Categories
News

Conspiracy Theory

Simple explanations just won’t do. It’s much more fascinating to think the government was in on terrorist plots and assassinations.

In the first article in a three-part series on the History News Network’s website, Mel Ayton, author of several books on famous conspiracy theories, takes a look at the thinking behind theories surrounding the JFK and MLK assassinations.

Ayton says theories accusing the Memphis police of having a hand in the Martin Luther King Jr. assassination stem from flawed testimony by people who claimed to have witnessed a second shooter. He says conspiracy theorists also believe Memphis police didn’t secure the site around the Lorraine Motel immediately, which could implicate them as being in on the scheme.

Categories
Music Music Features

R.I.P. Oleg, Enter Justin

Did we hear correctly that William Rast, the new clothing line created by Justin Timberlake and his friend Trace Ayala (along with Danny Guez who also helped with Eve’s Fetish and Bow Wow’s Shago), was inspired in part by the General Store at Shelby Forest?

The line is named after a grandfather of Timberlake and a grandfather of Ayala. William Rast is not groundbreaking stuff. It’s mostly T-shirts and jeans — albeit T-shirts and jeans that cost $42 and $180, respectively. It doesn’t seem to be available locally but you can order it online here.

And there’s also a good story on William Rast from The Village Voice here.

Categories
News

Blue Light Special

From the Nashville Tennessean today: the Tennessee Highway Patrol’s promotion methods are corrupt and thoroughly tainted by politics, according to Kroll Government Services, a New-York-based agency tapped by Governor Phil Bredesen to study the THP’s suspect hiring and promotions policy. The report states that troopers with better test scores and stronger records are often passed over for promotions in favor of those who are politically well connected.

Categories
From My Seat Sports

FROM MY SEAT: A Game Abused

Thank the stars for the NCAA basketball tournament. Because after this month’s baseball news, a nice, overhyped sports distraction is more than a little welcome. At least till Opening Day, April 3rd.

First there was the death March 6th of Hall of Famer Kirby Puckett, a modern sports teddy-bear if ever there was one during his playing days with the Minnesota Twins. The sad epilogue to Puckett’s life, of course, included the glaucoma that ended his playing career, legal troubles that revealed a personal life that was hardly angelic, then finally the extraordinary weight gain which, one must presume, contributed to the stroke that ended his life at age 45.

The contrast couldn’t be greater: a player who seemed most alive whenever we saw him in uniform, cut down so soon, his charms already having faded in the public eye. A dramatic reminder — once again — that the heroes we cheer on our playing fields remain very human.

Then came March 7th, and the revelation that an upcoming book will chronicle — in great detail — the steroid usage of one Barry Lamar Bonds. “Game of Shadows,” written by San Francisco Chronicle reporters Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams will serve as the most thorough, well-nigh definitive case against a baseball player who has repeatedly claimed he’s been steroid-free as he nears the hallowed career homer record of Hank Aaron. With the news breaking while the baseball world collectively mourned Kirby Puckett, the first World Baseball Classic was left as so much sideline distraction for lovers of our national pastime. Commissioner Bud Selig — the mind behind the marketing gizmo that is the WBC — has officially crossed Bonds off his Christmas list. (Bonds actually did Selig a favor by withdrawing from consideration for Team USA in the WBC. Had he been in uniform for the stars and stripes, baseball would have had a perfect storm.) If Selig had the brass, he’d ban Bonds, and immediately. Legal issues be damned. The commissioner’s office exists, after all, to protect the integrity of the game.

Where do baseball fans go now? How do we cheer? And for whom? Can a home-run record be broken if no one acknowledges it? All these questions remain to be answered as the six-month marathon that is a major-league baseball season opens next month. And as distasteful as it may be, Bonds will be at the center of discussion for each and every deliberation in ballparks coast to coast.

I, for one, can’t see how Bonds can play in any stadium outside San Francisco. He has been considered a cheat by many for years . . . without an entire book devoted to exposing his super-sizing methods. Even before he allegedly began doping, in 1998, Bonds was a menacing boor, and a player incapable of harmony with the media or, worse, his fans. As brash, as overtly arrogant as Bonds is, he’s ironically exactly the kind of personality who might thrive under the thunderous boos he’ll hear. “Sure enough,” one can imagine him thinking, “the world’s in my way. Only one thing to do . . . knock it down.”

Is Bonds a Hall of Famer? Not as long as Pete Rose remains a pariah. I’ve heard it argued by several pundits that, since Bonds had Hall-worthy numbers before he turned to steroids, his place in Cooperstown is still reserved. Such an argument is as blind as poor Kirby Puckett’s bad eye. If a player can be judged “before cheating” and “after cheating,” then Pete Rose — he of more hits than any other player in the game’s history, remember — should be inducted tomorrow. Every one of those hits came before he was caught betting on the game that made him a legend.

The saddest part of the Bonds legacy? Every home run hit this year (every year?) will bring with it a question: Is he or isn’t he? Unless your name is David Eckstein, when you go deep, fans are going to wonder what’s in your medicine cabinet. Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, Rafael Palmeiro, and the newly exposed Barry Bonds. ’Roid Royalty we might brand them. One of the few sports stories you’ll ever read where there is absolutely no winner.

Now, back to my bracket. George Mason?!

Want to respond? Send us an email here.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

GADFLY: Uncivil War in Iraq

Civil war? What civil war?

            In a page taken from the Clinton “it depends on
what the meaning of ‘is’ is,” the powers that be in the Bush Administration are
bending over backwards to deny that the sectarian violence which has been
racking Iraq for months, suddenly ratcheting up in recent weeks with

the bombing of a mosque in Samarra, and hundreds of Iraqis turning up dead in
execution-style killings
, constitutes a civil war.

Dick Cheney


Donald Rumsfeld


and his military minions
have all denied the existence of a civil war.
Remember what they say about not believing something until it’s officially
denied?

            However, most of the people either “on the
ground,” or with their ears to it, seem to disagree. Ayad Allawi, the U.S.’s
hand-picked interim prime minister of Iraq, has been quoted as

saying the country is in the midst of a civil war
. The New York Times’
bureau chief in Baghdad, John Burns,

has said the country has been in a civil war for some time
,. The prominent
(and militarily well-connected) Democrat, John Murtha,

has said the same thing
as has at least one outspoken Republican war
veteran, Chuck Hagel, the Republican senator from Nebraska, who

said the following
:

The former prime minister [Allawi] is correct. I think we have had a low-grade
civil war going on in Iraq, certainly the last six months, maybe the last year.
Our own generals have told me that privately. So that’s a fact.

            I agree that there is not a civil war in Iraq,
since there is nothing civil about the conflict between the Shi’ite and Sunnis
that is killing,

according to Allawi
, 50 to 60 people every day, and well over 1,000 so far.
All this denial and avoidance by the administration made me think the only thing
Rummy and Co. would recognize as a civil war in Iraq was if the factions came
out one day dressed in the costumes so popular with re-enactors of the American
civil war, the Sunnis in Blue and the Shiites in Grey.

            But then Rumsfeld appeared to debunk that
notion when

he said
(about a civil war in Iraq), “I don’t think it’ll look like the
United States’ civil war.”. His statement, hedging as it did about his
uncertainty that the combatants in an Iraqi civil war might look like the ones
at Gettysburg or Shiloh, reinforces my belief that’s exactly what it will take
for the likes of Rummy to admit the existence of a civil war in Iraq.

            No one questions that the conflicts involving
the Serbs and Croats in Bosnia, the Hutus and Tutsis in Rwanda, the Christians
and Muslims in Lebanon, or for that matter, the war between the North and South
Vietnamese, were all civil wars. They all had common elements, whether
conflicting political ideologies, ethnicity, religious beliefs, or claims to
territory or governance, which are also present in the Iraqi civil war, and they
all involved the killings of and by fellow countrymen. The other common element?
To one degree or another, most foreign civil wars have been either the cause or
effect of American meddling.

            So what’s the problem with admitting Iraq has
fallen into a state of civil war? Well, it’s the same reason the administration
has difficulty admitting that the presence of American troops not only has
failed to stem the tide of terror, but has actually increased and served as a
spawning ground for it. If our war president and his stooges can successfully
deny the existence of a civil war, he can avoid taking any responsibility for it
(an evasion he has raised to a high art). But more importantly, once it is
generally accepted that Iraq has degenerated into a state of civil war, any
remaining rationale for a continued American presence evaporates, as does what
little public support remains for that intervention. It’s one thing to build a
nation; it’s quite another to have to dodge IED’s, RPG’s and bullets just to
preside over its self destruction.

Want to respond? Send us an email here.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Limps Like A 77-Year-Old?!

Coach Cal?!! Check out what else the San Francisco Chronicle has to say about John Calipari and his Sweet Sixteen Memphis Tigers.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Not Walking the Line

Not Walking the Line

A new HBO series starring Memphian Ginnifer Goodwin has some folks talking Armageddon. The show, Big Love, about a modern-day Salt Lake City polygamist and his ,uh, families, prompts this comment from Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary: “Now, marriage faces what might be its most severe question — whether it can survive the corrosive effects of America’s postmodern culture.”

Goodwin, a graduate of Lausanne Collegiate School, is coming off her star turn in I Walk the Line, in which she played Johnnie Cash’s long-suffering first wife. Gennifer’s musical tastes go way beyond country, however. Her IPod mix includes the likes of The White Stripes, Massive Attack, Joni Mitchell, Sia, and Wilco, to name a few. Check out Gennifer’s interview at HBO.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Little Big Man

Little Big Man

While Cinderellas like Bradley and George Mason got most of the press attention in the aftermath of this weekend’s NCAA Men’s Basketball ball, Pat Forde, espn.com’s top college-basketball guru, found time last night to devote his on-line wrap-up column to saluting U of M backup point guard Andre Allen, whose two stellar performances turned a lot of heads in Dallas. “The little man absolutely lacks fear,” noted Forde, “which is a key ingredient on the grand stage of March.”

Here’s the link:http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=forde_pat&id=2376091

Categories
Music Music Features

Three 6 Mafia continue celebrating LA-style…

From defamer.com:

“It’s been nearly two weeks since Three 6 Mafia shocked the world by edging out Dolly Parton’s sex-change ditty and Kathleen “Bird” York’s ballet of intolerance to win Best Song at the Oscars. Since then, it has been one non-stop party for the crew, rolling with none other than kindred spirit Paris Hilton. (Video of their charming shenanigans made available by TMZ.com.) Not that there hasn’t been controversy: The Beastie Boys may have started an all-out Southern vs. Northeast Hebe hip hop turf war when Mike D. recently told a South by Southwest press conference, ‘Nothing against them, but we think Dolly Parton was robbed.'”

Read the full item here.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Absence Makes the Heart…

Think it feels good, Memphis fans, being back in the Sweet Sixteen after 11 years? Check out what they’re saying in Peoria, home of the Tigers’ next opponent, the Bradley Braves.