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News

Another Local Business Moving To Overton Square

Local Gastopub has signed a lease for the old Yosemite Sam’s property at the corner of Madison and Cooper in Overton Square. The property will house a second location for the downtown gourmet pub grub eatery. Bianca Phillips has the story.

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News News Blog

First Lease Signed in Overton Square

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Local Gastopub has signed a lease for the old Yosemite Sam’s property at the corner of Madison and Cooper in Overton Square. The property will house a second location for the downtown gourmet pub grub eatery.

This marks the first lease signed in the Loeb Properties plan to redevelop historic Overton Square and the second restaurant this month to announce plans for the area. Hot dog and Mexican restaurant Chiwawa recently announced plans to open in the old Chicago Pizza Factory building on Madison.

The 100-year-old building at 2126 Madison housed Yosemite Sam’s for 39 years. Said Loeb Properties vice-president of leasing Aaron Petree: “It’s always been one of the gateways to Overton Square, and that will continue with Local.”

After Yosemite Sam’s closed last August, the property underwent renovations for what Loeb’s Tom Hayes called “major structural problems.”

“My working concept has been a ‘rebirth’ because the building was at the end of its functional life, but it
had good bones, and given its history, it was worth saving,” said Hayes, vice-president of construction for Loeb Properties.

Loeb Properties plans to invest about $20 million to redevelop Overton Square into a thriving arts & entertainment district.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

YoLo, Cheffie’s: A Tale of Two Gelatos

‘Round about the time that Memphis saw the great second coming of frozen yogurt, someone told me about the divide that separates the ice cream lover from the fro-yo lover. Passions run high!, he said.

I don’t get this at all, but, truth be told, in my book, frozen treats rank as such: ice cream > Gelato > frozen yogurt.

And, so I prefer ice cream, I did manage to choke down some gelato recently …

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Above is the Payday from YoLo (about $3.50).

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Art Exhibit M

Cinema 7 Bike Parade and Installation

Overton Park and Rust Hall will become a playground for creativity on Saturday, as the Memphis College of Art’s Cinema 7 ensemble hosts an “art bike” parade and the (interactive) installation exhibit, ENTER=ACTIVE. Cinema 7 is a collective of MCA students comprised of an experimental video production class, taught by Associate Professor Jill Wissmiller.

In the past, the class was more studio-centric, but this semester, Wissmiller says that discussion of the concept of play led the tight-knit group to attempt to re-envision the conventions of a screen – originally with an exhibition at Power House for this year’s Live from Memphis Music Video Showcase, called Triggered. Using the interactive software, Isadora, the students created different programs as artistic games in which an outside user could control and compose both audio and video.

Setting the stage for adults to play like kids and thinking about art in a novel way became the focus of a larger project and the basis of ENTER=ACTIVE, on display from 8 to 10 p.m. at Rust Hall.

Race to the Top

  • Race to the Top

Kaitlyn Chandler created a piece for the sidewalk in front of Rust that acts as a full-body music-maker, wherein a projector and camera communicate to trigger sounds when someone dances on the colored grid below. Amanda Willoughby made a racing game for the facade of the building, where players will use standard video game controllers to navigate mazes, also mapped to color grids over Rust’s iconic screens. Working with the concept of digital painting, Stephen Harris’ piece will take viewers into the separate layers of a painting with a 3-D image projected onto a traditional canvas surface.

Music Maker Grid

  • Music Maker Grid

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The bike parade is set to start at 3 p.m., with bikes decorated by MCA students as well as members of the community. Envisioned by Cinema 7 member, Aimee Easter, the parade is intended to promote awareness, encourage bicycle travel, and provide an unusual opportunity for creative expression. People are welcome to decorate bikes on-site and anyone can participate, with absolutely no registration required. Check-in for art bikes will take place in front of Rust Hall at 2 p.m. and live music will be going on all day.

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News

It Ain’t Over Yet, Griz Fans

Frank Murtaugh has five reasons why there is still light at the end the tunnel for the Grizzlies against the Clips.

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From My Seat Sports

There is Hope, Grizzlies Fans

Back away from the ledge, Grizzlies fans. I’m here to tap the reset button on the 2012 playoffs.

Two weeks ago, radio host Brett Norsworthy asked me — live, on the air — if I thought the Memphis Grizzlies could reach the NBA Finals. I’m expected to have a stance or opinion when thrown a question by Stats (or his partner, Dave Woloshin), but with this query lobbed my way … I paused. Longer than is comfortable on live radio. I eventually offered a tongue-stumbler, along the lines of, “I’m not sure if I’d go that far, but …”

No more waffling. Why can’t these Grizzlies reach the NBA Finals? No stumbling here at my keyboard. I believe Memphis can win the Western Conference championship. However crushing Sunday night’s Game 1 loss may feel this morning, it was Game 1. In the first round. Here are five points in the Grizzlies’ favor:

• Trending Upward

Finishing the regular season on a roll matters in the NBA. Last year’s champs — the Dallas Mavericks — won their last four games, a convincing righting of a ship that was listing to the tune of four straight losses in early April. Memphis won its last six games this season, and needed every victory to secure the franchise’s first home-court advantage in a playoff series. Among the six teams the Grizzlies beat, only one (Orlando) will compete in the playoffs, and the Magic is without its best player (All-NBA center Dwight Howard). But so what? Winning is infectious. The core of this team’s roster (even Rudy Gay in a coat and tie) enjoyed a big taste of the playoff pie last spring. They’re surely excited at the chance for another run, but in no way timid before the brighter lights. And if they needed the proverbial postseason wake-up call, consider it delivered in the fourth quarter of Game 1.

• Thievery Doesn’t Slump

The Grizzlies have three of the top 15 steals leaders in the NBA in Mike Conley (136), Tony Allen (104), and Rudy Gay (95). The NBA playoffs are as much about disrupting an opponent’s attack as they are about executing with the ball in your hands. Chris Paul and Blake Griffin give the Los Angeles Clippers a star swagger that the Grizzlies can’t claim, but you have to believe Paul and Griffin aren’t dancing at the prospect of finding their shots under the kind of duress the Grizzlies will provide. (For the duration of this column, we’ll ignore that now-infamous fourth quarter.)

• Role Players Elevated

The extended absence of stars have but one silver lining: Reserves build new credentials. There’s no way Marreese Speights starts 54 games and averages 22.4 minutes for Memphis had former All-Star Zach Randolph not been sidelined for 38 games this winter. In the first round, the Grizzlies are tasked with slowing down the rim-rattling Griffin, and it will take a committee of defenders, including Randolph … and Speights. It’s not so much if an NBA team is fully healthy, but when they are. If Randolph can approach his level of play from last year’s postseason run (and he wasn’t close Sunday night), Speights will mean unforeseen depth, especially on the defensive end.

• Home Court Grind

I like the intangible contrast of Memphis fans vs. Los Angeles fans. These are two franchises with very few notches on their playoff bedposts. Fans in the Staples Center (for at least Games 3 and 4) will include a few celebrities interested in being different (from the Laker crowd). Fans in FedExForum will (still) be interested in seeing their team prove they belong among the highest ranks of the world’s greatest basketball league. And I believe such an edge can rub off on players.

• Winnable West

It wouldn’t be fair to call the Western Conference weak. Not with the likes of San Antonio (10 wins to finish the regular season), Oklahoma City (three-time scoring champ Kevin Durant), and the Lakers (Kobe, again, and an energized Andrew Bynum) in the mix. But do any of those teams look unbeatable? (Granted, Memphis was 2-9 against the trio this season.) Should the Grizzlies get by the Clippers, they’ll likely face San Antonio in a rematch the Spurs would relish. But I still like Memphis youth against the aging top seed. Then, presumably, the Thunder or Lakers in the conference finals. Too much speculation with but one playoff game in the books. But to answer Brett Norsworthy’s question two weeks late (with a question of my own): Why not?

And let’s remember, ye of little faith: Just as it’s hard to blow a 27-point lead in a playoff game, it’s hard to build a 27-point lead in a playoff game. I’d like to think the real Grizzlies were playing over the first three quarters of Game 1.

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Sports

99-98: Sports Perfection and Imperfection at a High Level

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Forget the Grizzlies for a minute and think, instead, about the 18,000 towel-waving fans who were at the game and the thousands more who watched it on television. How are we supposed to deal with that shocking collapse and 99-98 loss that left us stunned when we went to bed last night and still stunned this morning when we got up to go to work?

It’s cold comfort, but never again are we likely see such perfection at such a high level. That goes for the Clippers, who played just about perfectly on offense and defense during their 26-1 run in the fourth quarter, and the Grizzlies who, individually and collectively, played perfectly awful offensively and defensively by the standards of a high school or college team much less an NBA team playing at home in the Playoffs.

For the Grizzlies to lose, both things had to happen again and again and again. And, lucky us, we saw it.

The Clippers not only had to make lots of baskets, they had to make them quickly. Their near-perfect shooting was aided and abetted by the Grizzlies near-perfect lack of defense.

And the baskets could not be two-pointers; to catch up, most of them had to be three-pointers. Again, the Grizzlies obliged by making sure no one obstructed Nick Young in the corners as he poured in three of them in a little over a minute. Perfect shooting and perfect incompetence.

The Clippers also needed to shoot some free throws, because that stops the clock. Who better to shoot them than star guard Chris Paul? So, with 23 seconds left, the Grizzlies Tony Allen, one of the best defenders in the league, fouled him and Paul put the Clippers ahead.

The Clippers had to play perfect defense and do it without fouling and sending the choking Grizzlies to the free-throw line where they could score some easy points. The Clippers swarmed the Grizzlies, who obligingly turned the ball over or took low-percentage shots and missed them. Zach Randolph actually air-balled a one-footer at one point from one side of the rim to the other, which is nearly impossible to do when you are six feet nine inches tall.

The Grizzlies not only had to turn the ball over or miss their initial shots each possession, they had to miss their follow-up shots and not gain control of the rebound so they could get a fresh 24-second clock and run out the clock or force the Clippers to foul. The odds against this happening on long errant shots that produce long rebounds that guards can gather in are, well, long. Again, perfect incompetence.

The Clippers’ coach, Vinny Del Negro, had to have the perfect combination of shooters and defenders on the floor, which he did. Grizzlies’ coach Lionel Hollins had to have the perfect combination of offensive players who suddenly lost their shooting touch and walked the ball up the court to allow the Clippers to set their defense, and defenders who would not molest Young in the corner. Perfection achieved.

In the final seconds, the Grizzlies’ best player, Rudy Gay, had the ball with nine seconds left, which is an eternity in basketball. With a one-point lead, the Clippers could not foul him or the Grizz probably would at last reach the elusive 100-point mark and win 100-99. Gay had to miss. Which he did.

It was agonizing, shocking, awful, and, considering what had gone on previously in the fourth quarter, perfect. And we saw it, or at least those of us who didn’t head for the exits early or turn off the television assuming the lead was safe even though our team was clearly in trouble saw it. It was epic and mathematically improbable. And, with any luck, we will never ever see it again.

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News

Heart, Grit, and Groan

http://www.memphisflyer.com/BeyondtheArc/archives/2012/04/30/game-1-clippers-99-grizzlies-98-griz-suffer-worst-collapse-in-franchise-history

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Fold by Memphis Democrats Opened Door to 2012 Suburban Vote on Schools

State Senator Mark Norris

  • JB
  • State Senator Mark Norris

Give it to Mark Norris: The Senate Republican Leader from Collierville has managed to pull off his deftest maneuver yet, one whose enormous consequences for the future of education in Shelby County cannot be overstated.

In steering legislation through the General Assembly, at what was literally the eleventh hour, that enabled Memphis suburban municipalities to vote this year on creating their own school districts, Norris has probably advanced the schedule for creating such districts by a full year, and that is crucial.

Had not a House-Senate conference committee finally okayed on Friday Norris’ amendment to a bill by state Rep. Richard Montgomery (R-Sevierville), HB1105/SB`1923, which originally had nothing to do with Shelby County, the mid-March opinion by state Attorney General Robert Cooper on the unconstitutionality of a suburban vote this year would have stood.

Without the passage of the amended Montgomery bill, the suburbs would have been forced to wait until August 2013 even to launch their initiatives and, like it or not, would have had to spend the 2013-2014 school year within an all-Shelby County Unified District.

Although, as Bartlett Mayor Keith McDonald, unofficial spokesperson for the municipal-school movement, has vowed, he and other suburban leaders in Germantown, Collierville, Bartlett, Lakeland, Arlington, and Millington would have kept trying, the enforced year-long membership in a Unified District would inevitably have dissipated their momentum.

Residents of those communities might have developed second thoughts in the course of a school year in which academic affairs conceivably could have gone smoothly, with attendance zones functioning as usual, and with the possibility that a known quantity like current county superintendent John Aitken might then have been hired as superintendent for the Unified District.

Suburban voters could also have seen their resolve for independent school systems progressively weakened by alternative forecasts of tax levies and other expenditures conspicuously less rosy and likely more realistic than those that were presented to them this past year by their consultants at Southern Educational Strategies.

Who knows what would have happened? Norris has kept it from happening with some typically sophisticated sleight-of-hand. And he was aided by lackluster performance from potential opponents in the legislature and elsewhere.

The Senate Majority Leader’s insistence on sticking with another piece of school-related legislation initiated by himself, HB3234/SB2908, despite that bill’s having been neutered into meaninglessness, had puzzled onlookers, but this past week’s denouement may have clarified Norris’ strategy.

That other bill, which had begun as an ostensible effort to advance the date of eligibility for suburban districts from August 2013 to January 1, 2013, was finally moved through the legislature in a form that merely repeated the August 2013 date and restated the terms of the existing Norris-Todd Act of 2011.

But in negotiations with Democratic legislators, specifically the two who were named to the conference committee for the now-altered Montgomery bill that opened the door to suburban referenda in 2012, the parallel bill by Norris, meaningless in its own terms, became something of a red herring, a diversion.

Specifically, state Rep. Antonio Parkinson and state Senator Reginald Tate, the two Memphis Democrats who were named to the conference committee, seemed to suffer from some confusion as to which bill did what and which bill seemed to have incurred resistance and even, it almost seemed, which bill they were supposed to be working on.

At one point Norris appears to have indicated to Parkinson, who had inquired about a resolution from the Shelby County Commission opposing the referendum initiative, that he, Norris, had communicated with Commissioner Steve Mulroy, sponsor of that resolution, and “worked it out,” reassuring Mulroy that the bill in question did not alter the scheme of things.

Tate, too, would later indicate that he believed the bill before the conference committee, the one originally by Montgomery on an unrelated issue regarding Tennessee school boards but now amended to authorize suburban referenda in Shelby County, made no fundamental alterations in the Shelby County situation.

Whether convinced on the point or not, both Parkinson and Tate would sign the conference committee report on HB1105/SB1923, the amended Montgomery bill,allowing it to be presented to the full House on Friday as unanimously approved, a fact diminishing potential opposition on the floor to a general measure which, in an amended clause relating only to Shelby County, specifically countered the Attorney General’s opinion and authorized the very 2012 referenda which Cooper had deemed unconstitutional.

The bill passed 61-25 in the House, where there was more confusion as to which of two measures was being considered, and seemed assured of passage on Monday in the Senate.

As for the conversation between Norris and Mulroy in which things were allegedly “worked out,” the Memphis county commissioner insists that no such conversation, or any conversation at all between himself and Norris, ever took place.

Mulroy says he did receive an email from Norris informing him, accurately, that HB3234/HB 2908 made no fundamental changes and advising him not to worry. The email made no mention, however, of HB1105/HB1923, the now-amended Montgomery bill that authorized immediate suburban efforts to create municipal school districts, and it was that bill, of course, which was the actual subject of the conference committee report, and which had been the subject of the County Commission’s resolution of opposition.

It is a moot question as to whether Norris actively fomented confusion concerning the actual meaning of the legislation which surrogates finally guided through the House on Friday, after two aborted earlier attempts to have his amendment accepted there.

He may merely have taken advantage of the fact of confusion regarding two distinctly different bills. He may even have been relatively open and above-board in playing his hand and can plead in all candor that it’s not his fault if others misread his cards.

In any case, what’s done is done, the suburbs will apparently get to vote this year and to have their independent districts the year after, and the Unified School District will most likely kick off in August 2013 without participation by suburban Shelby County schools.

All of this is for better or for worse and can be argued either way. It is a stretch, however, to suggest that it was inevitable.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Game 1: Clippers 99, Grizzlies 98 — Griz Suffer Worst Collapse in Franchise History

Can the Grizzlies regroup after the worst loss in franchise history?

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Can the Grizzlies regroup after the worst loss in franchise history?

“They call themselves grit and grind. We kind of took that role in the 4th quarter,” Clippers point guard Chris Paul said a few minutes after his team completed a 28-3 closing run to register one of the greatest fourth-quarter swings in NBA playoff history and leave a capacity FedExForum crowd in stunned silence.

In what was every bit as much of a collapse as a comeback, the Grizzlies probably deserved that shot.

Through three quarters everything was going right in the first home playoff opener in franchise history. As is so often the case when the Grizzlies’ offense is at its best, Marc Gasol and Mike Conley — with four assists each — were directing a balanced attack as the Grizzlies sprinted out to a 34-16 run at the end of the first quarter.

When a 20-point Grizzlies lead eroded to 11 late in the second quarter — mostly with Gasol and Conley on the bench — the team responded with an 8-0 run to end the first half, capped by a buzzer-beating Gasol dunk off a Conley feed.

When the Clippers opened the third quarter on a 5-0 mini-run to get the Grizzlies lead under 15, the Grizzlies went on a five-minute 18-6 run to rebuild a commanding lead. It was during this stretch that Conley hit four consecutive threes and the Clippers’ defense seemed beyond repair.

But the third time was in no way a charm.