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News News Blog

Bill Seeks to Stem Radicalization in Prisons

Fincher

Legislation from a West Tennessee lawmaker would beef up background checks on volunteers entering federal prisons, which the lawmaker says “have become a breeding ground for radicalization.”

Rep. Stephen Fincher (R-Frog Jump) filed the Prevent Terrorism from Entering our Prisons Act in mid-December. The bill would require more thorough screening of prison volunteers by the Federal Bureau of investigation, “to uncover potential ties to domestic and international terrorists.”

It would also require the federal Bureau of Prisons to conduct a comprehensive study “on the spread of radicalization in prisons.”

“Over the years, our federal prisons have become a breeding ground for radicalization,” Fincher said in a statement. “By allowing volunteers to enter the system without first having to undergo a comprehensive background check, some of the most vulnerable members of society have become susceptible to radicalization.

Fincher says there are a “number of cases” in which inmates become radicalized in prison and attempt to harm citizens. His bill, he says, will help “ensure radical ideologies do not infiltrate our prisons.”

“We cannot let our own federal facilities become recruitment centers for terrorism,” Fincher said. “By strengthening the background check process for federal prison volunteers, we have a better shot at apprehending these individuals before their evil intentions see the light of day.”

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Memphis Gaydar News

New Year’s Burlesque Show

The monthly Cherry party — “a lezzie shindig,” as it’s billed — will host a post-New Year’s burlesque party on Saturday, January 2nd at the 5 Spot on South Main.

The show features performances by Kitty Wompas, Fatima Fox, Will Ryder, and Spyke Styletto, and it’s hosted by comedian Julie Wheeler. DJ Leslie will provide tunes in between and after the shows. Doors open at 8:30 p.m., and the burlesque shows start at 9:30 and 11 p.m. 

Admission is $10 for general admission or $20 for VIP, which includes a saved seat and a signed Cherry poster.

Categories
Music Music Features

Top Local Releases of 2015

As 2015 comes to a close, it’s easy to see that this was another great year for local musicians of all kinds. From ambient hip-hop to thrash metal, mainstream rap to garage rock, we compiled our favorite releases of the year. – Chris Shaw


Juicy J-
100% Juice mixtape (Self-released)

Juicy J continued to kill the rap game in 2015, but his best work came in the form of a mixtape called 100% Juice. While many a mixtape can feature one or two hits amongst tons of filler, 100% Juice delivers on just about every track, with the song “Ain’t No Rappers” being one of the best rap songs of the year, local or not. – CS

Evil Army- Violence and War EP (Hell’s Headbangers)

Self-recorded and written by Evil Army ringleader Rob “Evil” Wilkerson, Violence and War is six songs of blazing, old-school, battle-themed thrash metal (think Sodom, Deströyer 666, etc). Like the reissue of Evil Army’s debut LP and excellent 2013 I, Commander 7″ EP, Violence and War was released by Cleveland’s venerable Hell’s Headbangers label in September and hopefully signals a phase of reborn activity for one of Memphis’ longest-running metal hopes. – Andrew Earles

Julien Baker- Sprained Ankle (6131)

This 20-year-old, Arlington-born singer-songwriter’s debut earned her national recognition and a spot on the New York Time‘s best albums of the year list. Songs like “Blacktop” and “Good News” are lonely music for driving without knowing your destination. – Eileen Townsend

The Sheiks- “I’m Broke” B/W “I’m Gonna Make It in My Mind” (Ballroom)

You probably recognize the members of the Sheiks as Jack Oblivian’s backing band, but the three-piece is also capable of writing rippers of their own. “I’m Broke” sees the band going in a slightly more aggressive direction, and the result is one of their best songs to date. – CS

The AQuaDice- VHS (Self-released)

I’ll admit, I don’t know much about Vash, the woman behind the ambient hip-hop project the AQuaDice, whose VHS I’ve been listening to all week. But this producer/engineer/artist and “eclectic dreaded hippie” (according to her Soundcloud) is a talent to watch. VHS is washed-out and soulful at once, and very cool. – ET

Gimp Teeth- S/T cassette (Self-released)

Eight songs of wonderfully weird/off-kilter hardcore, if that’s the best description for it, by a band that have fit themselves into a wild array of shows this past year and should be graduating to the next level if this release is further indication of the band’s potential. – AE

Yo Gotti- The Return mixtape (CMG)

Gotti’s song “Down in the DM” perfectly captures the weird world of sexting and social-media hookups. Sure, there are 20 great songs on this thing, but “Down in the DM” outshines them all and can be heard on local rap radio stations approximately every 18 minutes. I’m not complaining. – CS

Reatards- Grown Up, Fucked Up (Goner)

After being out of print for years, the second, final, and best full-length of the Reatards’ original ’90s run was once again made available on vinyl by Goner Records. Originally released by Empty Records in 1999, this LP is a crucial piece in the Jay Reatard discography and historical narrative. – AE

Jack Oblivian- Dream Killer (Mony)

A scorcher of a tape from Jack Oblivian, featuring a collection of demos, outtakes, and rarities mostly recorded in his Midtown apartment. With 22 songs in total, Dream Killer is an inside look at how Jack Oblivian cranks out his hits, and the amazing comic book-style artwork from Michael Watson makes this release feel like a professional one instead of a demo tape. Dream Killer is worth buying a cassette player for. It’s that good. – CS

Cities Aviv- Your Discretion Is Trust (Collect)

The music of Gavin Mays, aka Cities Aviv, has been called “post-Internet rap” and “cloud rap” in a nod to the Tumblr circles where it first gained traction. Whatever you call it, one thing is clear from Cities Aviv’s eclectically sampled and styled latest: It’s great. – ET

PreauXX- Forever. I Will. (TRDON)

PreauXX told the Flyer earlier this year that the title for his latest album was an attempt to kill the underdog title that he’s always had as a Memphis rapper. It worked. Forever. I Will. finds the Memphis MC confident in his abilities as he raps about everything from falling in love to the social injustices that inspired the Black Lives Matter movement. Cities Aviv (also on this list) appears on two tracks, and the production by IMAKEMADBEATS and Alexander Odell make this one of the best underground albums of the year. – CS

NOTS- “Virgin Mary” B/W “Shelf Life” (Goner)

NOTS secured a relationship with venerable label Heavenly Recordings for U.K. distribution, which also released the limited-edition “Reactor” remix for the band’s first tour overseas. These two songs continue the promise of last year’s We Are Nots debut full-length on Goner, and point toward an equally productive 2016. – AE

Dirty Streets- White Horse (Alive)

Sure this album is just a couple months old, but that doesn’t stop it from being one of the best Memphis rock records of the year. With the help of producer Matt Qualls, Dirty Streets have done it again, wearing their influences on their sleeve in the best way possible. This band has always been excellent live, and White Horse proves that the three-piece know their way around a studio as well. – CS

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Frank’s Top Five Memphis Sports Moments of 2015

Frank Murtaugh continues the count-down of his Top 10 Most Memorable Memphis Sports Moments of 2015:

5) Navy 45, Tigers 20 (November 7) — Forget the result. This game, ironically, is the snapshot that will stick with me from the Justin Fuente Era in Memphis. The undefeated (8-0) Tigers and the 6-1 Midshipmen met on the gridiron (somehow for the very first time). And 55,000 fans packed the Liberty Bowl without an SEC team in sight. I’ve long held the Liberty Bowl is too big a stadium for the Memphis program. A crowd of 40,000 should not feel like a third of the stadium is empty. But when you pack 55,000 into the old saddle, it feels like big-time college football. Dreams of a New Years’ Six Bowl for the Tigers died on this night. But something else came alive.

4) Dallas 103, Grizzlies 95 (January 19) — The Martin Luther King Day game has become, in my opinion, the top annual event on the Memphis sports calendar. Saluting former athletes for making a difference beyond the box score makes for a poignant event, and one held merely blocks from the National Civil Rights Museum. This was the first chance I had to take my entire family to the game, allowing me the chance to try and explain the significance of Earl Monroe and his connection to one of the NBA’s most memorable teams. (Happily, my daughters were both familiar with another of the Sports Legacy Award honorees: Jason Collins.) This may have been the best matchup in the history of the event, the Griz entering the game with a record of 29-11 and the Mavericks at 28-13. Memphis fell behind by nine after the first quarter, clawed back to finally take the lead with just over four minutes to play, but fell when Dirk Nowitzki hit three field goals over the game’s final two minutes. The real winner, as it is every year on MLK Day, was the city of Memphis.

3) Redbirds 9, Sounds 4 (June 24) — I used some vacation time, took the afternoon off, and enjoyed this Wednesday-afternoon tilt with one of my daughters. Memphis fell behind, 2-0, in the top of the first, but Stephen Piscotty homered on the first pitch he saw in the bottom of the first, making the 109-degree heat index feel like hitters’ fuel. Bartlett native Jacob Wilson later added a double and Tommy Pham a triple as the Redbirds’ offense took starting pitcher Zach Petrick off the hook. Less than a month later, Piscotty made his debut with the St. Louis Cardinals, taking over leftfield from the injured Matt Holliday. Pham also played a key role in the Cards’ 100-win season that earned the franchise a third straight National League Central title. But on this sweltering afternoon at AutoZone Park, the Cardinals’ future was still the Memphis present.

2) Tigers 53, Cincinnati 46 (September 24) — This Thursday-night affair took more than four hours to play . . . but felt like 90 minutes, max. The two teams combined for 1,322 yards of offense (most of them — 752 — by the loser), 12 touchdowns, and 11 lead changes. Cincinnati scored nine times (four field goals) and Memphis eight (one field goal), with the same team scoring consecutively but once (two Bearcat field goals in the second quarter). Memphis quarterback Paxton Lynch passed for 412 yards, a career high (until the Tulsa game a month later). Not until Tiger linebacker Leonard Pegues picked off a wobbly Hayden Moore pass with 10 seconds left on the clock did the U of M secure the win. This was the third time in four games Memphis scored at least 50 points in a football game (with two more to come).

1) Tigers 37, Ole Miss 24 (October 17) — The Rebels were visiting the Liberty Bowl for the first time in five years and had beaten mighty Alabama a month earlier. But here’s the thing: The vast majority of the 60,000 fans in the Liberty Bowl . . . were wearing blue. This game certainly represented the apotheosis of the Justin Fuente Era in Memphis. The question should be whether or not it’s the apotheosis of University of Memphis football, period. After falling behind 14 points just six minutes into the game (“Here we go again . . .”), the Tigers simply dominated the 13th-ranked team in the country. Over the next 30 minutes of playing time, Memphis outscored Ole Miss 31-0, quarterback Paxton Lynch throwing three touchdown passes on his way to a 384-yard game. Two field goals by All-American kicker Jake Elliott provided separation in the fourth quarter. The victory improved Memphis to 6-0 for the first time in 54 years and extended the Tigers’ program-record winning streak to 13 games.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015

For our final Music Video Monday of 2015, I’m counting down the ten best videos of a fantastic year of collaboration between Memphis filmmakers and musicians. 

I’m not usually one for lists, but hey, it’s the end of the year, so why not? This Top Ten list has13 entries, which just shows you how bad I am at this whole list thing. So here it is, the best Memphis music videos of 2015, arbitrarily chosen and ranked by me:

10. (tie) “If You Want It” – Black Rock Revival / “Lucky Or Strong” by Caleb Sweazy

Two Memphis acts created fight themed videos this year. Black Rock Revival mixed it up in the squared circle with director Nina Stakz. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015

Caleb Sweazy directed his own video, took one on the chin, then got up and kept going. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (12)

9. “Ocean” – Nick Black

In Destyn Patera’s video, all Nick Black wants is a drink of water. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (7)

8. “Rock On” – Muck Sticky

The Sticky Muck self directed this psychedelic ode to friendship. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (4)

7. (tie) “Black Tux” – Marco Pavé / “Systemic Collapse” – Stephen Chopek

Director Drew Fleming and rapper Maco Pavé commented on consumerism. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (9)

Stephen Chopek self-directed this surreal tour of the decline and fall. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (8)

6. (tie)  “You’re The One” – Deering and Down / “Cosmophobia” – Arella Rocket

Director Matteo Servente and video artist Christopher Reyes teamed up to create a dreamy clip for Deering and Down. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (3)

Arella Rocket teamed up with filmmaker Michael Norris for this dream hop trip. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (5)

5. “So Addicted” – Tina Harris

Laura Jean Hocking created a lyric video to bring the former Sweetbox singer’s hit single to life. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (6)

4. “We Rewind” – Marcella and Her Lovers

Edward Valibus, Ben Rednour, and Erik Morrison of Corduroy Wednesday took Marcella to Molly Fontaine’s for this stylish clip.  

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (2)

3. “The Straight Liberace” – Lord T. and Eloise 

As with most things created by the time-travelling aristocrunks, this clip will have you asking where parody ends and actual decadence begins. Then you just won’t care. 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (13)



2. “cicada 3301” – Rick and Roy 

Charlie “the city mouse” Fasano’s animated captures the spirit of Rick & Roy’s experimental soundscapes.
 

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (10)


1. “Let The Little Things Go”  – Vending Machine

For his latest entry in his solo project Vending Machine, Robby Grant enlisted some of the best directors in Memphis to create music videos. The best of the bunch, and the best Memphis music video of 2015, is this clip created by G. B. Shannon, with cinematographic help from Ryan Earl Parker and Edward Valibus, and ace editing by Ben Rednour. 

VENDING MACHINE "Let The Little Things Go" Music Video from GB Shannon on Vimeo.

Music Video Monday: Top 10 of 2015 (11)

Thanks to everyone who submitted videos for Music Video Monday. If you want to get in on this action in 2016, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com. 

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies 112, Lakers 96: Five Thoughts

Larry Kuzniewski

Coming as it did on the heels of the Grizzlies’ annoying/avoidable loss to the Charlotte Hornets on Saturday night, Grizzlies fans were right to be a little worried about which version of the Beale Street Bears would show up for Sunday evening’s game against Farewell Tour Kobe Bryant and the struggling Lakers. It turned out not to be much of a game at all, but finally there was a home blowout that went in favor of the home team. Slowly but surely, the Grizzlies built a 20+ point lead and then Jarell Martin made his home debut. But… you know I’m going to talk about that some more later in the post. Five thoughts on last night’s game:

Five Thoughts

★ The “New” Grizzlies starting lineup—the “small ball” lineup—was very effective against the Lakers. Granted, the Lakers were playing some of the worst defense I’ve ever seen (and Kobe Bryant just wasn’t playing defense at all), so I’m not sure how accurate of a measure of effectiveness last night’s game was. But still, it was good to see that unit clicking. The chemistry of the smaller sans-Z-Bo unit has been lacking at time, and they certainly don’t have much in the way of practice time to figure things out in non-game situations, so these games against bad defenses—the first game against Washington comes to mind, as well—are a good exercise for them in running plays the way they want to run them without much resistance. All five starters shot better than 50% last night.

Larry Kuzniewski

Kobe Bryant vs. Tony Allen is always a big deal, but last night it wasn’t quite what it used to be.

★ The Lakers return in February, but who knows what the injury situation will look like then, so yesterday may have been the last chance Memphis gets to see a Tony Allen vs. Kobe Bryant showdown. Bryant has been on the record for years that Allen is the guy who has always guarded him the best—a reputation earned during two Celtics/Lakers NBA Finals all those years ago—and to see them go at it on Sunday, well… it didn’t have the same look as it has in years past. Kobe is greatly diminished at this point, and Allen is still struggling to find his groove (though he’s back from his knee injury and has been playing better since that point), so last night’s Kobe/TA minutes were mostly just a dim reminder of how pitched their battles used to be. Which is normally the point at which my language would elevate and I’d get into some pitched lament about the passage of time. Kobe vs. Tony is the mausoleum of all hope and desire, etc.

★ Adding to the theme of efficiency: Zach Randolph took 8 shots from the floor and made 7 of them—the highest FG% of his career when he takes 8 or more shots—and while Julius Randle wasn’t easy for him to back down, the Lakers’ frontline in general just didn’t know what to do with Randolph. Since moving to the bench, Randolph’s rebounding has dropped off, but his ability to get his shots when matched up against other “traditional” bigs hasn’t really gone anywhere. Even at this point in his career, he’s still Z-Bo, for the most part, and if he’s coming off the bench, that’s a pretty good guy to have as a reserve.

★ It was genuinely enjoyable to have some garbage time last night, and for the Grizzlies to be on the right side of it. The Grizzlies’ injury woes have prevented the young guys from playing much—Jordan Adams still hasn’t played, and the murmurs about his projected return date have completely vanished; Jarell Martin is just now able to play in these sorts of situations, and Brandan Wright’s absence means that even in blowouts the guys finishing the game have to be the same bench guys who have played the rest of the game. So to see the Grizzlies up by 20 in the 4th quarter was nice, and to see Russ Smith and Jarell Martin get some much-needed run was even nicer. I genuinely enjoy garbage time, and wish the Grizzlies gave us more opportunities to see it this year.

★ Jarell Martin played almost six minutes last night in garbage time, and while he was clearly excited to be making his home debut—and said overexcitement led to several questionable decisions made in the name of playing hard, not smart—eventually he settled down and started making good plays. Defensively, he did well knowing when to switch and when not to, and while he didn’t get any rebounds, what was more encouraging to me was to see his activity on the offensive end, where he was active under the basket, and made a pretty long two (long enough that I initially thought it was a three from my vantage point at the other end of the court, but he was inside the arc) with a pretty natural motion—it wasn’t a prayer, or a heave; it was a shot—and while it’s still very early in Martin’s development, he at least looked like an (unpolished) NBA player last night, and that’s really all you can ask of a guy playing in front of a home crowd for the first time.

Tweet of the Night

Jeff Green had a chasedown block that was more impressive than this one, but this rejection my JaMychal Green was really great, especially in the building.

Pontification Maximus

Last night’s garbage time immediately improved my mood, and got me to thinking: if the Grizzlies were barely above .500 and Jordan Adams and Jarell Martin were regularly getting minutes and developing, would I still be as negative about the season and their prospects for the future as I am? Or is it the fact that without any growth for the young players on the roster, a season full of meaningless, unwinnable games becomes that much more meaningless, and the frustrating losses become that much more frustrating?

I think it is. Seeing Jarell Martin finally hit the floor last night was a welcome sight, and not because I necessarily think he’s the future of the franchise. (I have, for whatever it’s worth, reversed my draft night opinion of Martin, and I think he can be a good player if he’s given the chance to develop.) It was just exciting to see a young guy trying to figure it out, and exciting to consider the possibilities he might bring to the team someday.

And that’s why it’s fun to watch a young bad team, sometimes. The same principle applies in blowout garbage time… when the young guys are able to play. If Russ Smith, Jarell Martin, and Jordan Adams were able to be on the floor at the same time, the score wouldn’t matter much to me; I think I’d instantly feel better about things just to see guys learning the game. That’s what I’ve missed from this season. If the Grizzlies aren’t going to be a very good team—and let’s face it: at this point, they’re not a very good team, just a “decent” one—the season is useless if it’s not building towards some future goal. That there haven’t been any young guys playing at all has meant there’s been no such building. Hopefully Martin can continue to get some run in lopsided games and show us that maybe there is a future here somewhere in here, however vaguely defined.

Categories
News News Blog

Downtown Parking Meter Rates Rise in January

City of Memphis

The only places rates won’t rise (yet) are close to the Shelby County Health Department and Shelby County Juvenile Court.

Parking meter rates will increase by a quarter in some parts of Downtown on Monday, Jan. 4.

Fees will increase to $1.25 per hour at meters in Downtown and the Medical District. The increase was done by executive action, meaning it came directly from Memphis Mayor A C Wharton’s office.

However, the Memphis City Council was mulling the increase during its last meeting of 2015. The increase will be one of the first issues taken up by the new council in 2016.   

City hall officials said the increase was needed to ensure the new parking meters paid for themselves, instead of the funds coming from city coffers.

Signs on the meters will begin to change in the next couple of weeks, though the actual rate increase won’t take effect until January 4. 

Read our previous story about the increase here.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

The Year in Film 2015

It’s fashionable to complain about how bad Hollywood movies have become. But from the perspective of a critic who has to watch it all go down, it’s simply not the case. At any given time in 2015, there was at least one good film in theaters in Memphis—it just may not have been the most heavily promoted one. So here’s my list of awards for a crowded, eventful year.

Worst Picture: Pixels

I watched a lot of crap this year, like the incoherent Terminator Genysis, the sociopathic San Andreas, the vomitous fanwank Furious 7, and the misbegotten Secret in Their Eyes. But those movies were just bad. Pixels not only sucked, it was mean-spirited, toxic, and ugly. Adam Sandler, it’s been a good run, but it’s time to retire.

Actually, I take that back. It hasn’t been a good run.

Most Divisive: Inherent Vice

Technically a 2014 release, Paul Thomas Anderson’s adaptation of Thomas Pynchon’s ode to the lost world of California hippiedom didn’t play in Memphis until January. Its long takes and dense dialogue spun a powerful spell. But it wasn’t for everyone. Many people responded with either a “WTF?” or a visceral hatred. Such strongly split opinions are usually a sign of artistic success; you either loved it or hated it, but you won’t forget it.

Best Performances: Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay, Room

Room is an inventive, harrowing, and beautiful work on every level, but the film’s most extraordinary element is the chemistry between Brie Larson and 9-year-old Jacob Tremblay, who play a mother and son held hostage by a sexual abuser. Larson’s been good in Short Term 12 and Trainwreck, but this is her real breakthrough performance. As for Tremblay, here’s hoping we’ve just gotten a taste of things to come.

Chewbacca

Best Performance By A Nonhuman: Chewbacca

Star Wars: The Force Awakens returned the Mother of All Franchises to cultural prominence after years in the prequel wilderness. Newcomers like Daisy Ridley and Adam Driver joined the returned cast of the Orig Trig Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher in turning in good performances. Lawrence Kasdan’s script gave Chewbacca a lot more to do, and Peter Mayhew rose to the occasion with a surprisingly expressive performance. Let the Wookiee win.

Best Memphis Movie: The Keepers

Joann Self Selvidge and Sara Kaye Larson’s film about the people who keep the Memphis Zoo running ran away with Indie Memphis this year, selling out multiple shows and winning Best Hometowner Feature. Four years in the making, it’s a rarity in 21st century film: a patient verité portrait whose only agenda is compassion and wonder.

Best Conversation Starter: But for the Grace

In 2001, Memphis welcomed Sudanese refugee Emmanuel A. Amido. This year, he rewarded our hospitality with But for the Grace. The thoughtful film is a frank examination of race relations in America seen through the lens of religion. The Indie Memphis Audience Award winner sparked an intense Q&A session after its premiere screening that followed the filmmaker out into the lobby. It’s a timely reminder of the power of film to illuminate social change.

Best Comedy: What We Do in the Shadows

What happens when a group of vampire roommates stop being polite and start getting real? Flight of the Conchords‘ Jemaine Clement and Eagle vs Shark‘s Taika Waititi codirected this deadpan masterpiece that applied the This Is Spinal Tap formula to the Twilight set. Their stellar cast’s enthusiasm and commitment to the gags made for the most biting comedy of the year.

Best Animation: Inside Out

The strongest Pixar film since Wall-E had heavy competition in the form of the Irish lullaby Song of the Sea, but ultimately, Inside Out was the year’s emotional favorite. It wasn’t just the combination of voice talent Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Lewis Black, Mindy Kaling, and Phyllis Smith with the outstanding character design of Joy, Fear, Anger, Disgust, and Sadness that made director Pete Docter’s film crackle, it was the way the entire carefully crafted package came together to deliver a message of acceptance and understanding for kids and adults who are wrestling with their feelings in a hard and changing world.

It Follows

Best Horror: It Follows

The best horror films are the ones that do a lot with a little, and It Follows is a sterling example of the breed. Director David Robert Mitchell’s second feature is a model of economy that sets up its simple premise with a single opening shot that tracks a desperate young woman running from an invisible tormentor. But there’s no escaping from the past here, only delaying the inevitable by spreading the curse of sex and death.

Teenage Dreams: Dope and The Diary of a Teenage Girl

2015 saw a pair of excellent coming-of-age films. Dope, written and directed by Rick Famuyiwa, introduced actor Shameik Moore as Malcolm, a hapless nerd who learns to stand up for himself in the rough-and-tumble neighborhood of Inglewood, California. Somewhere between Risky Business and Do the Right Thing, it brought the teen comedy into the multicultural moment.

Similarly, Marielle Heller’s graphic novel adaptation The Diary of a Teenage Girl introduced British actress Bel Powley to American audiences, and took a completely different course than Dope. It’s a frank, sometimes painful exploration of teenage sexual awakening that cuts the harrowing plot with moments of magical realist reverie provided by a beautiful mix of animation and live action.

Immortal Music: Straight Outta Compton and Love & Mercy

The two best musical biopics of the year couldn’t have been more different. Straight Outta Compton was director F. Gary Gray’s straightforward story of N.W.A., depending on the performances of Jason Mitchell as Eazy-E, Corey Hawkins as Dr. Dre, and O’Shea Jackson Jr. playing his own father, Ice Cube, for its explosive impact. That it was a huge hit with audiences proved that this was the epic hip-hop movie the nation has been waiting for.

Director Bill Pohlad’s dreamlike Love & Mercy, on the other hand, used innovative structure and intricate sound design to tell the story of Brian Wilson’s rise to greatness and subsequent fall into insanity. In a better world, Paul Dano and John Cusack would share a Best Actor nomination for their tag-team portrayal of the Beach Boys resident genius.

Sicario

Best Cinematography: Sicario

From Benicio del Toro’s chilling stare to the twisty, timely screenplay, everything about director Denis Villeneuve’s drug-war epic crackles with life. But it’s Roger Deakins’ transcendent cinematography that cements its greatness. Deakins paints the bleak landscapes of the Southwest with subtle variations of color, and films an entire sequence in infrared with more beauty than most shooters can manage in visible light. If you want to see a master at the top of his game, look no further.

He’s Still Got It: Bridge of Spies

While marvelling about Bridge of Spies‘ performances, composition, and general artistic unity, I said “Why can’t all films be this well put together?”

To which the Flyer‘s Chris Davis replied, “Are you really asking why all directors can’t be as good as Steven Spielberg?”

Well, yeah, I am.

Hot Topic: Journalism

Journalism was the subject of four films this year, two good and two not so much. True Story saw Jonah Hill and James Franco get serious, but it was a dud. Truth told the story of Dan Rather and Mary Mapes’ fall from the top-of-the-TV-news tower, but its commitment to truth was questionable. The End of the Tour was a compelling portrait of the late author David Foster Wallace through the eyes of a scribe assigned to profile him. But the best of the bunch was Spotlight, the story of how the Boston Catholic pedophile priest scandal was uncovered, starring Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo. There’s a good chance you’ll be seeing Spotlight all over the Oscars this year.

Had To Be There: The Walk

Robert Zemeckis’ film starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Philippe Petit, the Frenchman who tightrope-walked between the twin towers of the World Trade Center, was a hot mess. But the extended sequence of the feat itself was among the best uses of 3-D I’ve ever seen. The film flopped, and its real power simply won’t translate to home video, no matter how big your screen is, but on the big screen at the Paradiso, it was a stunning experience.

MVP: Samuel L. Jackson

First, he came back from the grave as Nick Fury to anchor Joss Whedon’s underrated Avengers: Age of Ultron. Then he channeled Rufus Thomas to provide a one-man Greek chorus for Spike Lee’s wild musical polemic Chi-Raq. He rounds out the year with a powerhouse performance in Quentin Tarantino’s widescreen western The Hateful Eight. Is it too late for him to run for president?

Best Documentary: Best of Enemies

Memphis writer/director Robert Gordon teamed up with Twenty Feet From Stardom director Morgan Neville to create this intellectual epic. With masterful editing of copious archival footage, they make a compelling case that the 1968 televised debate between William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal laid out the political battleground for the next 40 years and changed television news forever. In a year full of good documentaries, none were more well-executed or important than this historic tour de force.

Best Picture: Mad Max: Fury Road

From the time the first trailers hit, it was obvious that 2015 would belong to one film. I’m not talking about The Force Awakens. I’m talking about Mad Max: Fury Road. Rarely has a single film rocked the body while engaging the mind like George Miller’s supreme symphony of crashing cars and heavy metal guitars. Charlize Theron’s performance as Imperator Furiosa will go down in history next to Clint Eastwood in Unforgiven and Sigourney Weaver in Alien as one of the greatest action turns of all time. The scene where she meets Max, played by Tom Hardy, may be the single best fight scene in cinema history. Miller worked on this film for 17 years, and it shows in every lovingly detailed frame. Destined to be studied for decades, Fury Road rides immortal, shiny, and chrome.

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Wall Resigns as Urban Child Board Chair

The Urban Child Institute headquarters building.

Dr. Hershel “Pat” Wall has resigned his post as chairman of The Urban Child Institute (TUCI) board, according to Memphis Daily News.

Wall tendered his resignation to the board on Wednesday, Dec. 23, according to the newspaper. 

UTHSC

Wall

Wall is the second high-ranking official to leave TUCI this year. Longtime president and CEO Eugene Cashman announced his retirement earlier this month. 

TUCI has long been criticized in the community for sitting on a large investment fund but giving little of it to Memphis charities that actually help children ages 0-3 years, the group of children TUCI focuses its research work.

The nonprofit organization has also been criticized for paying Cashman a top of the line salary.  

When asked about TUCI’s finances earlier this year, Wall said, “I don’t see the books,” and said he was only “vaguely aware of how much money they’ve got and how much they give out.”

He said he depended on the financial savvy of other members of the board to review Cashman’s “very open and transparent management of the money.”

“I can imagine what folks might be thinking about, that Gene is making a lot of money and he’s not spending as much as he ought to be in the community,” Wall says. “But I don’t think that’s the case.”
 
Wall is a former chancellor of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center and is currently a special assistant to University of Tennessee president Joe DiPietro. 

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Holiday Travel By the Numbers

AAA


National: 

100.5 million – Year-end holiday travelers expected by AAA this year. It’s a record amount.
$28.7 billion – Amount those travelers are expected to spend, according to the U.S. Travel Association.
91.3 million – Holiday travelers expected to travel by car this year. (AAA).
+50 – Miles those travelers are expected to drive this year.
900,000 – Drivers expected to be rescued by AA this holiday travel season.
$2.01 – National average cost of a gallon of gas, 53 cents lower than last year.
2009 – Last time gas prices will be as low as AAA predicts for New Year’s Eve 2015.
5.8 million – Holiday travelers expecting to fly this year.
$174 – Average price of a roundtrip plane ticket this holiday season, down 6 percent from last year.
$68 – Average daily rental car price.
$150 – Average AAA Three Diamond rated hotel room night stay this holiday season, up four percent over last year.
$119 – Average AAA Two Diamond rated hotel room night stay this holiday season, up 11 percent over last year.
3.4 million – Holiday travelers going by other modes of transportation, including cruises, trains and buses. 

Tennessee:
2,305,418
– Year-end holiday travelers
2,157,962 – Traveling by car
61,277 – Taking flights
86,230 –  Other forms of transportation.