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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Anthony “Spice” Adams Raps About Ribs

Retired NFL defensive tackle Anthony “Spice” Adams parodies Tyga’s “Rack City” with delicious results.

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News

El Camino a Memphis

It’s the final day for “El Camino a Memphis,” a multi-media show at Caritas Village celebrating four immigrant families who came to live in Memphis.

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News

Stax Music Academy at B.B. King’s

You can enjoy the classic soul sounds of the Stax Music Academy alumni band at B.B. King’s Wednesday.

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News

What Do the New TCAP Scores Mean?

John Branston says it’s difficult to assess just what the latest TCAP scores signify.

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Opinion

What to Make of Latest TCAP Scores

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The schools story has become so complicated that it’s unclear what’s to be made of the latest batch of TCAP standardized test scores released this week.

The scores got generally positive notices from officials of the state Department of Education and the unified Shelby County School System. Scores increased for the majority of school districts in Tennessee in nearly every subject. In its last year of independence, Memphis City Schools showed increased proficiency in math, science, and social studies. The legacy Shelby County School system did the same, and also improved in reading.

But “improved” or “increased” compared to what? The scoring system — the curve for those of you in the education game — changed a couple of years ago, making long-term comparisons impossible. There are new subgroups of schools, such as the Achievement School District and the Innovation Zone (I confess to not knowing there was such a thing). Apples to apples has become apples to oranges to bananas to mangoes to papayas. And scores for individual schools, including public charter schools, have not been released yet.

More on that in a minute, but first the official statements.

“Sustained improvements across the state show that our efforts to raise student outcomes are working,” said Education Commissioner Kevin Huffman. “Our students, teachers, and administrators worked incredibly hard. The results prove that if we continue to maintain high expectations and quality support for our teachers, our students will continue to grow.”

David Stephens, deputy superintendent for the Shelby County Schools, was more restrained. Legacy MCS and legacy SCS districts both earned an overall Level 5 rating for student growth – the highest level of growth possible. In grades 3-8 Reading/Language Arts, legacy MCS showed a slight decrease (-0.4), while legacy SCS showed a slight increase (+1.1). The details are here.

“We realize that we still have work to do, but are very pleased with these accomplishments, especially in the midst of a school year involving the merging of two systems. The results are proof that our teachers and leaders continued to effectively advance student achievement in the classrooms, while adjusting to changes at the district level and preparing for a unified district.”

Statewide, 30 districts saw double-digit gains in Algebra I, some gaining more than 25 percentage points. More than 50 districts saw double-digit gains in Algebra II, some reporting growth over 40 percentage points.

Such gains are cause for inspection as well as celebration because they are probably due to a major change in the test-taking population or a small sample, which magnifies the change. If such a thing were replicable on a large scale, then the wizards who did it would be running every public and private education outfit in the country.

In Memphis, the seven Innovation Zone schools, which are hard cases like the ASD schools, showed an increase in proficiency from the previous year (Math +10, Reading +2.4, Science +13.4, Social Studies +11.9) that was at a higher rate than the state and the ASD.

Credit where credit is due, but the focus on small groups of schools at a time when the biggest school system merger in American history is nigh seems, well, curious.

Congratulations to all those who did better. But determining “better” these days is a little bit like making up a football schedule. If you can’t find someone somewhere you can beat somehow then you’re not trying very hard.

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News

They Like Mike

The Grizzlies welcomed sharp-shooter Mike Miller back into the fold Tuesday. Chris Herrington was there.

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Opinion

Not Looking Up

The Memphis skyline looks great in those golden-hued pictures taken from the other side of the Mississippi River or in an aerial shot taken at night when the lights are on at AutoZone Park.

The trouble is that several prominent buildings from the Pyramid to the South Bluffs are empty or emptying out. The skyline shot is a bit of a fake.

The 100 North Main Building is the tallest building in Memphis. By our standards, it is a skyscraper. The view from the 34th floor looks down on Civic Center Plaza, the Marriott Hotel, the convention center, and the Pyramid, where Bass Pro Shops has plans for an observation deck and restaurant at the apex.

But the 1965 office building with more than 400,000 feet of space is sparsely occupied, mostly by lawyers who work at the courts. The lobby is barren except for a concession stand and a few parched potted ficus trees. The escalators don’t run, and the elevators run so infrequently that some tenants worry about access to the upper floors in an emergency. There are no tenants at street level. The revolving restaurant on the roof is long gone, along with the Union Planters Bank sign (the bank was never a tenant) that gave the illusion of occupancy.

Building manager John Freeman declined to talk about any deal that might be in the works to sell the building, which was on the market for $20 million in 2006, but said he might have news in August. The owner lives in California and could not be reached for comment. Paul Morris, president of the Downtown Memphis Commission located across the street, said tenants are being notified that their leases will not be renewed. “The building has been neglected over the years and desperately needs improvements,” he said.

Reinventing a building that was as bland as its name in its best years “is a tough one.” Suggestions include a combination hotel, condo, and apartment building.

“The best market now in downtown is multi-family apartments,” Morris said. “But that is a huge building. I don’t think it would be profitable or cost effective to turn it into apartments. The proximity to the convention center helps. We need more hotel rooms. That is a possibility.”

Chuck Pinkowski, a consultant to the hospitality industry, has spoken to the owner and is not optimistic.

“It would be very expensive to retrofit it,” he said.

Job sprawl and office blight have taken a huge toll on downtown. It is more than likely that, within a year or two, Civic Center Plaza will be bracketed by two empty office buildings. The 12-story state office building on the north side of the plaza has been declared obsolete in a state report, and its 900 workers will be moving, possibly to another downtown building.

Nearby, the owners of the Lincoln American Tower and Court Square Properties have said they are facing foreclosure without extended tax breaks. Raymond James is laying off hundreds of employees and shopping for space in East Memphis to use in negotiations when its lease runs out at 50 Front Street next year. One Commerce Square lost its main tenant, Pinnacle Airlines. The Sterick Building next to AutoZone Park has been vacant for 25 years and, like other abandoned buildings, is not counted as leasable space in the reports that put downtown office occupancy at 84 percent.

“I don’t think the theory of an office tower is obsolete,” Morris said, citing the positive stories of AutoZone and First Tennessee, both of which own and occupy their buildings. “I have not gotten any credible information that Raymond James has made a decision. The advantage downtown has is that market rates are less. But the downtown office market is very weak, in contrast to the downtown residential and entertainment markets, which are doing very well.”

Indeed, the signs of new development can be seen this summer south of the train station and along the future path of the Harahan Bridge bicycle and pedestrian trail. Developer Henry Turley has cleared several acres for apartments and has been goading other property owners and the city to improve cleanliness, lighting, and safety so that visitors “wouldn’t think the city died in 1945.”

If you look out instead of up, things are looking up.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

They Aren’t Chew Toys But Dogs Love Them!

Kudos to Channel 5 reporter Jason Miles for showing so much restraint with this Tweet…

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Which directed followers to this headline.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

“Welcome Back Mike”: Notes From the Forum Lobby

With a “Welcome Back Mike” message on the marquee above the dais, the Grizzlies celebrated the return of a franchise favorite today at the lobby of FedExForum.

Flanked by head coach Dave Joerger and team CEO Jason Levien at a spirited and well-attended public press conference, the newly signed Mike Miller praised his new team with a long string of defensible superlatives: Joerger as “an unbelievable hire.” Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol as “the best big-man combo in the league.” Conley as “the most underrated player in the league.” Add in a “lockdown defender” in Tony Allen and the “championship pedigree” of Tayshaun Prince, and Miller made clear he sees this Grizzlies team as one that can compete to get where his most recent employer has been for the past three seasons: In the NBA Finals.

Larry Kuzniewski

Levien indicated that the team had been game-planning a potential Miller amnesty since before the past season ended. Miller revealed that Levien was one of his first phone calls when the amnesty came down. And the tone of the day underscored how close a relationship Miller and Joerger have.

“Isn’t this great?,” a Grizzlies employee said afterward, surveying the scene. “Great that it’s not happening in Oklahoma City today,” another onlooker answered. And that’s part of it.

The Miller introduction felt like the peak of the late-summer momentum that seems to have firmly re-entrenched the Grizzlies as a legitimate Western Conference contender. And Joerger went into a bit of detail about how Miller can factor on the floor, not only in spacing the court for the team’s power players but also using his versatility to give the team more playmaking and more small lineup options.

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Memphis Gaydar News

George’s Truck Stop and Drag Bar — The Sequel

In the original production of George’s Truck Stop and Drag Bar, the drag queens of Krisko County take up residence at George’s Truck Stop after their drag bar was burned down by its co-owner, Maybelline.

The sequel follows the queens of George’s Truck Stop yet again. Will Delta’s cosmetic line get banned by the FDA? Will L’Oreal ever get help matching her dresses? Will the new chef, Maria, get deported? Will Maybelline get to see her only son/daughter perform in his first pageant? Will Mary Kay drink all the Bud Light?

These are the pressing questions that will be answered in this hilarious follow-up. The play shows at Evergreen Theatre from August 1st through the 3rd. Curtain opens at 8 p.m., but each night’s performance is proceeded by a cocktail hour at 7 p.m.

For more information, see the event’s Facebook page. Tickets are available on the Friend’s of George’s website or at Inz & Outz on Cooper.

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