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Drawing Conclusions

You’ve seen Greg Cravens’ work on the cover of this paper and most weeks on the Flyer‘s editorial page. But, Cravens admits, the times when Jim Davis made bank with “Garfield” in the daily newspapers are over.

Now is a time to grab at whatever opportunities present themselves. Thinking about starting a web comic? Give it a shot, just have your ideas in place first.

These are just some of the things Cravens will cover in his cartooning class this Sunday at Novel bookstore.

Greg Cravens

He says when he first heard that Novel was opening, he called them about placing his own books in the store. This discussion led to some brainstorming of how they could work together, hence the class, which is open to all ages.

According to Cravens, all kids love to draw, but it’s their parents who may be the true comics geeks. Cravens, himself, is a Mad magazine connoisseur and a “Peanuts” fan from way back.

Cravens says he often has to break students of what cartooning is, that it’s more than just boxes and talk balloons. He often will start them off with a circle, two dots, and a line — in other words, a smiley face. He’ll ask them what that image is conveying. Happiness, they’ll say. This leads to a discussion of why this is and emotional content.

“Cartooning is not about drawing,” he says. “It’s more about communicating.”

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Cover Feature News

A Memphis State of Mind: Men’s Fall Fashion

For a certain type of guy, having good style is more than wearing what’s trendy. It is a state of mind. It means being impeccably groomed, so as to give him the confidence boost to move forward in any way. Because when you feel better, you look better. As we say cheers to September (fashion month), here’s the perspective of some cool and creative guys in Memphis on personal style, grooming, and fashion.

Photographs by Andrea Finese

Gonzo, Ziggy, and Eso

Stephen – @Iam_the1ndonly

My perspective on style in general is a very simple one and one that I take from fashion designer Tom Ford: “Dressing well is a form of good manners.” I keep that approach daily while preparing for my day. Yes, I want to look professional and respectable for my clients, so when I put on one of my suits every morning, I do not take the approach as if it is a uniform, but more a symbol/statement of who I am as a person. I let it reflect my personality.

Here in Memphis, we aren’t known as a trendy or fashion-forward city like L.A., New York, Atlanta, or Miami. We are such a blue-collar city. I was able to grow up watching my father dress in a suit, and I realized that I, too, wanted that for myself. Fashion is constantly growing, changing, reinventing, and repeating itself — from the suspenders back in the old speakeasy days to the stockbrokers of the ’80s, and from the wide-peak-lapel blazers in the ’60s being born again in the ’90s and 2000s. But one thing will remain the same … it’s always your personality!

Stephen

Ziggy @fomoloop

Grooming, in general, influences personal style by subconsciously adding a shot of confidence to the man. It’s similar to home and garden upkeep. You have more pride in something when you’ve taken the time to tend, grow, and maintain it.

Ziggy

Gonzo @gone_zo

I’ve only lived in Memphis for a year and I love it! I relish knowing that Memphians push the status quo (the herd look) and proudly express their individuality through a variety of unique styles. It’s seriously appreciated here. Drive three hours out east (Nashville, I’m talking to you), and everybody starts to look the same. If you dare to deviate from the herd, you’re shunned for standing out!

Gonzo

Eso @coolurbanhippie

Fashion is more open than it ever has been for men. There used to be a lot of rules. Now, anything goes! Right now, it’s less about fashion and more about style. Style is very personal. The climate is perfect for showcasing your personal style and expression, whatever it may be.

Eso

Thank you to Baron’s Man Cave (www.baronsmancave.com) and barbers Rick, Tito, and Brian; Wardrobe: Lansky Bros.

Eso, Ziggy, and Gonzo

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Politics Politics Feature

Seeing Double

So, okay, the newly elected version of the Shelby County Commission began the process of reorganizing itself  on Monday, keeping some of the body’s traditions and abandoning others — managing to be somewhat surprising, either way.

The man of the day was Van Turner, who became the new commission chairman. There was no surprise there — except maybe to those who expected one erstwhile custom — that of automatic promotion to the chairmanship of the previously serving vice chair. That would be Willie Brooks, like Turner a second-termer, who was at least expected to serve as acting chairman for the chairmanship vote.

Photographs by Jackson Baker

Van Turner

But when clerk Rosalind Nichols undertook to assist the commission, eight of whose 13 members are brand-new, by explaining the bylaws for the reorganization, she specified that two votes would be held. And when nominations were invited for the first of those, for acting chair, the new commissioner from District 1, Amber Mills, had first dibs and nominated Turner.

Turner, as it happens, had written to each commissioner, expressing his wish to be chairman, and Mills, understandably, may have become confused as to the order of things. In any case, Turner was elected acting chair in a lopsided vote over Brooks and presided over the vote for permanent chair, winning that by acclamation.

Another returning commissioner, Reginald Milton, a Democrat like Turner and Brooks, had aspired to be vice chair and had done some proselytizing to that effect, stressing that it was time to discard the commission’s vintage habit of alternating power positions between Democrats and Republicans. Simultaneously, returning GOP Commissioner Mark Billingsley had dispatched a letter to his fellow commissioners making the contrary case.

When it came time to vote, not only did the four new GOP members vote his way, so did most of the Democrats. Final vote: 9-3 for Billingsley.

There was more to the votes for chair and vice chair than honorifics. Turner had managed to establish what had long been forecast to be his ultimate preeminence on the commission, and Billingsley had maintained at least the semblance of bipartisan sharing, as well as his own viability.

Ed Ford

There was one more decisive act on Monday, and, appropriately, it came from Turner, who announced to all and sundry that he would be appointing a task force to maintain liaison with the Memphis City Council and would construct it around the person of newly elected Commissioner Edmund Ford Jr., who, after his election to the commission on August 2nd, continues to serve on the City Council, along with two other Council members — Bill Morrison and Janis Fullilove — who were also elected to county positions and remain on the council.

By keeping up their council identity, which by statute they can do until 90 days after their election to new office — November 2nd, in this case — the three departing council members will negate the organized efforts of various activists to call for a special election in November to replace them, thereby allowing their successors to be chosen by the remaining council members in an appointment process for which the current council has become notorious.

At least where Ford is concerned, Turner’s action in effect provides cover for the process. In announcing his task-force plans, the new commission chair touted Ford’s dual service as an opportunity to “utilize the fact that he’s also a city councilman for these waning months” and “allow us to see what’s going on in the city from the county perspective.” Among the issues to be examined in this way by Ford and whoever else ends up on the task force are MATA and health care, two areas of city/county joint concern.

Asked about this de facto seal of approval (which, to be fair, could also be seen as a simple acknowledgement of reality), Commissioner/Councilman Ford denied outright that there was any “controversy” involved in his continuing to serve in two different elected bodies.

“The people in my district don’t care,” the commissioner from District 9 insisted, speaking of a forthcoming “meeting” that evening involving the constituents of Council District 6.

• Several members of the commission, along with other local elected officials, took part on Saturday in the annual Orange Mound Parade through that centrally located African-American Memphis neighborhood. Among those taking part was Phil Bredesen, the former two-term Tennessee governor, now running for the U.S. Senate as the Democratic nominee. Bredesen’s Memphis schedule on Saturday also included a luncheon appearance in Germantown with the “Women United for Bredesen” group and a planned participation in the Southern Heritage Classic Tailgate, which ran into bad weather.

All the events served as a sort of run-up to another Bredesen appearance this Thursday night. Currently billed as a “‘Memphis Matters’ Ideas Forum” at Rhodes College, it is what remains of what was originally intended by the sponsors (including Rhodes, WMC-TV, and the USA Today newspaper chain) to be one of four statewide televised debates between Bredesen and the Republican Senate candidate, 7th District U.S. Representative Marsha Blackburn.

For whatever reason, Blackburn demurred at the idea of a debate at Rhodes, and the Bredesen campaign has been making the most of that decision, sending out press release after release accusing the GOP candidate of ducking a joint encounter in Memphis and playing up the newly configured Ideas Forum as a vehicle for their candidate to hold up his end on the matter.

At press time, Blackburn could not be reached on the matter of the aborted Memphis debate. Although two subsequent debates have since been arranged between the Senate candidates for Nashville and Knoxville, the only exchanges between the two candidates thus far have occurred via TV ads.

Blackburn currently has two attack ads running, one featuring President Trump endorsing her and bad-mouthing Bredesen and another accusing the former governor of favoring additional taxes and of gussying up the governor’s mansion at taxpayer expense. Both claims are somewhat off the mark. As Bredesen maintained in a response ad, he did not raise taxes, and, while the governor’s mansion was renovated during his tenure, he and his wife did not live there, remaining instead in their Nashville residence.

While most of his TV commercials to date have featured Bredesen sounding soft-spoken and willing to work across the partisan aisle, at least one ad on his behalf has appeared of late accusing Blackburn of excessive travel and other high-living habits on the taxpayers’ dime.

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Music Music Blog

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees

Eddie Floyd


The Memphis Music Hall of Fame
just announced this year’s inductees, who officially enter the ranks of honorees at the induction ceremony this November. The Hall of Fame, a nonprofit set up in 2012 and administered by the  Memphis Rock N’ Soul Museum, now celebrates the works of over seventy artists or groups, and shows no signs of lacking local talent for future recognition.

This year’s inductees are, as usual, giants in their respective genres. We pay tribute to them here with clips of them working their magic onstage. Towering over them all is the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin, who died just last month. She will be paid a special tribute in November’s ceremony, as the Hall of Fame honors a legend who called Memphis her birthplace.

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees (2)

Another soul giant, Eddie Floyd, will also be inducted this year. The writer and hit performer behind “Knock on Wood” and many other Stax hits, Floyd’s songs were interpreted by nearly every Stax artist. Naturally, not a year has gone by without at least one artist from the label being inducted.

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees (3)


O’Landa Draper
, the Grammy Award-winning gospel singer and director of the Associates Choir, was considered one of the top gospel artists of the 1990s. He too will join the ranks of honorees this year. Though not born in Memphis, Draper moved to Memphis at the age of 13 and attended Overton High School and the University of Memphis.

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees (4)

At today’s announcement event, there was some light-hearted discussion of whether Draper could be honored in the same program as fellow 2018 inductees, 8 Ball & MJG. They will be, we were assured, but the musical numbers won’t be juxtaposed. The rap duo are on a roll lately, ramping up their live appearances and continuing to drop new albums. (See our recent profile of them below).

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees (6)

In keeping with the Hall of Fame’s tradition of inducting groups as well as solo artists, the Box Tops were also added this year. With Big Star having been inducted in 2014, this makes for two groups associated with Alex Chilton getting the nod. Could he be recognized as a solo artist in his own right one day? In any case, the announcement also named checked original members Danny Smythe, Bill Cunningham, and Gary Talley, as well as 1968 additions Rick Allen and Thomas Boggs. The fabulous guitar in this video clip was not mentioned by name.

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees

Another group, arguably far more groundbreaking than the Box Tops, was also recognized: The Rock and Roll Trio, responsible for the groundbreaking “Train Kept A-Rollin'” and other rockabilly masterpieces. Driven by the savvy guitar attack of Paul Burlison, brothers and Memphis natives Dorsey and Johnny Burnette took the world by storm, once upon a time. Here they are from 1956.

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees (7)

And finally, another legend from the first days of Elvis, who most certainly has not left the building, is George Klein, the pioneering DJ and rock ‘n’ roll television host who was critical to giving regional bands exposure via his programming. He was also an early friend to the King, and had the honor of inducting Elvis into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He’ll be honored with the other performers above (for he, in his own way, was an artist as well) at the induction ceremony, scheduled for November 1st at the Cannon Center. Here’s George sharing a strange moment with the great Sam Phillips.

Memphis Music Hall of Fame Announces 2018 Inductees (5)

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News News Blog

Veazey Takes New Role in Mayor’s Office

Jackson Baker

Kyle Veazy moderates a political debate.

A shake-up at Memphis City Hall finds a familiar name moving up the ranks in Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland’s adminstration.

Kyle Veazey joined Strickland’s office in 2016. It was a high-profile move from The Commercial Appeal where he’d covered candidate Strickland during the election. Veazey left The CA in 2015 and later joined as the deputy director of communications, working under former WMC anchor Ursula Madden.

Veazey will now serve Strickland as one of two Deputy Chief Operating Officers. A Wednesday statement says Veazey will work with Chief Operating Officer Doug McGowen “to deliver longer-term priority projects, coordinate the city’s role in economic development initiatives, and oversee performance improvement opportunities, among other duties.” Veazey is a 2004 graduate of the University of Mississippi.

City-government veteran Chandell Carr will work with McGowen “for day-to-day service delivery, resource allocation, budgeting, and policy development for all of the city’s divisions, among other duties.” Carr has a law degree from the University of Memphis and has most recently served as the city’s Equity, Diversion & Inclusivity Officer for the Division of Human Resources.

“Chandell and Kyle have been a big part of our work these two-and-a-half years,” Strickland said in a statement. “We recognize and reward talent at the city of Memphis, and I’m proud to watch these two leaders grow as they play even greater roles in continuing our progress.”

Carr and Veazey will transition into their new roles next week.

The jobs became available as current Deputy COO Patrice Thomas left to become the new Chief Administrative Officer of Shelby County government. Thanks to this and an already vacant position in the COO’s office, the moves will not increase the city budget, Strickland said.

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News News Blog

Renovated Pink Palace Mansion to Open in December

Pink Palace

Rending of proposed exhibits


After close to two years of construction, the Pink Palace Mansion is set to re-open December 8th, the museum’s officials announced Wednesday.


Relocated and refurbished exhibits in the mansion will include a Piggly Wiggly store replica, a rural early 20th century country store, and a restored Clyde Parke Miniature Circus, which will be displayed on the second floor of the mansion — a section that has been closed to the public for 40 years.

Bill Walsh, marketing manager for the Pink Palace said opening up the second story of the mansion will “will be a great opportunity for many visitors to see a side of the mansion they’ve never seen.”

Pink Palace

Rending of proposed Clyde Parke Miniature Circus exhibit.

The revamped Piggly Wiggly exhibit will be recreated based on patent drawings and photographs of the original store. There will also be space dedicated to Clarence Saunders, the founder of Piggly Wiggly, who first began building the mansion in the 1920s, but had to turn the house over to the city for a museum after declaring bankruptcy. 

The renovated mansion will also house new exhibits like the Cossitt Gallery, featuring more than 600 artifacts from the city’s first culture and history museum. The museum was set up in a room in the Cossitt Library in the early 19th century. The new gallery will aim to recreate the look of that first museum.

Other new exhibits will include a Memphis streetscape meant to depict the symbolic intersection of black and white culture and history from 1900 to 1925.

The mansion will also have “plush new event rental facilities, state-of-the art lighting and a refurbished grand staircase,” Walsh said.

Walsh said construction is slated to wrap up soon and then the process of installing the exhibits will begin. “The exhibits are going to be spectacular. We’re excited that it’s re-opening during the holidays too. It’s sort of a holiday gift for Memphians,” Walsh said.

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News News Blog

Cool Thing: Viewfinders for the Color Blind

Cool Thing: Viewfinders for the Color Blind

Color blind visitors to 13 Tennessee state parks will be able to see the changing fall foliage in a whole new way this year.

The Tennessee Department of Tourist Development installed 13 special viewfinders with EnChroma lenses designed to alleviate red-green color blindness.

“One of the main pillars we promote in Tennessee is our scenic beauty,” said Kevin Triplett, commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Tourist Development. “The reds, oranges and yellows in the fall and the incredible colors in the spring are a staple of what comes to mind when people think about Tennessee or visit here.

Tennessee Department of Tourist Development

A still from a state video shows a color blind man seeing fall colors for the first time through a special viewfinder.

“But to realize, through red/green deficiencies and other forms of color blindness, there potentially are more than 13 million people in our country alone who cannot fully appreciate the beauty our state has to offer, we wanted to do something about that. We wanted to provide opportunities for more people to see what those of us who can may take for granted.”

But, as with many things to do with state government, West Tennessee got shorted.

Two of the 13 special viewfinders have been installed here. East Tennessee got seven. Middle Tennessee got three. Yes, mountains and all that…but still.

The closest viewfinder to Memphis is at Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park’s Poplar Lake, near the the nature center. The other in West Tennessee is at Chickasaw State Park, near Henderson. 

For more information, check here

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Sports Tiger Blue

Three Thoughts on Memphis Tiger Football

• The Tigers earned the scrutiny they’ve received this week. Navy was utterly beatable last Saturday in Annapolis. And a win would have solidified the Tigers’ status as favorites in the American Athletic Conference’s West Division. But dreary rain, four turnovers, and 43 minutes of Navy possession time were enough to tame, if not ruin, big Memphis expectations for 2018. (Honestly, remember that possession time. Despite having the ball for merely 17 minutes, Memphis outgained Navy, 378 yards to 316. Navy was so beatable, but you generally need to have the ball to score.)
Larry Kuzniewski

Mike Norvell

The Tigers’ final turnover — a Patrick Taylor fumble early in the fourth quarter — will be the hardest to forget as the season unfolds. Leading by 12 points at the time, Memphis coach Mike Norvell chose to hand the ball to Taylor, his gifted second option at tailback. Instead of giving the ball to Darrell Henderson, a man who’d scored three touchdowns and averaged 16.3 yards on 13 carries. This is what we call an embarrassment of riches. Memphis has not one, not two, but three talented players capable of breaking free at the line of scrimmage (don’t forget Tony Pollard). But it can confuse what should be simple late-game play-calling. Pardon me for second-guessing a rather sharp coach, but let me first-guess Norvell for the 10 games left on the Tiger schedule. Close game, late . . . give the ball to Darrell Henderson. If you’re gonna lose, lose with Option A.

• The Tigers must sweep their next four games. Memphis players get to wear their Sun Belt gear the next two weeks, with Georgia State (41-7 losers to North Carolina State) and South Alabama (55-13 losers to Oklahoma State) on their way to the Liberty Bowl. With Tulane (in New Orleans) and UConn to follow, this is an early-season lull in the Tiger schedule, but one in which a Memphis slip could prove ruinous. Two league losses would all but eliminate the chance for a return trip to the AAC championship game. If Memphis can hold serve and enter its tilt with UCF on October 13th at 5-1, we’ll have a huge game on our hands at the Liberty Bowl. A stumble over the next four weeks and that game is merely an underdog hosting a team with New Years Six bowl aspirations.

At his weekly press conference Monday, Norvell seemed to recognize the importance of a return to form. “I can tell you these guys will respond in the right way,” he said. “This has not been foreign to us. Unfortunately, we have been here before. We know what it takes to move forward.”

• Mike Norvell aims to win his 20th game as Memphis coach Friday night, and this is significant. You have to go back to the Carter presidency to find a Memphis coach who reached 20 wins in merely his third season. Richard Williamson went 7-4, 7-4, and 6-5 from 1975 through 1977, giving him exactly 20 wins over his first three seasons on the Tiger sideline. (The legendary Spook Murphy merely won 18 games over his first three seasons, though teams played 10 games per season in the Fifties and Sixties.) Norvell has continued to build what Justin Fuente started in 2012, and we’ve reached the point where a one-point loss at Navy in early September feels like a sloppy face-plant. Retain perspective. In a region of SEC behemoths, Memphis Tiger faithful are acting like 25 to 30 wins over three years is the norm. Let’s at least acknowledge it’s a new normal.

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News News Blog

City Council Brings Back Beale Street Entrance Fee

Beale Street

The Memphis City Council voted Tuesday to reinstate the fee to enter Beale Street based on “needs-based determination.”

Bringing back the entrance fee was one of the 24 recommendations made by the group, Event Risk Management Solutions (ERMS), which was hired by the Beale Street Task Force earlier this year to assess crowd control and safety on Beale.

After a long debate between the council Tuesday evening, they approved the fee 7-4, but on a temporary, needs-based basis that is to be determined by the Downtown Memphis Commission and the Memphis Police Department.

The original resolution, sponsored by Councilman Kemp Conrad, called for implementing an attendance-based entrance fee when the crowd is expected to exceed 10,000.

But, Council Chairman Berlin Boyd, who chaired the Beale Street Task Force said even an attendance-based charge could “look discriminatory.”

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“Hypothetically, what if we have 10,000 African-American male and females on the street and you put Beale Street Bucks in place, what does that look like?” Boyd asked. “ What if we have 10,000 African Americans on Saturday and 10,000 African Americans on Sunday night and we put Beale Street Bucks in place? If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, then it’s a duck.”

Boyd said public safety is important, but “we cannot have something that looks sketchy. I’m not voting for anything that’s going to looks like it’s discriminatory toward any person in the city of Memphis or any tourist.”

Councilman Worth Morgan told Boyd and colleagues that public safety shouldn’t be compromised for optics. Morgan also emphasized the importance of taking action, after an early morning shooting at the Purple Haze night club Monday.

To that, Boyd, joined by Councilman Martavius Jones, said an entrance fee would not have prevented that situation, as the night club is outside of the Beale Street Entertainment district. 

Continuing, Boyd reiterated that the program “has to be fair and equitable” for those who patronize and visit Beale Street. He said he wants to make sure that the city isn’t putting itself in the position to get sued.

Council attorney Allan Wade agreed, saying that there may be some risks with setting the number at 10,000, as the study found there was no correlation between crowd size and incidents on Beale. In the case of ligation, he said the court could see the number as “arbitrary.” He suggests adopting some “further objective criteria” for determining the number.

“I do believe that a court would look at MPD’s determination as being needs-based on safety and could be more defensible in court,” Wade said. “That’s just my humble opinion.”

So, Councilman Bill Morrison proposed the idea of allowing MPD and the DMC decide what elements call for implementing a fee or other security measures like wanding patrons.

“Let’s let the experts have this conversation,” Morrison said. “Let’s let the folks that get paid to protect and manage decide.”


The council concurred that the Beale Street Merchants Association should have an input on determining safety precautions as well.

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The $5 fee to enter the street on Saturday nights during peak seasons was eliminated by the council last November. Looking for an alternative to the fee, the Beale Street Task Force hired the crowd control consultant, ERMS earlier this year to study ways to keep the crowds on Beale orderly.

The group produced 24 recommendations in all. Some of which include setting the maximum capacity on the street to 20,000 people, restricting Beale Street to pedestrian traffic only, and redesigning the street’s entry points.

The study also concluded that there wasn’t enough regulation and monitoring of those entering the street.

Two weeks ago, the council made the first move toward new safety precautions, voting to spend a little under $800,000 for bollards — barriers keeping cars from driving onto the street. The bollards will be placed alongside Second protecting people lining up to enter the street, as well as at the ends of the entertainment portion of the street at Beale and Second and at Beale and Fourth.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Sneak Peek: Trader Joe’s

Trader Joe’s will open in Germantown Friday at 8 a.m.

The store announced in 2015 it was opening a location in the area. But sometimes it didn’t seem like a sure thing.

Friends, I stepped my own two feet in the store yesterday. And, well, it was Trader Joe’s, sans the produce, as it was too early to put that out yet.

Two buck chuck? Yep, it’s there, though now it’s three buck and some change chuck.

Noah Stevens says once they got the word that the store was a go at the end of July they worked nonstop to get the store ready.

The store is about 15,000 square feet, a wee thing compared to the 60,000 to 100,000 square feet of the average Kroger.

Stevens, who is a TJ’s veteran of 15 years, says it’s the biggest one he’s ever worked in.

He notes the mural depicting Germantown High as a welcome to the community from the store and that TJ’s has a deal set with the Mid-South Food Bank for pick-ups daily.

He says that the store will have nine registers and he aims to have them all working at once in order to get folks in and out.

But Stevens also emphasizes the fun, laid-back nature of the store — no intercom and cool music to have you dancing in the aisles.

“It’s an adventure,” he says.

Trader Joe’s is located at 2130 Exeter in Germantown.

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