Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

You Need Elvis’ Record Player

The king’s platter is for sale. No, it’s not a heapin’ heppin’ of fried catfish, it’s the big guy’s record player going up for bid in Cornwall (of course it’s in Cornwall), UK. The Beeb is all over this and ran an article. Apparently the (American) King gave it to a German woman when he was staying up all night doing speed in the cold for the U.S. Army. She had helped Vernon with some translations. As you can see below, it’s completely bad-ass in its own right. So get over there and buy the thing like you got sense. They think it will fetch £2000, which is like a trillion dollars.

Elvis freakin record player

  • Elvis’ freakin’ record player
Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Bunker Tenders Resignation from Commission; Thomas May Shortly Follow

Wyatt Bunker (l); Chris Thomas

  • Wyatt Bunker (l); Chris Thomas

With Shelby County Commissioner Wyatt Bunker’s official notice of resignation on Monday, tendered formally in a letter to County Commission chair James Harvey, the Commission will have at least one vacancy to fill on the 13-member body, and, if Bunker has his druthers, it may have another.

The second potential vacancy is that of Bunker’s Commission colleague Chris Thomas, who has been asked by Bunker, now serving as mayor of Lakeland, to apply for the job of Lakeland city manager.

Lakeland’s Board of Commissioners, which met Monday night, has delayed immediate action on replacing former city manager Robert “Bob” Wherry, who was fired last week. The vacancy has been publicly advertised, with a deadline for applications of December 13. The board will meet again on December 17 to decide on a hire.

Bunker’s letter to Harvey (see below) specified that his resignation would take effect on January 3. The Commission will be tasked with naming an interim replacewment for Bunker — and for Thomas, too, if need be. Both Bunker and Thomas are District 4 Republicans.

bunker_resignation_letter.jpg

Categories
News

We Have Always Lived in the Castle

Eileen Townsend interviews Terri Phillips on her current show at UM’s ArtLab.

Categories
News

Big Day Looming at City Council

The Memphis City Council will tackle two big issues on Tuesday. Toby Sells reports.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Star of Wonder

images.jpg

It’s shaping up to be a good holiday season for Ekundayo Bandele, executive director and playwright-in-residence for the Hattiloo Theatre. The best news is that the new Hattiloo, which broke ground in Overton Square three months back, is coming together even faster than expected, and he plans to announce the venue-opening show in January. If Scrooge Was a Brother, Bandele’s take on the Dickens classic, opened at Chicago’s eta Creative Arts Foundation in November, and runs through December 29th. On the home front, he is opening his newest Christmas play, The North Star: An Urban Nativity.

“Langston Hughes’ Black Nativity gets turned into a concert,” Bandele says of the play. “I really wanted to tell the story of what happens at the Nativity. And to tell it like I’ve never seen it done, in a way that I think would be interesting for me to watch.”

Bandele’s Nativity is contemporary, but he digs into the source material to tell the story of a poor carpenter, a pregnant virgin, the people who love them, the people who wonder at them, and a big bright light in the sky.

“It’s suspenseful,” Bandele says of a show that, for the most part, takes place in the 24 hours leading up to Christ’s birth.

“It’s much more about Mary and Joseph and their relationship than it is about Christ,” Bandele says.

“The North Star: An Urban Nativity” at the Hattiloo Theatre, December 5th-22nd. $18-$25. hattiloo.org

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Tom Foster Paints the Femme Fatales of Memphis Music

[slideshow-1]

Categories
News News Blog

AutoZone Park, Crosstown up for Council Vote Tuesday

Redbirds_1.jpg

  • From the Memphis Redbirds Facebook page

Two major decisions loom for the Memphis City Council on Tuesday as the body decides whether or not to buy AutoZone Park and to invest $15 million into the Crosstown Development Project.

Both issues will be heard during the council’s executive session at 1:15 p.m. in room 501 at Memphis City Hall. If the council approves the deals for a vote, they’ll be heard again and get a final vote in the council chambers at 3:30 p.m. during the regular meeting of the full council.

The Memphis Redbirds Foundation announced a deal last month “would rescue the financially troubled Memphis Redbirds and AutoZone Park.” The foundation has been operating the team and the stadium under a forbearance agreement since it defaulted on bonds in 2010.

The deal would have the St. Louis Cardinals buy the team and the city of Memphis to buy the park, which it would then lease to the Redbirds under a long-term lease agreement. The exact price of the park has not been made public, though The Daily News reported the price to be “south of $24 million.”

According to the foundation, the deal has been approved by the foundation’s sole bondholder, Fundamental Advisors.

Memphis Mayor A C Wharton said his administration has “done our homework and believe that it is in the best long-term interests of the city and its residents to move forward with this transaction.” Of course, Wharton said he encourages the city council to approve the deal Tuesday.

Redbirds_2.jpg

  • From the Memphis Redbirds Facebook page

The deal would come with new investments in the ballpark. Photos from the Redbirds’ Facebook account show new general admission seating on grassy hills (much like the existing Bluff section) on the left and right field corners of the park. A new concession stand and bar are planned for the new seating section in the left field corner. The photos also show a new LED board against the left field wall and updates to club-level bars and seating.

Representatives with the Crosstown Development Project will ask council members for $15 million to fund infrastructure needs and site cleanup at the old Sears Crosstown building in the midst of the Evergreen, Vollinitine-Evergreen and Speedway Terrace neighborhoods.

In October, the Shelby County Land Use Control Board approved the redevelopment of the 1.5 million square-foot building into a “vertical urban village” that could become the home to healthcare clinics, a school, and more.

The total project cost is estimated to be $175 million, with the majority of that money coming from the building’s founding partners — Church Health Center, Methodist Healthcare, Gestalt Community Schools, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, ALSAC, Memphis Teacher Residency, Rhodes College, and Crosstown Arts.

Categories
News

The Iron Bowl That Will Live Forever

Frank Murtaugh says the miracle finish of Saturday’s Iron Bowl between Alabama and Auburn will become an indelible “sports moment.”

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Alabama/Auburn — “The Return” is an Indelible Sports Moment

Where Were You When … ?

The greatest sports moments are a collision of the unlikely (performance) and the enormous (stage). Kirk Gibson’s one-legged home run isn’t immortal if it doesn’t win Game 1 of the 1988 World Series. Christian Laettner’s catch/dribble/shoot to beat Kentucky in the 1992 NCAA tournament isn’t legendary if it doesn’t advance Duke to the Final Four with a chance to defend a national title.

People not yet born in the great state of Alabama will be talking 100 years from now about Auburn’s Chris Davis and his 109-yard return of a missed field goal(!) to beat Alabama. The conversation will inspire Tiger fans and enrage Tide fans as long as Bo Jackson and Bear Bryant matter in the Yellowhammer State. It was epic. It was dramatic. It was explosive. It changed the way one of college football’s greatest rivalries will forever be remembered.

Unlikely? Name the last return of a missed field goal you remember. (I had to read of Devin Hester’s return for the Chicago Bears a few years back to remember it.) The play doesn’t take place without an official review to add a fraction of a second to the game clock, among the most subjective decisions in a sport loaded with subjective judgments. The play doesn’t take place without the hubris of Alabama coach Nick Saban. Even casual fans recognize the Tide kicker — his name doesn’t matter, one year to the next — as the team’s lone Achilles heel. When you’re reeling off three national championships in four years, how often is a kicker needed for a significant field goal? And 57 yards? C’mon, Nick. Put the ball in quarterback A.J. McCarron’s hands at the 25 (as overtime would have), and see if Auburn can answer.

And the stage? The Iron Bowl is more important to Alabamans than any postseason bowl game not played for a national championship. Marriages divide for a day (at least) when these schools meet on the gridiron. And for the first time since the SEC began holding a championship game in 1992, the Iron Bowl decided the western division’s representative.

Davis’s jaunt erased Alabama’s chances at an undefeated season and a third straight national championship. It vaulted an Auburn team given up for dead last fall into the conversation for this year’s BCS title game. (They’ll first have to handle Missouri for the SEC championship next Saturday.) It was a play that locked memories into “where-were-you-when” mode for generations to come.

The closest Memphis football fans have come to this kind of euphoria is Kevin Cobb’s “elbow-down” kickoff return for 95 yards against Tennessee in 1996. But that Play of the Year (according to ESPN) merely set up a later game-winning touchdown.

Sunday night in Orlando, the Memphis basketball team experienced one of the required elements (unlikelihood) in its upset of 5th-ranked Oklahoma State, a team that looked unbeatable less than two weeks earlier. But a basketball game at Disney World, in early December? Not the stage for legendary reflection.

I was at Huey’s in east Memphis when Chris Davis carved his name into college football history. Sharing a post-Thanksgiving meal with family and friends, I experienced the Iron Bowl’s climactic play without sound, the din of other families, other friends prevailing over any commentary from Vern Lundquist and Gary Danielson. (This proved disorienting when that precious second was added to the game clock and I saw a kick being returned in what I initially thought was overtime.) But then there were the cheers. And gasps. A few screams as Davis entered the end zone. The shocked looks at my table mirrored that of Saban as he began the long stroll to shake Auburn coach Gus Malzahn’s hand. It was a Sports Moment. Everyone in that restaurant felt like we were there, on the Plains. And we’ll remember the Moment as though we were.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest 7—Updated with a Clue!!!!

Screen_shot_2013-12-01_at_1.59.28_PM.png

You know the drill … The first person to correctly identify the dish and the restaurant wins his or her choice of a $50 Gould’s gift certificate or $40 Corky’s gift certificate.

Submit your answers to me via email at ellis@memphisflyer.com.

The answer to last week’s contest is the Rice Noodle soup with fresh vegetables, aka Pho Rau Cai, at Pho Vietnam, and the winner is … Johnny Vo.

UPDATE: This one seems to be a bit tricky, so I’ve added a clue below.

[jump]

Screen_Shot_2013-12-03_at_9.35.54_AM.png

Here’s another hint: This is a sandwich place, but it’s also known for something else.