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Style Sessions We Recommend

Style Secrets

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Justin Fox Burks

First, can we all agree that a martini glass makes a great accessory? It’s really too bad they’re relegated to nights and weekends, but maybe that’s part of what gives them their appeal.

When I “Mad Men-ified” myself (“Mad Menned”?) recently, I totally gave the Mad Me a little martini glass to carry around. It was either that or Don Draper …

Oh, right, you’re here talk about the clothes. I thought this was really simple but very elegant. We all know how I feel about white pants, and little black top is the more casual cousin of the little black dress.

But Julia McDonald was downright cute when we asked her about it.

“You want me to tell you the brands?” she asked. “That will give away the secret of my cheap shopping.”

In the end, we wrested the brands out of her (turns out martini glasses are good for that, too) and she told us her top was from Express and her pants were from the Loft. To finish the outfit, she added a pair of Coach sunglasses.

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Style Sessions We Recommend

Print Halter

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Justin Fox Burks

Susan Ronning says she usually dresses very casually, but she made an exception for the Literacy Council’s Taste of Cooper-Young.

This cute print halter is from Banana Republic and ties around the waist. (We had a discussion whether the print is navy or black, and to this day, I still don’t know the answer.)

“I dress extremely casual,” she told me, “like beachwear and work-out clothes.”

It occurs to me that sometimes you can tell a lot about a person by what they’re wearing (or by what they tell you they wear, in this case). Like beachwear … I immediately thought, this person is not from Memphis. This is a California girl. And I am jealous. B/c I really love beachwear.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Elvis Returns to the Shell

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On July 30th, 1954, a young Elvis Presley played what is considered his first real public concert at the Overton Park Shell. Elvis’ first single for Sun Records, the now legendary “That’s All Right (Mama),” had just been released and Presley was a relatively unknown opening act on a multi-artist bill headlined by country singer Slim Whitman.

Elvis would perform several shows at the Shell over the next year, before becoming the biggest star rock-and-roll would ever know. This fall, the King returns, in a way, to the venue that launched him when Elvis, the 1968 NBC television special now popularly known as “the ’68 Comeback Special,” will be screened in the park as part of the 12th Indie Memphis Film Festival.

The screening will take place at 7 p.m., Friday, October 9th, at the recently refurbished and renamed Levitt Shell. The screening is being presented by Elvis Presley Enterprises and co-presented by the Levitt Shell and the Memphis Flyer. It will be free and open to the public.

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Opinion The BruceV Blog

The Great White Nope

If you live in one place for a long time, you tend to get cynical about it. At least that’s been my experience, having lived in such disparate cities as Pittsburgh, Washington D.C., St. Louis, San Francisco, and Columbia, Missouri, over the past 30 years. Long-time residents of all those cities are convinced that their politicians are the crookedest, that their drivers are the worst, that their clerks are the rudest, etc.

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Memphis is no different. To our huge native legion of cynics, we’re “the most racist city;” our politicians are all greedy crooks, our crime problem is the worst in America, etc. etc. (Often, the folks making these remarks are the ones who proudly write letters to the paper about how they’ve “escaped” to Fayette or DeSoto or Tipton counties. I think they’re just lonely out there.)

At any rate, I was reminded of our universal provincialism when I read this article, about how Atlanta, a majority black city, like Memphis, may elect a white mayor for the first time in many years. My first reaction was, HA! See, racial politics — just like Memphis. And, yes, the article does point out how some black leaders are calling on one black candidate to drop out, to help assure that the mayor’s office stays in the hands of an African American. But what really struck me were the following paragraphs:

And while blacks have been the majority population and voting bloc in the city for decades, the demographics have changed in recent years.

A large voting bloc — residents in the city’s public housing — was erased as Atlanta’s crumbling projects were demolished over the past decade. And young professionals, black and white, have flocked to opportunity in the city.

In 2000, Atlanta was 33 percent white and 61 percent black. In 2007, the numbers were 38 percent white and 57 percent black, according to the U.S. Census.

In addition, blacks may no longer feel obligated to elect a black mayor, Boone said.

“You have a young generation of blacks — not native to Atlanta — who don’t necessarily see that as something that has to happen,” Boone said. “They may be staking their vote on matters more critical than race.”

This information truly gives me hope. If Atlanta can finally get past racial politics, so can Memphis. If Atlanta can lure young professionals, black and white, back into the city, so can Memphis. If Atlanta can get beyond “racial-majority rules” politics, so can Memphis. Can’t we?

Just as we look back and are appalled at the firehoses and bombings and injustices endured by those struggling for civil rights in the ’60s, I think the next generation will look back and be appalled at the racial stupidity of the Herenton/ThaddeusMatthews/MikeFleming/SidneyChism/etc. era, when the struggle was all about which skin color gets to wield political power. It won’t happen overnight, but Herenton’s retirement — if the stars are with us — will at least help stem the unbridled cronyism and attendent cynicism of the past few years. Then, it would help if we could elect a mayor who would govern and hire solely on the basis of competence and the best interest of the electorate. After that, the sky’s the limit.

I hope.

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Daily Photo Special Sections

inglourious basterds

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Education Secretary to Memphis, Shelby County: Go for the Gold

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan (left) and U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander listen to Memphis schools superintendent Criner Cash

  • JB
  • Secretary of Education Arne Duncan (left) and U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander listen to Memphis schools superintendent Criner Cash

Challenging Memphis and Shelby County to compete vigorously with other localities for billions of dollars in federal funds, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan met in Memphis this week with U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander and a variety of other political, business, and educational leaders, including 9th district Congressman Steve Cohen, Memphis schools superintendent Criner Cash, and members of the Tennessee legislature.

Duncan and Alexander met on Monday with the others at two local venues — the Memphis Academy of Science and Engineering, where STEM education (for science, technology, engineering, and math) was the subject, and the Soulsville Charter School on McLemore, where the future of charter schools formed the core of a wide-ranging discussion of education.

. Both stops were part of what Duncan has billed as his “Listening and Learning Tour.”

Summing up after the Soulsville conversation, Duncan told the media, “Because of the leadership of the president and the support of the Congress, we’ve got unprecedented discretion and resources. We’ve been able to see dramatic changes around the country in the past seven months, whether it’s 47 states coming together to think about common standards or a number of states, including Tennessee, removing restrictions on innovations, like charter laws.”

Calling himself a “huge fan” of Alexander’s, whose tenure as governor a generation ago was characterized by an a focus on educational change, Duncan, said, “We’d love to see the city and state compete vigorously for funding. We’re looking for dramatic change, not incremental change.” He said more than $10 billion would shortly be available under such sources as “Race to the Top, Teacher Incentive Funds, and Investment in Innovation funds.”

During the discussion at Soulsville, Alexander had recalled the Master Teacher program introduced under his administration as governor 25 years ago to reward innovative teachers and suggested that a local version of it might well qualify for Teacher Incentive Funds.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Flying Saucer Calendar Unveiled; Beer Knurd Contest!

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Last night, the Flying Saucer unveiled its 2009-2010 Beer Knurd calendar. The top Knurds — members of the U.FO. Club who’ve earned multiple commemorative plates by consuming many, many beers — were selected from the company’s 10-plus locations.

One Knurd in Memphis and one in Cordova were calendar models.

Feast your eyes below.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Product Test: Fleischmann’s Pizza Crust Yeast

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Last month, I happened to get my hands on a three-packet “advance copy” of Fleischmann’s Pizza Crust Yeast.

And in short order, I messed the first batch and then the second batch. Since the product wasn’t yet available (it hit the shelves last week), I approached the third batch with renewed focus.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Pie for Life

Royers pecan pie

  • Paula Forbes
  • Royer’s pecan pie

Saw this on eatmedaily.com about a Texas diner offering a pie a month for the rest of your life. The cost depends on how old you are.

ht: eater.com

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News

Council Delays Consolidation Committee Vote

The City Council delayed voting for at least two weeks on a resolution to set a new Charter Commission for the purpose of creating a metro government.

“I’m in favor of consolidation,” said councilman Jim Strickland, “but I’m not convinced that next year is the right time to move forward.”

For more, visit Mary Cashiola’s In the Bluff blog.