Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 1: Machine Gun Babes, The P&H, and Digital Rebels

Thank you to everyone who voted in our Best of Indie Memphis poll! We had many different, varied responses going way back into Indie Memphis’ twenty year history. I had originally wanted to do a top ten list, but there were so many ties that I would have had 18 films in the Hometowner top ten, and five films tied for first place in the general category. So instead, I’ll be doing a chronological countdown of the poll’s top vote-getters, staring from the beginning of the festival and moving to the present day, in a series of blog posts called Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits. Let’s get this party started!

Superstarlet A.D. (1999)

In the beginning, before there was an Indie Memphis or a digital revolution, there was John Michael McCarthy. The renegade punk from Tupelo, Mississippi moved heaven and earth to bring his psychotronic vision to life on film—actual film, not digital video! Superstarlet A.D., which won the festival feature competition in 1999, its second year, is the apotheosis of McCarthy’s 90s filmography. It’s a heady brew of  garage rock (Memphis punk goddess Alicja Trout is one of the stars), grindhouse exploitation, and The Feminine Mystique. McCarthy transformed late 90s urban blight into a post-apocalyptic hellscape populated by tribes of feral women dead set on taking revenge on the men who broke the world.

Today, McCarthy continues to make films and comics, and is a leading force for historical preservation in the Bluff City. His documentary Destroy Memphis depicts the years-long struggle to save the Zippin Pippin from destruction, and he is currently working on a full sized bronze statue of Johnny Cash.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 1: Machine Gun Babes, The P&H, and Digital Rebels

The Poor And Hungry (2000)

Eric Tate, Seth Hagee, and Craig Brewer on the set of The Poor and Hungry.

In 2000, a Barnes & Noble bookstore clerk named Craig Brewer fired a shot heard round the world. Made with money left to him when his father unexpectedly passed away, Brewer’s The Poor and Hungry was named for the P&H Cafe, the midtown beer joint where Brewer wrote. It was not the first time he had tried to make a film, but thanks to the then cutting-edge digital video technology that allowed him to record DVD-quality video and edit on a desktop computer, it was the first time he succeeded. In the 1970s, Francis Ford Coppola had said that film would not be a truly democratic medium until a poor girl in Iowa could make one as easily as she could write a book. Brewer was the fulfillment of that prophecy, and his film went on to win awards at not only the Indie Memphis and Nashville Film Festivals, but also the Hollywood Film Festival. Five years later, Brewer brought home Oscar gold to Memphis with Hustle & Flow. Today, he is a writer and director for Empire, one of the most successful shows on television. You Look Like, the comedy game show he is producing, will premiere at Indie Memphis 2017. It was filmed on location at the P&H.

“I think what I’m most proud of, is that there were a lot of filmmakers in town who had their own identity, and their own desire to make films, and they would have probably done it anyway,” says Brewer. “But I do think that they watched The Poor and Hungry, and the swell of excitement around it, and realized that it was more doable than they thought. ‘I know actors just like that in town! I know those locations! I have a better camera than this movie had! I spent more money on lights than this movie had!’ But this movie did a lot with very few tools. At the time, filmmaking was very daunting because of the cost and how hard technically it was to pull off on film. There were a lot of local would-be filmmakers who saw it and thought, ‘It’s time.’”

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 1: Machine Gun Babes, The P&H, and Digital Rebels (2)

Blue Citrus Hearts (2002)

In the Memphis of the early twenty first century, the epicenter of the revolution was the Digital Media Co-Op. Located in the basement of the First Congregational Church on Cooper, the Co-Op was founded by Brandon Hutchinson and Morgan Jon Fox. Fox, a Memphis native and White Station High School grad, had done a stint at a film school in New Hampshire before dropping out and returning to Memphis to find his own way. Members of the Co-Op pooled their resources and shared their knowledge. They learned together, and their experimental short films dominated the Indie Memphis Hometowner category for years. Blue Citrus Hearts was Fox and the Co-Op’s first attempt at a feature film, and it paid off spectacularly. The largely improvised story of young gay and misfit kids trying to cope in a closeted and repressive South combined the unflinching neorealism of Antonioni with the austerity of the Dogma ’95 movement—call it Memphis, Open City. It’s an emotionally wrenching ride. But the big payoff came at the end, where Fox’s camera accidentally captured an actual shooting star above the heads of his characters sharing their first kiss on the roof of the Tennessee Brewery.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 1: Machine Gun Babes, The P&H, and Digital Rebels (4)

Automusik Can Do No Wrong (2004)

Automusik at Sun Studios

One of the people inspired by Craig Brewer and the Media Co-Op was me. I had written my first feature film in 1994, but our attempts to produce it in the pre-digital era had failed. My friend and co-conspirator Steve Stanley, along with Chris Triko, Talbot Fields, and many others, discovered digital video tech and made two films around the turn of the century: Slick Lilly vs. The Grand Canyon and Six Days in the Life of Mims, both of which screened successfully at Indie Memphis. I had acted and crewed on both pictures, and caught the filmmaking bug bad. While Mims was in post production, I was eager to do my own thing. I was a fan of the synth pop parody band Automusik, which was baffling crowds all over Memphis. After one particularly crazed performance, I bought Automusik mastermind Scott Moss a drink at the bar and proposed doing a Spinal Tap-style mockumentary together. We enlisted Pritchard Smith, whose documentary short “$200 On eBay” had won at Indie Memphis the year before, and nine months later we won Best Hometowner Feature at Indie Memphis. Today, we’re still at it. Smith is a director/producer who helped found Vice’s video operation. His documentary The Invaders sold out opening night at Indie Memphis last year. I still believe what I told then-Memphis Flyer Film Editor Chris Herrington in a November, 2004 interview: “Half of the director’s job is to choose the people you want to work with and let them do their job.”

Here’s the most famous sequence from Automusik Can Do No Wrong, in which we recreated the climax of Purple Rain—in German.

AUTOMUSIK CAN DO NO WRONG clip – "The Machine" & "The Hammer Song" from oddly buoyant productions on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 1: Machine Gun Babes, The P&H, and Digital Rebels (5)

Cocaine Cowboys (2006)

As you can read in my Memphis Magazine article on the history of the festival, Indie Memphis was founded as a place for local filmmakers to show their work. In the early days, there was not much content from outside the Memphis metro area. But as the festival matured and expanded, that changed. By the middle of the 00’s, it was the place to go to see cutting-edge films that would never otherwise get a theatrical run in the Bluff City. One of the first films to screen at Indie Memphis that broke out and attracted a wider audience was Billy Corben’s Cocaine Cowboys. Corben’s film was ideal for Indie Memphis. It took a controversial subject matter and dove into it from a regional perspective. Corben is from Miami, and his intricate history of Florida drug smuggling puts heavy emphasis on both the price the city paid and the unexpected ways the era built contemporary Florida. Months after it screened at Indie Memphis, Cocaine Cowboys got a wide distribution and spawned two sequels. Today, it’s a staple on cable TV, and Corben has had a career making ESPN’s documentary series 30 for 30.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 1: Machine Gun Babes, The P&H, and Digital Rebels (3)

Tune in tomorrow for part 2. You can also check out the entire history of Indie Memphis as told through the collected programs in this slideshow set over at Memphis Magazine.

Categories
Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Vending Machine for Weaves Arrives, Memphis Now Officially a World Class City

According to a report by WMC news, Memphis now has its very own vending machine for weaves. The Diamond Dynasty weave machine offers a variety of hair options ranging in price from  $55-80.

According to the WMC report the vending machine will be a convenience for people who may need to change their look on the go. Like spies, I guess.

The obvious question: What kind of impact will easy access to hair have on Memphis’ tribble-like infestation of tumbleweaves?

Categories
News News Blog

Explore Bike Share Looks for Permanent Headquarters

Explore Bike Share – Facebook

Explore Bike Share, the 600-bike system launching here in the spring is looking for permanent headquarters, as well as a temporary warehouse in the city.

Slated to be occupied for two or three months beginning in February, the temporary warehouse will serve as a bike and station build-out space in preparation for the initiative’s launching.

For the warehouse, the nonprofit is seeking a 20,000-square-foot space that is climate controlled and equipped with ample electricity and lighting, sufficient internet and cell services, a ground-floor entrance and bay door, space for bike workstations, and dumpster rental services.

The permanent headquarters, which will be occupied beginning in January, will house a maintenance shop with a full-time staff.

For this, Explore Bike Share is seeking a 6,000-square-foot space within one of the neighborhoods where the program is initially launching: Binghampton, Orange Mound, Midtown, Downtown, Uptown, and South Memphis.

Other specifications for the space include:

  • 6,000 square feet minimum
  • Central location within Explore Bike Share initial service area
  • Ground-floor entrance with bay door
  • Overnight parking for 2 vans
  • Climate-controlled office space with conference room for 7 full-time employees
  • Climate-controlled maintenance shop space with four work stations, preferably connected to office but able to segregate
  • Space expansion opportunities
  • Space for battery charging station

Real estate proposals can be sent to info@explorebikeshare.com though Friday, Nov. 3.

“Explore Bike Share has valued and prioritized transparency through all aspects of its journey, and this part of the process is no different,” Explore Bike Share board secretary, John Paul Shaffer said. “There is immense potential for activating spaces to build, operate, and maintain Memphis’ incoming fleet of bikes, and we want to make sure that everyone has the chance to share and seize the opportunity.”

Explore Bike Share is also in the process of interviewing candidates for its executive director. The selected director is expected to be announced sometime in November.

“The quality of responses to our call for an executive director has been overwhelming,” lead of the Explore Bike Share board hiring committee, Jaske Goff said. “We are confident that, among the pool of qualified candidates, we will hire a leader who will launch and cement Explore Bike Share as an equitable and easy-to-use transit option for Memphians.”

The bike-share system will launch here in the spring with 600 bikes, and in 2019 an additional 900 bikes will be added to the fleet.



Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Hornets 104, Grizzlies 99: Five Thoughts

Larry Kuzniewski

Mike Conley continues to struggle.

The Grizzlies finally lost a home game on Monday night, falling 104–99 to the Charlotte Hornets after leading by as many as 13. A lot of things combined to take down the home team on Monday night but the biggest story is that the struggles of Mike Conley and Marc Gasol finally caught up with them. Conley and Gasol shot a combined 8 of 33 (that’s 24.2% for those of you keeping score at home) and the rest of the offense went cold as they tried to chuck any and every three point opportunity that came their way so the Grizzlies could keep up. That’s never really worked for this Memphis team, and it’s not about to start working now.

Here are five takeaways from last night:

The Grizzlies can’t pretend they’re a 3-point shooting team. Totally restored vintage Chandler Parsons or no, the Grizzlies have yet to win a game when they’re shooting threes at the expense of initiating any other offense. Last night, the shots weren’t falling, and in the third and fourth quarters, the Grizzlies refused to compensate by taking the ball to the rim. A good deal of credit for this, obviously, goes to Charlotte’s defense—but certainly not all of it. The offense stagnated when it started trying to shoot over the Hornets’ defense instead of working through it. The Grizzlies took thirty five threes last night and only made 8 of them. That’s never going to be a winning formula, especially if they’re all coming in half court sets instead of in quick offense generated off of defensive stops.

Larry Kuzniewski

The starters are bad. Period. The bench has bailed out the team in every win so far, and with Conley and Gasol both struggling now in addition to Andrew Harrison and Jarell Martin (maybe “because of” rather than “in addition to” but I haven’t rewatched enough game tape yet to say that), there’s no relief in sight unless (1) Selden or McLemore and JaMychal Green return to the starting lineup or (2) Gasol and Conley miraculously pull themselves out of the slump they’re in. Given that Selden’s injury was supposed to be a short thing—Fizdale even said at one point during the preseason that they were targeting an opening night return—I’m not sure what his timetable is anymore. But the sooner the starting lineup can be filled with slightly less marginal NBA players, the better.

Dillon Brooks finally looked like a rookie. He hesitated to take shots last night, defended well but also got burned a few times, didn’t shoot well even when he got good looks. The whole rest of the team looked like that too, but last night was the first time I’ve seen Brooks look so tentative, like he’s still so young and pure of heart that he was shocked when Gasol kept feeding him the ball instead of trying to drive. Those of us who have watched this team a long time know better. Speaking of which:

The offense got some great looks for the wrong guys. Ball movement is meaningless of Jarell Martin is the guy you’re hoping will hit a bunch of crunch time 3’s, or that Dillon Brooks will somehow save you. The Grizzlies, and Gasol especially, were overpassing down the stretch of the fourth quarter, kicking out to guys who were open for a reason. I’d be more upset about it if Gasol hadn’t been doing that since about 2009. (Remember all those times he fired a beautiful skip pass to a wide-open Tony Allen instead of taking it to the rim?)

Charlotte is good. This was not a loss to a bad team. The Hornets are #7 in the East, but I think they’ll rise in the standings as the season grinds on. The Grizzlies are somehow still in first place, having only lost one conference/division game and only two games overall.

Larry Kuzniewski

Tweet of the Night

From happier times in the first half when it looked like the Grizzlies were rolling, fueled by another big scoring night for the bench:

Hornets 104, Grizzlies 99: Five Thoughts

Up Next

The Grizzlies, #1 in the West, take on the Orlando Magic, #1 in the East before the Celtics finally pushed them down to #2 yesterday. No one expected either of these teams to be anywhere near as good as they’ve been to open the season, so this should be an interesting test game to see how good they really are.

Historically, this is a game that the Grizzlies would not get up for, so it’ll be interesting to see what kinds of effect that has on the starting five. But Orlando, like the Grizzlies, does not look to be a bad team that’s randomly hot; they look like they’re legitimately better than people expected. Should be a good one.

Also, when these two teams played in preseason, Jarell Martin did this to Bismack Biyombo, so Orlando has to play with four players. I think that’s how that works.

Categories
News News Blog

Feedback Period on City’s New Open-Data Policy Ending

The last day to submit feedback on the city’s proposed new open-data policy is Tuesday, Oct. 31.


Late last month, Mayor Jim Strickland announced a new data policy he said would further the transparency and accountability of his administration.

“When I ran for mayor, I promised to measure results, hold city government accountable, and share those results with you,” Strickland said in a September Facebook post. “We’ve been doing the by that by sharing our monthly data reviews, but with a new open data policy, we can do more.”

Drafted by the mayor’s Office of Performance Management, along with What Works Cities and the Sunlight Foundation, the new policy aims to use technology to prompt a more open city government, while improving the public’s ability to track the city’s goals and progress.

The new policy is also meant to increase the amount of data and the tools to interpret it that is available to the public, according to the draft.

Specifically, the policy will provide the basic principles of the Memphis Open Data Program, as well as authorize the mayor to create the Data Government Committee, who will develop the procedures and standards for implementing the new policy. The committee will also determine which types of data should and should not be made available to the public.

The full draft can be viewed here. The city has not announced the timeline for implementing the new policy. 

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Julien Baker

Today’s Music Video Monday lights the fuse.

Previously on Music Video Monday (and in the Memphis Flyer), we were waiting for Memphis emo phenom Julien Baker’s new album. The day is here! Turn Out The Lights has dropped on Matador Records. The video for the title track was directed by Sophia Peer, who also did the first video from the album “Appointments”, and was shot with the help of Memphis filmmakers Morgan Jon Fox and Breezy Lucia (who created this unforgettable one-take video for Baker’s “Something”). This video uses a single, clear visual metaphor to build up to the moment when Baker unleashes her full vocal power. Strap in and take a look:

Music Video Monday: Julien Baker

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

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Our Confederate Past: A Selective History

Yes, that’s “Confederates in the attic” you’re hearing now, but it’s the living who are rattling their chains, a ruckus caused by our lack of understanding of the past. Like many Southern cities, Memphis is wrestling with ghosts these days.

One of ours is Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest, whose bronze likeness sits atop a horse in Health Sciences Park. Calls to remove the statue have sparked controversy, but they shouldn’t. Defenders of the site today seem to have forgotten who Forrest was, why the tribute was put there in the first place, and even the purpose of monuments generally.

Nathan Bedford Forrest

According to historian Charles Royster, Forrest “was a minor player in some major battles and a major player in minor battles.” But he was also responsible for the massacre of black soldiers at Fort Pillow, an atrocity that drew widespread condemnation all across the country. Before the war, Forrest trafficked in slaves and acquired a “notorious” reputation even within his home state, and he helped found the Ku Klux Klan, the nation’s oldest continuing terrorist organization.

His memorial was completed in 1905, a time when the South was reclaiming its connection to the Lost Cause and trying to rehabilitate its military leaders, and doing so while redoubling efforts to subjugate African Americans through segregation, discrimination, and violence. The two things were closely connected. After all, this was the heyday of lynching. Yet those defending Confederate statues seem keen to ignore or minimize that part of the past.

Many people refer to these artworks themselves as history. But they’re really statements about history. And sometimes we get these salutes wrong or change our minds or rethink what we once thought. Sometimes we learn things about the individuals commemorated in these tributes that make them embarrassing or worse. But if you insist otherwise, follow your own logic: If erecting a statue is history, then so is removing it.

Would you have told the Hungarians not to remove the statue of Joseph Stalin in 1956? Were they erasing history? Whitewashing the past? Hardly. The people who launched the uprising that fall were attempting to overthrow a Soviet puppet regime that oppressed them, and having to stare at the symbol of that oppression was an insult too great and grievous to bear.

A colleague of mine recently compared monuments to books in a library — some good, some not, but would you really want even the disreputable ones taken off the shelf, he asked? Actually, yes. Librarians cull their collections all the time. So although his argument may at first sound persuasive, the analogy is wrong. Monuments aren’t books. They’re brands, publicly endorsed and often supported. They enjoy a prominence not easily escaped and a validation not easily denied.

It’s easy to show equanimity or insouciance when you’re not a member of a group that’s been terrorized. It’s easy to say, even with the best of intentions, that monuments to villains are a way to remind us of where we’ve been and how far we’ve come, and “wouldn’t it be splendid if we just used them as a history lesson.” Yet no one would expect Jews to tolerate a statue of Joseph Mengele in a nearby park. Or Catholics to put up with a statue of Queen Elizabeth.

It’s true that almost all historical figures have their detractors, but why preserve monuments to people who actively tried to vanquish whole groups? Why salute individuals with murderous or genocidal reputations?

There are alternatives. Plenty of Americans — North and South, black and white — brought us together. Pay tribute to them.

In the meantime, pack up these old Confederate statues and put them in museums. They don’t deserve to adorn city spaces in the 21st century. Not only do they fail to represent all of us, but these vestiges of apartheid are opposed to and stand as a painful affront to many of us. They may be a “heritage” in the sense that they have been passed down from ancestors, but some things we inherit turn out to be oddities we’d rather keep in the attic than hang in the dining room.

It works the other way, too. Some things we once celebrated, such as the Forrest statue, obscure ugly truths. As historian Jacquelyn Dowd Hall has written, “Remembrance is always a form of forgetting.” It is a means of coping, too, of trying to make peace with the past and with oneself. That’s the reason we create heroes, memorialize them, and sometimes scorn and eventually replace them.

Ghosts don’t haunt us, it turns out. We haunt them.

Joe Hayden is a historian and a professor of journalism at the University of Memphis.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies 103, Rockets 89: Five Thoughts

Larry Kuzniewski

The Grizzlies pulled off a big win over division rivals the Houston Rockets last night at FedExForum, 103–89, and the final score is actually closer than the game felt by the end. The 5–1 Grizzlies now have two wins over Houston already. Houston, without Chris Paul and Eric Gordon, was unable to keep up with the Grizzlies’ second unit on either end of the floor, which is the story of the young season for Memphis so far.

The Griz are lucky the bench had a big night, because wasn’t a pretty game for the starting unit. But more about that later. Here are five thoughts about what happened last night and What It All Means:

Chandler Parsons had himself a game. For the first time in a Grizzlies uniform, Chandler Parsons looked like the platonic 2014–15 ideal of Chandler Parsons. In 18 minutes, Parsons scored 24 points on 9–11 shooting, including 6 of 8 from 3. Most of that came in even less time than that. Not shown in the box score is the time he drove the lane on Ryan Anderson and dunked, which I think we can all agree is something that seemed unlikely (if not impossible). After the game, Mike Conley said the last time he saw Parsons play that well was when Parsons played for Houston and dropped “about 10 3’s” on the Grizzlies, and Parsons referenced the same game in his postgame interview. At any rate, it’s been a long time since Parsons has been that player, and it was wonderful to see it happen last night.

I had no expectations for Parsons this year. I thought it was possible that me might not be able to play at all, and so did people inside the organization. But all year long he’s been solid defensively, and as he’s gotten more comfortable in the flow of the game, his shot has returned to him as well. Even if he never has this sort of outburst again, the fact that he’s able to be a key contributor to a very good second unit is a positive outcome for everyone involved, and makes for a much happier vibe around the season. Good for Chandler Parsons. Maybe his Instagram manners will come around next.

Larry Kuzniewski

The Grizzlies’ depth is their strength. The Grizzlies beat the Rockets by 14 points, led by as many as 19, and didn’t have a single starter score 10 or more points. The leading scorer among starters was actually Jarell Martin who finished with 9. Counting the basket made by Deyonta Davis after the game was in garbage time, the Griz bench was responsible for 67 points last night, compared to the Rockets’ bench’s 25. The Grizzlies are crushing people without any starters on the floor this season. It’s been the story all along. But last night it was even more important, with the injury-hobbled starting lineup failing to get anything done.

After the game, coach David Fizdale had some interesting things to say about how he’s approached the bench. With the injuries to JaMychal Green, Wayne Selden, and Ben McLemore, the starting lineup is sure to change as guys come back, so Fizdale has focused on keeping his second unit—Mario Chalmers, Tyreke Evans, Dillon Brooks, Chandler Parsons, and Brandan Wright—as cohesive as possible while letting the starters carry the weight of the missing players.

That explains why Andrew Harrison and Jarell Martin are still starting, especially Harrison, who has struggled mightily and played his worst game so far last night. Green is sure to return in Martin’s spot, and one assumes either Selden or McLemore will start in Harrison’s spot, whichever is healthy first. But if the bench unit is staying together, including sensational rookie Dillon Brooks, either Selden or McLemore may find himself on the outside looking in once they’re all back. It’ll be interesting to see how this plays out as guys return.

Dillon Brooks is smooth. That’s all I have for this one. Brooks had 6 points and went 2–7 from the field, and even in an “off” night I was impressed by his poise on the court. He guarded James Harden some. But his pull-up 3 in transition showed an ease with the NBA game that the Grizzlies haven’t seen in a young guy in years.

Larry Kuzniewski

Mike Conley’s struggles are not getting better. Conley was flat-out bad last night. Marc Gasol was off, too, but he’s had enough MVP-like games that he gets a pass. Conley, on the other hand, struggled for all four quarters last night, unable to turn it on for the final frame like he has in other big games this year.

When I asked Fizdale about it postgame, he pointed out that defenses are keying in on Conley even more than in the past, and it’s taken some time to get used to it. He also pointed out that he’s not worried—that he knows Conley’s game will come around when it comes around. Last night the Grizzlies were able to see their way to a blowout without Captain Clutch, but one wonders how many more big wins they’re likely to get with Conley and Gasol both in single digits.

Tyreke needs to facilitate more instead of looking guys off. Yeah, right. But he did miss white-hot Parsons wide often for three, more than once.

Tweet of the Night

Grizzlies 103, Rockets 89: Five Thoughts

Up Next

Monday night, the Grizzlies take on the Charlotte Hornets at home, and then Wednesday night the home stand wraps up against the Orlando Magic. Given the Grizzlies’ track record against East teams, especially mediocre-to-bad ones, it’s anybody’s guess how these next two play out (although the Magic are currently on top of the East standings, so I suppose anything is possible). After that, it’s a weekend in LA, which we’ll talk about more later in the week. For now, the Grizzlies are back on top of the West standings, and anyone who says they saw this start coming is probably full of it.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

#24 Tigers 56, Tulane 26

On a raw, cold Friday night at the Liberty Bowl, the Memphis Tiger offense stayed red hot. At least for the first 20 minutes against Tulane.

Having scored touchdowns on their last six possessions of their previous game (at Houston on October 19th), the Tigers scored on five of their first seven drives Friday to take a 35-0 lead against their longtime rivals from New Orleans. Despite a midgame lull that allowed Tulane back in the contest, the Tigers secured their fourth straight win to improve to 7-1 overall and 4-1 in the American Athletic Conference, still in command of the league’s West Division.

Larry Kuzniewski

Riley Ferguson

“We knew we had to start fast tonight,” said Memphis coach Mike Norvell. “This Tulane club presented so many challenges. That’s a good football team that’s getting better. We had to have balance, be able to run the football. Our offensive line did a great job, our backs did a phenomenal job. Our guys prepared this week with a purpose. They know that every challenge we see will continue to get bigger.”

Sophomore Darrell Henderson led the ground attack with 112 yards on 10 carries, highlighted by an 82-yard touchdown scamper early in the second quarter that gave Memphis a 28-0 lead. Another sophomore, Tony Pollard, scored the game’s first touchdown when he took a reverse pitch and carried it 58 yards to pay dirt just 4:18 into the game. When Tiger quarterback Riley Ferguson connected with sophomore Kedarian Jones for a 37-yard touchdown pass, the Tigers seemed to have locked up the victory, leading 35-0 with 11:20 to play before halftime.

Memphis then played more than 25 minutes of football without scoring. Ferguson tossed an interception — his seventh of the year — in Tulane territory shortly before halftime, a turnover that led to a Tulane touchdown at the other end on the last play of scrimmage in the second quarter. The Tigers were then forced to punt on their first three possessions of the third quarter. The Green Wave had closed the margin to 16 points (35-19) until Tiger linebacker Austin Hall recovered a fumble in the Tulane end zone for a Memphis touchdown not quite three minutes into the fourth quarter. A pair of Ferguson touchdown runs in the game’s final 10 minutes completed the scoring and gave the Tigers their second-largest point total of the season.

“Our guys played fast,” emphasized Norvell. “They had a lot of confidence in our plan. I was pleased to see the big plays. I’d like to see us sustain it a little better. We had that turnover late in the first half. When you’re able to score 56 points, it’s a good night. But we have to be more consistent with what we’re doing.”

Linebacker Genard Avery had a stellar game to lead a much-improved Memphis defense, accumulating 5.5 tackles behind the line of scrimmage, including 3.5 sacks of Tulane quarterback Jonathan Banks. The win gives Avery and other four-year Memphis seniors a new program record for career victories with 34. (The previous record of 33 was held by the 1963 senior class.)

Larry Kuzniewski

Anthony Miller

Senior receiver Anthony Miller made an acrobatic catch in the first quarter for his tenth touchdown of the season and the 32nd of his remarkable career. He pulled down the 200th reception of his career and, with 75 yards for the game, surpassed Duke Calhoun for the most receiving yards in Memphis history (now 2,987).

“Anthony is a special player, a special person,” said Norvell. “His work ethic is truly what separates him. He’s the best, hardest-working player I’ve had the opportunity to coach. You watch him at a Tuesday practice and he plays just like he did tonight. The passion. The energy. He helps develop the culture we have here. It’s a special night for him. His picture will be up on our walls.

The Tigers finished with 557 yards of total offense despite having the ball only 22:32. Tulane was held to 325 yards on 83 plays, the best showing for the Tiger defense this season.

Memphis travels to Tulsa next Friday to face the Golden Hurricane. Tulsa is 2-7 after losing to SMU Friday night.

NOTE: The Liberty Bowl has added a lengthy banner, directly beneath the press box, displaying the names and numbers of the six former Tigers who have had their jerseys retired: John Bramlett (64), Isaac Bruce (83), Dave Casinelli (30), Charles Greenhill (8), Harry Schuh (79), and DeAngelo Williams (20).

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Free Shakespeare! Julius Caesar visits the Germantown Library

Michael Khanlarian, Khalil LeSaldo

On a cold rainy pre-Halloween weekend the only thing I can think of that might be better than a free indoor production of Julius Caesar might be a free indoor production of Macbeth. But since the latter’s not being performed you’ll just have to settle for Shakespeare’s tragically timeless story of murder and political intrigue in ancient Rome as performed by members of the Tennessee Shakespeare Company. 
The Ides of March come late this year. The original conspiracy theory goes down Saturday, Oct. 28 at 10 a.m.

Did I mention it was free?