Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Goners

Yes, HE’S GONE, but the really big headline devalues HE’S BACK in the event of the Second Coming. And the saturation television and print media coverage from Memphis donut shop to Lexington airport might make some people wonder how lean things really are in this business.

It’s a great story, though. It had an interesting main character, strong minor characters, a plot, deception, suspense, a climax, and a quick resolution. All the things most news stories — say the endless Herenton epic, the depressing economy, the confusing stimulus, or the consolidation snoozer — don’t have. And unlike another water cooler favorite, “American Idol,” it matters.

The future of downtown Memphis is tourism, residents, and entertainment. FedEx Forum can’t afford two basketball flops.

Sports can’t save a city — watch the Final Four this weekend in Detroit which has won the Stanley Cup, NBA Championship, and played in a World Series in this decade — but they can give it a monetary and mental boost, a respite from the daily grind. That’s what Calipari did for Memphis better than anyone in the last ten years.

There will be a sequel within a week or two when a new University of Memphis basketball coach is hired and holds his first press conference. He’ll have a Calipari-like contract for at least $2 million-a-year to scrutinize. Let’s hope he has more to work with than a starting five of Pierre Henderson-Niles, Willie Kemp, and three white guys.

In the spirit of the times, the University of Memphis, in a joint press conference with the coach, President Shirley Raines, and Athletic Director R. C. Johnson, should disclose where every dollar of the new coach’s compensation (and his assistants) is coming from. Not that we needed it, but the Calipari story is a vivid reminder that college sports is big and often shady business, and business is way ahead of university athletic departments when it comes to financial disclosure.

The old saw that the athletic department is separate from the rest of the university and generates enough revenue to pay million-dollar salaries demands the same microscopic examination as Cal’s final-day timeline. The University of Memphis is a public institution playing football and basketball in public facilities. Open the books in front of the cameras, without waiting for state legislators to demand an audit, as they did in Connecticut recently.

That won’t clear the air about one-and-dones or ease the hard feelings many people have about all of this, but at least we’ll know what the university and its boosters are paying and why before we go head over heels again.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Eyesores

Putting together an “Eyesores” issue isn’t as easy as you might think.

After all, where do you even start — or, more accurately, stop? Vast areas of North and South Memphis are almost painful to look at: blocks and blocks of abandoned buildings and decaying industrial sites. And it’s not just confined to regions outside the expressway loop. Urban blight pops up like acne throughout Midtown, East Memphis, Hickory Hill, and beyond.

But to qualify for an eyesore, we decided to focus on specific sites or buildings that stood out from their surroundings — properties that, if improved or even removed — would surely make a difference to their neighbors.

Some things, it seems, never change. We looked at eyesores several years ago in the Flyer, and it was disturbing how many of those properties could have made the current list. The Sterick Building, for one, should earn a Lifetime Under-Achievement Award, since the downtown landmark once proclaimed “The Showplace of the South” has steadily decayed for the past 30 years or so, and in the current economic climate, we don’t expect that situation to improve anytime soon.

But sometimes we find glimmers of light among the ruins. The old Lowenstein/Rhodes-Jennings Building — a Main Street structure so decrepit that barriers were erected around it to shield pedestrians from falling debris — reopened several months ago as newly renovated condos.

So there is always hope, and we present the Eyesores of 2009 with that thought in mind: Boy, these places are ugly, but somebody, somewhere, may be able to make them useful, profitable, and even beautiful again.

1)Celebration Station

I-40 and Sycamore View

by Michael Finger

Celebration Station

Memphians may know how to have a good time, but we sure don’t like paying for it. Entertainment complexes don’t survive in this city. Old-timers can remember long-gone places like Rainbow Lake and Al’s Golfdom, and more recent losses include Skateland, Maywood, Adventure River, Malibu Grand Prix Raceway, and Jillians. (And let’s not forget Libertyland; see below.)

When Celebration Station opened in 1993, it was sensory overload for the thousands of visitors who packed the seven-acre complex day and night. Outside, the place offered two miniature golf courses with brightly painted castles and other elaborate obstacles, a spacious pool filled with bumper-boats equipped with outboard motors (when you grew weary of smacking into other boats, you just turned the motor 90 degrees and put yourself into a vertigo-inducing spin), and a figure-eight concrete race track, complete with an arched bridge and powerful Honda-engined go-karts.

Indoors held a food court, rows of old-timey Skeeball lanes, all sorts of coin-operated arcade games and rides, and private rooms for birthday parties and other events. But then it all came grinding to a stop. In 2001, the owners closed the park for the season, and if they ever reopened, no one noticed. People driving along the expressway surely wondered why it was dark and quiet, and every day, it seemed, the grounds attracted more trash and graffiti. Today, Celebration Station is a depressing shell of its former self. The go-kart tracks remain, but the bumper-car pool is filled with scummy water, and there’s not a trace of the miniature golf courses. A faded sign still beckons, in a mocking way, “Open 24 Hours.”

2)Clayborn Temple

280 Hernando

by Michael Finger

Celebration Station

For better or worse, three landmarks from the American civil rights movement are located in Memphis: the National Civil Rights Museum, Mason Temple, and Clayborn Temple. The first two look a whole lot better than the last one.

The authors of Memphis: An Architectural Guide, perpetuate an urban myth by saying, “In this building, Martin Luther King Jr. gave his ‘I have been to the mountaintop’ speech before he was assassinated.” No, they’re wrong about that; King gave that speech at Mason Temple (just south of Crump Blvd.) on the evening of April 3, 1968. But they are correct when they say this building — constructed in 1892 as Second Presbyterian Church — “is one of the most imposing churches in the city.”

In the 1960s, Clayborn Temple served as a rallying ground for many civil rights demonstrations, and it was often the starting point for protest marches to City Hall. As late as the 1980s, it was still used as a sanctuary, but the years have taken their toll. Membership declined, and it didn’t help when the church pastor resigned amid allegations of rape and battery. “Clayborn has just had problems all around,” said a leader of the AME Church in Atlanta, which owns the property.

In the late 1990s, construction of FedExForum directly across Linden supposedly weakened the rear wall of the old church, and an unstable wing had to be demolished. At one point the Memphis City Council appropriated $150,000 to help restore the building, but the money was rescinded after complicated legal arguments about the separation of church and state. And so for years, it has stood as you see it here, its sturdy grey stonework set off by peeling white plywood.

3)Ambassador Hotel

345 S. Main

by Michael Finger

Clayborn Temple

Early in the 1900s, South Main was a beehive of activity, lined with family-owned businesses, shops, and small industries. Union Station and Central Station brought hundreds of visitors and tradesmen into the district, and many of them needed affordable places to stay, so small hotels and rooming houses opened up on just about every block.

The Ambassador was one of the largest of these medium-budget hotels, a sprawling place that originally occupied three separate buildings. One of those structures burned to the ground years ago, and another fronting on Vance has been converted into nice condominiums. The main hotel structure on South Main closed in the mid-1970s and has remained vacant ever since. In 1997, Memphis Heritage put the Ambassador Hotel on its list of the top 11 most endangered sites in Memphis, but that didn’t inspire any action except to board up the windows.

Over the years, a series of developers have announced they would transform the old building into a thing of beauty, usually in the form of shops or condos, but so far that hasn’t happened. Just about every building on this stretch of South Main has been revamped except this one. The exterior still looks decent, but vandals and vagrants who have crept inside have made a shambles of the interior.

4)Trousseau

1775 Union

by Michael Finger

Ambassador Hotel

It stands like a gray ghost along Union Avenue, a relic from a bygone age that really wasn’t so long ago. As recently as the 1960s, women who wanted the finest fashions in town didn’t flock to the suburban malls — for the simple reason those malls didn’t exist. Instead, they shopped at high-quality stores downtown and in Midtown, and Trousseau was one in an exclusive group that included Helen of Memphis, Minor Francis, Julius Lewis, and others. But when the malls opened, the boutique shops were doomed. Most of them were demolished; the once-proud Helen of Memphis is now a parking lot for Rite Aid.

Trousseau, which opened in 1949 and moved to the present location in 1974, closed in 2001 when the owners opened a new location in East Memphis (which closed a few years later). The empty building on Union is practically surrounded by parking for its next-door neighbor, Schnucks, which badly needs more space, so it’s just a matter of time before the old lady comes tumbling down.

5)Quality Inn

271 W. Alston

by Michael Finger

Trousseau

Developers constantly tout “location, location, location,” and in the 1960s, a motel facing the main highway leading into Memphis from Arkansas probably seemed like a great idea. Opened in 1967, the 150-room Quality Inn did a booming business — for a while. But just a few years later, the new Hernando DeSoto Bridge stretched across the Mississippi River, and most of those travelers switched to I-40. Tourist business along Crump Blvd. slowed to a crawl, the Quality Inn declined, and the building finally closed in the 1970s.

The good news is that the property is in the hands of developer Lauren Crews, who is presently transforming a derelict landmark nearby, the old U.S. Marine Hospital, into upscale residences. “That motel building stands at the gateway, so to speak, for our other developments,” says Crews, “so we certainly want to do something with it.” For a while, the fate of the property seemed in limbo, since the Tennessee Department of Transportation is looking at ways to improve the Crump Blvd./Riverside Drive/Memphis-Arkansas Bridge interchange (a confusing mess for anyone who’s tried to find the National Ornamental Metal Museum), but Crews says that the two options now on the TDOT table will spare the old motel.

“It may look awful from the outside, but it’s a solid concrete building and actually in good shape,” Crews says. “It’s got a great layout and could be easily converted into condos, apartments, or even back into a motel, for that matter.”

6)Medical Center Tower

Madison and Pauline

by Michael Finger

Quality Inn

This is an oddity — one of the city’s eyesores that many people don’t really notice — until they look up and see the empty 19-story building looming overhead, looking quite forlorn. The Medical Center Tower opened in the 1960s as a Holiday Inn, complete with a seven-story parking garage on the lower floors, a nice restaurant, and a swimming pool on the roof. The motel closed in 1989 and sat dormant for several years. In 1995 developers announced they would renovate the structure and reopen it as a smaller Holiday Inn, with some of the lower floors devoted to office space. Well, that never happened, and a year later The Commercial Appeal reported that the building’s status was “murky.”

Over the years, other developers pondered using the building as apartments and offices, but they never did anything about it. Finally, in 2005, the Memphis Bioworks Foundation purchased the property for $500,000 and announced they would tear it down to make more space available for UT Baptist Research Park. No date has been set for its demolition, but we hope they bring it down with a blast of dynamite as they did with the old Baptist Hospital. That was so cool.

7)Libertyland

E. Parkway and Central

by Michael Finger

Medical Center Tower

Libertyland opened in 1976 as “America’s Bicentennial Theme Park.” In addition to rides and midway games, there was a miniature Statue of Liberty and a truncated Independence Hall. Visitors could explore Mark Twain’s Island, get splashed in the log-flume ride, ice-skate in an open-air pavilion, and — you’d generally save this for last — ride the famous Zippin Pippin, supposedly the oldest wooden roller coaster in America.

Across the country, though, children and their families seemed to lose interest in these little homespun amusement parks, lured away by Disney World, “fun line” cruise ships, and other vacation destinations. One by one, the smaller places closed, and Libertyland soon joined the list, as developers announced plans for a better location for the Mid-South Fair and a more profitable use (they hoped) for the property occupied by what one of our colleagues called “Little-Bitty Land.”

The closing of Libertyland was quite a mess. Owners of an amusement park in North Carolina somehow ended up with the entire Zippin Pippin when they wanted to purchase just a few of its cars (especially the one favored by Elvis Presley). Before they could dismantle the thing, however, the city stepped in and declared that sale invalid, but not before just about every other piece of the park that could be removed was auctioned off.

Today the old park should be called Lonelyland. Although Friends of Libertyland bemoan its fate, Henry Turley, developer of Harbor Town and Uptown, among other grand ventures, and a group of investors have unveiled plans for Fair Ground, an ambitious project that would also embrace the aging Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium and the now-closed Mid-South Coliseum. The only thing they are waiting on is the same thing that is holding up many projects: money.

8)Frisco and Harahan Bridges

Mississippi River

by Michael Finger

Libertyland

When it opened in 1892, the Frisco Bridge was an engineering marvel — the longest bridge in North America and the third-longest span in the world. It only carried one set of railroad tracks, though, so it was joined in 1916 by the Harahan Bridge, which not only carried more trains but also featured one of the scariest travel adventures in the country. A narrow, wooden roadway was suspended from each side of the bridge, just a low railing separating nervous drivers from the Mississippi River far below. An unexpected hazard was revealed in 1928, when sparks from a passing train set those planks afire. Though the roadways were eventually rebuilt, the automobile traffic dilemma wasn’t really resolved until the Memphis-Arkansas Bridge opened in 1949.

by Michael Finger

Harahan Bridge

All three bridges are still in use today, the Frisco and Harahan carrying freight trains on a daily basis. They were so sturdily constructed that they will probably stand for another century. But they sure look like hell, don’t they? The ownership of a railroad bridge can be a complicated mess — often a joint venture between the states and the various railroads who use it — but would it really be that much trouble to slap a coat of silver paint on these things every 10 years or so?

9)Chicago Pizza Factory

Madison, near Overton Square

by Michael Finger

Frisco Bridge

When it opened in 1970, Overton Square was the city’s premier entertainment district, a grouping of some 30 shops, clubs, and restaurants. Centered around the intersection of Madison and Cooper, the district soon stretched down the street and eventually included this building, which opened in 1972 as Sweet Caroline’s and later changed its name to the Chicago Pizza Factory. Overton Square eventually lost much of its appeal, and this business locked its doors in 1989, but the building has remained something of a time capsule. Peer through the windows, and you’d think it closed last night. Tables and chairs, complete with salt and pepper shakers and napkin holders, are still inside, as if diners had just stepped away. The owner, contacted numerous times by potential buyers, steadfastly refuses to sell the property.

10)Chisca Hotel

272 S. Main

by Michael Finger

Chicago Pizza Factory

Old-timers don’t have any trouble listing downtown’s “grand” hotels: Peabody, Gayoso, King Cotton, and even Wm. Len. Then there were the “second-tier” properties, such as Chisca. An imposing structure with nice stained-glass details here and there, it mainly catered to businessmen working in the South Main area. The authors of Memphis: An Architectural Guide dismiss it, commenting that “it was clearly built on the cheap; there is little here that is not strictly utilitarian.” Maybe so, but anyone who held high school formals here in the 1960s and ’70s thought the old Chisca was something special. And it has a historic importance, too, for radio station WHBQ was located off the lobby. It was from here that deejay Dewey Phillips conducted the first on-air interview with a young singer named Elvis Presley.

Like most downtown hotels, the Chisca closed in the 1970s. The property and a newer addition called the Chisca Plaza Motor Court were purchased by the Church of God in Christ, which has made part of the building their headquarters. Unfortunately, the church has allowed the main structure to deteriorate, and upstairs windows have been open to the elements — and pigeons — for years.

11)Third Street Post Office

555 S. Third

by Michael Finger

Chisca Hotel

Not all eyesores are old or abandoned buildings. The post office on Third Street makes our list mainly because we are still bitter about what it replaced — Union Station, complete with domes and arches and tiles and all sorts of wonderful ornamentation, a place the authors of Memphis: An Architectural Guide called “the finest Beaux Arts structure ever built in Memphis.” That came tumbling down in the late 1960s, when travelers took to the skies instead of the rails, and it was replaced by … this.

In the past, public buildings, especially big-city post offices, were grand edifices, with soaring entrances, marble concourses, and other adornments. But this is neither an impressive nor inviting structure. It’s a brutal-looking, top-heavy fortress, three floors of “bushhammered concrete.” Its main entrance is a dinky pair of aluminum doors that lead to a bare parking lot, and everything about the building says, “Go away.” It just makes our eyes hurt to look at it.

by Michael Finger

Third Street Post Office

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Daily Photo Special Sections

Eyesores

Eyesores

Categories
News

Sprouted … then Stomped

I don’t know if I’ve mentioned this here — and apparently I’m too lazy to use the search function — but this year I planned to plant a garden.

(This was before Michelle Obama started hers. I’m not saying she copied me, but maybe we’re both plugged into the same culture zeitgeist.)

First, I thought a container garden was the way to go. (I’ve got limited space and I found this handy web guide, coincidentally done by a friend of mine.)

Then another friend of mine pointed out that I might not have as much light as I think. And he was right. After careful study, it looks like any one spot near my house will only get about four hours of light and most vegetables need a nice round eight hours.

So I signed up for a community garden at Shelby Farms.

While I was waiting for the master gardeners or the county or whoever to plow the community plots and then stake them (you have to know where to plant), I went ahead and started some little seedlings on my windowsill.

They sprouted and looked cute and sat there on the sill for a week or so (or more) and still no Shelby Farms staking (which is totally fine; it’s been raining a lot). So no planting for my seedlings.

But last weekend, some of them HAD to be moved. They were growing out of their little beds. I was still going to do a small container garden anyway, so I planted them in my little containers, hauled them into the front yard and dusted off my dirty palms with a nice “Good job” to myself.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Calipari’s Departure Presents Opportunity for Grizzlies

With so many fans and potential fans tuning the Grizzlies out over the past few seasons as the team’s on-court fortunes too a nose-dive, the at-least-temporary derailment of Tiger basketball could spur some people to give the local pro team a second look. Over at Beyond the Arc, Chris Herrington tells Mike Heisley that he can’t afford to not take advantage of this situation.

Categories
News

Calipari: “I was just kidding about the Kentucky job.”

Memphis Coach John Calipari told the Flyer today that he planned to remain the coach of the Memphis Tigers for “the rest of my life.” He said the recent stories about his departure from the Bluff City to take the University of Kentucky coaching job were all part of an elaborate practical joke.

“Everyone was in on it,” said Calipari, “the players, the assistant coaches, the recruits, everyone. I just got tired of all the silly speculation and decided to have a little fun with the media. Besides, do you really think I’d want to move to a rathole like Lexington, Kentucky? I mean, most of the fans there don’t even have teeth. My wife would kill me.”

“John is a guy who likes to have a good laugh,” said Memphis AD R.C. Johnson. “So when he came up with this idea, I thought, Why not? The publicity will be great for the university.”

As the news of Cal’s practical joke spread around the city, Memphians were seen high-fiving on the street and honking their car horns. “That Cal,” said Tiger fan I. B. Lyon, “he’s always one step ahead. I never believed he’d leave, really. It had to be a joke. I mean, c’mon, Kentucky???”

Calipari also announced today that top recruit John Wall would make a commitment to the U of M as soon as this afternoon.

In other April 1st news: Rush Limbaugh said he now hopes President Obama “succeeds,” and the Chrysler Corporation has announced a 68 percent increase in first-quarter profits. Also, Cal’s Championship Steakhouse has changed its name to KFC.

–B.V.

Categories
Opinion

I-69: Project Circle Jerk

Citing long-term benefits to their troubled business models, drug lords in Mexico and former car executives in Detroit praised road builders in Tennessee and Mississippi for expediting Interstate 269 around Memphis.

The Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) announced this week that it is speeding up construction of the interstate loop dubbed “the future Interstate 269 Corridor.” Total cost of “Project Circle Jerk,” as it is known to insiders, is an estimated $145 million.

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Lexington vs. Memphis: A Tale of Two Cities

Was Lexington over Memphis the right choice? Well, I’ll let every armchair sports expert argue between the two towns on purely basketball grounds, but, as far as everything else goes — quality of life, amenities, culture — Lexington versus Memphis bears some closer examination.

A tiny bit of background: I’ve lived in and loved both towns. Am I biased? Though I always have and always will consider Memphis my hometown, I’ve got good vibes flowing to each town. So, Memphis versus Lexington. Let the debate begin:

Regional Roots Music

Memphis: The Blues

Lexington: Bluegrass

Analysis: Live, great bluegrass bands are dynamite, as the interconnectivity of the many instruments and the interplay between the musicians overwhelm the senses, giving it the edge over live blues. But, all in all, there’s a democratic universality to the blues that leaves no one out — and that includes non-musicians. In my life, sometimes I get the blues. I never get the bluegrass.

Advantage: Memphis

Weather

Memphis: Hot, humid, and aggravating. And that’s in the temperate months.

Lexington: Four true seasons

Analysis: With appropriately long stretches of verdant springtimes and gorgeous autumns — and with summers that aren’t deal-breakers and winters that actually have snow, it’s no contest.

Advantage: Lexington

Driving Conditions

Analysis: As bad as I-240 between the Bill Morris Parkway and I-40 gets every day during rush hour, Memphians should thank their rearview-mirror dice they don’t have to deal with New Circle Road — a loop around Lexington, like 240 except that half of it has red lights every block and strip malls alongside. Imagine Union Avenue encircling the city. I’ll take having to dodge crazy drivers in Memphis so long as it means there’s a logical way to get from here to there.

Advantage: Memphis

Local Government

Memphis: Separate Memphis City and Shelby County governments

Lexington: Consolidated Lexington and Fayette County government

Analysis: Aaah, hear how quiet it is as a local government goes about business with relative efficiency and unity of message? That’s consolidated government.

Advantage: Lexington

The Corporate Community

Analysis: Based on Fortune 500 headquarters alone, Memphis has FedEx, AutoZone, and International Paper. Lexington has Lexmark.

Advantage: Memphis

Predominant Physical Feature

Memphis: Mississippi River

Lexington: Horse farms

Analysis: As powerful an anchor to Memphis as the Mississippi is, if you’re not right on top of it, it’s easy to forget it’s there. In Lexington, the white-fenced horse farms are everywhere, even just barely outside the city core. The horse farms are a constant visual reminder of what a great world this is to live in.

Advantage: Lexington

Signature Food

Memphis: Barbecue

Lexington: Hot Brown

Analysis: Hot Brown recipes vary, but it’s an open-faced sandwich with a slice of toast stacked with turkey, covered in Mornay or other cheese sauce, and topped with some combination of bacon, tomato, and more cheese — as yummy as starchy foods get. It was born in Louisville, but in Lexington, there’s maybe no finer Hot Brown than the one at Ramsey’s. I sometimes dream of easy access to a Hot Brown. But, c’mon, barbecue and Memphis are synonymous. And the diversity of Memphis barbecues available cannot be understated: The Cozy Corner and The Bar-B-Q Shop are as different as Picasso and Pollock. Same medium, different results. On sheer artistry alone, this is an easy race to call.

Advantage: Memphis

Intrastate Rivalry

Analysis: Lexington has Louisville like Memphis has Nashville. The hated foe. You can never say anything good about them. Except in Lexington’s case, the detestable metropolis is only 70 miles away and they have a college sports rival every bit as good as the home team. Say what you will about how terrible Nashville is, but don’t forget the best they can do to compare to the Memphis Tigers is Vanderbilt. Ha!

Advantage: Lexington

Diversity

Analysis: Lexington is one of the most lily-white towns you’ll ever go to. According to 2000 U.S. Census figures, it’s 81 percent white, 13.5 percent black, and 3.3 percent Hispanic. Memphis, meanwhile (also in 2000), is 34.4 percent white, 61.4 percent black, and 3 percent Hispanic. Is it important to you to live in a place where you can look around and encounter people different from you?

Advantage: Memphis

For the Cinephile

Analysis: Memphis has no art-house theater. Even though Malco regularly brings in high-profile indies, Lexington has the Kentucky Theatre, a gorgeous rehabbed theater dating back to the 1920s, which plays indie and foreign films exclusively. The Kentucky regularly has cult classic midnight shows and revival film festivals, such as an upcoming Samurai movie series. Memphis has The Orpheum’s summer film series and several excellent film festivals, but for the 365-day-a-year cinephile, Lexington’s the place to be.

Advantage: Lexington

Allergies

Analysis: I’m apparently allergic to the planet earth, as no matter where I live, I’m bedeviled by armies of microscopic particles. But never have I had as bad a seasonal allergic reaction as my spring in Lexington. A reaction to bluegrass? The state flower Goldenrod? Whatever it was, never again. A pollen-drenched Bluff City still wins.

Advantage: Memphis

Basketball Venue

Memphis: FedExForum

Lexington: Rupp Arena

Analysis: Forget the kids who run around on the floor and the fans in the seats, how’ the actual facility as a basketball venue? The Memphis Tigers have FedExForum, by all accounts a high-water-mark in athletics facilities in the U.S. It’s pretty on the outside, pretty on the inside, and still has the new-car smell. The University of Kentucky’s Rupp Arena is … boxy. And has that ’70s-car smell.

Advantage: Memphis

Non-Collegiate Sports Scene

Analysis: Memphis has the only major professional franchise in the two cities (the Grizzlies), the best minor-league baseball club in America (the Redbirds), high-profile football annuals (the AutoZone Liberty Bowl and the Southern Heritage Classic), professional sports tournaments in tennis (the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships and Cellular South Cup) and golf (the St. Jude Championship). Lexington has … the Class A baseball club the Lexington Legends. No contest, right? Except for twice a year, when Keeneland horse track becomes the center of the horse-racing world. It’s the best four weeks in either city.

Advantage: Four weeks a year: Lexington. 48 Weeks a year: Memphis

Hometown Celebrity

Memphis: Justin Timberlake

Lexington: Ashley Judd

Analysis: Judd’s around her town more frequently than Timberlake is, and she’s prettier (in my opinion). But Justin brought sexy back. Thanks, JT!

Advantage: Draw

–Greg Akers

Categories
News

Moonlight and Magnolias: A Video review

by CHRIS DAVIS