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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.

Categories
News News Feature

A Twofer

A Fight for Humanity

First, a few words about the brutal fight earlier this month at White Station High School (WSHS), the crown jewel of the city’s public schools. Students caught on their cell phone cameras an epic brawl between female classmates, the details of which you’ve seen repeatedly on TV or in your social media news feed, if you were conscious during the past week or so.

The level of violence stunned me and, judging by the online reaction, everyone who saw the video, which quickly went viral. The first thing I wondered: What in the world happened in these young ladies’ lives to generate this sort of anger?

The second thought that crossed my mind: How much of our horror was because the fight happened at Spartan Palace, the racially diverse, East Memphis utopia of National Merit finalists and an optional program that draws students who might otherwise go to private schools?

WSHS students quickly launched a PR campaign with a YouTube video and hashtags such as #lovewhitestation and the clever #MakingItRightStation.

As a WSHS alumna, I’m glad that news outlets allowed WSHS to reclaim its identity, even if the stations didn’t acknowledge their complicity in damaging it.

But if Hamilton students made a similar YouTube video, would news directors have been as quick to air it? How many WSHS graduates can get news directors, anchors, or reporters to take their calls compared to alums from Douglass, Melrose, or Manassas?

Do students at all-black high schools know how to convince the media to acknowledge their individuality and humanity? Do they think anyone would listen if they tried? In a nation built on the notion of individualism, it’s time we extend this right to all.

Women’s Foundation Turns 20

Let me give a shout out to the Women’s Foundation for a Greater Memphis (WFGM) as it celebrates 20 years of grant-making in Memphis. The foundation’s mission “is to encourage philanthropy and foster leadership among women and support programs that enable women and children to reach their full potential.” Since the foundation’s inception in 1995, it has awarded $7.8 million in grants to local nonprofit organizations that work with low-income women and families.

From financial literacy to time-management classes, support for sex trafficking victims, transitional housing for mothers with drug addictions, and entrepreneurship training for girls, programs funded by WFGM touch an estimated 17,000 people each year.

Often the speed bumps of low-income women are relatively minor, said executive director Ruby Bright. “There could be something as simple as not having a driver’s license or having a ticket that could be an impediment to getting a job. … Or something as small as $348 to repair a car.”

Here is where the WFGM can help, in this instance through the $8 million invested in Urban Strategies Memphis HOPE’s case management for low-income families.

The foundation doesn’t have a lobbying arm that works to reform the policies that make it difficult for low-income women to be financially self-sufficient. An example would be welfare rules that eliminate a family’s benefits when the parent earns even a dollar over the income limits.

A better policy would gradually reduce the family’s benefits as the household income increased, Bright said.

Still, the foundation’s leaders have an ambitious goal to reduce the poverty rate in South Memphis’ 38126 ZIP code by 1 percent a year for five years.

The Vision 2020 plan also calls to increase the number of families who collect the Earned Income Tax Credit and boost the number of children who are in pre-K and teens who have summer jobs.

We can support WFGM not only by donating to the organization, but by advocating for fairer public policy, such as an increase in the minimum wage, smarter mass transit, universal pre-K, and better health-care access, especially for those battling addictions.

“Sometimes there is the assumption that people are just freeloading,” Bright acknowledged, “but for the most part, our families want to improve.”

“True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar,” said Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.”

To be sure, the women and families helped by WFGM’s funding aren’t beggars and WFGM doesn’t toss dollars. But while WFGM continues its work, we need to rebuild the edifice. If we’re successful, the foundation won’t celebrate a 40th anniversary — because it will have no reason to exist.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said (April 30, 2015) …

Greg Cravens

About Toby Sells’ cover story, “All About That Bass!” …

Nice article. I think the big miss is the absence of the trolley/street car to cart visitors from Bass Pro around downtown. Sorry, trolley buses (like Showboat buses) are just a sad and inexcusable replacement.

The street cars could have been a perfect device to get visitors out of the retail environment and into the city streets. I hope the Flyer will investigate what went wrong with the management of the trolley system.

BP

The lack of foresight in not having the trolleys operational by Bass Pro’s opening is borderline criminal. There is a trolley stop at the Pyramid I used to use to get back to my car after games.

Once Bass Pro opens, people in the parking lot should be seeing our trolleys go by every few minutes. They would pick up thousands of tourists who would get off on South Main or Beale Street and spend tourist dollars.

I give our city credit and generally ignore the naysayers, but the total mismanagement of the trolley shutdown makes me wonder about our leadership and vision. The trolleys are truly the glue and an incredible asset to the entire area. With Bass Pro opening, it’s just another huge missed opportunity as the trolleys sit idle.

Midtown Mark

The Bass Pro store on Sycamore View does a good business. Will its current clientele drive downtown to the new one?

Clyde

About Jackson Baker’s Politics column, “From Nashville to Memphis: A Venue Change” …

Brian Kelsey’s version of “liberty” is what you might expect from a person who grew up as a child of privilege in a wealthy family, was coddled even into adulthood, and has never had to worry about how to make a living, where he has to find the money to pay this month’s utility bill, or how he will go about getting a child educated on limited funds. He has nothing in common with regular people.

olemanrvr

About Bianca Phillips’ post, “Memphis Couple Will Travel to D.C. for Supreme Court Same-sex Marriage Case” …

Marriage, legally speaking (and we are talking about the law, not religious doctrines), is a contract between adults that, absent of another contract that says otherwise, joins them financially, makes them next of kin, and default reciprocal beneficiaries.

Under a system of gender equality, there is no good reason to deny that we must keep evolving until an adult — regardless of gender, sexual orientation, race, or religion — is free to share love, sex, residence, and marriage (and any of those without the others) with any and all consenting adults. Polyamory, polygamy, open relationships are not for everyone, but they are for some.

The limited same-gender freedom to marry is a great and historic step but is not full marriage equality, because equality “just for some” is not equality.

Keith Pullman

About Bianca Phillips’ post, “Bill Increasing Penalties for Animal Fighting Passes Tennessee Legislature” …

Amazing night vote: taking a tradition and cultural heritage such as cockfighting and putting such a penalty on it. Cockfighting has been an American tradition since it was founded, and no wonder we’re becoming a third-world country. Think back to the 1940s through the 1960s, when America was a great nation — and look what the government has done to it!

Papa Ritz

Totally agree, Papa. America’s decline is a direct result of our criminalization of such wholesome sporting activities as cockfighting. And night raids.

Jeff

Whenever I wonder what is the best course for this nation I ask myself, “What would a cockfighter do?” Then I head down to the slave auction and help the economy at the “Buy Two, Get One Free” sale.

crackoamerican

Categories
Style Sessions We Recommend

Style Week with Vera Stanfield – Look 3 at Home – The Romper

Today, Vera welcomes us to her home, explains what led her to Memphis, and how her collection of vintage clothes began. She has had a longtime love for classics and history, starting with her obsession with Egyptian culture as a little girl Huntsville, Alabama. In fact, she received her degree in Classics from the University of Alabama. She moved to Memphis the day she graduated in December of 2008, quickly decided after meeting her now husband and Memphian Christian Stanfield. “Love at first sight,” she confesses. (More about that story later.)

“I loved Memphis from the moment I got here. The city’s musical history was a draw, but also Memphis is so alive today with all the revitalization projects and Choose 901 movement. There is so much culture here — culinary, music, art. I feel like there is so much to do here all the time that I can’t possibly take advantage of all that this city has to offer.”

[jump]

Vera did grow up with musical training, taking piano lessons as a child and teenager, then taking up the trumpet in middle and high school. She met Christian during her gap of not playing any instrument at all.

“He was playing in an old time string band, and I wanted to join in on the fun. So I started playing banjo uke during his band practices and at jam sessions. Christian builds banjos and banjoleles, so I eventually branched out to 5-string banjo so that I could start playing melody at jams too,” says Vera.

They formed their band the Side Street Steppers in June of 2008. This also leads into how she stepped into the world of vintage fashion.

“I really started getting into vintage when we formed the Side Street Steppers in June of 2008. We were playing vintage music, so it seemed natural to me to get dressed up in
vintage clothing for performing. That’s still half the fun of performing for me!”

Shopping Vintage
“If you love it, buy it, then and there. Nothing haunts us like the vintage we didn’t buy. Those pieces are so unique and one-of-a-kind. You’ve got to accept that true vintage is never going to be perfect. Those pieces have had a life of their own before you find them, and that’s part of the beauty of vintage,” she says. “Of course, I love shopping at Red Velvet! If I’m not shopping there, you can probably find me shopping around the corner at Hoot + Louise, perusing Anna’s fun collection of new and vintage.”

The Romper

“This little playsuit has introduced me to the fun world of rompers! I want more now – they are so great for performing. No worrying about your skirt flying up while you’re singing,” she smiles.

Outfit Details

Polka Dot Playsuit by Trashy Diva (Coming soon to Red Velvet)
Peep Toe Clogs by Lotta Of Stockholm
Boater Hat by Goorin Bros
Deco Wing Earrings by Rosita Bonita from Red Velvet
Banjo and Banjolele built by her husband Christian at George Banjos 

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Memphis Flyer Margarita Festival June 27th!

I have solemnly sworn to report the news, and here it is, everybody! The Memphis Flyer Margarita Festival is set for Saturday, June 27th, 3-6 p.m. in the Overton Park Greensward. 

“Basically, we were just thinking about a unique event that Memphis hasn’t seen yet,” says Jackie Sparks-Davila, the Flyer‘s event manager. “A margarita competition with some of Memphis’ best restaurants seemed like a perfect event that our readers would enjoy!”  

Around 20 different restaurants will compete for the best margarita in Memphis. Guests get samples and text their vote.

Among those signed up for the ‘Rita Wars in the Greenwards (sorry!) are Babalu, Swanky’s Taco Shop, and Happy Mexican.

Proceeds from the event go to Leadership Memphis’ program, Volunteer Memphis.  

It’s happening rain or shine. This is a 21+ event.  

Tickets

Memphis Flyer Margarita Festival on Facebook

Categories
News News Blog

Flinn Resigns Council Seat

Shea Flinn has resigned from his post on the Memphis City Council for a job as the senior vice president for the Greater Memphis Chamber’s Chairman’s Circle.

Flinn tendered his resignation to council chair Myron Lowery Wednesday in a letter.

“While it has been an honor and privilege to serve on the city council, when opportunity knocks, you have to answer,” Flinn wrote. “Therefore, I am tendering my resignation immediately.”

Flinn’s interest in the chamber position has been known for some time and he decided not to run for re-election to his District 9 council seat. Flinn will start his new job at the Chamber on Monday, May 4.

“Shea has demonstrated his passion for making transformational change in Memphis and that is the core focus of our Chairman’s Circle,” Phil Trenary, president and CEO of the Greater Memphis Chamber, said in a statement. “Our team is eager to work with Shea and get him engaged with our Chairman’s Circle members.”

In that news release from the Chamber, Flinn said the defeat of the pre-k sales tax referendum in fall 2013 was a turning point for him, calling it a “wake up call.”

“The Chairman’s Circle continued to work on it and eventually found alternative resources,” Flinn said in a statement. “It made me realize they had the leadership and ability to prioritize an important initiative like this and make it happen.”

Candidates to fill his seat may be nominated by council members, the general public, or “interested parties,” according to a statement from Lowery’s office Wednesday. Candidates can pick up registration packets beginning Friday, May 1 but no later than May 14 at noon. Candidates will have to submit proof of residency, a sworn affidavit, and a nominating petition with a miming of 25 signatures of registered voters who reside in District 9.

The council will vote on the appointment of a new council member no later than May 19.

Flinn served as a member of the Memphis City Council since 2007 and serves as the general counsel for Flinn Broadcasting. Flinn graduated from Rhodes College with a degree in theater. He got a law degree from the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphrey’s School of Law. He is married with a son. 

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Music Music Blog

Mid Week Music: Dick Dale Canceled, Man Control, John Paul Keith

The trifecta of Marilyn Manson, Dick Dale and Bob Dylan all performing in Memphis on the same night was to good to be true. Sadly, the Hi-Tone recently announced that their Thursday night bill featuring Dick Dale has officially been canceled. But don’t let that news ruin your Wednesday, because there are still plenty of other shows worth checking out. Here are a few:

Wednesday, April 29th.
The Local Saints, 8 p.m. at Lafayette’s.

Mid Week Music: Dick Dale Canceled, Man Control, John Paul Keith

John Paul Keith, 9 p.m. at Bar DKDC, $5.00.

Mid Week Music: Dick Dale Canceled, Man Control, John Paul Keith (2)

The Donkeys featuring Steve Selvidge and Robby Grant, 9 p.m. at The Hi-Tone, $8.00.

Thursday, April 30th. 
Marilyn Manson, Knee High Fox, 8 p.m.. at Minglewood Hall, SOLD OUT.

Nots, Mancontrol, 8 p.m. at Rocket Science Audio, free with limited seating.

Bob Dylan, 8 p.m. at The Orpheum, $62.00 – $92.00.

Mid Week Music: Dick Dale Canceled, Man Control, John Paul Keith (3)

Neutral Milk Hotel, 7 p.m. at the Lyric in Oxford, $35.00.

Mid Week Music: Dick Dale Canceled, Man Control, John Paul Keith (4)

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News News Blog

VIDEO: Wanna See the Top of the Pyramid?

VIDEO: Wanna See the Top of the Pyramid?

The top of the Pyramid is now a restaurant and bar called the Mile High Catfish Cabin. From up top, the view of Memphis can’t be beat.

If the views from the windows aren’t enough, step out onto The Lookout (at about the 1:00 mark in the video), an observation deck with a glass floor that takes you over the Pyramid’s edge for an immersive view of the city skyline and the Mississippi River.

When Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid opens, the elevator ride to the top will cost $10 for adults and $5 for children (until 5 p.m.). Family memberships can be purchased for $100. That’ll get you a year’s worth of rides up and down the largest freestanding elevator in the country.

  

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News News Blog

Guide to the Bass Pro Grand Opening

Here are the top five things you need to know to get to the big grand opening party for Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid tonight.

#1. The event is free and open to the public.

#2. Times:

2 p.m. Bass Pro Shops parking lot opens, city of Memphis and MATA free parking and free shuttle service begins. See the map above and/or download your own right here: 

[pdf-1]
4 p.m. Exhibits open and live music begins

5:30 p.m. Country star John Anderson performs

6 p.m. – 9 p.m. Opening remarks, ribbon cutting, celebrity meet-and-greet opportunities and store opens to customers

1 a.m. City of Memphis and MATA free parking lots and free shuttle service ends

#3. There’ll be tons of celebrity appearances, well, celebrities for those in the Bass Pro universe.

Here’s who:

Top Draws
John Anderson, “Seminole Wind,” “Swingin’”
Ernie Brown, Jr. (“Turtleman”), host of Animal Planet’s hit show, “Call of the Wildman”
Bill Dance, bass angler and host of NBC Sports Network’s “Bill Dance Outdoors”
Tony Stewart, NASCAR driver of the No. 14 Bass Pro Shops/TRACKER Boats Chevrolet SS
Kiara Young, 2015 Miss Tennessee USA

Outdoors
Phillip Crowe, award winning wildlife artist representing Ducks Unlimited
Fred Zink, Zink Calls/Avian-X Decoys owner
Buck Gardner, world champion duck caller and founder of Buck Gardner Calls
Jimmy Houston, host of World Fishing Network’s “Jimmy Houston Outdoors”
Field Hudnall, host of Outdoor Channel’s “DU TV,” Field Proven Calls owner
Rob Keck, RedHead Pro Hunting team member and host of “Bass Pro Shops Outdoor World” radio show
Doug Koenig (World’s Best All Around Shooter), competitive shooter
Jerry Martin, RedHead Head Pro Hunting team member and The Legends of the Outdoors Hall of Fame member
Nick Mundt, Travis ‘T-Bone’ Turner, and Michael Waddell hosts of Outdoor Channel’s “Bone Collector”
Rusty Sellars, True Timber founder and CEO
John Stephens, Duck Calling World Champion
Brenda Valentine, First Lady of Hunting and RedHead Pro Hunting team member

Sports
Hugh Freeze, head football coach, University of Mississippi
Jeanette Lee (“The Black Widow”), professional billiards star
Kendall Newson, former Miami Dolphin and Bass Pro Shops NITRO Pro Team member

Racing
Richard Childress, Richard Childress Racing chairman and CEO
Austin Dillon, NASCAR driver of the No. 3 Bass Pro Shops/TRACKER Boats Chevrolet Camaro
Kerry Earnhardt, former NASCAR driver, outdoor personality and co-founder of the Earnhardt Collection and Earnhardt Outdoors
Kelley Earnhardt Miller, JR Motorsports general manager and co-owner, co-founder of Earnhardt Outdoors

#4. Parking is going to be tricky. Bass Pro Shops advises against trying to park at the Pyramid. Instead, the city of Memphis and MATA have teamed up to provide free parking (at some lots), and a free shuttle service. The shuttle will run up and down A.W. Willis and along the Main Street and Riverside trolley loop routes from 2 p.m.-1 a.m. 

Know what? Let’s put that downloadable map right here one more time: 

[pdf-1]

#5. Called the “Evening for Conservation,” the event is a fundraiser for conservation organizations, including Duck Unlimited. Half of the proceeds from the event will go to those organizations. 

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

5 Thoughts About Grizzlies/Blazers Game Five

Larry Kuzniewski

The Grizzlies can and should win Game 5 with more help from their big men.

1. If the Grizzlies don’t win tonight, this series is probably going seven games. Portland smells blood in the water after their Game 4 win. Without Mike Conley, the Grizzlies struggle to run offensive sets and struggle to score, and they’ve been over-reliant on guard play in the three series wins so far. With the crowd behind them at home, it wouldn’t be surprising for the Blazers to win again at home (especially since if they’re playing another home game, that means they beat the Grizzlies in Memphis in Game 5).

The Grizzlies should treat tonight like a Game 7—if they win, they don’t play again until Sunday. That means the whole team needs to play like the world will end if they don’t win, like the fabric of spacetime will be torn asunder if they don’t bend and bully every black-uniformed Portland player into submission before their Grizzly will. It’s not a “win or go home” game, but it is a “win and get to rest before you have to deal with Golden State” game, and they’ll need as much time as they can manage to prepare for the Warriors, especially if Conley is looking at an extended absence.

Larry Kuzniewski

If there’s an NBA player equivalent of Colonel Kurtz, it’s Chris Kaman, right?

2. The Grizzlies have to figure out how to curb their reliance on guards for scoring. That’s not the way the Grizzlies have played their basketball this season. Optimally, scoring from guards and wings just opens the floor up for Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph to visit wanton violence on opposing frontcourts. The Grizzlies haven’t gotten much production from Randolph this series, and Gasol has focused on defense (mostly brilliantly) instead of scoring.

Tonight, Gasol and Randolph’s mission should be to terminate the Blazers’ season with extreme prejudice.

Randolph and LaMarcus Aldridge have played each other to a standstill, and neither has been efficient, but Randolph has basically sacrificed every aspect of his game to the fisticuffs with Aldridge. If Gasol can handle that matchup for more time tonight (which means “if Meyers Leonard or Chris Kaman don’t become a problem while being guarded by Z-Bo”) maybe it’d free Randolph up to be more of a factor. On the other end, Randolph struggles to score over Aldridge’s length, so hitting him on the run in the high-low game might be a better option than the iso-Z-Bo postups that clogged the Grizzlies’ offense in Game 4 worse than Jack Pirtle’s clogs arteries all over our fair city.

Either way, without Mike Conley there to distribute the ball, and neither of his replacements being All-Star caliber point guards, the two remaining legs of the Big Three tripod have to step it up tonight. Courtney Lee is great, but the Griz can’t rely on him to win Game 5 with one-dribble pullups. Jeff Green was barely at Game 4, much less playing well. It’s got to come from Gasol and Randolph.

Larry Kuzniewski

It won’t be easy, but the Griz need to figure out how to run their sets without Mike Conley calling the shots.

3. The Grizzlies need to figure out how to win playoff games without Mike Conley. At the time of my writing this, no one knows how long Conley will be out. It could be two games, it could be until next season. If it’s the latter, the Grizzlies have a much-diminished chance of doing anything beyond the second round, but if it’s going to be a chance at all, they need to figure out how to run their offense (“their” being the starting unit) with Beno Udrih or Nick Calathes calling the shots. That starts tonight.

In Game 4, the Grizzlies’ offensive rating dropped below 110 points per 100 possessions for the first time in the postseason. (Game 2 was a low-scoring affair but it was played at an 83.9 pace, skewing the points-per-game numbers a bit). Slowing the game back down to something like that—a pace somewhere in the 85 range—and still figuring out how to get buckets through the bigs is the surest path to victory.

There’s no question that the Grizzlies miss everything Conley brings to the table. He’s regarded as one of the best point guards in the league for a reason. But there are ways to mitigate his absence to the extent possible, and that needs to be on the minds of the Grizzlies coaches and players tonight. Play like he’s not coming back, and if/when he does, they’ll be in that much better shape for it.

4. Can CJ McCollum play in Memphis the way he played in Portland? McCollum stepped in for the Blazers and had two huge games in Games 3 and 4 (not to mention the fact that he took Mike Conley out of the equation by accidentally breaking his face). He had 26 in Game 3, 18 in Game 4, and was generally unstoppable, flying around the court trying to do whatever he could to get the Blazers a win.

In Games 1 and 2, McCollum had 3 points and 6 points, respectively, while playing 36 and 29 minutes in each game. McCollum is a young guy, and so nerves were probably a factor at first, but can he really keep up the high level of Games 3 and 4 for one more night against what promises to be a loud FedExForum at least halfway grouchy that we all have to go back down there for another game in the first place?

If he can, and can put up stat lines similar to his Portland outings, that’s a problem for the Grizzlies. If he plays more like he did in the previous two games in Memphis, that’s a (bigger) problem for the Blazers, because he’s been a big part of their scoring output since the series shifted westward.

Larry Kuzniewski

5. This could/should be the last time we see this year’s Grizzlies playing when they aren’t the underdogs.

Historically, this group of players has performed far above expectations when their backs are against the wall and no one expects them to be able to do anything. Taking the Thunder to seven games both times they’ve done so. Getting to the Western Conference Finals in 2013. Obviously, knocking off the Spurs in the 2011 first round. This is a group of guys who relish proving people wrong, who enjoy defying expectations.

They’re the favorites in this series, even without Mike Conley. They have home court advantage, they’ve owned Portland all year, and they have a 3-1 series lead that was this close to being the first sweep in Grizzlies history.

If the Grizzlies win tonight, all that changes. The narrative shifts back to “nobody believes we can beat Golden State.” They—and we, Memphis, as an extension, because that’s the way these Grizzlies playoff runs work—go back to our most comfortable posture, our civic position of strength: nobody thinks we can do this.

I think a return to the underdog status will give this Griz team an edge it’s been missing for a little while now, a desire to prove they belong. That’s invaluable for this group. It’s when they do their best work. It’s when the most indelible images are made, when the moment elevates to a level worthy of our long civic memory, the storytelling of sports fans about old warriors, long dead. If the Grizzlies make it out of the first round, they’re right back where they belong: back in the epic.