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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Tennessee Psycho

Nashville Tennessee

  • Nashville Tennessee

My name is Nashville. I am the state capital of Tennessee, located right on the Cumberland River. Reese Witherspoon has a home in my Belle Meade neighborhood. Jack White has a club here too, and although his early albums with the White Stripes were a little too punk for my taste, I can’t get enough of the excellent 2012 single “Love Interruption.” I especially admire the line “Stick a knife inside me/And twist it all around.”

I believe in looking out for myself and, even for a handsome “it-city” with an NFL franchise and a massive music industry, that’s no easy task. I use an expensive deep pore cleanser and a fine honey almond exfoliating scrub. And I start my morning routine by absorbing nearly all film and television subsidies allotted for the entire state in order to prop up my universally acclaimed namesake TV show.

Each morning over a cup of coffee at The Frothy Monkey I read the newspaper. Just yesterday, as my labyrinthine mind contemplated things like RCA Studio B, the Hermitage, The Parthenon in Centennial Park, Cheekwood, the Gaylord Entertainment Center, and Yazoo beer, I discovered that, in spite of having terrible jobs, difficult lives, and low access to healthcare, Memphis, that fat, economically devastated city on the Mississippi, is somehow much happier than I am. Now I cannot stop looking west and wondering what else I need to take in order to change this.

There is an idea of Nashville, some kind of abstraction. You can visit the gift shop at my Country Music Hall of Fame and take in a concert at Robert’s Westernwear. You may even get the sense that you know me. But the fact is, no matter what the maps may say, I simply am not there.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Johnny Winter at the Blues Foundation Tuesday

The Blues Foundation will host Johnny Winter this Tuesday, November 26th. There will be an auction and a meet and greet for top-tier ticket holders. “An Intimate Evening with Johnny Winter” will benefit the foundation’s efforts to finish a new museum and home for the Blues Hall of Fame. The building at 421 S. Main was purchased in 2010. Plans are in place for the exhibit and $1.8 million has already been raised toward the goal of $2.5 million. See an artist’s rendering of the space below this slammin’ cool video of guest of honor, Johnny Winter, himself a 1988 Hall of Fame inductee. Winter is a titan of ’70s rock for dang sure. But his depth comes from his long collaboration with Muddy Waters, which earned Grammys and financial reward for both of them. Winter is a certified legend. You can hang out with him by going to www.blues.org and buying tickets.

An artists rendering of the Blues Foundation museum

  • Blues Foundation
  • An artist’s rendering of the Blues Foundation museum
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News

Memphis Comics & Fantasy Convention Pix

Check out the amazing and entertaining costumes worn by attendees at last weekend’s Comics & Fantasy Convention.

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News News Blog

Memphis International Airport Now Has Free Wi-Fi

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Memphis International Airport launched free wi-fi access today. The service is offered through Boingo Wireless. Previously, the airport only offered paid wireless access.

The free, ad-supported wi-fi can be used for basic internet needs, such as checking email, searching the web, or using social media, but those with more data-intensive internet needs, such as streaming video and uploading large files, can purchase premium wi-fi.

“Our customers asked for free Wi-Fi services, and we listened,” said Scott Brockman, Chief Operating Officer for the Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority.

The wi-fi is available at all gates, ticketing, and baggage claim areas. In late December, the rental car area of the airport will also have free wi-fi.

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News

Grizzlies Beat Warriors in OT, 88-81

Kevin Lipe recaps the Grizzlies’ stirring OT victory over the Warriors Wednesday night, ending an improbable 4-0 road trip.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Rampaging Rhino Spotted in Downtown Memphis

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These signs in conjunction (as seen posted here on the railroad overpass at Front and Butler) indicates that angry Rhinoceroses should keep to the right in order to avoid being struck by oncoming traffic. I guess.

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Opinion The BruceV Blog

Mid-South Comics & Fantasy Convention

Local photographer Frank Chin sent us these wonderful pictures from last weekend’s Comics & Fantasy Convention at the Ridgeway Hilton. Enjoy.

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Sports Tiger Blue

“American” Football Picks: Week 13

LAST WEEK: 5-0
SEASON: 49-18

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THURSDAY
Rutgers at UCF

SATURDAY
Memphis at Louisville
Cincinnati at Houston
SMU at USF
UConn at Temple

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Road Recap: Grizzlies 88, Warriors 81

Mike Conley was quietly excellent on the Grizzlies whole West Coast trip.

  • Larry Kuzniewski
  • Mike Conley was quietly excellent on the Grizzlies’ whole West Coast trip.

The Grizzlies are now 30th out of 30 teams in the league in pace, according to Basketball Reference, and as they’ve plummeted to the bottom of the league’s pace-of-play rankings, they’ve started to solidify into a cohesive team of grind-it-out intensity and a violent offensive mindset spearheaded by two (or three when Kosta Koufos also gets a double double) of the league’s best big men. The Grizzlies everyone (including this author) was worried about are gone, and the old Grizzlies have returned in their place.

The Grizzlies defeated the Steph Curry-less Warriors to overtime last night despite (1) playing their fourth game in six nights, all on the West Coast and (2) the Warriors’ starting Andre Igoudala at point guard due to injuries, causing the Grizzlies to struggle mightily with their length on the perimeter for most of the first half. They did so by doing what they do best: forcing the Warriors, one of the most potent offensive teams in the league, into what was probably the slowest game they’ve played all year, with both teams tied at 75 at the end of regulation.

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The pace number—an estimate of the number of possessions in a game—for last night? 78.9. League average so far this season is 94.6. The Warriors average 95.9, the 11th fastest in the league.

But the Grizzlies are last. Like Z-Bo says, “We in the mud.”

Three Things I Liked

1. I liked Marc Gasol’s defense last night. It was his first DPOY-ish performance yet this season, and it became a huge difference maker while the rest of the Grizzlies were out of sorts trying to figure out the help defense necessary to keep the Warriors’ extra-tall lineups from beating the smaller Griz defenders. Having Gasol in the middle playing like Gasol was a difference-maker last night, and a welcome return to form for a guy who, let’s be honest, didn’t look like he wanted to be playing basketball the first two weeks of the season.

2. Another 20-10 game for Zach Randolph, which… I mean, I don’t even know what else to say about it at this point. I know three of the four games on this road trip have been against teams without good interior defense, and Z-Bo has historically owned the matchup against the fourth team—the Clippers—when healthy, but I have to admit that I wasn’t sure Z-Bo still had this gear on a regular basis. I’m glad he does, because he’s carrying a massive amount of the Grizzlies’ scoring load. The only Grizzly with a usage rate higher than Randolph’s is Mike Conley.

3. Speaking of which, even when he’s struggling to guard Andre Igoudala one-on-one, Mike Conley was brilliant on the whole road trip. Understated greatness. Conley has been fantastic this season—so much so that he’s carried the team through some tough spots, and when the rest of the roster finally started clicking, he’s made them that much better by continuing to do what he was doing. Conley’s got a tough test coming up Friday facing Tony Parker and the Spurs, but we’ll get into that tomorrow.

Three Things I Didn’t Like

1. Ed Davis didn’t play at all, and while that was clearly the right move in terms of winning the game, I still think Davis is going to have to play at some point. Zach Randolph played 46 minutes last night, and Gasol played 38 after playing 40 against the Clippers Monday night. Even with Koufos playing 21 minutes, I think that kind of minute load is untenable over the course of a season, and Dave Joerger is going to have to go with a 4-man frontcourt rotation, like it or not. If Davis is really so bad that he can’t play even for 10 or 15 minutes, the Grizzlies need to just get rid of him now. A 3-man frontcourt rotation is fine in the playoffs. It’s not a recipe for playoff success when you’re doing it in November. Note that I don’t say this because I think Davis has earned the minutes. He’s been very uneven to start the year, and mostly bad. But I don’t think the Grizzlies can really play a 3-man frontcourt rotation all year long. I don’t see how that can end well.

2. Quincy Pondexter started in place of the suspended Tony Allen, and for whatever reason, really struggled to find his rhythm and to play within himself. His struggles contributed to a very slow start for the Grizzlies, who were down 10 after the first quarter. The Grizzlies really missed Allen’s excellent cutting ability on offense, and Pondexter’s poor offensive start to the year was certainly a contributor to their woes in the first frame last night. If Pondexter wants to start, he’s going to have to play better.

3. Tayshaun Prince came up huge in overtime, which is when you expect a veteran guy like him to turn it on: when the game is on the line and he needs to make a bucket. It almost made up for the fact that he couldn’t hit the broad side of Zach Randolph’s $3 million Memphis house for the 48 minutes before that. Almost.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Memphians in Oxford American Tennessee Music Issue

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The sometimes-existing Oxford American magazine released its Southern Music issue for Tennessee this week. There are some obvious Memphis names and some that make you think they really know our hearts. The track list kicks off with Sid Selvidge’s “That’s How I Got ti Memphis.” It looks like a great playlist. Local musicians include Motel Mirrors, Human Radio, The Bo-Keys, The Grifters, and Van Duren. Obviously, the old guard makes the list too. Have a look after you read the entire Flyer and patronize at least half of our advertisers.