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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Love Cat Videos? Kedi Is The Movie For You

As you’re probably aware, the internet is made of cats.

A still from Edward Valibus’ ‘Cat/Yoga’.

And yet, aside from a pair disastrous vehicles for Sandy Duncan and Hallie Berry, cats are sadly underrepresented in feature films. That is about to change.

Tonight at the Malco Ridgeway, Indie Memphis is presenting Kedi, an epic documentary about seven feral cats who live in Istanbul. If you’ve ever had the misfortune to sit through Lil Bub & Friendz, you might not feel that a feature length cat documentary is in your best interest. Be assured, this is not like that. Indie Wire called Kedi “The Citizen Kane of the cat genre.” Behold, this fancy feast of a trailer.

Kedi – Official U.S. Trailer – Oscilloscope Laboratories from Termite Films on Vimeo.

Love Cat Videos? Kedi Is The Movie For You

Preceeding Kedi is a short film by Memphis filmmaker and noted cat enthusiast Edward Valibus. Shot by Valibus and Kevin Brooks at Crosstown Arts, “Cat/Yoga” pretty much does what it says on the label. The first show have already sold out, but a second 9 PM show has been added, and you can purchase tickets at the Indie Memphis website.

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News News Blog

Celebration Scheduled to Kick off ‘Great Streets’ Downtown

Bike/Ped Memphis

Peabody Place

The Downtown Memphis Commission is sponsoring a party tonight at 5:00 to celebrate the kick off of the Great Streets Pilot project, which created a new space for bikers and pedestrians Downtown.


Over the past few weeks, a handful of Downtown streets, including parts of Beale and Front Street received a facelift, as Public Works crews repaved and restriped the streets, and volunteers decorated portions with art, plants, and furniture.




The Great Streets Pilot project, an effort of the City’s Division of Engineering and the UrbanArt Commission, is a combination of new protected east-west bike lanes, pedestrian spaces, outdoor eating area, and games.

Tonight near the intersection of Main Street and Peabody Place, there will be live music, Sprock n’ Roll Party Bike rides, MEMPops, games, and a photo booth.

The project is piloted for one year and is designed to connect with proposed bike lanes to come in the fall on Riverside Drive and Dr. MLK Jr. Avenue.

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Book Features Books

Frank Murtaugh’s Trey’s Company

I remember the exhilaration that came with the snap of the match head on the striking surface and the first whiff of sulfur. I remember the thrill as the flame attached itself to a small pile of leaves and twigs and then spread to the larger pieces of kindling my friends and I had pulled from the very clubhouse we sat in. The smoke was mesmerizing, and then it seemed too much. And then there was the shouting of my mother from the back door and her voice coming closer. The look on her face is probably what I remember most and the clenching of my stomach later that night when she made me recount what I’d done to my father.

We’ve all done it — played with fire — or something equally thrilling and frightening. First kiss. First drink. First puff. Rites of passage. It’s the dawning of the unknown, a corner turned abruptly from childhood to adulthood.

It’s a moment in time, this transition, and it’s one captured in Frank Murtaugh’s debut novel Trey’s Company from Jackson, Mississippi-based publisher Sartoris Literary Group.

Trey Milligan is 13 years old in the summer of 1982, three months that will change him and his world irrevocably. He and his little sister Libby have a tradition of the season spent with their widowed grandmother outside Cleveland, Tennessee, far from their parents in California. The Milligans have traveled around; the parents, who remain distant and unseen throughout the story, are professional academics. But Trey feels most at home among the gently rolling hills of his grandmother’s neighborhood with its meandering creek, adjacent trailer park, and driveway basketball hoops.

It’s the home of some of his dearest friends as well — Devon, Larry, Arline, and Wendy. Wendy. We all have that someone in our lives who lit a fire in our hearts for the first time and changed who we are for good, and for young Trey Milligan, that someone is Wendy.

To understand Frank Murtaugh, the man, is to know that he moves through his days with his very own Holy Trinity: family, baseball, KISS. And Murtaugh the novelist clearly had this trinity at his elbow as he wrote Trey’s Company. The warm nostalgia of family and a ballgame on the television are folded into every chapter; the ideals of Americana, just a neighboring porch away in Gran’s neighborhood.

Baseball is a constant with Trey — his team, as is his creator’s, is the St. Louis Cardinals — and he collects rookie cards and spends hours pitching a rubber ball to himself off the backyard deck (a baseball stadium of his own imagining). He and Libby visit Gran’s sister in her retirement home, the very idea a nightmare for some kids, but the Milligan siblings adore all contact with family, even when that family is a racist uncle who has a way with horses.

So there is Murtaugh’s trinity save for KISS. While the theatrical hard-rock quartet doesn’t make an appearance in the novel, the shadowy evil their shows portend does as the author rains hellfire (and actual fire) down upon his characters. The summer of 1982 is the axis upon which life turns, and it is through loss and fear and death that Murtaugh evokes the change of season for Trey, his Everyboy. Heaped upon a first kiss, a first date, and the milestone of glimpsing an older woman in bra and panties, there is the unknowable loss of someone close and a brush with tragedy and the law that shakes this 13-year-old to the core.

In the end, we wish Trey’s childhood could go on indefinitely, just as we wish all childhood might. If not an actual stunting of age, then the innocence that accompanies those magical years. A time when we might not know of death so close, of racist uncles, of fear and pedophiles and the heat from the fire of adulthood.

If that Peter Pan wish can’t come true, then we’ll wish to travel those rolling neighborhood streets with friends who will help see us through. “Choose the people you let in, Trey,” Geraldine, the ice cream lady and neighborhood sage, says. “Choose them very carefully. They’ll help you pave your path.”

Categories
News News Blog

Lyft: Memphis Home to Generous Tippers

Lyft

Lyft said Memphis is home to some of country’s most generous tippers.

Memphis ranked 9th nationally in the percentage of Lyft rides that end with a tip. The ride sharing company operates in more than 350 communities across the country.

Here’s how Memphis stacked up in the nation’s top 10:

Salt Lake City, UT
Lincoln, NE
Portland, OR
Omaha, NE
Colorado Springs, CO
Louisville, KY
Nashville, TN
Denver, CO
Memphis, TN
Minneapolis, MN

So far this year, Lyft drivers have collected more than $250 million in tips. More than $50 million of those tips were generated in the last two and a half months, the company said.

Lyft drivers earned a total of $1.6 billion in 2016, according to the company.

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News News Blog

MemphisFlyer.com to require Facebook or Google account for comments

Sergey Zolkin, Unsplash

Beginning on Wednesday, June 28, the Flyer will only accept story comments from registered Facebook or Google accounts.

Until now, we’ve allowed people to register with their own name, anonymously, semi-anonymously, and even not to register at all to make comments. It was a system that led to some great and spirited conversations, but unfortunately it also allowed tons of spam, hateful and racist comments every day, posters with multiple sock-puppet accounts, and personal attacks on Flyer staffers and other commenters. Monitoring and deleting reader comments was a constant hassle, even (and especially) on weekends, and, frankly, it was a waste of our time and energy. We simply aren’t staffed to monitor and referee MemphisFlyer.com 24/7.

We recognize that some of our long-time commenters have posted under pseudonyms in order to avoid consequences from employers and/or simply from a desire to keep their identity secret, for whatever reason. Many of these folks have contributed greatly to the success of the site. We are sorry to lose you, if we must.

We’re joining what’s become the norm for most news organizations around the country. We realize that some folks will still create fake social media accounts and try to game the system, but we intend to keep diligently monitoring the site and doing our best to keep comments and conversations civil and transparent.

Bruce VanWyngarden, editor

Categories
News News Blog

Arkansas Will Accept Marijuana Applications Friday

Patients, growers, and prospective dispensary owners can apply Friday to state officials in Arkansas to join the state’s brand new medical marijuana program.

Arkansas voters approved medical marijuana in the state last year. Since then the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission (AMMC), under the state’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Administration, was established to organize the program and work out its details.

Arkansas officials said they expect 20,000 to 40,000 patients to apply for a medical marijuana registration card. Those cards will cost $50 so even if 30,000 apply, the registration fee will cover the $1.5 million officials have said it will cost to run the marijuana program there.

The AMMC will also begin accepting applications Friday for “cultivation” facilities, or marijuana grow operations. The AMMC will issue only five licenses but can also issue less than that number if “an insufficient number of qualified applicants” meet the September 18 application deadline.

Also, the commission will start to accept applications for 32 dispensaries across the state. The commission carved up the state in eight geography zones and each zone will get four dispensaries. The zone closest to Memphis stretched from the Missouri boot heel to Crittenden County, home to West Memphis.

Arkansans will get their marijuana registration cards as soon as dispensaries are approved, established, and ready to sell. State officials said that could be early 2018.

Not all cities are required to have medical marijuana dispensaries, though. The law passed by voters allows cities to opt out. So far, only Hot Springs and Siloam Springs have chosen bans (but those bans are only a few months long).

Of course, the law does not give marijuana patients carte blanche to smoke just anywhere. According to the law, marijuana cannot be consumed on a school bus, on the grounds of any preschool or primary or secondary school, in a motor vehicle, any government building, health care facility, and more.

Also, patients will only receive a medical marijuana registration card if they are an Arkansas resident, of course, and can prove they have cancer, glaucoma, HIV, Hepatitis C, lateral sclerosis, Tourette’s syndrome, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, PTSD, severe arthritis, fibromyalgia, Alzheimer’s disease, cachexia, peripheral neuropathy, or chronic pain.

Business is slowly beginning to grow around the new program. Some websites, like weedmaps.com and ardispensaries.com are waiting to populate their maps to help patients find dispensaries in the Natural State.

Another company, The Herbal Compliance Co., is now trying to attract investors with a “golden opportunity” that awaits working in the “cannabis compliance” space.

The Horseshoe Lake-based company is holding a meeting today to attract those investors in hopes of raising between $100,000 and $1 million. The minimum buy-in is $100.

That money will start the business that aims to help marijuana companies navigate the waters between state law and federal law.

Arkansas Will Accept Marijuana Applications Friday

Categories
News News Blog

President Trump Approves Federal Assistance in Tennessee for Memorial Weekend Storm Recovery

President Donald Trump approved a major disaster declaration for the State of Tennessee in response to the Memorial weekend storms that parts of Shelby County, along with others are still recovering from.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) announced that federal assistance will be available to supplement state and local storm-recovery efforts in 12 Tennessee counties, including Shelby County.

Local government officials, as well as certain private nonprofit organizations may apply for reimbursement for emergency work or repair resulting from the storm.

Funding will also be available for statewide hazard-mitigating measures.

However, FEMA has not made a decision concerning Gov. Bill Haslam’s request of additional individual assistance for Shelby County residents.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Chris Milam

It’s just another gig for Music Video Monday.

There are lots of songs about life on the road. But when it’s the Rolling Stones or Bob Seger singing about the hardships of the tour, it falls a little flat. Those songs are more like humblebrags than honest laments. But the video for Chris Milam’s “Kids These Days”, shot by Andrew Trent Fleming, and co-directed by Milam and MVM frequent flyer Ben Siler, rings true to the struggles of the small timer trying to break in to the business. But it’s not all grim grind—there are little moments of magic that keep Milam going. It’s those evocative mood swings that make this video work so well.

Music Video Monday: Chris Milam

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

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

Now open: Ono Poke and Agavos Cocina and Tequila

Tinawat Klaimongkol-Gai likes being a foodie ambassador in Memphis.

He was the first to offer a selection of ramen in Memphis at Skewer, which was near the Clark Tower.

When he found himself without a job after Skewer closed, he did a little traveling. What he noticed was a phenomenon in the form of fresh fish cubed and served over rice in bowls.

“Poke is everywhere now,” Klaimongkol, or Gai, as he is called, says. “It’s in all the big cities — New York, Chicago, L.A., Austin. But not here.”

Now there is, thanks to ambassador Gai.

In mid-June, Gai opened Ono Poke at 3145 Poplar across from East High school.

Poke is a fish salad that originated in Hawaii before Hawaii was a state and has become popular among the surfing crowd as a protein-laden pick-me-up between surf sessions.

“A lot of different kinds of Asian people lived in Hawaii long before World War II, including Japanese, Filipino, and they all combine their food into unique dishes,” Gai says.

Poke (fresh fish salad) at Ono Poke

Gai’s menu works mostly in two forms — house bowls and build-your-own.

The house bowls include such concoctions as the Pele Bowl, the Big Wave, and the Buddha Bowl.

The Pele comes with tuna and crab stick, jicama, edamame, cucumber, jalapeño, carrot, and spicy Pele sauce. The Big Wave serves up salmon and crab stick, fresh greens, corn, seaweed salad, pineapple, tomato, and Yuzu Delight sauce — a sort of Japanese citrus sauce. And the Buddha Bowl is for all the vegetarians out there (holla!), with tofu, fresh greens, edamame, broccoli, tomato, jicama, and wasabi sauce.

All of his sauces are homemade, and all dishes come on either white or brown rice, buckwheat noodle, greens, or a mixture of two. All bowls come with a choice of toppings, including seaweed, sesame seed, cilantro, kimchi, onion, radish, and others.

So far, so good for Ono Poke.

“Everybody is enjoying trying all the different kinds,” Gai says. “The menu is not fixed. It will be flexible according to what’s in season and what I can get my hands on.

“I like new things, and I like Memphis,” he added.

Ono Poke, 3145 Poplar, (901) 618-2955. Hours are Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Website coming soon.

You remember those enchiladas at El Puerto — grilled chicken topped with cheese sauce and green sauce and sour cream?

Well, El Puerto might have closed (due to Cookout’s buying the building), but the owners Esthela and Alex Rojas haven’t gone anywhere. Well, actually they went about a mile northeast into the old Republic Coffee building at Walnut Grove and Tillman.

The Rojas are the couple, along with Esthela’s brother and sister-in-law Cesar and Margaret Villalpando, behind the new restaurant and tequila bar Agavos Cocina and Tequila.

“We had been looking at opening another restaurant,” Esthela says. “We were going to try to do both restaurants, but when Cookout bought the building, we just decided to close and make this a different concept.”

The concept is to offer homemade dishes using their grandmothers’ recipes served in an unexpected and very pleasant presentation.

“It’s a little more fine dining, a little more upscale,” Alex says.

So far, their No. 1 seller is the Tequila Shrimp — six jumbo shrimp served with a special tequila lime sauce along with a side and rice, lettuce, pico de gallo, and sour cream ($14.50).

They also fix a lot of hamburgers, the Agavoburger to be more precise — ground beef mixed with chorizo, served with onions, fried jalapeño, bacon, and chipotle mayo ($9.50).

They have quite the selection of tequilas and margaritas. Depending on how much you want to spend, you can sip on a 1942 Don Julio or Herradura Anejo or just a regular silver tequila along with just about everything in between, with close to three-dozen types of specialty tequilas to choose from.

And their menu boasts about 10 different signature margaritas, including the most popular choice of mango.

The Rojas and the Villalpandos will be adding more items to the menu soon, including those enchiladas we were just talking about, and pretty soon you can expect to see karaoke on the calendar as well as a Latino night with DJ Moi.

But don’t expect to recognize the place. They changed it up quite dramatically from its previous incarnation with a curved wooden bar reminiscent of tequila barrels, painted walls, and colorful decorations evoking the colors of Mexico — “red for the harvest, blue for agavo, and green for when the plant is growing,” says Esthela — as well as a beautiful mural of a blue agavos plantation on the north wall.

“We use fresh ingredients every day,” Margaret says. “All of our food is homemade using our grandma’s recipe.”

Agavos Cocina and Tequila, 2924 Walnut Grove, (901) 433-9345. facebook.com/agavoscocinaandtequila. Hours are Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

Categories
News News Blog

Mayor: Greensward Deal Is a ‘Win-Win-Win’

Brandon Dill

Designers with Memphis-based Powers Hill Design could officially kick off their work this week to create a new main parking lot for the Memphis Zoo, a move that will eventually end parking on the Overton Park Greensward.

The Memphis City Council quietly accepted funds for the project from the Overton Park Conservancy (OPC) on Tuesday. The vote came with no debate on what was once the most controversial issue at Memphis City Hall.

OPC officials were ready to deliver the funds to the city more than two months ago. But zoo officials said OPC did not have the money to actually build the project and threatened to pull out of the entire agreement if OPC could not get the money.

The council gave the OPC two months to raise $1 million, which it did through an online campaign that went national, several local fundraisers, and some big-money matching grants from local philanthropists and foundations.

With that money in hand, the OPC went back to council this week to give it the money for the design portion of the project.

Here’s what OPC communications director Melissa McMasters said of the situation:

“We were thrilled to be able to demonstrate the community’s commitment to protecting the park, and we’re eager to set in motion a solution to the Greensward parking problem. Now the design team can get to work and develop concepts, and we look forward to getting our neighbors’ feedback during the public engagement process.

It’s great to feel like we can finally get down to the business of returning parkland to the community!”

In his Weekly Update, Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland said the compromise deal is a “win-win-win.”

“This week’s news brings us closer to the realization of a solution I proposed last year, which accomplishes three things: permanently ends Greensward parking, allows our great zoo to continue to thrive, and uses no city tax dollars, leaving them to be dedicated to core services.

It’s a win-win-win, proving the worth of compromise to permanently settle an issue that has dragged on for some three decades.”