Categories
Calling the Bluff Music

Throwback Thursday: Three 6 Mafia Freestyles on Rap City

BET‘s now-defunct Rap City used to be my favorite show to watch after school. More than a program that enabled you to see a slew of videos from both underground and well-known rappers, it was an outlet to watch different artists talk about their current and upcoming projects.

To me, the show’s glory days were during Big Tigger’s tenure hosting it. At that time, it was titled Rap City: Tha Basement, and in addition to featuring interviews and videos, it boasted a freestyle session. Before the show ended, artists who stopped by to discuss their music would step into the booth and spit a few bars. 

Around the time Three 6 Mafia had their catchy smash “Riding Spinners,” they appeared on Tha Basement. And during the show’s freestyle segment, the Memphis natives stepped into the booth and traded verses with Tigger over T.I.’s “24’s” instrumental. 

Check out the footage below. R.I.P. Lord Infamous. 

Throwback Thursday: Three 6 Mafia Freestyles on Rap City

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Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Old School Pictures Reveals Bad, Bad Men Trailer

Brad Ellis and Allen C. Gardner have been making movies together since they were in high school. Their features The Path Of Fear (2002), Act One (2005), Being Awesome (2013) have all won multiple awards at the Indie Memphis Film Festival and elsewhere, and their vampire movie Daylight Fades (2010) received international distribution.

(left to right) Drew Smith, Allen C. Gardner, Matt Mercer, Matthew Gilliam, and Nathan Ross Murphy in Bad, Bad Men

Now they have released the first trailer for their new comedy, Bad Bad Men, which stars Gardner as a schlubby real estate agent who is bullied at a coffee shop. But his scheme to get revenge on his petty tormentors backfires, and leads to an After Hours-style adventure in the Memphis underworld. The film, which was shot in Memphis last August by cinematographer Ryan Parker, also stars local actors Drew Smith, Dennis Phillppi, Nathan Ross Murphy, Donald Myers, Markus Seaberry, and singer Alexis Grace. The film is currently in post production with Laura Jean Hocking as the editor, and we should expect to see it hit the festival circuit in the fall. 

Old School Pictures Reveals Bad, Bad Men Trailer

Categories
Style Sessions We Recommend

Red Velvet Vintage – Boutique Peek – Winter 2015

Before Red Velvet Vintage became a full-scale clothing boutique, owner Eryka Smith’s concept of vintage and retro clothing was just a few racks in the CrazyBeautiful store. She slowly curated more pin up couture as the demand increased.

Eryka opened Red Velvet Vintage last May carrying specialty items of past eras. Fits and cuts boldly accentuate a woman’s features with class. Accessories are adorned with feminine details like flowers and lace, and yes, indeed, Red Velvet carries petticoats. 

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Though the perfect source for pin up couture, Red Velvet has pieces that can be worked into the day-to-day wardrobe of any modern woman. Boutique manager Vera Stanfield, who was/is one of Eryka’s best vintage clothing customer, embodies the vintage style effortlessly. Stay tuned for more on Vera in Style Sessions.

509 South Main Street
Memphis, TN 38103
(901) 826-5503
Open Tuesdays – Sundays

www.facebook.com/RedVelvetMemphis
instagram.com/redvelvetvintage

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Stickem Owner Opening Ethiopian Restaurant, etc.

Ermyias Shiberou, owner of Stickem food truck, is planning on opening a Ethiopian restaurant on Madison near the Bar B-Q Shop in the former site of a Pizza Hut. The restaurant will be called the Blue Nile. Shiberou hopes to have it open by spring. 

Shiberou says that he originally hoped to open an Ethiopian restaurant before he began Stickem. The reason that he’s pursuing it now is that the property became available. 

“I felt like I’ve to do this now,” he says. “It just makes sense to me — the timing, the location.”

Shiberou says he doesn’t have menu set yet, but plans to serve traditional vegetarian dishes and Kitfo, which he describes as a beef tartare seasoned in clarified butter and Ethiopian spices and served with a homemade cottage cheese. 

He also plans to roast coffee in-house, and hold Ethiopian coffee ceremonies once a week. 

• Spotted at the corner of Madison and Belvedere … 

• For folks who are Lenting … Whole Foods is having a Fish on Fridays special through April 2nd. 

Categories
News News Blog

Blueprint for Safety Initiative Seeks to Combat Domestic Violence

Louis Goggans

Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell discusses the Blueprint for Safety initiative.


The city’s frigid temperature didn’t hinder a medium-sized crowd from attending the launch of a new comprehensive response to domestic violence at the Urban Child Institute (UCI) today.

After a three-year planning stage, Shelby County’s “Blueprint for Safety” initiative was introduced during a Thursday morning news conference. The initiative seeks to enhance services provided by 911 dispatchers, law enforcement, and victim/witness services to domestic violence victims. The Blueprint for Safety will also strengthen the rehabilitative efforts provided to offenders by the city’s domestic violence court, pretrial services, and probation.

Stakeholders for the initiative include city and county governments, local law enforcement, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District’s office, the Shelby County District Attorney General’s office, General Sessions Division 10, the Family Safety Center, and other non-profit agencies.

Representatives from several of the aforementioned entities took turns speaking at a podium about their role in the initiative and the adverse circumstances of domestic violence.

Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell said one of Blueprint for Safety’s main goals is to enlighten the public on the frequency of domestic violence cases locally.

“We have some 8,000 domestic violence cases here in the local area annually,” Luttrell said. “This blueprint helps us to differentiate the cases and the elevated risk and work collectively with all of the service providers as we try to focus on the plight of the victim. What I particularly appreciate about this plan is how it pulls together the dispatchers, law enforcement officers, the firefighters, and correctional officers in our jails and prisons. It brings all of the players that are involved in touching the elements of crime together for kind purpose.”

The Blueprint for Safety initiative is being funded by a $300,000 federal grant administered through the U.S. Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Office on Violence Against Women.

Memphis is the fourth city to adopt the DOJ’s Blueprint for Safety model. The initiative is already being implemented in both St. Paul and Duluth, Minnesota as well as New Orleans, Louisiana.

For more information on the Blueprint for Safety initiative, read next week’s issue of the Memphis Flyer.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Ballet Memphis Presents “I Am”

Ballet Memphis

Ballet Memphis describes I Am as a, “symphony of struggles and triumphs in four world premiere works.” The evening showcases new work by a quartet of notable choreographers from the four corners of America — Reggie Wilson, Julia Adam, Gabrielle Lamb, and Memphis’ own Steven McMahon.

Here’s a preview…

Ballet Memphis Presents ‘I Am’

And another…

Ballet Memphis Presents ‘I Am’ (2)

Categories
Music Music Blog

Weekend Round Up Part Six

Josh Miler

The Sheiks

The Ice Apocalypse of 2015 is over and you survived, even if your pantry and liquor cabinet took a serious hit. Celebrate your victory over the elements by checking out these concerts this weekend.

FRIDAY FEBRUARY 20TH

The Passport, Mason Jar Fireflies, Mary Owens, Press, 6:00 p.m. at the New Daisy, $8.00.

Sidekicks with The Star Killers, 9:00 p.m. at the Hi-Tone Small Room, $10.00.

Weekend Round Up Part Six (2)

Rosco Bandana, 10:00 p.m. at Lafayette’s Music Room.

Orion, Hazy Skies, Canaan, 10:00 p.m. at Murphy’s, $5.00.

The Sheiks, Naan Violence, Aquarian Blood, 11:00 p.m. at Bar DKDC, $5.00.

Weekend Round Up Part Six (5)

SATURDAY FEBRUARY 21ST

Creepy Neighbor, Elysian Feel, China Gate, Ugly Girls, 9:00 p.m. at The Hi-Tone Small Room.

Weekend Round Up Part Six (3)

Josh Heinrichs, SkillinJah, Chinese Connection Dub Embassy, 8:00 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $8.00.

Weekend Round Up Part Six (4)

Wisewater, Mason Jar Fireflies, 8:00 p.m. at Otherlands,

Weekend Round Up Part Six

Devil Train, The Sheiks, Agori Tribe, Kitty Darling, Mojo Hand, 9:00 p.m. at Black Lodge Video, $7.00.

Capgun, Parasite Diet, Banned Anthem, 9:00 p.m. at P and H Cafe, $5.00.

Merle Haggard, 8:00 p.m. at the Horseshoe Casino Tunica, $65.00.

Weekend Round Up Part Six (6)

John Paul Keith, 10:00 p.m. at Bar DKDC, $5.00.

Graber Grass, 10:00 p.m. at The Cove. 

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

2015 Memphis Tigers Football Schedule

football_helmet.jpg

Sept. 5 — MISSOURI STATE
Sept. 12 — at Kansas
Sept. 19 — at Bowling Green
Sept. 24 — CINCINNATI
Oct. 2 — at USF
Oct. 17 — OLE MISS
Oct. 23 — at Tulsa
Oct. 31 — TULANE
Nov. 7 — NAVY
Nov. 14 — at Houston
Nov. 21 — at Temple
Nov. 28 — SMU

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

The Rant (February 19, 2015)

courtesy bc buckner | Forgotten Memphis | Wikimedia Commons

Mid-South Coliseum

Ouch. Hold on. Wait a second. Ouch! Ugh. It is so hard to type while hiding under a rock. It’s so dark and so cold. I’ve gone into seclusion because I just caught the tail-end of a news story reporting something about how televisions can record what you shout, uh, say, out loud to the television while watching it and transmit the recordings to some kind of database somewhere. I knew I should never have purchased a flat screen.

If this is actually true, I’m in deep doo-doo with the FBI, CIA, TSA, AA, ABC, NBC, CBS, NSA, and every other organization who’s acronym ends in “A.” Or any other letter. Because this is the area of life in which I am the most politically incorrect. They say the true measure of your character is what you do when no one is watching, and if that’s true, I’m burnt toast.

Every time I see a story on the news about that family in Arkansas with the couple who have something like 22 children and is always expecting another one I shout horrible obscenities at them. “You psychotic breeders!! Do you know how many children need adopting?!! Can you stop procreating for five minutes and give a homeless baby a home??!!”

Every time I see Sarah Jessica Parker on television I shout, “Hey, Jessica! Why the long face?!” I know. It’s horrible and shameful, but I can’t help myself. It’s a sickness.

And the advertisements for prescription drugs and their potentially dangerous side effects: high blood pressure, low blood pressure, internal bleeding, headaches, nausea, diarrhea, sleep deprivation, thoughts of suicide, kidney failure, liver disease, erectile dysfunction, erection lasting over four hours, vision problems, loss of hearing, back pain, anxiety attacks, muscle pain, swelling of the tongue, joint stiffness, blackouts, vertigo, memory loss, acid reflux. … On and on, and I always shout at the television, “Give me some side effects I don’t already have!!!!”

And I might as well throw my hat into the ring on this one: Every time I see anything on the news about tearing down the Mid-South Coliseum I totally lose it and shout, “What is wrong with you a**holes??? How could you even dare entertain an idea so stupid?! Did you never take psychedelic mood-altering substances and go there to see a David Bowie concert and have it change your life?!”

I know, I know. Not everyone has a history with that building and some people are all caught up in the financial spreadsheets (I hate spreadsheets) that calculate the pros and cons of demolishing it versus renovating it, and I don’t think anyone has yet come up with the perfect idea as to what it could become if saved from the wrecking ball. But, come on!  What is the big rush about tearing it down? Who is it hurting? What real danger does it pose? Can we not stop and realize that it has been there for decades and that we should take time to give this some serious thought?

For me, it’s a viscerally emotional thing. Every time I drive by, to this day, the sight of the Mid-South Coliseum takes my breath away. I realize that it’s just a building, but so is the Empire State Building, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, the Vanderbilt Mansion, Graceland, the Flatiron Building, and the Taj Mahal. If any of those were to become “obsolete” for some reason, would you want them scraped off the face of the earth?

Ever heard the saying, “Memphis has torn down more history than most other cities ever had to begin with?” It’s true. Walgreens alone has demolished the original Grisanti’s restaurant at Airways and Lamar, the original and historic Leonard’s BBQ restaurant at Bellevue and McLemore, and several other landmarks that were part of the very fabric of Memphis.

The city allowed the demolition of the resplendent Hill Mansion on Union Avenue to make way for a Shoney’s decades ago. The only remaining reminders of that beautiful home are the stone lion sculptures that were thankfully saved and are now part of the exterior of the Brooks Museum. Can you imagine what downtown would look like if all the Victorian structures surrounding Victorian Village had been saved and preserved like the ones that are still there now?

I know we can’t change the past, but can we not be a little more patient regarding the Coliseum? That building has a history and personality so culturally significant I think we should give it a lot more thought.

Besides, if they tear it down, it will give me another reason to scream at the television when they cover its demolition, which is just more information Big Brother will have on me.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

“Fifty Shades Of Grey”

As a woman, a feminist, a person with eyes, and a human being who has had sex more than once, I can say with complete transparency that I hated Fifty Shades of Grey. It is an important movie, not because it is good, but because in Fifty Shades we have a great American cultural salon — a place where we can discuss what the heck is going on with us in 2015.

Based on an unaccountably popular softcore paperback by fanfiction writer E.L. James, Fifty Shades of Grey is the tale of a 22-year-old, virginal English lit major, Anastasia Steele (Dakota Johnson), who falls in love with 27-year-old billionaire businessman Christian Grey (Jamie Dornan). Grey is also hot for Ana, but he “doesn’t do” romance. He is a BDSM dominant who would prefer to keep Ana in his shiny bachelor pad and perform unmentionable things upon her naked body. Only problem with that plan is that Ana is a born romantic, and Grey just might be in love. After some happenstance and hijinks, Grey lures Ana to his sleek pad, where he asks her to be his submissive. When Grey lays down the terms of the BDSM contract, Ana asks: What might she receive in exchange for her freedom? Grey answers: “You get me.”

No reasonable human woman could think this is a good exchange. The problem is not that Ana might waste several good years trapped with a weird guy in a track-lit kitchen somewhere above Seattle, it’s that Christian Grey is not sexy. Somewhere between Justin Timberlake, our most neurotic pop icon, and Mark Zuckerberg, our most visible example of a successful, white, American male in 2015, we find Christian Grey.

Dornan’s success as a romantic lead rests on the premise that he is a troubled, hot dude with a couple of jets and a slick apartment. Archetypically, he should impress with a panty-twisting mix of vulnerability and control. He should do coke. He should carry a gun. But he doesn’t do anything bad, or even interesting. This is partially E.L. James’ fault and partially Dornan’s. When Grey assures us that he is “50 shades of fucked up,” it’s with all the deep darkness of a 20-year-old who’s seen Trainspotting.

The only evidence that Grey is anything but the tilapia option at the bad billionaires steak club is that he likes BDSM. He likes to tie women up; he’s bad. Never mind that most internet-possessing tweenagers could imagine more lurid scenes than what we see in Grey’s playroom. (Floggers and rope, lots of boobs and butt, a little pubic hair and thrusting, no full nudity.) What really irks is that Fifty Shades of Grey pathologizes BDSM so much as to make it Grey’s exciting flaw.

I don’t buy it. This movie is not about sex or even romance. It is about privacy. Grey is not merely interested in Ana. He admits early in one scene that he is “incapable of leaving her alone.” This, after we see him track her location from her cell phone and essentially kidnap her from a bar where she is drinking with her friends. That’s only the first in a line of actions that, to the impartial observer, are just plain stalking, but Ana seems only mildly miffed that her former independence has been replaced by his totalizing attention.

What in all holiness is my demographic (hi, ladies!) supposed to find alluring about this? It’s not sexy, so all we have left to ferry our deadened souls from one scene to the next are the displays of money and power.

How does Grey fund his elegant lifestyle? He’s 27 and lives in the Pacific Northwest. He’s bad at dating, and he’s into alt sex. He’s too sleek for hardware, but he could be a software guy or an app developer, though he seems too chilly for social media. Surely, Grey is a Google man.

This is a flick about power, which in 2015 means tech. Grey is a walking embodiment of it — an exciting, little-understood, but all-powerful force that promises us safety in exchange for the small matter of our privacy. We are all virginal English majors in the face of the Goog.

The romantic fantasy at the heart of Fifty Shades of Grey is that we are capable of negotiating with tech power. “You can leave at any time,” says Grey to Ana, before they enter the red room of expensive handcuffs. We see Ana parsing over details in her submission contract and telling him no-way-José can he suspend her from the ceiling using genital clamps. He pushes, she pulls. He eventually tells her that she is the one changing him. They are each other’s totally healthy and normal project, wink wink.

I’ll join everyone on the internet in saying this is not a picture of a healthy BDSM relationship between two self-selecting adults. Anastasia and Christian’s affair is a coercive situation that masquerades as an even-handed exchange. This year’s defining fairy tale is that the Anastasias of our world are capable of convincing the tech-moneyed powerful not just to control us, but also to care about our needs. Yeah, right.