Chris Herrington reports on the annual Rock for Love fund-raiser concert being held this weekend.
Month: September 2013
Marketing and advertising agency archer>malmo added an indoor bicycle parking “garage” for employees as part of a larger renovation project on its fourth floor at the Cotton Exchange Building. The new design is a response to the rapid growth of bike and pedestrian infrastructure in Memphis, according to archer>malmo account manager Sarah Baker.

The garage space has hooks on the wall for lighter bikes and a parking area on the floor for heavier cruiser models. It can accommodate up to 12 bikes.
“The people who work in that space helped design it, and many of them live in Midtown or downtown and ride their bikes to work everyday,” said Russ Williams, CEO of archer>malmo. “We thought it was a totally fantastic way to use that space.”
Additionally, the company purchased a communal cruiser bike for employees to share for downtown errands. It’s been available for employee use for about one week.
“I haven’t used it yet, but next time I need to go north on Main, I will,” Williams said.
Hey, Nineteen …
Steely Dan plays Mud Island Friday night. Chris Herrington has the story.
Stylin’ on South Main
Sophorn Kouy talks to Cynthia Grawemeyer about her sense of style and her downtown shops.
As owner of four businesses on South Main and as senior pastor of St. Timothy United Methodist Church, Cynthia Grawemeyer will still routinely take her time looking through her closet and trying on outfits until the right one fits her mood. You will rarely find her in sweats or jeans.

I met up with her at Grawemeyer’s, her restaurant serving her family’s German-American recipes.
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Grawemeyer pegs her love for fashion to her mom’s creativity and skill as a seamstress. “She made my prom dress and it looked so unique and high-end that everyone wanted to know where I bought it,” she says.
She says her love for classic and vintage style developed as a child watching movies and admiring the overall glamour.
With her two boutiques, Sir Samuels and Everleah’s, she hopes to offer Memphis with vintage pieces and more forward-fashion pieces.
She’s wearing a green classic form dress with navy shoes she purchased in Paris. This outfit is what she defines as her typical look, transitioning easily from delivering a sermon to greeting her customers at her two boutique and two restaurants, Grawemeyer’s and Rizzo’s Diner.


Grawemeyer predicted some of the big fall trends: classic prints like houndstooth appearing in modern designs, and classic blazers paired with riding pants as well as hats.
“The items we carry are what I would wear or my daughters would wear,” she says.
Sir Samuels is going through a renovation but be sure to visit Everleah’s boutique on South Main. Both are adjacent to Grawemeyer’s restaurant.
Everleah’s and Sir Samuels: sirsamuels.com
Outflix Weekend Picks
The Outflix Film Festival starts tonight at Malco’s Ridgeway theater and runs through next Thursday. I previewed the opening night features — documentary Bridegroom and the high school comedy G.B.F. — in this week’s paper. Here are a few potential highlights from the Saturday and Sunday slates:
Saturday:
Out in the Dark (3 p.m.): A Palestinian student who falls for an Israeli lawyer and finds himself caught between worlds in multiple ways — ostracized in Palestinian society because of his sexuality and in Israeli society because of his nationality. Has won awards at GLBT film festivals in cities such as Toronto, Philadelphia, and Miami.
Sunday:
Any Day Now (1:30 p.m.): This strong feature from writer-director Travis Fine is based on a true story and set in West Hollywood circa 1979, where a gay couple (Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt) take in a teenager with Down syndrome who’s been abandoned by his mother and fight a biased legal system to keep their new family together. An audience-award winner at festivals around the country, including Tribeca, Chicago, and Outfest. Cumming and Dillahunt’s odd couple pairing isn’t always the most convincing, but the film is moving without straining too hard for effect, and Cumming’s performance as a big-hearted drag queen walks a tightrope, but mostly stays balanced. Well worth a wider theatrical run than it got.
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The New Black (5:30 p.m.): A documentary about gay-rights issues within the African-American community. One activist asserts early on that her quest for equal rights for homosexuals is part of “the unfinished business of black people being free,” but the film explores such hurdles as the prevalence of homophobia in the black church and the use of gay rights as a black community wedge issue by political conservatives. Also a multiple audience-award winner on the fest circuit.
The Rugby Player (7:30 p.m.): A documentary about the relationship between Mark Bingham, one of the passengers on United 93 on 9/11 and his former flight attendant mother, Alice Hoagland.
For a full schedule and ticketing info see outflixfestival.org.

- JB
- new County Commission chair James Harvey
The reign of James Harvey as chairman of the Shelby County Commission will commence in earnest on Monday, and already it is shrouded in controversy — as is the new chairman’s political future.
Harvey, a Democrat, was formally censured Thursday night by the Shelby County Democratic Committee for his decision, among other eyebrow-raising apointments, to name Republican commissioner Heidi Shafer as chair of the Commission’s budget committee, replacing holdover Democrat Melvin Burgess in that role.
The local censure motion was brought by local Democratic committee member Jay Bailey, who is also a member of the state Democratic committee and has declared his intention to file a censure motion against Harvey at Saturday’s meeting of the state committee in Nashville.
The appointment of Shafer, a vociferous opponent of the recent increases in both the budget and the county tax rate that were approved by the Commission majority, is not an isolated circumstance. Harvey, who had earlier joined fellow Democrats in voting for the increases, proposed by County Mayor Mark Luttrell, joined with Shafer and other Republicans in opposing Luttrell’s proposed tax-rate increase on its third reading.
The tax-rate proposal — of $4.38, an increase from the previous rate of $4.02 — narrowly prevailed, but Harvey’s signaling of his opposition had meanwhile earned him enough votes from Commission Republicans to net him the chairmanship over Mike Ritz, who had wanted another term, and Steve Mulroy.
Ritz, who supported Luttrell on both the budget and tax-rate matters, had offended most of the GOP colleagues regarding that issue and a series of others, including his votes with Democratic members on matters relating to the ongoing school-merger issue.
Shafer and two other Republicans, Wyatt Bunker and Chris Thomas, had adopted an Anybody-but-Ritz strategy in voting for the chairmanship, even to the point of supporting liberal Democrat Mulroy in early rounds of the chairmanship voting, which took place at the Commission’s July 9 meeting, where Harvey and fellow Democrat Justin Ford would cast surprise votes, along with most GOP members, to stall the tax-rate increase.
Ford would end up voting for the Luttrell tax rate at the Commission’s next meeting, ensuring its passage, but Harvey, now chairman-elect, continued to oppose it.
Harvey may or may not be able to shrug off the censure votes, one done and one pending, though they could adversely affect his future hopes of winning other public offices as a Democrat. (Harvey, who frequently uses the term “businessman” to define himself and his motives, does, however, have the option of changing his party allegiance — though, at present, that seems a remote prospect.).
But what Harvey must deal with in the short run and can’t shrug off is a Monday vote by the Commission on a motion by Democrat Walter Bailey (perhaps not coincidentally, the father of censure-bearer Jay Bailey)to amend the resolution confirming Harvey’s committee assignments.
That motion, rejecting Shafer and re-appointing Burgess, was voted down in committee last Wednesday when a Republican majority was on hand but could fare differently when considered by the full Commission.
If the Commission’s Democrats, some of whom had supported Harvey for chairman, should vote en masse on Monday for Bailey’s motion, and if they should be joined by Ritz, who has just returned from a family vacation in Russia and professes himself undecided on the appointments issue, Harvey will suffer a serious rebuff to his authority and intentions.
Those inclined to support the new chairman, including the GOP members who determined the shape of Wednesday’s vote, consider Bailey’s motion a threat to Commission tradition; those likely to oppose Harvey have expressed concern about the possibility of trade-offs made by Harvey to secure the chairmanship.
UPDATE: State Democratic committee member Jay Bailey did in fact submit a resolution aimed at censuring Harvey at Saturday’s Democratic executive committee meeting in Nashville. But action on the resolution was deferred until the committee’s November meeting, pending receipt of more detailed information requested by committee members.
Front Page News
We always thought Divine was from Baltimore. Oh well, she’ll make a great addition to the Tiger lineup. Or she would if Harris Glenn Milstead hadn’t died in 1988.
Outflix Highlights
Chris Herrington previews some of the highlights from the 2013 Memphis Outflix festival that begins Friday.
Outflix Film Festival

The 16th annual Outflix Film Festival kicks off on Friday, Sept. 6th with a screening of Bridegroom, a documentary about the emotional journey of a man who lost his partner in a tragic accident.
The film deals with how the benefits of legal marriage protection could have helped the surviving partner. Other notable films include G.B.F. (a Darren Stein film about a popular openly gay kid in high school, with Megan Mullally and Natasha Lyonne), Who’s Afraid of Vagina Wolf? (comedy about a lesbian attempting to remake Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf?), and I Am Divine (documentary about John Waters’ filthiest drag star).
For a full schedule, check out the Outflix website. The festival runs through September 12th, and all screenings at held at Malco’s Ridgeway Four. Tickets are $10 per film, and festival passes are available.