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Film Features Film/TV

If You Prefer the Christmas Jesus

On the heels of the boffo success of The Passion of the Christ comes The Nativity Story, a Son of God tale for those who prefer the Christmas Jesus. (Passion of the Christ was for those who prefer the Ultimate Fighting Championship Jesus.) Passion was artistic but a bitter pill to swallow; Nativity is the prequel, a little less artistic but much more palatable.

Nativity‘s greatest strength is how earthy it is. The story gets cozy with turn-of-the-common-era pastoral life, and it has a very organic sensibility, both in a dirt-under-the-fingernails and “this is likely how it actually happened” sense of the word: Though the subject matter is momentous, director Catherine Hardwicke (Thirteen) underscores the inherent simplicity of the story, bringing the backwoods-y characters and locales to the forefront. Here, Mary is no self-aware Mother of God-to-be. She’s a young teen who’s horsing around with kids the day before she’s told she will bear the Messiah.

As portrayed in the film, Mary’s great virtue is that she accepts her role without complaint and with trust in God that it will all work out. Her arranged marriage to Joseph is similar to her arranged pregnancy by God, but Mary chafes more at the former. And when the scandal of her pre-marriage pregnancy gets tongues wagging, Mary is aloof to the dangers of stoning that she faces.

Nativity is based as much on Nativity productions staged by runny-nosed kids worldwide as it is on the biblical account: Mary riding a donkey; the star above Bethlehem; the deus ex manger; the gold, frankincense, and myrrh of the Magi; the shepherds looking on. Hardwicke presents some of these iconic images as if they were painted stills. Her shot of the star shining down on the manger could have come straight from Thomas Kinkaide’s portfolio.

Where the stations of the cross was the fundamental framework of The Passion of the Christ, The Nativity Story seems to draw on the stations of The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien’s Rings is said to be a Christ-story equivalent, but I’ve never been able to decode the references. Interestingly, Nativity makes the analogies obvious. Nazareth is Hobbiton; Herod is Sauron; Herod’s men are Ring Wraiths; Mary and Joseph traveling to Bethlehem are Frodo and Sam on the way to Mount Doom; Jesus is the one true ring (and the ring’s climactic destruction finally makes religious sense). I’m compelled to guess that this was on Hardwicke’s mind when making the film, so sharply are the parallels drawn, right down to, in some scenes, very obvious Lord of the Rings film visual echoes and production-value aesthetics.

As Mary, Keisha Castle-Hughes proves her Oscar-nominated turn in Whale Rider was no fluke. Oscar Isaac steals the show as Joseph, as does Ciarán Hinds as sourpuss King Herod. Shohreh Aghdashloo holds the line as Elizabeth, John the Baptist’s too-old-to-conceive mama.

The Nativity Story doesn’t have any apparent evangelistic tendencies. It’s happy to preach to the choir. It leaves it up to pre-existing audience beliefs to create emotional resonance. Coupled with its unwillingness to truly be scary or chilling, The Nativity Story is a bit slight. While The Passion of the Christ was criticized as too bloody, the PG-rated The Nativity Story isn’t bloody enough.

The Nativity Story

Opening Friday, December 1st

Multiple Locations

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We Recommend We Recommend

Steppin’ Out

Thursday November 30

Bravo Memphis Wine Tasting

David Lusk Gallery, 6-8 p.m., $25

A wine tasting hosted by Bravo Memphis to benefit the Greater Memphis Arts Council. Winter white wines will be sampled, and gallery owner David Lusk will provide tips on art collecting.

friday December 1

Jazz for St. Jude

Memphis Drum Shop, 7 p.m., $25

An evening of music, from Gershwin to Sinatra, with performances by the Memphis Jazz Orchestra, Jane Malton, and John Prestigiacomo. Proceeds go to St. Jude.

Reanimation

The Cadre Building, 9 p.m., $25

Feel like dancing? Head downtown to the Cadre Building for Reanimation, featuring the hottest beats from Skylab 2000, R.A.W., and FACTOR e.

saturday December 2

Rural Route 7

Open Studio Holiday Art Tour

Various locations, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

This seventh annual holiday tour in Eads takes you to Stark Pottery, the Lugar Bronze Foundry, the Fagan Carpenter Studio, and Eads Pottery. Call 384-9132 for directions. Also on Friday from noon to 8 p.m. and Sunday noon to 5 p.m.

Memphis Arts Collective

Holiday Show

Opening Night Party

International Antique Market,

6-9 p.m.

The Memphis Arts Collective is a newly formed group with a goal of promoting local artists while supporting local charities. This show will feature fabric works, folk art, mosaics, woodworking, photographs, paintings, and more. Jim Duckworth and Jim Spake will perform at the opening, and patrons can purchase gift bags for MIFA’s senior clients.

Connections: Food

The BRIDGES Center, 7 p.m., $250

Popular fund-raiser with a five-course meal from the Beauty Shop, Automatic Slim’s, DŌ, Cielo, City Grocery, and Encore accompanied by dance pieces from Ballet Memphis.

sunday December 3

Carol DeForest and Friends Holiday Sale

Jack Robinson Gallery, noon-5 p.m.

Annual sale of work from more than 25 local artists. Sale includes paintings, candles, jewelry, bags, rugs, and more.

German Christmas Service

Trinity Lutheran Church, 210 Washington, 4 p.m.

Now in its 28th year, this event features traditional German sacred music.

monday December 4

Booksigning by Frank Jones

Burke’s Book Store, 5-6:30 p.m.

Frank Jones, who wrote a column on investing for The Commercial Appeal, will sign A Penny Saved … Is Impossible, a book about understanding investments and other financial matters.

Opening for “Memphis Rhythms”

Theatre Memphis, 5:30-8 p.m.

Opening for an exhibit of recently restored photos from the Center for Southern Folklore’s archives. Blind Mississippi Morris will perform.

tuesday December 5

Booksigning by Leslie Carpenter

Davis-Kidd Booksellers, 6 p.m.

Leslie Carpenter signs At Home Café: Great Food and Fun for Everyone, a cookbook designed to get the whole family involved in mealtime.

The Cheetah Girls

FedExForum, 7 p.m., $26.50-$36.50

Live performance from the Cheetah Girls of the popular tween-girl book series and Disney Channel movie.

Categories
News

Rickey Peete, Edmund Ford, and Joe Cooper Charged

City Council members Rickey Peete and Edmund Ford were
charged with bribery in a federal criminal complaint Thursday.

In a separate complaint, former Shelby County Commission
candidate Joe Cooper was charged with helping drug dealers acquire cars.

A complaint is not an indictment but is an alternative way
for the government to proceed in a criminal case. An indictment could come later
following presentation of the complaint to a grand jury.

The complaint filed by an FBI agent came as a surprise and
was handled with secrecy to prevent Peete and Ford from learning about it. Peete
was at a party on Beale Street Wednesday night in preparation for Thursday’s
charity boxing match between Mayor Willie Herenton and Joe Frazier.

Peete and Ford allegedly sold their influence to help a
developer win approval for a planned development and a billboard near Interstate
240. A confidential informant who is facing indictment cooperated with the FBI
and taped both Ford and Peete. Peete allegedly got $12,000 while Ford got
$6,900.

The payments occurred in September and October. Ford
allegedly got his payment at his funeral home while Peete got his at his office
on Beale Street, where he is head of the Beale Street Merchants Association. The
affidavit says both councilmen were wary of being busted. The informant put
Peete’s “papers” in the bathroom of his office after Peete allegedly wrote a
note inquiring about possible cooperation with the FBI.

The planned development, which was not identified, passed
the council 9-2 in October over the objections of the Land Use Control Board and
Office of Planning and Development.

Categories
News News Feature

Herenton vs. Frazier

Herenton vs. Frazier

Branston: The headgear (surely), one-minute rounds, the ages, the legal agreements — everything points to an overpriced exhibition of good-humored sparring. Joe Frazier may be old, but he was heavyweight champion of the world, and it’s a big world, buddy. Smokin’ Joe has thrown more leather than Gucci and his hands are still lethal, I don’t care how fit Herenton is. You’ll see harder contact on Dancing With the Stars — and much better footwork.

Baker: Once Herenton savors the experience of fox-trotting around Smokin’ Joe, whose patented powerhouse lunges are going to find naught but thin air, he’ll forget all over again that he’s supposed to be mortal. Which is to say, yes, he’ll “win” the exhibition. In boxing as in politics, he won’t just stand there and take the hit. And he likes dealing it out so much he’ll pick a fight if he doesn’t have one!

Herenton vs. Himself: Will he run again?

Branston: No. This is the last hurrah, the victory lap, the final dance with youth. Herenton holds the record, he’s tired of the game, he’s accomplished what he set out to, his popularity is fading, and he’s not invincible. (Ever heard of Mike Tyson, Joe Paterno, and Bobby Bowden?) He can exit the ring as the undefeated heavyweight champ for 16 years. And when a plausible successor steps forward next year, that’s what he’ll do.

Baker: Yes. One keeps hearing various handicappers opine that the four-time champ has lost a step, taken too many hits due to scandal rumors or problems relating to crime or taxes or the city’s on-again/off-again credit rating. Or that, at 66, he’s just too old to keep on stoking that fire in the belly.

Knock yourself out, wise guys! Or let the mayor do it for you. Freshly intoxicated by the go-round with Smokin’ Joe, he’ll be ready again for all comers in 2007. Don’t forget, here’s a guy who enjoys shadowboxing, and, as he surveys the likely field for next year, that’s all he sees: mere shadows!

The Contenders: Will Harold Ford Jr. run for mayor?

Baker: No. Ask yourself, when was the last time this contender was forced to take a knee to the floor before November 2006? Right — 1999. That was back when the congressman — then still in his 20s — was first mulling over a Senate race against GOP incumbent Bill Frist in 2000. As something of a warm-up, Ford decided to take a hand in the mayor’s race being run by Uncle Joe Ford against Herenton and got caught up in a messy argument over who was stealing whose signs in South Memphis. He ended up with his suit of shining armor too caked from the opposition’s mudballs to do the Senate race then. Lookit, Prince Harold’s vista is altogether national. He won’t get mired down in local ooze again.

Branston: He might, he should, and he would win. He needs to beef up his resume and forge some political convictions before he turns 40. He’ll lose that Don Imus celebrity appeal quickly, now that he’s an ex-congressman. Odds are there won’t be another open Senate seat for a while. As mayor he would be a magnet for talent and federal funds. Plus, he’s the ideal thirtysomething for a city that needs some fresh horses and pizzazz to compete with Nashville, and if the right leaders flattered him, then he would listen.

Can a white candidate win the Memphis mayor’s race in 2007?

Branston: Yes. Look at Steve Cohen. Remember, there is no runoff in the mayor’s race. In a crowded field, a credible white candidate with money, name recognition, and black supporters could win.

Baker: The Cohen example is a wee bit chimerical in that the new U.S. representative-elect presided for a full quarter-century over a state Senate bailiwick at the heart of the 9th Congressional District. And he had an issue — the lottery — that made him famous and touched everybody. No likely white candidate can boast as much in the city mayor’s race, unless you throw in another variable like, er, gender and some damn-the-establishment populist fervor that crosses the lines.

Herenton vs. Carol Chumney

Baker: Case in point: Here’s where the demographic form sheets could be seriously misleading or just plain wrong. First of all, Chumney has to be counting on a multiple-candidate field, with or without Herenton in the ring. A battle royale, with everybody flailing at everybody else (if no WWH) or at His Honor (if Herenton, as I expect, runs again).

Now ask yourself, who else among the officials of this or any other city has experience with multiple opponents, taking everything they can dish out without ever crying uncle? That’s right, Madame Chumney. Been there, done that.

She has gone up against the entire council, one by one as well as all together, and the mayor and all the king’s horses and all the king’s men! Count it foolhardy or count it crazy like a fox, but Chumney can by God take a punch. And she can sucker punch or duke it out straight on.

Branston: Good questioner, too. But winning elections is about building bridges, not burning them. Council members overestimate their appeal as mayoral candidates. And name one woman who has run a close race for city or county mayor. Time’s up.

Herenton vs. Council Wannabes, aka Marshall, Peete, Lowery, Sammons, Vergos

Branston: Yeah, I know, Ali’s camp used to call them Bum-of-the-Month fights and all that. Their best news is some kind of bad news for Herenton — Tennessee Waltz indictments or a financial crisis — but things don’t seem headed in that direction, for now at least.

Baker: Looks like we agree for once. Lots of talent and experience in this combo of present and past council members. But nobody in the bunch is used to running citywide — the Memphis political equivalent of having to go 15 rounds as against putting something together to win a round or two. And let’s have no talk of Herenton being past his prime, when all these guys are pushing it, too.

Herenton vs. Herman Morris

Baker: Are you kidding me? As savvy as the former NAACP main man, MLGW CEO, and blue-chip attorney might be, he’s utterly untested as a crowd-pleaser, and politics is the ultimate test of tangible numbers and real energy. So what if he’ll have some smart money with him? Remember the sad case of Robert Spence? Morris, who’ll plot his fight from the Marquess of Queensberry textbook, won’t be nearly streetwise enough to handle the bare-knuckles stuff that’ll be aimed at him.

Branston: Well, I watched those debates last month and didn’t see anybody who reminded me of Jon Stewart. Maybe Memphis has had enough crowd-pleasers. Morris is savvy, blue-chip, NAACP and MLGW, family man — what’s wrong with that? There’s a grudge match here just waiting to happen. And Herenton may have been 16-2 in the ring, but Morris still holds the 100-yard-dash record at Rhodes College.

Herenton vs. A C Wharton

Baker: Many see a city mayor’s race as a cinch for the likable Wharton, a nonpareil stylist and crowd favorite whose ability to clinch and hide his shortcomings is a decided contrast to Herenton’s bully-boy stuff and, for better or worse, more open style. Before a countywide audience, Wharton easily outclasses Herenton, but this is a city election, remember? Fighting city-side, the elegant county mayor would play Billy Conn to Herenton’s Joe Louis — i.e., he’d be ahead on points before the heavy stuff started coming in the late rounds. Anyhow, A C’s got the job he wants. Why would he seek a contest — and a job — where the risk of serious injury is prohibitive?

Branston: Term limits, for one thing. His number’s up in 2008. I read somewhere that Wharton does 70 pushups every morning, which is eight more than his age. If he avoids a knockout by retirement he can win on style points every time.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

What’s More

Raffe’s Deli, located a couple blocks west of Highland on Poplar, is a cross between a smoke shop, a convenience store, a deli, and a beer mart.

The owners, Al and Raffe Sakan, are Syrian immigrants, who arrived in Memphis 17 years ago. “We came here on a one-way ticket. We never visit [Syria]; this is our home now,” Al Sakan explains. Because both he and his wife are handicapped and knew that it would be difficult to find jobs that would easily accommodate them, they decided to start their own business five years ago and just recently expanded their operations by adding Raffe’s Beer Garden in an adjacent space in the same building.

At the deli, customers can buy the typical convenience-store wares, choose their favorite brew from an extensive collection of international and domestic beers, select a fine cigar, or order one of Raffe’s popular sandwiches. Gyro, falafel, muffaletta (with Italian salami, ham, Provolone cheese, and olive salad dressing), “Chicago Heat,” and “East & West” (with roast beef, corned beef, Swiss, and Provolone cheese) are only a few of the choices.

Although Raffe’s diners have all that good stuff at their fingertips, the deli provides little room for eating in, and drinking in is impossible because, while the Sakans are allowed to sell beer, they don’t have a license to serve it.

“Many of our customers like the large variety of beer, but they also want to be able to enjoy it here,” says Al Sakan. “They can do that now in Raffe’s Beer Garden.”

The Beer Garden is a small gathering spot with a deli kitchen. All the beers sold in the deli are now available for consumption in the Beer Garden. Sakan plans a beer tasting in the near future, and the Pyramid Dancers, a bellydance group, will perform at Raffe’s Beer Garden regularly.

Raffe’s Beer Garden, 3358 Poplar (454-9988)

Michele D’Oto, chef/owner of Pasta Italia in Collierville, has had a busy year. Hurricane Katrina brought the native Italian to Memphis, and although he lost his home and business in Biloxi, it didn’t take him long to open Pasta Italia. Now, barely a year later, he’s taken on a new challenge: Caffe Italia, a coffee shop by day and a wine bar by night, serving casual food and snacks. Coffee shops that change “concepts” at night are not uncommon throughout Europe, and D’Oto leaned heavily on this tradition when he decided what Caffe Italia should be like.

Caffe Italia will open at 8 a.m. for the morning coffee and breakfast crowd, serving mostly pastries and paninis. The lunch menu is light, with lots of salads and sandwiches and a daily changing pasta dish.

For the evening and late-night crowd, the Caffe will transform into a piano bar, offering plenty of options from the full bar with food similar to the lunch menu.

“I was looking to create a place with extended hours that would attract a lot of different people and offer a different menu with more affordable prices,” D’Oto explains.

Caffe Italia is scheduled to open in December.

Caffe Italia, 102 Mulberry (850-8363)

The Main Course by Frank Grisanti and Sons hit local stores almost a year ago, and more than half of the cookbook’s original print run sold within the first three months. Now it’s time for a “second helping.” The book is filled with old family recipes as well as photos and stories about the Grisanti family. You can buy it at local bookstores or visit one of the upcoming book signings at Waldenbooks in Wolfchase Galleria, 5 p.m. Thursday, November 30th, and at the Brooks Collection (110 E. Mulberry, Collierville), 1 p.m., Saturday, December 2nd.

For more booksigning dates, visit www.frankgrisanti-embassy.com.

siba@gmx.com

Categories
News The Fly-By

Prize Fighter

Sometimes a city needs a strong mayor — especially if he’s planning to take on the former heavyweight champion of the world.

In recent months, Memphis mayor Willie Herenton has been in training to fight 62-year-old Smokin’ Joe Frazier this week at The Peabody. The duo is expected to duke it out in three one-minute rounds to raise money for the Shelby County Drug Court, a program that treats non-violent drug offenders and has a 77 percent non-recidivism rate.

Vegas odds are on Frazier, but it’s not as if Herenton is a stranger to the ring — and he’s certainly not afraid of a fight. An amateur boxing champion in his teens, Herenton once asked Councilman Brent Taylor if he wanted to step outside during a particularly heated committee meeting. (Sure, Taylor’s no Muhammad Ali, but still.)

With the national media taking notice of the story, I’m reminded that a city can be made or mangled by its mayors. They are the public face of the city.

A few weeks ago, late-night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel was scheduled to interview Justin Timberlake. One of his staffers called me wanting to know if I had any pictures from Justin’s Good Morning America appearance on Beale Street. Specifically, they wanted photos of Herenton getting booed.

I didn’t have any but admitted that some Memphians weren’t huge fans. Personally, I’ve always had mixed feelings about Herenton. I respect his vision for the city, but I’ve found his arrogance off-putting.

I have mixed feelings about this boxing situation, as well. Do we really want our mayor participating in the “real world” equivalent of Fear Factor?

What’s next? The City Council takes on the County Commission, WWE tag-team-style, to pay for vector control? County trustee Bob Patterson designs a line of hats to benefit tax freezes for senior citizens?

However crazy the idea seems, the fight is representative of everything Herenton is and could be. The best mayors are visionaries, natural leaders, and larger than life. Herenton is those things. He’s willing to risk damage to his pride and ego (and, in this very literal case, his body) to do his share.

Scarlett Crews, president of the Shelby County Drug Court Foundation, says a board member brought up the idea of getting Frazier involved. “He knew Frazier did charity events. He wouldn’t get in the ring but would show up and sign autographs,” says Crews. “Memphis is a boxing town. We thought Joe was great, but we weren’t sure that would be enough of a draw.”

Then they thought about having Herenton box him — only the mayor thought they were joking. “After he realized we were serious, he said something like, ‘If Joe Frazier will do it, I’ll do it.’ He had to then,” says Crews. She expects the fight to raise $100,000, about a fifth of the program’s yearly budget.

More often than people give him credit for, Herenton is willing to take one (or even more than one) for the team. In past years, he’s been the first one to talk openly about Shelby County’s migration problem and has pushed for controversial changes, such as restructuring the local school systems, all the while knowing it would affect his popularity. Maybe that’s ego or a messiah complex, but he doesn’t pull punches when it comes to what he believes is in the city’s best interest.

Herenton might go down Thursday, but he’ll go down swinging.

Categories
Art Art Feature

Eyes Wide Open

In “Sleepless,” the current exhibition at Clough-Hanson, Jan Hankins, an accomplished painter known for his astute and sardonic mural-sized observations regarding politics, plumbs the dark waters of the subconscious. Hankins’ methodology is ingenious. With plastic replicas of characters from science fiction, classic tales of horror, and adventure films, he creates scenes of apocalypse that represent the conflicted impulses of the human psyche — the desire for relationship, for power, for pleasure, for immortality.

The psychic battles that rage in Hankins’ paintings are often complex free-for-alls between morality, instinct, and reason. In Lamb O’ God, the sacrificial lamb becomes a 22-karat, testosterone-filled ram that looks down from a high precipice as an F16 bombs an already devastated landscape. The head of a scientist becomes a gun turret from a battleship in Madness, and in The Blind Beating the Blind, God (with white hair and beard and a halo as heavy as an anvil) whispers prohibitions in the ear of a hunchback who is jacking off.

A Day in the Life looks like a ribald simulation of the evolution of the id/ego/superego in which the Creature from the Black Lagoon emerges from primordial waters with gun and money in his webbed hands, a policeman with angel wings points a gun in our face, and a mummy dressed in the American flag leaps out of a pile of manure, roll of toilet paper in hand.

No humor seems too dark, no exaggeration possible in a world where nuclear weapons and self-righteousness proliferate, genocide is alive and well in Darfur, and cloning humans is a distinct possibility. The surreal is tomorrow’s reality, and many of Hankins’ works have this at-the-edge quality, including Dominion Over, in which nightlights on the tanks of a chemical plant shine like Christmas lights in an otherwise blacked-out world. A giant ant straddles a flask and towers above Dr. Jekyll’s laboratory table. Bambi crouches below on a tiny island surrounded by black water.

Dark waters (an appropriate symbol for pollution, global warming, and clouded psyches) inundate much of the landscape in this body of work. A few survivors stand on top of rocks, stone pedestals, and piers. Fifi the pampered poodle (Yak with Fifi, acrylic on canvas) sits on top of an ice floe all dolled up with ribbons and flowers in her hair. She’s bright-eyed and slap-happy and oblivious to the snarling wolves that approach her.

Black water almost covers the stone pedestal on which the muscle-man in Blauburgunder stands. This Schwarzenegger look-alike has one foot on a treasure chest and is wrapped in the colors and stars and stripes of the flag. His tattered trousers are red-and-white-striped. His arms have become wildly gesturing, brawny legs that wear blue boots covered with gold stars. Blauburgunder — an Austrian word for the red Pinot Noir grape — refers, perhaps, to a politician drunk with power, money, and patriotism. In spite of the black water lapping at his ankles, he’s still grinning, still swaggering, as clueless and excited as Fifi.

Mirrors placed beneath three untitled toy models (including the one on which Blauburgunder is based) reflect gallery lights and cast shadows of figures onto the wall, creating dramatic plays of light and dark that intensify our sense of the struggles that go on within the heart and soul. Light streaming from beneath the plastic replicas and climbing up the gallery wall, rather than shining from above, brings all kinds of truisms and metaphors to mind, such as removing the sty from our own eyes and looking for truth inside.

In a series of oils on canvas (Sleepless 1, 2, and 3) and in two untitled plastic models, hope regarding the human condition can be gleaned from Hankins’ retelling of a classic tale of horror and romance. In Sleepless 2, water roars across the landscape and around Frankenstein’s monster, a stitched-together creature whose head is sewn on backward. The creature’s arms and torso reach toward the gravesite on which he stands. His head and lower body strain toward his bride, who is bandaged from neck to foot and strapped to an operating table. Beneath the table, a panther devours a human heart. In this scene of raging emotions and thwarted desires, another bandaged creature (or another aspect of the feminine) rises from the bride’s chest. Its swollen right hand reaches for a rose engulfed in light.

Wide-eyed and wide-awake in “Sleepless,” Hankins goes into the dark and shines light on wounded, misguided, deluded creatures who can still reach for beauty. His cast of characters — by turns funny, frightening, and poignant symbols of the human psyche — provide a blueprint for us all.

At Clough-Hanson Gallery, Rhodes College, through December 6th

Categories
News The Fly-By

Sexual Repression

Talk about ruining the mood.

With the recent revamping of Memphis’ Organized Crime Unit (OCU), prostitution is being targeted by the Memphis Police Department (MPD). To date, the MPD has made 1,145 prostitution arrests this year compared with 993 arrests during 2005 and 777 during 2004.

“There’s a lot of avenues of vice out there to investigate,” said Lieutenant Anthony Berryhill with OCU, “but the focus will be trying to put more emphasis on cracking down on the prostitutes out on the street.”

The recent restructuring of OCU allots more resources to fighting street-level prostitution as well as all other forms of vice. The unit, which handles cases involving illegal gambling, drugs, and “knock-offs,” or counterfeit products, on the black market, was once divided into separate teams, each focusing on a specific crime.

Now the unit has three response teams that handle all vice complaints, meaning officers are able to crossover in areas that were once highly specialized. The changes bring the OCU up to speed with the MPD’s Blue Crush crime-abatement strategy, which requires officers to work closely with one another in targeting hotspots.

“You’ve got more eyes and ears at every level,” said Major Carolyn Jackson, director of the OCU. “We’ve got more resources out there focusing on everything.”

One focus will be prostitution hotspots, which have gotten harder to track as rent-by-the-hour hotels gain popularity among hookers.

“You used to see a bombardment of women on the streets, but now [they stay inside hotels],” said Berryhill. “They’ll hang out inside the hotel corridors, and then the guys that frequent [prostitutes] know they can blow their horns and a girl will come out. That keeps the girls out of sight when uniform patrol passes.”

OCU officers hope a heightened focus on prostitution will lead to other vice arrests.

“A lot of prostitutes also sell drugs, and most are probably using drugs. That will tie us back into a drug organization,” said Berryhill.

The OCU is also seeing an increase in prostitutes peddling stolen cargo from freight trucks.

“Truckers will sometimes barter their freight in return for favors from the girls,” said Jackson. Stolen interstate cargo falls under the OCU umbrella as well.

The unit will also be targeting prostitution in strip clubs. Two weeks ago, OCU officers appeared before the Memphis Alcohol Commission to testify to 35 incidents of prostitution and pornographic acts at Brooks Road’s Black Tail Shake Joint in the last six months. The beer board issued owner Charles “Jerry” Westlund a $26,000 fine, the largest fine ever given to a strip club for a violation.

One of the biggest problems OCU has with prostitution is repeat offenders. “You can go out and make X number of [prostitution] arrests per night, and within the next day or so, some of the same prostitutes will be back out,” said Berryhill. The department is currently building a better relationship with the attorney general’s office in an effort to get stiffer penalties for prostitution offenders.

Categories
Music Record Reviews

Pop Manifesto-The Scruffs

Back in 1977, Memphian Stephen Burns and three local buddies followed Big Star into Ardent Studios and came out with a minor power-pop punk classic: ‘Wanna Meet the Scruffs?’. Nearly 30 years later, Burns returned to Ardent with his current incarnation of the band, where he’s backed by a trio of Scottish fans, for a record that veers more into Beatlesque pop, rootsy classic rock, and gentle psychedelia, but it still sounds like the Scruffs. (“There’s a Girl I Know,” “Karrie Anne”) — CH

Grade: B

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Debt Trap

Bianca Phillips and the Flyer should be congratulated for shedding light on one of the great overlooked problems of Memphis — our epidemic of personal bankruptcies (“Debt Trap,” November 23rd issue).

Most ordinary people who file bankruptcy do so for quite legitimate reasons — huge medical bills that aren’t covered by insurance, a loss of a job, etc. — not credit-card debt. Yet, our Congress, with the help of the powerful banking and credit-card lobbies, passed a bill making declaration of bankruptcy a true hardship for honest working people who fall upon hard times.

One of the first jobs of the new Democratic-controlled Congress should be to right this egregious wrong. It’s time to pay attention to the needs and problems of America’s working class, instead of the relentless pandering to our corporations that has been the trademark of this Republican administration and Congress.

Linda Watkins

Memphis

More on Amendment One

Certain “godly” people are right: What’s morally best should come before personal feelings — sexual or otherwise. That’s why the moral principles of tolerance and freedom that this country is based upon should come before any of our personal beliefs.

We should be tolerant enough to allow each other to be different as long as we don’t stop anyone else from living their lives in the process. Homosexuality is a peaceful and civil act.

Someday, those in power may decide that the “godly” people’s religion is divisive, bigoted, self-righteous, and dangerous. They may decide that you are dangerous and try to keep you off the streets and in your houses. If that were to happen, you’d see how important it is to allow each other to be open and “different,” despite our personal feelings.

I’ve been beaten up, put out, verbally abused, and disowned for being sexually free. Ask yourself: Who’s being uncivil?

Dedrick Davis

Memphis

It is very discouraging that none of the local candidates desiring to represent us in the recent election lined up on the right side of the most important civil rights issue facing our society today.

This is America, a place where I thought we would have the care and tolerance enough to allow each other to be different and live our lives as we believe as long as we don’t hinder anyone else from doing the same. Two men or two women getting married never stopped anyone from marrying who they wished. Gay and lesbian marriage is a civil act — certainly a lot more civil than gang violence, child abuse, and intolerance.

We have suffered enough bigotry already in our country — against women, minorities, and the poor. Many use religion to justify this. Anyone who puts their own beliefs ahead of the basic moral principles that make America great — freedom and tolerance — does not need to hold office. Gays and lesbians pay taxes and die in our wars. We need to demand more respect from these candidates, instead of taxation without representation.

Holly Blackburn

Memphis

A Great Wall?

Hundreds of years ago, the Chinese built their famous “Great Wall” to keep outsiders out. After the fall of Nazi Germany in 1945, the Soviets built a wall to keep people in.

Today we are building a wall in Israel and a wall in the southern United States, both having the objective of keeping outsiders out. We profess as a country to welcome all who seek democracy and freedom, and we applauded when the Berlin Wall fell.

Must we build walls around America to protect it? If democracy is to survive, must we sacrifice freedom for security? These are questions that cannot be answered through xenophobia and building more walls. Walls do not unite; they separate.

Len Eagleburger

Springfield, Missouri

Editor’s Note: In the Flyer‘s “Best of Memphis” issue (September 27th issue), Dr. David Leu was voted third-best chiropractor. Leu’s last name was misspelled as “Lee.” The Flyer regrets the error.