Categories
Blurb Books

Greg Sestero, author/actor, to appear at the Mid-South Book Festival

As everyone with any current culture awareness knows, Room is the Best Picture-nominated, and Best Actress-winning (Brie Larson) movie of this week’s Academy Awards ceremony. 

This blog post is not in any way about that movie, but it is why I was confused when Kevin Dean, executive director of Literacy Mid-South, contacted me today to tell me that someone connected with the film had been booked for this September’s Mid-South Book Festival.

I am clearly on the low end of pop-culture consciousness because The Room, as it turns out (with its all-important article), is the cult classic starring Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero. Dean implored me to stop whatever it was I was doing (poking around Facebook) and get a copy, as though this journalistic locomotive might be so quickly halted. “It’s epic,” he reiterated. 

The Room has been called “the best worst movie ever made” and “the Citizen Kane of bad movies.” And people love it. In fact, it sells out showings all over the place and fans have watch parties in their homes. 

The book The Disaster Artist is a bestselling look behind the scenes of the making of the movie that cost $6 million to produce and earned a total of $1,800 at the box office. From Goodreads: “Readers need not have seen The Room to appreciate its costar Greg Sestero’s account of how Tommy Wiseau defied every law of artistry, business, and interpersonal relationships to achieve the dream only he could love. While it does unravel mysteries for fans, The Disaster Artist is more than just an hilarious story about cinematic hubris: It is ultimately a surprisingly inspiring tour de force that reads like a page-turning novel, an open-hearted portrait of a supremely enigmatic man who will capture your heart.”

“We are excited to add Greg Sestero to the Mid-South Book Festival,” Dean told me. “Cult film enthusiasts will be thrilled to know that his presentation at the festival will be free and open to the public, and we are working with Indie Memphis to have a screening of the film before the festival. Even more exciting is that the movie version of The Disaster Artist will open in theaters one month after our festival.” That film version is directed by and stars James Franco.

The announcement of Sestero comes on the heels of the news that Lauren Groff, author of the bestselling Fates and Furies, will also be a part of the fall festival. In only its second year, 2015’s event saw 80 authors and 5,000 attendees. And that’s way more than attended the first run showing of The Room when it was released in 2003. 

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Brandan Wright out indefinitely with MCL sprain

Larry Kuzniewski

The Grizzlies’ Lost Weekend of a stretch run is getting a little lost-er. The Grizzlies announced today that Brandan Wright is out indefinitely after suffering a sprained MCL in his right knee.

Wright had been back from knee surgery and playing pretty well—though obviously still getting his bearings on the court—when Saturday night against Phoenix, Ronnie Price collided knees with Wright while Wright set a screen. Wright was down on the floor for a while before being helped to the locker room.

Of course, Wright just had surgery on that knee, so it’s good that his new injury won’t require surgery to repair. If you’re looking for positives, it’s also good that it was just a freak basketball “that happens sometimes” injury, rather than a non-contact thing, or something that could have been a result of a previous injury. Sometimes guys bang knees. It’s one of the hazards of the sport.

What this does to the Grizzlies’ rotation is anybody’s guess—with Marc Gasol out and three newly-arrived players still working their way into the scheme of things, this is certainly a blow to whatever stability the Grizzlies are staggering towards. Maybe someone will have to be waived to bring back Joerger favorite and team yo-yo Ryan Hollins for more frontcourt help.

At any rate, this is not good news, for Wright (who was just now starting to find his fit with the team after missing most of the season) or for the Grizzlies (who are already without their starting center and best player), who are in Denver playing the Nuggets tonight.

Categories
News News Blog

New “Bike Nerds” Podcast Focuses on Cycling in Memphis

A couple of Memphis’ best-known cyclists have launched a new podcast on the OAM Network.

Kyle Wagenschutz, bicycle/pedestrian program manager for the City of Memphis, and Sara Studdard, project manager of Explore Bike Share, are the co-hosts of “Bike Nerds,” a podcast about cycling culture and livability.

The first episode is available now on the OAM Network website. In it, Wagenschutz and Studdard discuss their own cycling histories and the work they’re engaged in. 

Future episodes will feature interviews with people they’ve dubbed as “bike change leaders” from across the country, such as Memphis’ own Anthony Siracusa of Bike Walk TN and Olatunji Oboi Reed, co-founder of Slow Roll Chicago, which organizes bike rides to reduce crime.

The hosts say they plan to address a variety of bike-related topics on the show, including bike equity and inclusivity, tipping points for emerging bike cultures, and future potential challenges for the cycling community.

Last year, the League of American Bicyclists awarded Memphis with a bronze-Level Bicycle Friendly Community award, and in 2012, Bicycling Magazine named Memphis “Most Improved City for Cycling” (after naming it among the worst cities for cycling in 2008 and 2010).

Under Wagenschutz’s leadership, the city has more than doubled its miles of bike infrastructure since 2010. According to the 2014 city “State of Bicycling” report, that number could double again by the end of 2016.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Star & Micey

Today’s Music Video Monday carries a very special Monday message. 

If you’re like me, and I know I am, “Never give up” is the message you need to hear on a Monday morning. Stephen Hildreth directed this video for Star & Micey’s latest single, “Get ‘Em Next Time”, an ode to perseverance. 

“They’re very affable,” says Hildreth of the guys in the band, Nick Redmond, Geoff Smith, Joshua Cosby, and Jeremy Stanfill. “They’ll go for something that’s funny to them, totally commit to it, and take risks on it. And they’re actually really funny guys and ya know performers, so they end up bringing extra things to a video that make the result even better than the idea in your head. The great part was we got about a day out from shooting when it finally all clicked. Like I realized ‘Wow, if you take being in a band and distill it down to its essence, it’s comprised of selling merch, playing music, trying to meet girls, and riding in a van.’ We didn’t cover the van bit here, but I’m sure somewhere down the road that can be charted territory.”

Hildreth wore all the creative hats in the video, which was shot partially at Sun Studios. “The production couldn’t have happened without the work of John Goldsmith, Charlie Metz (Grips/Gaffers for the Sun Studio Shoot), Alistair Clark (camera op for the Minglewood footage), Curry Weber, and Ples Hampton (Cleared Sun Studios. Ples, whose dad was the late John Hampton, served as a Producer for the rest of the shoot. And Curry is like the official Star & Micey Superman. Like that’s his actual job title associated to the band. Not to mention all the staff at Sun Studios, who are just some of the best people, especially Jayne Ellen Brooks, Clara Daschund Parker, and Nina Jones—those ladies were all awesome.”

Star & Micey’s new album, Get ‘Em Next Time, will drop on March 11. 

Music Video Monday: Star & Micey

If you’d like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest 92

Another all-time favorite of mine … 

The first person to correctly ID the dish and where I’m eating wins a fabulous prize. 

To enter, submit your answer to me via email at ellis@memphisflyer.com

The answer to GWIE 91 is falafel pita at Casablanca, and the winner is … Steve Steffens!

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Leap of Faith: Memphis-Style

The next time I can post a column on February 29th will be 208 weeks from now, so I’m making the most of this chance. Come 2020, Tokyo will be aiming to improve on the Summer Games of Rio (the Zika virus a distant memory). Each of the local sports tales below could well be written by the time Hillary Clinton — or Donald Trump, or Bernie Sanders — begins a re-election campaign. I’ll let you attach the year for each.

• For the first time in University of Memphis football history, the Tigers will play for a conference championship. With their 37-27 win over Oklahoma State at the Liberty Bowl, the Tigers clinched the Big 12’s Eastern Division crown and will face Baylor in a game that could land the winner in the College Football Playoff. Brady Davis became the first Memphis quarterback to surpass 4,000 yards in a season as he tossed four touchdown passes in a game that saw Memphis accumulate 584 yards of offense against the Cowboys. U of M coach Mike Norvell expressed pride in his team’s 10-2 regular season, but emphasized the work that remains. “Our first goal in spring camp every year,” he stressed, “is to win the Big 12. As good as this feels, we haven’t done that yet. But we’re relatively healthy after a long regular season and we intend to be at our best next week in Dallas.”

• For the first time since the Final Four season of 2007-08, the Memphis Tigers will enter conference play undefeated. With a 79-71 victory over Arkansas in front of 17,487 at FedExForum, the Tigers improved to 12-0. Judging by the perspiration on the brow of Tiger coach Penny Hardaway after the game, the vibe of this team’s early-season run has approximated the playing days of at least one former Tiger great.

“I guess when you’re coaching,” said Hardaway, “you soak up the energy and excitement of your players. I’ve never felt younger. Chandler Lawson and D.J. Jeffries are special players and I love being their coach. I just wish I could be their teammate for one game.” Lawson led Memphis with 22 points and 9 rebounds while Jeffries added 16 points, hitting six of nine shots from the field.

The Tigers will enjoy a week off before opening Big 12 play on December 30th at Iowa State. They return to FedExForum on January 4th when third-ranked Kansas comes to town.

• The fans streamed out of FedExForum onto Beale Street, confetti stuck to their sweaty cheeks, the “Finally Memphis!” growl towels turning the June night a distinct shade of gold. It had actually happened. With their 114-103 win over Chicago in Game 6 of the NBA Finals, the Memphis Grizzlies were champions of the basketball universe. That crazy notion that Kevin Durant would take his talents to the Bluff City can now be viewed as the savvy decision of a Hall of Fame-bound superstar who recognized championship-caliber teammates in Marc Gasol and (finally an All-Star) Mike Conley. Durant’s 38 points in the Game 6 win clinched the Finals MVP trophy and put to rest — permanently — any lingering doubts about his big-game capability.

In the jubilant postgame locker room, there was but one question from a reporter that caused Durant’s cheek-splitting smile to flatten: Did the Grizzlies simply win a title that would have been Cleveland’s had LeBron James not been injured in the Eastern Conference finals? “You know,” answered Durant, tilting his head in quasi-aggravation, “the ’94 Rockets loved seeing Michael Jordan on a baseball field. But no one’s taking away their championship. And no one’s taking this away from us. Ever.” The NBA-champion Memphis Grizzlies. It’s now in the book. Forever.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 92, Tulsa 82

They wear uniform numbers 1 and 2 and when this Tiger team is right, Dedric Lawson and Shaq Goodwin form as good a one-two punch as any frontcourt in college basketball. On Senior Day and in front of the largest announced crowd of the season at FedExForum (15,289), Lawson and Goodwin each put up double-doubles to spearhead an upset of Tulsa and clinch a first-round bye in the upcoming American Athletic Conference tournament. Lawson’s 27 points and 12 rebounds are his best numbers to date in AAC play and give him 14 double-doubles for the season. Goodwin played his last college game at FedExForum in style, posting 28 points and 11 rebounds for his 16th career double-double. Goodwin scored six points over the game’s final two minutes with four coming via two thunderous dunks.

Larry Kuzniewski

Shaq Goodwin

“We lost to Tulsa last year on Senior Day,” acknowledged Goodwin. “So we had kind of a chip on our shoulder. I’m just glad we played two halves as a team. That will take us a long way.”

Goodwin wasn’t the only senior to make an impact. Trahson Burrell and Kedren Johnson made rare starts alongside Goodwin and point guard Ricky Tarrant Jr. Burrell had 11 points, nine rebounds, and four assists in 36 minutes and Johnson had, far and away, his best game in a season compromised by lingering injuries: 10 points (5 of 7 shooting) in 17 minutes. The Tigers’ fifth senior, walk-on Caleb Wallingford, entered the game in the final seconds, allowing Goodwin one last ovation from the home crowd.

“[Our seniors] are not perfect,” said Pastner, “but they’ve done a good job representing the community, the university. They’ve done nothing to embarrass the program. And that’s not easy; we’re not with them 24-7. I spend much of my time trying to educate our guys, and they’ve come a long way. They’re all going to graduate. Kedren’s married and has a child, with another one on the way. Trahson Burrell has two kids. I try and teach them about fathering, those kind of things. That’s part of being a head coach at the college level.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Dedric Lawson

The Tigers trailed by one (47-46) at halftime, but took the lead early in the second half and maintained it, most importantly outscoring Tulsa 12-8 over the game’s final five minutes, “finishing” in modern terms, a component sorely lacking most of the winter for a team that now stands 16-13 and 7-9 in the AAC. Memphis shot a staggering 39 free throws and made 31, distancing themselves in the category from Tulsa, which made 19 of 22 from the charity stripe. The Golden Hurricane hit six of 15 shots from three-point distance in the first half but only one of 10 in the second. The loss drops Tulsa to 19-10 and 11-6 in the American.

Goodwin signed a ball for a young fan immediately after the game, a gesture that didn’t surprise his coach in the least. “Shaq’s had his best year with us this year,” noted Pastner. “He’s a good guy. He’s been a good ambassador, with many, many acts of kindness that people don’t know about. I get emails, and I’m very proud of him for doing those kind of things.”

The win once again prevented the first three-game losing streak of Pastner’s coaching career. (The Tigers have had four consecutive three-game stretches now with two defeats followed by a victory.) The U of M also clinched at least a .500 record for the 16th straight season.

Two road games remain in the regular season: at Temple on March 3rd and at East Carolina on March 6th. Memphis will play its quarterfinal game in the AAC tourney (at Orlando) on Friday, March 11th.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Carson, Clinton Make Sunday Morning Visits to Memphis

Apparently finishing out a pre-Super Tuesday weekend that had seen full-bore presentations locally by Republican presidential candidates John Kasich and Donald Trump, Democrat Hillary Clinton and GOP hopeful Dr. Ben Carson each made brief visits to Memphis on Sunday morning.

No doubt mindful of the importance on Tuesday of the African-American vote, so central to her landslide victory in South Carolina on Saturday. Clinton dropped in on at least two predominantly black churches — Mississippi Boulevard Christian Church and Great Imani Church — on her way to a noontime address at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, an historic African-American institution.

Her brief address at Mississippi Boulevard constituted a virtual mini-sermon on the importance of Americans “working together” to solve problems across racial lines. At times conflating that theme with stern words about “the gun lobby,” she recapitulated numerous recent occasions in which African Americans were victims, including the violent deaths of Trayvon Martin, Erick Garner, and the elderly members of a South Carolina bible study class.

Her ultimate message was upbeat, as she called for the rejection of “prejudice and paranoia,” and ventured that America’s “best days” were still ahead.

Jeremy Pierre

Hillary at Mississippi Boulevard

 
Carson, who had also apparently visited some early church services in Memphis, made a late-morning stop at Alpha Omega Veterans Services, Inc., a privately run facility in the Airport area that function s on behalf of returned veterans. Carson evoked D-Day during World War Two and other memorable battles in which American servicemen took horrendous losses but “didn’t turn back,” and said America owed its veterans a return favor./X

In particular, Carson, mindful of various recent controversies involving Veterans Administration services, said that returning vets should be provided opportunities for compensated treatment at a variety of institutions other than those associated directly with the government, citing Alpha Omega as one such alternative.

Carson at Alpha and Omega

Carson’s visit on Sunday was as noticeably low-key as his address to a turnaway crowd in West Memphis last year was conspicuously high profile, and reporters in a brief press conference with the candidate wondered out loud about the chances that Carson, whose poll numbers and primary outcomes have been low, might drop out of the presidential race.

He responded that numerous people have begged him not to do that and that he remained disinclined to do so and would continue. Carson contrasted his dignified approach to the contest with last Thursday’s rowdy and rancorous GOP debate in Houston, which, he said, reminded him of a “W.W.E.” event and was “like being at the [Roman] Coliseum.”

“Guess what? I’m still here,” he insisted, urging “special interests” to “go jump in the lake.”

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Trump Day in Millington

The approach to the Millington Jetport Hangar, where Donald Trump was to speak on Saturday evening, was a long, slow crawl for miles of automobiles bumper-to-bumper. It had the look of Woodstock to it, and, at 5:45 p.m., the car queues were being diverted away from the main approaches by uniformed local officers of various kinds and onto a back road that emptied directly onto the tarmac. From there it was a not-too-longish trek by foot through a gated area where peddlers a-plenty were selling Trump paraphernalia and finally, through metal-processing points into the hangar.

Uncharacteristically for the presidential campaigns in this election year (and unlike Trump’s once or twice in New Hampshire when the snows fell hard), this event conformed fairly closely to the advance schedule. At roughly 6 p.m., the appointed time, Trump’s big private jet taxied up close to the massive hangar’s open area, where a speaking platform had been set up, and the huge crowd inside the hangar, easily numbering several thousand, let up a roar, simultaneous with the raising of a host of cell-phone cameras to capture the event.

There had been rumors that Trump would have a surprise guest, and, sure enough, down the ramp, along with Trump came New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, the recent presidential-campaign dropout whose endorsement of Trump on Friday had somewhat offset that day’s other big news meme, his brutal tag-team mugging by opponents Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz in Friday’s Republican debate in Houston, broadcast by CNN.

Even as Trump and his new bromance bud strode up to the speaking stand, the continually building roar gave sufficient proof that The Donald had lost no luster among these masses, a packed-in assembly of just-folks Americana, largely white to be sure, but otherwise running across various class, gender, and age lines, from cap-and-jeans blue-collarites to a generously sized section for people in wheel chairs to the likes of Steve Ehrhart, the dapper Liberty Bowl exec who pointed out that he had grown acquainted with Trump in New York, presumably in the course of some deal that must have redounded to the benefit of both.

Christie spoke first, issuing some preliminary blasts at Rubio and Cruz and making it clear to the crowd that his endorsement of Trump was something more than that, it was an enlistment in the same cause that had attracted the thousands of attendees.

And then there was Trump. It was the usual philippic, mixing boasts, such as a claim that “every poll” had shown that he had won “every debate” with his rivals with familiar insults of those rivals, especially of “little Marco” — depicted by Trump as a quivering, sweaty-wet about-ready-to-pass-out “choke artist” whom he had spotted overtly leaguing with Cruz in a conspiratorial handshake before Thursday’s debate — and a distancing of himself from the rest of the field, too, indeed from the whole of the GOP establishment, with a claim that he was ever “the nicest person” on any stage with any of them and proudly boasting that he was creating a new Republican Party, indeed a new American consensus, including Democrats and independents as well.

The crowd, which was plainly not the usual muster of political junkie-dom (though any number of local GOP regulars could be spotted here and there) was uproariously with him on all of this, chanting “Win! Win! Win!” along with Trump and delighting also in his disparaging of the ex-Mexican president Vincente Fox who had famously said on Fox News that Mexico would not pay for the “faw-king” wall Trump says he’ll build on the border. The crowd rejoiced at Trump’s mockery of Fox and his tut-tutting at the “f-bomb” usage, and it suddenly became possible to imagine this and future such crowds hailing threats against uppity nations, near and far, that might go beyond the employment of bricks and mortar and electric wire.

Not that Trump, who for the record is much more non-interventionist in a military sense than his fellow GOP contenders, sounded any violent note per se. Indeed, when, as often happens at one of his rallies, a protester began to chant against him from inside the hangar, he calmly directed the crowd to “get him out” but “don’t hurt him.” And so the crowd did, with its counter-chant morphing from “Trump! Trump! Trump!” to “Win! Win! Win!”And finally to “U.S.A.! U.S.A! U.S.A!”

Call it what else you will, but this is a movement.

Meanwhile, Rubio and Cruz, building on what they must have imagined to have been the great gains of the debate, were releasing their tax returns over the weekend in the apparent belief that they could shame Trump thereby and embarrass him in the eyes of the American electorate.

It was hard to imagine such a thought crossing the minds of those in these approving multitudes. In fact, it was absurd to think they would side with the battling Mambo Brothers or the IRS against their new idol — or hold him blameful for possibly gaming a system that has done them no favors.

Could Trump, as he had boasted, actually get away with shooting someone at high noon on Fifth Avenue? With these supporters, he might. Not with the law, but — to say it again — Trump is come not to uphold the law but to abolish it.

Finally, there was the after-speech rope line, with Trump spending serious person-to-person time with each beseecher that handed him a cap or a poster or even an American flag to sign or smiling for the inevitable selfie. All the while there were desperate cries of “Mr. Trump! Mr. Trump!” from people trapped behind secondary rope lines further back, still hopeful, despite evidence to the contrary, that they, too, might get close enough to touch or be touched.

 

And then, finally, he was aboard the plane and gone, off on his quest to Make America Great Again, no doubt secure in his conviction that the minions he left behind in the Memphis area would go to the polls on Super Tuesday, just three days away, and do the right thing by him.

Categories
Music Music Features

Cash Comes Home

In December, 1954, Johnny Cash, Marshall Grant, and Luther Perkins stepped into the Galloway Methodist Church on the corner of Cooper and Walker for their first performance together for the Pioneers Club, a ladies church function. Over the past year, Mike McCarthy has been raising money in hopes of erecting a statue to commemorate this historical event.

I sat down with McCarthy to learn more about the Johnny Cash Statue project, which has raised over $16,000 of the $75,000 needed to erect a statue in front of the newly-bought Galloway House. –Chris Shaw

Leigh Wiener

Johnny Cash

Memphis Flyer: How long have you been working on this project?

Mike McCarthy: I went to the initial owners of the church about a year ago and pitched them the idea after I finished doing a similar project in Tupelo and realized how under-statued Memphis was. I’ve lived in Cooper-Young for 17 years, and I started thinking about how cool it would be to have statues of neighborhood heroes. Johnny Cash being the hero of Midtown, Otis Redding the hero of Soulsville, and so forth. You could look at [the former] Forrest Park and see it as Sam Phillips park. I started the ioby site about a year ago, and we are asking for $75,000 in total.

Why do you think Cooper-Young needs this statue?

Every neighborhood has a hero, and in Memphis that’s especially true. I look back at what Memphis offered in the 20th century in terms of pop culture, and a lot of it has gone away. A lot of it isn’t being promoted anymore. We see Mississippi taking advantage of their cultural identity, the Mid-South identity, and that’s something we could have. I think if we claim ownership of our cultural identity, it could change the perceptions of these poor or bad neighborhoods.

What’s the neighborhood response been like so far?

I’ve had a lot of encouragement from Zac Ives (co-owner of Goner Records) and the Cooper Young Business Association. They agreed to give 10 percent of all revenue from their sales on Thursday, and they’ve already given $3,000 or so.

Who owns the church where you’d like to put the statue?

As of the last couple weeks, Mark Lovell, who runs the Delta Fair.

How many people do you think know that this location in Cooper-Young was where Johnny Cash played his first show with Marshall Grant and Luther Perkins?

For the last 10 years I’ve worked on various tourist jobs, and it was always common knowledge within those circles. This is something that’s going to be more known once the statue is up, especially if the Galloway House is banking on this being a place to see live music. When I worked for Backbeat Tours, we’d always slow down by the church. It has been esoteric, but that has to do with people trying to figure out how to promote the idea. Every neighborhood in Memphis is pivotal to the history of music here. Some neighborhoods have more than one hero.

You go into these places, in this case into this basement room, and the young punk rock scene or the young high school music scene has been playing in there, but the history goes back much further. I had the pleasure of interviewing Marshall Grant there, and we all assumed that the stage in there was the stage they played on because it looks 100 years old, but Marshall Grant turned me around 180 degrees and pointed to a corner and said, “That’s where we played.” I thought that was very Memphis — Cash playing in a corner. I want to show people that corner and show that it doesn’t have to be perfect for it to be historically significant.

Tell me more about the play based on the performance that’s happening on Friday.

The play was written by Daniel Lee Perea. He’s from Mississippi, and he’s a filmmaker. He was originally going to play Luther (Perkins), and then it turned out he couldn’t do it. Russell Rainey had played Cash in a play called Ring of Fire that Germantown Performing Arts Center had put on, and he’ll be playing Cash in this play too. Robbie House, who was in Sin City Scoundrels, is playing Luther.

Cash played the Galloway Church in December 1954, and he called his mother and told her he was very proud to play the church at Christmastime. That information will be on the historic marker that we unveil on May 1st. They had a ladies club there that raised money to send missionaries different places, and that night was the first time they ever played as Johnny Cash and the Tennessee Two. We are trying to be historically accurate with the songs for the play, and Rainey will perform the same songs those church ladies heard years ago in the same place.