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Memphis Podcasts Are Finding Their Tribes

Podcasts are having a moment. Well, they’ve been having a moment. And, these days, it seems everyone has one.  

Shaq has a podcast. Jay and Silent Bob have one. Snoop Dogg has one.

Paula Deen (remember her?) has one. Neil deGrasse Tyson has one. So do Goldman Sachs, GE, Netflix, and eBay. 

Right there on your phone or laptop or car radio you can hear shows about film, music, comic books, art, finance, history, UFOs, technology, current events, Donald Trump — name the subject, and there’s a podcast (or six) about it. And you can hear most of them for free.

But podcasting has been around a long time. It’s so old that the word itself is a portmanteau of “broadcast” and “iPod” (remember those?). The word was coined around 2004, when some of the first podcasts were being produced on a consistent basis. Apple included support for podcasts in iTunes 4.9 in 2005, so users didn’t have to download the shows and then port them to their mobile devices. They were just … there. Soon thereafter, radio companies began to flow their content on the iTunes platform, and the medium took off. 

Podcasts’ recent rise is credited largely to Serial. The true crime show was downloaded 10 million times in the seven weeks after its debut. And its follow-up, S-Town, shattered that record. Both shows brought millions to the podcasting medium.

Though more than half of the country (60 percent) knows the word “podcasting,” only 40 percent of Americans have ever listened to one, according to new data from Edison Research. Those who listen regularly are mostly educated males with a good, full-time job, according to Edison. Even still, most podcast listeners said they don’t listen on a regular basis.

But, while podcasts are having a moment, they also have a bright future. Podcast ad revenues have grown by 85 percent since this time last year, according to a new report from the Interactive Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers. And that figure is on track to reach more than $220 million this year. For this, an IAB executive said the podcast landscape will continue to grow mainstream.

The podcasting universe has historically been populated with independent producers making independent shows about whatever in the hell they found interesting. They’d chronicle their own lives, or talk sports, or just talk with friends while they played party games. (See the OAM Network section of the story below.)

There are now dozens of podcasts in Memphis — about sports, music, social media, bikes, fitness, insults, creativity, and, perhaps not surprisingly, there are a ton of shows about church and religion.  

Welcome to Night Vale, one of the most successful podcasts of all time, is slated for a live performance Tuesday, July 11th, at the Germantown Performing Arts Center. Also, look for the newly re-launched Memphis Flyer podcast out now on memphisflyer.com, iTunes, or wherever you find podcasts.

For this issue, we found some of the city’s most interesting podcasts and talked to the creative, hard-working people behind them. Even so, we certainly couldn’t cover every show in Memphis, which is a great problem to have. We fully expect, though, that many, many more creative Memphians will find their ways to the medium, slap on some headphones, slide behind a microphone, hit record, and broadcast our city to the digital masses. — Toby Sells 

OAM NETWORK
Podcasts, like everything else, provide endless possibilities. That’s the way Gil Worth sees it. 

“I don’t know if it’s my dumb creative brain, but I have to think about podcasts as more than just [radio on demand],” he says. “They can be anything.”

His OAM Network proves it. Scroll through the list of shows at the Memphis-based, independently owned and operated podcast network, and you’ll find shows about social justice, bikes, games, current events, and being a black nerd in Memphis.

Worth started the network in 2012, and while it has 10 separate shows on the air now, the OAM vault has 20 shows which aren’t “live” anymore but can be accessed anytime.

Burned out on years of playing music, Worth discovered podcasts. He had recording equipment and time and thought, “Maybe I could do one of these.” He did. It was a variety show with interviews, discussion, and games. Did anybody listen?

“Probably not, no,” Worth says.

But he enjoyed the process and kept going. Others started asking him how he did it, and he offered them his help. Then, he formed the OAM Network (OAM is an acronym for the first letters of his children’s names: Owen, Adia, and Mia). 

The network will soon move to a brand-new studio in Crosstown Concourse. Church Health partnered with the OAM Network and Forever Ready, a video production company, to house both organizations in a big, glass booth on the ground floor of the building, there for all to watch. 

While podcasts are, indeed, having a moment, Worth hopes that moment lasts a long time. “It’s almost like my mission statement,” Worth says. “Is it going to last, or did I make terrible decisions? Ah, you should’ve stayed in school, Gil.”  — TS

www.theoamnetwork.com

Justin Fox Burks

Southern Hollows

SOUTHERN HOLLOWS
Stinson Liles’ new history podcast Southern Hollows peddles in the grim and the inhumane — all of it a particularly Southern shame: a man is set on fire, babies are stolen, a mob breaks into a prison, a town is flushed of its black citizens.

One could argue that it makes all the sense in the world that this masterfully done podcast with its focus on long-ago bad deeds done south of the Mason-Dixon line is a result of current events. 

“Right up to the election, I was listening to a lot of current events podcasts, and I kind of burned out on them. I needed to take some time for myself,” Liles explains. “That’s when I found myself listening to more and more humanities, storytelling, and history. That’s when I got this idea together.” 

Liles had a vision: a single-voiced, little-known history story, one with a moral that didn’t have to be spoon fed to the audience. That “hollows” angle intrigued Liles. 

“Given where we are in the world, I’m really interested in the history we intentionally mislead ourselves on,” he says. “I just thought there was a real opportunity, and maybe even coming from the voice of a Southerner to, you know, own up to a lot of this stuff. I think we’re really conflicted as Southerners in a lot of ways because everyone needs lore, family lore, regional lore.

“When it’s conflicted like that, it’s hard to separate ‘how can I love old grandpappy but find the history of my entire surroundings an abomination?'”

Southern Hollows is now four episodes into its first 12-episode season, with each episode averaging about 1,000 downloads. Liles had hoped to release episodes every other week, but stuff (like straight-line winds) got in the way. He was also worried that he wouldn’t have enough ideas for season two, but his notepad is filled. — Susan Ellis

www.southernhollows.com

BLACK NERD POWER
Richard Douglas Jones is one of the funniest people in Memphis. He’s the new host of the P&H Cafe’s popular Thursday night open mic, and Patton Oswalt has personally asked him to be his opening act twice.

Jones is also the creator and co-host of the Black Nerd Power (BNP) podcast, and its corollary stand-up showcase the Black Nerd Power Comedy Hour. Both were developed, in part, as a response to the isolation he felt as an African-American comedian and media consumer who wasn’t all that into the Def Comedy Jam model. He liked comic books, and science fiction, and animation, and video games, and — you know — nerd stuff.  

“You can be a nerd about anything,” Jones says, and BNP proves it by addressing obvious topics like superheroes, less obvious topics like romance novels, and completely unexpected topics like office supplies. “People completely nerd-out over office supplies,” he says before nerding out over his favorite office supplies. “You get people talking about pens, and pencils, and stationary, and you can just see their nips protruding through their shirts.”

While touring America as a comic, Jones came to feel less alone, finding more folks like himself. Within their home comedy scenes, they were what Jones described as “the only Klingons on the Enterprise.” So Black Nerd Power became like a very funny message in a bottle — written in Klingon. Its theme: “You are not alone.”

“My plan right now is to evolve the podcast into a live show,” says Jones, whose guests have included comedians like Paul Mooney, David Alan Greer, and John Witherspoon.

On the nerd front, Jones takes a controversial position on Wonder Woman, giving the film two thumbs down and describing it as “Captain America set during WWI.” He’s excited about Spider-Man: Homecoming and Black Panther. He wants others who thought Aisha Hinds was sexy in her performance as Harriet Tubman on the TV series Underground to know it’s okay to feel that way. 

“Harriet was a powerful woman,” he says. “And power is sexy.” 

Black Nerd Power has broadcast 140 episodes. They are all archived and available at the OAM network. — Chris Davis

www.theoamnetwork.com/bnp

NEIGHBORHOOD CONNECT
“It’s going to be the bomb-diggity.” 

That’s a phrase you’ll often hear from Joyce Cox, co-host of the Neighborhood Connect podcast from the city of Memphis’ Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD).

Cox, HCD’s manager of communication and civic engagement, hosts the show along with HCD director Paul Young. He says the show is designed to create a platform for the city to communicate happenings and efforts made in various neighborhoods, as well as be a medium for members of the community to talk about the initiatives, opportunities, and obstacles in their neighborhoods.

“We [HCD] want to continue to be involved in larger projects, but our focus is on neighborhoods,” Young says. “The lifeblood of the city comes from the neighborhoods, and we want to elevate things happening in them.”

There have been six episodes of the podcast to date, with topics ranging from urban art to home ownership to removing blight to more complicated topics, including how HCD is funded. 

“We give insight to different things in different ways,” Young says. “It’s a lot easier when you are listening to someone explain something.”

The show has had around 4,500 downloads since its inception last November. Although listeners tripled in the spring, Young says one of the biggest challenges in getting more listeners so far is the podcast’s irregular schedule.

Over the next month, Young says the goal is to “freshen up” the podcast and increase listener rates. One way he plans to do this is by incorporating and engaging more youth with topics ranging from struggles common among young people to opportunities for youth and crime rates in their generation.

“Most neighborhood leaders aren’t young people,” Young says. “So we want to give the youth a space that allows them to have their voices heard.”  — Maya Smith
Neighborhood Connect can be found on iTunes or Stitches.

Justin Fox Burks

Sonosphere

SONOSPHERE
Amy Schaftlein, who produces the Sonsphere podcast with Christopher Williams and engineer Zach Losher, attributes the current boom in podcasting to its ease of use. 

“The medium is just so convenient,” Schaftlein says. “It’s like the DVR of radio. You can put it on your list, and if you are about to go on a long car ride or a long walk or something, you can just put it on.” 

Sonsophere is “an exploration of sound in music and art movements through history.” Williams saw the word in the book Sound in the Margins and thought it was perfect for the show.

“It encompasses our tagline,” Williams says. “The ‘sounds all around you.'”

Schaftlein and Williams began Sonosphere in August 2015, with a show about Detroit-based industrial noise band Wolf Eyes but quickly found themselves headed down a research rabbit hole. 

“I approached the podcast from a place of curiosity,” Schaftlein says. “How did we get from classical music to electronic noise?”

Even though the abstract music covered by Sonsosphere isn’t burning up the charts, these musicians’ theories and experiments have had a lasting impact on hip-hop, rock, and EDM. Much of the podcast’s audience is listening in Europe, such as the Vienna experimental music collective, which recently sent thanks for inspiration. 

“Most of the podcasts in Memphis are Memphis-specific,” says Losher. “I like this, because is it Memphis-based but it has international appeal.” — Chris McCoy

www.sonospherepodcast.com

You Like Hoops?

YOU LIKE HOOPS?
Chase Lucas hosts a podcast that is ostensibly about sports but is really about life, Memphis, and what it means to be a fan of something. 

You Like Hoops? is available on the GBB Live feed, the podcast of Grizzlies blog Grizzly Bear Blues. Since launching the show in February (full disclosure: I was a guest on episode 4), Lucas has taken the conversational format of many podcasts and applied it to a field more driven by talking about stats and scores.

What makes You Like Hoops? such a breath of fresh air in the sports vertical (where everyone has a hot take about everything usually just for the sake of having an opinion) is that its roots aren’t really in sports media at all, but other shows Lucas enjoyed.

You Made it Weird with Pete Holmes is a wide-ranging, in-depth conversation where you come away feeling like you really know the guest,” Lucas says. And it’s not just the format, but the method of production as well: “[Holmes] always records in-person, which I attempt to do whenever possible.” 

Because Lucas has done the same, the format lends itself to an intimacy in the conversation that isn’t the norm among sportswriters. There’s no sense of the hosts and guests as personae — they’re just people talking.

NBA culture is an odd, precious thing. It’s maybe the only community left on Twitter that’s still driven by enthusiasts watching and discussing something they enjoy as it happens. 

“I wanted to try a spin on that but within this crazy basketball culture that exists so far outside of what happens during the actual games,” Lucas says. — Kevin Lipe

www.grizzlybearblues.com/you-like-hoops-podcast

Michael Donahue

Dinner With the King

DINNER WITH THE KING
Hosting his podcast, Dinner with the King, each Wednesday on Pod Avenue is a natural for Jerry “The King” Lawler. 

He wanted to be a disc jockey before he decided to become a professional wrestler. In the late ’60s Lawler entered some of his drawings and won second place in a WMPS radio contest. But it was radio announcer, Scott Shannon, who made him want to become a deejay. Lawler was at the awards ceremony at Southland Mall. 

“Scott comes out and he’s got on almost like a white jumpsuit like Elvis,” he says. “It’s open up all the way down. No shirt. He’s got a white scarf around his neck. And he’s got this long, long blonde hair and everything. Like a rock star.

“All the girls went crazy. They started screaming. Right then at that point I said, ‘That’s what I want to be. A radio deejay.'”

Shannon invited Lawler to the station. He asked him to draw weekly Scott Shannon caricatures for the station’s Top 10 records flyer. Lawler told Shannon he’d love to try to be a deejay. Shannon helped Lawler put together a demo tape, and Lawler got a job as a deejay at WMQM.

When he was asked to host a podcast, Lawler said he’d do it as long as he didn’t have to feature guests each week. 

“They said, ‘You don’t need to have a guest,'” Lawler says. “‘Just do it yourself. You just go on and talk every week. Tell about what you’ve done, and tell old stories from Memphis wrestling.'”

Lawler and cohost Glenn Moore have done 16 episodes, which can be found at podavenue.com/king as well as iTunes, Sticher, Google Play and other podcast apps. 

“We are close to 800,000 downloads so far,” he said. — Michael Donahue

www.podavenue.com/king

Categories
News News Blog

Memphis Group to Host Panel on Pedestrian Safety

Innovate Memphis

One group in Memphis wants to address the increasing danger of being a pedestrian in the city, as last year Memphis was named the ninth most dangerous metropolitan area in the country for pedestrians, according to a report done by Smart Growth America.

With over 350 pedestrians struck by cars each year in Memphis, Innovate Memphis will assist the public in understanding and addressing pedestrian safety in the city at a panel discussion on Thursday, July 6.

The “How to Share the Road” panel discussion will touch on topics such as, how to reduce traffic violence, the city’s need for $1.1 billion in sidewalk repairs, as well as ways to ensure that roads are safe for all modes of transportation.

The panel will include representatives from the City of Memphis, the Memphis Medical District Collaborative (MMDC), and the Memphis Center for Independent Living, as well as the founder of the Collegiate Life Investment Foundation— an organization that strives to prevent distracted driving. 

The panel discussion is an installment in the larger series by Innovate Memphis, “How to Leave Your Car at Home,” which previously included discussions on commuting patterns, being more multi-modal, improving public transportation, and other commute-related topics.  

The installment, planned for 6:00 p.m. at Emerge Memphis, is open to the public, but requires registration due to limited space.

This discussion comes just a week after the MMDC launched its “vision zero” campaign, which aims to eliminate all pedestrian injuries and fatalities in the Medical District by 2020.

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News News Blog

Flyer Podcast: OAM Network Founder Gil Worth

Flyer Podcast: OAM Network Founder Gil Worth

Here is the first episode of the newly re-launched Memphis Flyer podcast. This time around we are going to bring you interviews with interesting people who are making their marks on Memphis.

In our first episode back, staff writer Toby Sells sat down with Gil Worth on the side patio of Cooper-Young’s Celtic Crossing. Worth is the founder of the Memphis-based podcast network, the OAM Network.

The conversation coincides with this week’s cover story, “Radio You,” which is all about Memphis podcasts. In the conversation with Worth, we learn how to say OAM Network (and where the name came from), we talk about podcasts, of course, and we hear cicadas ring through the whole thing.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Bruster’s Coming to Highland

Loeb Properties announced today that Bruster’s Real Ice Cream will open a store on Highland Strip late this year.

From the release:

Bruce Reed, the “Bruce” in Bruster’s, created the Bruster’s Real Ice Cream brand in 1989 with a commitment to freshness and quality ingredients that remains today. They are known for premium, artisan, small batch ice cream made fresh daily in stores and served in a wide variety of innovative flavors. Bruster’s is made the old-fashioned way, from ingredients that are slow kettle processed and designed specifically to create the distinctive Bruster’s flavor. It all starts with their proprietary home-style mix, delivered fresh from their dairy to each store, where small artisan batches are crafted daily by their Certified Ice Cream Makers.

At least 24 ice cream flavors are always ready to be enjoyed in crunchy, handmade waffle cones, sundaes, candy-filled blasts and thick milkshakes. Freezes, Italian ices, sherbets, sorbets and frozen yogurt, as well as fat-free and no-sugar-added treats, are also available. Cakes and pies are offered for every occasion, along with pints, quarts and half gallons.

There are nearly 200 independently operated Bruster’s locations in 20 U.S. states, South Korea and Guyana.

The new store will be at 571 Highland and will be 1,300 square feet.

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News News Blog

$3.2M Awarded to U of M for Disaster Mitigation Work in West Tennessee

A multidisciplinary team led by the University of Memphis received a $3.2 million grant to map and assess damage from future floods and earthquakes in four West Tennessee counties, the university announced today.

The grant, awarded by the 2015 HUD National Disaster Resilience Competition will also fund public education and community outreach in the four counties: Lake, Dyer, Lauderdale, and Madison.

T

he U of M team, which includes scientists and engineers from Vanderbilt University, Tennessee’s Department of Environment and Conservation, and the Central U.S. Earthquake Consortium will help the
four counties with infrastructure upgrades, like rehabilitating outdated waste water treatment plants.

Additionally the team will assist the communities in preparing and responding to future disasters, as well as submitting data-based funding requests for disaster relief.

“This important work will assist the state in increasing disaster resilience in some of West Tennessee’s most vulnerable rural communities through applied research and education,” U of M president David Rudd said.

The $3.2 million awarded to the U of M is a part of a larger $44 million Rural by Nature award that the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development (TNECD) received to address areas of Tennessee that were impacted by the flood in 2011 and that are also in the New Madrid Seismic Zone—placing the areas at risk for earthquake damage.

“We look forward to working with the University and various state agencies to understand the magnitude and distribution of potential losses from extreme weather events and damaging earthquakes, especially for vulnerable rural communities along the Mississippi River,” said Ted Townsend, chief operating officer for the TNECD.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Karl Dean in Memphis Next Week

Karl Dean

On Thursday, July 13, of next week, a group of Memphis Democrats will host a fundraising event in honor of former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean, the sole Democrat so far to have announced a candidacy for Governor in 2018.

The proceeds from the event will go to the sponsoring organization, the Tennessee Voter Project PAC, and the event will take place in the law offices of Glassman, Wyatt, Tuttle & Cox at 26 N. Second St., Memphis, from 5 to 6:30 p.m.

Appearing along with Dean, and given parallel billing on the invitation for the event, will be Diane Cambron, the 2017 Volunteer of the Year, as selected by the Tennessee Senate Democratic Caucus; and Danielle Inez, president of the Shelby County Young Democrats.

The “suggested contribution” for the event is “$40 for those under 40 years old and $100 for everyone else.”

As the fine print on the invitation explains, the Tennessee Voter Project PAC is “a special political action committee formed by Lee Harris that is dedicated to growing the number of registered Democrats.” Harris, of course, is the University of Memphis law professor, former City Councilman, and current District 29 state Senator who is leader of the five Democrats who form the state Senate’s minority caucus.

As the fine print further elaborates: “The last major election saw Tennessee place virtually dead last in voter turnout. We can try to change that through a campaign to register as many democratic voters in Tennessee BEFORE the 2018 election. The time is now to spread democracy and increase political engagement for progressives across the state.”

Hosts for the event are listed as: “Jake Brown, Dawn Campbell, Dr. Davin Clemons, Jeremy Gray, Dan Harper, Lee Harris, Isaac Kimes, Esq., London Lamar, Gavin Mosley, Tami Sawyer, Anthony Siracusa, Bryan Smith, Esq., Thurston Smith, Van Turner, Esq., and Michael Whaley.”

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Woj: Zach Randolph signs two-year deal with Kings

Larry Kuzniewski

Zach Randolph is no longer a Memphis Grizzly.

ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski is reporting that free agent power forward and Memphis Mt. Rushmore candidate Zach Randolph has signed a two-year, $24M contract with the Sacramento Kings.

Woj: Zach Randolph signs two-year deal with Kings

In terms of this summer, this deal makes it more likely than ever that the Grizzlies will also not be returning Tony Allen, and it also makes it much more likely that they match whatever offers JaMychal Green is able to drum up.

In terms of the upcoming season, this much seems certain: nothing will be the same. Even if somehow Allen returns, the Grizzlies will be a totally different group of basketball players without Zach Randolph in that locker room. And it just makes all the more evident the Grizzlies’ shift towards youth and player development since David Fizdale was hired as head coach.

Off the court, I can’t even begin to have a reaction to this yet. My brain understands that it’s a done deal, but the relationship this athlete had with this town operates in a different place, and I’m going to have to reflect on it a little. I will say I’m going to miss getting to write about games like this one.

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From My Seat Sports

My Country. My Team

It’s been said there are three fundamental ways an American can serve the country: voting in elections, serving in the military, and sitting on a jury. With Independence Day upon us, I’m here to tell you there’s a fourth way to fully engage in the American experience: choose and cheer a sports team.

There’s one qualifier when it comes to this component of patriotism. The team’s flag you wave can’t simply be your college alma mater. This is too close to a member of the Army showing off his stripes. It’s one’s duty, after all, to support the football team (and swim team!) from the campus one called home. Do so with passion. But pick at least one other team, cut ties to any other (in the same sport), and count the ways you honor this country’s founding fathers.

• The pursuit of happiness.
In these trying times, is there any more direct path to happiness — at least for a day or night — than pulling for your baseball team to end a losing streak? Or for your basketball team to knock off a division rival? No narcotic unleashes the endorphins like a stirring comeback victory by the team you call your own. And no happiness, I’d argue, is quite as pure.

• Freedom of assembly.
“I’ve got tickets.” Perhaps the three most liberating words in the English-American language. Sports command our attention on screens more than ever, but it’s still about being there. In the arena or stadium. With thousands, or even hundreds (hell, even dozens) of others with a shared devotion. The sounds and smells of a ballpark are as rewarding as anything we see on the field. With your numbered seat secure, you’re more than merely a fan. You’re part of a movement.

• Freedom of religion.
Sports fandom is a form of faith. Never doubt this. Witness the tears of Atlanta Falcon fans after surrendering their first Super Bowl title in about 20 minutes of playing time. Witness the tears of Chicago Cub fans kneeling at gravesites with newspapers, tangible proof that curses and miserable baseball do, somehow, go away. Witness rally caps, lucky t-shirts, game-day meals, and fathers explaining to daughters why they need to stand straight when they walk by the statue of Stan Musial.

• Freedom of speech.
Have you checked your Twitter feed lately? If you can dance around the blather from or about our current president, the most opinionated commentary from American “twits” involves one team or another. LeBron James has made two franchises champions merely by his choice of uniform. Kevin Durant has ruined the NBA by choosing the same path James did in 2010. My team will win the Stanley Cup finally (or again). Your team is an embarrassment to all things right and holy. Matter of fact, YOU are an embarrassment to all things right and holy. The teams we choose stir discussion. It’s up to us to avoid Stephen A. Smith and keep the discussion intelligent.

• No cruel or unusual punishment.
I know. This one has you wondering. Sure as hell feels cruel (if not unusual) when the San Antonio Spurs once again end a season for our Memphis Grizzlies. But here’s the beauty of team sports (and one of life’s grand clichés): There’s always next season. Unlike actual life, “dead” teams come back. Rosters are adjusted, coaches changed, and every team opens a new season undefeated. Losing hurts, particularly the losses that mean months without a game to attend. But in the world of 2017? Have you read (non-sports) headlines of late? A bad day at FedExForum is better than most in or near a state capital.

Happy Fourth of July everyone. Fire up the grill and gaze at the fireworks. But do so in your favorite team jersey. It’s perfectly American.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Baby Driver

Of all the movies in theaters right now, Baby Driver kicks the most ass. Edgar Wright says he first conceived his film in 1994, and it shows. That was the year Quinten Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction premiered, plunging the indie film world into years of hep cat criminals snarling stylized dialog at each other. Tarantino’s use of pop music, drawn freely across genres from the past and present, was something new. Everyone wanted to try it, but not everyone had Tarantino’s ear.

Ansel Elgort in Baby Driver

1994 is also the year the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion recorded Orange. The former Pussy Galore frontman had made a pilgrimage to Memphis the year before to discover Stax soul and record with lo fi legend Doug Easley. Orange opens with “Bellbottoms”, a 5-minute epic that shifts gears from lush Issac Hayes strings to Oblivians-inspired, runaway train punk. Wright opens Baby Driver with a bank-heist/car-chase scene set to “Bellbottoms” that he’s obviously been planning in his head since the first Clinton administration. With Baby (Ansel Elgort) lip synching the words as he tears balletically through Atlanta’s nightmarish streetscape, the sequence plays as a perverse marriage between La La Land and Mad Max: Fury Road.

The best way to experience Atlanta.

Atlanta is just as much of a character for Wright as Los Angeles was to Damien Chazelle. Baby (Ansel Elgort) is a creature of the streets, a supernaturally talented car thief whose knowledge of the city’s endless array of onramps to nowhere is surpassed only by his knowledge of banging tunes. His favorite leather jackets, with black body and white sleeves, make him look like Han Solo from a distance.

A while back, Baby tried to boost a car belonging to Doc (Kevin Spacey), a gangster in the mold of Harvey Keitel’s The Wolf. Rather than killing him, Doc decides to give him a job as a getaway driver, enabling a string of daring daylight bank robberies that, naturally, end in spectacular high-speed chases. The taciturn Baby is already having second thoughts about the collateral damage left behind by his partners in crime when he meets Debora (Lily James), a waitress at the local diner who instantly captures his heart. They make plans to run off together, but Doc keeps pushing him to do job after job, each one more dangerous and audacious than the rest.

Lily James and Ansel Elgort get cozy.

The plot’s pretty standard grindhouse crime fare, but it’s the execution that matters to Wright. Baby Driver sometimes feels more like a series of intertwining music videos than a feature film, with its 30-song soundtrack bleeding into the film’s reality at unexpected times. The editing by Scott Pilgrim cutter Paul Machliss is as immaculate as it is propulsive.

Ansel Elgort, Jamie Foxx, Elza Gonzalez, and Jon Hamm taking no guff.

Wright’s having a blast, and his fun infects the cast. Jon Hamm grows a beard and lays it on thick as a heavy named Buddy, who is hopelessly in love with the assault-rifle-toting sexpot Elza Gonzalez. Jamie Foxx brings unpredictable menace to Bats, a bank robber with a major impulse control problem.

But the music is the real star of the show. In yet another homage to Hustle & Flow, when Baby isn’t running from the law, he makes beats on his eclectic analog equipment. Carla Thomas, Sam and Dave, Martha and the Vandellas, The Beach Boys and The Commodores all get loving treatment. The Damned classic “Neat Neat Neat” becomes the car chase anthem it was always meant to be, while both T. Rex’s “Debora” and Beck’s “Debra” get dedicated to the leading lady.

Baby Driver aspires to be cinema, a film experience that brings fans together. It should definitely been seen in the theater, if for no other reason than to fully experience the mesmerizing sound design. It’s a terrible shame that, with a dozen channels of flawless digital sound reproduction at their disposal, the vast majority of filmmakers are content to just make explosions louder, or do that awful “whamp” noise from Inception again. Wright aims for a much higher bar, and clears it with ease.

Baby Driver

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: B.B. King

This music video Monday, we celebrate a great American.

B.B. King at the Monterey Jazz Festival, 1967

From 1949, when he began recording with Sam Philips, until his death in 2015 at age 89, B. B. King was the voice, face, and guitar tone of the Memphis blues. To keep his legacy alive, the B. B. King estate has started a YouTube channel to make the musicians’ extensive archive of live performance footage available to the public. Fifty years ago this summer, B.B. headlined the Monterey Jazz festival. Here, for your patriotic enjoyment on this July 4 holiday, is video of the man trading licks with Texas electric blues legend T.-Bone Walker. God bless America!

Music Video Monday: B.B. King

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