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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

“Franch Ready To Hit Libyan Extremists”: The True Story

Many people assumed there was a typo in this headline from Tuesday’s Commercial Appeal.

The headline was correct although the accompanying narrative about France preparing to bomb rebels along the Libyan border was complete rubbish and clearly printed in error.  What should have appeared was the story of a feud between two neighbors: Harbor Town resident Kenneth Franch, the inventor of Franch’s Tangy Orange Salad Dressing, and librarian Binford Scuttlebutt.  According to reports Franch became enraged because the Scuttlebutts, who are actually from Denver and of Flemish extraction, didn’t take their holiday decorations down after January 1st. 

Categories
News News Blog

Former Chickasaw Country Club Clerk Faces 20 Years

A 58-year-old woman faces up to 20 years in prison for defrauding Chickasaw Country Club of $736,000.

On Tuesday, Sue M. Winfrey, a former payroll clerk at Chickasaw Country Club, entered a guilty plea to charges of submitting fraudulent payroll data to Chickasaw’s payroll processor, Paychex.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s office, Winfrey received approximately $736,000 as a result of submitting the fraudulent data between 2003 and August 2013. The money was deposited electronically into bank accounts she maintained at Bank of America. 

“This case underscores our unwavering commitment to bring to justice those who steal from others and brazenly line their pockets by committing white collar crimes,” said Edward Stanton, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Tennessee, in a statement. “When employees such as Sue Winfrey fraudulently divert funds from employers, the United States Attorney’s office will work with law enforcement partners to ensure those individuals are held accountable and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”

Winfrey was indicted by a federal grand jury in October 2014. She faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. She is scheduled to be sentenced April 1st.

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News News Blog

Calling All Hotties!

It’s that time again! We’re looking for Memphis’ hottest men and women so we can ask them frivolous questions and feature their hot faces in the pages of our Valentine’s week issue.

A sample of last year’s Memphis Flyer hotties

So send us pictures and contact info for all the hot people in your lives. But make good and sure they’re hot before you send ’em. We’re not looking for any of that “Oh, he’s hot because he’s a good person” crap. We want truly gorgeous people, folks. Sure, it helps if they’re good people, too. But for once, let’s consider what really matters — looks.

Think you’re hot stuff? Then nominate yourself! We promise we won’t tell anyone.

Submit pictures, contact information for your hottie, and a few lines about him or her to bphillips@memphisflyer.com. We’ll narrow submissions to the 14 hottest people, interview them, and ask them to come in for a photo shoot later in the month.

The deadline for submissions is January 24th.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Memphis Dawls in Paste

Memphis’ favorite dawls, The Memphis Dawls, have charmed cool-kid music source Paste magazine. We’re not surprised, given how charmed we are. Yay! 

Memphis Dawls – Skin Like a Cage from Second Light on Vimeo.

Memphis Dawls in Paste

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

A New Year, A New Look for Humphrey’s Prime Cut Shoppe

For years, Humphrey’s Prime Cut Shoppe—the Folk’s Folly butcher shop—was a well-kept secret. So well-kept, in fact, that many of the steakhouse’s best customers didn’t know it was there. It all started in 1977, when founder Humphrey Folk started selling prime steaks to friends from the back door of his restaurant.

Well, now they can come to the front door.

Humphrey’s (formerly the Prime Cut Shoppe) recently got a makeover: a total rebranding that includes a new website, new logo, and new marketing materials, plus an interior and exterior facelift. These days, the butcher shop is executed in crisp black and white, with clean lines that highlight the bright-red freshness of the meat. 

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The website is similarly sharp, with an intuitive layout and tasty images. Just a few clicks, and you can have an Australian lamb rack—or a cowboy ribeye, or a veal chop—shipped overnight to most anywhere in the United States.

Maybe the best part is that the meat is never frozen, so when it shows up at your door, it’s practically still mooing.

“You can take the restaurant experience with you,” says Humphreys manager Terry Martin. “Selecting a hand-cut prime steak and fixings for your home is the next best thing to enjoying them in our Folk’s Folly dining room.”

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

The Interview

Have you ever heard of The Streisand Effect? Back in 2003, Barbara Streisand somehow spotted her Malibu home in one of 12,000 aerial photographs of the California coast on a photographers’ website and sued him because she didn’t want anyone looking at her house. But here’s the thing: If she hadn’t pointed out that her home was the subject of one of 12,000 pictures, no one would have known, or probably even cared, that it was there. But now, because of Striesand’s attempt to suppress the photograph, it has its own Wikipedia page. The act of trying to suppress something brought more attention to it than it would have gotten anyway.

Diana Bang, Seth Rogan, and James Franco in The Interview.

You’ve probably heard the story of The Interview by now: Seth Rogan, the “stoner king of Hollywood”, and his friend from the Freaks and Geeks days, James Franco made another of their middlebrow comedy movies to be released last Christmas. The plot involved Franco’s character, talk show host Dave Skylark, getting a chance to interview North Korean leader Kim Jon Un. The CIA, represented by Agent Lacey (Party Down vet Lizzy Caplan), makes them an offer they can’t refuse: Assassinate Kim. Will they do it, or are they too stupid to pull it off?

There are a few times in history when a group of filmmakers have made big, lasting political statements or captured the zeitgeist just right. Chaplin’s The Great Dictator, lampooned Hitler on the eve of war. The backdrop for Casablanca’s love story was a community of political refugees from war-torn Europe, a description that fit many of the actors on the screen. Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove skewered the insanity of a world preparing to destroy itself with nuclear weapons. Now, to this rarefied list of films, we must add The Interview. And you can blame the Streisand effect for that, because The Great Dictator, it ain’t.

Donna Dixon, Dan Ackroyd, and Chevy Chase in Spies Like Us.

Don’t get me wrong. The Interview is not a bad film, per se. It has some funny moments, and some decent performances by Franco, Rogan, and Diana Bang as Sook, the North Korean handler assigned to Skylark.  It’s a surprisingly old fashioned action comedy in the John Landis/John Belushi/Dan Ackroyd vein. It wants to be The Blues Brothers, but its nearest antecedent would be Spies Like Us, the 1985 John Landis comedy that was originally supposed to star Ackroyd and Belushi but ended up replacing the deceased half of the duo with Chevy Chase. Like Spies Like Us, The Interview has its comic duo (Rogan plays Franco’s producer Aaron Rappaport) as untrained, and none too bright, field agents thrown into a totalitarian Communist dictatorship on a perilous mission of international import. The only reason the filmmakers chose North Korea as a target for humor is because they’re the only totalitarian Communist dictatorship still around 25 years after the fall of the Berlin wall, and their internal propaganda looks ridiculous to the West. 

Randall Park as Kim Jong Un

But some movies are born great, and some movies have greatness thrust upon them. That’s what happened to The Interview when Kim Jong Un ordered a cyber hit on Sony Pictures after hearing that Hollywood was imagining his assassination. One of the many intertwining ironies of this whole affair is that the actor who plays Kim Jong Un, Randall Park, gives the best performance in the entire movie. Sure, his Kim is a privileged buffoon, but so are Rogan and Franco’s characters. Had the North Korean dictator simply ignored the movie’s provocation—if it can even be said to rise to the level of provocation—it would have made some money providing cheap laughs to theatergoers over the holidays and then been flushed down the memory hole with Spies Like Us.

But as it is, The Interview will have repercussions far beyond the multiplexes of the world. It’s an attack on a private company inside the borders of the United States by a state actor, and the United States has decided to respond. We still don’t know exactly who did it, although I find it unlikely that anyone but Kim was ultimately behind it, no matter who was hired by whom to do the dirty work, for the simple reason that the movie is so innocuous. Equally implausible is the theory that it was all a publicity stunt by Sony, as the damage to that studio is real and likely to be lasting, depending on exactly how many people Sony owes money to that have their lawyers and accountants pouring over the studio’s leaked financial information right now. The decision to pull the movie from release in the face of anonymous terroristic threats makes more sense if you consider that the theater chains were likely more concerned about their IT infrastructure being turned inside out than a physical attack.

Rogan and company didn’t do anything but set out to make a funny movie, and they were reasonably successful. The filmmakers were just artists doing their job, until they got swept up in something bigger. Maybe that’s how art is supposed to work. 

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Feeding Memphis Book to Feed Memphis

On Monday, January 12th at 6 p.m., there will be launch party at Sweet Grass for Feeding Memphis: A Celebration of the City’s Eclectic Cuisine, a new book by Michael Glasgow.

The book includes profiles of 28 of Memphis’ best restaurants and features recipes. Ten dollars of every sale of Feeding Memphis, which costs $45, will go to the Mid-South Food Bank.  

Glasgow is a Nashville-based writer, which begs the question: Why Memphis?

“I like finding new stories,” Glasgow says. “This is more fun for me to learn things I don’t know.”

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Justin Fox Burks

Restaurant Iris’ Corn Bread Pancakes with Crab Ravigote

Glasgow has a son living in Memphis, and through him, he hooked up with local chefs. He then asked them where they like to eat, which led him to places like Lunchbox Eats and the Cozy Corner. What he sought for Feeding Memphis is “the new, the iconic, and the emerging.”

Among the restaurants are the Second Line, Hog & Hominy, Felicia Suzanne’s, Memphis Pizza Cafe, Huey’s, Tsunami, Muddy’s Bake Shop, the Half Shell, and the Beauty Shop.

Some of the recipes in the book are the Arcade’s famous sweet potato pancakes, Folk Folly’s Maker’s Mark medallions, and McEwen’s on Monroe’s sea bass with shiitake risotto.

The book has plenty of food porn and great archival images as well. 

Andrea Behrends

Hog & Hominy’s Johnny Cakes Masa

While all of the restaurants in Feeding Memphis are familiar to Memphians, the book underscores how many of them are securely grounded in family: the Boggs family of Huey’s; the Vergos family of the Rendezvous, the Koplins of Brother Juniper’s. There are Thara Burana and Dottie Cull of Bangkok Alley and Raymond and Desiree Robinson of the Cozy Corner — both couples leaping into unknown waters of the restaurant business.

Glasgow proves adept at rooting out interesting asides and charming anecdotes. Felicia Willett has a degree in marketing and business from the University of Memphis. Kevin Keough struggled with coming up with a name for Cafe Keough. Molly Gonzales’ (the Molly of Molly’s La Casita) nickname for Robert Chapman was the Tortilla Man. 

The driving idea behind the Feeding Memphis, says Glasgow, is “Dine Local/Give Local.” His goal in teaming up with the Mid-South Food Bank is to provide 150,000 meals. His next step is extending the Feeding brand to 8 or 10 more cities, with the ultimate goal of providing one million meals. 

The Feeding Memphis launch party at Sweet Grass is $100 per person and includes a three-course dinner prepared by Ryan Trimm and a signed copy of the book. Huey’s will host a Feeding Memphis Day at all of its locations Monday, January 19th. Copies of the book will be available for purchase throughout the day. 

The book is available for purchase at Social gift shop on Perkins, the South Main Book Juggler, the Booksellers at Laurelwood, Burke’s Book Store, the Stovall Collection, and Oxford Floral in Oxford, MS. 

A number of restaurants will also have the book for sale: the Rendezvous, Muddy’s Grind House, Muddy’s Bake Shop, Porcellino’s, Gibson’s Donuts, Molly’s La Casita, Folk’s Folly, the Beauty Shop, Caritas Village, Bangkok Alley, and Brother Juniper’s.  

Categories
Music Music Blog

Random Review: Native North America Volume One

Native North America (Vol. 1): Aboriginal Folk, Rock, and Country 1966-1985 
Light in the Attic Records

Native North America (Vol. 1) is a collection of Aboriginal folk, rock, and country made by the indigenous people of Canada and the Northern United States. The collection of songs touch on familiar artists from the time period like Neil Young, Johnny Cash, and Leonard Cohen, but the politically charged lyrics are from artists who have lived through struggle rather than those who made a living singing about it.

The musicians featured on Native North America (Vol. 1) also had limited access to studios and recording time, and because of the political climate of the day, the majority of the albums they were able to create never got the air-time or recognition they deserved. As is normally the case with under-appreciated and undocumented music, many of the albums featured on Native North America (Vol. 1) are nearly impossible to find. 

Touching more on the struggle certain artists on this compilation faced, Light in the Attic says:

“With cooperation and guidance from the artists, producers, family members, and behind the scenes players, Native North America (Vol. 1) sheds real light on the painful struggles and deep traditions of the greater Indigenous community and the significance of its music. The songs speak of joy and spirituality, but also tell of real tragedy and strife, like that of Algonquin/Mohawk artist Willy Mitchell, whose music career was sparked by a bullet to the head from the gun of a trigger-happy police officer, or those of Inuk singer-songwriter Willie Thrasher, who was robbed of his family and traditional Inuit culture by the residential school system.” 

“Considering the financially motivated destruction of our environment, the conservative political landscape, and corporate bottom-line dominance, it’s bittersweet to report that the revolutionary songs featured on Native North America hold as much meaning today as when they were originally recorded. Dedicated to legendary Métis singer-songwriter and poet Willie Dunn, featured on the anthology but who sadly passed away during its making, Native North America (Vol. 1) is only the beginning. A companion set featuring a crucial selection of folk, rock, and country from the United States’ Lower 48 and Mexico is currently in production.”

Now, thanks to this extensive collection from Light In The Attic, these powerful songs of freedom, hope and despair can finally be heard. The collection is available on both Vinyl and CD with information on both packages below. 

The deluxe 3xLP set includes 60 page book with comprehensive liner notes, artist interviews, unseen archival photos, and lyrics (with translations), housed in a “Tip-On” slip case with three “Tip-On” jackets.

The deluxe 2xCD set features a hard-cover 120 page book with comprehensive liner notes, artist interviews, unseen archival photos, and lyrics (with translations).

Copies of Native North America (Vol.1) are available from Light in the Attic. 

Random Review: Native North America Volume One

Random Review: Native North America Volume One (2)

Categories
Calling the Bluff Music

Wave Chapelle Talks Curren$y, Rico Love and Yo Gotti

CMG representative Wave Chapelle recently sat down with DJ Smallz to reflect on some of the lessons he learned in 2014. 

During the interview, Wave touched on what he took away from being featured on Curren$y’s “The Drive in Theatre” tour, receiving mentorship from Rico Love, and watching Yo Gotti record.

Check out the interview below. 

Wave Chapelle Talks Curren$y, Rico Love and Yo Gotti

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Categories
News News Blog

New Bill Would Get Wine In Grocery Stores By Summer

Wine could be on grocery store shelves as soon as this summer, if one Tennessee representative has his way. On Monday, Representative Bo Mitchell (D-Nashville) filed a bill to shorten the timeframe by one year for the implementation of wine sales in grocery stores.

HB2011 would move the sale date up from the previously approved date of summer 2016. When the “wine in grocery stores” bill was passed by the Tennessee General Assembly last year, it allowed liquor stores, which have lobbied against wine sales in retail shops, to begin selling non-alcohol and low-alcohol products immediately. But the bill pushed wine sales in grocery stores to 2016, contingent on the measure passing individual referendums in Tennessee cities. That referendum passed in Memphis in November.