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News News Blog

City Council to Help Residents Get Licenses Reinstated

The Memphis City Council will host an event Tuesday to give about 600 Memphians the chance to get back on the road legally with reinstated driver’s licenses.

As a part of the city council’s MLK50 initiative, the council allocated about $600,000 for the Driver’s License Reinstatement and Diversion Amnesty program. Through the program, Memphis drivers in the Drive-while-you-pay program, as well as those with suspended and cancelled licenses, will receive amnesty.

The General Sessions court clerk randomly selected 600 residents who meet a list of general criteria to gather at the the Benjamin L. Hooks library on Tuesday to work with council members and the city clerk’s office to have their license reinstated.

City council chairman Berlin Boyd said the goal is to reduce the number of people driving on Memphis streets with a suspended or revoked license who run the risk of getting pulled over, going to jail, or incurring more fines.

“It was amazing to us how many calls we received,” Boyd said. “Hearing some of the stories that people have told us about how impactful this would be in their lives has been really encouraging.”

There are a number of residents who owe minimal fees to have their license reinstated, but don’t know how or have the means to pay, Boyd said. There is a cycle revolving around revoked licenses and Boyd anticipates the program will help reduce the cycle of crime and recidivism. It will also make it easier for people to get to access jobs, he said, as not having a driver’s license can hinder being gainfully employed. “We will see a great return on investment because we’re changing lives.”

Ed Stanton Jr. of the General Sessions court said every year in Memphis close to 40,000 licenses are revoked and only half are reinstated. This leaves about 20,000 drivers with no license who Stanton said could likely end up being arrested. The idea is to keep these drivers out of the system, he said.

Boyd said in addition to the 600 residents selected for the program, there is still a “large list” of people out there who need their licenses reinstated. For now, there are no plans to involve other drivers apart from the initial 600, but Boyd said it’s something the council may consider in the future.

“We tried to cast a net and capture as many people as we possibly could,” Boyd said. “We may have the opportunity to try to do something like this again.”

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Nick Black

Music Video Monday is born to hula!

Nick Black can’t hula hoop.

But the Memphis pop impresario knows people who can hoop. Boy howdy can they hoop. Choreographer Ellen Phillips, Anna Wilcott, and Jeanne DeCarlo are artistés with the hoop. Director Gabriel DeCarlo pairs them with breakdancers Luis Arrechi and Anthony Allen for a striking, kinetic video.

But what Black lacks in the hula department, he makes up for with his uncanny ability to craft summery pop confections like “One Night Love.”  Check it out!

Music Video Monday: Nick Black

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

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Notes on Council, School Board Races

Not to be forgotten (but largely overlooked, all the same) as we approach the August 2nd election date is a race to fill a vacancy on the Memphis City Council and four races for positions on the Shelby County Schools board.

By definition, these positions apply exclusively to Memphis, in the case of the council seat, and mainly so for the school board positions.

CITY COUNCIL, SUPER-DISTRICT 9, POSITION 2: The council seat, an at-large position for roughly the eastern half of the city, was formerly occupied by Philip Spinosa, who resigned in May to take a job with the Greater Memphis Area Chamber of Commerce. The seat is now occupied, on an interim basis, by funeral home director Ford Canale, who was appointed to the vacancy by a majority of the other council members. Canale and six other candidates are now seeking the right to fill out the duration of Spinosa’s term.
JB

Council Candidates at Woodland Hills: from left, Erika Sugarmon, Lisa Moore, Tim Ware, Charley Burch (at mic)

The other six are Charley Burch, Tyrone Romeo Franklin, Lisa Moore, Erika Sugarmon, Tim Ware, and David Winston. There have been two public forums to which all the candidates have been invited. Both were held last week — one at the Olivet Worship Center at Woodland Hills on Tuesday, the other at Mt.Olive C.M.E. Church on Thursday. Only candidates Burch, Moore, Sugarmon, and Ware took part, and, while no one bothered to mention Franklin and Winston, the absence of interim Councilman Canale drew significant attention from those present.

In fact, Canale’s ears had to be burning on Tuesday night. Music producer/realtor Burch talked about him at length, casting him as the “plant” in a saga whereby a cabal of business elitists, special interests, and council incumbents are determining who is and can be on the council — and pretty much everything the council does.

“The council knows how they’re voting before they come into the room [the City Hall auditorium],” Burch asserted. “There’s empirical evidence of it.” And Canale’s appointment was a case in point. “The fix was in,” said Burch. “I’m not running against one great candidate up here” he said, a sweep of his arm indicating the fellow candidates on stage with him at Woodland Hills. “But I am running against Canale, because he has a plan to keep us out. … I’m the main one they don’t want elected.”

Moore, who runs a non-profit called Girls, Inc., was of similar mind on Tuesday, speaking of active “collusion” between the council and City Hall on behalf of “a well-orchestrated plan,” where “the rich get richer and the rest of us just watch and struggle.” She called for “equity” efforts in every neighborhood, a crash program in public transportation, and a developed educational plan. Former teacher Sugarmon, the daughter of Memphis civil rights pioneer Russell Sugarmon and a self-proclaimed “people’s candidate,” called for community development programs that would “trickle up” economic progress. Tim Ware, who has had a lengthy career as an education consultant, called for the city to resume its spending on public schools, an idea that the others approved as well.

There was more from all four, much of it sound, some of it more freely speculative, and most of it was repeated at Mt. Olive on Thursday in a program sponsored by the NAACP via its VIP901 election-year campaign and shared with school board candidates. Burch, who has union support and promised to restore the lost pension arrangements of the city’s first responders, and Moore had sounded the leitmotif: that city government was in the clutches of a self-aggrandizing clique, for whom the newly named Canale was just the latest tool.

The Rev. Kenneth Whalum, pastor of the church sponsoring the first council forum and a former school board member, had joined in the verbal abuse of Canale, whom he ridiculed for the fact that the not yet elected councilman’s picture was said to have been mounted already on the City Hall auditorium wall.

Congratulating the other candidates, Whalum said, “All of them were very impressive. They‘re all eminently more qualified than Ford Canale, who didn’t think enough of you to show up. Vote for anybody but Ford Canale. … Put one of these people on the city council and make them take that picture down.”

SHELBY COUNTY SCHOOLS BOARD

At stake on August 2nd are the SCS seats for District 1, 6, 8, and 9. The candidates who turned up for the second half of the NAACP bill at Mt. Olive were basically the same ones who had been at a forum the week before at Bridges downtown. They were: incumbent Chris Caldwell and Michelle Robinson McKissick in District 1; incumbent Shante Avant in District 6; and incumbent Mike Kernell, Kori Hamner, and Joyce Dorse-Coleman in District 8.

The school board seminar at Mt. Olive was lively and reasonably thorough, though it lacked some of the spice that had been contributed at the earlier Bridges affair by candidates Michael Scruggs in District 1; Minnie Hunter and Percy M. Hunter in District 6; Jerry A. Cunningham in District 8; and Rhonnie Brewer in District 9. Incumbent Billy Orgel of District 8 did not attend either forum.

At Bridges, the questions given the candidates were more numerous and more pointed, including one about how to deal with the factor of LGBTQ students that some candidates circled around and others answered with sentiments of simple acceptance. Another question at Bridges that received some lip service at Mt. Olive was that of whether the School Board should be enlarged to include at least one student member. At neither venue was there an outright endorsement of that idea.

[Note for future forum planners. Bridges is an inviting place to have an assembly, but its acoustics, at least when hand mics are being swapped around, are far from ideal]

At both Bridges and Mt. Olive, the school board candidates stressed the importance of involving students’ families in the schooling process, but all of them made the case for increasing resources, from any or all of the funding sources. They all, as well, called for more wrap-around services and such auxiliary personnel as counselors, social workers, behavioral specialists, and the like. And everybody thought teachers deserved more rewards. JB

Board candidates, from left, Mike Kernell, Joyce Dorse-Coleman, Kori Hamner, Rhonnie Brewer

Other notions that found general favor were that of after-school activities and programs to combat what incumbent Avant called the “summer slide.” Though the issue of the district’s optional-schools program was not addressed systematically, there was a certain sentiment, voiced most specifically by McKissack, that the curricula of non-optional schools should be upgraded. As for the problem of differing school formulas — including charter schools and IZone and ASD institutions — the candidates favored some version of sharing resources but tilted toward preserving the norm.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Three Questions About Memphis Tiger Football

The 2018 Memphis Tiger football team opens its preseason camp this Friday. Year three of the Mike Norvell era opens with the coach newly signed to a contract extension that could — emphasis, could — keep him on the Liberty Bowl sideline through the 2022 season. Still two months shy of his 37th birthday — he’s a decade younger than a certain, quite popular basketball coach in town — Norvell has 18 wins under his belt and a Top-25 finish for last season’s 10-3 team.

So what’s next? There are far more questions than answers during any training camp. Here are three to get things started.
Larry Kuzniewski

Mike Norvell


How will the Tigers wear the hat of favorites?

In the American Athletic Conference’s preseason media poll, the Tigers were picked to win a second consecutive West Division title, and it wasn’t close (Memphis received 23 first-place votes to four for second-place Houston). We are but six seasons removed from a 2-10 campaign that had Memphis well shy of relevance on the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) landscape. Now the program is in the conversation when New Years Six bowl games are discussed, that lone, precious spot reserved for the top team outside the Power Five leagues.

The Tigers are now a hunted program, circled on the schedules of UCF (the defending AAC champ), Houston, and six other AAC teams. The roster is star-studded, with six first-team all-conference players (according to Athlon), and two — running back Darrell Henderson and kick-return maestro Tony Pollard — getting All-America consideration. Memphis will be heavily favored in five of its first six games, a trip to Navy being the lone roadblock, it appears, to a 6-0 start before UCF visits on October 13th. Can the Tigers motivate themselves from atop the AAC standings? For so long, a pigskin-sized chip has rested on the shoulder of Tiger players come game day. Can a front-runner stay hungry?

Can the Tiger defense win games?

In two years under Norvell, Memphis has alllowed 28.8 and 32.5 yards per game. (Last year’s figure ranked 102nd among 130 FBS programs.) With its explosive offense, Memphis was able to win games last season in which the Tigers allowed 31 points (twice), 38, and 45 (twice). If there’s any drop in offense from a year ago — the Tigers averaged a program-record 45.5 points per game — can the defense earn a win or two?

Cornerback T.J. Carter, only a sophomore, is already a star. Senior linebacker Curtis Akins appears ready to step into the leadership void left by Genard Avery (drafted by the Cleveland Browns). Linebacker Austin Hall and lineman O’Bryan Goodson have received preseason accolades. Perhaps this is the year the Tiger D flexes some muscle in resistance to high-powered attacks like that of UCF (the Knights beat Memphis in last year’s AAC Championship, 62-55). Balance is one of those crutch-words for football coaches (and analysts). New heights could be reached if Memphis finds balance between its offensive and defensive strengths.

Who will quarterback this team?

You didn’t think I’d overlook the most pressing question on the depth chart, did you? The only thing worse than a football team having no quarterback is a football team having two quarterbacks. Between now and the opener (Mercer visits September 1st), Norvell and offensive coordinator Kenny Dillingham will have to decide between sophomore David Moore (10 career pass attempts) and junior transfer Brady White (three games for Arizona . . . in 2016). Memphis has been spoiled by it quarterbacks the last four seasons, as Paxton Lynch and Riley Ferguson averaged 3,690 yards and 30 touchdowns over the period (all winning seasons).

Having lost All-America wideout Anthony Miller to the NFL, the Tigers’ 2018 quarterback will be asked to trust the weapons remaining — Henderson, Pollard, Patrick Taylor, and Joey Magnifico to name four — and use a talented, experienced offensive line to chew up yardage. No heroics or record-breaking stat lines required. This will be a fun competition to watch throughout August. But keep that nugget of wisdom in mind: If one of these two signal-callers hasn’t emerged by September, the Tigers have a significant hole in their attack. 

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News News Blog

Harbor Kayak Tours Start Saturday

Kayak tours of the Wolf River Harbor will begin Saturday. (Photo courtesy of Kayak Memphis Tours/Facebook.)

Kayak tours of the Wolf River Harbor will begin Saturday at the historic cobblestones in Downtown Memphis.

Kayak Memphis Tours, the same company that runs Ghost River Outfitter, will begin renting kayaks and stand-up paddle boards to the public for tours of the harbor from 8 a.m.-8 p.m.

For the new tours, the company partnered with Memphis River Parks Partnership (MRPP) “to give Memphians and visitors a new way to experience the Memphis riverfront.”

Kayak Memphis will be open on the cobblestones on Saturdays, Sundays, and weekday afternoons. Tickets for the tours are $20 (with an additional $1.83 fee). Get them here.

The company will host a “fun and friends” kayak race on Saturday at 11:30 a.m. from the cobblestones to the A.W. Willis Bridge. It’ll also host a social media photo contest. The best photo wins one of the company’s kayak tours from the northern end of Greenbelt Park to Tom Sawyer’s RV Park in West Memphis (a $75 value).

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Gubernatorial Candidates Dean, Fitzhugh Have Democrats Back in the Game

The very fact that two name Democrats — former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean and state House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh — are competing in a primary to become the party’s nominee for governor is something of a throwback phenomenon.

There was a time, lasting for the better part of a century, when victory in a statewide Democratic primary was inevitably reported in the press as “tantamount to election.” That sense of a solid Democratic South has expired pretty much everywhere by now, although the case can be made that in Nashville, and only in Nashville, it  JB

Karl Dean

still exists.

That’s because, for whatever reason, it’s still routine in Nashville for Democrats, both black and white, to win local elections there. And, to be a Democratic office-holder in Nashville, especially the office of mayor, is still, ipso facto, to have an eye on the governorship. It is no accident that the party’s last major statewide winner was Phil Bredesen, who was mayor of the capital city when he won the first of his two gubernatorial terms in 2002. (Bredesen is also, of course, the now out-of-power party’s hope to win a U.S. Senate race this year.)

It is no accident, either, that Karl Dean, a recent Nashville mayor, is a current candidate for governor. What’s more unusual is that he has an opponent, in Fitzhugh of Ripley, from a rural part of the state. West Tennessee rural, at that. A competitive Democratic primary for governor almost got started in 2010, but that was the year when all of the prospective Democratic candidates discovered — in the words of one of them, then state Senate Democratic Leader Jim Kyle of Memphis — that all the state’s yellow-dog Democrats had somehow become yellow-dog Republicans. All but one Democrat, Mike McWherter of Dresden, son of a former governor and eventual loser to the GOP’s Bill Haslam, would drop out.

But here we are in 2018, amid talk, even in Tennessee, of a Democratic blue wave, and, though it is still likely that the word “tantamount” will be applied to the winner of the four-way Republican primary for governor, a sense of optimism — or, at least, of revived respectability — is observable among Democrats.

Which is why, at Friday evening’s debate between Dean and Fitzhugh at Fairley High School in Whitehaven, moderator TaJuan Stout-Mitchell, citing local party Democratic chair Corey Strong as her source, informed the small crowd in the Fairley auditorium that “we love both our Democratic candidates. And we intend to stay a family when this is over.”

Not that there has been any prior animosity between the two candidates, although Fitzhugh, as the less well-funded underdog, has, Hail Mary-style, thrown one or two effective barbs Dean’s way in the course of the electoral season.

Not Friday evening, unless you count the jest he got off when, as he rose to answer a question, his microphone cord almost got tangled up with Dean. “I don’t want to choke you,” Fitzhugh apologized, adding, “yet.”

JB

Craig Fitzhugh

The two candidates had been asked, a few minutes into the debate, to share the same table because Dean’s mic wasn’t working. Moving over, he had hazarded a quip of his own: “Shall I repeat everything I’ve already said?”

Actually, there wasn’t a great deal of difference in what the two of them said. They agreed that West Tennessee, and Memphis in particular, had generally received the shaft from the powers-that-be in state government. They both looked askance at the state-run Achievement School District, comparing it unfavorably to the I-Zone institutions of Shelby County Schools. They both rejoiced at a recent court decision against the state practice of lifting one’s driver’s license as a penalty for not paying fines. And they both thought the GOP-dominated legislature’s refusal so far to accept Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act to be a huge and catastrophic partisan folly.

Each also championed the principle of diversity, deplored the use of excessive force and racial profiling by law enforcement, and praised the Hope Scholarship Program and the governor’s Tennessee Promise program of support for free community college tuition, though Fitzhugh was somewhat more insistent that the Hope revenue stream not be tapped to fund Promise.

Dean touted his experience as a onetime Public Defender as a useful experience informing his concern for unempowered minorities. Fitzhugh similarly cited his background as proprietor of a “Bank of the Little Man” in Ripley.

The one issue on which a genuine difference of viewpoints might have materialized was somewhat finessed when Dean — who, unlike Fitzhugh, has been a supporter of charter schools — professed his opposition to “for-profit” charters. Fitzhugh also found a bit of air between himself and Dean’s use of the term “forgotten” as an adjective indicating concern for various classes of Tennesseans — West Tennesseans, in particular — both in Friday’s debate and in a TV ad Dean has been running.

“I don’t call it ‘forgotten,’” Fitzhugh objected, reprising his own frequently expressed concern that the same attention be lavished on “those who live in the shadows of skyscrapers” as on those “in the skyscrapers” themselves. “I don’t like the term
‘forgotten,’” he repeated, advising that voters take a look at his record of ameliorative legislation. “I’ve never forgotten.”

A rhetorical point, perhaps, and one intended essentially to demonstrate a shade of difference, but it is possible that it is on the grounds of such shades and nuances that Tennessee Democrats will render their decision. But there is no party fissure here; either one of these men will suit the party faithful, who are clearly hoping that the era of Democratic no-names with no chance of winning is, at the very least, about to be over.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Bill Lee Closes Fast in GOP Primary

JB

Gubernatorial candidate Lee works the room at Arlington’s Legacy Grill.

Is Bill Lee the new frontrunner among Tennessee’s Republican gubernatorial candidates? A recent poll says that he is, and the Williamson County businessman is now promoting that assumption on a last, pre-primary tour of the state at “100 town halls” (two of them in Shelby County on Thursday, a week before final voting on August 2nd).

Given the lingering consensus that, Democratic blue wave or no blue wave, Republicans are still the majority party in Tennessee, does the prospect that — with less than a week to go — Lee has taken over the GOP lead from the duo long at the top, Diane Black and Randy Boyd, mean that he is the state’s likely new governor?

“Maybe” is the right answer to all those questions. The poll reflecting a sudden come-from-behind lunge from Lee is by JMC Analytics and Polling, a Louisiana firm that is new to the headlines in Tennessee. So, make allowance for a degree of skepticism. It is certainly true, however, from an aggregate of various other polls over the last several months, that Lee had been maintaining a reasonably close third-place position behind Black and Boyd and was theoretically within striking distance of the Black and Boyd, should either or both of them falter.

And it is widely believed that both Black and Boyd, whose campaigns had largely become mere mechanisms for attacking each other, had indeed faltered, especially since their attacks had become progressively meaner-spirited and less connected to reality — accusing each other of being swamp creatures secretly disloyal to President Trump, as well as mad taxers intent upon robbing Tennesseans blind while gaming the financial system to enrich themselves. At no time has there been a reasoned dialogue between the two contrasting Black’s hard-shell Trump-style conservatism with the progressive governmental ideas of Boyd, an entrepreneur and former idea man for current Governor Bill Haslam who prefers now to be called “Conservative Randy Boyd,” as if that were the name on his birth certificate.

Meanwhile, Lee — a multi-millionaire like his two main rivals — has been steadily touring the state in the supportive company of his wife, Maria, stressing his religious faith and his rebound from previous family tragedies that included the death of his first wife from a horseback fall. Looking like a casually composed latter-day Marlboro Man, Lee has eschewed desperate attacks upon his opponents in favor of promises to help build a ‘better life” for all Tennesseans. Steering clear of ideology as such, and lacking a political record of any sort, he styles himself as a “conservative” and an outsider.

His current pre-election tour of Tennessee, in the same 14-year-old RV he has been using for the past year or so, made two stops in Shelby County on Thursday — one at noon at the Kooky Canuck eatery downtown, another at mid-afternoon at The Legacy Grill in Arlington, he greeted supporters, schmoozed with diners, and in general acted like a low-key Man of the Hour.

The restaurant at Arlington was filled with people, who were first treated to a stock campaign video, which recapped moments from the life and times of Lee, who was seen describing his first wife’s fatal horse-riding accident in a subdued but straightforward voice.

“Over time, we healed, we grew, we started laughing again,” Lee said on the video, explaining that he had made it his mission to “ work to change others, to make life better for other people,” not just the “1,200 hard-working pipe-fitters, electricians, plumbers of the Lee Company,” but others, including the inner-city child he mentored and the “guy from prison” he helped make a transition back to society at large.

“I started to think, What if I could do that for everyone in Tennessee? I believe I can. I’m sure going to try.

A local pastor then introduced the flesh-and-blood Lee to the crowd as “a man’s man, “farmer, husband, father, grandfather … not a career politician — in fact, he’s never run for office before — a passionate lover and follower of Jesus Christ.”

Lee came up to the front, dressed in casual shirt and chinos, suggesting that people were looking for a “conservative man of faith” and offering that as a description of himself. Hailing some Memphis-area cousins that were in the crowd, Lee cited the “transformational” nature of his family tragedy and in short order was joined at the front of the room by Maria, “God’s gift to me.”

He promised to take better care of the state’s teachers. “We test too much, and we may be testing for the wrong things.” He spoke of his wish to reform criminal justice and reduce “the revolving door” of recidivism, lamented that 15 Tennessee counties, all rural, were officially designated as in poverty, and got an extended round of applause when he rounded on the “dishonest, deceptive attack ads” that, he implied, his major GOP opponents were committed to.

“It’s everything that’s wrong with politics,” he said. “There’s a lot more truth you can find in the person behind those ads than in the person in those ads.”

There was more in that vein, and a nod to his independence and the fact that he was “not beholden to anybody,” donors, lobbyists, or legislators. He likened his “outsider” status to that of President Trump. “That’s why he’s been so effective.”

After his remarks, he and his wife greeted an impressive number of well-wishers who approached them.

He was asked if really had taken the lead. “We certainly know there’s a surge, and the momentum is there. I don’t rely on polls, but I do rely on the momentum and the electricity I see. In today’s world, people want a conservative and an outsider, and that’s me.”

Asked to define what he meant by the term “conservative,” he said it denotes a “playbook for the fundamental approach to governing, that limited government and small government is better, that fiscal governmency includes not allowing government to grow beyond what it should, and understanding there are conservative social values like being 100 percent pro-life.”

Some might think of all that as boilerplate, but Lee makes such statements with a seeming frankness and a confident if modest attitude. He is not one for hard and fast policy points, but in a contest where image counts for much, he certainly looks the part, and, after several months of trailing frontrunners Black and Boyd for first-place honors in the Republican gubernatorial primary, he may indeed be peaking at the right time.

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News News Blog

Memphis Greenspace Clears Out Rest of Confederate Memorabilia from Memphis Park

Justin Fox Burks

The statue of Jefferson Davis in a downtown park

Memphis Greenspace started cleaning out the remaining Confederate memorabilia from Memphis Park Saturday “to say goodbye to the past” and now also has full state approval to relocate the Confederate statues the nonprofit removed from two parks late last year.

On Saturday, the nonprofit began the process to temporarily relocate the Jefferson Davis statue pedestal, two additional Confederate markers, a sculpture of the Ten Commandments, the battlement cannon, the fencing around the statue pedestal, and the MPD SkyCop.

The Confederate materials will eventually be moved to an undisclosed, safe location. The cannon, fence, and MPD SkyCop will also eventually be returned to the city of Memphis.

“We’re expediting our efforts to relocate current Memphis Park items because we feel the dramatic increase of positive energy flowing up and down Riverside, and we want to continue to be a part of its success,” said Van Turner, director and president of Memphis Greenspace. “There are many incredibly forward-thinking organizations in Memphis that all share a vision of a diverse, inclusive future for Downtown public space, from the Downtown Memphis Commission to Fourth Bluff and Memphis River Parks Partnership. To create that future, we need to say goodbye to the past.”
[pullquote-1] However, no similar moves are under way at Health Sciences Park.

Crowds gathering in Health Sciences Park to support the removal of the Nathan Bedford Forrest statue.

“For Health Sciences Park specifically, the ongoing litigation about the relocation of Confederate markers has been a roadblock,” Turner said.

Greenspace said it has also received word from Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam’s office that it is free to solicit formal requests for the relocation of the Jefferson Davis and Nathan Bedford Forrest statues that were removed last year.

“We’ve already had numerous requests from many organizations willing to take the Confederate statues and other memorabilia,” Turner added. “We will entertain requests from parties interested in housing the statues, but the Memphis Greenspace Board of Directors will use discretion when vetting those interested.”

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Music Music Blog

J.D. Westmoreland Celebrates Royal Records Release

Paul Chandler Moulton

J.D. Westmoreland

Shangri-La Records continues its tradition of remaining absolutely undaunted in the face of the Memphis heat. This Friday, they’ll host an early evening show by J.D. Westmoreland, who’s celebrating the vinyl release of a single he cut at Royal Studios. It’s one of a handful of releases by the new Royal Records label, and, as such, it’s an interesting statement of eclecticism by the new imprint.

Westmoreland, perhaps best known as a member of the popular “Gypsy-Jazz-Bluegrass-Skiffle” group Devil Train, is revealing his skills as a singer/songwriter of late. The single, which is already available online, has a laid back vibe that brings to mind early ’70s Dylan, with his unhurried vocals layered over a soul shuffle tinged with pedal steel (“Birds of Paradigm”) or sprightly, uptempo folk (“Can’t Seem to Get it Right”).

As Westmoreland says, “For this particular project I wanted more of a clean, simple production so that the songs could really express the story. Both these songs deal with the ambiguity of love and circumstance. I wanted to crystallize emotions in a simple format – kind of a bright way of looking at darkness.”

On the A-side, it’s especially encouraging to hear the warm electric piano tones of Royal coloring the country/soul saunter of Westmoreland’s writing. Somehow, in this age of chaos, the marriage of homespun poetry and funky urban grooves does the soul good. A perfect choice for a vinyl release, and an intriguing new twist from Royal.

‘Birds of Paradigm’ single

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

For Your Consideration: Tell the 2018 Ostrander Judges Who to Nominate

The Ostrander Awards are scheduled to go off Sunday, August 26th. The judges have not yet convened, and it’s only a matter of days now before the haggling begins over who gets nominated for one of Memphis’ coveted theater awards, and who goes home with the plaque. In other words, if there was ever a time to make your feelings known as to who you think they should choose, now would be the time to make some noise. I’m suggesting not that any of our upstanding judges could ever be swayed by outside influence. But it sure can’t hurt and might even be fun to try.

What I’m proposing is that theater fans post their own “for your consideration” suggestions in comments here, or on the social media platform of your choosing. You can make it text only, or — if you’re feeling creative — make Academy Awards-style “for your consideration” ads and share them around. My only request is, if you make ads, either email a copy to me or tag me when you post it. If we get enough I’ll create a second post with the best homemade ads out there.

For my sample I picked John Maness because that guy could easily be nominated in a couple of categories, and absolutely deserves a play prize this year.

Have fun and stay tuned to Intermission Impossible for Ostrander updates including nominees, interviews with honorees, and this year’s installment of WHO GOT ROBBED?!?!