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News News Blog

Former Memphis Police Officer Indicted for Rape

Michael Smith

Michael Smith, a former Memphis Police officer, was arrested and indicted on Tuesday for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman while he was on duty.

Smith resigned from the MPD last week, following a complaint from a 26-year-old woman who claimed Smith had made inappropriate sexual contact with her on April 16th as she was leaving the Purple Haze club near FedExForum downtown. Smith, who had been with the MPD since 2009, worked in the South Main precinct,

Smith is being charged with rape, official misconduct, official oppression, and sexual battery.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Rev. Billy Kyles, Local Civil Rights Lion and MLK Friend, Dies

The Memphis minister who was only feet away from Martin Luther King on the night the civil rights icon was slain at the Lorraine Motel and who had planned on being Dr. King’s dinner host that night in 1968, has passed away, 49 years later.

The 82-year-old Rev. Samuel “Billy” Kyles died Tuesday evening at Baptist East Hospital. Born in Mississippi, he was raised in Chicago and came to Memphis in 1959 to become pastor of Monumental Baptist Church, where he served until ill health forced his retirement in 2014.

Kyles never stopped being a pivotal local figure, involved in virtually every cause that, as he saw it, benefited the struggle for rights and dignity of black Memphians.

But, from the night of that tragedy in Memphis on, Kyles, who was already involved with the national civil rights movement, became one of its essential figures — the source of anecdotes from and about the martyred hero and a permanent testament to his memory.

In 1993 I was one of several local media figures who traveled with a group of Memphians, mainly African Americans, in a Memphis-in-May-sponsored tour of the Ivory Coast (Cote d’Ivoire) in West Africa. Rev. Kyles and his delightful wife Aurelia were in the group.

From time to time the tour bus would be stopped to allow Kyles, whose memory had been jogged by this or that sight along the road, to relate some little-known incident in King’s life and ministry.

Nobody begrudged those moments. Collectively, they were something like a seminar. In 2008, Kyles and his chronicler’s role were the subjects of an Academy Award-nominated film, The Witness: From the Balcony of Room 306.

But, for all his national and international renown, Kyles continued to be an energetic preacher and pastor for his home congregation and a vital member of the Memphis community, a participant in all kinds of ecumenical, multi-ethnic citizen efforts, and someone sure to be involved as one of the leaders of any development aimed at raising the condition of his fellow African Americans.

Upon hearing of Kyles’ passing, Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland released this statement: “I am saddened tonight to learn of the passing of Rev. Samuel “Billy” Kyles, truly a civil rights icon. I was fortunate to get to know him and visit his church, and will always treasure his commitment to Memphis and to the cause of civil rights.”

9th District Congressman Steve Cohen said, ““Reverend Kyles was a legendary clergyman and civil rights advocate. I extend my sympathies to his devoted wife and wonderful children.”

Other testaments are sure to pour in, not only from the numerous Memphians who knew and respected Kyles, but from admirers around the world.

Bianca Phillips

In 2009, Rev,. Kyles (tall man in center) was one of the hosts, along with Rev. Ben Hooks and Pitt Hyde, for the Dalai Lama in a visit to the fateful Room 306 where Dr. Martin Luther King was slain in 1968.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Evil Army Rules, OK?

Don Perry

When it comes to Memphis metal, Evil Army have held the crown for quite some time. The band has been around since the early 2000’s, and their following is one of the strongest in all of Memphis, uniting different factions of the local punk scene in addition to skate rats, metal heads, and the Black Lodge Video sect. They’ve released records on Contaminated (Alicja Trout’s old label), Get Revenge Records, Housecore Records, and most recently, Hells Headbangers.

My favorite era of Evil Army was when they practiced below singer and band leader Rob Evil’s house in a spot they dubbed The Armory, a one car garage that also served as a show space for around a year or so. Those that attended shows at The Armory weren’t there to look cool or to find a one night stand, they were in attendance for one reason: the music (well, that and to get loaded).

In Addition to Evil Army being the “house band,”  Armory gigs included locals like Bury The Living, Vile Nation, Porn and Grenades, and Jet Jaguar and the KR-3 Killing Spree, as well as touring acts like Uncurbed, Bitter End, Forward to Death, Life Crisis, Chronic Seizure, and Municipal Waste. Yeah, Municipal Waste played a one car garage on Cleveland Avenue. That’s something that won’t ever happen again. 

Evil Army capture the best elements of bands like GBH, Slayer, Metallica, and the Misfits and crank out some of the most authentic thrash metal since the genre was created in the early ’80s. Their records are still pretty easy to come across, and Rob Evil’s two-song side project with Jay Reatard- the black metal band Winter Coffin- had a single released on Blak Skull Records last year. Get acquainted with Evil Army in the videos below, and read my interview with Rob Evil here.  

Evil Army Rules, OK?

Evil Army Rules, OK? (2)

Evil Army Rules, OK? (3)

Evil Army Rules, OK? (4)

Evil Army Rules, OK? (5)

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

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

If You Can Dream It, You Can Do It

When Diane Grover gave birth to her youngest child, Mary Ellen, more than a decade ago, she learned what it meant to be a champion for people with intellectual disabilities. Mary Ellen, or ME, was born with Down syndrome.

Over the years Grover advocated for her daughter and others with intellectual disabilities in a variety of ways, including founding the International Down Syndrome Coalition, but her most successful was handing out jam. On March 21st of last year — March 21st being world Down syndrome day — Grover handed out jam produced by a Colorado company, Steamers, that employed people of all abilities in an effort to create awareness of the disparity in employment rates for those with intellectual disabilities.

It has been reported that only 17 percent of people with disabilities were employed in 2015. Grover’s efforts to bring these numbers into the forefront took her on a path of advocacy she never anticipated. Requests for more jam grew into greater demand for gift baskets which transformed into developing her own coffee roast which turned into running her own company.

Grover now owns Dreamers Merchants, a business which facilitates the vend of products either created or sold by people with disabilities. It started when Grover included coffee in her gift baskets which she sold to raise money for the Down Syndrome Foundation. She contacted J. Brooks and told them about her efforts, and the company encouraged her to create her own blend to both raise awareness of her efforts and funds for her cause. The Dreamers blend was born, which she advertised on her Facebook page.

Soon friends across the country were asking to sell the coffee too, and Dreamers Merchants was born. That grew into selling artwork created by her vendors, or Dreamers, or products made by other advocacy companies, and most recently, Grover’s first brick-and-mortar shop.

Sometime around Valentine’s Day of this year, Grover and team cut the ribbon on their first coffee shop, Dreamers Coffee, located at the Vantage Point Golf Center on Macon Road in Cordova. Grover now works to help her merchants develop skills running their own businesses, either setting up tables at events to sell their wares, and Dreamers coffee, working in the coffee shop, learning how to frame their artwork, and other tasks. She now works with 25 Dreamers across the country, eight of them locally, and helps with 26 online stores in nine national locations.

For more information, visit dreamersmerchants.com or call 849-7111. Dreamers Coffee is located at 9580 Macon.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

The Shelby County Democratic Party Is in Crisis Mode Again

JB

Challenges by Del Gill (back to camera) to SCDP chair Randa Spears were a recurrent fact of life during a stormy year for the local party.

Yes, Virginia, there are functional, thriving Democratic Party organizations in Shelby County. There are the Germantown Democrats, whose monthly meetings at Coletta’s on Highway 64 are well-attended events attracting a variety of speakers on political and social issues. There are the Democratic Women of Shelby County, who include a cadre of committed activists. There are the Young Democrats, who are attracting new blood into the party and who are constantly interfacing with local elected officials to disperse useful information about governmental processes.

Nor is this a complete list, notes Dave Cambron, president of the Germantown club. The aforementioned organizations and several others, he notes, continue to conduct useful meetings, assist with political campaigns, and serve as organizational nuclei for interested Democrats, in and out of election years.

So yes, Democratic Party organizations are live and well in Shelby County.

It’s just that the Democratic Party of Shelby County, the official organization which in theory is the party’s flagship, may not be one of them. Cambron, a former SCDP vice chair who served a brief term as acting chairman last year during a difficult moment for the local party, declined to comment on what is shaping up as another period of crisis.

As of earlier this month, the party lacks a chairperson, former chair Randa Spears having resigned for reasons that may have something to do with her desire to focus more on the duties of her job at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital but may also have to do with what various Democrats describe as a kind of chaos that has descended upon the Party’s affairs.

These Democrats say that Spears, who was elected chair of the party in March of 2015 in the wake of a financial scandal involving previous chair Bryan Carson, has had to contend with persistent tension at party meetings involving Del Gill, her runner-up in the chairmanship election who, at meeting after meeting, has employed an unrelenting variety of parliamentary maneuvers to challenge the chair’s control.

Gill, of course, does not see himself as the problem. Rather, he appears to regard himself as a long-term, committed party member who has so far been unfairly frustrated from realizing his own leadership ambitions. He sees himself as a Democratic purist who has mastered both Roberts’ Rules of Order and the party’s own regulations, while his foes see him as pedantic to a fault, disruptive by nature, and egregiously self-absorbed.

In any case, he has to be regarded as a leading candidate for the local party’s chairmanship, which will be up for grabs again in June at a meeting presided over by Sheriff’s Department Lt. Michael Pope, a former party vice chair now serving as acting chairman. Several members of the party’s executive committee say privately they intend to resign if Gill is elected.

The leadership vacuum is just one of the party’s problems, of course. Another is that, for the second year in a row, the local party has failed to meet deadlines for filing financial reports with the state Registry of Election Finance and faces the prospect of stiff financial penalties as a result.

Then chairman Carson, Spears’ predecessor, was forced to resign in early 2015 when it was found that the party had not only missed the state Registry’s deadlines but that, as was revealed in an audit conducted by party member Diane Cambron, Carson could not account for some $6,000 in party fund expenditures.

It was then that David Cambron, Diane Cambron’s husband, became acting chair. He served in that role until the election of Spears in March, 2015.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Elvis and Nixon

In the deep recesses of Elvis lore, there is one image that stands out as particularly surreal: Elvis in full 70s regalia shaking hands with Richard Nixon in the Oval Office. As the prologue of Elvis and Nixon reminds us, it is by far the most requested image from the National Archive, more popular than the Marines raising the flag on Mount Suribachi or the Apollo 17 “Blue Marble” shot. As the image stares at us from the walls of countless dorm rooms and t shirts, it poses the inscrutable question, “What the hell was going on here?”

Elvis and Nixon meet in December, 1970

Director Liza Johnson tries to answer that question with Elvis and Nixon, with mixed success. One of the best choices from her and a trio of screenwriters (Joey Sagal, Hanna Sagal, and Cary Elews of Princess Bride fame) is beginning with the morning meeting where advisors Egil Keogh (Colin Hanks) and Dwight Chapin (Evan Peters) try to blithely slip in that the President’s nap time will be curtailed in favor of meeting with Mr. Presley. Kevin Spacey, used to playing a president in House Of Cards, absolutely nails Nixon, all hunched shoulders, quivering jowls, and indignation.

When we meet Elvis (Michael Shannon), he’s restless and irritable, trapped in Graceland’s TV room like a panther in a cage. In this telling, it’s the images of the military flailing around in Southeast Asia and the anti-war movement that drive him to seek an audience with the president. No longer a conduit of youthful rebellion, but an early middle aged, wealthy member of the establishment, he’s disturbed by the direction of the country, and thinks the best way he can help is to become an undercover narc. The alternate theory, long entertained by druggies everywhere, that Elvis, buoyed by the finest formulations from Dr. Nick’s pharmacopeia, was pulling Nixon’s leg, is not entertained here.

Kevin Spacey and Michael Shannon star in Elvis and Nixon.

The truth is, the story of this weird picture of two of the most recognizable figures of the twentieth century is pretty thin gruel for a movie. Johnson treats it as a light comedy, which is appropriate, and is at her most interesting when she’s drawing parallels between the isolation and delusions of the President and the King. Both have two henchmen—Elvis’ are Jerry Shilling (Alex Pettyfer) and Sonny West (Johnny Knoxville)—who dictate the exact terms on which anyone can communicate with their boss. The climactic meeting is like watching two silverback gorillas trade dominance displays in the jungle, and it’s pretty fun.

The film’s weak link is Michael Shannon, but it’s not entirely his fault. There have been many attempts to portray Elvis onscreen, with varying degrees of success. For my money, the best was still Kurt Russell in the John Carpenter-directed Elvis TV movie from 1979. Shannon’s not a bad actor, and he gets Elvis’ body language right for the most part. But the voice is all wrong, and the look is just…well, Elvis was one of if not the best looking man of his century and Michael Shannon is not. He suffers especially when put up against Spacey’s uncanny Nixon.

Despite that glaring flaw, Elvis and Nixon is a good view for Memphis audiences and Elvis fans. It’s understatedly, and sometimes surreally, funny, and Johnson has some genuine insights on the isolating nature of fame. But the definitive film document of Elvis remains to be made.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Beyond the Arc Podcast, #50: Playoff Reflections

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

  • The end of the Grizzlies’ season, as they got eliminated by the San Antonio Spurs (again).
  • Dave Joerger got emotional in his presser after the game, and good on him.
  • The West playoffs would’ve been much different with a healthy Grizzlies.
  • A look at the other series still going on.
  • And much more, as we get ready to record our final episodes of the 2015-16 season.

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
News News Blog

Zambezi River Hippo Camp to Open Friday

Memphis Zoo officials said Monday that the brand new Zambezi River Hippo Camp exhibit will open Friday, April 29. 

The event will kick off with a ribbon cutting ceremony at 11:30 a.m. Friday. It will be the first major exhibit to open at the zoo since Teton Trek in 2009. 

“This is the most ambitious exhibit we’ve constructed to date – in terms of both the architecture and animals curated,” said Matt Thompson, director of animal programs at Memphis Zoo. “The Zambezi River Valley is a lesser-known, but extremely important part of the world. We can’t wait for visitors to learn about this area through a cultural experience like never before. Besides our new and rare animals, there will also be interactive stations throughout the exhibit for both children and adults to enjoy.”

The four-acre exhibit will feature hippos, Nile crocodiles, okapi, nyala antelope, patas monkeys, yellow-backed duikers, lesser flamingos, cape vultures, and other African birds.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

On the Scene at the Southern Hot Wing Festival

Wing lovers packed in Mississippi River Park for the annual Southern Hot Wing Festival. 

Frank Chin was there to get in his shots. 

[slideshow-1]

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Caleb Sweazy

Today’s Music Video Monday’s could prove fatal. 

Today we have the world premiere of the latest single from Caleb Sweazy’s Music + Arts / Blue Barrel Records release Lucky Or Strong. The video for “Bluebird Wings” was directed by his wife Melissa Anderson Sweazy. who calls it “Double Indemnity meets ‘Last Dance with Mary Jane’. I¹ve long been a fan of noir films and I¹m particularly fascinated by the trope of the femme fatale, the construct of the dangerous, duplicitous woman who often has a deeply conflicted, cat-and-mouse relationship with the detective. But maybe its more like a dog with a squirrel. What happens when the chase is over and she finally catches her prey?”

The video stars Caleb Sweazy and the Memphis Flyer’s own Eileen Townsend. It was shot by Ryan Earl Parker, who also did the outstanding color work in post production, and edited by Laura Jean Hocking. 

Music Video Monday: Caleb Sweazy

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