant U.S. attorney Fred Godwin told U.S. magistrate Tu Pham during the hearing last week to decide whether Mawlawi should be jailed or released on bond.

“He was planning to leave the country, and there is further indication that he was informed of an investigation against him,” Godwin said. “If he gets to his home nation of Syria, our chance of ever getting him back is slim and none.”

Mawlawi was detained pending trial, as was codefendant Karim Ramzi, a citizen of Morocco. In all, four Middle Eastern men and six Memphians were indicted last week on federal charges of conspiracy and violation of immigration laws. The Memphians accused of involvement in the sham marriages and engagements include the daughter, grandson, and former daughter-in-law of the Rev. James Netters, a founding member of the Memphis City Council and interim president of Memphis Light Gas and Water in 2004.

What has not previously been reported is the background of Mawlawi, which was outlined in the detention hearing before Pham, a handful of Justice Department employees, and four spectators on April 7th in a third-floor courtroom in the federal building.

Most Memphians are apt to think of Homeland Security in Memphis as airport security, a solitary Coast Guard boat cruising up and down the Mississippi River between the bridges, a police car parked on the shoulder of the interstate, or inspectors and dogs checking packages at the FedEx Super Hub. The Mawlawi case puts a different light on things.

Mawlawi, 54, is a naturalized U.S. citizen who served in the Navy for 12 years. He is also a citizen of his native Syria. He had a criminal record before being indicted last week. According to Memphis FBI spokesman George Bolds, in 1994, he was convicted on a felony count of fraud in California and did jail time. In 1993, records show he was arrested in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, but the charges were dismissed. Mawlawi failed to show up for an extradition hearing following one of his arrests and was picked up by authorities when he reentered the United States at JFK International Airport in New York. Records show that occurred in 1993.

It is not clear how long he has been living in Memphis. His one-story, brown brick house is on a corner lot three blocks from Craigmont High School. Since moving to Memphis Mawlawi had preached and conducted Muslim prayers with inmates at the Shelby County Penal Farm. He apparently came to the attention of the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force because of an inmate named Andre Dotson, serving time on a charge of aggravated robbery. Dotson wrote the FBI that he had evidence of a marriage scam and said Mawlawi had tried to recruit him.

As explained by FBI agent Robert Parker at the detention hearing, Dotson’s information about the marriage scam was good but his trustworthiness was shaky. After contacting the FBI, Dotson told Mawlawi that he was being investigated. Then he wrote another letter to the FBI telling them that he had warned Mawlawi about the investigation.

As a result of all this, the investigation took on new urgency. On March 18th, agents did a “trash pull” of a garbage can outside Mawlawi’s home and found printed copies of e-mails indicating he was corresponding with a school in Damascus and preparing to move his wife and family to Syria. During subsequent surveillance of the house, agents observed yard sales and a “For Sale” sign in the front yard. The sign was on the porch of the house last week.

When agents went to the house last week, Mawlawi and his wife were home, and boxes packed with clothing, toys, and other items were scattered around the living room. Mrs. Mawlawi said they were moving and leaving the country, but Mawlawi said they were moving to Arizona. He later changed his story and admitted they were moving to Syria.

Agents asked Mawlawi if he had any firearms in the house. He told them he had only a shotgun. He did have a shotgun, but that was not all. Inside a locked safe, agents also found a .9-millimeter Glock handgun, a .32-caliber pistol, and a .38-caliber revolver. The guns were loaded, and there were extra loaded ammunition magazines next to them in the safe.

Also in the safe was $30,000 in cash, although Mawlawi had previously told agents he did not make any money on the marriage scam. Agents found another $4,000 in cash in a bedroom, along with Moroccan and Bosnian passports and a Syrian passport for Mrs. Mawlawi. In all, agents found 20 to 30 passports — some current and some expired — in the names of the Mawlawis and their children. Passport stamps indicated Mawlawi had been to Iran and Pakistan, although he had told agents that he did not visit other countries near Bosnia.

Agents also found two pictures of Mawlawi shouldering a rocket-propelled grenade launcher. In one of them, the end-cap is removed so that the weapon is ready to fire. Mawlawi said the pictures were taken when he was in Bosnia in 1996 and 1997 working as an English teacher.

Also found was a videotape which starts with the words “al Mujahadeen” and pictures of a firearm. The voiceover is in Arabic, Parker said. The word “mujahadeen” has come into common use in news reports since the onset of the war in Iraq. It is variously translated as “those engaged in jihad,” “holy warriors,” “Islamic warriors,” and “soldiers of God.” The video shows graphic images of dead people with injuries “that appear to be from combat wounds,” Parker said. Mawlawi does not appear on the tape. Videotapes of war casualties, beheadings, and other gruesome scenes are readily available via the Internet.

Mawlawi, a stocky man with black glasses, grey hair, and a salt-and-pepper beard, appeared in court last Thursday wearing a light-brown prison jumpsuit. A Middle Eastern woman with a scarf over her head sat in the back of the courtoom, shaking her head back and forth as the FBI agent testified. Mawlawi was represented by attorney Randy Alden of the U.S. public defender’s office.

“The government is trying to paint Mr. Mawlawi as a very dangerous person,” Alden told Magistrate Pham.

Alden said the government is overstating the danger. He said Mawlawi was honorably discharged from the United States Navy after serving 12 years. The passports to Iran and Pakistan had expired prior to the 9/11 terror attacks. Mawlawi might not have been in Pakistan since the 1980s, Alden said, and he was in Bosnia after the United Nations conflict. Alden did not explain why Mawlawi was photographed with the grenade launcher on his shoulder against a background that appears to be a snowy hillside.

Charged along with Mawlawi and Ramzi in the four indictments that were unsealed Monday were Omran Omer, a U.S. citizen, and Mhammed Kabouchi, a citizen of Morocco. Arraignments for Mawlawi and Ramzi were set for April 13th.

Morocco is home to several of the suspects in the March 11, 2004, terrorist train bombing in Madrid which killed 191 people. On April 1st, Moroccan Youssef Belhadj was extradited to Spain and arrested in connection with the train bombings. Another Moroccan, Farid Hilali, was arrested last year in London as a suspected accomplice of the Madrid bombers and possible plotter of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York City.

Authorities in Memphis were not characterizing the Middle Easterners in the alleged marriage scam as terrorists or terrorist sympathizers. The indictment makes no mention of terrorism, and the strongest word used in the detention hearings was “dangerous,” and that was by Mawlawi’s own attorney. However, the grainy copies of the photographs of Mawlawi holding a grenade launcher (from which the illustrations for this story were taken) were entered as exhibits in his court file.

“Our handling of the hearing will speak for itself,” said U.S. attorney Terry Harris.

The indictment says that between November 2001 and September 2004, the defendants operated a marriage-for-profit scheme to get foreign nationals into the U.S. in violation of immigration laws.

“Rafat Jamal Mawlawi, assisted by Omran Omer, would recruit and pay United States citizens to travel out of the United States, arrange sham marriage engagements, and produce fraudulent applications for fiancee visas,” the indictment says.

The indictment details several payments ranging from $110 to $2,300 in checks and cash to co-defendants and numerous trips between Memphis and Morocco by the alleged conspirators. The payments total $25,730.

On November 18, 2003, Chandra Netters married Karim Ramzi, who had filed an application for a non-immigrant fiancee visa four months earlier.

On January 14, 2004, Janet Netters Austin married Mhammed Kabouchi.

Kimberly Netters was recruited by Mawlawi to enter into a sham engagement with Abdelkada Kabouchi, the indictment says.

Chandra Netters Lofton Taylor, 47, is the daughter of the Rev. James Netters, and Janet Netters Austin, 50, is his former daughter-in-law. Rev. Netters could not be reached for comment. His wife told the Flyer he would have no comment.

Janet Netters Austin sings professionally using the name J.P. Netters, sometimes appearing with her husband James Austin, who is also a professional singer and former member of the singing group the Platters. She was released without bail following a court appearance last week. She declined to comment to a reporter.

Omran Omer was released on a $10,000 bond. His attorney, Bernie Weinman, declined to comment.

The defendants face a maximum prison sentence of five years and a fine of up to $250,000.

Marriages — real and fake — between American soldiers and foreign women were common during and after World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. The 1945 War Brides Act and Fiance Act of 1946 allowed foreign spouses and would-be spouses (as well as their children) of U.S. soldiers to become citizens. The Immigration Marriage Fraud Amendment became law in 1986. Since the terrorist attacks on the U.S., sham marriages to foreign nationals have begun to attract greater attention from immigration officials and the FBI. Last December, six people were indicted by a federal grand jury in Seattle in an alleged scheme to bring Vietnamese nationals into the U.S.

This is not the first federal immigration case in Memphis with Middle Eastern connections and overtones of violence. In 2002, five Middle Eastern men who came to Memphis from New York were arrested in a scheme to get fake driver’s licenses. Katherine Smith, an employee at the driver’s license testing station who was also arrested, died five days later in a burning car which was apparently deliberately set on fire. The case was investigated for possible terrorist connections but none were found. The men were held several weeks but eventually released and deported.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Van’s Dual Role

Former 4th District congressman Van Hilleary, one of four declared Republican candidates in next year’s U.S. Senate race, responded over the weekend to a potentially vexing problem. Faced with grumbling in party ranks — especially among supporters of his opponents — Hilleary stood fast on the issue of retaining his current position as GOP national committeeman from Tennessee.

Hilleary continues to hold that position while preparing to run in a contested primary against former Congressman Ed Bryant; state representative Beth Harwell; and Chattanooga mayor Bob Corker.

Addressing the regular quarterly meeting of the state Republican executive committee at the Holiday Inn Select at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Hilleary said he had “heard rumors” about opposition to his dual role of candidate and committeeman and challenged the committee to pass a resolution at its next meeting against his continued service. Otherwise, he said, he intended to continue in the role of committeeman.

No action was taken on that issue Saturday by the committee, which did effect another change, however — amending the party by-laws governing intervention in party primaries by Republican Party officials. The by-laws, which preclude such action, have up until now allowed for one exception — allowing intervention against Republican legislative incumbents who have opposed the party’s legal position or supported that of the Democrats on redistricting matters.

Mindful of the controversy concerning the speakership elections in both houses of the Tennessee General Assembly, the committee on Saturday amended the by-laws to allow public opposition by party officials to those incumbent Republican legislators who cast votes in January for either Lieutenant Governor John Wilder, reelected as Senate speaker, or state representative Jimmy Naifeh of Covington, who was renamed Speaker of the House.

Two Republicans cast votes for Wilder — enough to ensure his election over Republican Ron Ramsey — and 11 Republican House members voted for Naifeh.

The by-laws change in effect ratified a resolution introduced at the committee’s December meeting by Memphis member Layne Provine. As it happens, Provine has an opinion about the Hilleary issue too. “I don’t have a dog in the hunt,” Provine, a professional political consultant, pointed out Tuesday. “I’m not representing anybody as of now in the Senate race, and I’m wide open on which candidate to support. But I think Van’s a smart enough fellow, having been a congressman and a candidate for governor, to figure out the committeeman thing without needing a resolution by the party.”

Provine said he agreed with those people, “including a couple of prominent supporters of Van,” who find it “awkward” for the former congressman to continue in his official party role while running against other Republicans in a primary. If a resolution of the sort mentioned by Hilleary came before the committee at a future meeting, Provine said he would support it.

n Jim Balentine, former reporter for United Press International and longtime political writer for the old Memphis Press-Scimitar, was the recipient two weekends ago of a heart transplant at Baptist East Hospital. Balentine has experienced complications since the operation, but doctors are said to be “guardedly optimistic” about his prospects for a full recovery.

n The elections of 2006 are now officially upon us. Although several potential candidates have floated their intentions to compete for a county commission seat in next year’s countywide elections, the first actual declaration has come from Mike Ritz of Germantown.

Ritz, who will seek the District 1, Position 1 seat now held by Marilyn Loeffel, made a formal announcement of candidacy in a release this week, stressing “a need to control rising property taxes” and emphasizing his experience in financial management.

“If elected, I’ll use my financial and budget analysis experience to review the County’s fiscal and debt situation and assist the Mayor and fellow Commissioners in finding solutions to the County’s massive debt and over reliance on the property tax,” said Ritz in the statement.

Ritz had been among several applicants seeking a commission vacancy last year that was ultimately awarded to Dr. George Flinn. Since then, Ritz has made a point of attending the commission’s regular meetings and committee sessions as an observer.

For her part, Loeffel is said to be eyeing the county clerk’s job now held by Jayne Creson, who is considering retirement. Like several fellow commissioners, Loeffel is term-limited as a consequence of a 2002 countywide referendum.

Commissioners Walter Bailey, Cleo Kirk, and Julian Bolton have sued to invalidate those results, and a ruling on the issue by Chancellor Tene Alissandratos has been long expected.

n The Tennessee General Assembly is not only a venue for important public business. It can also be, for all the parliamentary minutiae and dead air of its daily proceedings, an improv theater of surpassing eloquence — one in which, every now and then, a speech can actually influence the outcome of a vote.

Here’s a recent example: State senator Steve Cohen protested in the Senate against a measure floated by Governor Phil Bredesen (often the object of Cohen’s ire) that would tap state government’s Rainy Day (reserve) fund rather than resort to new taxes, like one proposed by Cohen and state representative Kathryn Bowers that would raise the state cigarette tax to help fund TennCare.

“They want to live off the taxes that Senator [Jerry] Cooper [D-Smartt] sponsors, and they want to live off the revenue the lottery created,” Cohen said. “It’s not a bad thing, ladies and gentlemen. Some of you voted for it, and those of you who didn’t should have. It’s kept the schools going, it’s kept the high schools open, it’s kept the prisons going, the jails.

“It’s the government and taxes that educate the children, give healthcare to your people. It gives law enforcement money, gives correction, public safety, public welfare. And you can’t operate without revenue. You can’t do it. And if you want to live on the work of the past generation, you’re poaching. You need to show some backbone and courage. Not just here, the first floor [governor’s office] needs to show it!

“They’re living off that billion dollars the General Assembly voted on, and they’re living off that lottery money the General Assembly passed. And now they’re trying to tell you, We want to spend it all. We don’t want to create any of it. This General Assembly created it. This General Assembly, this Senate, needs to stand up and do a little bit on its own and realize that some of the ideas that we passed are worthwhile. And that’s what this is about.”

The bottom line: The Senate evidently heeded Cohen and opted to keep the Rainy Day fund at its current level.

Categories
Music Music Features

Sound Advice

A longtime sideman and collaborator for local roots-music queen Nancy Apple, Jay Ruffin goes solo this month with Skeleton Key, the first release on Apple’s Ringo Records not by Apple herself. Ruffin has recorded solo before, under the name Jay Harrington (Ruffin is his middle name), but with Skeleton Key the ostensible alt-country player has undergone a skillful, convincing makeover as a straight-up rocker, one whose sound bounces agreeably from the vaguely rootsy (think Steve Earle or Tom Petty) to the poppy (Marshall Crenshaw) to slightly harder, more electric stuff (’80s/early-’90s college rock).

The guitars on Skeleton Key cut more than jangle, but it’s the songcraft that stands out: Some songs — “Dirty Little Town,” with its background vocals and big guitar solo; “Common Ground,” with its growling vocal, blues-rock guitars, and organ fills –fit into the classic-rock vein. But the best-sounding songs –“Run Virginia Run” or the uptempo “Never Be the Same” — have the pop gallop of vintage Crenshaw. As a transition from alt-country to straight-up rock, Skeleton Key bears some musical resemblance to the Old 97s’ breakout albums Fight Songs and Satellite Rides, though Ruffin’s lyrics aren’t in the same ballpark as Rhett Miller’s best.

Ruffin will celebrate the release of Skeleton Key at Paddy’s Irish Pub, inside the Edge District’s Stop 345 space, Saturday, April 16th. Helping him out will be his all-female backup band, The Luv Muffins.

Were MC5 and Blue Cheer slow? I haven’t listened to the former in more than a decade (always preferred the Stooges) and have never owned music by the latter, so my musical memory is a little fuzzy. I only ask because the New Orleans noise-rock duo Blackfire Revelation cite both bands (covering Blue Cheer’s “Second Time Around,” by far the speediest thing on the record) and come on with such attitude that I was expecting something more chaotic than what their album Gold and Guns on 51 provides. Then again, I also wasn’t expecting the chin-up lyrics of the opening “Battle Hymn,” which remind me a little of early Hüsker Dü, except Blackfire Revelation never motorvates like the Dü’s Metal Circus. The molasses tempos here are enlivened by a bluesy feel likely informed by singer/songwriter John Fields’ rural Mississippi roots, and whether MC5 or Blue Cheer ever got this sluggish, the s-l-o-w, sleazy grind of “Preach to the Choir” does remind me of the Stooges’ grunge-y “Dirt.” “Dirt” I love, but generally loud-and-slow isn’t my ideal, which doesn’t mean it isn’t yours: Bring your earplugs to the Hi-Tone Café Thursday, April 14th, for Blackfire Revelation. — Chris Herrington

The Fucking Champs have managed to pioneer a hybrid of heavy-metal mayhem and old-school prog that obliterates the sophomoric Dungeons & Dragons quality of the former (in spite of titles like “Thor Is Like Immortal”) and the dippy, acid-drenched “spirituality” of the latter. The Champs’ songs — almost exclusively instrumental — show virtuosity without the embarrassing “Whoa, look what my hands just did!” B.S. that is the signature expression of so many Guitar World virtuosos. They’re at the Hi-Tone Café Saturday, April 16th, with another — very different — band, Parchman Farm, whose polished vintage sound captures the moment when ’60s psych began to morph into the pop metal of the early ’70s. Beautiful Byrds-inspired harmonies and dreamy lyrics explode into growling Steppinwolf-ish rockers. It’s a refreshing dose of boomer-era radio rock designed for those of us who are sick of the late-night infomercials reminding us (ad nauseum) how great it was. In short: They rool.

Quick hits: Also on Saturday, The Derailers will be at Murphy’s. Seeing these shit-hot honky-tonkers in a venue this small is a country-and-western fan’s dream come true. (Dale Watson was there only last week. Go, Murphy’s!) Drums & Tuba, who are the Saturday-night headliners at the Young Avenue Deli, have gotten too electronic for their own good. But there was a time I might have said that they — along with Calexico — were the reigning kings of quirky instrumental post-rock. The Gourds, a sort of punk-influenced answer to Levon Helm and Robbie Robertson, have developed a following among Phish-heads, Panicheads, and Deadheads who haven’t come to grips with Jerry’s passing. They hit the Hi-Tone on Wednesday, April 20th.

Categories
News The Fly-By

LIFE GOES ON…

On Thursday, April 7th, The Commercial Appeal ran an Associated Press story about the funeral of celebrity attorney Johnnie Cochran, lawyer for such high-profile clients as Michael Jackson, Sean “P. Diddy” Combs, and, most notoriously, O.J. Simpson. According to the article, “The range of mourners reflected Cochran’s work in high profile civil rights cases and high glamor trials.” Then it listed a smattering of the artists in attendance including “Stevie Wonder, and Earvin `Magic’ Johnson, Jesse Jackson, former Cochran client Abner Louima, football great Jim Brown, actor Todd Bridges, and rappers Tupac Shakur and Snoop Dogg.”

Of course, it’s pretty unlikely that Tupac was actually in the house since the ever-popular rapper was gunned down after a Mike Tyson fight on September 7th, 1996, and died in the hospital six days later. Todd Bridges, on the other hand, may have attended the funeral but his career as an actor died in 1986 with the cancellation of Diff’rent Strokes. — Chris Davis

Plante: How It Looks

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

Friday, 15

Art openings: Works by Pam and John Wagner at Then & Again; “This Is Serious Business,” senior thesis projects from Rhodes College students at Clough-Hanson Gallery; a BFA Exhibition by University of Memphis students at 387 S. Main; and “Form and Function,” African art at Jay Etkin Gallery. German playwright Heiner Mueller’s vivid takes on Hamlet and Medea addressed topics such as Communism and Nazism; the New Moon Company is retrofitting Mueller’s Hamletmachine, Despoiled Shore Madeamaterial Landscape with Argonauts for the Iraq war and will be showing tonight and tomorrow night as well as next Friday and Saturday at TheatreWorks. The FedExForum hosts the Gaither Homecoming Concert, four hours of gospel music and comedy. Stop by Burke’s Book Store this evening, 7 p.m., for artist Dolph Smith‘s signing of The Penland Book of Handmade Books, a study of works by bookbinders and papermakers.

Plante: How It Looks

Categories
News The Fly-By

Putting the M back in LGW

It’s all about the power

Who has it, who wants it, and who can benefit from it.

Right now, MLGW has it (along with the gas and the water). But there are always options for our hometown powerhouse. We could restructure it to be more like other city divisions, or we could sell it to the highest bidder.

The city might need the money, but selling the utility won’t fix the cause of our budget woes. Plus, MLGW bills to customers are high enough already. I shudder to think what they would be like under a private company in business to make money.

Memphis Networx, the telecommunications company in which MLGW owns a majority stake, may be the best example why we should not sell the utility. At a meeting last Thursday, MLGW board members approved a $750,000 short-term loan to Networx. The loan, to be repaid in 90 days, is supposed to be financially beneficial to MLGW but is also needed to keep Networx solvent.

The funding brings MLGW close to the $32 million cap on its Networx investment set in part by the City Council. Council members provide checks and balances that simply wouldn’t exist with a private company.

Then there’s the issue of open information. Since Networx is a private company—though it’s heavily financed by public funds—it’s been difficult to get specific financial information about it. A privately owned MLGW could present the same problem.

A better plan is probably the recommendation to merge four of MLGW’s divisions—human resources, audit, legal, and information services—with their City Hall counterparts for a combined $4 million in savings.

The recommendation includes eliminating several vacant MLGW human-resources positions and using city attorneys to represent the utility in legal actions. In this time of penny-pinching, it seems rational, but not everyone agrees.

“I personally think it’s an encroachment on your charter,” Joe (the City Council member, not the TV judge) Brown told the board last Thursday. “It’s going to create more problems than it’s worth. This utility has always stood alone. … I think this encroachment would be devastating for this utility.”

Brown also worried that City Hall would not have the experience or expertise to handle the utility’s affairs, especially when it came to human resources.

“We’re talking like it’s a merger, but it’s outsourcing,” he said. “It looks like City Hall is trying to run this utility company rather than this utility company running itself.”

Hmmm, doesn’t the city of Memphis own MLGW? And doesn’t the City Council have to confirm the mayor’s nomination for president? .

I don’t want the City Council to run the utility, but geez, maybe MLGW does need a reminder about what the M stands for. I’ve always thought MLGW was a bit of a strange animal. They have a gift shop in their lobby. And despite being the city-owned utility and having a monopoly, they used to advertise on downtown billboards.

It may be time to bring MLGW more under the city’s umbrella. Especially because it’s a rainy day.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

thursday, 14

Eons-old Greek tales, a 4,000-gallon pool of water, and director Cookie Ewing’s decades of experience combine for Metamorphoses, a modern interpretation of Ovid’s myths, opening tonight at the University of Memphis Mainstage, $15 adults, $10 students. Also at the U of M, in the Harris Concert Hall, is the ensemble Sound Fuzion at 8 p.m. Author Janis Kearney will be at the Civil Rights Museum 5:30-7:30 p.m. tonight to discuss Cotton Field of Dreams, her memoir about growing up a sharecropper’s child in the Arkansas delta. The Memphis Redbirds play the New Orleans Zephyrs at AutoZone Park tonight at 7:05 p.m.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

POLITICS: Van’s Dual Role

VAN’S DUAL ROLE

Former 4th District congressman Van Hilleary, one of four declared Republican candidates in next year’s U.S. Senate race, responded over the weekend to a potentially vexing problem. Faced with grumbling in party ranks — especially among supporters of his opponents — Hilleary stood fast on the issue of retaining his current position as GOP national committeeman from Tennessee.

Hilleary continues to hold that position while preparing to run in a contested primary against former Congressman Ed Bryant; state representative Beth Harwell; and Chattanooga mayor Bob Corker.

Addressing the regular quarterly meeting of the state Republican executive committee at the Holiday Inn Select at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Hilleary said he had “heard rumors” about opposition to his dual role of candidate/committeeman and challenged the committee to pass a resolution at its next meeting against his continued service. Otherwise, he said, he intended to continue in the role of committeeman.

No action was taken on that issue Saturday by the committee, which did effect another change, however — amending the party by-laws governing intervention in party primaries by Republican Party officials. The by-laws, which preclude such action, have up until now allowed for one exception — allowing intervention against Republican legislative incumbents who have opposed the party’s legal position or supported that of the Democrats on redistricting matters.

Mindful of the controversy concerning the speakership elections in both houses of the Tennessee General Assembly, the committee on Saturday amended the by-laws to allow public opposition by party officials to those incumbent Republican legislators who cast votes in January for either Lieutenant Governor John Wilder, reelected as Senate speaker, or state representative Jimmy Naifeh of Covington, who was renamed Speaker of the House.

Two Republicans cast votes for Wilder — enough to ensure his election over Republican Ron Ramsey — and 11 Republican House members voted for Naifeh.

The by-laws change in effect ratified a resolution introduced at the committee’s December meeting by Memphis member Layne Provine. As it happens, Provine has an opinion about the Hilleary issue too.

“I don’t have a dog in the hunt,” Provine, a professional political consultant, pointed out Tuesday. “I’m not representing anybody as of now in the Senate race, and I’m wide open on which candidate to support. But I think Van’s a smart enough fellow, having been a congressman and a candidate for governor, to figure out the committeeman thing without needing a resolution by the party.”

Provine said he agreed with those people, “including a couple of prominent supporters of Van,” who find it “awkward” for the former congressman to continue in his official party role while running against other Republicans in a primary. If a resolution of the sort mentioned by Hilleary came before the committee at a future meeting, Provine said he would support it.

Jim Balentine, former reporter for United Press International and longtime political writer for the old Memphis Press-Scimitar, was the recipient two weekends ago of a heart transplant at Baptist East Hospital. Balentine has experienced complications since the operation, but doctors are said to be “guardedly optimistic” about his prospects for a full recovery.

The elections of 2006 are now officially upon us. Although several potential candidates have floated their intentions to compete for a county commission seat in next year’s countywide elections, the first actual declaration has come from Mike Ritz of Germantown.

Ritz, who will seek the District 1, Position 1 seat now held by Marilyn Loeffel, made a formal announcement of candidacy in a release this week, stressing “a need to control rising property taxes” and emphasizing his experience in financial management.

“If elected, I’ll use my financial and budget analysis experience to review the County’s fiscal and debt situation and assist the Mayor and fellow Commissioners in finding solutions to the County’s massive debt and over reliance on the property tax,” said Ritz.

Ritz had been among several applicants seeking a commission vacancy last year that was ultimately awarded to Dr. George Flinn. Since then, Ritz has made a point of attending the commission’s regular meetings and committee sessions as an observer.

For her part, Loeffel is said to be eyeing the county clerk’s job now held by Jayne Creson, who is considering retirement. Like several fellow commissioners, Loeffel is term-limited as a consequence of a 2002 countywide referendum.

Commissioners Walter Bailey, Cleo Kirk, and Julian Bolton have sued to invalidate those results, and a ruling on the issue by Chancellor Tene Alissandratos has been long expected.

The Tennessee General Assembly is not only a venue for important public business. It can also be, for all the parliamentary minutiae and dead air of its daily proceedings, an improv theater of surpassing eloquence — one in which, every now and then, a speech can actually influence the outcome of a vote.

Here’s a recent example: State senator Steve Cohen protested in the Senate against a measure floated by Governor Phil Bredesen (often the object of Cohen’s ire) that would tap state government’s Rainy Day (reserve) fund rather than resort to new taxes, like one proposed by Cohen and state representative Kathryn Bowers that would raise the state cigarette tax to help fund TennCare.

“They want to live off the taxes that Senator [Jerry] Cooper [D-Smartt] sponsors, and they want to live off the revenue the lottery created,” Cohen said. “It’s not a bad thing, ladies and gentlemen. Some of you voted for it, and those of you who didn’t should have. It’s kept the schools going, it’s kept the high schools open, it’s kept the prisons going, the jails.

“It’s the government and taxes that educate the children, give healthcare to your people. It gives law enforcement money, gives correction, public safety, public welfare. And you can’t operate without revenue. You can’t do it. And if you want to live on the work of the past generation, you’re poaching. You need to show some backbone and courage. Not just here, the first floor [governor’s office] needs to show it!

“They’re living off that billion dollars the General Assembly voted on, and they’re living off that lottery money the General Assembly passed. And now they’re trying to tell you, We want to spend it all. We don’t want to create any of it. This General Assembly created it. This General Assembly, this Senate, needs to stand up and do a little bit on its own and realize that some of the ideas that we passed are worthwhile. And that’s what this is about.”

The bottom line: The Senate evidently heeded Cohen and opted to keep the Rainy Day fund at its current level.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

wednesday, 13

Di Anne Price & Her Boyfriends at Isaac Hayes Reloaded. And now I have to beat it. The cat doesn’t like the shirt that’s on the bed, and she’s screaming.