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News

Big Music Weekend in Memphis

It’s a big music weekend in Memphis, beginning with WattStax at the Levitt Shell and continuing with the Center for Southern Folklore Music & Heritage Fest downtown. Chris Davis has all the details.

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Style Sessions We Recommend

Favorite Finds — Tribal Bags from CrazyBeautiful Pop-up Shop

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Ease into the tribal print craze with these bags found at CrazyBeautiful’s new pop-up shop in Overton Square.

The Tribal Zip Case Clutch instantly caught my eye. My mind flooded with all the scenarios it could be my stylish sidekick, and I caught myself holding it close and smiling. Plus, that tassel is just so charming.

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It also sizes just right for a tablet. So many possibilities.

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The Palm Springs Weekender Bag will help retire that old dufflebag you’ve had too long. It’s perfect if you’re traveling this long weekend or for any upcoming weekend trips.

The CrazyBeautiful Pop-up Shop in Overton Square is located 2092 Trimble Place at the Tower courtyard. They are open Mon-Sat 10am-8pm and Sunday 12pm-6pm.

Feel free to share your favorite finds around Memphis with us. Have a great Labor Day weekend!

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Reasonably Fly: “Stick Fly” Runs Through Sept. 14 at the Hattiloo Theatre

Bertram Williams, Emmanuel McKinney, Jai Johnson and Venise Settles in Stick Fly

  • Bertram Williams, Emmanuel McKinney, Jai Johnson and Venise Settles in “Stick Fly”

God, how I love that new theater smell. And so far I love just about everything else about the new Hattiloo too, from the lobby experience, to theater seats that don’t turn into torture devices halfway through a long show. There’s also a lot to love about Stick Fly, the Hattiloo’s second production in its new digs, although Lydia R. Diamond’s promising drama is plagued by pacing issues, and a the same kinds of lighting glitches that have always marred Hattiloo productions.

It’s ironic how Stick Fly aims for subtlety while spelling out all its formal conceits by inserting subtext directly into the mouths of the play’s childish but well-educated characters. Angry shouting confrontations are artificial devices, we’re told as Kent “Spoon” LeVay, a young, gadfly of means discusses narrative strategies in his soon to be published novel. It’s a message directly from the playwright and viewer expectations should be adjusted accordingly. Likewise, the show’s title is explained in detail in a conversation between Taylor, the young entomologist and Joe, a randy older neurosurgeon. It suggests that audiences might take a more cerebral and less emotional look at the show’s characters, like scientists monitoring flies glued to the end of a stick. Get it?

Stick Fly is an inverted Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner for a generation that fancies itself post-racial but isn’t. It tells the story of two brothers from an affluent African American family who bring their girlfriends—one black, one white— home for a long weekend where things are said and secrets exposed.

Director Erma Elzy allows too much time to elapse between scenes and what should be a superior show oozes along at a monotonous pace.

Jai Johnson and Emmanuel McKinney are both engaging as young lovers Taylor and Spoon. So to are Hattiloo vet Bertram Williams and Kilby Yarbrough as Flip and Kimber, the play’s slightly older interracial couple.

The evening’s best moments come courtesy of Venise Settles, who plays Cheryl, the daughter of the family maid whose mother has just dropped a bombshell. Settles is the kind of performer who never has to say a word, everything you need to know can be read in her posture and in her eyes. She’s a scene-stealer in a play filled with accomplished performers doing very good work.

Stick Fly is at the Hattiloo through September 14.

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News News Blog

Florida Man Sentenced to 25 Years For Raping Child in Tennessee

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  • Florida Department of Law Enforcement

An Oviedo, Florida man currently serving 15 years for sexual battery on a minor has received an additional 25-year sentence for raping the same child in Tennessee.

Marc Anthony Baechtle, 46, will serve a 25-year prison sentence in Tennessee subsequent to completing the remaining eight years of his Florida sentence. According to the Shelby County District Attorney General’s office, Baechtle began sexually assaulting a Florida girl when she was 10 years old. It continued for several years and took place in several states.

The victim, now an adult, appeared in Criminal Court Thursday, August 28th, and asked the judge to sentence Baechtle to the 25-year maximum for his criminal actions. The lady said he “ripped her childhood from her and that she testified against him in trial in July so he could not do the same to others,” according to a press release from the District Attorney General’s office.

Baechtle issued an apologetic statement to the court for his actions, and he requested maximal punishment: “I hope you give me the maximum sentence, because I deserve it.”

Baechtle’s Tennessee sentence carries no parole. He will be on the Tennessee Sex Offender Registry and under community supervision for life. In Florida, he is classified as a sexual predator under the law.

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News

Two New Lunch Options

John Klyce Minervini reports on Lisa’s Lunch Box and The Blind Bear, both of which have new lunch options.

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News

“Reforming Sentencing” Panel is Flawed

Memphis attorney Mike Working says Governor Haslam’s task force on reforming sentencing standards lacks racial and legal diversity.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

The National Civil Rights Museum Brings “Black Angels Over Tuskegee” to The Orpheum

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The National Civil Rights Museum is bringing Layon Gray’s play Black Angels Over Tuskegee to The Orpheum Tuesday, September 16. Black Angels tells the story of WWII heroes, the Tuskegee Airmen, and their contributions, sacrifices, and struggles against prejudice.

Details, here.

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Calling the Bluff Music

Throwback Thursday: Juicy J’s “Name It After Me”

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Long before Juicy J enjoyed commercial acclaim as a solo artist, he was part of Three 6 Mafia, one of rap music’s most successful collectives. Following the group’s first Platinum album, When The Smoke Clears, and their movie, Choices, Juicy released his debut album, Chronicles of the Juice Man, in 2002.

Juicy used a large portion of the album as an outlet to vent his frustrations with the incarceration of Project Pat, his older brother. The project was also a platform for him to provide listeners with that raw, bass/sample-heavy sound that popularized Three 6 during the early 90’s.

One of my favorite tracks off Chronicles of the Juice Man is “Name It After Me.” Over a sample of David Ruffin’s “Statue of a Fool,” Juicy smoothly flows about the lavish lifestyle he’s acquired from hard work before lyrically placing himself in the shoes of a disadvantaged man hustling to survive and provide for his family. Former Hypnotize Minds artist Frayser Boy also contributes a verse on the song. Peep it below.

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News

Return to Sin City

Chris McCoy reviews the sequel, Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, and finds it lacks some of the punch of the original.

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News

The Clean at the Hi-Tone

’80s Kiwi-punk icons, the Clean, play the Hi-Tone Thursday. Chris Shaw has their story and says you should check ’em out.