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News

Worst Neighborhoods in America, 2010

Last year, when Annesdale-Snowden was chosen as one of the most dangerous neighborhoods in America, neighbors did not take the designation kindly.

Now two new Memphis neighborhoods have that opportunity.

WalletPop recently named the area around Florida Street as the country’s 12th most dangerous neighborhood and choose N. Danny Thomas Boulevard as the 19th.

WalletPop’s data suggested that in the Florida Street area, almost 40 percent of the population is under 17. It seems fitting, then, that the area is less educated than in most U.S. neighborhoods, but it’s also among the 15 percent lowest income neighborhoods in the country.

The Danny Thomas area fares better. Though the Uptown area doesn’t seem to be within Walletpop’s borders, the site’s data characterizes the neighborhood as trendy, walkable, and suburban. (Ed. note: !?!)

As for the rest of the list … Four of the neighborhoods were in the Atlanta area, one — number 10 — was in Chattanooga, and three were in Las Vegas.

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Special Sections

Who Was “Cotton-Eyed Joe”??

Cotton-EyedJoeAd-Mary61.jpg

This curious quarter-page ad ran in the back of a 1961 yearbook for St. Mary’s Episcopal School. It did not appear in yearbooks before or after that. I checked. Just that one year.

So the obvious question is: Who was “Cotton-Eyed Joe” and why was he memorialized in the St. Mary’s yearbook in 1961? In “loving” memory, no less.

I will patiently wait for an answer, dear readers. C’mon, I can’t do this without you.

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Daily Photo Special Sections

valerie june

Categories
Special Sections

The “Hollywood” Showboat – 1933

HollywoodShowboatAd-1933.jpg

Back in the early 1930s, Memphians could go downtown to the various theaters, which were gradually being converted from vaudeville and stage shows into “moving picture” theaters, but we also had another entertainment option that’s no longer available: showboats.

Poring over a November 1933 issue of The Commercial Appeal, I noticed this ad for a production of “St. Elmo” aboard the Hollywood showboat.

Reserved seats were 40 cents, which seems a bit steep for the time, but maybe this was a classy boat, and a good production that was well worth the price of admission.

What’s interesting is where the boat was docked — near “Second Street and the Wolf River Bridge.” I would have thought they would have just tied up at the cobblestones, about where the Memphis Queen Line is located today. But back in the 1930s, the riverfront was considerably busier than it is now, so maybe this was the only place the boat could stay for extended periods of time. I really don’t know. Do you?

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Vintage Apron Giveaway

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Flyer food writer Pam Denney has a knack for finding the niftiest vintage kitchenware — plates, casserole dishes, measuring cups, and Pyrex.

One of Pam’s specialties is vintage aprons, such as the one pictured above and which she has generously donated for a Hungry Memphis giveaway.

To enter, post a comment about your messiest kitchen accident.

We’ll pick a winner later this week.

Categories
News

Tiger Green

Tomorrow is the University of Memphis’ Tiger Blue Goes Green day, complete with a Sustainable Design Showcase in the third floor ballroom in the University Center and exhibits on recycling, the campus gardening initiative, and eco-job opportunities on the Student Plaza.

U of M President Shirley Raines will kick off the event at 10 a.m. The Physical plant will display its cost-saving building improvements, but for my money, I wouldn’t want to miss the department of architecture’s “bioplastic lights.”

In addition, the U of M Cycling Club is hosting its first Bike to Campus Day. They are planning several group rides to campus, about two to three miles in length leaving around 9 a.m. and converging on campus at the fountain near the Administration building at 9:30 a.m. To find out more about specific group rides, click on the Facebook page.

Tell me that bike isnt Tiger Blue and that other person has gone green! (From South Koreas Hi Seoul Festival, NOT the U of M.)

  • Tell me that bike isn’t Tiger Blue and that other person has gone green! (From South Korea’s Hi Seoul Festival, NOT the U of M.)

Also, if anyone wants to play roving reporter for me tomorrow — I’ll be on deadline — I’m more than open to hearing from volunteers.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Larry Porter on Recruiting (When Losing)

I found this question (and Coach Porter’s answer) provocative, from today’s press luncheon:

Q: Do results like that against Tulsa (a 48-7 loss) have an impact on recruiting?

A: Not when you are relentless, give great effort and have a good game plan. I mean, you have to have a game plan for recruiting just as much as for opponents. I don’t see that as an issue for us. Hopefully, here within a week or so, you guys will see a couple, three, or four guys added to our commitment list. So, to me, that should help based on guys knowing that we need help. (We will continue to put) ourselves in position to keep selling our message and making sure that we let kids know where we are. In fact, I encourage our staff to call guys even more so. Some people when you’re not doing as well like to hide. You still have to call with that same tone and same energy and let guys know the future of this program is very promising.

FOOTNOTE: Porter didn’t share any specifics on quarterback Ryan Williams’ injury, or the likelihood of Williams playing this Saturday at Louisville.

Categories
Art Exhibit M

Anguish

Rosemary Laing, a dozen useless actions for grieving blondes #5, 2009

  • C-Type photograph, 30.50 x 52.562 in (77.50 x 133.50 cm) Courtesy Galerie Lelong, New York © Rosemary Laing
  • Rosemary Laing, a dozen useless actions for grieving blondes #5, 2009

Perhaps one of the art events I’m most excited about in October is Anguish, an exhibition of works from nine different artists on the theme of, well, anguish.

It certainly isn’t an easy topic to explore, but one of the rawest of human emotions is the inspiration for curator Cynthia Thompson’s upcoming exhibition at the new Memphis College of Art Graduate School on South Main.

“The idea for this exhibition has been kicking around in my head for over a year,” says Thompson. “I like to come up with a concept and find artists whose work reflects that in different ways. It’s challenging. And I do it also because I like to challenge the viewers. I think it’s important to bring work to Memphis that people can not only view, but experience.”

Categories
News

Fantasy Football? Why?

Frank Murtaugh says he doesn’t get fantasy football — for lots of reasons.

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Fantasy Football: What’s the Deal?

I don’t get fantasy football.

Now, I generally understand the draw of the enterprise for so many millions. (Like Lady Gaga, whether or not you enjoy the phenomenon, it’s large enough that you better pay attention.) I’ve been at a blackjack table, and I’ve bet on horses in the Kentucky Derby. There’s a thrill to “being in the game” that’s hard to match, even if your vantage point is a bar stool. But I can’t grasp the attraction of splitting my rooting interest in any number of directions, with the primary goal of appearing more clever for having chosen those disparate interests.

On the playgrounds where I grew up, kids were ripped apart for waffling on their favorite team. (I did some of the ripping.) The quickest ticket to exile from the Island of True Fans were the words, “But my second-favorite team is … .” Even as a child, I was all-in when it came to the teams I cheered, be it baseball season, football season, or those exotic glimpses of professional hockey (the Atlanta Flames!) I caught, courtesy of Ted Turner’s super-station. The idea of cheering a quarterback wearing different colors than my team of choice was as foreign to my way of fandom as would be a Batman-Joker crime-fighting partnership. “Team first!” was the battle cry.

But now in the realm of fantasy football, the Joker and Batman can be fast friends, with no collateral damage to “real-world” football as we view the standings on Monday morning. Somewhere, there’s a Tennessee Titan fan — probably a season-ticket holder — who “owns” Eli Manning for his (or her) fantasy team. On September 25th, that fan had to be giddy over his team’s real-world victory over the Giants, an easier-than-expected 29-10 road win. But then, Peyton’s kid brother threw a pair of interceptions with nary a touchdown pass against the Titans. This couldn’t help the fan’s fantasy score, could it? (Well, Eli did pass for 386 yards, so all was not lost. A real-world win, a fantasy wash, at worst.) But what if Manning had led the Giants to victory that Sunday? How does our Titan fan go to bed that night? A better-looking score for his fantasy league … and one game less likely to see a playoff team in a stadium he can actually visit.

I don’t mean to beat up on the Titans, but let’s consider Chris Johnson’s 2009 season. Tennessee’s star tailback became just the sixth man in NFL history to rush for 2,000 yards in a season. Add the 16 touchdowns Johnson scored, and he had to be a fantasy gold mine for “owners” savvy enough to have “drafted” him before the season began. Back in real-world football, though, Johnson’s exploits were good enough to earn his team an 8-8 record, mediocrity defined. Fantasy football, it turns out, is just that.

When I was in sixth grade, I decided a way I could fully engage in every Major League Baseball game or NFL contest would be to rank every team — 26 baseball clubs at the time, 28 football — in order of my personal preference. I’d then have a rooting interest whether it was the St. Louis Cardinals against the Chicago Cubs, or the Cleveland Indians against the Seattle Mariners. When I showed the rankings to my dad, he laughed. Out loud. It’s the only time I can remember my father laughing at something I took seriously. He was wise enough to explain the wasted energy of creating an emotional connection where it didn’t already exist. Passion steers us enough over the course of our lives without having to be injected into a game between one’s 14th- and 22nd-ranked football teams.

When I have my journalist’s hat on, it’s a challenge to be objective — dispassionate, neutral — at an event where thousands of other people are cheering one team or the other. Sports are more about what our hearts tell us than any message our brain might try and get across. Fantasy football requires a fan to go the opposite extreme from “no cheering in the press box.” In fantasy football, you’re expected to cheer every game, or more precisely, every player in every game who might stand to gain you points, and another step toward a fantasy championship.

Whether it’s “old-school” or anachronistic, I remain a team-first guy. (In modern parlance, “It’s the name on the front of the jersey.”) Jerry Seinfeld would surely scoff at my choosing a certain color of laundry over another. But being all-in has its virtues. The only points I add up at game’s end are those on the scoreboard. And when my team of choice happens to have more than its opponent … well, it feels real.