Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

New DejaVu Set to Open this Week

The latest iteration of DejaVu, the Krewe of DejaVu, is set to open in its old location on Florida Street Downtown sometime this week.

Chef Gary Williams says he’s waiting on the last inspections. He and his partners, Martin Gill and Rondell Charles, were pushing for an opening in time for Memphis in May.

The space has gotten painted. The driveway has been redone to improve parking and a patio has been added for seating up to 30.

Diners can expect their favorites — vegetarian, vegan, and Creole dishes — from DejaVu, says Williams.

“It’s much the same,” Williams says. “It’s what people have loved for years and years.”

Categories
From My Seat Sports

How to Enjoy the Griz-less NBA Playoffs

Unsplash

What’s a grit-and-grinder to do during the NBA playoffs without any Beale Street Blue? For the first time in eight years, Memphis basketball fans have been forced to watch the NBA’s best determine a champion without the Grizzlies in the mix. Fret not. Below are five ways to spark your rooting interest (or the precise opposite).

• Bad Guys Lose, Too
The Grizzlies have reached the playoffs 10 times and have been eliminated by a total of six franchises: the Spurs, Suns, Mavericks, Thunder, Clippers, and Warriors. Among this sinister six, only the Warriors are left for Griz fans to stomach as things get real in May. Find vicarious thrill, Memphis fans, in knowing the Spurs fan base — one that has cheered the elimination of the Grizzlies four times — has as much chance at a 2018 championship as those of us married to a 22-60 club. And let’s be honest: Any NBA postseason without the Clippers is better than one with L.A.’s second sons.

• Real Rivalry Renewed
Expansion and relocation have diluted NBA rivalries, but aside from Celtics-Lakers, there’s none better than Boston-Philly, a pair of original franchises now meeting in the Eastern Conference semifinals. In 1967, the 76ers ended the longest run of championships in the history of American pro sports when they beat the Boston Celtics to prevent a ninth consecutive championship for Bill Russell and friends. (The Celtics recovered and won the title the next two years.) The Celts and Sixers met in the Eastern finals four times over a six-year period (1980-85) when Larry Bird and Julius Erving were the two best forwards on the planet. The latest confrontation will miss Celtic stars Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward, but feature two of the most dynamic young stars in the sport: Philadelphia’s Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons. And those Grizzlies fans who got on board this winter’s tank ride can consider Philly the poster franchise for such big-picture tactics. Between the 2013-14 and 2015-16 seasons, the Sixers won 19, 18, and 10 games for the right to grab their prize tandem.

• LeBron
We’ve reached the stage of LeBron James’s brilliant career where it’s impossible to turn away from his exploits. (Think Michael Jordan over the course of his second three-peat with the Bulls, now 20 years ago.) James’s Cavaliers are really the second playoff team that will feel the impact of Irving’s absence, the star guard having forced the trade that sent him from Cleveland to Boston last summer. Kevin Love has been a reasonable running mate, but these Cavs feel more like the faceless bunch James put on his back and carried to the Finals in 2007. Among the four teams left in the Eastern Conference, the three-time defending champs are actually the underdogs. For James to reach an eighth straight Finals, he’ll have to lead upsets — no home court advantage — over top-seeded Toronto and the winner of the Boston-Philly series. And if he does, that sculpture of James on the NBA’s Rushmore will gain a layer around the jaw line.

• The Villainy!
The Houston Rockets — owners of the NBA’s best record this season (65-17) — have the best backcourt in the game: Chris Paul and the league’s scoring champ, James Harden. They are also about as unlikable a duo as you’ll find. Paul, let’s be real, is a Clipper in Rockets clothing, best appreciated with a Tony Allen sneaker near his kisser. Harden’s greatest skill with the ball is drawing fouls. He shot 727 free throws in 72 games this season, almost 100 more than the second-most prolific foul “victim.” It’s like cheering the playground whiner (you remember him). The Rockets are the most likely team to topple the Warriors in the Western Conference. They’re also perhaps the only team fans would prefer Golden State backhand into the offseason.

• Oh, Canada
No Canadian team has won the Stanley Cup in 25 years. With that the case, the Toronto Raptors aim to flip the North American sports script and take the Larry O’Brien Trophy north of the border. If you can’t find another team worth your support through May and June, the Eastern Conference’s top seed will do. And hey, four-time All-Star Kyle Lowry was once a Grizzly.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Faux Killas

We’re just here to let you know Music Video Monday loves you.

Let Faux Killas ease the pain of your Monday. Jeremiah, Jason, Sam, and Seth don suits to woo “SLS” in this dreamy video. They’ve got a new album out, called Chiquita, that you can get acquainted with via Bandcamp.

Music Video Monday: Faux Killas

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

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

War Stories

Several months ago, the Flyer featured a cover story with local musicians recounting their “Worst Gigs Ever.” I wish somebody would’ve asked me. I have so many horror stories, they have to be categorized by decade. I’ve been in other bands and played as an acoustic soloist, but most of my performing career has been with the Radiants, a “rock-and-soul” group that lasted from my teen years in the Sixties until our final show two years ago at Lafayette’s.

In a 2011 Flyer, I wrote about being punched out by the bouncers at Club Clearpool, only to be vindicated by Sputnik Monroe. You could look that one up if you’re curious, but first let me tell you about a gig that still gives me the creeps. I was in a band out of Knoxville called Rich Mountain Tower. We had a production deal and were on a mini-tour, opening for Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. Our bass player — we’ll call him Todd — was going through some serious psychological problems resulting from an LSD-fried brain. He had that 1,000-yard stare, even though he’d never been in combat. When we played Charleston, West Virginia, Todd paused and spoke to the audience. Backstage, I asked what he had said, and he told me that he “asked the audience’s forgiveness for being a coward all my life.”

The next night’s gig was at the Mid-South Coliseum. We set up shop at the old Downtowner Motel, across from the Peabody, where we returned after the concert. I was chatting with friends, when I heard shouting and screams for help coming from the next room. I ran next door to witness Todd standing on the edge of an open window on the 15th floor, with our guitarist bear-hugging Todd’s mid-section to prevent him from jumping. We succeeded in pulling Todd back into the room, but he was on a bus at the crack of dawn, leaving for his home town and psychiatric help.

I had been playing at various joints around Knoxville when an agent booked me and my singing partner, Bob Simon, for a show in Middlesboro, Kentucky, at an Elk’s Club gathering. Or it could have been the Lions Club, I forget. I was dressed in my hippie finery — bell bottoms, flowered shirt, boots, peace sign, and long hair — while we waited in the kitchen for their program to end. Bob looked  at the crowd of rural, middle-aged men in coats and ties and refused to go out. I was in the middle of berating him when we were introduced. He agreed to come out, only after I had sung the first song.

When I entered with my guitar, the room exploded with laughter. I don’t mean snickers or giggles, these were howls and belly laughs at my appearance. I stood in front of the microphone, but the laughter went on and on. As I looked out at the rowdy crowd, waiting for their derision to subside, I felt like Edwin Booth taking the stage just months after his brother had killed Lincoln. I sang a song, introduced Bob, and the room erupted again. Bob’s face turned beet red. We changed our entire set and sang one country song after the next until they finally gave us some begrudging applause. We cursed our agent all the way back to Knoxville and learned the benefits of knowing your audience in advance.

Many years ago, there was a motorbike dirt-track out near Lakeland on I-40. They occasionally staged races and competitions or whatever the hell dirt-bikers do, and I was booked to play an outdoor concert with a four-piece band cleverly named the Hired Hands. We assumed that we would play in a break in the action or after the race. I never imagined they wanted us to play while the race was taking place. We’d start a song and every 30 seconds the whine of a dirt bike would drown us out. It was not only a ridiculous situation, the bikes were kicking up so much dust that I was literally eating dirt while trying to sing. We were coughing and sneezing on our flatbed truck, parked hard against the track while the motorcycles whizzed by, covering the sky in particles of dust.

While wiping my tears when the gig was mercifully over, the track’s owner gave me a check. It bounced. I contacted the owner later, and he assured me the account was solvent and wrote me a second check — which also bounced. When I drove out to the track, it had closed. It was the only time, in a lifetime of performing, that anyone ever stiffed me with a bad check.

The Radiants were playing a gig at an after-hours nightclub in North Little Rock called The Apartment Club. It was a seedy place filled with drunks with nowhere else to go. A scuffle broke out in the crowd and the band went on break. I’ve seen a lot of fistfights. I’ve seen brawls roil from one side of the room to the other while the band continued to play, but this felt different, maybe more menacing.

I was standing outside with the bass player when the front doors flew open and a gangly, drunken redneck tumbled onto the ground followed by two huge bouncers. The drunk staggered to his feet, lunged at the bouncers, and threw a punch. Suddenly, a handgun appeared and we dove for cover. While one bouncer held the gun in the air, the other pulled out a blackjack and started pounding the guy in the head shouting, “You done fucked up now, Bobby Gene!”

The intoxicated Bobby Gene refused to go down and received a Rodney King-like beating until he finally succumbed to the blows to his head and slumped to the sidewalk. He lay there bleeding for a while, but made it back to his feet. He stumbled toward a pickup truck, but the bouncer gave one last sweeping kick to his ribs that dropped him to the gravel.

The band had to regroup. The crowd was visibly shaken by the episode. Things seemed to be calming down a bit, when someone ran in, screaming, “Bobby Gene’s back with a shotgun!” Everyone froze. We were instructed to continue playing, so we did, while an armed Bobby Gene was fighting with the police out in the parking lot. He lost, but all we heard was “Keep playing, boys; that’s what we pay you for.”

Show Biz ain’t for sissies, folks. If you’re unable to tolerate a constant barrage of bullshit and humiliation, there are probably too many singing guitar players out there anyway.

Randy Haspel writes the “Recycled Hippies” blog.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

GOP Mayoral Hopefuls Repudiate White Nationalist Alexander

Keith Alexander (from a campaign poster)

The three Republicans vying for the head-of-the-ticket party position in Tuesday’s countywide party primary have all taken note of recent news disclosures of Republican assessor candidate Keith Alexander’s white nationalist background and statements. And all three GOP candidates for Shelby County Mayor — Shelby County Commissioner Terry Roland, Trustee David Lenoir, and Juvenile Court Clerk Joy Touliatos — repudiated Alexander for the record.

As pointed out in The Commercial Appeal Sunday in a front-page story by Mark Perrusquia and on the paper’s editorial page, Alexander has taken extreme positions as a former talk-show host on the radio program “The Political Cesspool” and elsewhere.

Some of Alexander’s statements:

“Martin Luther King was really a bad man. In fact, I doubt that very many people in the audience have within their circle of friends and acquaintances a man that was worse than Martin Luther King….[The Communists] had to give him plenty of money to keep him on task because if they hadn’t he would have just gone on into doing what so many black ministers do, which is to, you know, preying on his congregation — and chasing after the women in his congregation, too.”

“[African Americans] can’t solve any real problems like infant mortality or high crime rates or functional illiteracy and illegitimacy, things like that. But they can with the help of certain enablers from a certain religious persuasion start destroying Western civilization and white heritage.” (The remark about “a certain religious persuasion” closely resembles a staple attitude frequently voiced by known anti-Semites.)

Reactions from the would-be Republican standard-bearers to Alexander:

Commissioner Roland: I don’t even take him seriously as a candidate. He doesn’t stand for what I stand for. My record in support of the black community speaks for itself. In these days, we need people who unite rather than divide.

Trustee Lenoir: It does not represent me or anybody else in the Republican party. It surely is not characteristic of what the party is all about.

Clerk Touliatos: I’m shocked that some in the party knew that his opinions existed and didn’t condemn them earlier. His comments and attitudes are not what the party of Lincoln stands for.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Pete & Sam’s sneak peek!

Michael Donahue

Pete and Sam’s closed after a fire around midnight Dec. 12. It’s slated to reopen soon.

Pete & Sam’s is slated to reopen soon after a fire closed the restaurant. People can’t wait to see what the newly renovated restaurant looks like. Here is a sneak peek of some inside shots! Stay tuned! [slideshow-1]

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Avengers: Infinity War

Doctor Who premiered November 22, 1963. It was an immediate hit, and over the years the hokey show about a time-traveling weirdo became a cultural touchstone. By 1983, the production team was at the height of its powers. The lead role was in the hands of the young and charismatic Peter Davidson, and the budgets were bigger than ever. In the post-Star Wars afterglow, the show finally made the jump to America. The BBC decided to celebrate the 20th anniversary with the greatest crossover event in television history: They would bring together all the actors who had ever played the Doctor for one universe-shattering adventure. After months of hype, “The Five Doctors” premiered on November 23, 1983. It was a disaster.

Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman), newly minted beardo Captain America (Chris Evans), Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) and supersoldier in perpetual distress Bucky Barns (Sebastian Sam) defend Wakanda in Avengers: Infinity Wars.

Getting the giant cast together was a nightmare of bruised egos and diva behavior. The most important actor, Tom Baker, pulled out late in the process, so writer Terrance Dicks had to rewrite around some clips of Baker salvaged from a scrapped episode. The ratings were good, but not significantly better than a normal week’s viewership.

Worst of all, “The Five Doctors” exposed the weaknesses that the show’s fanbase had learned to overlook. There were still great moments to come—in 1984, the series produced “The Caves of Androzani”, now regarded as an all time high—but viewership faltered, and before the decade was out, Doctor Who was cancelled. In the internet comment board fever swamps, this is what’s known as “jumping the shark.”

I think you can see where I’m going with this.

Spider-Man (Tom Holland) and Iron Man (Robert Downey, Jr.) get lost in space.

Picking up where Thor: Ragnarok left off, Avengers: Infinity Wars gets off to a strong start. Spaceships full of refugees from destroyed Asgard are intercepted by Thanos (Josh Brolin), who slaughters them and extracts the Infinity Stone from the Tesseract held by Loki (Tom Hiddleston). Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo) narrowly escapes the destruction and rides the Rainbow Bridge, opened by Heimdal (Idris Elba) to Earth, where he warns Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and Tony Stark (Robert Downy, Jr.) of Thanos’ plan to collect all six Infinity Stones, artifacts of immense power that control Mind, Soul, Space, Time, Power, and Reality, and use them to destroy half of all life in the universe.

One thing Infinity War has going for it that other superhero movies have struggled with is a compelling villain. Brolin’s Thanos, until now a barely glimpsed, purple skinned mound of muscle, turns out to be surprisingly complex. He gets some fine scenes with his two adoptive daughters, Gamora (Zoe Saldana) and Nebula (Karen Gilian, who has emerged as one of the best Marvel actors). Directors Anthony and Joe Russo are at their strongest when they take time to concentrate on pairs of characters, such as the doomed romance between Vision (Paul Bettany) and Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen), or the science/magic rivalry between Stark and Strange. Chris Hemsworth’s Thor gets paired off with Rocket (Bradley Cooper) and teenaged Groot (voiced by Vin Diesel), which makes for some pleasantly goofy comedy beats. But everything else seems rushed, thin, and worst of all, calculated for maximum fan service, such as when the Guardians of the Galaxy are introduced singing along to The Spinners’ “Rubberband Man”. Our heroes make a stand in Wakanda, but the snap Ryan Coogler brought to Black Panther is missing. The potentially touching reunion of Banner and Natasha Romanov (Scarlett Johansson) is completely botched.

Thanos (James Brolin) seeks radical glove improvement. Also, genocide.

What ultimately sinks Infinity War is the unsolvable problem that sank “The Five Doctors”—the need to fit in references to 19 other Marvel movies. This is a film designed for superfans, and it could please many. But there inevitably comes a moment in long, episodic serials when the audience realizes that the catharsis they seek will never come. The demands of capitalism means there can never be a satisfying ending, and each installment of the story is reduced to a commercial for the next one. One way to read the ending of Infinity War is as a bold departure from formula. Another, more accurate way to read the ending is the plot equivalent of the moment in A Christmas Story when Ralphie uses his new Little Orphan Annie decoder ring to discover that the secret message is “Be sure to drink your Ovaltine”. It’s the moment when all of the superheroes team up to collectively jump the biggest, most expensive shark of all time.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

August: Osage County, Jitney, and Stupid F**king Bird: Weekend Theater Roundup

August Osage County

Memphis musical fans despair! I have no comfort for you this week. (Unless you want to take a quick trip to DeSoto County to catch the closing weekend of Camelot at DFT). On the other hand, tragedy and comedy lovers have some great choices.

August: Osage County
has a bit of everything for everybody: marital infidelity, incest, child molestation, Eric Clapton records, fibs, lies, falsehoods, etc. But in spite of the unsavory ingredients, this dish comes together like apple pie — crusty, sweet at the center, and full of spice.

Set in Oklahoma during a blazing hot summer just before and after the drowning suicide of the Weston family patriarch, Tracy Letts’ Pulitzer-winning drama August: Osage County plays out like a middle-class echo of one of Sam Shepard’s savage family plays with a pinch of King Lear folded in. Letts’ breezy dialogue and ability to find screwball humor and slapstick in dark and realistic events makes him unique among playwrights.
Bill Simmers

Stupid Fucking Bird

Mixing clever adaptation with bits of improv Aaron Posner’s Stupid Fucking Bird has earned a reputation for transcending its title profanity to pay reasonable tribute to Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull.

Love? Art? Adulthood? — IT’S ALL SO DISAPPOINTING. And sometimes, it’s awfully funny.

August: Osage County, Jitney, and Stupid F**king Bird: Weekend Theater Roundup

August Wilson’s rarely produced work, Jitney, is a play that merits mass-revival. Written before Uber was either a noun or a verb, the play looks into the lives of gypsy cab drivers in in Pittsburgh’s Hill district, where proper taxis refused to travel. It’s a story about life in America’s alternative economy, legacy, and what a struggle it can be to hold on to anything, let alone pass it down.

This script probably merits mass revival. Definitely worth a peek. 

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Where the Grass Isn’t Greener for the GOP

People still contend that Shelby County is the nexus of the Democratic Party in Tennessee. This is despite the fact that Democrats, who in theory have held the demographic edge locally for two decades, have had grievous difficulty winning even isolated positions in countywide elections.

This year could be different, of course. There are numerous signs that the blue wave supposedly building elsewhere in the U.S. will inundate Shelby County, as well. It’s a fact that, in the next election coming up, the county general-cum-state-and-federal primary election on August 2nd, there will be more Democrats on the ballot than Republicans.

But Shelby County is not and never has been the center of Democratic Party strength in Tennessee. That distinction belongs to Nashville. Yup, the prideful sister city up I-40, the capital city, the site of a state government that can be pretty damn laissez-faire about what happens in Memphis.

The fact is that, for better or for worse, Nashville is the last place on earth where the old Solid Democratic South still exists, where whites as well as blacks have a better chance of being elected to countywide (in their case, Metro-wide) office as Democrats.

Here’s some instructive proof of the fact — a Facebook post from Don Johnson, a Memphis transplant (and a Republican) now toiling in the vineyard of GOP Governor Bill Haslam.

April 24 at 7:53pm ·

If you are a Republican voter in Nashville you may have noticed that there are *no candidates* to vote for in the May 1 Republican primary.
Not one GOP candidate for any office.
No Republican Judges. No Republican Sheriff. No Republican Clerks. …
Sure it would be near-impossible for a Republican to win a county-wide race here, but we’ve just given the Dems a free ride in August without having to even pretend that our votes matter.
The blame falls on all of us who failed to act upon the belief that every voter has a right to choose a conservative alternative.
You should absolutely still vote and make your voice heard – one way or the other – in the transit referendum. You can leave the other boxes blank or write-in your neighbor’s cat.
Meanwhile in Shelby County, nearly every office has multiple qualified and competent GOP candidates to choose from. Be thankful for these men and women who have proudly stepped forward and for the dedicated and determined party organization that nurtures and supports them.

(Whereupon Johnson, to illustrate his point, prints out the Republican-primary part of the Davidson County Metro ballot. Below.)

Categories
News News Blog

Latino Man Says Officer Racially Profiled Him, Asked for Documentation

Facebook

Rondell Trevino

A local Latino man said he was “terrified” when he was racially profiled by a Memphis Police Department (MPD) officer while on a walk through his neighborhood.

On Rondell Treviño’s Tuesday evening walk in the Berclair area, he said he was accosted by an MPD officer who asked for his documentation. Trevino, who is the founder of the Immigration Project (a faith-based organization aimed to improve immigrant relations with the church), told the officer he is an U.S. citizen and works at a local church.

After the officer insisted that he still needed to show documentation, Trevino gave the officer his Social Security card.

“Wow, I thought you’d be an illegal alien because you’re Latino,” the officer responded, according to Trevino.

Latino Man Says Officer Racially Profiled Him, Asked for Documentation


When asked to respond to this incident, MPD Lt. Karen Rudolph said there is no record of it occurring, however it is “absolutely not” standard procedure for the department.

[pullquote-1]

“Memphis Police Officers are not instructed to inquire on any person’s citizenship,” Rudolph said. “The Memphis Police Department does not enforce immigration laws.”