Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

LGBT Family-Friendly Scavenger Hunt

photo-scavenger-hunt-2010.jpg

Get your smart phone cameras ready. The first annual LGBT Scavenger Hunt and Family Day is set for Saturday, April 20th at Overton Park.

Anyone who wishes to participate should arrive at the park at 9 a.m. for muffins and juice and a briefing on the hunt rules. The scavenger hunt will begin at 10 a.m. All members of each team must fit into one vehicle, and each team must have one camera.

Participants will snap pictures of items they find throughout the hunt, and each photo is worth five points.
There are some opportunities for bonus points as well. The hunt is open to all ages. Winners will be chosen at the end of the event. Prizes include certificates, trophies, and a Makeda’s Cookies.

For more information, check out the event’s Facebook page.

Categories
Opinion

Rating UM President Shirley Raines

Shirley_Raines.jpg

University of Memphis President Dr. Shirley Raines is leaving in June. I was only on the campus a dozen or so times during her years, and often as not it was for a press conference involving football or basketball or the athletic director. So I did not follow her career first hand, but I disagree with those who are saying her biggest failing was the on-campus stadium issue.

Tellingly, it was former Mayor Willie Herenton who first broached the idea of a new stadium, in a surprise announcement during a press conference on New Year’s Day that wasn’t even staffed by the daily paper. At no time after that do I remember the university’s A-List donors to the athletic department publicly clamoring for a new stadium to be built on campus or anywhere else. Rather, there was support, admittedly tepid, for keeping the home field in the Liberty Bowl Stadium and fixing it up. If Mike Rose, Fred Smith, and Brad Martin had joined Harold Byrd in his call for a new stadium then Raines would have signed on too, I believe. Instead she threw it to a committee. Big deal, that is pretty standard procedure.

The biggest disgrace of the last 12 years was the Derrick Rose entrance exam farce. All he had to do was give a sample of his handwriting, which he refused to do, to clear up the matter. So the university athletic department leadership and administration including Raines backed Rose’s sham play and jumped on the NCAA and the testing services. Rose was soon gone, with John Calipari following, and the NCAA sanctions at about the same time. The administration’s response should have been, “Young man, make what choices you must, but if you are part of this university know that we will in no way be complicit in any shenanigans or cover-up involving your entrance tests.”

My visits to the university for academic affairs were few and far between, but I always thought the campus looked very nice and I would have been proud to have sent my children to school there if that had been their desire. Dr. Raines has a couple more months before she leaves, and it isn’t realistic to expect current faculty and staff to objectively evaluate her years. So I asked my friend Bob Levey, the former Washington Post columnist who held the Hardin Chair of Excellence in Journalism, for his thoughts. This is what he wrote.

“During Shirley Raines’s ten years as president, The University of Memphis could have slid toward becoming a community college. The deck was totally stacked. UM didn’t have the right friends in Nashville. It didn’t do as well as it might have in fundraising. And its students didn’t seek the liberal arts curriculum as much as they should have. President Raines fought valiantly—and quite successfully—against all three of those problems. She shored up departments like art, journalism and history when so many were saying that they didn’t produce jobs (they have, they do, they will). Besides, she steadied the ship during a recession that really socked UM students and the city. I give her very high marks.”

Categories
Opinion

Jerry Lee Lewis Rocks On

John Branston

Jerry Lee Lewis

Jerry Lee Lewis, the last living member of the legendary Million Dollar Quartet, sat beneath a photograph in his den of that signature moment in the history of rock-and-roll in 1956 and vowed to keep on rocking.

Now 77 years old and recovered from a broken leg that kept him out of last year’s Beale Street Music Festival, he is touring again and will play the festival on May 4th. And on April 27th, he will be honored with a parade on Beale Street and cut the ribbon outside of Jerry Lee Lewis’ Café and Honkytonk in the building that formerly housed Pat O’Brien’s and Dancing Jimmy’s.

Lewis, of course, is usually associated with the Sun Records Studio on Union Avenue, which was recreated in the musical Million Dollar Quartet that opened on Broadway in 2010 and recently finished its second run at the Orpheum. But he said that as a young man he often went to Beale Street.

“I think it’s about time I should have a place up there,” he said this week in an interview at his home in Nesbit, Mississippi. “I used to listen to a Dixieland jazz band down near the river. I don’t think that’s Beale Street now, though; it’s all changed up so much.”

Lewis was married for the seventh time last year. He and his wife, Judith, live in a red-brick ranch home with a lake on 30 acres. He is far from the cocky chatterbox portrayed in Million Dollar Quartet but his voice and handshake are strong, and he cracked up when his old friend J.W. Whitten produced a long-lost picture of Lewis and astronaut Neil Armstrong, who carried his music to the moon, and said, “Them Martians are rockin’!”

The man who has kicked over thousands of piano benches still has a trace of a limp.

“I had that broken leg operated three times before the plate was removed,” he said. “That kind of took the wind out of my sails.”

The den is decorated with a Yamaha piano, gold records, album covers, and photographs, including two copies of the famous one with Lewis, Elvis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash at the piano in Sam Phillips’ studio. Elvis died in 1977, Perkins in 1998, and Phillips and Cash in 2003. Lewis recorded “Last Man Standing” in 2006.

He didn’t bite on a question about competition and who influenced whom the most. “It went both ways,” he said. “I always held my ground.” He has fond memories of that day at Sun Studio.

“I remember the day that picture was made very well,” he said. “Elvis’ girl was standing to the right of him, just out of the picture. I was looking straight at her, and she was looking straight at me. I never knew it would turn into something like that, but you never know what’s going to happen.”

He saw Million Dollar Quartet on Broadway.

“I thought it was great,” he said. “They had me come out onstage. The drummer had a hard time keeping up with the beat.”

In 2010, he made another album of duets called Mean Old Man, but he disavows the title.

“I’m certainly not a mean old man,” he protested.

“Why, he’s an angel,” Judith added.

A halo on Jerry Lee Lewis? Great balls of fire! I asked about performers he especially admires (“this guy Elton John is pretty good”) and the young bands in the festival.

“They’re fans of mine and friends, but as far as getting together and playing, I don’t see that happening. Like that picture of me in the Million Dollar Quartet, we didn’t know what was going to happen, and you never know what’s going to happen with the younger generation.”

My time was up. “Thanks, killer,” he said, and stuck out his hand. No, thank you, Killer, from a grateful Memphis.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Mellow Mushroom’s Future-Themed Interiors

Hannah mentioned that the second area location of Mellow Mushroom, in the old AAA on Park Avenue, would take advantage of the building’s cool round shape, with a “decor will be sort of retro-future: what the future looked like to Memphians in the ’60s and ’70s.”

Renderings of the space have been released Grinder-Haizlip Construction Company, and they are …

so …

49_image_Mellow_Mushroom.jpg

and really …

45_image_Mellow_Mushroom.jpg

and just …

47_image_Mellow_Mushroom.jpg

well, there are not enough exclamation points to describe it.

Owners hope to have the new location open sometime this summer.

Categories
Office Rehab Real Estate

Uncovered From the Archives

Way back when, over a whole decade ago, if someone wanted to share an article or photo with you, the poor sap had to go through the laborious task of either faxing (look it up, kids) or actually mailing you the documents. And not just average folks had to do this: no, even famous entertainers had to be sure to drop a press kit – a tidy package of sassy black and white photos and detailed performance information – to all local media outlets as a main means of promoting that your city would be a stop on their tour.

Throughout our massive CMI Office Overhaul, most of the old junk that has been collecting for decades has been removed to make way for the stellar new Knoll furniture from Spaces of Memphis. However, thanks to our insatiable office pack rats, not all artifacts of such aforementioned press kits have been lost. See here a few of my favorite photos from past concert and comedy tours that have been uncovered during the rehab. Surely, I can’t be the only one who remembers the illustrious musical career of John Tesh?!

Enjoy!



[slideshow-1]

Categories
News

Cruelty Charges Against Former Animal Shelter Director Dismissed

Animal cruelty charges for Ernie Alexander and Tina Quattlebaum, stemming from the 2009 raid on Memphis Animal Services, have been dismissed. Bianca Phillips has more.

Categories
News News Blog

Cruelty Charges Against Former Animal Shelter Director Dropped

Ernie Alexander

  • Ernie Alexander

Animal cruelty charges against former Memphis Animal Services (MAS) director Ernie Alexander and supervisor Tina Quattlebaum were dismissed Tuesday morning in Shelby County Criminal Court.

The charges stemmed from a 2009 Shelby County Sheriff’s Office-led raid at Memphis Animal Services that revealed dogs dying of starvation. Former MAS veterinarian Angela Middleton was also charged with animal cruelty after the raid, but she was acquitted of all charges in October.

According to a statement from the Shelby County district attorney’s office, the charges were dropped due to lack of cooperation of key witnesses, a lack of direct evidence of the defendants’ contact with the animal victims, budget constraints that were placed on MAS by the city administration at that time, and because both Alexander and Quattlebaum made attempts to notify their supervisors about shelter conditions. Based on those factors, the DA’s office determined that prosecution would not have a “reasonable likelihood of success.”

Categories
News

Victorian Village Revives

Bianca Phillips reports on the continuing revitalization of Memphis’ historic Victorian Village.

Categories
News

James Beard Dinner at Hog & Hominy

Hannah Sayle reports on the big James Beard Dinner at Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen, and on plans for a new “dive bar”at Hog & Hominy.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

James Beard Dinner; Big Plans for Hog & Hominy Patio

IMG_5192.JPG
An elegant table setting for the Friends of James Beard Dinner.

  • An elegant table setting for the Friends of James Beard Dinner.

While Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen was hosting the prestigious Friends of Beard Dinner on Sunday, sister restaurant Hog & Hominy was preparing to give sneak peeks of its next project — a new dive bar on its back patio.

For Sunday’s Friends of Beard dinner, Chefs Andy Ticer and Michael Hudman welcomed five up-and-coming guest chefs from across the country to Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen: David Posey of Blackbird in Chicago, Jason Fox of Commonwealth in San Francisco, Jason Stanhope of Fig in Charleston, Jeff McInnis of Yardbird in Miami Beach, and Stephanie Prida of Manresa in Los Gatos, CA.

The theme of the evening was “Know Your Food, Know Your Roots,” an exploration of hometown, ancestry, or childhood inspirations. And while the prep work was a fascinating display of some of the country’s best chefs buzzing around the Andrew-Michael kitchen, the actual dinner cost $300 a person, effectively pricing out this writer. (Proceeds went to support the James Beard Foundation, whose mission is to “celebrate, nurture, and preserve America’s diverse culinary heritage and future.”)

Three lambs roasting while chefs prepare for the Friends of Beard Dinner.

  • Three lambs roasting while chefs prepare for the Friends of Beard Dinner.
Chef Jeff McInnis of Yardbird stuffs quail with fois gras, grilled peaches, and cornbread.

  • Chef Jeff McInnis of Yardbird stuffs quail with fois gras, grilled peaches, and cornbread.

After the Friends of Beard Dinner, chefs enjoy a late-night dinner on Hog & Hominys back patio.

  • After the Friends of Beard Dinner, chefs enjoy a late-night dinner on Hog & Hominy’s back patio.

But I was able to return once the Friends of Beard Dinner wound down, when the chefs and some of the guests moseyed on over to Hog and Hominy to get a taste of what Ticer and Hudman have been working on for the past couple of years since Andrew Michael opened. I hung out by the open kitchen, drinking an Old Fashioned and sneaking little tastes of things, which is how I found out about what Ticer and Hudman have planned for the back patio of Hog & Hominy.

What was formerly a fairly lackluster patio is already being transformed into a side concept for the restaurant: A no-frills dive bar with a seriously pared down menu. There, surrounded by distressed wood and corrugated steel, patrons will suck down oysters on the half-shell, boiled peanuts, cheap beer, and the J.T. Burger — Ticer and Hudman’s homage to Oxford’s ambassador of Southern cuisine, John T. Edge.

(Hudman says he and Ticer have been working on perfecting this burger for a long time, settling on a classic cheeseburger with American cheese, onions caramelized into the patty, chopped lettuce dressed in pickle juice, tomato, mustard, and ketchup. The result is close-your-eyes-and-sigh good.)

And that’s it: Three menu items, cans of Schlitz and Pabst, white and brown well liquors, and old records spinning in the background. Ticer and Hudman plan to close in the currently open-air space, adding large barn doors that will open in nice weather and stay shuttered for winter use.

The meticulously tested and fussed over J.T. Burger, to be served at Hog & Hominys new back patio dive bar.

  • The meticulously tested and fussed over J.T. Burger, to be served at Hog & Hominy’s new back patio dive bar.

Hog & Hominy staff preparing for chefs meal after Beard dinner. H&H is converting its back patio, shown here, into a dive bar.

  • Hog & Hominy staff preparing for chef’s meal after Beard dinner. H&H is converting its back patio, shown here, into a dive bar.

We can’t wait for the idea to be fully realized, which should be happening in the coming months. In the meantime, next time you pop over to Hog and Hominy, stick your head out the back door and start imagining late night revelry and cheeseburgers. Don’t forget the cheeseburgers.