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News News Blog

You Know You’re From Memphis If…

Grit and grind. Duck march. Dry rub. Tiny Bomb.

You know you’re from Memphis if you know these things without context clues.

Memphis is one of a kind. Memphis experiences are, too. You got ‘em. We want ‘em.

The Memphis Flyer wants you, our wonderful readers, to submit your own, one-of-a-kind Memphis experiences (or witticisms and criticisms from the past and present) for our first “You Know You’re From Memphis If…” cover story.

Rules for submission:

Submissions should finish the phrase: “You know you’re from Memphis if…” Multiple submissions are welcome.

Contributors must give their first and last names. Anonymous submissions will not be considered for publication.

All submissions must be sent to Flyer editor, Bruce VanWyngarden, at brucev@memphisflyer.com. (Only submissions sent to Bruce will be considered for publication.)

Flyer staff will read and vet submissions for print. All submissions (within reason) will be published on our website after the print edition is delivered.

Deadline for submissions is Wednesday, July 6. Story will publish on Thursday, July 14.

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News News Blog

TDOT Suspends Most Lane Closures for Independence Day Weekend

TDOT SmartWay camera

Construction activity close to I-40/I-240 and Sam Cooper Boulevard

Road construction will be suspended on Tennessee’s interstates and highways at midnight Thursday, according to the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT), to make way for those traveling for the Independence Day holiday weekend.

AAA estimates that more than 831,000 Tennesseans will travel over the holiday weekend, with over 740,000 of them traveling by automobile. TDOT says they want to offer those travelers “maximum roadway capacity.”

“Tennessee’s interstates and state routes will be especially busy during the July 4th holiday,” TDOT Commissioner John Schroer said in a statement. “We will be suspending lane closures for this holiday travel period to help travelers reach their destinations safely and without unnecessary delays.”

However, some drivers will still encounter some long-term lane closures on some road construction sites. Workers may be present on some construction sites and reduced speed zones will remain in effect for those areas. Speeding in work zones could bring a fine of $250-$500, court fees, and possibly higher insurance rates, According to TDOT.

TDOT suggests checking construction activity and traffic delays on the state’s SmartWay traffic cameras, which can be accessed at www.tnsmartway.com/traffic. Motorists can also dial 511 for travel information. 

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Music Music Blog

Elvis Guitarist Scotty Moore Dies

Scotty, Elvis and Bill

Scotty Moore has died. The influential Elvis Presley guitarist, and pillar of the early rock-and-roll sound was 84.

Moore was Elvis’ senior by a few years and a couple of years younger than bassist Bill Black. But, to his fellow musicians, he was known as, “the old man.”

In a field full of flighty creative types, Moore was famously reliable and, during his tenure as Elvis’ first manager, he kept photo albums filled with receipts the way other musicians collected photographs and souvenirs. It’s not surprising that “the old man” would move into a management position for Fernwood Records when Elvis got the G.I. Blues for real. 

If Moore was uncommonly reliable behind the scenes, the licks he coaxed out of his big Gibson hollow body electric guitars were reliably hot. His unique style blended the contemporary R&B of B.B. King with hillbilly blues sounds pioneered by artists like Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams. He whisked it all together with the jazzier electric lead stylings of Nashville cat Chet Atkins. If Moore didn’t really sound like any of his influences, it was close enough for rock-and-roll. 

Moore wasn’t serious all the time. He sometimes joked that he was in the only band in the world conducted by the gyrations of its lead singer’s backside. And for all his usual humbleness and modesty no album has ever been more perfectly named than his 1964 solo release, The Guitar that Changed the World.

Elvis may have been crowned the King of Rock and Roll, but according to most accounts his highness didn’t get in the way too much when Moore and Black were working out arrangements on recordings of songs like “Mystery Train,”That’s Alright,” and “Baby Let’s Play House.” 
Moore was inducted into the Rock-and-Roll Hall of Fame in 2000 and into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame in 2015. 

Elvis Guitarist Scotty Moore Dies

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

State Party Head to Local Dems: Settle the Carson Matter!

Mary Mancini

There are, as it turns out, more guaranteed circumstances than the two most often noted: death and taxes. Right up there with those two, in terms of inevitability, is the fact of discord in state and local Democratic Party ranks.

The latest instance of such is contained in a letter dispatched to members of the Shelby County Democratic executive committee from state Democratic Party chair Mary Mancini. The letter deals with the long-festering case of former local party chairman Bryan Carson, who was forced to resign by the county committee in February of 2015.

The Mancini letter, in essence, mandates the terms of a resolution of the matter by the Shelby County party and provides a short deadline for doing so.

The executive committee’s action in early 2015 came after the county party had been fined by the state Election Registry for its failure to comply with financial reporting deadlines and after Carson had been unable to account for the disposition several thousand dollars in party funds. At issue also was the fact that the chairman had apparently switched bank accounts for the party funds without express authorization by the executive committee and had made several withdrawals from ATM machines without providing receipts.

The amount of the financial discrepancy has never been determined with exact accuracy, but a preliminary audit performed by committee members at the time of Carson’s resignation estimated the unaccounted-for amount to be at least $6,000. Another ad hoc investigating group on the committee has since arrived at a higher estimate for the missing funds, in the vicinity of $25,000, but there has never been absolute agreement on the committee on the validity of either sum.

Through his attorney, Robert Spence, Carson admitted no wrongdoing but offered to settle the dispute by compensating the local party for the $6,000 sum at the rate of $100 a month. There is disagreement as to whether the full committee was ever apprised of the offer, which in any case ceased to be active.

Compounding the confusion was the fact that Carson’s elected successor as chairman, Randa Spears, as well as the local party’s first vice chair, Deidre Malone, had both abruptly resigned their positions in April, each giving the press of other obligations as the reason for their departure. The Spears-led party had meanwhile missed another financial reporting deadline for this year and had been assessed a fresh $10,000 fine by the Election Registry.

At its regularly scheduled monthly meeting on Thursday, June 2, the executive committee elected a new chairman, Sheriff’s Department Lt. Michael Pope, and acted on a motion by defeated chairmanship candidate Del Gill to prosecute Carson for embezzling the larger estimated sum. That motion passed, fairly handily, but there has been no formal action on the matter by the committee since.

All of that formed the background for the Mancini letter, dated Friday, June 24, to the Shelby County executive committee, care of chairman Pope.

Mancini’s letter begins with a citation of party bylaws and state codes that, she says, assign her “both a supervisory and organizational role over each of the county executive committees that operate throughout the state.” The letter follows with a cursory and none too indulgent recounting of the Shelby County’s ongoing problems (“many years of dysfunction,” as she puts it).

Mancini then comes to the nut of the matter, prescribing a settlement in accord with the dormant offer made to the party by Carson through his attorney:

“With a looming election that is shaping up to be of monumental importance for our state and our country, and for the health of your organization and executive committee, it is my responsibility to inform you that you must agree to the arrangement that Mr. Carson pay the amount of $6000 at $ 100 per month for 5 years and be released from any additional claims and that Chairman Pope must sign all the necessary paperwork to honor that agreement or you will no longer be in compliance with your charter issued by the Tennessee Democratic Party.”

Ironically, perhaps, Mancini had in recent months been sounded out by disgruntled party members wondering if voluntary surrender of the local party’s charter might be a feasible option. She had always answered no to such inquiries.

The deadline for “signing the necessary paperwork and forwarding it to Mr. Carson’s attorney is Friday, July 1, 2016,” Mancini concludes.

Some party members are questioning Mancini’s authority to mandate an or-else solution of this sort, while others are ready to acknowledge that she has the right. In any case, there is no pending meeting of the executive committee until the regularly scheduled one of Thursday, July 7 and thus no opportunity for a committee vote before Mancini’s deadline.

Chairman Pope, however, has indicated he is prepared to accept Mancini’s mandate, but his authority to do so without a committee authorization is questionable. To say the least, confusion persists.

Dynamic duo: During his first several congressional terms after being elected in 2006, 9th District U.S. Representative Steve Cohen cemented an alliance with venerable Detroit congressman John Conyers (D-Michigan), who then served as House Judiciary Committee chairman and regarded the Memphis liberal, a committee member, as something of a protégé and journeyed to Memphis on Cohen’s behalf.

When the Republicans captured control of the House after the election of 2010, the Conyers-Cohen tandem was not heard from with the same intensity, but it still existed. This week, after the landmark Supreme Court decision striking down the severe restrictions on abortion clinics imposed by a Texas state law, Conyers and Cohen reasserted themselves as a duo.

In a joint press release, Conyers, in his capacity as ranking member of the Judiciary Committee and Cohen, as ranking member of the Judiciary subcommittee on the Costitutional and Civil Justice, and Cohen, hailed the Court’s decision as a reaffirmation of “the fundamental cnstitgutional right of women to make their own decisdions about their health, their bodies, their families, and their lives.”

Said the two congressmen: “The Court correctly saw the Texas law for what it was, which was an attempt to severely restrict abortion rights and not one to protect women’s health” and that the Texas law “placed such substantial obstacles to a woman’s choice to have an abortion that its provisions were an “undue burden” on women’s constitutional right to choose….”

The Conyers-Cohen press release, one of several recently released by Cohen’s office, highlighted one of the incumbent congressman’s built-in advantages in generating media. Cohen has three opponents in the 2016 Democratic primary — Shelby County Commissioner Justin Ford, Larry Crim, and M. LaTroy Williams. Republican Wayne Alberson and independent Paul Cook will be on the November ballot.

More fallout: The Court’s decision on the invalidated Texas statute, incidentally, will almost surely have repercussions in Tennessee, where the General Assembly in recent years had enacted laws with provisions almost identical to those in the Texas law, which basically required doctors performing abortions to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals and imposed rigid standards on abortion clinics resembling those for hospitals performing outpatient surgery.

Laws passed by the Tennessee legislature in 2012 and 2014 had made similar specifications, which have been challenged in the U.S. District Court in Nashville.

Promises, promises: The fact that a freshman seat In the U.S. House of Representatives — to be one of 435 — is the equivalent of landing an entry-level job in the federal government, the continuation of which is entirely contingent on the good will (or passing whims) of voters back home, is often lost sight of in the heat of campaigning. Candidates want to suggest that they can, all by themselves, shift national policy, and who can blame them?

Along this line, it will be hard for any of his competitors to beat two claims made by 8th District Republican congressional candidate David Kustoff in a TV commercial that just hit the airwaves over the weekend. The ad proclaims, of course, that Kustoff, the former U.S. Attorney for Western Tennessee, has impeccable credentials as a conservative and will, for example, oppose Obamacare, but it makes two additional claims that are unprecedented in their magnitude.

In the checklist of promises with which the commercial concludes, one learns that Kustoff will (drumroll) “end illegal immigration” and (thunder and lightning) “destroy radical Islamic terrorism.” Not to vote to do these things, mind you, but — well, just to do them.
Er…wow! •

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Eli Parker Is Getting Married? Anniversary Screening to Benefit Memphis Gay And Lesbian Community Center

An early gem of the Memphis indie movement is getting a rare screening on its fifteenth anniversary. Fifteen years ago, Eli Parker Is Getting Married was a hit at both Outflix and the Indie Memphis film festivals. 

Jonathon Lamer and John Shoenflet in the opening scene of Eli Parker Is Getting Married?

The screening is a benefit for local LGBT causes. “I wanted to do something for the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center,” says Mark Jones, who wrote and produced the film. “After the Orlando shooting I thought, what can I do to help raise money here locally?” 

Jones says the idea for the film came from a trip to a wedding. “I wanted to make a coming out story,” the writer says. “I had been to a wedding earlier that year with some friends from school who were about the same age as the characters of the film…I just started writing. I wanted to make it a situation where the best man came out to the groom, and he has to deal with it right then and there. He’s handcuffed to the guy. He can’t say ‘I’ll talk to you later on.’ He has to deal with it that day.”

After a wild bachelor party, Eli Parker (Jonathon Lamer) and his friend Ronnie Smith (John Schoenfelt) awaken naked in a cotton field, unsure of how they got there. “The main character is like the Spencer Tracey character in Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner,” says Jones. “The Spencer Tracy character is a liberal guy in San Francisco. Our hero, Ely, is a somewhat liberal guy in Memphis, but it’s kind of a shock to have his best friend say he’s gay.”

To direct, Jones tapped Ryan Earl Parker, who today is the most sought-after cinematographer in Memphis. “I wrote the script and I went to Ryan, who was a student finishing up a degree at the University of Memphis. He and I had worked with Channel 10 for a few years, maybe four years or so. He kept saying, ‘Make it a short film,’ but finally, after the third or fourth time, he said ‘OK, I’ll direct it.’…He was incredible, the way he handled the actors and the entire set. It was great to work with him.”

Lamer and Schoenfelt are joined by some familiar Memphis actors, such as Kim Justis, Michael Gravois, G.B Shannon, Jim Elkner, and Kacky Walton. “I watched it last week for the first time in years,” says Jones. “It was like hanging out with an old friend. It was so much fun!”

Eli Parker Is Getting Married will screen at 7 PM tonight, June 28, at Studio On The Square. 

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson

Last week, Memphis lost one of its great players in the person of Wayne Jackson, the trumpet half of the Memphis Horns, at age 74. 

In addition to his rightfully famous work with Stax legends such as Otis Redding and Sam & Dave, Jackson and his partner Andrew Love (who passed away in 2012) were prolific session musicians who spread the gospel of Memphis music worldwide. Take, for example, this song, the theme to the 2008 James Bond film Quantum of Solace, where Jackson backed Alicia Keys and Jack White. 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson

Here’s Wayne playing with Neil Young in 2005. 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (2)

The Memphis Horns filled out the sound for Steve Winwood in this #1 smash that was inescapable in 1988. 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (3)

That same year, when U2 came to Memphis to record at Sun Studios for their Rattle and Hum album, they called Jackson and Love. 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (4)

What’s that you say? This list needs more Peter Gabriel? Wayne helped out on his biggest hit. 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (5)

Here’s Wayne and Andrew playing Late Night With David Letterman, accompanying Robert Cray. 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (7)

In 1977, they appeared on this number one hit…

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (8)

…and recorded this solo album: 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (6)

And all that without even touching the seminal work they did with Memphis artists like Al Green…

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (9)

…or Ann Peebles. 

Music Video Monday: Wayne Jackson (10)

So let us toast to the work of a Memphis legend, evidence of a life well lived.

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

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News News Blog

Holt Gives Away AR15s at ‘Hogfest’

Andy Holt

Participants in Rep. Andy Holt’s Hogfest & Turkey Shoot Saturday.

Tennessee Rep. Andy Holt’s controversial Hogfest & Turkey Shoot event on Saturday raised more than $16,000 “and not a single person was injured,” according to a new release issued Tuesday.

Holt’s event got national attention as he promised to give away two AR15 rifles. The promise came after a shooter using a similar assault rifle killed 49 in an Orlando night club. Holt said he “stuck to his guns” and gave away the rifles as he promised.

Here’s how Holt described the event:

“It was an incredible evening. At one point, we had more than 50 people waiting in line to register.

“We had folks coming from as far east as Johnson City and all the way west from Memphis. We raised more than $16,000, not a single person was injured, and there were probably more firearms there than there were people. It was a fantastic celebration of the 2nd Amendment, God, and country.”

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News News Blog

Campus Gun Carry Registration Begins at U of M

Registration began Tuesday for University of Memphis (U of M) employees to carry concealed handguns on campus and the university president offered new, detailed guidance to employees.

State lawmakers passed a law earlier this year that will allow full-time employees of the state’s public universities to carry concealed handgun on campus. The law takes effect Friday.

But employees wishing to carry guns on the U of M campus must first register with campus police and the process got underway Tuesday, according to university president David Rudd in a note to school employees.

Employees with valid handgun carry permits have to meet with campus police, fill out a registration form that states they’ve read the U of M policy. If campus police verify the employee’s employment status and the validity of their permit, they can begin to carry their handgun on the East Memphis campus.

But that privilege comes with a host of caveats. Employees must keep their handgun permits on them at all times. Full-time employees enrolled in a class at the U of M cannot carry a handgun on campus.

Handguns must be concealed at all times, they “cannot be visible to ordinary observation by a reasonable person, and must be kept in close proximity to the employee and under the employee’s exclusive and continuous control,” according to Tuesday’s statement from Rudd.

There are also many places on campus where qualified employees cannot carry a handgun. Here’s the list:

• stadiums, gymnasiums, and auditoriums during school-sponsored events
• meetings regarding employee or student disciplinary matters, to include any meeting in which an employee’s performance or conduct is being addressed
• meetings regarding any tenure issues
• offices where the primary services are medical or mental health services (e.g., Hudson Health Center, Counseling Center, Psychological Services Center)
• K-12 school buildings or grounds (e.g., Campus and Lipman schools)
• childcare centers (e.g., Child Development Center)
• any other location where state or federal law prohibits the carrying of a handgun

Another section of Tuesday’s note to employees notes that “carrying a handgun is a personal choice” and that an authorized employee who elects to carry is not acting in the course or scope of their employment at U of M when carrying or using a gun.

They are not entitled to workers’ compensation benefits for injuries arising from carrying or using the firearm. They are not immune to personal liability and any employee who violates university policy can be arrested and fired.

U of M campus police will hold voluntary training sessions for all employees, which will include firearm safety.

Check this week’s print edition of the Memphis Flyer for more on the guns-on-campus issue. 

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From My Seat Sports

Pat Summitt: 1952-2016

My wife was an all-state soccer player in Vermont. One of my daughters was recently named to the “Best of Preps” All-Metro softball team. My other daughter completed middle school in May having won no fewer than six county championships (three in soccer, three in softball). For two generations, this has seemed like the natural order of things for female athletes. When Pat Summitt coached her first basketball game at the University of Tennessee in 1974, it wasn’t natural, and there was no order.

Summitt died early Tuesday at the age of 64 after a painfully brief battle with Alzheimer’s disease (diagnosed in 2011). Arguably the most significant woman in college sports history, Summitt won more game (1,098) than any Division I coach, male or female. She led the Lady Vols to eight national championships, including a 1997-98 season in which Tennessee went 39-0. Summitt was named Sportswoman of the Year by Sports Illustrated in 2011 and was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Barack Obama the next year. Perhaps most impressive of all, over Summitt’s 38 years as Tennessee’s coach, every player who stayed with her program four years left UT with a degree.

My parents met at the University of Tennessee in the early 1960s and I was born in Knoxville (even before Summitt won her first game). I’ve got orange in my blood. While my parents were both only children, I’ve long considered a certain coach “Aunt Pat.” And 18 years ago, I came one appendectomy away from finally meeting her.

In late-April 1998, shortly after completing that undefeated season, Summitt came to Memphis on a book tour, promoting Reach for the Summitt, a motivational guide for achievement written by a farm girl from Clarksville, Tennessee, who could motivate with merely a few seconds of The Glare. So piercing, so physical, Summitt’s blue eyes delivered messages to her players that needed no supplemental verbiage. (I often wondered how a heavyweight champion would handle Coach Summitt in a pre-match stare down. Actually, I know who’d blink.) I made plans to get in line at what was then called Davis-Kidd Booksellers and finally shake the hand of Aunt Pat.

It wasn’t meant to be. Stabbing pain the morning of Coach Summitt’s visit led me to Methodist University Hospital where I ended up on a surgeon’s table right about the time the author began greeting her fans in east Memphis. When I awoke, though, my wife — that all-state soccer player, remember — had a signed copy of Summitt’s book waiting in my room. “To Frank and Sharon, Pat Summitt.” She had made it to the book signing and back to the hospital in time to greet her appendix-free husband with a gift for the ages. I like to envision Summitt giving Sharon The Glare when she learned of my wife’s double-duty that day.

My first daughter arrived in 1999. Among Sofia’s first major sporting events — before her first birthday — was a 2000 NCAA tournament game at the Pyramid, a Lady Vols win over Virginia. (Tennessee fell short that March in its attempt to win four straight NCAA titles.) That was the closest Sofia came to meeting Pat Summitt. The best we can do now is a pilgrimage to the larger-than-life-sized statue now standing on the UT campus, a trip we’ll make soon.

Every Lady Vols media guide includes “Coach Summitt’s Definite Dozen,” instructions not just for being a championship-caliber basketball player, but a human being capable of making an impact on others. Among them:

• Develop and demonstrate loyalty.

• Discipline yourself so no one else has to.

• Make hard work your passion.

• Put the team before yourself.

• Change is a must.

• Handle success like you handle failure.

Not long after I became a father, I wrote Aunt Pat a letter, emphasizing how I intended to incorporate many of her standards in raising my own daughter (soon enough, two daughters). She replied with the signed photo you see here (two national championships still in her future). My daughters didn’t turn into basketball players, and they’ll never feel The Glare personally. But rest assured, Pat Summitt has influenced them. They’re athletes, you see. Young women practicing daily perhaps the most valuable of Summitt’s “Definite Dozen”: Be a competitor.

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News News Blog

Crosstown Concourse Apartments Now Available for Rent

As of Tuesday morning, 165 apartments inside the revitalized Crosstown Concourse building are available for lease.

The apartments have been named Parcels at Concourse as an homage to the building’s former use as a Sears warehouse and shipping center. In the building’s Sears Crosstown headquarters days, more than 400,000 square feet of the upper floors housed thousands of products that were packaged and shipped to customers.

Four different floor plans are available — the Crafton (a 540-740 square foot studio), the Kismet (a 615-950 square foot one-bedroom), the Americus (a 950-1,465 square foot two-bedroom), and the Greenview (a 1,900 square foot three-bedroom). All of the floor plans boast massive windows overlooking Crosstown and lots of natural light. Prices begin at $854 for a studio and top out at $2,484 for the largest 3-bedroom. Some of the apartments will be ready by January or February. 

Residents will have access to restaurants (The Kitchen Next Door has already signed a lease), retail, art galleries, performance spaces, and the Church Health Center’s fitness and wellness centers (residents get a free fitness membership), which all be located on the lower floors of the building.

They’ll also share space in the building with Crosstown Arts, Memphis Teacher Residency, Methodist LeBonheur Healthcare, City Leadership, Christian Brothers University, and a number of other health, arts, and education organizations to be located inside the building. If all goes as planned, there may also be a public high school located inside the building. 

To inquire about leasing, visit the Parcels website, call 901-435-7796, or visit the leasing office at 430 N. Cleveland.