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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Crone, Shaffer Are Early Seekers of Interim Appointment to Flinn Seat

Paul Shaffer (l); Alan Crone

Even as the race for the Super District 9, Position 2 City Council seat, which has been vacated by Shea Flinn, remains in the early, petition-gathering sage, the race to hold the Position 2 seat on an interim basis is about to heat up.

Candidates for an interim appointment for the seat may pick up qualifying packets from the Council office beginning on Friday, May 1, and will have until May 14 at noon to submit them to the Council for consideration.

On Tuesday, May 19, the 12 remaining members of the Council will decide on appointing someone to hold the seat until a permanent seat-holder is elected on October 8. The person ultimately named o May 19 will need 7 votes.

Nothing yet on whether the Council, in selecting an interim Council member, will express a preference for candidates renouncing any wish to run for the seat on a permanent basis. For the record, Berlin Boyd, who was selected as interim Councilman in Lee Harris’s District 7 seat when Harris vacated it to be a state Senator, will also be seeking election to the seat in October.

That may or may not be a precedent for the May 19 decision. Boyd’s previous service as an interim candidate on another occasion made him something of a known quantity and might have rendered the distinction moot.

In any case, lawyer Alan Crone, who will not be seeking election in October, and union official Paul Shaffer, who will be, have both already signaled an active interest in pursuing the interim appointment. And Shaffer’s active candidacy for the interim position will surely encourage others running for the permanent seat to seek the interim one as well — if any encouragement was needed…

In fact, all those who have so far acquired petitions to run for the Position 2 seat will doubtless also be seeking the interim appointment before the Council.

And Crone will likely not be the only person outside the circle of active candidates to seek the interim position. Fran Triplett, an activist heavily involved over the past year in protests against changes in city employees’ benefits package, is said to be actively considering seeking the interim appointment.

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Style Sessions We Recommend

Style Week with Vera Stanfield – Look 4 with husband Christian

Today, we finally meet Christian, get a look inside their home, and find out how many Trashy Diva outfits Vera actually owns. The butterfly dress worn in today’s series was originally owned by her friend Wendi Hardage, who worked at CrazyBeautiful. Vera explained that the older Trashy Diva dresses are very collectible and, as evidence of her obsession, has joined a Facebook community called Desperately Seeking Trashy Diva. Today’s dress is Trashy Diva, of course. The butterfly print is highly sought after.

“I love bold, happy prints — the busier, the better. And the bangles were given to me by Christian for Christmas. He gives seriously amazing gifts!” says Vera about her husband and bandmate.

[jump]

He would jokingly recommend we skip past the number of Trashy Diva outfits are in Vera’s personal collection (answer: over 60) and talk about music instead. In this case, let’s talk about music and dance as Vera describes how he won her heart.

“Christian was born and raised here in Memphis, but we actually met in my hometown of Huntsville, Alabama, at a Contra Dance Festival. Contra dance is very similar to square dancing with a caller doing the calls like “Swing Your Partner” and “Do Si Do,” but it’s done in long lines rather than square sets. And it’s always done to live music — usually an old time string band featuring fiddle, banjo, guitar, and bass. That’s really how I first got exposed to old-timey style music — through dance. Christian literally swept me off my feet with his fancy dance moves!” 

Their love story is surrounded by many mutual loves — dance, music, and all things vintage. Their home covered with vintage music posters and an array of instruments. Though Vera describes it as a rare treat, they do love sitting in their living room or front porch playing fiddle and banjo tunes together.

“We also find it really relaxing to sit at home in our living room and to listen to audio books together. As opposed to watching TV together (we don’t have one), it seems more like quality time. We started out listening to audio books when we were traveling to play shows, and then we enjoyed it so much that we started just listening to them at home. I’ll crack open a beer, and Christian will have a root beer, and it’s the most relaxing thing ever.”

Outfit Details
Butterfly Dress by Trashy Diva
Peep Toe Clogs by Lotta of Stockholm
Vintage Wooden Bangle – gifted from Christian
Trashy Diva is a line carried at Red Velvet Vintage.

Stay tuned for the final post in Vera’s style session tomorrow as we find out more about the band and see them on stage.

Categories
News News Blog

Marine Indicted for Stealing, Selling Guns and Body Armor

A Memphis Marine Corps reservist has been indicted on charges of stealing and selling government assault rifles, ammunition, and body armor.

A federal grand jury indicted Armando Jaime Vazquez, Jr., 21, of Memphis, of selling nearly $24,000 worth of government property this year.

According to the indictment, he stole and sold:

• a Marine Corps issued Improved Load Bearing Equipment (ILBE) pack
• desert tan body armor
• ammunition magazines for M-16 style rifles;
• a Quiet Pro communications headset
• a ballistic helmet with camouflage cover
• 2 Beretta M9 inert training aids
• a Bushmaster Blue Fire M4
• a Bushmaster Blue Fire M-16 A4 with an accompanying magazine

Also, the indictment said that back in January, Vazquez illegally removed an $89,000 military-issued Hummer and a $150,000 Tractor, Rubber Tired, Articulated Steering, Multipurpose Vehicle (TRAM) from the USMC Reserve Center in Memphis.

He faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison and up to $250,000 in fines.

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Everything is Awesome: Meet Lego Jason Miles

Fly on the Wall has chronicled the many faces of WMC’s excitable news reporter Jason Miles

We’ve shown you Jason Miles under a car

We’ve shown you Jason Miles under a car on a cake.

Now, fresh from his Twitter profile, here’s Lego Jason Miles.

Will some less lazy person please photoshop this Jason under a car? Please?

Categories
Music Music Blog

Weekend Roundup 15: Tyler Keith, Deering and Down, CCR Headcleaner

Deering and Down play Lafayette’s Saturday night.

I took a break from my Weekend Roundup series last week because I was knee deep in Beale Street Music Fest coverage, but the Roundup is back this week with a vengeance. There will be over 60 bands playing downtown this weekend, but you already knew that. Here are some other shows to check out east of Tom Lee Park.

Friday, May 1st.
Tyler Keith, 6 p.m. at Goner Records, free.

Weekend Roundup 15: Tyler Keith, Deering and Down, CCR Headcleaner (3)

Strengths, Xebrula, Star Period Star, Weird Birds, 9 p.m. at Murphy’s, $5.00.

The Vampirates, Special Victims Unit (SVU), Richard James, VI, The Toy Trucks, 9 p.m. at The Buccaneer, $5.00.

No Comply, 11 p.m. at Bar DKDC, free.

XLM,  9 p.m. at The 1884 Lounge, $10.00.

Weekend Roundup 15: Tyler Keith, Deering and Down, CCR Headcleaner (4)

Saturday, May 2nd.
Deering and Down, 6:30 p.m. at Lafayette’s, free.

Weekend Roundup 15: Tyler Keith, Deering and Down, CCR Headcleaner

Nots, CCR Headcleaner, Malfuture (first show), 9 p.m. at The Buccaneer, $5.00.

Weekend Roundup 15: Tyler Keith, Deering and Down, CCR Headcleaner (2)

Deep Fried Five, 10 p.m. at Lafayette’s, free.

Sunday, May 3rd (Go Grizz).
Gringos, 6 p.m. at The Buccaneer, free.

Kidaudra, Prom Date, The Pop Ritual, Sports Coach, 8 p.m. at The Buccaneer, $5.00.

Weekend Roundup 15: Tyler Keith, Deering and Down, CCR Headcleaner (5)

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

The Salt Of The Earth

“I also befriended a whale.”

By the time Sebastião Salgado says those words, late in The Salt of the Earth, there’s no doubt he’s speaking literally. Co-directors Win Wenders’ and Salgado’s son Juliano’s documentary chronicling the life of the photographer is so full of jaw-dropping moments that getting up close and personal with a whale merits only a passing mention. Besides, the 71-year-old photographer has just been showing us incredible, close-up black-and-white photographs of a mountain gorilla in the wild to be included in his newest photography book and exhibit “Genesis,” which he describes as “a love letter to planet Earth.”

That Salgado could write such a letter is remarkable, given what his lens has seen. Salgado was born in Brazil, the sole brother of seven girls. While growing up on a farm nestled on the banks of the Rio Doce, he says he yearned to find stories over the ring of hills that defined his world. At the behest of his father, he went to college to study economics and met Leila, his love at first sight who would become his lifelong muse. They became heavily involved in leftist politics and were forced into exile in France by Brazil’s military dictatorship in 1969. When she bought a camera for her work, he instantly took to it, and a couple of years later he quit his job and set out to become a photographer, roaming the world, going wherever the story took him.

Salgado at work

His first major photo book, The Other Americas, documented his repeated tours across South America, lasting from 1977-1984. Salgado’s crisp, black-and-white images show his knack for bringing out the humanity in his subjects. He would go to any length to gain their trust, such as sleeping in a bare concrete room in the mountains of Mexico until the natives thought he was tough enough to stay. We see him rolling across the windswept gravel to get candid shots of a walrus family, befriending tribesmen in the Amazon rainforest, and chasing musk oxen across the Siberian tundra — whatever it takes to get the shot.

It’s the images Salgado captured when he was the only person willing to get the shots that make up the melancholy soul of the movie. His photographs were some of the first to call attention to the Ethiopian drought and famine of 1984. He got the shots because he was willing to ride into the desert in the back of a truck filled with starving refugees. A decade of war and disaster later, Salgado drove down a Rwandan road he described as “150 kilometers of death,” where he documented a genocide in progress. “Everybody should see these images, to see how terrible our species is,” he says in the film. “When I left there, I no longer believed in anything.”

Wenders, whose own storied film career stretches from Paris, Texas to Until the End of the World, crafts a compelling arc of the life and career of Salgado using his photographs and a tag-team narration with Juliano. Early in the film, Wenders says of discovering a Saldago photograph for the first time, “Whoever took it had to be both a great photographer and a great adventurer.” The Salt of the Earth proves his instinct was right.

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Midtown Woman Furious MPD Won’t Find Her Glasses

Cute, right?

Crosstown — Ariya Mann says someone has stolen her new bifocals and the Memphis Police Department won’t even take her report.

“It’s shocking,’ Mann said. “They just look at me and laugh. Right in my face. They tell me to go home and look in the mirror and things like that. One officer even had the audacity to say, ‘Miss Mann, nobody’s stolen your glasses,’ when I know full well that they did. Because I know I put them down on the coffee table in the living room and they’re not there now. What else could have possibly happened?”

Mann says she suspects gang activity. The glasses, she explains, were only a month old, but the $68 Kate Spade frames have a vintage 1950’s look. “They’re so adorbs,” She said, pulling up a photo on Google images, and adding that she’s not usually the type of person who just goes around saying “adorbs.”

Mann, who appeared to be wearing a pair of Kate Spade glasses pushed up high on her head at the time of this interview, claims to have lost all faith in local law enforcement.

Midtown Woman Furious MPD Won’t Find Her Glasses

“You know, I wasn’t even going to call the police until I heard the news report about how they found Sir Elton John’s glasses when they were stolen from the Rock and Soul Museum last week,” Mann said. “I know I’m just an ordinary person. I never even wrote one version of ‘Candle in the Wind,’ let alone two versions. But I certainly didn’t expect to be treated like a crazy person.”

When asked if the glasses on top of her head might indeed be the missing pair Mann became embarrassed. “Well, look at that,” she said, laughing at herself. “I guess this one’s on me.

“There’s still the matter of my pickup truck that was stolen in 1996,” Mann concluded, adjusting her recovered spectacles. “That’s way bigger than any old Rocket Man glasses, and the police never found that either. I’m not sure they even tried.”

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Survive and Advance: Scenes from Game 5. Grizzlies 99, Trail Blazers 93

Larry Kuzniewski

I

Zach Randolph sends up a jab-step jumper over LaMarcus Aldridge. The ball hangs in the air for uninterrupted minutes, like it’s not coming back down. Eventually it finds its way into the rim and through, but Randolph isn’t watching anymore. After taking the shot he hops backwards on his back foot, his other leg still out in front, Dirk-style. He is turned to face the Portland bench. He is addressing them directly. I cannot hear what he’s saying, but he’s already said it by the time the ball goes through the hoop.

There were times in Game 5 when it looked like the Grizzlies were in real trouble—trouble of throwing away Game 5, throwing away the 3-0 lead they built up in this series, maybe becoming the first team ever to lose a playoff series when leading it 3-0 (though, given Mike Conley’s absence, it would be easy to explain away, easy to asterisk). Portland had finally figured out large portions of the matchup problems that plagued them so badly in games 1 and 2: the new Wonder Twins of Meyers Leonard and CJ McCollum were causing serious problems on both ends of the floor, Beno Udrih was getting cremated alive by McCollum and whoever else he had the misfortune of trying to guard, Jeff Green couldn’t hit a shot, and nothing was working.

The Grizzlies barely strung it along into the 4th quarter with a 2-point lead, 68-66. It was anybody’s guess whether they’d be able to pull out the Game 5 win, with Portland scoring at will (well, mostly CJ McCollum scoring at will; McCollum had 33 points on 12-20 shooting, including a mind-melting 7-11 from beyond the arc) and the Grizzlies’ offense (mostly helmed by Beno Udrih at that point) was barely operational, and the defense even less so.

[jump]

And yet: Jeff Green started hitting shots when he hadn’t all night. Vince Carter continued his “quality over quantity” policy and hit an insane (Vinsane, I guess) baseline fadeaway as the shot clock expired—the very same Vince Carter who looked like he wasn’t going to be able to step it up for the playoffs, who looked completely done. Prior to the fourth quarter, he had a dunk that looked like something he would’ve done in 2002, and a putback that kept the Griz from falling into a long scoring slump with Portland on the rise. He was 4 for 10, but they were a good 4, holding off the relentless advances of time and injury for another night, another series. The tone of the extremely physical LaMarcus Aldridge/Zach Randolph matchup darkened considerably as the two stopped playing basketball and started to act like they had to fight to the death, winner goes to the second round. Everything for the Grizzlies tightened up, clamped down, held on for dear life with Mike Conley sitting in a luxury box with his eye swollen shut and a face full of titanium.

When Conley was on the big screen, waving to the crowd with one good eye, the crowd roared in deafening recognition of one of their heroes. From then on, though Portland kept fighting, it wasn’t their game to win, it was the Grizzlies’ to lose, and they held on. Through every little explosion of fervor and physicality and Memphis Playoff Basketball, they held on.

Larry Kuzniewski

II

Late in the first half, Vince Carter finds himself with the ball just inside the 3-point line and stares at a Portland defense daring him to do something. He’s already between the basket and his man, Damian Lillard, and Batum and Leonard stay home on Lee and Gasol, watching Vince like they’re waiting to see what he’s going to do, whether he can do anything. There’s enough of a lane to drive between them, and with Aldridge and Z-Bo wrapping each other up and shoving each other there’s no one under the rim. By the time Meyers Leonard realizes that Vince Carter is driving past him it’s too late for anyone in a black jersey to do anything about it. Carter takes off from outside the restricted area and slams it home. It takes the crowd a split-second to react, because no one believes that Vince really did what Vince just did.

Few have been harder on Vince Carter than I have this season. If we’re honest, he’s had a tough year, hurt most of the time, playing well for a week and then dropping back off the cliff. There have been large stretches where it has looked (due to injury, age, conditioning, whatever) like Carter stayed in the league one year too many, unable to will himself to do the things he wants and needs to do to contribute.

Vince Carter was huge last night, on offense and on defense, and he did it without having a stat line that looks any different from any other night this year: 9 points, 4 of 10 shooting, 0 for 3 from 3-point range, 5 rebounds. But it was those four baskets: even now I can distinctly remember three of them. Flying in for a two-handed putback dunk. The aforementioned drive and slam that no one expected him to do. The fadeaway mentioned earlier, a shot that I’d have mocked him for not two weeks ago.

The cliché was that Carter was brought in to win playoff games, and that nothing he did in the regular season mattered much one way or another—it was all about April, and now May as well. I didn’t buy that. I thought it was important that he contribute desperately needed shooting and scoring (after all, last year’s Dallas model of Carter would have immediately been the best offensive wing player on the team), and important that he be integrating himself into the offense and the system.

What we’re seeing now is something different: a guy who knows the importance of the moment and is playing with something else in mind: doing whatever it takes to win the game. Carter played excellent defense at times last night. He almost always made the right pass or the right play. He still chucked up some terrible shots, but they were understandably terrible shots for the most part, not setting fire to precious possessions like they’re checks from Caddy for Ms. Quentin.

Vince Carter made a difference in Game 5 last night, and at every step of the way he was defying a body that has betrayed him this season, and you could tell it every time he moved.

Larry Kuzniewski

III

With a three point lead and 2:48 left in the first half, Jeff Green enters the game for Nick Calathes. Beno Udrih has been getting torched by Lillard and McCollum both, but with Calathes on the floor the offense isn’t working. Instead of choosing a poison, Dave Joerger finds the Third Way: Courtney Lee will be the “point guard,” which means, really, that the Grizzlies play the last three minutes of the first half of a playoff game—an elimination game—without a point guard. From the time that Green checks in and Calathes goes to the bench, the Grizzlies extend their lead from 3 points to 7.

Larry Kuzniewski

Sometimes when the Grizzlies are ahead and things are breaking their way in a game, it’s easy to lose sight of just how hard things always seem to be for the Grizzlies. Every single basket is the basketball equivalent of oil shale, scraped out of the ground and processed within an inch of its life just to extract anything useful from it, anything of value at all.

The way things are in games is also the way things are in a macro sense. The Grizzlies were second in the Western Conference until the last week of the regular season, when they fell to 6th and rose to 5th and it seemed for all the world like they were headed back towards a Clippers or Spurs first round. They couldn’t just coast into the playoffs with a 2nd seed that had been wrapped up for months.

The way things are in the season is also the way things are in a macro-macro sense. The Grizzlies play in the poorest market in the NBA and one of the poorest metro areas in the country. Players give away tickets by the hundreds just so people can see one playoff game that they can’t otherwise afford, and people stand in line for hours just to try to get tickets, not able to see the front of the line, just praying they’re not number 501.

Most of the time it doesn’t feel like these three levels of reality are related, until the playoffs. When everything gets harder anyway, the truth shines through: the Grizzlies wouldn’t know what to do with themselves if everything weren’t a life-or-death struggle. We, those of us who watch them, wouldn’t know what to do if they were so good they never had any struggles. Remember November and December, when the Grizzlies were the best team in the league? Remember how strange that felt, like you (1) didn’t believe it was actually happening and (2) were just waiting for the other shoe to drop and bring with it some precipitous decline?

That’s the way we are as a city, too. Somehow we’ve created a basketball team that mirrors our strengths and weaknesses. The self-sabotage. The shining moments of transcendent brilliance. The sense that if things don’t go our way, we’ll just fight somebody. The refusal to perform at the highest level without facing dire odds, impossible circumstances. The possibility that it’s not just something that happens during a competition but that we’re actually insane.

18,100 people chanting “Whoop that trick” at the Portland Trail Blazers while television audiences across America shudder in non-recognition. Who are these people? How is it possible that they are like us? That’s the same feeling the Grizzlies inspire in their opponents. It’s not fear—it’s a recognition that their flaws can be exploited, that they can be beaten, that they are vulnerable, but to exploit those vulnerabilites one will have to be willing to endure a physical confrontation bordering on unbearable.

Somehow, the Grizzlies are everything we are, for better or for worse. Last night, it was for better. In this series, it was for better. In the playoffs, it’s always for better.

Larry Kuzniewski

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

In Spring …

(such a sky and such a sun

i never knew and neither did you

and everybody never breathed

quite so many kinds of yes) — e. e. cummings

I have a friend who told me years ago about the “perfect day” in Memphis. It happens in the spring, she said — usually in mid-April. It’s the morning when you realize every leaf has filled out on every tree, bright and lush and newly green. The sky is clear; the winter is gone, summer is born again. The air is luminous.

Twenty-two years ago, I came to Memphis in late April to visit a friend. Pittsburgh was cold and gray and muddy. Memphis was warm and green and sunny. The azaleas were in bloom. I sat on my friend’s porch in Cooper-Young and watched a mockingbird singing in a magnolia tree, the most Southern thing ever.

I want to live here, I thought, and I managed to make that happen. I’ve never regretted it, and I still love this town. Especially in the spring.

Perfect Day 2015 was last Saturday. My daughter, who moved here from Austin last year, was hosting a friend for the weekend. She, too, was from Austin, an ad agency exec who works in digital marketing, millenial, smart as a whip. Over the course of three days, she got the full Memphis monte: Cooper-Young restaurants, walks in Overton Park, the Rec Room, the Wiseacre Taproom, Broad Avenue, the Brewery Revival, Harbor Town, Beale Street, Raiford’s.

Saturday afternoon, I met the young ladies for beers on the Slider Inn deck, where we were served by a smart-alecky waitress named Elizabeth, who should be getting paid a stipend by the CVB for her charm.

My daughter’s friend had a job interview scheduled in Seattle. As we sat on the deck, she said, half seriously, “I think I want to move here, instead.”

“Great idea. Austin is played out,” I joked. “Memphis is what Austin used to be. Besides, it’s cloudy in Seattle 259 days a year.” (I may have made up that number, but I don’t think I’m far off.)

By Monday, my daughter’s friend really was ready to move to Memphis, and was not saying it frivolously. “Send me your resume,” I said. “I know some folks in the advertising business.”

I wasn’t blowing smoke about Memphis, and it was obvious to our visitor — as it is to anyone living in Midtown or downtown. The difference is palpable, visible. The city is undergoing a sea-change; something is shifting. In Memphis, as in cities all across the country, young people are moving into urban cores, reinventing old commercial spaces, taking advantage of under-valued housing stock, reclaiming the urban turf abandoned by their grandparents and parents. Businesses — grocery stores, restaurants, retail outlets, and jobs — are following suit.

The best and brightest of this next generation — white, black, brown, gay, and straight — are rejecting mall culture and suburban life. They don’t fear diversity; they fear a life of commutes and boredom.

Yes, Memphis has deep issues — poverty still holds back too many of us — but reclaiming the center city is how the turn-around starts. And we need young people to help get us there.

We’re not perfect. Perfect is still a process, even in April.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1366

Smoked Meats

The cost of a crack rock: $10. The cost of a trailer full of lunch meat: $50,000. Viral exposure after some lunkhead truck driver trades a trailer full of lunch meat for crack: priceless.

Larry Ron Bowen became world famous last week after the Arkansas truck driver was sentenced to drug treatment for trading a trailer full of lunch meat for an undisclosed amount of crack cocaine. Bowen, who was apprehended eating a lunch meat sandwich in the parking lot of a Memphis service station, described the transaction as “inadvertent.” Naturally, this story was picked up by news media around the world, but nobody did a better job of telling it than WTFark’s Mark Rylander. “We’ve all been conditioned to believe “there’s a certain way drug deals go down,” the satirical online news reporter noted. “But what happens when the traditional ‘money for drugs’ system collapses?”

“Hey, you! Wanna buy some crack?

“I don’t have any money, but I do have $50,000 worth of lunch meat.”

Neverending Elvis

Good news for Elvis fans who’ve been wailing and gnashing teeth since it was announced last year that Elvis’ planes might soon be leaving Graceland. On Sunday, Graceland issued a press release noting that the planes would stay in Memphis, and Presley’s daughter Lisa Marie took the opportunity to say that the aircraft would be at Graceland “4 ever.” TCB.