Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

The Gays Are Coming!

Run! Or buy this DVD — before it’s too late.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Griz Lose Again: Iavaroni on Hot Seat?

The Grizzlies blew a double-digit halftime lead to fall 111-103 to the then 1-16 Oklahoma City Thunder. It’s the team’s 10th loss in their past 11 games, and one that could have head coach Marc Iavaroni feeling the heat. Chris Herrington considers the coaching situation in his post-game report at Beyond the Arc.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Sole Restaurant Now Open Downtown

After a brief close, the restaurant in downtown’s Westin Hotel has reopened with a new executive chef (Matthew Crone), a new name (Sole Restaurant & Raw Bar), and a group of not-so-new owners from Interim in East Memphis.

Some of the first to sample Sole’s scrumptious menu attended a hip-and-happening preview party last week for media, downtowners, and restaurant insiders, including Rick Farmer of Jarrett’s, one of Crone’s mentors in Memphis.

“We are bringing something different to a fantastic location,” says Ben Brock, Sole’s managing partner. “People will see big changes in the restaurant’s food.”

“I’m a Southern boy who lived in Spain, cooked in the Northwest, and was classically trained in French cooking,” Crone says. “I’ve picked up a lot of influences, but I like bringing all of it back to my roots.”

More specifically, Crone started cooking as a youngster with his family, who had an award-winning barbecue team for Memphis in May. After working locally at Jarrett’s, Erling Jensen, and Grove Grill, Crone headed for Europe to cook and travel in France and Spain. Next up was the New England Culinary Institute and jobs in Portland, including one as executive chef at the historic View Point Inn.

Family lured Crone back to Memphis, where he teamed up with Interim chef Jackson Kramer, a longtime friend. “We have tremendous respect for each other,” Crone says. “Jackson cooked at my wedding, I cooked at his wedding. We share the same philosophies on food.”

Read more about Sole and On the River, another new downtown restaurant, in this week’s Food News by Pamela Denney.

Categories
Special Sections

When the Sterick Building Was Supreme

bc5e/1242158522-sterickelevatorgirls.jpg Just look at this photo. Nine women in starched white uniforms face the camera. Dimly visible behind them are elaborate lighting fixtures, marble walls, and ornate plaster moldings and other ornamentation. Nurses at an old hospital, perhaps? Waitresses at a fancy hotel?

Nope. Meet the elevator operators of the brand-new Sterick Building.

When the Sterick opened at Third and Madison in 1930, no detail, it seemed, was spared from the $2.5 million landmark. The exteriors of the lower floors gleamed with Minnesota granite and Indiana limestone; upper stories were carved “artificial stone” capped with a green tile roof. Inside, the main lobby “rivaled the beauty of a Moorish castle,” said the newspapers, and a cluster of chandeliers cost more than $1,000 each.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Obama’s Moderation is Not a Surprise

The unsurprising moderation of Barack Obama has caught many people by surprise. At this point, he seems intent on restoring a version of the old Clinton presidency — Hillary Clinton running foreign policy, Robert Rubin’s ensemble running the economy, Bill Richardson at Commerce and nary a certified “cut ‘n’ runner” on Iraq anywhere in sight …

Read the rest of Richard Cohen’s Viewpoint.

Categories
News

Sister Myotis Gives Thongs

A classic from Memphis’ favorite actress, Sister Myotis. A l’il something to brighten up Black Friday.

Categories
News

Get a Jump Start on Christmas This Weekend

Thanksgiving is over, and though you’ll likely be knee-deep in leftovers for the next few days, wade free of the mashed potatoes and hit up some early holiday events this weekend.

It may not be the Macy’s Day Parade, but the annual Memphis Holiday Parade promises local marching bands and Christmas floats.On the Friday after Thanksgiving, it’s the perfect kick-start for the hectic shopping days ahead. The parade begins at 5 p.m. in the South Main Arts District.

Don’t limit your holiday giving to friends and family. Donate a bag of socks to the homeless at the Old Fashioned Sock Hop at Earnestine & Hazel’s on Friday night. For your donation, you’ll gain entry to a traditional “sock hop” party with live music and dancing. And you can rest easy knowing your holiday gift-giving has already begun. The party starts at 8 p.m. Socks will be dispersed to the homeless through Calvary Street Ministry.

Stock up on local art for holiday gifts at Lulalyn’s Santa Showcase on Saturday night from 5 to 9 p.m. The tax-free art sale features work by Cathy Burge, Paul Clements, Kevin Mitchell, and others.

If you have room left in your belly after days of eating Thanksgiving leftovers, dine at Majestic Grille during their weekly “Sunday Supper & a Movie” promotion. Each week, they’ll serve a special holiday menu and screen a Christmas film. Miracle on 34th Street begins at 6:30 p.m. this Sunday.

For more weekend fun, check out the Flyer‘s online calendar.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Safety or Pride?

A few weeks ago, city councilman Shea Flinn told his colleagues they could choose their safety or their pride.

Perhaps not surprisingly, they chose pride …

Read Mary Cashiola’s take on the police residency brouhaha.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Back to the Future?

The unsurprising moderation of Barack Obama has caught many people by surprise. At this point, he seems intent on restoring a version of the old Clinton presidency — Hillary Clinton running foreign policy, Robert Rubin’s ensemble running the economy, Bill Richardson at Commerce and nary a certified “cut ‘n’ runner” on Iraq anywhere in sight. The erstwhile “change” candidate seems intent on vindicating that old French expression: The more things change, the more they remain the same. Oui.

What is surprising is that any of this should come as a surprise. All during the primary campaign, the main difference between Obama and Hillary Clinton was supposedly Iraq. This was the issue that propelled him to victory in Iowa, and this was the issue that stoked his supporters to paroxysms of enthusiasm. One candidate was for peace and the other was for the war — and that was all there was to it.

Not quite. There was always a synaptic gap between Obama’s ethereal image and his more grounded reality and the sneaking suspicion that he and Clinton were not all that far apart on anything — Iraq included. He conceded as much before the presidential race began. “I think very highly of Hillary,” he told New Yorker editor David Remnick in 2006. “The more I get to know her, the more I admire her.” In that same interview, Obama even narrowed the gap on Iraq: “I was running for the U.S. Senate. She had to take a vote, and casting votes is always a difficult test.” In other words, who knows?

This is not to suggest that Obama thought the war in Iraq was really a good thing. It does suggest, though, that he recognized that the issue was never an easy one, and had he not represented a dovish Chicago district in the Illinois Senate, he might well have expressed a more nuanced opposition. After all, not a single one of Obama’s U.S. Senate rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination voted against authorizing the war. Two of them are now about to play prominent roles in shaping and executing Obama’s foreign policy — Joe Biden, the vice president-elect, and Clinton, the presumptive secretary of state. As for the economy, a third Clinton administration would probably have looked like an Obama first: Lawrence Summers doing macro, Timothy Geithner doing micro, and both of them making late-night calls to Bob Rubin in New York.

What, then, can explain the length and bitterness of the Democratic primary campaign? For the answer, we must look not to some talking head but to Sigmund Freud and his phrase “the narcissism of small differences.” By this, he meant the antipathy we feel toward people who resemble us. To an outsider, this explains the age-old Protestant-Catholic enmity or the proclivity of Shiites and Sunnis to slaughter one another. It also explains why Clinton and Obama supporters were at each other’s throats. With the exception of the candidates themselves, they had so few differences. This is why so many Obama supporters despised Hillary Clinton — and were despised in return.

Remember that? Remember when Clinton had no integrity, no character, when she lied about almost everything and could be trusted about almost nothing? Remember when she was excoriated for diabolically exonerating Obama of the charge that he was, secretly and very ominously, a Muslim with the portentous phrase “as far as I know”? And remember when her husband had supposedly revealed himself to be a racist? That was a calumny, a libel, and a ferocious mugging of memory itself. But it was believed.

As is sometimes the case with passionate love, one can look back after a campaign and wonder: What was that all about? Usually, the passion of the campaign is shared by the candidates themselves and, for sure, their staffs. They live in a bubble infected by rumor and suspicion, a latter-day Borgian court of intrigue. But with Obama, he seemed always to distance himself from the heat of the campaign and to look down at it, as he did with that immense crowd in Berlin, as being of short-term use.

A presidential campaign is really a government looking for a parking space. Obama’s campaign showed us a candidate of maximum cool. He has always remained ironically detached, and that has served him — and now us — very well indeed. It’s now clear that he will not govern from the left and not really from the center but, as his campaign suggested, from above it all.

Richard Cohen writes for the Washington Post Writers Group.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Letter from the Editor: It’s the Geography, Stupid

As nearly every sentient being in Memphis now knows, the City Council last week voted down a proposal by Councilman Reid Hedgepeth to expand residency requirements for new Memphis police officers to anyone living within 20 miles of the Shelby County line. Officers currently are required to live within the county, and the department is at least 200 officers short of its budgeted allotment, so the relaxing of the residency requirement seemed to make sense to many, including a committee of city officials and representatives of FedEx, AutoZone, and other major businesses.

However, a majority of the council — seven members — voted against the proposal, suggesting instead that the department needed to more aggressively seek candidates who live in the city limits — crime rate be damned. It’s geography über alles!

Now that the dust has settled, I’m happy to report that the council has apparently started a trend with its vote. Just today, Northwest Airlines announced that it would henceforth only use pilots who live in Shelby County. “We feel that as a Memphis-based hub, it’s only right that we hire pilots based on where they live rather than on their skills in piloting an airplane,” said company spokesperson Albie Darned.

Picking up on the trend was the Med, which declared Thursday that the company would begin limiting its medical hires to “doctors and nurses who live in the 38103 zip code.”

“We are confident we can find plenty of fairly decent physicians and nurses in this zip code. All we have to do is increase and intensify our recruitment efforts,” said hospital spokesperson R.U. Kidden. “We may have to lower our medical standards slightly, but the important thing is that our doctors and nurses are committed to living in our neighborhood.”

The Memphis Grizzlies also committed to the new business model today. “We are letting go of all our players who are not from the South,” said team spokesperson Watt A. Crock. “Sure, it means we replace O.J. Mayo and Rudy Gay with a couple of recruits from LeMoyne-Owen and CBU, but what the heck. At least we know they care about our community, and that’s the important thing.”

Of course, by now you realize I’m making all this up — except for the part about the City Council’s decision to make one’s ability to live inside Shelby County the primary skill set desired for hiring Memphis police officers. I only wish I were making that part up.

Bruce VanWyngarden

brucev@memphisflyer.com