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News News Blog

Feminist Icon Gloria Steinem to Speak in Memphis

Gloria Steinem

Feminist organizer and activist Gloria Steinem will be the keynote speaker at the Planned Parenthood Greater Memphis Region’s (PPGMR) James Award celebration in September. 

Her upcoming appearance was announced at a PPGMR reception Thursday evening at the Majestic Grille. This will be Steinem’s first public appearance in Memphis.

“We are so thrilled to be welcoming Gloria to Memphis for this event,” says Ashley Coffield, President and CEO of PPGMR. “While reproductive health providers across the country, and certainly here in Tennessee, are facing more intimidation and political opposition, the need for our services is only escalating — as is the resolve and generosity of our supporters. Gloria’s message is more relevant now than ever in Memphis.”

The James Award ceremony, which this year will also mark PPGMR’s 75th anniversary, will be held on September 15th at the Hilton Memphis (939 Ridge Lake). Each year, the James Award (named in honor of former Memphis City Councilman/PPGMR supporter Bob James) is presented to a Mid-Southerner who has shown “unwavering support to the ideals of Planned Parenthood.” 

Honorees will include Representative Johnnie Turner (D-Memphis) and attorney and former PPGMR Board member Eddie Kaplan.

“We can think of no more deserving individuals for these honors than Rep. Turner and Mr. Kaplan,” said PPGMR Board Chair Barbara Newman. “The passion, courage, creativity, and hard work that they have demonstrated in supporting Planned Parenthood over the past several decades are an inspiration to us all. These awards are presented in gratitude for all that Johnnie and Eddie have done for generations of Memphis women and families.”

Rachel Ankney and Tamara Hendrix will be honored as 2016 Volunteers of the Year. Hannah Piecuch, Ema Wagner, Nora Goodman-Bryan, and Annie Vento will be recognized as the 2016 Young Volunteers of the Year.

Tickets for the James Award celebration are on sale now. For more information, call 901-725-3008 or email Grace Weil.

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News News Blog

Mediation Talks Yield New Parking Spaces for Zoo

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland said the mediation talks between the Overton Park Conservancy [OPC] and the Memphis Zoo have yielded two plans that could create up to 325 new parking spots for the zoo.

In one of his first acts as mayor, Strickland brought the zoo and OPC together in January for mediation talks, a process in which a neutral third party helps groups find compromise. The mediation discussions came after the zoo and OPC filed separate lawsuits to solidify their claims of control of the Overton Park Greensward.

Mediation remains ongoing but Strickland sent out a special notice from Memphis City Hall Thursday to share the two agreements already made:

1. City crews will soon reconfigure the Memphis Zoo lot for extra parking spaces, Strickland said. The move could yield 25-125 new spaces for zoo parking.

2. Those street crews will also begin working on a plan to create nearly 200 new spaces of on-street parking along North Parkway.

Strickland called these two plans, which could yield a total of 325 new spaces “a huge step forward.”

Here’s the rest of Strickland’s statement:

“And this is hardly the only result of mediation, which remains ongoing. Many other issues are being discussed, and I’m more optimistic than ever that the process will produce a result. Just those two items above are proof that this is working.

“The Memphis Zoological Society and Overton Park Conservancy are wonderful entities run by people of goodwill who love this city. I have met and/or spoken with many of them through this process, and their passion and desire to put in the real work to make this mediation successful makes me know we’re going to produce consensus.

“I understand the mediation process seems slow. I understand it’s hard to follow. But the items I shared above are movement. They represent clear progress. While we are not at the finish line, we are much closer than we were in January. And I just wanted to share that with you today.

In the meantime, I hope you enjoy Overton Park and the Memphis Zoo — two great assets in the core of a great city — this very weekend.”

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Memphis Gaydar News

Haslam Signs Bill That Allows Counselors to Discriminate

Bill Haslam

It’s now legal in Tennessee for licensed counselors and therapists to refuse to treat clients whose “goals, outcomes, or behaviors” violate the counselors “sincerely held principles.”

The bill was passed by the Tennessee General Assembly, and Governor Bill Haslam signed it into law on Tuesday afternoon. 

The bill was one of several religious freedom-style bills pushed by the Family Action Council of Tennessee (FACT) this year. That group often focuses on pushing anti-LGBT measures, and it’s been called a hate group by LGBT activists. FACT has said the bill is intended to protect the right of conscience of a counselor and to safeguard their religious beliefs. 

The American Counseling Association recently updated its code of ethics to prevent discrimination against clients in need of service, which may have prompted FACT to push for a change in Tennessee.

The bill doesn’t name LGBT people specifically, and it has potential to have a far-reaching impact beyond the LGBT community. But Tennessee Equality Project Executive Director Chris Sanders believes the LGBT community is the bill’s primary target. He has said the bill will be especially harmful to LGBT youth in rural areas, where the only counselors available may now legally turn them away.

That said, Sanders thinks the new law will be used to discriminate against all sorts of people.

“They amended out the word ‘religion’ and it’s now ‘sincerely held principles,’ and that’s even broader,” Sanders said. “Conceivably, sexism and racism are principles. At this point, it’s so wide open, it’s ridiculous, and it defeats the purpose of having a counseling code of ethics.”

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

10 Things Prince Didn’t Know About Me

As everyone knows by now, gender- and genre-bending musician Prince died unexpectedly at his home in Minneapolis last week at the age of 57. It came as a tremendous shock, with the story first breaking on TMZ, then hitting social media and spreading like spilled mercury before more reputable media outlets confirmed the worst.

Instantly, the world rushed to honor Prince’s memory and his music. Thousands of people posted links to their favorite Prince performances. Hundreds of musicians — professional and amateur — posted videos of themselves playing Prince songs. Cities around the world lit their bridges, overpasses, fountains, obelisks, and various other civic edifices purple. Self-professed nerds, weirdos, and shy people praised Prince for his bravery in flouting gender and racial stereotypes, and for giving them the courage to become themselves. Movie theaters announced free showings of Purple Rain.

It was a sad, sad a day for everyone.

Saddest of all, I think, is the fact that Prince didn’t live long enough to meet me. No doubt, he probably read my columns online, and I’m sure he laughed at some of my Twitter witticisms (I mean, who wouldn’t?), but the Purple One and I never could manage to get together IRL.

I feel sad that he didn’t get to know my talented and beautiful children, all grown now. Nor did he get to meet my gorgeous and brilliant wife. (I think the two of them would have gotten along famously. She loves “Little Red Corvette.”) And I regret that I never got to grill my famous Korean spareribs for him while we chilled together on the back patio.

Okay, I know, I know, I shouldn’t make Prince’s death about me. That’s terribly wrong. But so is the fact that literally within five or six hours of the news of his death, the Prince internet tsunami turned from real sadness and sincere tributes to Facebook clickbait memes like: “Which Prince Song Was Written for You?”; “10 Things You Didn’t Know About Prince”; “The Last 6 CDs Prince Purchased”; and “Wow, I Didn’t Know Prince Wrote That Song!”

It turned to CNN’s Wolf Blitzer mourning the man responsible for the seminal “Purple Haze” album. It turned to Memphis television reporters broadcasting themselves lip-synching Prince songs. Prince even got “quoted” in a local meme as supporting the “no parking on the Greensward” movement.

Then came the “humor.” Pictures of Prince on the $20 bill, suggesting we make it worth $19.99. Har. Or, “Why is Prince dead when the Kardashians are still alive?” Finally, there was the transgender-bathroom meme suggesting we should all just “Potty Like It’s 1999.”

Just stop, already.

Prince’s life and music meant something to millions of people. There’s no denying he was a musical genius — a man who could play any instrument and who cranked out dozens of brilliant pop records. He defied gender norms and made it look natural. By all reports, he was also a good person, who quietly gave large amounts of money to charities. He was respected and beloved in his home town of Minneapolis, which also says something good about him.

But in 2016, everyone’s a pundit, a critic, a comedian — or a salesman. And whether it’s just for fun or for ego gratification, or worse, for profit and exploitation, everybody wants a piece of the action.

Guess it’s just a Sign O’ the Times.

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News The Fly-By

Local Transgender Community Bands Together in Wake of Anti-LGBT Bills

Friedrich Nietzsche (or Kelly Clarkson or Kanye West) said it best: “What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.” As LGBT Tennesseans (and especially transgender Tennesseans) faced one of the worst years for anti-gay and anti-trans legislation, the local trans community has begun to band together.

Last week, the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center (MGLCC) hosted the first meeting of the center’s new transgender committee, which was immediately followed by a transgender flag-raising ceremony.

The trans flag consists of five horizontal stripes — two in light blue, two in pink, and a white strip across the center.

“We had a transgender flag here before, but it was much smaller than the rainbow flag, and it was in rags and tatters,” said Kayla Gore, the transgender service specialist at MGLCC. “We wanted to make sure the trans community felt welcome here. Now, from down the street, you can see our flag and know that you’re welcome here.”

Bianca Phillips

The MGLCC raised a larger transgender flag last week.

Gore said MGLCC is starting a new support group for transgender men, who were previously lacking their own group, on Friday, April 29th. And she said the center formed its new transgender committee to help the community stay informed about future statewide political threats or local issues.

“It’s good to have organization when there’s so much stuff going on. If we’re not organized, we’re not going to be prepared for what’s coming,” Gore said.

The “stuff going on” that Gore is referring to includes a number of anti-LGBT bills that were considered (and passed) in the now-adjourned General Assembly this past session. A bill that would have banned transgender students at public schools and universities from using the restroom that corresponds with their gender identity was pulled by its sponsor, Rep. Susan Lynn, at the last minute.

But another bill, which has come to be known as Hate Bill 1840 by its opponents, that passed has potential to negatively impact the LGBT community in Tennessee. Governor Bill Haslam signed the bill into law on Tuesday, and it allows counselors to deny service to any client who conflicts with the counselor’s “sincerely held beliefs.”

The bill could have far-reaching impact, but Tennessee Equality Project (TEP) Executive Director Chris Sanders said the LGBT community is intended as the primary target.

“Conceivably, sexism and racism are sincerely held principles, too. At this point, it’s so wide open, it’s ridiculous, and it defeats the purpose of having a counseling code of ethics,” Sanders said.

According to Sanders, the LGBT community in Tennessee has “never had a year like this” in regard to anti-LGBT legislation and says that’s likely due to backlash from the U.S. Supreme Court decision last year legalizing same-sex marriage. Earlier this year, the Tennessee House passed an anti-same-sex marriage resolution condemning the Supreme Court decision.

Sanders said he’s expecting the transgender bathroom bill to be back next session, and TEP is working to strengthen ties with religious organizations that may help them fight such bills in the future.

“We want to engage members of conservative denominations who are tired of religion being used for discrimination,” Sanders said.

Next time around, TEP may have some help from a new political coalition that’s forming in Memphis. The West Tennessee Transgender Political Coalition (TTPC) has started a Facebook page and plans to hold its first meeting soon.

“We’ll meet once a month to update everyone on political news, and we’ll be looking at local trans issues or school issues. We want to get people together to stand against any anti-trans legislation that comes up,” said Victoria Hester, the assistant coordinator for the coalition.

The local coalition is affiliated with the statewide TTPC, which also has factions in East and Middle Tennessee. An older version of the West Tennessee group disbanded years ago.

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Music Music Features

Lamb of God Returns

As arguably one of the biggest acts to emerge from the mid-’00s “undergrounding” of high-profile metal, Lamb of God was riding its long and continuing ascent in June 2012 when attention on the band began to increase exponentially on the back of a most unfortunate turn of events. A good six months into the touring cycle behind his band’s seventh studio album, Resolution, Lamb of God singer Randy Blythe was arrested by Czech police on suspicion of manslaughter and charged with “committing intentional bodily harm.”

The charges concerned a concert from two years earlier when a fan sustained head injuries (immediately leading to a coma and eventual death several weeks later) after being pushed from the stage by Blythe. Lamb of God was caught totally by surprise, as they didn’t even remember the specific show and were unaware of the damning European press coverage following the event, or that the Czech police had already investigated and charged Blythe, simply because no one was contacted by the United States Department of Justice after the D.O.J. turned down overseas requests for assistance.

Blythe was swiftly put behind bars in a Czech prison for what remained an open-ended incarceration, due to the challenges of meeting a bail figure that was repeatedly increased. Thus began an unpredictable and authentically dramatic saga unlike any other in metal’s long and dark history of finding itself on the wrong side of the law. In March of 2013, after a six-day trial that could have easily ended badly, the Czech court arrived at a verdict that removed Blythe’s criminal liability regarding the incident. Many readers might be aware of how things played out, as there was much media coverage and an astonishing amount of support that traversed and transcended the metal community.

The Richmond, Virginia, band formed as Burn the Priest in 1994 and operated at the underground DIY level for six years, releasing several demos, two split-EPs, and one self-titled, full-length debut in 1999 before a name change to Lamb of God was implemented based on a desire to avoid being misinterpreted as a Satanic metal band. The next album and first to carry the Lamb of God moniker was 2000’s New American Gospel. A progressive combination of rewired and intensified thrash metal informed deeply by Pantera’s mid-tempo groove and breakdowns, New American Gospel appealed out of the gate to a fan base that would grow behind the band’s next two years on the road.

2003’s As the Palaces Burn attracted some nice reviews in mainstream media outlets like Rolling Stone and scored high in the metal press’ year-end tallies. The Lamb of God sound was well-established by this point and filled a need with its less cartoonish, more streamlined metal onslaught that spoke to both young and old fans of the form, unlike the then-waning silliness of Slipknot or the overt faux intensity of System of a Down. The increased airplay of the album’s three singles laid the groundwork for Lamb of God’s proto-breakthrough, Ashes of the Wake, their first for major label Epic Records. It debuted at No. 27 on the Billboard 200 with first-week sales of over 35,000 and remains the band’s best-selling back catalog title as it approaches gold certification.

But Lamb of God’s next two albums, 2006’s Sacrament and 2009’s Wrath, would secure the band’s status as a global force and perhaps the biggest Trojan horse to sneak otherwise mainstream-untenable elements of metal extremity to a wide audience since Pantera’s similar coup during the ’90s. Both album’s debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 and had first-week sales of over 60,000 and collectively yielded three Grammy nominations for Best Heavy Metal Performance for “Redneck” (perhaps Lamb of God’s best-known calling card) in 2007, “Set to Fail” in 2010, and “In Your Words” in 2011, respectively.

This period brought many other next-level “firsts,” and the band spent the better part of six years on the road and satiated fans between studio efforts with two live album/DVD titles. In 2010, the band released the 10-year anniversary Hourglass career retrospective that featured a much-drooled-over “Super Deluxe” edition packaged in a big coffin. The package contained a three-CD anthology, a career-covering vinyl box set, The Art of Lamb of God book, a 4-by-6 “Pure American Metal” flag, and, most notably, a Mark Morton Signature Series Jackson Dominion D2 guitar. The aforementioned seventh album, Resolution, was released in January of 2012 and added some thrashier guitar riffs and song structures to Lamb of God’s meat-and-potatoes metal to keep things out of an artistic rut.

Then, as covered previously, everything went to hell a few months later, and a short hiatus followed as the band waited for the outcome of Blythe’s case and figured out what to do next. For a minute, Lamb of God’s future as an active band was up in the air, but the five-some returned to the studio, and out came last year’s VII: Sturm und Drang, an album informed by the inevitable influence of Blythe’s situation but also one with more sonic surprises than the band is known for. The record included the distinct vocals of guest Chino Moreno of the Deftones on a track, plus Blythe’s most extended venture into clean singing on the song “Overlord”.

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News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1418

First Person

Pictures or it didn’t happen. Isn’t that what they say these days? But mobile phones didn’t have cameras in 1997, and the phone I answered that sweaty August morning was attached to the wall. My friend Kelly was calling because she had news she thought I’d want to know.

“PRINCE IS PLAYING A SECRET CONCERT AT THE NEW DAISY TONIGHT! OMG!” she exclaimed. Well, she didn’t say “OMG.” Nobody said “OMG” back then. But that was the gist.

Kelly didn’t have details. She wasn’t 100 percent sure if Prince was really playing a second show following his big concert at the BassPro Shops (formerly known as the Pyramid). But the last time Kelly was 99 percent sure about something, the two of us went to the Peabody Hotel, called the front desk from a pay phone, asked for Tom Waits’ room, and Waits answered.

Words like “magic” are overused, but there was alchemy involved in what happened at the New Daisy that night. Wearing shiny lavender jammies, Prince owned the stage, running through songs like “The Ballad of Dorothy Parker,” “Baby I’m a Star,” and “1999.” He covered James Brown, Parliament, and the Staples Singers. The highlight of the show, however, was when Prince introduced his special guest, 80-year-old Stax royalty Rufus Thomas. Then the unflappable Purple One proceded to nerd the hell out, saying he didn’t ever want his time with Rufus to end.

There was conflict too. And drama! When Prince encouraged Thomas to cut loose and freestyle, he balked: “Oh no.” There was a back and forth between the two musical icons. Something was said about “nursery rhymes,” and then, with increasing confidence, the two men started improvising together. I wish I could tell you what was said and sung, but the details have slipped away. All that remains is the memory of a grin so big it threatened to crack my face and a similar memory of so many other people wearing the same dopey expression.

I’ve got no pictures, but I swear to God (and Wendy and Lisa too), it happened. You’ll just have to trust me and the few hundred other people lucky enough to get a call.

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Film Features Film/TV

Green Room

There’s nothing a group of musicians love to do more than swap stories about bad gigs. The guitarist got drunk and puked onstage. The promoter was a crook. A brawl broke out. But in the long and sordid history of bad shows, I dare say none comes close to what happens to the punk band the Ain’t Rights in director Jeremy Saulnier’s new film Green Room.

When we meet the Ain’t Rights — Pat (Anton Yelchin), Sam (Alia Shawkat), Reece (Joe Cole), and Tiger (Callum Turner) — their tour of the Pacific Northwest is already faltering. After a disastrous afternoon show at a pizza parlor in Seaside, Oregon, the band figures they’ve hit rock bottom and decides pack it in and go home. But to get back to the East Coast, they need money, and the pizza parlor gig only paid out $8 each. The mohawked promoter, Tad (David Thompson), feels guilty and sets them up with a show at a club 90 miles away where his cousin works. “Just don’t talk about politics, and you’ll be fine,” he warns.

As with everyone else who has ever told a punk band not to talk about politics, his warning falls on deaf ears. When they arrive, they find that the venue where they’re booked is not so much a punk club as it is a white power movement compound hidden in the middle of the Oregon woods. Naturally, they open their set with a cover of the Dead Kennedy’s “Nazi Punks Fuck Off,” which is certainly the punk thing to do, but not the best choice in terms of long-term survival. Still, by the end of the set, they seem to have won over the crowd and are feeling pretty good about the situation until they return to the green room and find the lead singer of the headlining band standing over a dead girl with a knife in her head.

Callum Turner,Anton Yelchin and Alia Shawkat in Green Room

At this point, Green Room shifts gears from Decline of Western Civilization in the PacNor to a claustrophobic cross between 12 Angry Men and Assault on Precinct 13. Just when it looks like things can’t any worse for the band, Saulnier pulls the rug out from under them again. What could be worse than being locked in a room with a murderous, 250-pound neo-nazi named Werm (Brent Werzner) by a pack of eerily disciplined skinheads? How about when Darcy, the leader of the skinheads, shows up, and it’s Sir Patrick Freakin’ Stewart. Darcy calmly takes command like the evil Mirror Universe version of Captain Picard, and the casual brutality of his evil is bone chilling. He effortlessly throws the police off the scent and proceeds to clean up the mess left on his property with the help of a squad of “red laces,” as skinheads who have killed enemies of the movement are known. As the band tries to escape first the room and later the club, they discover the secrets Darcy has been hiding, which explains why he is so eager to wipe out the witnesses.

As you would expect, Stewart’s chilling precision is the film’s acting highlight. Shawkat as the cool-girl bass player sporting an ever-fashionable Dead Kennedy’s logo shirt and Imogen Poots as Amber, a local punk desperate to escape the skinhead underground, outshine their male compatriots, most of whom read as transparent murder fodder or inhuman killing machines.

Green Room is billed as a “horror thriller,” and Saulnier, whose previous work was the acclaimed indie Blue Ruin, can throw a jump scare with the best of them. But there’s quite a bit of 1970s-era hostage movies like Dog Day Afternoon in Green Room‘s DNA, so I would hesitate to call it horror. The director’s primary concern is ratcheting up the tension, one excruciating turn at a time. His most effective weapon is his grungy sound design that he uses to incorporate wailing feedback as a plot point and the goopy plop of a disemboweling for shock points. The director clearly has a broad knowledge of and affection for this musical milieu, which makes the whole proceedings feel more real and grounded and helps audiences gloss over the occasional logical lapse. Green Room is punk as hell, and it makes me eager to see Saulnier’s next outing.

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We Recommend We Recommend

An Enemy of the People at Evergreen Theatre

The setting: a community with a popular water attraction. The conflict: There’s something dangerous lurking in the water. One man knows the truth, but vested interests warn that panic can be expensive. No, I’m not talking about Steven Spielberg’s famous shark flick. Nor am I referring to some future Michael Moore documentary about public utilities in Flint, Michigan. Henrik Ibsen’s 1882 play, An Enemy of the People, may not be as well-known (or action-packed) as Jaws, but it tells the kind of political horror story modern audiences will immediately recognize.

An Enemy of the People, as adapted by Death of a Salesman playwright Arthur Miller, arrives in Memphis courtesy of regional veteran Marler Stone and his newly christened CentreStage Theatre company. It tells the story of Dr. Stockmann, who discovers that his town’s public bath is badly contaminated. He’s initially thanked for his vigilance but ultimately opposed by the very people he sought to protect. Over the course of the play, Stockmann discovers just how hard it can be to stand alone, especially when the truth is unpopular.

At 78, Stone shows few signs of slowing his artistic output. “There are a lot of plays I want to do,” he says, rattling off a list of classic shows ranging from Arthur Miller’s A View From the Bridge to the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical Carousel. “I want to do things that are relevant,” he says.

Stone marvels that An Enemy of the People was admired both by Miller, a lion of the literary left, and by objectivist icon Ayn Rand. “I wondered why,” he says.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Brooks’ RedBall Project

We’ve all seen the big red dots on maps that indicate our current locations. Artist Kurt Perschke’s globetrotting RedBall Project brings that enormous dot into the 3-D world — to show us where we are and make us experience our current locations differently. The 15-foot ball has visited Paris, gone rogue in the streets of Toledo, and made various awkward and awe-inspiring appearances in places like Taipei, Barcelona, Abu Dhabi, and various other cities around the world. It will spend 10 days in Memphis as part of the Brooks Museum of Art’s centennial celebration.

Brit Worgan ©RedBall Project

Be here now. Kurt Perschke’s RedBall

Perschke’s ball makes its first and last stops at the Brooks where, on Saturday, May 7th, the museum hosts a free Party for the Century from noon to 7 p.m. Joyce Cobb will sing happy birthday, and the Bo-Keys perform at 5 p.m.