Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said (May 7, 2015) …

Greg Cravens

About Jackson Baker’s post, “Haslam Caves, Signs Legislation Nullifying Local Option on Guns in Parks” …

Jeff, I wonder how those of us too frail (say over 70 and harmlessly gardening in the front yard) or in a hurry (those of us attempting to protect ourselves from an abusive ex-paramour) or any number of other types of people (the poor) would feel about such a barrier to “the great equalizer”? 

I’m thinking that their right to own and carry a loaded handgun, if they so wish, trumps the need for extensive, lengthy, and expensive training. Perhaps you shouldn’t abuse them and they won’t shoot you.

Ichabod McCrane

Icky, I never said grandpa can’t buy a gun and pack it in the saddlebag of his Little Rascal as he putts around his own garden. Just that if he wants to pack it to the park and, perchance, whip it out with his feeble, quavering hand to shoot any random sumbitch within within range because he doesn’t have the strength to aim, he’s SOL. 

He should have taken classes and gotten certified when he wasn’t so feeble. Maybe the training would have kept him in better shape and he wouldn’t be so feeble today. But I have no problem with him packing in his own garden. 

Jeff

About Bruce VanWyngarden’s Letter from the Editor, “In Spring” …

In 10 years, we won’t recognize the Midtown we know today. New arrivals will indeed come to discover her charms. The biggest risk to that growth is that newcomers and developers will bring a suburban aesthetic with them (including conservative politics, pleated shorts, boat shoes, and a lack of interest in art).

Midtown has always meant artists (not developer-created fake “arts districts”), writers, filmmakers, left-wing politics, strong coffee, gay people, health nuts, trendsetters, serious readers, etc.

I can see why the suburban kids want in, but rather than change us, could they please adapt?

PB

About Tim Sampson’s Rant …

What does the Tennessee State Constitution say that our taxes are legally allowed to be used for? None of those projects.

CHG

What does the Constitution say about my penis? But y’all are sure involved in its use. Obviously, the Constitution is what we make it, having made it in the first place.

crackoamerican

About Wendi Thomas’ cover story, “Cuba, Si!” …

It was great to read about Thomas’ trip to Cuba. It is always a pleasure to see how liberals are drawn to the mystique of Castro’s brand of communism. If only the mean, old, imperialistic United States had not imposed trade embargoes, Cuba would be a booming, robust country.

Granted, the people of Cuba are a wonderful people, but if you take off the rose-colored glasses, you will see that they live under the yoke of communism, where there is no freedom. Thomas’ guided tour was just that, a guided tour. She saw only what they wanted her to see.

James Kline

About the new downtown “trolleys” …

As a 20-year resident of downtown Memphis, I have recently almost been hit by the “new trolleys” twice. When I mentioned this to a couple of long-term downtowners, all reported similar encounters. We all knew to listen for the noisy rumble of the real trolleys, and these silent, no-noise hybrid engine models are a threat to all. Can we at least get some good old-fashioned combustion engine models until the state takes over and restores our beloved trolleys? In years past, the only threat posed by the trolleys were all the tourists trying to take photos. I have yet to witness a tourist taking a shot of the “rubber wheels.”

Charles Deaton

Categories
Music Music Blog

Weekend Roundup 16: Water Liars, The Parting Gifts, Impala

Water Liars play the Hi-Tone Friday night.

We already gave you the rundown on all the blues related events happening over the next few days, so here are some other shows worth checking out this weekend. 

Friday, May 8th.
New Artist Night, 8 p.m. at Otherlands, $5.
Water Liars, James and the Ultrasounds, 9 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $8.

Weekend Roundup 16: Water Liars, The Parting Gifts, Impala

XLM, 9 p.m. at the 1884 Lounge, $10.

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Saturday, May 9th.
The Parting Gifts,9 p.m. at the Hi-Tone Cafe, $7.

Weekend Roundup 16: Water Liars, The Parting Gifts, Impala (3)

La Pistola, Clanky’s Nub, 8 p.m. at the 1884 Lounge, $7.
The Holy Drug Couple, Blackberries, 9 p.m. at Murphy’s, $5.

Weekend Roundup 16: Water Liars, The Parting Gifts, Impala (2)

Impala, 10 p.m. at Bar DKDC.
Somebody’s Darling, 10 p.m. at the Young Avenue Deli, $10.

Weekend Roundup 16: Water Liars, The Parting Gifts, Impala (4)

Sunday, May 10th.
Blind Mississippi Morris, 5 p.m. at B.B. King’s Blues Club.
Nick Black CD Release show, 10 p.m. Lafayette’s Music Room.

Weekend Roundup 16: Water Liars, The Parting Gifts, Impala (5)

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Pierre Kimsey, Producer Extraordinaire

This will be personal.

Pierre Kimsey, the producer of WKNO-TV’s “Behind the Headlines” show and of numerous other features and interviews for that station, unexpectedly died this week, apparently of a heart attack in his apartment on Monday. His body was discovered at some point later, and news of his death went around on Thursday. 

That kind of quasi-anonymous passing belied the fact that Pierre was beloved of many, almost everybody who knew him, in fact. My friend and colleague Les Smith knew Pierre for 30 years and is a better source than I am for a full sense of his life and accomplishments, but I knew him long enough — beginning in 2010, when he asked me to be one of the four original cast members of BTH — to feel privileged.

He was an Emmy winner as a producer and had been a renowned TV feature reporter for long before that, working in such climes as Florida, Charlotte, and Memphis. But his real accomplishment, his real grace, was as a human being. He was endlessly thoughtful, a pure delight, solicitous to a fault with those he worked with.

Pierre had every right, as an artist of considerable stature, to indulge himself in ego trips, but he was remarkably self-effacing instead, always at the service of others, taking care of their needs and concerns. It was that unique empathy that made him so effective as reporter, interviewer, producer, and friend.

Case in point: the picture, dating from 2011, that illustrates this post. Do I find it personally gratifying? Yep. Did then, do now.

The sign we’re holding was something he surprised me with at an informal get-together for the original cast of BTH. What a nice touch! He also had little party favors made for us, and badges bearing our likeness. He was endlessly attentive and charming to my wife and daughters on that occasion, as well.

He was 62, much too young to go. As great as he was as an artist and technician and journalist and producer — all of that — it was as a human being that he had the most impact. Delight the Heavens, my friend!

Categories
Music Music Features

Barbara Blue Live at Silky O’Sullivans

The reigning queen of Beale Street will be recognized this Friday with a brass note on the Beale Street Walk of Fame. Barbara Blue has been at it for a while now, releasing 11 albums throughout the course of her career, in addition to playing on Beale Street five nights a week. Blue will join Elvis, Robert Johnson, and Justin Timberlake (along with many others) on the walk of fame, and to celebrate she will be officially releasing her latest album, Sweet, Strong, and Tight.

Originally from Pittsburgh, Blue visited Memphis in 1997 and paid $5 to sing with the famous dueling pianists at Silky O’Sullivans. Silky liked what he heard so much that he hired Blue on the spot, and she became a regular performer weeks after. Eighteen years later, Blue can still be found at Silky’s, playing original songs that are influenced by female vocalists ranging from Janis Joplin to Etta James.

Barbara Blue

Produced by Boo Mitchell, Sweet, Strong, and Tight is a collection of 13 tracks that definitely prove Blue belongs on the Walk of Fame. The Beale Street performer has claimed to know more than 3,000 songs, but she picked some of her best for her latest album, and tracks like “Rudy’s Blues,” “Rolling up on Me,” and “I’m Gonna Tear Your Playhouse Down” definitely capture the essence of what it means to be a legendary Beale Street performer. On the title track “Sweet, Strong, and Tight,” Blue claims to be the cure for a strong hangover, something she’s probably witnessed first-hand when dealing with the Silky’s crowd on a Sunday morning.

With Blue performing two shows Friday night and all the Blues Hall of Fame events happening this weekend, it’s a good time to have the blues in Memphis.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Avengers: Age Of Ultron

In “The Freshman,” the first episode of the fourth season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, our heroine, having killed the villainous Mayor by exploding her high school, discovers that the vampires have followed her to college. Buffy’s trusty sidekick Xander knows what to do: Get the gang back together.

“Avengers assemble!” he exclaims.

Now, 16 years later, Buffy mastermind Joss Whedon has released his second, and if the director is to be believed, final, Avengers movie to a different world. In 1999, “Avengers assemble” was a reference to Marvel Comics’ B team — it was funny because it wasn’t the X-Men. Now, Captain America (Chris Evans) helms the flagship of the biggest film franchise in the world. Disney’s success with Marvel has set the standard for the 21st-century blockbuster, and all other Hollywood studios are trying to emulate it. Even Star Wars, the original modern film franchise, is adapting the model. It’s no accident that Furious 7 has the same number of main characters as The Avengers. Whedon’s 2012 film, the first to unite all of the different strains of the Disney-owned end of the Marvel Universe, was used as a blueprint, with Vin Diesel playing the Captain America role and Dwayne Johnson playing Nick Fury. The results of that cargo cult appropriation was laughably bad but extraordinarily profitable for Universal. Even car chase movies have to be superhero movies now. Comic books are rewriting film in their own image.

Is this a bad thing? If it means more quality movies like Avengers: Age of Ultron, maybe not. It’s a sprawling epic that represents the best work the corporate Hollywood studio system can produce. With Whedon’s work, that’s not damning with faint praise, it’s just a statement of fact.

Contemplate, for a moment, the extraordinary difficulty Age of Ultron‘s screenplay alone represents. Whedon had to juggle Captain America, Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), The Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), and Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), from the first film, while introducing new villain Ultron (James Spader), as well as three new members of the team, Quicksilver (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen), and Vision (Paul Bettany), and integrating Don Cheadle’s War Machine from the Iron Man sub-franchise and Anthony Mackie’s Falcon from Captain America: The Winter Soldier into the outfit. That’s 11 superheroes and a supervillain. The Batman franchise has repeatedly choked on one superhero and two supervillains. Only a few of the X-Men movies were able to pull off something so complex, and Whedon moonlighted as a script doctor on the first one of those back during the Buffy days.

Creativity often flourishes while pushing against restraints, and in this case, Whedon is in one of the tightest straitjackets any writer/director has ever had to don. With so many subplots and characters to deal with, every beat in the screenplay has to be accounted for. Whedon pulls it off, even accounting for the fact that the first cut he turned in to the studio was reportedly more than 40 minutes longer than the final 2-hour-20-minute running time.

Whedon is the best in the business at teasing out real human emotions from fantastical characters in unbelievable situations. One of the ways he does this is by being honest with the audience. As Hawkeye, who seems to serve as Whedon’s voice in Age of Ultron, points out late in the picture, here’s a guy with a bow and arrow fighting an army of robots in a city that is currently being levitated into space. “None of this makes any sense!” He’s telling Scarlet Witch, the new member of the team who just a few minutes ago was an enemy, to cowboy up, and it works, both in plot as a motivational speech and as a Shakespearian aside to the audience.

Shakespeare looms large in Whedon’s world. When he worked himself into exhaustion on the first Avengers movie, he directed an all-star cast in a low-budget adaptation of Much Ado About Nothing to unwind. He has also absorbed the greatest lesson from the English language’s greatest humanist: “The fault is not in our stars, but in ourselves.”

Chris Evans and Chris Hemsworth

Early in the film, while our heroes are busting up yet another Hydra base in Eastern Europe, Scarlet Witch uses her mind-bending powers to trap each of the heroes in a hallucinatory world where they are confronted by their fears and desires. At that point, Whedon has been in action mode from the word go, but things suddenly slow down and get weird. Captain America sees what his life would have been like had he not been frozen in ice before World War II ended. Black Widow relives her childhood dream of being a ballerina perverted into a life of killing in a brutal Soviet training camp. Thor sees Asgard ruled by evil. And Iron Man sees himself unable to prevent the destruction of the Avengers and the world. The sequence, which cuts back and forth between frantic action and reverie, is the single greatest moment in any Marvel movie to date.

Ultron is a creation of Tony Stark’s hubris. Tony’s worst fear is the destruction of humanity by superpowered cosmic forces, but his solution is to create an artificial intelligence that wants to accomplish just that. Ultron is the best kind of villain: One who honestly believes he is the hero of the story. He thinks if he can just explain the plan in clear enough terms, everyone will be on board with human extinction. Think of the benefits! The cyborg race he will create to replace us will be a great improvement over this mortal coil. Spader’s performance is mostly a voice performance laid on top of motion capture and CGI work, but that doesn’t make it any less brilliant.

Age of Ultron has one of the things The Avengers lacked: romance. It pairs the most emotionally vulnerable of the team, Bruce Banner, with the most emotionally cut off, Natasha Romanoff. But, this being a Whedon joint, the gender roles are switched. Johansson’s Natasha pursues Ruffalo’s Bruce, who flees like Cinderella from the ball at the stroke of midnight. The two actors have great chemistry together, even when one of them is a green CGI creature the size of a front-end loader. When Natasha, faced with a choice between love and duty, inevitably chooses duty, her solution will look very familiar to Buffy fans.

Mark Ruffalo and Robert Downey Jr.

That Banner, for the first time, has a possible future outside of super science and “Avenging” gives the big, mandatory fan service moment emotional heft. When the Hulk, driven insane by Scarlet Witch, goes on a rampage in a populated area, Iron Man has to super-size his armor to subdue him. Iron Man fighting the Hulk has been a fanboy favorite ever since it played out on the comic pages 30 years ago, and Whedon’s interpretation proves just how good at this stuff he is. He out-Transformers Michael Bay in the giant robot fighting department while simultaneously echoing and outdoing the city-destroying brawl between Superman and General Zod in Zach Snyder’s Man of Steel.

Most importantly, Age of Ultron does what big studio movies have been trying to do since before Errol Flynn took up his bow and rapier in 1938’s The Adventures of Robin Hood: It’s a fun flick to watch in a big theater full of people. Is it a perfect movie? No, but its failings are set by the limitations of the genre. Is it the kind of movie Whedon would be doing in this critic’s ideal world? Not really. His skills and vision are bigger than men in tights. Historically, we’ve had Westerns, adventure movies, spy movies, science fiction, war movies, and all the other action movie variants to deliver swashbuckling good times. Now, with Marvel banking $187 million in three and a half days, and Warner Brothers planning at least 10 more movies set in the DC Comics universe, the superhero template is all we’re going to get for the foreseeable future.

Whedon’s contract with Disney/Marvel is up next month, and he’s been telling everyone who will listen that he’s not coming back. Marvel’s still got a crackerjack team, but Whedon is the secret sauce. Age of Ultron seems like the end of an era.

Categories
Blurb Books

“Pinch” Workshops; “Impossible” Readings

If you’re a poet, a fiction writer, or a writer of creative nonfiction, your deadline date is Friday, May 15th. That’s when online applications (including writing samples) are due for a series of June workshops conducted by staff members of The Pinch, the literary journal of the creative-writing program at the University of Memphis.

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Pinch_workshop_2.jpg

The full-day workshops, held at story booth (438 N. Cleveland), will be next month and run on three consecutive Saturdays: June 6th (poetry); June 13th (fiction); and June 20th (creative nonfiction).

Costs to attend are $25 for one workshop; $40 for two workshops; and $65 for all three. For more information, application forms, and where to send writing samples, go to pinchjournal.com.

“It’s a great opportunity for writers age 16 and up,” Ashley Roach-Freiman, MFA student at the U of M, recently wrote in an email.

“The workshops are one day each, genre-specific, and incredibly cheap! They are taught by Pinch editors who are also MFA students and seasoned creative writing teachers, so they will be a great experience.”

Roach-Freiman, who will be co-teaching the poetry workshop, also coordinates the “Impossible Language” reading series, and the next big event is on Saturday, May 23rd, at 7 p.m.

That’s when Ruth Baumann, P.J. Williams, Ashley Chambers, and Heidi Staples will be reading from their work at 430 N. Cleveland. Except for Baumann, the poets are recent graduates or faculty of the University of Alabama. For updates on the evening, go to “Impossible Language” on tumblr. •

Categories
Style Sessions We Recommend

Moms with Style – Laura Boswell and daughter Leighton – Walking in Memphis in High Heels

For Laura Boswell, author of the style blog Walking in Memphis in High Heels, the inevitable change is a positive one. As the first in the Moms with Style series this month, Laura shares her experience as a new mom while managing in the fun of fashion and life she’s always had.

Followers of her blog have been guided through Memphis by her warm smile that enhances her appeal as a pioneer of sorts, confidently exploring new trends. Candidly documenting her outfits during the week, readers get to discover real ways to enjoy the challenge of work wear. Her exploration of new trends begin to make work wear more chic and feminine.

Now a new mom to 6-month-old Leighton, Laura finds a way to incorporate comfort with style and, of course, includes baby in on the fun.


“I wear high heels most everyday, especially for work, but when I am out and about with Leighton (at the zoo for instance), I always pack a pair of sandals. I tend to go for rompers, jeans or shorts instead of dresses and skirts since I am bound to end up on the ground playing with Leighton at some point during the day.”

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“Layer when you can. It makes you look more pulled together even if you really just threw the first thing on you could reach for in your closet. I also throw a Chewbeads necklace or bangle in my bag so Leighton has something to chew on. I am notorious for carrying a huge diaper bag that doubles as my purse too,” she adds.

“My favorite part of style blogging is trying to come up with an outfit by mixing pieces I already have in my closet. I never got the artistic gene like my siblings, but I did get the artistic gene when it comes to picking out outfits. I love to mix and match pieces to try to create a new outfit that makes each piece look completely different depending on what you pair it with.”

She admits the act of blogging has attributed to her adventurous sense of style, helping her step out of her comfort zone. As for advice to other bloggers, she recommends what has worked for her – to “be yourself.”

“I think people will genuinely appreciate you and like you for being who you are best – yourself. I think it really shows through in your pictures and in your words, and others will see the passion you have for what you are blogging about. Also, try to take great pictures. Everyone loves a pretty picture, and it is the first thing they will see when going to your blog.” 

This Mother’s Day, Laura hopes to share a relaxed weekend with her husband Shane and baby Leighton. A significant day as it’s her first year celebrating as a mom and even more emotional since Leighton was a long-awaited.

“Our little miracle baby,” she says. “It was a long and emotional time, but it was worth every second of it.”

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Here also, Leighton has her first playdate with the baby boy of the next stylish mom featured in this series to be revealed next week but we’ll welcome any guesses you want to share.

In the meantime, click over to Laura’s Mother’s Day Gift Guide for some ideas for moms of all ages.

Outfit Details
On Leighton
Oh So Vera Bloomies & Headband
Old Navy Eyelet Top

On Laura
Francesca’s Collections Romper
Crazy Beautiful Boutique Denim Jacket
Sam Edelman Sandals
Rebecca Minkoff Diaper Bag
Ray-Ban Aviators

Categories
News News Blog

Million Moms March in Memphis

Next Saturday, May 16th, Memphis moms (and their allies) will host a solidarity march in conjunction with last weekend’s planned Million Moms March in Washington, D.C. The D.C. march was held on Mother’s Day weekend to raise awareness of the issue of unarmed black men being killed at the hands of police. The Memphis march was supposed to be held on Mother’s Day, but it was postponed due to weather.

The Memphis rally will take place at 10 a.m. at Main Street and A.W. Willis downtown. It’s being hosted by Families for Justice. The national march in D.C. is hosted by Mothers for Justice United. The marchers are asking the Department of Justice to demand accountability for deaths, such as the recent death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore and the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri last year, at the hands of police officers.

Families for Justice, according to their press release about the march, “seeks to help dismantle institutional racism. Families for Justice is a diverse group; inclusive of mothers, fathers, children and concerned citizens of any ethnicity, culture, religious or political affiliation, united in understanding that this is an American human rights failure and that all people play an important role in confronting racial injustices.”

A flyer for the Mothers for Justice United march planned for Washington D.C.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Taste the Rarity Festival Saturday

Wiseacre’s Taste the Rarity Festival is Saturday, May 9th, 3-7 p.m.

The festival, now in its second year, features rare beers from breweries across the country. Among those participating are 2nd Shift, Three Floyds, Wicked Weed, and Amnesia. Tickets are $50.

Felicia Suzanne’s is offering a Mother’s Day meal to go. Featured on the menu are smoked salmon deviled eggs, crawfish and Vidalia onion pie, beef tenderloin, potato salad, asparagus salad, and coconut cream pie. 

 

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Memphis Tiger Trivia (answer)

Starting this fall, the Memphis Tiger football team will share a division of the American Athletic Conference with Houston, Navy, SMU, Tulane, and Tulsa. Below are listed the number of games Memphis has played against these five opponents (in descending order). Match the opponent to the number of games it’s faced the Tigers.

• 31 — Tulsa
• 25 — Tulane
• 23 — Houston
• 7 — SMU
• 0 — Navy

And a bonus. What is the earliest meeting between the Tigers and a member of their new AAC division?
The Tigers first played Tulane on September 25, 1954. They played to a 13-13 tie in New Orleans.

AAC_logo.jpg