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Opinion Viewpoint

The Pyramid: Too Big to Ignore

In opinion writing and investing, it’s good to remember that, as the cliché says, every day is the first day of the rest of your life. All those mistakes and misjudgments and lost causes don’t matter. Move on.

So, The Pyramid. It’s too big to ignore and it won’t go away, at least not without engineers and high-grade blasting materials.

First, readers should check out the Smart City Memphis blog. Author Tom Jones and, apparently, many of his readers were around at the inception of The Pyramid and saw many of its signature moments first hand. There are some good comments. I also saw The Pyramid come out of the ground, and these are some of the things I remember.

The Pyramid was the vision of one man, John Tigrett. It simply would not have happened, period, without him. Off hand I cannot think of another “big deal” in Memphis that you can say that about. This is one reason why adapting it to a new use is so hard.

Tigrett was charismatic, reclusive at times, very smart and sometimes aloof and he would refer to mayors Bill Morris and Dick Hackett as “sport” and “boy” in a way that was part avuncular and part hard-edged. My impression was that he usually knew exactly what he was doing.

He wanted to do something big and lasting for Memphis, and other than fame of a sort, which I don’t think he cared that much about, there was nothing in it for him. He could afford to lose some money, but the damage to his reputation hurt him.

His vision was also the building’s great limitation. Once it got rolling, there was no stopping it because The Public Building Authority that studied it and ultimately blessed it held several public meetings that were personally chaired by Tigrett’s friend Fred Smith. If you thought you had a better idea or had a nagging feeling that the whole thing was a great mistake, you were advised to have your ducks in a row because this was one powerful train.

I vividly remember three things during the construction period. The original location was the South Bluff, but it was moved for practical and political considerations that depreciated its appeal as a landmark, probably fatally. When the steel skeleton was finished, I went to the top with county engineer Dave Bennett. Ironworkers were balancing on beams 300 feet in the air like it was nothing and one guy was perched at the end of a beam with a video camera like a dad taking movies of his children at the mall. There was about a three-foot gap between walkways at one point, with a straight drop to the floor if you stumbled, lost your nerve, or looked up to admire the scenery. Three or four feet doesn’t seem like much until you’re way up in the air. I let my photographer do that one.

On another tour a few months later after the building was enclosed, I remember attorney Bill Farris, a PBA member, Tigrett contemporary, and a pretty powerful guy politically, quietly saying to noone in particular “would you say too much space?” when our guide pointed out all the open space between the arena floor and the “ceiling.” Farris clearly had an opinion, but he also knew the cards had been dealt and played and it wasn’t his day.

You had to meet Sidney Shlenker to believe him. Some people think The Pyramid was his idea but it wasn’t. It was like the gods decided to play a great practical joke on Memphis and sent us Mr. Shlenker. He had a track record with big arenas in Houston and Denver and I think he tried his best.

You also had in the mix one Isaac Tigrett, son of John Tigrett, and cofounder of Hard Rock Café, which was the hottest, hippest thing going in the late 1980s. The Pyramid never got a Hard Rock, but it did get some of Isaac’s mystical crystals stashed in the apex, which was seriously weird and possibly a continuation of the cosmic joke.

The practical limitations and wasted space inside the building were obvious from Day One to anyone attending a basketball game or concert, but it still hosted some very cool sold-out events that Memphis would not have had otherwise, including the Grizzlies. And the view from across the river when The Pyramid is lit up at night the way it should be but isn’t, and the view from the top (there are actually two levels and a whole lot of space) if you ever get a chance to see it, are spectacular. There should be a public open house so everyone can do that. I bet if they put in an elevator a lot of people would still take the stairs.

So that’s what we’ve got. As Robert Lipscomb says, people are not exactly lining up to buy it and Bass Pro would be a pretty good idea, IMHO. On the other hand, tearing it down might also be a pretty good idea given all that’s come before.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

The Best Wines for the Holidays

With the holiday season comes not only “Jingle Bells” but also a chorus of corks popping. There are a bevy of choices when it comes to this style of wine — traditional and modern and sometimes even a little of both. Yes, bubbly can be expensive, but when chosen wisely, it is worth every single penny. Whether it’s dry, sweet, or in between, there are quality offerings in every category and some that do more than surprise.

Gosset was founded in France’s Ay region of Champagne by Pierre Gosset in 1584. He immediately established the level of quality and maniacal attention to detail that is still carried out in the winery today …

Read the rest of Michael Hughes holiday libation story from the Flyer here.

Categories
News

Time to Fish or Cut Bait for Bass Pro/Pyramid Deal?

“Bass Pro has had enough time,” said Commissioner Joyce Avery. “Either they make their decision or let’s go with something else.”

“Something else” could be the Ericson Group’s proposal for a $250 million indoor amusement park. The plan includes a “Disney-esque” theme park, a shopping mall at the foot of The Pyramid, improvements to Mud Island, and a 300- to 400-room hotel. Under the proposal, which would rival the Graceland expansion, Ericson would buy the property, pay off The Pyramid’s existing debt, and do so without public tax dollars …

Read the rest of Mary Cashiola’s column on the various Pyramid schemes being tossed around in the public arena in this week’s Flyer.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

ESPN Gives Gay (and Herrington) Some Love

From ESPN.com: Chris Herrington of the Memphis Flyer took the night off from being a journalist to sit in the stands and cheer with friends. He picked a good one:

“I couldn’t have asked for a better game to take off the media pass and act a fool. It was great fun to be on my feet with the fans when Rudy Gay hit that game winner last night.

“What made it even better was the awesome video the blasted from the Jumbotron seconds after Rudy hit the shot: Rudy dancing and smiling to Usher’s ‘Yeah’ while Kyle Lowry and Hakim Warrick backed him up like the Pips to Rudy’s Gladys. I don’t think the team has shown that before – and should probably be judicious in its use — but in that moment, it was perfect …

See the article and the game-winning clip here, and check out the rest of Chris’ column at Beyond the Arc.

Categories
News

Andy Wise is Now on WMC-5’s Side

The Flyer just received the following press release from WMC-TV:

December 21, 2007 — The Mid-South’s premier newscast and best known investigative reporter are joining forces in an unprecedented move: Investigative reporter Andy Wise is leaving WREG to join WMC-TV and Action News 5.

Wise is a long-time consumer investigative specialist who is instantly recognizable to Mid-South viewers as a no-nonsense, hard-hitting reporter. With Wise joining “The Action News 5 Investigators” there can be little doubt that WMC-TV5 has cornered the market for television investigative reporting.

“For generations, Mid-Southerners have trusted the tradition of broadcast journalism at Action News 5. They grew up watching it. Their parents grew up watching it. Now in the age of HDTV, I am thrilled to be a part of producing ground-breaking segments for WMC-TV and wmctv.com that will set a new standard for consumer protection in this generation,” said Action News 5’s Andy Wise.

Got that, people? Andy Wise will take his hard-hittin’ investigative mojo over to Joe Birch’s place. You’ve been warned.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Pistons Rout Grizzlies, 92-67

(AP) – Tayshaun Prince scored 16 points and Antonio McDyess added 11 points and 11 rebounds to lead the streaking Detroit Pistons to a 92-67 victory over the Memphis Grizzlies on Friday night.

The Pistons, who have won four straight and 11 of 13, got 14 points each from Chauncey Billups and Richard Hamilton. Rookie Arron Afflalo added a career-best 12.

Detroit’s more-heralded rookie, Rodney Stuckey , made his NBA debut in the fourth quarter. Stuckey, the 15th pick in June’s draft, missed the first 25 games with a broken hand.

Rudy Gay led the Grizzlies with 18 points, but added to Memphis’ offensive problems by missing a pair of wide-open dunks. Pau Gasol returned to the Memphis lineup after missing four games with a toe injury. He finished with 10 points and 10 rebounds in 31 minutes, but went 4-for-14 from the floor as Memphis shot 33.8 percent.

The Pistons led 42-38 at the half, missing seven of eight 3-point attempts. Hamilton had 12 points in the half.

Rasheed Wallace ‘s 3-pointer early in the third kicked off an 8-2 run that gave the Pistons a 52-45 lead, and they expanded the margin to 68-54 at quarter’s end.

The Grizzlies had seven turnovers in the third and six field goals. Gay didn’t help when he missed his second dunk, then was called for offensive goaltending while trying to hang on the rim and catch the bounce.

Detroit pulled away in the fourth while both teams emptied their benches.

Categories
News

New Target Slated for Ridgeway and I-240 Development

PRNewswire – Weingarten Realty Investors announced today Target will be the anchor store for its Ridgeway Trace development in Memphis. Weingarten Realty recently sold 10.1 acres to Target to develop a store which is expected to open in March 2009.

Ridgeway Trace is located at the intersection of Poplar Avenue and I-240 and will be the first retail development of this size in east Memphis in more than 30 years.

The 26-acre project will include an additional 150,000 square feet of retail space with a mix of “lifestyle tenants and national retailers.” The center could include a national bookstore and a national home electronics retailer.

Ridgeway Trace is scheduled to open in spring 2009, with the development being handled from Weingarten’s Atlanta regional office.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Film About Joy Division Lead Singer is Effective Rock Biopic

When the Replacements were drunkenly stumbling toward indie-rock immortality in the mid-1980s, lead singer Paul Westerberg was still living and writing songs for his band’s major-label debut in his parents’ basement.

Why aren’t these revealing economic realities ever shown in movies about artists? Maybe most moviegoers can’t stomach the sight of poverty; maybe they like their cult heroes to emerge from the head of Zeus fully formed, rich and famous.

Director Anton Corbijn’s new film Control, about the life of Joy Division singer Ian Curtis, is a bracing success in part because it stares long and hard into what writer Michael Azerrad called “the yawning gap between critical acclaim and financial reward.”

Read the rest of Addison Engelking’s Flyer review here.

Categories
News

Tennessee Ranks 34th in Protecting Kids from Tobacco

PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Tennessee ranks 34th in the nation in funding programs to protect kids from tobacco, according to a national report released today by a coalition of public health organizations.

Tennessee currently spends $10 million a year on tobacco prevention programs, which is 31 percent of the minimum amount of $32.2 million recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Last year, Tennessee ranked last in the nation, spending nothing on tobacco prevention.

The report’s key findings for Tennessee include:

— Tobacco companies spend more than $406 million a year on marketing in
Tennessee. This is more than 40 times what the state spends on tobacco
prevention.

— Tennessee this year will collect $511.5 million from the tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes, but will spend just 2 percent of it on tobacco prevention.

Earlier this year, the state Legislature approved a plan proposed by Governor Phil Bredesen to allocate $10 million for programs to keep kids from smoking and help smokers quit, a historic move for a state that has no history of spending money on tobacco prevention. Bredesen also proposed and the legislature approved a new smoke-free workplace law and a 42-cent increase in the state cigarette tax.

Said William V. Corr,
Executive Director of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids: “Despite this
progress, Tennessee still spends less than a third of the CDC’s recommended
minimum for tobacco prevention. It’s critical that Tennessee build on its
progress because tobacco companies are spending huge sums to market their
deadly and addictive products. Tobacco prevention is an important investment
that protects kids, saves lives and saves money for taxpayers by reducing
tobacco-related health care costs.”

Nine years after the 1998 state tobacco settlement, the report finds that the states this year have increased total funding for tobacco prevention programs by 20 percent, to $717.2 million. But most states still fail to fund tobacco prevention programs at minimum levels recommended by the CDC, and altogether, the states are providing less than half what the CDC recommends.

Only three states — Maine, Delaware and Colorado — currently fund tobacco prevention programs at CDC minimum levels.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Brick By Brick

Muralist and sign painter James “Brick” Brigance sits with his head down, gripping the arms of his wheelchair in a small but comfortable room at the Willowbend convalescent center in Marion, Arkansas. “I miss them walls, man,” he laments. “I miss painting on them. I think about painting those walls every time before I go to sleep. I’m just like a football player, I tell you. I’m like a football player who’s been knocked down, but I’m gonna get back up. I am going to get back up.”

Brigance is 55 years old. That’s a good age for an artist, he says, because by the time a man’s 55, he’s done about everything there is to do. The wildness has worked its way out, and he can approach his work with skill and confidence.

“Maybe if I can get me some legs I can get back to painting before I’m too old,” he says, listing the indignities that have become a part of his daily routine.

“Fell off the commode two or three times,” he says, shaking his head in an un-self-conscious gesture of amusement and shame. “Busted my ass too.”

Two years ago, while riding his bicycle along Lamar Avenue, Brigance, whose ubiquitous signs and murals are woven into the fabric of life in Memphis, was struck by a car. Shortly thereafter his legs became infected and gangrenous, and they had to be removed.

“I ache a lot,” he says. “I’ve been through a lot of operations, but I’m going to be okay. I’ve been on a lot of pain medicine, but I’m going to get back up, you watch.”

Brick, one of seven children born and raised in a small house on Douglass Avenue near Airways in the Orange Mound community, earned his nickname on the job. “A lot of people can’t paint on brick walls, you see, because it’s really a challenge. But it just came natural to me, and I like doing it,” says Brigance, whose first artworks consisted of drawings he made in the dirt with a stick.

“I was drawing in the dirt before I went to paper, then I went from paper to watercolor painting, then oil paint, then chalks and pastels,” Brigance says. “My brother Charles taught me a lot too. He was good and went off to California and got work painting backgrounds for Disney.

“It was rough growing up on Douglass. But it was good too,” Brigance says, remembering the days when he and his friends would play football in the streets. “A lot of the guys in my neighborhood were smart, but they was into a lot of junk too — junk that got them in trouble. But all of us was like family on my street.”

As a teenager, Brigance joined a harmony-singing group called the Tennessee Playboys, which he compares to the Temptations. “We sang every week on WDIA, played at Bill’s Twilight Lounge and at the Rosewood over on Lauderdale,” he says. “Bubba, one of the guys who used to sing with us was 17 when he died in jail after an asthma attack. We broke up at about the time everybody started chasing girls. Like I said, it could be rough sometimes. And sometimes we didn’t get along, but the family stuck together when times got hard. We’d build our own bikes and go-carts. And we’d run. All the boys in my family was fast and could outrun anybody in the neighborhood. Sometimes we’d run around the block five times just for the hell of it. We’d wake up in the morning and run. Just run.”

Brigance studied art at Melrose High School. “I couldn’t read or write too good, but I could draw,” he says. “The teacher, Mr. Purvis, gave me a circle and a square to draw, but instead I drew him.”

His first professional work as an artist was to paint the exterior of Raiford’s Hollywood Disco, as well as a portrait of Robert Raiford who owned the storied dance club. “I used to paint Raiford’s name on the side of his cars too,” he says.

Although his hand-stenciled signs on businesses can be found all over Memphis, most of Brigance’s surviving murals are located in Orange Mound. “I didn’t have a car,” he explains. “And everywhere I went I was walking or riding my bike, so I’d just walk along until I saw a wall that didn’t have anything on it.

“I had my hangouts,” he says. “I used to stay on the street. I’d kick it with the winos, I didn’t care. I was having a good time.”

Eventually, Brigance made Pressure World, the Lamar Avenue club, garage, and car wash, his base of operations.

Works by James Brigance are commonplace in Orange Mound, including here at the Melrose Booster Club on Carnes, and a car wash on Spottswood (below).

“I stayed busy because people knew where to find me. They said, ‘We’ll catch him at the car wash.’ And I was good at detailing cars. People liked me because I could get on them cars and shine them up like nobody else. I had cars lined up waiting for me, because for $20, I’d paint your initials in the back window. I was making good money and reaching my peak, then all of a sudden — BOOM. I got messed up. But I’m going to come back. And when I come back, I’m going to come back strong because I’ve got a lot of stuff in me.

“I need to take a nap now,” Brigance eventually says, looking up at the large painting of an armed Japanese nobleman that he painted for his sister Doris 31 years ago. He shuffles through recent paper images of orange cats and yellow flowers, the first drawings he’s made in more than 15 years.

“I want to make a lot more drawings,” he says, getting ready for bed. “I just ain’t ready yet. I’ve been going through a process of healing and a lot of times I hurt. I hurt a lot. That kind of takes me away from wanting to draw. And I’m not about to do anything if I’m not good at it.

“I need to get some glasses so I can get all the details right,” Brigance says. “I need to get some legs. I need to get back on the walls before I get too old.”