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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Letter From the Editor: Bass Pro is a Game-Changer

“Bass Pro Shops Lures 1,500 Applicants.” That was the big story in the Valley Morning Star of Harlingen, Texas, last week. There’s a new Bass Pro Shop store opening in that Rio Grande Valley city, and more than 1,500 job-seekers lined up to apply for work.

The Bass Pro Shop in Harlingen will hire 450 people. Some of the jobs are minimum wage; some are much higher. The bottom line is that 450 people will have new jobs in Harlingen when the store opens.

The Bass Pro/Pyramid deal in Memphis is on a much larger scale. Construction on retrofitting the Pyramid is projected to create 1,665 jobs. The store itself will hire 560 people, full- and part-time. The attendant reinvigoration of the nearby Pinch District should stimulate those businesses and bring in new ones. Again, that means jobs, which means tax revenue, which is good news for Memphis.

Much of the cynicism about the Bass Pro deal comes from a misunderstanding of the nature of the new tenant in the Pyramid. It’s a glorified “bait shop,” say critics. It’ll just draw rednecks and hicks. This criticism, I suspect, would not be happening if, say, Macy’s had decided to move into that big pointy building.

That’s missing the point. This Bass Pro development is not comparable to a department store. It’s way beyond a simple retail establishment. Department stores don’t have an indoor cypress swamp with alligators, fish, ducks, gar, and a kayak run. They don’t have a mezzanine with a fishing platform, a fly-fishing shop, an arcade, a snake pit, a dining deck, an aviary, lots of boats, and a harbor dock where you can take one out for a test cruise.

This project will draw fresh money into Memphis. Bass Pro says 4 million people a year visit its flagship store in Springfield, Missouri — which isn’t exactly on the beaten path. Similar numbers in Memphis would provide a serious boost to the local economy.

This is a potentially huge game-changer for the area, and it’s a perfect complement to the casino and music tourism we already get. We need to get over the elitist attitude and embrace the opportunity. Bass Pro isn’t Sidney Shlenker redux. This is a hugely successful national company that’s moving to town. If they want to paint the Pyramid camo, I’m okay with it, if it puts people to work.

Bruce VanWyngarden

brucev@memphisflyer.com

Categories
Calling the Bluff Music

Kevin Hart Talks Screening New Film In Memphis (Video)

Kevin Hart

  • Kevin Hart

Kevin Hart, one of the funniest people on the planet, hosted an advanced screening of his upcoming film, Think Like a Man Too, at the Malco Paradiso Monday, June 2nd.

Before a jam-packed audience got the opportunity to view the sequel to Think Like a Man (2012), which grossed $90 million, the actor/comedian opened up about why he chose Memphis as a location to screen the film. Check it out below.

Think Like a Man Too hits theaters nationwide June 20th. Aside from Hart, the film will star Gabrielle Union, Terrence Jenkins, Michael Ealy, Gary Owens, and Taraji P. Henson.

Follow me on Twitter: @Lou4President
Friend me on Facebook: Louis Goggans
Check out my website: ahumblesoul.com

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News

“Haint” Opens at TheatreWorks

Chris Davis talks to playwright Justin Asher about his new play, Haint, which opens at TheatreWorks this week.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Tiger Trivia Tuesday

Memphis freshman forward Austin Nichols earned the American Athletic Conference’s first Rookie of the Year award for his performance in the 2013-14 season.

Name the six Tigers who were named Freshman of the Year during the Conference USA era (1996-2013).

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Calling the Bluff Music

Kevin Hart Serving Free Sandwiches At A&R Bar-B-Que

Kevin Hart

  • Kevin Hart

Hilarious comedian/actor Kevin Hart is in Memphis to promote the upcoming release of Think Like a Man Too, the highly-anticipated sequel to Think Like a Man (2012), which grossed $90 million dollars.

Hart will stop by A&R Bar-B-Que (1802 Elvis Presley Blvd.) today (Tuesday, June 3rd) to treat Memphians to some free BBQ sandwiches. Hart will be at A&R Barbecue from 1:30pm — 2:30pm. The event is free and open to the public.

Last night, Hart stopped by the Malco Paradiso to show an advanced screening of Think Like a Man Too. He conducted red carpet interviews with various media outlets. Other guests on the red carpet included Mayor A C Wharton and legendary Memphis rapper MJG.

Aside from Hart, Think Like a Man Too will star Gabrielle Union, Terrence Jenkins, Michael Ealy, Gary Owens, and Taraji P. Henson. The movie hits theaters nationwide June 20th.

Follow me on Twitter: @Lou4President
Friend me on Facebook: Louis Goggans
Check out my website: ahumblesoul.com

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Memphis Minnie’s Birthday

Lizzie Douglass ran away from Walls, Miss., to Beale Street at age 13. She toured with the circus, played for dimes, and was a prostitute. She and her husband were signed by Columbia in 1930, and the label gave her the nickname. She played and recorded through the 1950s, settling in Chicago. She died in a Memphis nursing home in 1973. In 1996, Bonnie Raitt paid for her tombstone, which is in Walls. 

Memphis Minnie’s Birthday

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News

New Book on Memphis Barbecue

Susan Ellis interviews Craig David Meek about his new book, Memphis Barbecue — and his favorite spots for ‘que.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Craig David Meek Writes the Book on Memphis BBQ

Craig David Meek is a former journalist, who’s been chronicling his quest to try every soul food and barbecue restaurant in the area on his blog Memphis Que.

Craig David Meek

  • Craig David Meek

The blog caught the eye of an editor at the History Press, with the result being Meek’s excellent Memphis Barbecue: A Succulent History of Smoke, Sauce & Soul.

The book begins with Hernando de Soto introducing pigs to the region and covers everything from such old-time Memphis favorites like Brady and Lil’s and the barbecue contest to Corky’s on QVC. There are some amazing moments in Memphis Barbecue — like Jim Neely speaking quite frankly about his TV celebrity nephew Pat Neely and John Willingham’s widow remembering the barbecue legend’s last day.

Memphis Barbecue will be released on Tuesday, June 10th, and there will be a launch party and signing at the Booksellers at Laurelwood that same day at 6 p.m. Related events include the Whole Hog BBQ, Live Music & Book Party at the Hi-Tone on Friday, June 27th and a book talk and signing with a barbecue tasting at the Cotton Museum Thursday, July 10th.

Meek took some to time answer questions about writing the book.

Writing the history of barbecue seems like a massive and daunting task. How did you figure out how to organize the book?
Meek: By writing a first draft that was a rambling mess, then going back through and putting everything in a more chronological order. I originally tried to organize it around different aspects of barbecue I considered important like craftsmanship, business, and tradition with different restaurants and competition teams used to represent different components of each aspect. It ended up reading like the world’s most disorganized barbecue restaurant guide, but reading over it I saw that I had the entire history of Memphis there if I reorganized it into the story of the city told through barbecue.

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You’ve been blogging about barbecue for three years, in working on this book, did you come upon anything that truly surprised you?
Looking into the history of William’s Bar-B-Q across the river in West Memphis and realizing how important the neighborhood around it was to the development of the electric blues and early rock-and-roll in the ’40s through the ’60s. That was the vibrant, late-night music scene where the early Sun artists really honed their skills during a period when the nightlife and music scene on Beale Street was surprisingly dead.

What was your favorite part about writing the book?
Since the blog was always done anonymously, with me just coming in as an average Joe and eating, I loved gathering the oral histories that went into the book. Going into the kitchens with people like Jim Neely at Interstate, Barry Pelts at Corky’s, Eric Vernon at the Bar-B-Q Shop, Craig Blondis at Central, and Helen Turner at Helen’s over in Brownsville and hearing their stories and letting them show me the work that goes into their food. Standing behind the counter with Flora Payne while she makes a spicy jumbo sandwich for me. Going down to the basement at Coletta’s to see the shoulders on the pit, then up to the kitchen to watch them make a fresh barbecue pizza and carrying that pizza straight to their Elvis room to eat it.

You very judiciously sidestep the question of your favorite barbecue places by saying it depends on the day, your mood, the weather, etc. Come on, man. You must have two or three places you frequent more than others. Spill it.
The Tops on Jackson Avenue is a few blocks from my house so their double cheeseburger with everything topped with two ounces of chopped pork would represent my most frequent barbecue order and it is a thing of savage beauty.

But really, I am in a different part of the Mid-South almost every day with my job, so I tend to have a favorite place to stop for each part of town. But even that gets hard to nail down. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been in the Fox Meadows/Hickory Hill area staring at my windshield, holding my keys, way overthinking the decision between a dry rib dinner from Leonard’s and a shoulder plate from Showboat. I know either will be perfect, but choosing one means missing out on the other that day. I’ve literally flipped a coin on multiple occasions.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

A Visit to Tart

Tart, a highbrow concept marrying art, coffee, pastries and French cuisine, finally is open after a lengthy delay.

Heather Bryan-Pike and Abby Jestis have managed to merge seemingly disparate dreams and a corporate casino background by converting a former duplex at 820 South Cooper into a quirky coffeehouse that couldn’t be more individualistic.

Based on customer feedback, Bryan-Pike told me during a recent visit, Tart has placed a heavier-than-anticipated focus on the food.

The Instagram-friendly tarts stand out in the display case, no explanation needed. But the food menu begs for an explanation even for the most ardent foodie.

I cannot pronounce the dish I ordered — salmon rillette — despite two years of French courses in college. I ordered it upon Bryan-Pike’s recommendation, but to try to regurgitate her crash course of the way it’s prepared would be an exercise in futility.

From what I gathered, though, the small glass cup at the corner of my plate contained a chilled paste made from shredded fish meat, which I spread on the half dollar-sized slices of bread along with pieces of juicy pepper and a sweet jelly. My plate also included a moist side of peas accentuated with spices and vegetables.
I also ordered a croissant and my friend, a cute Brazilian girl, graciously let me taste the cherry tart she ordered.

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I was distracted by her smile (that’s my excuse, anyway) and failed to grab photos other than a pair of absentminded shots of my plates after I had nearly finished eating, but Tart features gallery lighting, local art on the walls and tables wedged into corners of the several rooms that give the venue a homey and private feel.

Dubbed the “CooperLoo Gallery,” a rotating street art installation provides a sort of odd motivation to stand inside the door of the restrooms and have a conversation.

As Tart is open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday to Thursday, to 10 p.m. on Friday, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Bryan-Pike and Jestis practically live there. Bryan-Pike serves as the outgoing spokeswoman chatting with most of the guests and Jestis bustles around greasing the gears of the machine.

One of Tart’s strengths is the duo’s combined intelligence, experience, and attention to detail, all of which converge in the venue’s layout, visual seduction, and the unique and nuanced menu.

The concept will feature community events, classes and collaborations with local artists, and a seasonally-based menu unlikely to grow stale.

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News

All the News in Memphis Blues

Joe Boone has some Memphis blues news that you can use.