Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Schweinehaus Changes Focus to Barbecue


Schweinehaus
is now Schweinehaus BBQ.

The changeover in menu from German-fare to full-on barbecue began two weeks ago, says owner David Walker.

“German food was a tough sell,” Walker says. “And to be honest, it wasn’t a passion of mine. Barbecue is.”

For a more barbecue ambience, Walker says they’re bringing in neon signs, maybe some decorative pigs. But the place will still be a German beer hall. “It fits pretty well, believe or not,” he says.

As for the menu, Walker says Sweinehaus’ ribs “stack up to some of the best in the city.” They offer pulled pork and chicken, brisket, and smoked turkey breasts. German holdovers include the pretzels and the chicken schnitzel.

Categories
News News Blog

Photos from Memphis Flyer Crafts & Drafts (Slideshow)

Don Perry

Check out these snaps from Don Perry, who covered Memphis Flyer’s second annual Crafts & Drafts Festival! The event featured homemade crafts from local artists, plenty of beer to go around, and delicious grub from the best food trucks around! If you missed out, we hope you can join us next year!

This event helped benefit Crosstown Arts, and a special thanks to our sponsor: Atlas Health

[slideshow-1]

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News News Blog

Two Tennessee Residents Indicted for Conspiracy to Defraud United States

A federal grand jury has indicted two Tennessee residents for conspiring to defraud the United Sates as well as failing to account for and pay over employment tax.

Mark and Jayton Stinson were arrested Tuesday. The Stinsons operated a temporary staffing company that aided businesses in the state and elsewhere from 2005 to 2015, according to the indictment. Within their standard contract, the company was responsible for withholding employment tax from its employees’ wages and paying over the amounts withheld to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

The Stinsons allegedly failed to pay more than $2.8 million in employment tax to the IRS. They also failed to timely file employment tax returns and filed false employment tax returns. Despite providing the same business to essentially the same customers for years, the indictment alleges that they restructured the company and changed its name numerous times after accumulating employment tax liabilities.

The indictment also alleges that the Stinsons conspired to impede IRS collection efforts of the company’s payroll tax liabilities. They allegedly falsely represented to the IRS their control of the company and their knowledge of their responsibility to truthfully account for and pay over the employment taxes. The Stinsons allegedly placed their company in the names of nominees who did not have control over the operations, and set up payment arrangements intended to impede an IRS levy placed on their customer payments.

Further more, The Stinsons allegedly use withheld funds to pay for personal expenses such as a Mercedes-Benz, a Cadillac Escalade, mortgage payments, and private school tuition for their children.

Both men were charged with one count of conspiring to defraud the United States and five counts of failing to truthfully account for and pay over payroll taxes. Mark Stinson was also charged with five counts of filing false tax returns, one count of theft of government funds, and one count of aggravated identity theft.

If convicted, the Stinsons will face a statutory maximum sentence of five years in prison for the conspiracy count and for each count of failure to pay over employment taxes. Mark Stinson will also face a statutory minimum sentence of three years in prison for each false return count, 10 years in prison for theft of government funds, and a mandatory sentence of two years in prison for aggravated identity theft charge, which will be in addition to any other imprisonment term he receives. Both defendants also face a period of supervised release and monetary penalties.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Little Men

Little Men proves Ira Sachs directs actors better than almost anyone else working in film today. Sachs doesn’t rehearse his actors before they come onto the set, but that doesn’t imply a lack of preparation on his part. The first step in getting career-best performances from people like John Lithgow and Alfred Molina is a spot-on instinct for casting. For example, when preparing for 2014’s Love Is Strange, he discovered that Lithgow and Molina were old friends, and he knew that even though both actors are straight, they would be perfect to play the long-committed gay couple whose lives are thrown into turmoil when they are finally able to marry. Little Men, which finishes a trilogy of Sachs films about male relationships that began with 2012’s Keep the Lights On, starts off with a strong foundation of perfect casting from top to bottom. The lead duo are Theo Taplitz as Jake Jardine, the shy, 13-year-old whose parents’ move from Manhattan begins the story; and Michael Barbieri as Tony Calvelli, the outgoing, first-generation Brooklynite who immediately recognizes a kindred spirit.

Jake’s dad Brian is played by Greg Kinnear, from whom Sachs wrings an unexpected depth of emotion. Brian is an actor whose father Max dies, leaving him and his sister Audrey (Talia Balsam) the building in Brooklyn where he lived. The building comes with a spacious apartment and a single tenant, a dress store owned by Leonor Calvelli (Paulina García). When Max bought the house, his Brooklyn neighborhood was quiet, working class, and not very desirable. By the time the Jardine family moves in, it’s in the midst of a real estate boom, pushing the average rents on the street five times higher than what Max was charging Leonor.

Sachs has been recognized as perhaps the greatest queer filmmaker of his generation, but there has always been an underlying class consciousness in his work. Little Men brings those concerns to the forefront. Jake and Michael quickly become best friends, but there’s no suggestion of romantic attraction between the two teens. Tony clearly likes girls, and one of his best scenes involves his getting his first taste of rejection when the girl he’s crushing on informs him she’s into older guys. After giving a look like he’s been hit in the stomach with a sledgehammer, Tony gathers himself up and says, “Thank you for your honesty”—which, not coincidentally, was the title of the retrospective series New York’s Museum of Modern Art ran in Sachs’ honor this summer.

Greg Kinnear (left) and Talia Balsam deliver acting gold in Ira Sachs’ Little Men.

Jake and Tony bring out the best in each other. Jake begins the film avoiding eye contact with his public school classmates and ends with a developed set of social skills. Tony takes Jake’s commitment to his drawings and discipline in schoolwork, and the aspiring actor flourishes, as seen in a blistering scene in an acting class run by Mauricio Bustamante. But as the two only children grow closer, raw economics conspire to pull them apart. Brian’s acting career is going nowhere fast, and his sister Audrey insists on raising Leonor’s rent to levels the store can’t sustain. Jake and Tony’s doomed friendship becomes a metaphor for the vanishing multiethnic, economically varied community in Brooklyn that inspired Jane Jacobs’ The Death and Life of Great American Cities.

Sachs’ and co-writer Mauricio Zacharias’ ability to imbue a simple story about a couple of tween boys bonding over video games with such depth of subtext is breathtaking. Even the way they get into and out of scenes brings unexpected joy. Sachs and cinematographer Óscar Durán’s camera is always in exactly the right place, never sacrificing clarity even as the framing and staging veers wildly unconventional.

Sachs says Little Men was inspired in part by his experiences as a longtime member of the Memphis Children’s Theatre, and it’s clear that his actors are at the center of everything he does. García is absolutely brilliant as Leonor, a tough but kind woman fighting for her livelihood while trying to do what’s best for her son. Molina makes a cameo as Leonor’s lawyer, and even his minor turn is brilliant. Kinnear delivers the sneakiest performance of the film, surrounded by loving family, but also alone, uncertain about his action, and ultimately denied any sort of lasting satisfaction. It may not rise to the emotional highs of Love Is Strange, but Little Men is a beautiful, complex work that will stay with you long after the credits roll.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Brandan Wright undergoes ankle surgery, no timetable for return

The Grizzlies have issued a medical update on Grizzlies.com about backup big man Brandan Wright, who has missed the entire regular season so far with an ankle injury. From the post on the Grizzlies.com site:

Wright underwent a successful arthroscopic debridement of his left ankle Tuesday afternoon after non-surgical interventions failed to eliminate his posterior tibialis tendinopathy.

There is not yet a timetable for Wright’s return.

Wright’s tenure in Memphis has been snakebit from the beginning. He missed a great deal of tome last season before having a knee surgery, and it was never clear why that surgery was so delayed. From there, he got back on the court only to have Ronnie Price run into his knee and sprain his MCL.

Wright played a very heavy minute load in preseason because of other injuries on the roster, and then hurt his ankle pretty immediately. One hopes he can get back to basketball in a matter of weeks rather than months, but the track record so far is not one that inspires a lot of optimism.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Report: Grizzlies among teams no longer staying in Trump hotels

Marc Stein and Zach Lowe of ESPN reported late last night that the Grizzlies are among three NBA teams—along with the Milwaukee Bucks and the Dallas Mavericks—who will no longer be staying in Trump hotels in New York City and Chicago.

From the report:

Sources told ESPN.com that the Milwaukee Bucks, Memphis Grizzlies and Dallas Mavericks have moved away from Trump hotels in New York City and Chicago, which bear Donald Trump’s name through a licensing agreement.

The Grizzlies and Mavericks, sources say, have stayed at the Trump SoHo in the past but opted during the offseason to book new New York hotels for this season.

It’s not hard to see why this change was made; in the run-up to the election several players were very outspoken in a Commercial Appeal tidbit about the election, and it’s not hard to imagine that given the divisiveness of this campaign season, team officials recognized well in advance that players would be less than enthusiastic about staying in Trump-branded properties.

I reached out to several folks with the team for comment but did not get confirmation.

The original ESPN report is here.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Bruno Mars Announces Show at FedEx Forum

Bruno Mars’ world tour stops in Memphis on September 17th.

Grammy award winner Bruno Mars has announced a show at Fed Ex Forum. The show will take place on Saturday, September 17th, and will be the first Memphis gig for Bruno Mars since 2014.

Bruno Mars has a new album out on Friday, but Memphian’s will remember when Mars cut “Uptown Funk” at Royal Studios with Mark Ronson, bringing Memphis it’s first number one record in over 40 years.

Tickets for the show go on sale this Monday through Ticketmaster. Check out the video for “Uptown Funk” below.

Bruno Mars Announces Show at FedEx Forum

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Three Thoughts on Memphis Tiger Football

• Memphis athletic director Tom Bowen requested a “formal review of several plays” from the USF loss last Saturday (as described in a U of M press release). The pass-interference non-call on the Tigers’ final offensive play — Bulls cornerback Deatrick Nichols had Anthony Miller’s right arm like a father escorting his daughter down the aisle — warrants a review. It was egregious. And it cost the Tigers an opportunity to tie and possibly (with a two-point conversion) win the game.

Larry Kuzniewski

Riley Ferguson

But here’s the thing: football. There are so many missed calls — both made incorrectly and not made at all — every Saturday, every Sunday, every day 22 men collide 150 times in three hours. Keeping order is the equivalent of tracking a single sock in a washing machine. Missed calls — game-changing at times — are part of the ingredients we accept when served a dish of American football. There’s no conspiracy against your favorite team. The Tigers have benefited (and will benefit) from missed calls. Last Saturday’s loss was simply an opponent’s “turn” with the advantage in this department. Honestly, why not create a stat, like third-down conversions: How many questionable calls in each team’s favor? It would have been fun to see the Tigers attempt a two-point conversion to win last week’s game. Quinton Flowers from the 25-yard line in overtime? Not so much.

• In their six wins, the Tigers have allowed an average of 335.5 yards. In their four losses, 607.7. In only one of its wins has the U of M given up more than 350 yards (Temple put up 531). There’s an obvious component weighing these figures: the quality of the Tigers’ opponents. Ole Miss, Navy, Tulsa, and USF are supremely more talented, particularly on offense, than the likes of Kansas, Bowling Green, and Tulane. Nonetheless an average of more than 600 yards allowed in Tiger defeats. Sorry for the broken record in this space, but the program must find more speed and strength on the defensive side of things to compete for an AAC championship. Three of the top four tackle totals against USF were by Memphis defensive backs (Jonathan Cook, Chris Morley, and Arthur Maulet). That’s not conducive to stopping drives.


• It feels strange typing this, but Friday’s game in Cincinnati should be a gimme for Memphis. These aren’t the Bearcats of yesteryear (or last year). Next-to-last in the AAC in scoring (20.6 points per game), seventh in total defense (one slot behind Memphis), losers of five of their last six games. In its last three losses, Cincinnati has scored a total of 19 points against Temple, BYU, and UCF. Common opponents? The Bearcats were blown out by USF (45-20) and lost to Temple (34-13). It still feels like a rivalry game, these two programs having clashed as members of Conference USA and before that, the Metro. Memphis should treat the game with the importance it holds: A victory would clinch a third consecutive winning season.

Categories
News News Blog

Calling All White Folks

Micaela Watts

Tonya Reece, an organizer with SURJ facilitates a conversation with meeting attendees on what various forms of direct action against racism could look like. More than 150 were in attendance for SURJ’s largest meeting yet.

Last night, roughly 150 citizens gathered in the main sanctuary of First Congregational Church on Cooper to discuss how they, as white people, would streamline their collective outrage at the national and local trends of discrimination against people of color into action.

SURJ, or Showing Up for Racial Justice, is a national organization with a newly formed Memphis chapter. Their aim is simple, to take the burden of discussing complex issues around white supremacy off of black people. In doing so, they hope to facilitate conversation which ideally will result in unified political actions.

“We have a lot of people here who already have a pretty deep analysis around anti-racism already, but we absolutely welcome people who are brand new, and have a lot of questions,” said Allison Glass, an organizer with SURJ. “For people who have questions, we want to “call them in”, not “call them out”.

According to Glass, it’s a great thing when white people have questions about white supremacy and how to combat the overt and covert forms it manifests in. However, turning the the nearest black person you know for explanation, “well, that can be extremely hurtful. They have to do deal with that reality every day.”

The stated national goal of SURJ is to engage 3.5% of white people in racial justice. This can take on many different forms such as fundraising for black-lead racial justice organizations like Black Lives Matter.

“One of our main goals with SURJ, is to center black-lead anti-racist movements,” explained glass.

In the wake of Trump’s elections, hate crimes have seen a dramatic rise. Some experts have even said the numbers of reported hate crimes are surpassing those that took place in the days following 9/11.

“What we’ve seen in response since the election, shows that this work is needed now more than ever.”

SURJ will have a meeting at 6:00 p.m. tomorrow at 902 S. Cooper to discuss upcoming direct actions against racial violence.

Categories
News News Blog

Corrections Center Deputy Director Resigns Amid Outrage Over Racist Facebook Posts

David Barber

David Barber, Deputy Director of the Shelby County Corrections Center, resigned today amid outrage over a series of racist posts to social media including a Facebook status claiming the Ku Klux Klan was more American that President Obama.

Text from the official announcement:

Corrections Center Deputy Director Resigns After Facebook Post November 15, 2016 David Barber, Deputy Director of the Shelby County Corrections Center, resigned today after derogatory comments were posted on his personal Facebook account. Although Barber’s comments were personal to his Facebook page, his occupation at the Shelby County Corrections Center was evident to anyone who accessed the page. After discussing the offensive nature of the comments and the impact they would have on the corrections center, he offered to resign and it was accepted by Corrections Director William Gupton. “Anyone in a leadership position at Shelby County Government is held at a high standard of behavior, both on and off the job,” said Shelby County Mayor Mark H. Luttrell, Jr. Barber had been with the corrections center for 17 years. Before assuming his position as Deputy Director two years ago, he was the center’s Administrator of Finance.”