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Politics Politics Beat Blog

UPDATE: De-annexation Bill Killed for Session

NASHVILLE — In a surprise action, the state Senate’s State and Local Committee has voted 5-3-1 (with chairman Ken Yager voting aye) to approve a motion by Senator Bill Ketron (R-Murfreesboro) sending the controversial de-annexation bill (HB 779/SB 749) to summer study.



Voting in the minority on the motion were the bill’s Senate sponsor, Bo Watson (R-Hixson) and Senator Mark Green (R-Clarksville), a key co-sponsor. It was Green’s absence on Tuesday that had postponed a vote until Wednesday’s reconvening of the committee.



The action means that all possible action on the bill is over with until, at earliest, the legislative session that begins in January 2017.



“We really had no idea this was going to happen. But it was the best possible result, obviously. This is really a victory for the entire state,” said Phil Trenary, the Greater Memphis Area Chamber of Commerce head who had been in Nashville last week and this week opposing the bill.

Though the suddenness of the committee’s action took Trenary and other onlookers by surprise, it had become obvious that the bill was in for rough sledding once it hit the Senate committee, where chairman Yager (R-Kingston) supervised a systematic vetting of its contents and numerous witnesses had criticized it in detail.

Some indication of what was to come was the fact that numerous amendments weakening the bill’s force were passed in committee on Tuesday by lopsided votes.

Though six witnesses on Tuesday testified to the commmittee in favor of the bill, it had become obvious from previous testimony of bill opponents last week that resistance to it was serious, influential, and in depth.

Not only Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland but the mayors of two other affected cities, Chattanooga and Knoxville, had warned of the bill’s potentially ruinous effects, fiscal and otherwise, on targeted cities. Representatives of the state’s business community, including Pitt Hyde of AutoZone, and two ranking officers of First Tennessee Bank, seconded that point of view.

Even senators considered friendly to the idea of allowing urban de-annexation procedures had visibly cooled to the provisions of the de-annexation measure sent over from the House after swift ands lopsided passage there.

Those provisions had limited the bill’s effects to only five urban areas which had pursued state law in annexations that the bill, in a provision whose constitutionality was in doubt, considered “egregious.”

Other objectionable provisions included the bill’s allowance of a low ceiling — 10 percent of an annexed area’s population on a petition — to call a de-annexation referendum.

PREVIOUSLY (3-29-16): The ongoing debate in the General Assembly on a bill to allow de-annexation by areas of Memphis and other Tennessee cities that were annexed since the passage of Public Law 1101 in 1998, was renewed Tuesday in the state Senate’s State and Local Committee.

Two amendments to the House bill were approved last week by the Senate committee — one clarifying certain issues of debt obllgations remaining for any de-annexed residents and another expanding the reach of the bill to all municipalities statewide, not just Memphis and the four other urban areas alleged to have pursued “egregious” annexations since the 1998 date.

Both those amendments were regarded as concessions to the delegation that testified in the committee against the bill last week — which included Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland, Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke, and Knoxville Mayor Madeline Rogero, as well as AutoZone founder Pitt Hyde and two officials of First Tennessee Bank.

Jackson Baker

Phil Trenary

Last week’s testifiers made the point that the de-annexation bill received by the House was overly punitive and potentially financially ruinous to the cities affected. (Strickland testified that de-annexation by all the areas annexed by Memphis since 1998 could cost the already cash-strapped city the loss of property tax revenues ranging from $27 at minimum to a maximum of $78 million.)

Chairman Yager began the renewed hearing on Tuesday before a standing-room-only audience, noting that the witnesses against the bill last Wednesday had been opposed to it and professing a desire “to be fair-minded on an issue this polarizing,” then announcing that six new witnesses favoring the bill would be heard.

The first was Patricia Possel of South Cordova, who said, “The city of Memphis tried to silence us,” and went on to note that her area had been annexed July 1, 2012, more than four years before the next scheduled election in South Cordova.

She called the situation “taxation without representation,” and spoke, in a trembling voice, of the murder of a neighbor, Susan McDonald, in 2015 — clearly, an indication to her that crime had followed upon her neighborhood’s annexation by the city as something of a direct consequence.

Finally, she said, there had been “no disclosure” of any kind to her or other homeowners, at the time of their purchasing property, that they were located within one of Memphis’ annexation preserves, about to lose its independence.

Next up was Terry Roland, the chairman of the Shelby County Commission, who announced that he had heard “bad numbers” being testified to by representatives of the city last week and wanted to present “the straight skinny.” According to his own figures, the de-annexation from Memphis of South Cordova and Windyke-Southwind, the last two areas annexed, would result in a financial gain to Memphis of $3 million — not, as had been claimed, a deficit of $13 million.

Roland also spoke, as he has for years, of the constant departure of citizens from Memphis because of high and unreasonable property taxes. He said that 68,000 people had left Shelby county for DeSoto County, Mississippi in the years 2001-2010.

Roland did concede that if all 10 areas annexed by Memphis since 1998 were able to de-annex themselves (as the original House bill provided), the city would end up the loser, financially, but he made it clear he considered that prospect far-fetched.

The two Shelby County witnesses were followed by John Emerson of Alamo (who had been introduced by Yager earlier as “the father of de-annexation” and who pronounced it absurd that representatives of cities habitually spoke as if there a law of nature that urban municipalities could only expand and never contract.

Three residents of Chattanooga suburbs that had been annexed followed, with variations on some of the themes already addressed. (One of them announced that he did not turn on TV to watch “baseball, football, or Dancing With the Stars,” but was a regular watcher of congressional hearings and stayed up late to watch them. He had determined from that practice that public political debates and processes were essentially shams.)

From that point, the stream of amendments that was interrupted by the close of last Wednesday’s hearing ensued again — the first of them authorized by chairman Yager himself and directly addressing the complaint that Strickland had made of the original House bill — that, while it did require newly de-annexed citizens to continue paying their share of the city’s general obligation debt on a pro rata basis, it did not stipulate anything regarding residual pension and OPEB obligation on the part of those residents.

The Yager amendment would include pensions and OPEB obligations on a pro-rated basis.

Senator Bo Watson of Hixson, a suburb of Chattanooga, and a sponsor of the de-annexation bill, challenged the logic of including those debts, which Watson suggested were “pay-as-you-go” by their nature and that ex post facto assessments would be improperly doubling up on charges to the residents.

He was backed up on those allegations by Senator Todd Gardenhire, another Chattanoogan, who testified from his point of view as a former member of a U.S. Department of Labor committee on pension obligations. In the course of seconding Watson’s assertions that including the new assessments would be double-billing de-annexed residents, Gardenhire got off a series of negative observations regarding the past fiscal performance of the city of Memphis.

Most of those observatios recapitulated criticisms made by state comptroller Justin Wilson about city bookkeeping practices during the administration of former Mayor A C Wharton. “The city of Memphis was not run like a business,” Gardenhire said.
Even so, the amendment was passed by the committee 6-1. It began to seem possible that the optimism for a favorable resolution expressed last week by Strickland and Chamber of Commerce president Phil Trenary might be justified.

That sense was furthered somewhat by discussion later of other new amendments, notably including one by chairman Yager that would raise from 10 to 20 percent the percentage of residents necessary to validate a petition for a de-annexation referendum. This one ultimately passed 7-0, and among those committee members agreeing with Yager that “the bar should be raised” on requirements for a de-annexation petition was state Senator Mark Norris (R-Collierville), a nominal supporter of the bill’s intent.

Not everything was roses. An amendment from state Senator Reginald Tate (D-Memphis) limited the Memphis areas eligible for de-annexation to South Cordova and Southwind-Windyke failed for lack of a second. And another, contemplated by Yager, requiring 66 percent, rather than a simple majority, for passage of a de-annexation referendum, was withdrawn by the chairman.

Asked afterward to assess Tuesday’s actions on the bill, the Trenary said the amendments made the bill “more realistic” but said he still continued to oppose it and was hopeful that the legislature as a whole ultimately would.

Roland’s reaction was one of satisfaction also, and he expressed the hope that the effect of the bill might still be limited to the two recently annexed areas of South Cordova and Southwind-Windyke. “They’re the only ones that are organized,” he pointed out.

An ultimate vote by the committee on the amended bill was delayed out of courtesy to the bill’s main sponsor, state Senator Mark Green of Clarksville, who was absent. (It was Green who last week compared the alleged “egregious” annexations by Memphis and other cities to a Russian occupation of Poland, and Norris wondered somewhat archly on Tuesday how the residents who moved to “Poland” in recent years should be counted in determining the right ceiling for a referendum petition.)

It is hard to imagine Green being altogether favorable to the amendments accepted Tuesday, but, in any case, whatever his opinion or the committee’s vote on the bill, the bill is not likely to be headed to the floor of either House or Senate anytime soon.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Knaughty Knights Rule, OK?

The Knaughty Knights

Knaughty Knights were a Memphis garage band that featured Jack Oblivian and Rich Crook. They were active from 2001 to 2006, and released records on Goner, Solid Sex Lovie Doll, Norton, Perpetrator, and Shattered Records- the label run by Jay Reatard and Alix Brown.

Some Knaughty Knights songs sound like what Jack Oblivian has perfected with The Tennessee Tearjerkers and most currently with The Sheiks, but other numbers- specifically the punchy punk banger “Death Has Come Over Me” -prove that Rich Crook brought an edge to this stellar band of Memphis creeps. Check out some of the Knaughty Knights work below, and best of luck finding these singles.

Knaughty Knights Rules, OK? (4)

Knaughty Knights Rules, OK? (2)

Knaughty Knights Rules, OK?

Knaughty Knights Rules, OK? (3)

____ Rules, Ok? is a new weekly installment on the Memphis Flyer Music Blog where music editor Chris Shaw focuses in on Memphis music past and present. 

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

The Divergent Series: Allegiant

For the last decade, publishers and producers have been desperate to emulate the success of Harry Potter. What made The Boy Who Lived into an international phenomenon that launched the most successful young adult series in history and eight movies that were not only financially successful and generation defining, but also fun to watch? For a while, they thought they had found it in The Hunger Games, but even though the films helped launch Jennifer Lawrence’s career and made a truckload of money, they just weren’t very good and limped across the finish line with last year’s hopelessly compromised Mockingjay-Part 2.

Successful young adult novels translate kids’ life experience into allegory. One thing Potter and Veronica Roth’s 2011 novel Divergent have in common is a sorting mechanism, where kids are put into groups that determine the future paths of their lives. At Hogwarts, it’s a magic hat. In Roth’s post-apocalyptic Chicago, it’s an aptitude test that determines which faction they will join in the controlled community of survivors. In this age of high stakes standardized testing, one can see how that would strike a chord with teenage audiences.

That was two movies ago. When the third Divergent film, Allegiant, opens, the caste system has been smashed by Tris Prior (Shailene Woodley) and her brother Caleb (Ansel Elgort), semi-chaste boyfriend Four (Theo James), and frenemies Peter (Miles Teller), Marcus (Ray Stevenson), and Christina (Zoë Kravitz). In the power vacuum left behind after the collapse of the faction system, Four’s mother Evelyn (Naomi Watts), the former insurgent leader, has become a demagogue, holding show trials that involve injecting suspects with truth serum and shooting them in the head when they “confess.” Evelyn has the city in lockdown, but Tris and Four are determined to leave the walled perimeter to investigate the message from the outside world they received at the end of Insurgent. Rebelling against their former allies, they break out of the city’s walls and find new and startling secrets about the true nature of their world.

Or at least the secrets are supposed to be startling. In practice, the bland new villain David (Jeff Daniels), head of the Bureau of Genetic Welfare, the scientifically advanced organization that has been running a long-term genetic experiment in the ruins of Chicago, is a milquetoast presence who goes on at length about the greater good but shows very little sign of actual competence. The same goes for everyone on all sides of this confusing, incoherent conflict. At one point, it occurred to me that maybe the Divergent universe is what happened when Idiocracy finally collapsed under the weight of its own stupidity. This is a world where armies don’t put doors on their armored vehicles, and scientist types walk up to bomb craters and say “This looks radioactive!” Allegiant is a cynical agglomeration of YA and dystopia tropes thrown together with little regard for either sound storytelling or effective world building, which wouldn’t be bad if it weren’t so boring. It’s impossible to pick a standout performance from this cast, whom director Robert Schwentke seems to have instructed to speak in as flat a monotone as possible, so as to give the dimwitted dialog the illusion of gravitas. At the center of it all is the hapless Woodley, who demonstrates what The Hunger Games would have been like if Jennifer Lawrence were a no-talent hack. Who thought this person could carry a $110 million franchise movie? At least she’s fairly paired with James, who is doing something with his voice that I think is supposed to be a Tom Cruise impression.

The only flashes of brilliance in this futuristic clown show is the production design that borrows from the king of 1970s space art, Chris Foss. But if my eyes are roaming around the screen to check out an attractively wrecked space station, your movie has already lost.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Beyond the Arc Podcast, #47: The Jordan Farmar Era

This week on the show, Kevin and Phil talk about:

  • The Matt Barnes/John henson fracas in Milwaukee.
  • Kevin says the Chalmers injury was the moment the joy left the season for him.
  • Jordan Farmar is on the Grizzlies now. Will they keep him? Will they keep Ray McCallum?
  • Zach Randolph got his first ever triple double against LA.
  • A rundown of the injury situation as it currently stands.
  • Are the Grizzlies going to bring Lance Stephenson back after this season?
  • Who do the Grizzlies want to play in the playoffs?

The Beyond the Arc podcast is available on iTunes, so you can subscribe there! It’d be great if you could rate and review the show while you’re there. You can also find and listen to the show on Stitcher and on PlayerFM.

You can call our Google Voice number and leave us a voicemail, and we might talk about your question on the next show: 234-738-3394

You can download the show here or listen below:


Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

TED Talks PBS Special Has Memphis Ties

TED Talks, the popular online lecture series, is premiering its new broadcast special on PBS this Wednesday night and the nationally broadcast show features work by Memphis artists. 

A virtual set created by Memphians K. Brandon Bell, Sara Rossi, and Dan Baker.

K. Brandon Bell and Sarah Rossi’s work on the Tony Awards was previously featured in the Memphis Flyer. Along with animator Dan Baker, they created the virtual sets that hosted the speakers for a TED event last November in New York’s Town Hall Theater on Broadway. Three shows for PBS were created from the event, and the first one, “Science And Wonder”, will air on WKNO Wednesday night, March 30 at 9 PM. Here’s a preview:

TED Talks PBS Special Has Memphis Ties

Categories
Opinion The BruceV Blog

Behind the Scenes at a Memphis Zoo Board Meeting

Local wit and activist Jonathan Cole has created a video masterpiece. Watch and enjoy as the Memphis Zoo board and Chuck Brady finally face the truth.

Categories
Blurb Books

Author of KLANDESTINE to speak at the National Civil Rights Museum

Journalist Pate McMichael, author of KLANDESTINE: How a Klan Lawyer and a Checkbook Journalist Helped James Earl Ray Cover Up His Crime (Chicago Review Press) will discuss his book as part of the National Civil Rights Museum’s Book & Author Series. This event is free and open to the public.

On April 4, 1968, while standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed by a single bullet fired from an elevated and concealed position. Almost half a century later, unanswered questions surround the circumstances of his demise, and many still wonder whether justice was served.



After all, only one man, an escaped convict from Missouri named James Earl Ray, was punished for the crime. On the surface, Ray did not fit the caricature of a hangdog racist thirsty for blood. Media coverage has often portrayed him as hapless and apolitical, someone who must have been paid by clandestine forces. It’s a narrative that Ray himself put in motion upon his June 1968 arrest in London, then continued from jail until his death in 1998. In 1999, Dr. King’s own family declared Ray an innocent man.


After his arrest, Ray forged a publishing partnership with two very strange bedfellows: a slick Klan lawyer named Arthur J. Hanes, the de facto “Klonsel” for the United Klans of America; and checkbook journalist William Bradford Huie, the darling of Look magazine and a longtime menace of the KKK. Despite polar opposite views on race, Hanes and Huie found common cause in the world of conspiracy. Together, they thought they could make Memphis the new Dallas.



Relying on novel primary source discoveries gathered over an eight-year period, including a trove of newly released documents and dusty files, KLANDESTINE takes readers deep inside Ray’s Memphis jail cell and Alabama’s violent Klaverns. Told through Hanes and Huie’s key perspectives, it shows how a legacy of unpunished racial killings provided the perfect exigency to sell a lucrative conspiracy to a suspicious and outraged nation. 


McMichael is an award-winning journalist. His stories have been published in Atlanta magazine, Saint Louis magazine, Zócalo Public Square, and elsewhere.  

Pate McMichael
Thursday, March 31st
6 – 8 p.m.
National Civil Rights Museum (Hooks Hyde Hall)
450 Mulberry Street

Categories
News News Blog

Greensward Protest Caused ‘Almost Irreparable Harm’

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Hundreds took to the Greensward Saturday to protest parking.

Memphis Zoo officials say zoo visitors were bullied by protesters this past weekend and that protests like it undermine the process that will likely bring the long-term solution to the Greensward parking problem.

Protesters took to the Greensward at Overton Park Saturday for an event that began as a “Greensward Play Date,” organized by the anti-parking group Get Off Our Lawn. The casual protest turned more dramatic as several protesters lay on the dirt path the zoo uses for Greensward parking and refused to move, blocking Greensward parking.

The protestors eventually struck a compromise and the zoo only used one-third of the large, grassy field for parking.

Zoo officials said the protest caused “almost irreparable harm to the zoo, to the city of Memphis, and to the very cause the protestors claim to support.” The statement said zoo visitors were “bullied, yelled at, and otherwise harassed while trying to visit the zoo” this weekend.

Zoo public relations officials were asked for comment on the situation for a story to publish in this week’s print edition of the Memphis Flyer. They missed that deadline but issued a statement on Saturday’s protest late Monday evening.

Here’s the statement in full:

“Protests like those this weekend are, in our opinion, causing almost irreparable harm to the zoo, to the city of Memphis, and to the very cause the protesters claim to support.

We have heard from zoo visitors in person, online, and on the phone. They expressed anger, sadness, and frustration at being bullied, yelled at, and otherwise harassed while trying to visit the zoo.

Many families parked blocks and blocks away because they were directed by protesters acting as zoo volunteers, only to arrive to see plenty of paved parking available but blocked by protesters. Still others were unable to visit the zoo at all.

The zoo supports a viable, long-term solution to the parking issues. Such a solution has not yet been agreed upon in mediation. Actions like those taken this weekend undermine the mediation process and only serve to divide the community. “

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Always an Excuse to Go to the Farmer

The Farmer was one of the first to show what farm-to-table means.

I try never to turn down an excuse to go to the Farmer, and what better reason to go than for a good cause. The farm-to-table restaurant — one of the pioneers in Memphis — recently held a benefit for the Bluff City Fellowship, a recovery community in the area, and my fellow Memphians couldn’t resist either. The event sold out with 90 Farmer fans getting on board. 

For $29 diners could choose between a soup or salad, one of three entrees, and from a choice of two desserts.

The soup offered was a sweet potato bisque with the crowd-pleaser, Benton bacon, and marshmallow creme fraiche. The salad was the SG Wedge, with crisp romaine, cherry tomatoes, pickled onions (the best way to eat an onion, IMHO), bleu cheese crumbles, and buttermilk Ranch dressing. I went with the salad, pretty much to save room for dessert.

For the main course, I picked the Savory Chicken Breast, oven roasted with natural jus, red skinned mashed potatoes, and sautéed green beans. I went with the chicken because I will forever be enamored with the Farmer due to my first rendezvous with the restaurant several years ago. My mother and I lunch together about every month, conquering the Memphis restaurant landscape one new establishment at a time. I had never tried the Farmer — back then it was the Elegant Farmer, but in the past year or so dropped the Elegant because of some copyright/trademark/patent/whatever issues — so we met up on Highland Street and were greeted by a warm, jolly “Hello!” from the owner, Mac Edwards.

The Farmer owner Mac Edwards

I will never forget the Oven Roasted Chicken Breast my mother ordered. One bite, and I had been transported back to my homeland, L’hexagone (I am an unapologetic francophile). That’s the thing about the Farmer. Everything is done right. Well. Correctly. And that is what makes it good. No need to wow with portmanteaus or whatever the fashionable import of the month is. The food is the upside of perfectionism.

I do kind of wish I had tried the Lake’s Catfish, a pan-seared filet with citrus orzo, sautéed green beans, and saffron aioli. Lake’s catfish is the best in the region, and I haven’t yet had the pleasure of being swept off my feet by the Farmer’s expertise on the dish. I’m not a big l meat-eater, except when it comes to barbecue, so the Smoked Pork Loin Chop didn’t appeal to me. Edwards and team served up an oven-finished center cut chop with sweet potato hash, sautéed green beans, and BBQ bordelaise. Sounded AMAZE. 

For dessert, there was no chocolate, but there was the strawberry cake recipe that I grew up eating, the one with strawberry Jell-O in the ingredients. It was so sweet my teeth curled. There was also the apple cobbler with cinnamon whipped cream, but I don’t really get cobbler. It doesn’t have any chocolate in it.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Spurs 101, Grizzlies 87: Five Thoughts

Larry Kuzniewski

Lance Stephenson had a long night.

The Grizzlies lost to the Spurs last night at home, 101-87, putting to rest the dreams of many that after their strong showing in San Antonio on Friday night, the Griz might be able to come out on their home court and steal one from the usual suspects in black and silver. Except it wasn’t all of the usual suspects: the Spurs were without Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker, Kawhi Leonard, and David West—which was fine, because we all know by now the list of Grizzlies who are out (definitely or indefinitely) and it’s a nice gesture for visitors to play without five of their best players, too, to make it a fair contest.

The grind of the post-Goon-Squad era has really started to get to me. These games are fun when they win, and mostly unwatchable when they don’t—they’re sloppy, poorly-executed, maximum effort and low efficiency, and those are the good games. The Grizzlies’ chances are so dependent on focus and execution right now that they can’t afford to come out even the slightest bit off-kilter, which they did last night, lacking focus even from the first tip. And it caught up to them.

Here are five thoughts on last night’s game, and What It All Means:

Five Thoughts

Larry Kuzniewski

JaMychal Green, who has played more games (70 of 74) for the Grizzlies than anybody this year.

Playing hard isn’t good enough against the Spurs, even when they’re resting some of their best players. Dave Joerger said it in his postgame presser last night: the Grizzlies just didn’t look like they were very focused, and made mistakes (turnovers, especially) all night long. The Grizzlies, in the Core Four era, have always won by playing harder than their opponents, but there’s an efficiency there, the inevitability of wearing down an opponent through the middle. They can’t do that right now—they just don’t have the personnel—so they have to keep mistakes to a minimum. At least some of the new guys should at least know a subset of the plays by now, or at least have a general idea of how they want the ball to find the basket. That has to be executed against good teams. Effort alone won’t get them there.

There was no one to stop LaMarcus Aldridge. Zach Randolph usually makes it a point to have a big night against his former Trail Blazers teammate, but he was gone last night. He usually can defend Aldridge OK, too, and if he can’t, Marc Gasol can try. Neither of those guys were available last night, leaving it to JaMychal Green, Jarell Martin (a rookie) and Ryan Hollins (my thoughts on whom are very well documented). As a result, Aldridge had 31 points in 31 minutes on 11 of 16 shooting, and pulled down 13 rebounds. Without anyone to guard him well, and without some of his best teammates, turns out Aldridge can put a serious hurting on the Grizzlies all by himself.

Live By The Lance, Die By The Lance. He’s had some really good games lately, but last night was probably the worst game Lance Stephenson has had yet in a Grizzlies uniform. He couldn’t hit anything, and was trying to freelance and get to the rim, but the entire Spurs roster knew that’s what he was going to do, so every time he started to isolate, they were sending guys at him before he even stepped inside the arc. As a result, his decision-making, probably his biggest weakness even when he’s playing at his absolute best, suffered mightily. It was not good. It was very bad. Hopefully it was a regression to the mean after some very good play by Stephenson and not a sign of future problems as the strain of playing 30 minutes a night against strong competition starts to become an issue.

Larry Kuzniewski

I was told there would be fun. Post-Goon Squad, and I say we’re Post Goon Squad because that team was supposed to have Conley, Chalmers, Z-Bo, Brandan Wright, and even PJ Hairston on it, the operative theory has been that the Grizzlies are fun to watch because they’re playing without any expectations. That’s really only half true, though. They’re fun to watch when they’re the scrappy underdog pulling off improbably victories. When they get down 15 or so and stay there no matter how hard (but sloppy) they play, the product is considerably harder to take. Last night was an example of that—one of the ugliest games I’ve ever watched in person. It isn’t as much fun as maybe I thought it was going to be. It’s a little hard for me not to see Chalmers’ exit as the moment all the joy was sucked out of the room, even though there have been some good games since.

Watch the standings. The playoff race hasn’t become a thing yet—the Grizzlies are still 2.5 games up on the 6th place Blazers and 5 games up on the 8th place Rockets and 9th place Mavericks. But they’re going to have to win some more to be guaranteed a playoff spot—Wednesday’s game against Denver (who just lost to Dallas) and Sunday’s game against Orlando stick out as two particularly winnable contests. If they start to put together a losing streak, the playoff battle will become A Real Thing more quickly than Grizzlies fans would like to admit.

Tweet of the Night

This about summed up last night:


Larry Kuzniewski

Up Next

Denver at home Wednesday, Toronto at home Friday, on the road to Orlando on Sunday, and a home game Tuesday against the faltering Bulls. The Griz really need to win at least two games out of these four, and beyond that, that Friday (4/8) game in Dallas has the potential to turn into an elimination game for the Mavs. After that, the Warriors, and, well, I don’t want to think about that yet.