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News

Hannah Montana’s Memphis Concert: The Bootleg Video

Thanks to the wonders of YouTube.com, you now can see and hear the world’s most important artist, Hannah Montana, performing a song during her recent Memphis concert at FedExForum. You know, the one you couldn’t get tickets for.

After forcing ourselves to watch this, we don’t want to say the young lady is, uh, overrated, but does the name “Tiffany” ring a bell?

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News

Shane Battier Sings Neil Diamond!

This is disturbing, but it must be shared. Beloved former Griz star Shane Battier has been videoed performing a karaoke version of “Forever in Blue Jeans” by Neil Diamond.

The Griz take on Battier’s Rockets tonight at FedExForum. Watch this video and get prepared. What’s next? Yao Ming crooning Celine Dion?

Watch it here, but don’t say we didn’t warn you.

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News

Otis Redding Exhibit to Open at Stax

An exhibit of Otis Redding’s personal effects goes on display Monday, December 10 at the Stax Museum of American Soul Music. Monday marks the 40th anniversary of Redding’s death in a plane crash in Lake Monona near Madison, Wisconsin.

You can read Ben Cauley’s account of that crash in the December issue of Memphis magazine, on newsstands now. He was the lone survivor.

The Stax exhibit features photographs and mementoes from Redding’s family and personal collection that are on display publicly for the first time.

In addition to the artifacts on loan from Otis’ widow Zelma Redding and daughter Karla Redding-Andrews, the exhibit contains several items on loan from private collector Bob Grady and never-before-shown artifacts from the Stax Museum archives.

“Stax Records was like a second home for Otis,” Zelma Redding said. “We are pleased to be able to share some of our personal family moments in this exhibit.”

The exhibit runs through April 30, 2008.

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Sports Sports Feature

Rockets Thump Grizzlies, 105-92

AP – Tracy McGrady had his third career triple-double and Yao Ming had 24 points and 13 rebounds to help the Houston Rockets beat the Memphis Grizzlies 105-92 on Wednesday.

McGrady, who was cold shooting from the field early, finished with 17 points, 10 rebounds and 12 assists.

Reserve Bonzi Wells added a season-high 24 for Houston, which has won four of six since losing six straight.

Pau Gasol led the Grizzlies with 23 points and 12 rebounds while Damon Stoudamire had 19 points. Memphis has lost eight of 12.

The Grizzlies came back from a 13-point halftime deficit to get within seven at one point in the third quarter.

But McGrady, who hit only three of his first 15 shots, warmed up in the third by scoring seven points. Yao added 13 as Houston pulled back to an 85-71 lead after three.

Notes: McGrady’s other triple-doubles came against Philadelphia (22-11-11) on Feb. 23, 2002 and New Jersey (46-13-10) on Feb. 23, 2003. It was his first with the Rockets. … Grizzlies C Darko Milicic didn’t start due to a strained left ankle. Gasol moved to the center spot and Juan Carlos Navarro started at forward. Milicic, who missed seven games due to a strained left thumb, had been back only two games. … Yao missed his second free throw of the game, ending a string of 27 straight. It started in the second quarter of the Nov. 26 game at the Los Angeles Clippers. … Stoudamire equaled his season high for 3-pointers with four.

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Sports Sports Feature

Memphis is Eight-Point Favorite Over USC at MSG

We know that readers of this website would ever place a bet on a basketball game, but if you’re looking to see what the professional odds-makers think about tonight’s game between 2nd-ranked Memphis and 25th-ranked USC, we suggest you check out TheSpread.com.

Here’s a sample: Oddsmakers from Bodog have made Memphis -8 point spread favorites for today’s game. Current public betting information shows that 71 percent of bets for this game have been placed on Memphis -8.

Rose and Mayo were two of the most heavily recruited guards in their class, and both figure to be early selections in next summer’s NBA draft. Both players have also gotten off to hot starts in their collegiate careers.

The 6-foot-4 Rose has helped Memphis (6-0) match the highest ranking in school history. The Tigers, who are No. 2 for the first time since the 1985-86 season, haven’t started 6-0 since 1995-96.

Rose is averaging 17 points, and is coming off perhaps his best game of the season. He had 19 points and 12 assists in a 104-82 win over Austin Peay last Tuesday.

There’s much more here.

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News

Holiday Stuff to Do in Memphis

There’s plenty going on around town to bring out the holiday cheer in even the most Scroogely Memphians this holiday season.

Stop by the Pink Palace Museum for the Enchanted Forest Festival of Trees, an annual display of decorated trees, animated elves, and model trains. Proceeds benefit Le Bonheur Children’s Medical Center.

Have a “Blue Christmas” at Graceland where Elvis’ life-sized nativity set and blue lights shine in the night. Also on display are original Presley family Christmas artifacts.

More than 100 nativity figures surround a 16-foot holiday tree at The Dixon Gallery and Gardens‘ Younger Foundation Creche Collection and Bethlehem Tree.

Or check out school and church group holiday choirs performing classic carols in The Peabody Hotel lobby daily from 11 a.m. to noon.

For more holiday listings, check out the Flyer‘s searchable calendar.

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News

AutoZone Stock Rises on Good Earnings News

Shares of Memphis-based AutoZone (AZO) motored higher Tuesday after the auto-supply retailer handily beat Wall Street’s first-quarter profit targets.

From TheStreet.com: For the first quarter ended Nov. 17, the Memphis company earned $132.5 million, up 7 percent from $123.9 million a year earlier.

On a per-share basis, earnings jumped 17% to $2.02 from $1.73 last year, as the average number of shares outstanding dropped 9% due to buybacks. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected earnings of $1.91 a share.

More analysis and detail at TheStreet.com.

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News

Dixie Chicks’ Natalie Maines Issues Call to Protest Convictions of West Memphis Three

Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks is the latest celeb to take up the cause of the West Memphis Three — Damien Echols, Jesse Miskelley, and Jason Baldwin — who were convicted for allegedly murdering three eight-year-old boys in 1993.

Maines writes on the Dixie Chicks website: I’m writing this letter today because I believe that three men have spent the past 13 years in prison for crimes they didn’t commit.

On May 5th, 1993 in West Memphis, Arkansas three 8 eight-year-old boys, Steve Branch, Christopher Byers, and Michael Moore were murdered.

Three teenage boys, Damien Echols, Jesse Misskelley, and Jason Baldwin were convicted of the murders in 1994. Jason Baldwin and Jesse Misskelley received life sentences without parole, and Damien Echols sits on death row.

I encourage everyone to see the HBO documentaries, Paradise Lost and Paradise Lost 2 for the whole history of the case.

I only discovered the films about 6 months ago, and … I immediately got online to make sure that these three wrongly convicted boys had been set free since the films were released. My heart sank when I learned that the boys were now men and were still in prison. I couldn’t believe it.

I searched for answers as to what had been done and what was being done to correct this injustice. I donated to the defense fund and received a letter from Damien Echols wife, Lorri. She is a lovely woman who has dedicated her time and heart to her husband. I was glad to hear that after so many years of fighting for justice it looked like things were finally happening. Below, I have written what the DNA and forensics evidence shows. I hope after reading it and looking at the WM3.org website, you will know that the wrong guys are sitting in jail right now, and feel compelled to help.

Go the Dixie Chicks website to read the rest. And to read a Flyer story on the WM3, go here.

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Politics Politics Feature

Who Is This Huckabee Mug Anyhow, and Why Is He Stealing Fred Thompson’s Thunder?

Earlier in the year local Republicans, like their
counterparts elsewhere in Tennessee, were jumping ship from other presidential
campaigns to make known their allegiance to former Senator Fred Thompson. That
was back when Law and Order star Thompson, presumably on the strength of
his Nielsen ratings, was considered the answer to GOP prayers.

The lanky, rawboned actor/lawyer/lobbyist, a native of
Lawrenceburg in Middle Tennessee and a University of Memphis graduate, had ample
cachet. A protégé of former Senator Howard Baker, who in 1973 had made him
minority counsel for the Senate Watergate Committee, Thompson had by 2007 been
in the public eye for a full generation.

His acting career in the movies as well as on TV, plus
eight years in the Senate, had made him a familiar figure enough to be a
formidable trump card. But when he got turned up on the table – or, more to the
point, when he began standing side by side with his GOP rivals on the debate
stage – something seemed to be missing.

Maybe it was age (some thought Thompson looked unexpectedly
thin and ravaged), maybe it was conviction (what was his role supposed to be?
moderate? arch-conservative? Bushite? critic?), or maybe it was the candidate’s
well-known laissez-faire attitude toward exertion. Whatever the case, The
Thompson boom went from bang to whimper in record time.

It is not just that his finances are hurting or that the
national media is beginning to write him off or that his numbers have dwindled
to single digits in Iowa, whose caucuses are coming up within a month’s time.

The real problem is a rival area candidate who has been
auditioning well on the road. That’s Mike Huckabee, the former governor of
Arkansas and, as has been pointed out ad infinitum, a native of Hope, home town
of two-term former Democratic president Bill Clinton, another up-from-nowhere
sort.

By now, Huckabee has actually taken the lead among
Republicans in Iowa. His dramatic arrow up parallels Thompson’s going down. And,
whereas Thompson had never quite defined his character in the ongoing campaign
drama, the folksy but articulate Huckabee has his down pat: He’s an unabashed
pro-life social conservative but an economic populist who raised taxes for
social programs as governor and who regularly denounces “Wall Street” in the
manner of a latter-day FDR.

As such, Huckabee performs the improbable feat of yoking
together two points of view that have been politically sundered for well over a
generation. In some ways, he’s a throwback to the old Southern Democratic model.
He’s a former Baptist preacher who can also play a mean bass guitar on “Free
Bird” – a feat he performed alongside current Shelby GOP chairman Bill
Giannini’s lead guitar at the local Republican “Master Meal” last year.

Huckabee’s plain-spoken oratory was also a huge hit at that event, and there’s
no doubt that the seeds for a mass following have been planted in these parts.

Tracy Dewitt of the northeast Shelby Republican Club is a
dedicated supporter, as is Paul Shanklin, the local businessman and successful
impressionist who does all those politician’s voice for Rush Limbaugh. The
Arkansan’s national campaign manager, moreover, is Chip Saltzman, an ex-Memphian
and a graduate of Christian Brothers University.

When the East Shelby Republican Club, one of the GOP’s
local bedrocks, had an informal straw vote poll at its regular monthly meeting
last week, Fred Thompson still had the residual strength to come out well ahead.
Huckabee was down among such relative also-rans as New York’s Rudy Giuliani and
Massachusett’s Mitt Romney.

But that, as club president Bill Wood acknowledges, was
then. Now is something else. “That was before Huckabee got a front-page article
in USA Today and all this other recognition.” If the same straw vote were
held today? “Oh he’d go up like a bullet. There were already a lot of people
here who liked him. Now they’re starting to see how he’s doing in the rest of
the nation.”

Indeed, it is probable that, if Huckabee should hold his present numbers and win
Iowa, you couldn’t build a big enough bandwagon to accommodate his supporters
locally.

One caveat: Thompson could still come back. There are many
political observers who remember his lackadaisical start in 1994 against
Democratic Senate opponent Jim Cooper, whom he trailed at one point by 20 points
in the polls – the same number he would eventually win by against Cooper.

But for the time being, the man from Hope has center stage.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Memphis Tops USC in OT, 62-58

The Memphis Tigers overcame horrendous free-throw shooting (7-17) and a tenacious Southern Cal triangle-and-two defense to defeat the Trojans in the Jimmy V Classic in Madison Square Garden, 62-58.

Robert Dozier led Memphis with 13 points and 8 rebounds, followed by Chris Douglas-Roberts with 10 points and 9 boards. Freshman sensation O.J. Mayo led SC with 16 points and 5 rebounds, but the Tigers superior rebounding (46-29) led to numerous second-chance points as Memphis wore down their opponent in overtime.

For stats and recap, go to CBS sportsline.