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Hotty With No Toddy

The board of aldermen in Oxford denied a request by the local restaurant association to be allowed to served alcohol on Sunday, September 2nd. That just happens to be the date of Ol’ Miss’ opening game of the football season against Memphis.

So be forewarned Tiger fans: If you plan on celebrating the Tigers’ victory in Oxford, it’s going to be mighty dry in local restaurants after the game. Read all about it.

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News

Won’t You Be My (Decapitated) Teddy Bear?

A teddy bear owned by the young Elvis Presley was destroyed last night after a guard dog at a children’s museum in London “went berserk,” attacking a toy display valued at nearly $1 million. A security guard frantically chased the crazed pooch, but was too late to stop the decapitation of Presley’s former bed buddy, named Mabel. Mabel was on loan from a Brit collector Benjamin Slade, who acquired the toy at an auction in Memphis.

Read more about the killer dog, the beheaded bear, and the angry owner here.

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Sports Sports Feature

CUSA Quarterbacks Are Good

With less than a month to go before the start of the CUSA season, the South Mississippi Sun Herald has a comprehensive look at the league’s top quarterbacks. Surprisingly, Memphis’ untested Martin Hankins gets some props. Which is not totally surprising, considering he passed for 7,700 yards and 65 touchdowns for Hal Mumme’s Southeastern Louisiana team the last two years. To read it all, go here.

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Politics Politics Feature

‘Truthiness’ and Consequences

On Monday, July 31 The Commercial Appeal ran a Page-One story focusing on conflicts in the 9th District congressional race that, in the judgment of many observers, was so filled with contextual distortions that it very nearly resembled a work of fiction. 

Candidates Steve Cohen and Ed Stanton, it said, had a “disagreement” over whether or not pro-Stanton push-polls asked if voters preferred Christians or Jews. Julian Bolton’s wildly anti-Semitic claim that a Jew is unacceptable at the 9th District’s representative was described simply as “Bolton’s assertion.”

The story’s author Halimah Abdullah wrote that Cohen had a “quarrel” with financial frontrunner Nikki Tinker, and that Tinker had subsequently become the “target of attacks.” Who was attacking Tinker and how? That somewhat important piece of information was left entirely to the readers’ imagination. 

“Nobody [in the Tinker campaign] said we were under attack,” Tinker spokesperson Josh Phillips says. When asked if he felt that the campaign was, or had been under attack Phillips added, “That’s not what we’re focusing on, and there’s been no discussion of attacks.” So we’re left to wonder, where did the reporter get the information around which her thesis was formed? 

Throughout Abdullah’s story Cohen was presented, not as the victim of Bolton’s negative, inarguably anti-Semitic TV ads, but rather as a lightning rod for controversy. On the other hand Tinker—the only candidate not directly quoted in the story—was presented as an innocent victim caught up in a swirling political cesspool.

The article suggested that these alleged attacks on Tinker were the result of a successful fundraising drive that’s made the previously unknown candidate, a relatively new Memphian, the financial frontrunner.  Notably, the story failed to mention that a glossy anti-Cohen mailing sent out by the powerful women’s organization Emily’s List was stamped with Tinker’s official campaign logo.

OBJECTIVELY SPEAKING, Steve Cohen has been the only 9th District candidate repeatedly singled out for attack by his opponents. Last Friday Cohen responded by holding a press conference to address these attacks, including the mailing from Emily’s List. Abdullah’s coverage of Cohen’s conference is misleading at best, and subtly laced with a dollop of good old-fashioned Jewish stereotyping. It implies calculation and suggests perversion.

“Cohen moved a chess piece forward during a Friday morning press conference at his home to discuss what he termed a distortion of his record on sex crimes[our italics] and other issues,” Abdullah writes. 

The interesting thing about this is that Cohen wasn’t pushing anything forward. After weeks of enduring racially divisive attack ads that misrepresented his record on everything from education and prayer to the use of medical marijuana, he apparently just decided enough was enough.

It’s particularly interesting that Abdullah’s story had room enough to work in some of the Tinker campaign’s talking points — including the often repeated story about how the candidate was raised by a single mom. And yet the conversation never returned to Cohen’s supposed “record on sex crimes.” Readers were left to wonder about both the accusation and Cohen’s actual position on this dark, dirty-sounding matter. 

The Flyer’s senior political analyst Jackson Baker specifically asked the Tinker campaign last week if they wanted to put distance between themselves and the anti-Cohen propaganda bearing their candidate’s name and face. They declined the offer.

Speaking on Tinker’s behalf, Phillips continues in that vein this week: “From the beginning Nikki has said she would run her own, issues-based campaign…And we’re not going to comment on what other groups do.” Clearly, the Tinker camp doesn’t put much stock in that old, true-cutting saw: Silence is a vote of complicity.

Does it bother Tinker’s Campaign that the hit piece on Cohen bore Tinker’s image and campaign logo? According to Phillips, it’s not against the law, so no.

In addition to misrepresenting the dynamic existing between the Cohen and Tinker campaigns, Abdullah allowed to stand unchallenged (and without any substantive proof at all from the two candidates) both Stanton’s push-poll denial and Bolton’s claim that Cohen only wanted to go to D.C. to get more money for Israel.

THE APPARENT DISTORTIONS in Abdullah’s story raised a number of eyebrows among several Cohen supporters. Those eyebrows shot up even higher when it was discovered that both the writer, Abdullah, and the candidate, Tinker, attended the University of Alabama and were both members of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority. 

That revelation alone is circumstantial, of course.  So, for that matter, is Tinker’s August, 2005 announcement that, as an outsider candidate, she was counting on the aid of her friends, colleagues, and (yes), her sorority sisters. 

From The Hill, a newspaper for and about the U.S. Congress (and the one that first propagated the concept that the then unknown quantity, with no Memphis roots or known network of supporters, was the congressional-race “frontrunner”):

           “Tinker has spent her time sizing up support within Memphis’s business community, churches and plaintiff’s bar. Like most other first-time candidates, she is reaching out to her sorority sisters and friends.”

 
Abdullah hasn’t responded to interview requests, but Commercial Appeal Editor Chris Peck acknowledges that Tinker and Abdullah are, in fact, members of the same sorority. 

“Our reporter, Halimah Abdullah, isn’t a classmate or friend of Nikki Tinker,” Peck says. “They joined the same sorority, but didn’t know each other at the University of Alabama and in fact, graduated five-to-six years apart.”  

That five-to-six-year time frame, however, could be more than a little misleading.  According to an accreditation study pertaining to the University of Alabama, Abdullah came to UAB in 1994 by way of a minority journalism workshop. 

Meanwhile, Tinker, after her 1994 graduation, remained at Alabama for law school, and, as we have seen, began “reaching out to her sorority sisters” for networking purposes once she began her congressional campaign.

Coincidence? Maybe. It would be difficult to describe the errors in Abdullah’s stories as outright lies. They conform more to what late-night satirist Stephen Colbert has dubbed “truthiness,” whereby semantics and contextual distortions converge to create a warped interpretation of actual events.

When truthiness and conflicts of interest (real or apparent) appear together within the pages of a major metro newspaper, you don’t have to be in Houston to see that there’s a problem. 

          

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Politics Politics Feature

‘Truthiness’ & Consequences

On Monday, The Commercial Appeal ran a Page-One story focusing on conflicts in the 9th District congressional race that, in the judgment of many observers, was so filled with contextual distortions that it very nearly resembled a work of fiction. Candidate Steve Cohen, the passive subject of attacks by three opponents, was described as an active party to “disagreements” with them, and their assertions were never documented or even inquired into. The Flyer‘s Chris Davis looks into the story behind the story — and finds surprises. (To see for yourself, go to “Political Beat”.

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Politics Politics Feature

BULLETIN; Ballot Box Missing!

In an astounding development, the Flyer has learned, ballot materials, including a ballot box to be used for “off-machine” purposes (certain write-in ballots and provisional ballots) and other election-day supplies, were checked out of the Shelby County Election Commission’s operations center office at Shelby Farms Wednesday by an unauthorized individual.

The person, apparently impersonating an accredited precinct officer, may have presented forged credentials to retrieve the materials intended for use at a county precinct station in Thursday’s election, according to sources. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is conducting an emergency investigation
and has summoned Election Commission members and other commission personnel to the operations center.

A statement was released by commission chairman Greg Duckett, speaking for the body’s Democrats, and Rich Holden, speaking for the Republicans, confirming that “the matter is under investigation by the TBI involving a [single] precinct. The matter will in no way affect the integrity of the election.”

The ballot box and other electon-day supplies, including the preinct roster, belonged to Precinct 49-1, a South Memhis box located at Alton Elementary School at 2020 Alton. Prince 49-1 is a majority black precinct with 843 voters.

Without specifying further, the two commissioners said certain additional steps were being taken “to insure the integrity of the election.”

The Flyer will present follow-up information as it is learned at “Political Beat”.

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Politics Politics Feature

Ballot Box Apparently Stolen from Election Commission

In an astounding development, the Flyer has learned, ballot materials, including a ballot box to be used for “off-machine” purposes (certain write-in ballots and provisional ballots) and other election-day supplies, were checked out of the Shelby County Election Commission’s operations center office at Shelby Farms Wednesday by an unauthorized individual.

The person, apparently impersonating an accredited precinct officer, may have presented forged credentials to retrieve the materials intended for use at a county precinct station in Thursday’s election, according to sources. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is conducting an emergency investigation
and has summoned Election Commission members and other commission personnel to the operations center.

A statement was released by commission chairman Greg Duckett, speaking for the body’s Democrats, and Rich Holden, speaking for the Republicans, confirming that “the matter is under investigation by the TBI involving a [single] precinct. The matter will in no way affect the integrity of the election.”

The ballot box and other electon-day supplies, including the preinct roster, belonged to Precinct 49-1, a South Memhis box located at Alton Elementary School at 2020 Alton. Prince 49-1 is a majority black precinct with 843 voters.

Without specifying further, the two commissioners said certain additional steps were being taken “to insure the integrity of the election.”

The Flyer will present follow-up information as it is learned at “Political Beat”.

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News

Farish Street Blues

Construction of an entertainment district and apartments on Farish Street in Jackson, Mississippi, has been held up by a lack of funding from the state.

Farish Street is a planned entertainment/residential area being developed by Beale Street’s John Elkington, CEO of the Memphis-based Performa company. According a Jackson Clarion-Ledger story, Elkington told City Council members on Monday that his company will not receive all the state money it needs to complete the work.

“This has gotten to the point that it’s very frustrating,” Elkington said. “We could have been finished with Farish Street by now.”

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News

“Art of the Tomb” Opens Today

Peabody Place Museum will be flashing some new bling during the month of August. The museum – which houses year-round the best public collection of Chinese art in the Midsouth – will be exhibiting “Art of the Tomb,” a show featuring many items new to the museum such as figurines, sculptures, and furnishings that were discovered in ancient Chinese burial tombs.

The objects come from the Tang dynasty (considered the golden age of Chinese civilization) and the Han dynasty (the folks who invented paper and adopted Confucianism as a way of life). They are impressive not only for the beauty and intricacy of their design but for their ability to survive, in some cases, thousands of years.

For museum hours and admission costs, check out the Flyer’s searchable online calendar

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News

Love Bites

Homegrown actress and ever-increasing tabloid fodder Ginnifer Goodwin is getting even more ink these days since hooking up with fellow actor (and Katie Holmes reject) Chris Klein. Any rumors about the two breaking up or even cooling off can now be laid to rest. Goodwin now has he dubious honor of making the celebrity sightings on Gawker Stalker — cruising the streets of New York proudly sporting one of love’s most hickish battle scars. Big Love indeed!