Categories
Politics Politics Feature

There’s Life After Politics for Fred Thompson — on Mars

After Fred Thompson’s failed effort in the 2008 presidential primaries, political pundits might not have the former Tennessee senator to kick around any more. But drama critics will have another shot.

According to Entertainment Weekly, Thompson, a University of Memhis graduate last seen as District Attorney Arthur Branch in Law and Order, has signed on to portray a chief of detectives on the ABC television program Life on Mars, a show in which, via a space-time warp, a law enforcement officer has been cast 35 years into the past.

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Sports Sports Feature

Griz Break Skid, Beat Clippers

Rudy Gay and O.J. Mayo combined for 45 of the team’s 93 points as the Grizzlied ended a seven-game losing streak with a 93-81 victory over the Los Angeles Clippers at FedExForum last night. Chris Herrington breaks it down at Beyond the Arc.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Cohen Recipient of Humanitarian Award in Spain

The U.S. House Resolution formally apologizing for slavery that was sponsored earlier this year by U.S. Representative Steve Cohen (D-9th) has earned the congressman the D. Emilio Castrelar Work Recognition Award, presented in Madrid, Spain, by the Vida Foundation, which concerns itself with environmental protection and human rights issues.

“It is gratifying that my sponsorship in the U.S. House of Representatives of the resolution apologizing for the slavery and segregation of African-Americans in our country has inspired people abroad to work for racial reconciliation in their own nations,” Cohen said in accepting the award at a Friday ceremony attended by numerous officials of thie Spanish government and other dignitaries.

Cohen added pointedly, “Although Spanish-American relations have cooled in the past few years under the Bush Administration, I am very encouraged to see the enthusiasm and optimism with which the Spanish people and their elected officials are greeting the election of Barack Obama. There is no doubt in my mind that America’s image around the world has already undergone a dramatic makeover in the few weeks since his election.”

The D. Emilio Castelar award, named for the former president of the First Republic of Spain is given to individuals around the world who have “tirelessly worked in their field towards social and environmental welfare, securing the future of citizens through the promotion of human prosperity, peace, human rights, energy security and sustainable development,” according to the Vida Foundation.

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Sports Sports Feature

Griz Host Clippers Tonight

After a 3-3 start, the Grizzlies have lost 10 of 11 games and seven in a row. They’ll try to stop the bleeding tonight when they host the 3-15 Los Angeles Clippers. Chris Herrington has a preview at Beyond the Arc.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Wanna See My Stimulus Package?

What exciting times. A new president-elect. A new administration. An official recession. And the federal government’s new reality game, to be hosted by the Internal Revenue Service, called “Bailout Stimulus.”

It’s easy. Just answer the following questions to determine your eligibility …

Read John Branston’s not-so-cheerful take on the economy.

Categories
News

Get Your Holiday Shopping Done This Weekend

Eek! Only 20 shopping days left until Christmas! Hit up these local art sales and shopping expos and put some gifts under that tree.

Got a baby boomer mom or stereotypical gay man on the shopping list? Purchase a photo of Bob Mackie’s Cher doll standing in front of the Eiffel Tower tonight at the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center. “The Cher Show” features Hugh Busby’s photographs of his Cher doll posing in front of tourist spots around the world and even a few in Memphis (think Cher in front of the Lorraine Motel). The show opens tonight from 6 to 9 p.m.

If fancy, overpriced art is out of your budget, never fear. The Made In Memphis Arts Collective features affordable local arts and crafts by Alex Smythe, Alisa Botto, Angela Goza, Carolyn Olivia Dodson-King (who makes awesome vintage-like aprons), and lots of others. The show starts at 6 p.m. tonight at 2238 Central Avenue and runs through 9 p.m.

Tour one of Midtown’s oldest ‘hoods and purchase local art during the Evergreen Art Walk on Saturday and Sunday. Work by Martha Kelly, Elmore Holmes, Joan Kelly, and Linda Turpin will be on display in two homes in the Evergreen Historic District. The walk runs from noon to 5 p.m. on both days. For more information (like locations), call 725-9165 or 278-1216.

Go east this weekend for the Rural Route Art Studio Tour, an annual self-guided driving tour of art studios in rural Shelby County. Pick up paintings, sculpture, and pottery at four locations and you’ll get a bonus behind-the-scenes look into the workspace of some local artists. Included on the tour are the Deborah Fagan Carpenter Studio (4881 Canada), the Lugar Bronze Foundry (11379 Hwy. 64), the Agnes Stark Studio (12675 Donelson), and Eads Gallery (12370 Washington). Tours run Friday through Sunday.

Double your money at Subsidium’s Carrousel of Shoppes, an annual fund-raiser expo benefiting the Memphis Oral School for the Deaf. Over 100 merchants will be offering all sorts of gift items, like candles, clothing, antiques, handbags, jewelry, and art work. The expo runs until 6 p.m. today and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday.

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

Categories
News

What Will Happen to Overton Square?

Memphis Heritage doesn’t have a plan for preventing a potential demolition of Overton Square. But they have the plan for a plan, and that’s a start.

June West, Heritage’s executive director spoke to a roomful of Memphians who gathered at the organization’s Madison Avenue headquarters Tuesday. They were there to discuss the future of Overton Square. West told them that her organization’s recent forays into activism have taught her a valuable lesson.

“I don’t want to be an obstructionist. I don’t want to be in an adversarial position,” she said. West said she wants developers to understand that although her group is dedicated to preservation, it’s not opposed to progress.

“We want [developers] to know that we’re to help them in any way we can,” She said. “We don’t want to show up at the last minute and tell somebody they can’t do something.”

Overton Square, Midtown’s storied entertainment district, is currently for sale by its owners, the Colorado-based Fisher Capital Partners Ltd. In spite of West’s stated goal, she, like those who came out to listen and share their ideas, wants to prevent Associated Wholesale Grocers, a potential buyer, from knocking down the buildings along the south side of Madison and building a big-box grocery store in what is now a large parking lot.

Those buildings aren’t protected. If somebody wants to demolish them there’s nothing that can be done to stop it except public outcry,” West said.

Associated Wholesale Grocers is a large retailer-owned company that builds a variety of large, concept stores such as Price Chopper, Price Mart, Apple Market, Sun Fresh, Ca$h $aver, Alps, and Thriftway.

The crowd of about 30 people was thick with architects, as well as area residents and business owners who were interested in discovering better ways to redevelop the square that don’t involve demolishing the 1920s-1930s era buildings, or bringing big box retailers, and a “Union Avenue aesthetic” to Madison and Cooper.

Although the square has had problems attracting and maintaining new tenants, several area mainstays continue to thrive. Paulette’s, Yosemite Sam’s, Side Street Bar and Grill, Bosco’s, Bayou Bar and Grill, Le Chardonnay, and Malco’s Studio on the Square all do solid business. Playhouse on the Square, Memphis’ only professional resident theater, is in the process of building a $10-milion performance space at the corner of Cooper and Union that will also host performances by Ballet Memphis and the Memphis Symphony Orchestra.

“This will bring an additional 40,000 to 50,000 people to the square every year,” said Playhouse founder Jackie Nichols, who is also concerned with the fate of the French Quarter Inn, a once nice, now-dilapidated hotel on the northeast corner of Madison and Cooper.

Nichols used to fill the hotel to capacity for a week during United Professional Theatre Auditions, a hugely successful national casting call for professional actors founded and hosted by Playhouse on the Square. Nichols stopped using the hotel a few years back, because it wasn’t being kept up.

Ray Brown, an architect and Heritage board member who moderated Tuesday’s discussion, approached the preservation effort from a dispassionate, realistic position. “We assume these buildings need to be saved,” he said. “But should they be saved? That kind of thing can be done very well, and it can be done poorly.”

Brown is planning a 4-day charette (planning session) that will bring together community members, area stakeholders, architects, designers, and policy experts, who will develop a plan to physically and financially re-imagine the square. Brown, who described the unique (for Memphis) urban space as an “extended neighborhood center,” said that it had to be a plan that will work in the current environment, and that will attract money to the area.

“A year ago, somebody might have suggested building out condos as part of a mixed use development,” Brown said, acknowledging how quickly conventional wisdom regarding development can change. “Now, that’s probably not a good idea. Maybe we should include apartments in the plan … I don’t know.”

For more information on how to get involved with Memphis Heritage’s efforts to improve and preserve the character of Overton Square visit Memphisheritage.org.

— Chris Davis

Categories
Special Sections

Doughty-Robinson Drug Company

d920/1242155824-doughty-robinsondrugs.jpg These days, many companies prefer to carry generic names like Costco, Super D, and Rite-Aid, but for almost four decades, one of the largest drugstore chains in Memphis went by the somewhat dry name of Doughty-Robinson.

In 1923, two pharmacists — Lorenzo Doughty and Andrew Robinson — opened their brand-new “prescription druggists” firm at 1083 Union. Back in the days when the telephone company assigned prefixes to phone numbers (Mutual, Fairfax, etc.), that first drug store got an appropriate number: HEmlock-1482.

The chain flourished, and by the mid-1940s it had opened other branches on Union, Chelsea, Jefferson, Lamar, Madison, North Parkway, Poplar, and Summer. This photo, taken in 1943, shows the main branch on Union at Camilla. In addition to medicines and pharmaceuticals, patrons could also enjoy Coca-Colas, sodas, and lunches at the “luncheonette” and — judging from other signs in the windows — bring home Kodak film, Sealtest’s Clover Hill ice cream, Forest Hill milk, and Bexel Vitamin B complex. It’s hard to see on this grainy image, but a wall-mounted thermometer advertises the new Ex-Lax (“That Chocolate Laxative”), and a placard for movie star Barbara Stanwyck promoted the “Hollywood” line of hair products for something called “Good Looks / Good Health Week.”

By 1953, however, the busy store at 1083 Union was the only one remaining, and it closed the following year. Nowadays, almost all the former Doughty-Robinson Drug Store buildings, including the main branch here, have been torn down for parking lots or are standing empty. Only one location, at 1635 Union, is still being used as it was intended. Today, it houses Wiles-Smith Drug Store.

PHOTO COURTESY BENJAMIN HOOKS CENTRAL LIBRARY

Categories
News The Fly-By

Q&A with Linda Kerley,

Call it a sign of the times. In this harsh economic climate, even the former mayor of Collierville is struggling.

After serving nine years as mayor and four years before that as a Collierville alderman, Linda Kerley recently resigned her post because of financial reasons. New mayor Stan Joyner took office last Monday.

Throughout Kerley’s tenure as mayor, she and her husband, Ken, also worked as real estate agents. Earlier this year, the Kerleys realized they weren’t bringing in enough money. The Collierville mayor’s salary isn’t enough for one person to live on, and with the real estate business going south, Kerley had no choice but to give up her post. — by Bianca Phillips

Flyer: What’s the Collierville mayor’s salary?

Kerley: $15,000. I could make more at McDonald’s. I worked 50 or 60 hours a week, and I was on call 24/7. I was always going to different church services on the weekend or some kind of event, like Boy Scout ceremonies. It takes a lot of time.

The Collierville mayor’s salary needs to be changed to a living wage. It’s very much a full-time position.

When did you realize you were going to have to find a new job?

The deadline for getting your petition [for reelection] in was Thursday, August 21st, and I made the announcement on the Tuesday before. I literally waited until the last second to see if I would get some real estate commissions and sell some houses, so I could seek reelection. But it didn’t work out.

Was the lack of real estate business related to the economy?

I think most of our problem stems from February when an alderman accused me of an ethics violation because, at that point in time, [my husband and I] changed from one real estate company to Crye-Leike. Crye-Leike ran a very nice ad welcoming us, as they do with all agents. One of our aldermen filed a formal complaint with the town against me for using my office to seek financial gain.

I was exonerated when [Crye-Leike founder] Dick Leike wrote a letter stating that I had nothing to do with the ad. Unfortunately, the ad appeared in all the newspapers several times, and from that point on, we have not had one new client. People are making the biggest investment of their lives, and if someone has been accused of an ethics violation, would you make that contract with them?

I don’t know if I’m overreacting, but I know other people in real estate who are doing great. It seems very coincidental.

How did you get into politics in Collierville?

In 1994, there was a development that was going to the Board of Aldermen for approval called Oakmont. It backs up to several subdivisions off Byhalia Road, and our family lives in one of those subdivisions.

We were concerned about construction traffic, and we went to the meetings and were told to shut up and sit down. We took offense to that. Some friends and I went to Destin a few weeks after the meeting, and too many piña coladas later, they talked me into running for alderman. In May 1995, I ran and was elected as the first female alderman in Collierville. I ran for mayor in 1999.

What are your plans now?
I’m going to try to get a job, so if anyone out there is hiring ex-mayors, tell them to call me.

Would you consider running for elected office again someday?

I truly loved serving the community, and I love Collierville, but would I get back into it again? I believe the board is going to be successful as well as all the people appointed to the commissions. I don’t think it will be necessary for me to get back into it.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Jason Statham: the real James Bond.

It’s been a dreary year at the movies, and recent releases aren’t offering much hope. High-concept glop like Changeling and lowest-common-denominator pap like Quantum of Solace are making money, but I suspect they’re leaving discerning consumers disappointed. In tough times like these, it’s best to seek pleasure in out-of-the-way places, like the second-run theaters or those dimly lit corners of the multiplex that aren’t harboring battalions of Four Christmases or Twilight prints.

In such nooks and crannies of film exhibition, the thrills are unexpected and vital. Jonathan Sela’s ornate cinematography in Max Payne, Mark Walton’s wild vocal performance as a maniacal hamster in Bolt, and the poignant, moving solos by Zac Efron and Vanessa Hudgens in High School Musical 3 are all recent examples of movie magic that break free from formulaic restraints. Transporter 3, director Olivier Megaton’s entry in this underrated action series, joins their ranks by supplying thrills missing from most current action releases.

Once again, Transporter 3 stars Jason Statham as Frank Martin, a fearsome fighter and impeccably stylish chauffeur who makes his living moving sensitive cargo from one location to another. Retired from his profession, Frank now prefers to spend his days on a fishing boat in a Marseilles bay with his comrade, Inspector Tarconi (a droll François Berléand). But good professionals are always in demand whether they like it or not, and one car crash and one liquid-nitrogen bracelet later, Frank is pressed into duty on a trans-European errand that involves the delivery of frisky Valentina (Natalya Rudakova), a jailbait Ukrainian official’s daughter.

Because of its Saturday-matinee caper premise, Transporter 3 is flexible and funny; its action sequences are bold, surreal, and fast-paced. And what other action franchise would dare employ the male striptease as a metaphor for character change? Granted, the first striptease is a tactical one, as Frank uses his coat and shirt to subdue a gang of hoodlums in an auto garage. But the second one is both strategic and erotic — when Frank has to disrobe to get his car keys back from Valentina, the scene transforms into a sexy interlude smartly scored by Tricky’s “Hell Is Around the Corner” and also reveals Frank’s tender side. Throw in an arresting car-train chase climax, spice the expository dialogue with casual remarks about why Russians are so depressing, and you have the unpretentious, throwaway action flick James Bond used to deliver regularly.

The Transporter 3

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