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Memphis Gaydar News

Groups Want Tennessee DA Disbarred on Anti-LGBTQ Stance

Tennessee gay rights groups are calling for a Tennessee District Attorney to be disbarred for saying he issues lower charges for same-sex domestic assault cases and wouldn’t prosecute Tennessee county clerks who deny marriage licenses to same-sex couples. 

Northcott

Lambda Legal, Tennessee Equality Project, and the Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Center of Rutherford County filed a formal complaint last week against Coffee County District Attorney General Craig Northcott. The complaint was lodged with the Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility, which oversees attorneys in the state.

The groups claimed that Northcott made public statements that he does not file domestic assault charges if the violence occurred between same-sex spouses, does not recognize “homosexual marriage,” and would not prosecute those county clerks.

“Coffee County DA Craig Northcott has denied the validity of same-sex marriages and the equal protection of the law to LGBT people,” said Ethan Rice, senior attorney for the Fair Courts Project at Lambda Legal. “Such conduct violates ethics rules protecting citizens from bias and has no place within the very office designated to enforce the law of the land.

“Keeping DA Northcott in office will have a chilling effect on the willingness of LGBT people to seek justice and protection. District Attorney Northcott’s public comments revealed not only a bias against LGBT people but that he has made discriminatory charging decisions against an entire class of people and intends to continue to do so.”
[pullquote-1] Last year, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations (TBI) reported 1,424 cases of domestic violence in same-sex relationships, according to the groups. The TBI’s 2018 Tennessee Hate Crime Report said 21.9 percent of all hate crimes last year were motivated by sexual bias, which includes crimes against LGBT and gender non-conforming people. Tennessee is home to about 130,000 LGBT adults, according to a report from the Williams Institute, and nearly 25 percent of those are people of color.

The groups said Northcott’s comments may deter LGBT people from reporting domestic assault, hate crimes, or other violence against them and create an obstacle to accessing the criminal legal system.

“LGBTQ people experiencing domestic violence are among the most vulnerable populations in Tennessee,” said Christopher Sanders, executive director of Tennessee Equality Project and Tennessee Equality Project Foundation. “Prosecutors have a duty to treat their cases with the same gravity as all other cases. 

“Discrimination in prosecution endangers our community and erodes the public trust in the criminal justice system.

Northcott’s statements were made during March 2018 in a presentation he gave called “The Local Church’s Role in Government” at New Mexico’s Chafer Theological Seminary Bible Conference.

He said he charges defendants with simple assault when a domestic violence incident occurs within the marriage of a same-sex couple, rather than the charge of domestic assault that he files when the incident occurs in the marriage of a different-sex couple.

Simple assault is a lesser charge with reduced punishment implications. The groups argued that Northcott is stripping LGBT domestic assault victims of the protections given with the elevated charge of domestic assault.
[pullquote-2] Northcott said domestic violence charges are to recognize and protect the “sanctity of marriage” but “there’s no marriage to protect” when it comes to same-sex marriages.

“We understand ‘domestic’ is not confined to marital status and feel it is important to advocate for all victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking regardless of race, color, national origin, religion (including religious belief), sex, gender identity (including gender expression and gender identity), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family or parental status, or socioeconomic status,” said Karen Lampert, executive director of the Tennessee-based Domestic Violence Program & Sexual Assault Services. “Denying, limiting, or disbelieving a victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking further empowers an abuser, increases danger of lethality, and perpetuates a societal crime that can be prevented”
[pullquote-3] Northcott also said county clerks should not “succumb” to the rule of law” when it comes to issuing same-sex marriage licenses. Instead, they should “stand on God’s truth” and he would not prosecute them for it. Further, he said he would pat the clerk on the back and give them hugs.

Read the formal complaint here.

Late last month, a group of about 300 Tennessee lawyers wrote the board asking for an investigation of Northcott on his statements. The Council on American-Islamic Relations filed another charge abasing Northcott after he said Muslims were inherently evil.

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News News Blog

Memphis Pets of the Week (9/3-9/9)

Each week, the Flyer will feature adoptable dogs and cats from Memphis Animal Services. All photos are credited to Memphis Pets Alive. More pictures and more information can be found on the Memphis Pets Alive Facebook page.
[slideshow-1]

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News News Blog

Harris Presents ‘Landmark’ Funding Plan for MATA

Memphis Area Transit Authority

Mayor Harris wants to give MATA $10 million.

Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris presented a plan to the Shelby County Commission Wednesday to generate $10 million in funding each year for the Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA).

In the past, MATA has said it needs an additional $30 million in funding to build a more robust, frequent, and reliable system.


Gary Rosenfeld, CEO of MATA said Wednesday that the mayor’s proposal is a “landmark plan” that would “dramatically change the trajectory of funding for public transit in this community.”

Harris said the plan would have “zero impact” on most families and does not include an increase in property taxes. Instead, the plan would implement an annual $145 registration fee for households’ third vehicle and beyond. Harris said this would only affect about 17 percent of residents here.

“Today I presented out #Future4Transit plan to the Shelby County Commission,” Harris wrote on Twitter. “If adopted it will have a big impact on transit.”

If the commission adopts the plan, the county would also allocate 1.5 percent, or $1 million of its capital improvement budget, to transit.

Harris anticipates the additional funds will be used to implement recommendations laid out in the Transit Vision 3.0 Plan, such as an express route to the airport and increased frequency on MATA’s most popular routes.

The additional $10 million would have an economic impact of more than $40 million, Harris said, citing expanded job access and a reduction in car accidents.

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The mayor also said the plan would have a significant impact on poverty, noting there are 15,000 available jobs in the county: “More frequent transit helps people get a job and keep a job.”

The transit investment would also have a “big impact on our shared environment.” Harris said. With more frequent and reliable transit options, there would be more ridership and a reduction of automobile emissions by thousands of tons.

“Everyone has to play a role in trying to preserve our shared environment, even local officials,” Harris said. “We will all enjoy the benefits of clean air, reduced congestion, and a reduction in poverty. This sustainable investment in transit helps achieve all those objectives.”

Harris is looking for the commission to vote on the plan by February 2020. County approval could be contingent upon MATA giving the county a place on its board.

Earlier this year, the county commission approved $2.5 million of the county’s 2020 budget going toward MATA and related infrastructure improvements. This was the first investment in public transit by the county.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Alex da Ponte’s This Is Ours

Jamie Harmon

Alex da Ponte


After making her start with indie band Yeah, Arturo, Memphis-based songwriter Alex da Ponte released her first solo album, Nightmares, in 2012. Since then, she has remained an active member of the Memphis music scene, releasing new albums every few years, like clockwork. She released her newest album, This Is Ours, recorded at High/Low Recording with Toby Vest and Pete Matthews, in July of 2019.

Memphis Flyer: You’ve been active in the Memphis music scene — and pretty regularly releasing new music — for a while. Has your relationship to making music changed over time?

Alex da Ponte: It’s still so bizarre to me that I’ve been here in Memphis making music for 13 years and playing shows for 11. My first show was at the old Galloway Church in Cooper-Young in 2008. It was so shaky and uncertain. I talked too much between songs. It’s so hard for me to be vulnerable, it still is, but I stood up there with my band because I had these songs and the songs just kept coming. I just reached a point where I didn’t know what else to do. It felt like a waste to just keep them to myself. That much hasn’t changed. The songs continue to come. I love to sing and I love to write so I’ve found myself in this sort of permanent-yet-casual relationship with making records.

The new album’s opening feels very cinematic to me. There’s space in the arrangements on “Girls,” and I can visualize the scene – the road, the “feet on the ground.” Is that what you wanted?

“Girls” was inspired by the HBO series Girls. I started the song as a letter to creator/actress Lena Dunham, but I address her by her character’s name, Hannah. I was a fan of the show and happened to catch an interview where she answered questions about being a female in the industry. It was easy to see the parallels between her personal life and the show she’d created. She inspired a lot of people and this was all in the midst of a very political climate, when Hilary [Clinton] was running for president, a topic the interview also touched on. So, the song ended up being, for me, a very political statement.

What was it like working with Krista Lynne on Jana Misener? They’re some talented players.

Krista and Jana are wonderful. So easy to work with, obviously super-talented and really kind people. They came in and took the song “Work to Do” to another level. This is another example of Memphis at its finest. Look how much talent is in our area. I wanted to bring as much of that together as possible.

To me, “Work to Do” is a particularly mature song. Even as you say “you’ve got work to do,” there seems to be an understanding there that suggests a more nuanced emotion than you get in most pop songs. I think the switch to first person at the end really underscores that.

Yeah, “Work to Do” is such a raw song for me. My little brother died a couple years ago, just a month shy of my son — my first child — being born. That was a whirlwind time — emotions all over the place, as you can imagine. It was such an intense experience to watch my child be born and go home with a newborn all while in the thick of grief. So, the song, too, is both sad and really full of hope.


Your father, siblings, and nephew contributed to “Sibling Song.” What was it like working with family? Had you done that before?

I’ve never been able to pull my family into the studio before, but I’ve always wanted to. After so much tragedy in our lives I finally thought, “What am I waiting for?” So, we made it happen.

My parents and my older sister in particular have really great voices. My mom’s mom sang opera and my dad’s mom has always sung in her church choir. It really was such a special moment having them come in and sing on this song.

And at the very end of this track you can hear my little brother say, “We’re related to Alex da Ponte. She’s aight,” and then laugh. Had to incorporate him in someway. Any excuse to hear his voice. Part of grief, for me, has meant finding ways to keep him alive. Now he’ll forever be chuckling at the end of one of my songs, and I love that.

Is that your nephew on the cover of the album?

That’s my son, Oz, on the album cover with me and my wife, Karen. My best friend, a transplant from Missouri who has become a Memphis staple in the local film scene, Breezy Lucia was the photographer.

Is music a big part of your family life?

It is. When my dad’s side of the family gathers we end up singing a lot or sharing music we like. Sometimes it’ll just be my dad, his sister and his mom singing harmonies a cappella while the rest of us sit and swoon.

Breezy Lucia

Alex da Ponte


I really like the tone of the record, “Memphis” in particular. There’s a very Memphis inflection to the sound, but it’s subtle. Clean guitars, tight rhythm section, a little bit of shuffle to the drums. How much of that influence is Toby and Pete?

Oh, man, Toby and Pete. That duo. I did my very first record with them back when High/Low Recording was on Cleveland, near the Crosstown Concourse. And Pete was in my band for a long time.

I have so much love and admiration for them and what they bring to the projects they work on. My songs just don’t feel complete until they’ve had their hands on it. Sincerely. I’ve learned so much from Pete in particular. He has had such an impact on me as a musician. Forever my stage brother and wise Yoda mentor.

You co-produced the record, right? Can you tell me a little about that?

I have accidentally co-produced every record I’ve done. I’m very hands on, and I always have a vision of how I want things to be. I know what kind of sound and vibe I’m going for. I’m so lucky to work with producers who are so open and even encouraging to spit-balling ideas together. That’s another thing that I learned from Pete — you put ego aside and do what’s best for the song.

Talk a little about that “we got a fire inside us” line. What does that mean in relation to being a Memphian to you?

In high school, I hated it here. I thought I needed to move to a bigger city to be able to thrive but then I found myself in Midtown and making connections with so many like-minded people. Dreamers that were making things happen. Small business owners like Kat who owns Muddy’s Bakeshop, the Choose 901 crew, Outdoors, Inc., where I worked for a few years. Everybody was doing something. It was and is so inspiring.

Now, I feel like I’m an advocate for this place. I’m in love with it. When we did the music video for this song, I wanted to hit some of these places that inspire me and help make this city the place I love so we filmed a bit at the new indoor skatepark over on Broad called Society and the climbing gym that opened up in Soulsville called Memphis Rox.

[pullquote-2]


Can you tell me a little about your songwriting process?

I’ve written songs in a lot of different ways, but it always turns out best when the lyrics come first and I put guitar to it later. I’m a writer before I’m a musician. In fact, my great-great-grandfather was Lorenzo da Ponte, librettist for Mozart. He wrote the words to Mozart’s operas. Writing, by blood, is my strong suit I think.

I think you have a real flair for telling stories. What are some of your influences?

My greatest influence is writer John Fante. Hands down. I’ve read everything he’s ever written, and the influence has permeated my entire being. Musically, though, there’s a band called Shovels & Rope that swept me off my feet about seven years ago at the Hi Tone. I’ve never seen a cooler couple. They give 110 percent every performance. Worth checking out if you haven’t already. Their latest song “Mississippi Nuthin'” is one of my very favorites.

Are there any concerts coming up or anything else I should promote?

We don’t have anything booked at the moment but we do have a music video out for the song “Memphis” that we’d love for people to check out. Also, all the songs are on Spotify, iTunes, and Apple Music.

Is there anything else you want to talk about?

I’d like to mention my band boys. Kris Acklen played bass (and some keys) for me on this record. He has been really fun to work with. Joe Austin is my go-to guy now days. Amazing guitarist. Added a lot of cool lead guitar stuff that totally makes the songs shine. And Mark Petty II played drums. You’ve probably seen Mark in the Smiths cover band around town. They are super tight. I was very lucky they all signed onto this project. I hope to keep them around!

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday on Tuesday: Big Ass Truck

Cole Early

Robby Grant and Steve Selvidge rock Railgartenwith Big Ass Truck

You were out of pocket on Labor Day, so we’re doing Music Video Monday on Tuesday.

In the 1990s, Big Ass Truck was the hottest ticket in Memphis. Formed by Steve Selvidge, Robby Grant, and Alex Greene (who is the current music editor for the Memphis Flyer) with the goal of being the post-modern MGs, they were one of the first bands anywhere to incorporate turntablism in a rock band setting, courtesy of DJ Colin Butler.

After touring relentlessly for the better part of the decade, the band went on hiatus in 2001. Nowadays, Grant is instrumental in the Mellotron Variations and Selvidge is the lead guitarist in, among other bands, The Hold Steady. Big Ass Truck has been periodically reforming for one-offs and short tours, like they did last winter at Railgarten. Director and producer Cole Early was on hand with his camera crew to capture the stone cold groove.

This Saturday, September 7th, Big Ass Truck will open for The Hold Steady at The Basement in Nashville, and once again, it’s the hottest ticket in town. Courtesy of Early, here’s a little taste of what the folks paying top dollar for that show will see.

Big Ass Truck – Live at Railgarten Memphis 11-21-18 ”Theem From” from Cole Early on Vimeo.

Music Video Monday on Tuesday: Big Ass Truck

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

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News News Blog

ACLU Moves to Stop State Voter Registration Law From Taking Effect

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Tennessee filed for an emergency injunction Friday in an attempt to stop a state law that places substantial requirements on voter registration efforts from going into effect.

The law, signed by Governor Bill Lee in May, mandates a slew of requirements for those participating in voter registration efforts and penalties for those who don’t comply. It is set to take effect on October 1st.

Some of the requirements of the law include providing the coordinator of elections with information about any voter drive prior to holding it, completing a training session, and filing a sworn statement stating an intention to obey the laws and procedures pertaining to the process.

The law also creates civil and criminal penalties to groups or individuals who turn in more than 100 “deficient filings.” Groups opposing the law have said it would place “strict, unnecessary, and irrational restrictions” on community-based voter registration efforts.

[pullquote-1]

Soon after the law was passed, the ACLU, along with the Campaign Legal Center and Fair Elections Center filed a lawsuit challenging the legislation in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee on behalf of the League of Women Voters of Tennessee, the American Muslim Advisory Council, the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center, Rock the Vote, Spread the Vote, Central Labor Council, and HeadCount.

The ongoing lawsuit, League of Women Voters of Tennessee v. Hargett, argues that the law violates the freedoms of speech, association, due process, and “the fundamental right to vote under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.”

Now, the ACLU is trying to stop the law from going into effect by filing a motion for a preliminary injunction. If granted, the injunction would prohibit the state from penalizing those participating in voter registration who don’t meet all the requirements of the new law. Read the full motion for injunction below. 

[pdf-1]


“Civic-minded groups like our clients should be able to help community members register to vote without the threat of being charged with a crime or slapped with an exorbitant fine,” said Hedy Weinberg, executive director of the ACLU of Tennessee. “While this case works its way through the system and we prove in court why this law is unfair and unconstitutional, our clients should be able to help as many Tennesseans as they can gain access to the ballot box.”

Tuesday (today) is the last day to register to vote to participate in the upcoming city elections, set for Thursday, October 3rd. Voters can register one of three ways: online, via mail, or in person. Find more information on how to register here

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Three Thoughts on Tiger Football

• Memphis allowed only 10 points against an SEC team.
The Tigers allowed only 10 points. To a team from the mighty SEC. You have to go back 14 years to find a game in which Memphis allowed so few points to an SEC foe . . . and the Tigers lost that game. (Ole Miss won the 2005 contest at the Liberty Bowl, 10-6.) If new defensive coordinator Adam Fuller wanted to make his presence felt in a program built recently on offensive firepower, his unit accomplished the feat in the season-opener. Only once last season did the Tigers allow a team fewer yards than they surrendered (173) against Ole Miss, and that was an FCS program (Mercer).

Nine members of the Tiger defense contributed at least three solo tackles against the Rebels. Memphis accumulated an astonishing ten tackles behind the line of scrimmage (Bryce Huff, J.J. Russell, O’Bryan Goodson, and Joseph Dorceus had two each). The Rebels were one for 10 on third down conversions and held the ball just over 21 minutes of game time. It was a dominating, statement game for a defense recently accustomed to giving up at least 30 points, win or lose. The Rebels play in the SEC but they are not Alabama or Georgia. Some perspective should be retained. But for one game, a statement game? The Memphis defense showed up. (NOTE: The last time the Tigers allowed as few as 10 points and beat an SEC foe: a 19-3 win over Ole Miss in 1993.)
Larry Kuzniewski

Memphis coach Mike Norvell


• The Tigers have a stud in punter Adam Williams.

He won’t appear on the cover of a media guide, as Tom Hornsey did in 2013 (the year he won the Ray Guy Award). But Williams was a difference-maker in Saturday’s win. He narrowly missed pinning Ole Miss inside the Rebel five-yard line twice before finally doing so late in the fourth quarter on the play that preceded Huff’s sack of Matt Corral for a safety. (The Memphis offense then consumed the game’s final 6:27.) Williams averaged 43.8 yards on his six kicks, almost precisely his average (43.2) as a freshman last year. There will likely be games (blowout wins) in which Williams’s impact is negated. But it’s healthy to recognize that new special teams coordinator Pete Lembo has a legitimate weapon on fourth down. Combined with a stingy Tiger defense, Williams may decide another game or two.

• Stick to the “1 and 0” philosophy.
Under poor leadership, the Tigers would overlook this week’s opponent (Southern). They might even gaze around their first road game (September 14th at South Alabama) and set their sights on Navy (at the Liberty Bowl, September 26th). I don’t see this happening. To a man, players and coaches I’ve spoken to stress “the next game is the biggest game” on the schedule. It’s a quaint notion with Southern coming to town, with the Tigers’ three toughest opponents not appearing on the opposite sideline until November for crying out loud. But the notion is smart if this team wants to raise its ceiling for achievement in 2019. Wins must be accumulated. The opponents are scholarship players, too, we’ll be reminded.

Few Memphis supporters anticipated the 3-1 Tigers traveling to Tulane last season and getting spanked by the Green Wave. That was the first of three losses in four games for a team coming off a Top-25 finish in 2017. Win the next game. The Tigers have two months of football ahead in which this approach must be standard, however quaint.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Highland Axe & Rec to open Sept. 4th

MIchael Donahue

Highland Axe & Rec offers three lanes and six targets for axe throwing.


It’s time to start limbering up. Highland Axe & Rec opens Sept. 4th at 525 South Highland.

It’s safe to say this 5,000-square-foot venue isn’t your usual Highland Strip watering hole.

Highland Axe offers three lanes with six targets. People stand behind a line and throw an axe and try to hit the target.

It also offers food, two bars, games, three 12-by-10 foot projector screens, and three other TVs, plus plenty of seating. Highland Axe also has a basketball-throwing machine and  video game arcades and pinball machines.

But let’s start with the axe throwing.

Throwing that axe isn’t easy at first. I tried it twice and hit the flat of the axe against the wall both times.

Taylor Berger, managing partner in Partymemphis.com, which owns Highland Axe, Rec Room, Railgarten, and Loflin Yard, showed me the proper way to throw. You hold the axe in two hands with arms raised, take two steps forward, and throw. Berger’s throw, by the way, was right on the money.

You might have thrown an axe or two if you’ve been to the Rec Room. But Highland Axe is the ultimate when it comes to axe throwing. The back area, where the lanes are located, also includes a wide-screen TV, a bar, beer pong and seating for about 30 people. That space was a storage area until they converted it, Berger says.

Why axe throwing? “I got hooked on playing,” Berger says. He’d go to Rec Room with his buddies after the kids had gone to bed and throw some axes. But there’s no kitchen at Rec Room. Now, at Highland Axe, you can eat, drink and be an ax champion.

The main area includes three living room areas, each with its own set of couches and giant projector screen. You can rent out the seating areas to play video games, or, if nobody is renting them, you can relax and watch sports.

Berger installed a deluxe sound system, which will come in handy at Highland Axe dance parties and DJ nights. He also will offer occasional live music.

The menu includes a variety of appropriately-named items, including the “Axe,” “Big Axe,” and “Fat Axe” (thee patties) hamburgers.

The “Kick Axe Chicken Sammie” is a whole, marinated fried chicken breast with melted cheese, served plain, buffalo, or chicken jerk style. Chef Russell Casey came up with the menu.

I’m intrigued by the “Bad Axe Pop-Tarts,” which are pancake battered deep-fried strawberry Pop-Tarts with whipped cream and rainbow sprinkles. You get two to an order.

Movie posters from famous axe-related movies, including Friday the 13th, Golden Axe, American Psycho, The Shining, and So I Married an Ax Murderer, will hang on the walls.

Will they actually run axe movies at Highland Axe?

“Frequently. Yes,” Berger says.

Highland Axe & Rec will be open from 4:30 p.m. until late on weekdays and 11 a.m. until late on weekends.

Michael Donahue

People can play games or watch sports on giant projector screens in comfy living room areas.

Michael Donahue

Taylor Berger

Michael Donahue

Taylor Berger shows how it’s done.