Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

#16 Tigers 41, Tulane 13

Memphis football fans have now worn two Halloween costumes since the Tigers last lost a game. In coming from behind to beat the Green Wave Saturday night at the Liberty Bowl, Memphis improved to 8-0 on the season and earned its 15th consecutive victory, a program record that’s been growing for weeks now. Junior quarterback Paxton Lynch passed for 343 yards (his seventh consecutive game over 300) and tossed his 18th touchdown pass of the season to lead a Tiger offense that gained 581 yards (compared with 270 for Tulane).

“We knew going into the game they were very good up front,” said Memphis coach Justin Fuente. “They possessed the ball almost the whole first quarter. We felt our best chance was to lean on them a bit, and we weren’t getting that opportunity. But once we got settled down, and found some rhythm, we were able to have success.”
Larry Kuzniewski

Paxton Lynch

Behind third-string quarterback Jordy Joseph (making his first start), Tulane swallowed 11:13 of playing time on its opening possession before taking a 6-0 lead with a three-yard touchdown run by Dontrell Hilliard. (The PAT was blocked by Memphis linebacker Jackson Dillon.) Hilliard scored again on a 43-yard gallop early in the second quarter to give the Green Wave a 13-0 lead, the fourth time this season the Tigers have allowed at least 10 points before scoring themselves. (Fuente considers a generally “over-anxious” group of players responsible for the trend.)

Memphis finally got on the scoreboard almost five minutes into the second quarter when sophomore Doroland Dorceus completed a 76-yard drive with his seventh touchdown of the season, a two-yard run. Two Jake Elliott field goals and a safety after a botched Tulane punt attempt game the Tigers a 15-13 lead at halftime. (Elliott added a third field goal in the second half to tie Joe Allison for second in Memphis history with 51 for his career.)

The score remained tight until a five-minute stretch late in the third quarter and bridging the fourth, when the Tigers put up 19 points. Freshman tailback Jamarius Henderson took a screen pass and sprinted down the left side of the field for a 43-yard touchdown, and sophomore wideout Anthony Miller took a handoff from Lynch on a reverse, changed directions, and followed a Lynch block into the left corner of the end zone for a 15-yard score.

Larry Kuzniewski

Doroland Dorceus

Jarvis Cooper completed the game’s scoring with a one-yard touchdown run with 8:16 left in the contest. The Tigers have now scored at least 40 points in six of their eight games.

Fuente dismissed any notion of the Tigers looking past Tulane, the Green Wave having entered the game as heavy underdogs. “We don’t talk about [the spread],” he said. ” I don’t know if they’re aware of it or not. The kids felt like they should win the game. When things don’t go well and you’re supposed to win, how do you respond to that? That’s a different feeling than when no one thinks you can win.”

Lynch acknowledged some frustration at having to watch so much football after the game’s kickoff as Tulane bled the clock on its opening drive. “It’s very hard,” he said. “You get warmed up for the game, you’re ready to go in, and they take the whole first quarter. You just have to stay locked in and be ready when it’s your turn.” Lynch completed 26 of 42 passes without an interception.

Phil Mayhue led the Tiger receivers with seven catches for 107 yards. Mose Frazier also caught seven passes for 75 yards. Dorceus led the Tiger ground attack with 45 yards while Lynch added 43.

The Tigers host Navy next Saturday in the first of three consecutive showdowns that will determine who plays in the inaugural American Athletic Conference championship. Navy beat USF Saturday to improve to 6-1 on the season. The Midshipmen, like the Tigers, are 4-0 in AAC play.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Indie Memphis 2015

One of the best things about Indie Memphis is the festival’s schedule of shorts from local, national, and international filmmakers. This year, the entries range from documentary shorts about young dancers in Memphis (Suzannah Herbert’s “What’s Inside the Cage”) to narrative works about living with an autoimmune disorder (Stacey Ashworth’s “No Breath Play”). Over 70 submissions, all under 25 minutes, will play throughout the week. We picked out a few of our favorites.

“The Department of Signs and Magical Intervention”

“The Department of Signs and Magical Intervention” – Melissa Anderson Sweazy

When Aidan (Sean McBride) gets hit by a fast-moving bus while skateboarding, he finds himself in the afterlife, a realm that — according to Memphis filmmaker Melissa Anderson Sweazy — looks a whole lot like the most boring parts of corporeal existence. Specifically, it looks like a bank. Except instead of dealing in dollars, this ethereal vault and its matter-of-fact employees dole out “signs and magical intervention” to unsuspecting humans.

“The Department of Signs and Magical Intervention,” shot in Downtown Memphis with a cast of familiar local faces, is perhaps this year’s most charming contender: lighthearted, very funny, and smartly framed by Sweazy. The lesson, as Aidan navigates an undead bureaucracy, is that magic, and second chances, just might exist.

“Alphabet” – Ben Siler

“Alphabet,” the latest from Memphis underground filmmaker Ben Siler, opens with a blonde woman wielding an axe in a suburban kitchen. Blood spatters on her shirt as she hacks at someone out-of-frame. You see her digging a hole in her garden and then shoving potato chips into her mouth and examining her nails. Later, she cries to a neighbor, who comforts her unsentimentally.

In two minutes and 37 seconds, we see two murders, an affair, and the long legacy of a secret. It’s funny and brilliant in Siler’s usual muted, dark way. Siler’s dialogue-less, low-definition shorts are as sharply edited as they are pointedly mundane. Despite frequently macabre and over-the-top plots, the filmmaker’s lens is always focused on unremarkable details, such as the glass of seltzer water on the table, or an unplugged power strip in the corner.

“To Cross”

“To Cross” – Suzannah Herbert

This documentary short from the Brooklyn-based and Memphis-born filmmaker Suzannah Herbert follows a high school student named Jared on his daily commute. At 3:30 a.m., Jared wakes up on the Mexican side of Tijuana, early enough that he is able to cross the border and attend high school in America. Twelve arduous hours later, he returns home to Mexico. “At the end of the day, we are really tired,” says Jared, who, we learn, is the only member of his family able to attend school in the U.S. After graduation, he hopes to be able to support his siblings by finding work in the States.

Herbert’s short shines light on the lengths Jared and his peers go to in order to obtain an education, despite the fact that their schooling is considered illegal since the students are not United States residents. “To Cross” gives viewers a sense of its subjects not only as young people, tasked with the care of their families, but as regular high school students. Herbert, who has worked for Martin Scorsese and Michael Moore in addition to making her own films, tells Jared’s story with a light touch and characteristic skill.

“One Hitta Quitta”

“One Hitta Quitta” – Ya’Ke Smith

“One Hitta Quitta” is a genre-bending narrative entry from newcomer Ya’Ke Smith, a Texas-based filmmaker. The film melds real footage of fights, shot on phones and posted online, with the story of a young man whose obsession with watching violent footage leads him to act out. We see Jason (Dariel Embry) challenge his algebra teacher, Mr. Kelly (Shelton Jolivette), while other students in the class surround with phones primed.

Smith shot entirely on mobile devices, which contributes to the film’s fast pace and realistic feel. In the height of the short’s drama, when Mr. Kelly returns Jason’s punch, the frame shifts from horizontal to vertical to horizontal again, referencing the crowd-sourced depictions of similar real events. Smith’s handling is seamless, and makes what might otherwise be a run-of-the-mill story into something new and on point.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Double J’s BBQ Eggrolls

I’ve been hearing about Double J’s BBQ eggrolls ($7) for a while now, and I finally got to try them.

First of all, wow… they’re big! On the first bite I was instantly impressed by how well fried the eggrolls were. I know that sounds odd to say, but it’s true. The eggroll wasn’t too chewy or crunchy when I bit into it. The pulled pork was hearty and flavorful. The coleslaw was light and delicious.

I also need to point out Double J’s original BBQ sauce. It was recommended that I eat the eggroll with it and what a good tip. The sauce amazing. It’s mainly sweet with a hint of spiciness to it.

Categories
Music Music Blog

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist

Happy Halloween!

Here are a group of  songs guaranteed to get you in the spooky spirit, or at the very least, freak you out. Did I leave off your favorite scary song? Leave a comment and it might get added to the list.

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (6)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (2)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (5)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (4)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (6)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (8)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (10)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (10)

A Very Scary Halloween Playlist (11)

Categories
Style Sessions We Recommend

Closet Essentials: Building a Wardrobe with Organized Style

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The transition of seasons encourages some closet organization and practical wardrobe assessment. As a supplement to last week’s post with Thuyvi Vo, we tackle how exactly does one create a wardrobe that works as a complete collection and how to organize your closet to ease the everyday choice of outfits. A few other fashion bloggers Kim Thomas, Tara Skelley, and Ariane Patrice also chime in on their closest essentials and organizing tips.

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Closet/Wardrobe Essentials
Our compiled list of wardrobe essentials touches on what everyone should have this season but mainly items that will last through many seasons.

• A coat, tailored and neutral
• A blazer, tailored
• Dress shirt, white or chambray
• A quality pair of denim jeans
• Boyfriend t-shirt, V-neck
• Pair of boots
• Pair of sneakers
• Pair of loafers
• Scarf, quality material
• Travel bags. Shown above are a coordinating set by Madewell.

A Styled Closet
A styled closet can mean less time getting ready since everything coordinates and is easy to find. Here are a few things you can do to organize and make your closet look like your favorite retail store with a livable quality.

• Matching hangers, such as all wooden hangers.
• Organize by color.
• Separate by season if your closet is big enough to hold all seasons. If not, pack away what you don’t need.
• Purge anything you don’t wear or love. Only keep what you love.
• Organize by type and order of layer. For example, things you put on first are on one side then work your way across to outer layers like sweaters and coats.
• A small stool will help as you as you get shoes on. It’s also a great step stool or display for your hat.
• A small plush rug like a sheepskin rug amps up the style while keeping your feet comfortable.

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Please let us know if you have any other suggestions for a stylish closet. Have a fantastic weekend.
Photographed at the Lofts at Merchants Row using Thuyvi’s wardrobe essentials.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Wait Until Dark Is a Stylish Thriller in the Classic Vein

Jeffrey Hatcher’s update of Fredrick Knott’s classic thriller Wait Until Dark is unusual. Instead of moving the story closer to the present to give it currency, it’s been pushed back in time to the 1940’s. The heroin packed inside a doll, and accidentally smuggled into the country by an unsuspecting man and his blind wife has been written out. Now that doll’s full of diamonds. And everything feels just a little more Hitchcockian. 

It’s a smart move framing the manipulative, sometimes belabored script in a way that brings out all its best qualities. 

Wait Until Dark tells the story of a murderous con man and how he and his partners plan to retrieve the doll full of diamonds, and frame an innocent man. The best parts are told in the dark, giving the play’s blind heroine, Susy Hendrix, an unanticipated edge. 

Theatre Memphis’ production isn’t perfect, but it’s often very good. Director Tracy Zerwig Ford has assembled an able cast. She gets solid performances all around and especially fine turns from Andria Wilson as Hendrix, and Willie Derrick, as a con artist pretending to be one of her husband’s old war buddies. Kaitlyn Poindexter is delightfully obnoxious (and deeply sympathetic) as Gloria, the brat who lives upstairs. 

The real star of this show, however, is Daniel A. Kopera’s stylish scenic design.  Jeremy Allen Fisher’s lights, are also noteworthy. 

Wait Until Dark takes a long time to set up, and the story strains at the edge of credibility. But when things get rolling in the second half, it’s just about everything you could want from a mid-20th-Century thriller. 

Categories
Music Music Blog

Fundraising for Johnny Cash Statue Underway

Johnny Cash by Leigh Wiener, 1962.

Residents of Cooper Young are currently raising money for a Johnny Cash statue that they hope to place in front of Galloway United Methodist church, the site of Cash’s first concert with Marshall Grant and Luther Perkins. According to the IOBY page dedicated to the project:
 
“Once the total project amount of $103,035 is raised, Sculptor Bill Beckwith will sculpt, cast, and mount a 7-foot tall bronze of Johnny Cash taken from a photograph made by Leigh Wiener in 1962. First, local historian Jimmy Ogle will install the Historic Marker describing Cash’s first performance at the Church. Before the statue is mounted, the plaza will be landscaped and prepared at the corner of the Church property at 1015 Walker (now Cooper Walker Place).” 

Currently, $5,070 of the needed $31,015 funds have been donated. Those in favor of building the statue hope to have construction completed by May 1st, 2016, the 60th anniversary of the Sun Records single “I Walk the Line.” After the sculpture is completed, local artists, landscapers, and architects will be enlisted to create sculpture gardens based on Memphis music history. Listen to “I Walk the Line” below. For information on how to buy a brick on the “Cash Walkway” or the “Cash Steps,” click here.

Fundraising for Johnny Cash Statue Underway

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Horrortober: Beetlejuice (1988)

Micheal Keaton rules as Beetlejuice

Beetlejuice is not a horror movie by any stretch of the imagination, but it almost was, according to IMB: 

The original script was a horror film, and featured Beetlejuice as a winged, reptilian demon who transformed into a small Middle Eastern man to interact with the Maitlands and the Deetzes. Lydia was a minor character, with her six year old sister Cathy being the Deetz child able to see the Maitlands. Beetlejuice’s goal was to kill the Deetzs, rather than frighten them away, and included sequences where he mauled Cathy in the form of a rabid squirrel and tried to rape Lydia. Subsequent script rewrites turned the film into a comedy and toned down Beetlejuice’s character into the ghost of a wise cracking con-artist rather than a demon.

Perhaps a route to pursue for the sequel

And while Beetlejuice is most certainly a comedy, and arguably director Tim Burton’s best film, it is filled with plenty of true-life scares: goth teen poetry, modern furniture, bad art, spackled paint, polyester suits, small closets, living in Connecticut, etc.

The plot: the Barbara and Adam Maitland live an ideal life out in a quaint country home and then they die. The Deetzes, straight from New York, move in and disturb the peace, so the Maitlands call a bioexorcist, Beetlejuice, to spook the family out. 

Beetlejuice is a lesson in economy; every second bounces along for its compact 90 minutes with many great moments, such as the Netherworld waiting room scene and Calypso-spiked dinner party.  

Winona Ryder, with to-die-for bangs, as Lydia

The cast is sharp as well: young Winona Ryder (with to-die-for spiky bangs) as Lydia Deetz and Jeffrey Jones and Catherine O’Hara as her clueless and pretentious parents; Geena Davis and Alec Baldwin as the Maitlands (Baldwin at his most personable and harmless); plus Dick Cavett and Robert Goulet! But the film belongs to Michael Keaton as the title character, a centuries-spanning creep who put the ouch in louche. 

If you haven’t seen Beetlejuice, stop what you’re doing and watch it now. It’s that good. And, if you’re wondering what a comedy is doing in a series about horror films, get into the spirit of the season. We have Beetlejuice, after all, for all those great Halloween costume ideas. 

Horrortober: Beetlejuice (1988)

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Carson, Clinton On the Way to Memphis

JB

Clinton in Memphis last year

Climaxing a period in which Hillary Clinton seems to have significantly strengthened her bid for the Democratic presidential nomination and the GOP candidates had at each other in yet another televised battle royal, Memphis finds itself in line for some direct contemplation of some main contenders.

Dr. Ben Carson, currently leading longtime Republican frontrunner Donald Trump in Iowa, site of next February’s first votes for the record, will hold a rally on Friday night at West Memphis High School’s Lehr arena, from 6 to 8 p.m., with doors opening at 4 p.m.

Former Secretary of State Clinton, two weeks after a strong debate performance and mere days after confronting her Republican critics on a special House Benghazi committee, will be in Memphis for an appearance on November 20, her campaign announced. Details will follow.

Meanwhile, on Monday night, a local organizing committee for Clinton’s chief Democratic competitor, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, will meet at Newk’s Restaurant in Cordova.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian

Public Image Limited play the New Daisy Theater on Sunday, November 1st.

Welcome to the 39th edition of my Weekend Roundup. It’s Halloween weekend, and there are plenty of opportunities to get freaky to some live music over the next few days. From post-punk to psych rock, there’s something for everyone, so put on your favorite costume, crank up The Cramps (or your favorite spooky band) and get out to some of these shows. Allow the Ramones video below to get you in the Halloween spirit.

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian (7)


Friday, October 30th.

Alex G, Spencer Radcliffe, Bonus, Loser Vision, 8 p.m. at the Hi-Tone Cafe, $10.

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian (4)

The LACS, Hard Target, 7 p.m. at  Minglewood Hall, $20.

Zoogma, AndTheEcho, 8 p.m. at Minglewood Hall, $15-$17.

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian (5)

Everett Brown, JD Reager, Kenny Hayes, 8 p.m. at Otherlands, $8.

Jack Oblivian, DJ Andrew McCalla, 11 p.m. at Bar DKDC, $5.

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian (6)

Saturday, October 31st.
Spaceface, Fever The Ghost, Isaiah the Mosaic, Fever Dream Interactive, 8 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $10. 

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian (3)

Halloween Bash with Freeworld and DJ Stan Bell, 8 p.m. at Minglewood Hall, $20.

Heaven and Hell Halloween Bash Featuring The Sheiks, Jack Oblivian, Superwitch, The Dead Soldiers and Al Kapone 9 p.m. at Ernerstine and Hazels, $10.

Sunday, November 1st.
Knocked Loose, No Victory, Lowered A.D., Reserving Dirtnaps, 8 p.m. at the Hi-Tone, $10.

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian (2)

An evening with PiL, 8 p.m. at The New Daisy Theater, $27-$35.

Weekend Roundup 39: PiL, Spaceface, Jack Oblivian

Kitten Forever, Rickie & Aimee, Mystery Box 9 p.m. at Murphy’s, $5.