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Intermission Impossible Theater

Things That Go Bump: Chatterbox uploads another batch of spooky stories

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I simply cannot believe that I missed it. While advising readers to celebrate Halloween with zombies, shape shifters, or Edward Gorey, I totally forgot about what appears to be a real fright night tradition in the making. Like aliens from The Outer Limits, Memphis’ Chatterbox Audio Theater took over the airwaves at WKNO radio on Halloween night. For the second year in a row the Chaterboxers kept listners on the edge of their seats with tales of supernatural horror, brutal revenge, and monsters from the pits of hell. And I forgot about it completely.

But here’s the good news: It’s all online. Part one can be found here. And here’s part two.

If you liked those you might want to re-visit Chatterbox’s 2008 Halloween broadcast. And the group’s more recent adaptation of James Joyce’s The Dead.

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Memphis Gaydar News

AIDS Funding Workshop

Community service providers interested in helping people living with HIV and AIDS may be eligible to receive funds from the Memphis Ryan White Part A program. The program, in existence since 2007, awards over $5 million annually to organizations helping patients in Shelby, Fayette, Tipton, Desoto, Marshall, Tate, Tunica, and Crittenden counties.

Ryan White

  • Ryan White

Any group able to provide services in outpatient medical care, AIDS drug assistance, oral health, substance abuse treatment, home-delivered meals, or psychological support services should attend the Ryan White Part A pre-application workshop at United Way of the Mid-South (6775 Lenox Center Court, Suite 200) on Thursday, Nov. 12 at 9 a.m.

The program was named for the now-deceased Ryan White, a teenager who contracted the disease through a blood transfusion in 1984. White was kicked out of his high school after administrators learned he had AIDS.

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News

Opened Records

Memphis mayor A C Wharton signed an executive order this morning expanding the public’s access to City records.

I wasn’t there — deadline day and all — but the order dictates that the salaries of city employees will be posted to the city website. The website will also include a list of city contractors and the size of their contracts.

“Personnel costs and outside contracts comprise the majority of the city budget,” Wharton was quoted as saying in a release. “Taxpayers should know how those funds are being spent and with whom.”

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News

Meeting Scheduled About Plans for Overton Square

If you were one of the people upset about Anderton’s, you might also be interested in the future of nearby Overton Square. Mary Cashiola has news.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

The Vegetable Plate Conundrum

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Last week, coworkers Greg, Pam, and Leonard and I went to the Blue Monkey. I ordered the vegetable plate, and just as the waitress was out-of-reach I began lamenting my choices.

“I should have ordered the tomatoes,” I said.

“Why didn’t you?” Greg asked.

“I panicked.”

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News

The Iverson Debacle: Men Behaving Badly

Chris Herrington takes an insightful look at the big meltdown in GrizzlyLand.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Ford and Gibson Battle Through 24 Ballots, But There’s No Winner for Interim County Mayor

Really, it lasted less than five hours from beginning to end, but Monday’s meeting of the Shelby County Commission — the core of which was an effort to name an interim county mayor to serve until the general election next August — had the feel of a marathon.

The wear and tear was such that even the two commissioners — acting chairman Sidney Chism and Henri Brooks — who had vowed midway of the event to continue all night if necessary to get a winner, were content by late afternoon to accept a postponement until a special meeting of Tuesday, November 17, when those members of the commission eligible to vote will try again.

Though commissioner George Flinn and county CAO Jim Huntzicker (both briefly) and erstwhile commission chair and acting mayor Joyce Avery (intermittently) were also candidates, Monday’s session was essentially an unyielding standoff between commissioners Joe Ford and J.W. Gibson.

Both are Democrats, though each would boast — and maintain — support across political boundaries. Their support was indeed perfectly balanced. Except on those few occasions when Avery or Flinn or Huntzicker could claim a vote or two, the final tally for each of the 24 ballots was an unvarying 5 to 5.

Ford was supported by Democrats Matt Kuhn, Steve Mulroy, and Chism and by Republicans Mike Ritz and Wyatt Bunker. Gibson’s backers were Democrats Deidre Malone, James Harvey, and Brooks, and Republicans Flinn and Mike Carpenter. Not only was party not a major factor, neither was ideology, as each support group ran the gamut from right to left.

Commissioners Gibson and Ford listen as acting county mayor Joyce Avery makes the case for herself.

  • JB
  • Commissioners Gibson and Ford listen as acting county mayor Joyce Avery makes the case for herself.

What did figure were complex personal relationships (both pro and con), paybacks for previous alliances, patently opportunistic calculations on the part of some commissioners, and suchlike. The only time the standoff became heated was when Huntzicker was nominated by Malone as an expedient to break the impasse.

In addressing the commission for the nth time on behalf of his candidacy, Ford denounced the “former administration” (current Memphis mayor A C Wharton’s as much as Huntzicker’s) for fiscal irresponsibility. In his turn, Gibon took verbal potshots at the “negative old politics,” which he linked to Ford by name.

Malone was not the only one who tried to end the stalemate. At one point, Harvey implied unmistakably that he might consider going over to the other side if another Gibson advocate would go with him. None did. So Harvey, too, stayed put.

Former Memphis city councilman John Vergos was a presence in the county auditorium through Monday’s session, and he made it clear that he hoped to be considered as a compromise candidate. His time didn’t come Monday, and it may never.

Between now and next week, other third-party names will be considered, and the partisans of Messrs. Ford and Gibson (and mayhap of Avery and Flinn as well) will sound out their colleagues on such deals (Sunshine Law or no Sunshine Law) as may break the tie and produce a winner.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Knowledge Bowl: Bartlett Panthers vs. West Memphis Christian Black Knights

Knowledge Bowl, Match 2: Bartlett Panthers vs. West Memphis Christian Black Knights. Aired November 7th, 2009.

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Bartlett:
Casey (Captain), Senior
Davis, Senior
Macy, Senior
Chris, Junior
Alternate: Asher

West Memphis Christian:
Timothy (Captain), Senior
Braden, Senior
Shea, Junior
Michael, Junior
Alternate: Jonathan

Results:
Round One: Bartlett 130, WMC 30
Round Two: Bartlett 110, WMC 65
Round Three (Lightning Round): Bartlett: 10, WMC 10
Final: Bartlett 250, WMC 105

The Game: The only real tense moments in what was ultimately a pretty dominating game was about halfway through the second round. With the answer “Quadratic,” by West Memphis Christian’s Timothy, the Black Knights pulled the score to 130-100. Then Bartlett answered the next five correct toss-ups (and three bonuses) and put it out of reach for good.

Some might say there was a conspiracy afoot. West Memphis Christian reduces to WMC — the call letters for a TV rival to News Channel 3. Well, that was the kind of thing I thought about while scrawling out my voluminous notes for this first round match. I took two-and-a-half pages of notes, including every correct, incorrect, and bonus answer. I may not do that again, but I wasn’t sure at the time what info I might need for promised statistics. (See more, below.)

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Beyond the Arc Sports

The Iverson Debacle: Men Behaving Badly

The Iverson Era was supposed to be fun and interesting even if — especially if! — it descended into chaos. Then why am I bored with it already?

  • The Iverson Era was supposed to be fun and interesting even if — especially if! — it descended into chaos. Then why am I bored with it already?

I spent this past weekend in deepest, darkest Arkansas, in the internet-free zone that is my mother’s house, and when I finally returned to town Sunday night it was into a lengthy to-do list of on- (and, um, past-) deadline Flyer and Memphis magazine work. This is all to explain why I am the very last person with any reason to comment on the latest twist in the Allen Iverson saga to get around to doing so.

The one benefit of coming in last is being able to gauge the general reaction. The bad part is that pretty much anything worth saying on the subject has already been said. So I’m going to try to keep my commentary brief. (Warning: When it comes to basketball, I always fail to live up to this promise.)

Predictably, the local media reaction has seemed to be a matter of choosing sides, assigning primary blame to Michael Heisley, Lionel Hollins, or Allen Iverson. But I refuse to choose sides in a debacle in which everyone comes out looking bad. A pox on all their houses.

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News

Bernie Madoff Author to Speak at MJCC

Nobody could believe it — the profits: $65 billion. Nobody wanted to believe it — the scam: a Ponzi scheme. The scam artist: “Uncle Bernie,” aka Bernard Madoff.

Erin Arvedlund didn’t believe those profits either, so she investigated Madoff for Barron’s back in 2001. Now she’s speaking at the MJCC.