Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

The “Freshman Class” of City Candidates: a Second Look

Among the factors that go into a successful political

Frank Johnson

campaign are significant financial backing, existence of a well-established network of support, and name recognition. Candidates who can boast those advantages generally do well. Candidates who do not have a much rougher time getting noticed.

There is an occasional new-face candidate who, by dint of hard work, luck, good helpers, and most importantly, a coherent and compelling platform, can transcend the lack of the advantages mentioned above.

Frank W. Johnson is one of several candidates in the current city election who began their efforts as lesser-known personalities taking on well-known incumbents for Memphis City Council positions. Not to put too fine a point on it, Johnson has quarreled with what he saw as an insignificant amount of attention paid his effort in my recently published pre-election review.

I have hashed the matter out on FaceBook with Mr.Johnson and other candidates with like complaints, who see themselves as representing a new broom of overdue reform — or, as one of them suggested, a “freshman class” of new energy and new ideas. And, having turned the matter around in my mind, I am somewhat convinced — enough so that I have begun to see some of these candidates as in fact deserving of a second look.

Candidate rosters in big elections are normally loaded up, as I put it in an earlier preview, with “hopeful dreamers — perennial candidates, unready first-timers, and a fair share of the outright deluded.” I think it is fair to say that, here and there, the “freshman class” of relatively unknown candidates this year represents yet another category, signifies in fact a legitimate insurgency.

To begin with the aforesaid Frank Johnson, who says: “I have taught school, worked on the primary board with the Shelby County Democrats [and have been] a grassroots committee representative for District 10. Also, I continue to work around the issue of environmental justice and the problems with lead in our drinking water.”

In several appearances, Johnson has made much of his upbringing in southeast Memphis, “next to the Defense Depot, one of the most contaminated areas in the city. He speaks convincingly of a history of contamination” and of serious, life-threatening illness experienced by his own mother and sister from the effect of “living next to mustard-gas canisters in the ground. As a teacher at Larose Elementary, he was aware that his students had lead in their drinking water. And in general Johnson has first-hand experience of ‘decades of trauma,” and his candidacy is in large part witness to this grim reality.

Johnson is also articulate on the subject of “gentrification,” which he defines as a way “they get us [the city’s underserved] out of our properties … in both black and white areas.” He characterizes gentrification as “Reaganomics revisited,” a mode of development whereby “we give rich people money and hope they come back and give us some of that money.” He maintains, “Our Mayor’s offices, our Councils, our Commissions have all been compromised by this corporate money.

“There was a time in the ‘80s when there were grocery stores on every corner. There was equity in our communities, but we’ve been starved of money. They bait us with bags of money, wanting us to decorate our communities before they take them from us. We need to re-invest in our communities, renovate our homes, rehabilitate our schools, and pay a living wage.”

Much of that indictment is rhetorical, of course, and needs to be documented with incontrovertible fact, but it speaks to a growing perception among many that developers now have a stranglehold on city government.

Johnson is no “moderate.” At the site of a recent AFL-CIO action, he unleashed some strong words. “Labor’s strong. Labor’s strong. … I like to play shut-down every now and then. I was out there on that bridge a few years ago. Sometimes you not only got to shut things down, you got to cut things off, because they don’t get it. These rich and powerful people don’t understand that labor makes this country go. We didn’t get a 40-hour work week being nice to people. … They shut down Henry Ford. They shut down Rockefeller. Labor shut down everybody. And guess what, we got to shut it down again.”

Johnson is running in a multi-candidate race for Position 2 of Super-District 8. His opponents include the redoubtable Cheyenne Johnson, the incumbent, who is generally regarded as a credit to the council and, during her electoral career as Shelby County Assessor, was able to win consistently as a Democrat, even during Republican-dominated election eras.

Others in the race are; Marinda Alexandria-Williams, Craig Littles, and Brian L. Saulsberry. Each of them, too, has a story to tell.

To Be Continued…

Categories
News News Blog

Groups Seek Funds for Afrofuturistic Garden, Food Forest, Boat Dock

Google Maps

Site of South Memphis Future and Funk Community Art Garden

Two groups are looking to transform a vacant South Memphis lot into an Afrofuturistic-themed community garden, and are asking for donations to do so.

Using the online fund-raising platform, ioby, the Center for Transforming Communities and the United Housing Inc. are hoping to raise a little over $8,000 to create the South Memphis Future and Funk Community Art Garden.

The project is planned for a vacant lot on McMilan Street in South Memphis’ Lauderdale subdivision. Designed by Tobacco Brown, a community art garden specialist, the garden “will honor the meaning of home in South Memphis and will reimagine what the future of South Memphis as home will mean using art, photographs, and nature.”

Organizers say one goal of the garden is to engage the community and encourage the activation of other vacant properties in the city. The garden will be a “gateway to begin the discussion about creative ways to activate vacant lots and land while celebrating the culture of South Memphis and the future of the community,” the fund-raising page reads.

A community build day is scheduled for Saturday, October 5th from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the site of the future garden. Volunteers will have the opportunity to work with Brown, the garden specialist, to plant flowers and build seating for the space.

Organizers are hoping to reach the fund-raising goal of $8,327 before Monday, October 7th ahead of the unveiling celebration on October 12th. The groups will host an activation celebration that day for the community to come and learn about the garden.

The celebration will feature writers Sheree Thomas and Troy Wiggins as speakers, an Ethiopian coffee ceremony, as well as poetry, dance and musical performances. The event will also provide information on fair housing in the city, programs that promote renter’s rights and home ownership, and the importance of home ownership in building wealth, equity, and stability for families.

Through its New Century of Soul Challenge, the city of Memphis has promised to match donations for this project up to $10,000. To donate go here.

ioby

Future site of the Uptown Community Food Forest


• A few miles north of the South Memphis garden site, another group is looking to transform an existing Uptown community garden into a food forest, a garden that mimics forest growth with edible plants. This strategy for growing food leads to better light exposure, simpler maintenance, and an overall better, more bio-diverse yield.

Unlike most community gardens, organizers say the Uptown Community Food Forest will utilize nearly all of the land where it sits to maximize the amount and variety of crops. The project’s organizers say the food forest will provide the community with access to naturally grown food, including seasonal and native produce that they might not otherwise have access to.

The hope is to raise the $8,675 needed for the project by the end of November. To donate to this project go here. The city is also slated to match funds for this project.

Wolf River Conservancy

Rendering of proposed boat dock

• Several miles away from the site of the future food forest, the Wolf River Conservancy is raising funds to give a Raleigh community better access to the Wolf River.


The Conservancy is looking to construct a boat dock near the recently constructed Epping Way section of the Wolf River Greenway trail. The boat dock will provide expanded access to the 20-acre lake there. In Raleigh, there is currently no safe way to access the water to teach and enjoy paddle sports, according to the Conservancy.

The hope is that the new boat dock will help the group better engage youth and adults in environmental education and recreation activities.

The Wolf River Conservancy has already secured $55,000 for the project, but is looking to raise an addition $20,635 by Friday, October 4th. The city has agreed to provide the difference if the goal isn’t met. To donate to this project, go here.

To learn about more projects in the city like these, visit the ioby site.

Categories
News News Blog

‘OK’ Symbol, Roof’s Bowlcut Added to List of Hate Symbols

The bowl cut of white supremacist mass killer Dylann Roof is now a hate symbol, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

Is the OK hand symbol OK anymore?

Maybe, maybe not, says the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). If used by white supremacist groups, it’s a hate symbol.

The OK symbol was one of 36 symbols the anti-hate group added to its “Hate On Display” online database this year. Many of the symbols, memes, and slogans added this year are white supremacist symbols adopted recently by the alt-right segment of the white supremacist movement.

“Even as extremists continue to use symbols that may be years or decades old, they regularly create new symbols, memes, and slogans to express their hateful sentiments,” said ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt. “We believe law enforcement and the public need to be fully informed about the meaning of these images, which can serve as a first warning sign to the presence of haters in a community or school.”

Many of the new symbols have appeared at white supremacist events, such as the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, and were painted on the guns used by white supremacist mass killer Brenton Tarrant. Such slogans and symbols appear online on 4chan, 8chan, and Reddit, according to the ADL. Some have also spread into mainstream platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and gaming platforms.

Here are some of the new symbols or slogans added to Hate on Display this year, with explanation and opinions by the ADL:

• The “OK” hand symbol – Begun as a hoax by members of the website 4chan, the OK symbol became a popular trolling tactic. By 2019, the symbol was being used in some circles as a sincere expression of white supremacy.  Anti-Defamation League

Australian white supremacist Brenton Tarrant flashed the symbol during his March 2019 courtroom appearance soon after his arrest for allegedly murdering 50 people in mosques in Christchurch.

• Burning Neo-Nazi symbols – Neo-Nazis have adopted the Ku Klux Klan practice of symbolic burnings, substituting swastikas and other neo-Nazi symbols, such as othala and life runes, for crosses.
[pullquote-1] • Dylann Roof’s “Bowlcut” – The “Bowlcut” is an image of a bowl-shaped haircut resembling the one worn by white supremacist mass killer Dylann Roof.
Anti-Defamation League

Roof’s bowl cut.

Those who use the bowlcut image or other “bowl” references admire Roof and call for others to emulate his 2015 mass shooting attack at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina.

• Happy Merchant – An anti-Semitic meme depicting a drawing of a Jewish man with heavily stereotyped facial features who is greedily rubbing his hands together. The meme is by far the most popular anti-Semitic meme among white supremacists, according to the ADL.

• “Anudda Shoah” – An anti-Semitic phrase that first became popular among white supremacists in 2014 to mock Jews, whom they claim bring up the Holocaust (“Shoah” is the Hebrew term for Holocaust) when confronted with anything they don’t like. Anti-Defamation League

‘The Happy Merchant’

• Diversity = White Genocide – A white supremacist slogan intended to suggest multiculturalism will mean the demise of the white race.

Logos of various hate groups, including the neo-Confederate white supremacist League of the South, the neo-Nazi National Socialist Legion, the white supremacist Rise Above Movement (RAM), the white supremacist group Patriot Front, and the American Identity Movement, the white supremacist group that is successor to Identity Evropa.

“These are the latest calling cards of hate,” said Mark Pitcavage, senior fellow in ADL’s Center on Extremism and an expert on hate symbology. “While some hate symbols are short-lived, others take on a life of their own and become tools for online trolling.

“We pay special attention to those symbols that exhibit staying power, as well as those that move from online usage into the real world.”
[pullquote-2]

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 35, Navy 23

The Memphis Tigers are 4-0.

That sentence — or a version of it — could have opened a game report no more than twice since World War II until the Tigers beat Navy Thursday night at the Liberty Bowl. Only Spook Murphy’s 1961 squad (which started 6-0) and Justin Fuente’s last Memphis team in 2015 (which started 8-0) have gone as deeply into a season unblemished as the 2019 Tigers. With a third of the regular season behind them, the Tigers won their American Athletic Conference opener in a matchup of teams aspiring to win the league’s West Division. (Navy falls to 2-1 overall and 1-1 in the AAC after the loss.)

Larry Kuzniewski

Mike Norvell

“That was a program-defining game,” said Memphis coach Mike Norvell after securing the 30th win of his four-year career. “Navy does things the right way. To come out, and not play our best in the first half, and see our guys respond, to continue believing in each other, to finish the game . . . the response of our quarterback [Brady White] was remarkable. All three phases of the game, that’s what you have to see. Our kids would not be denied. It speaks volumes to where we are. We’re looking for our complete game; we’re still in the process.”

After falling behind 20-7 midway through the second quarter, the Tigers roared back, starting with a 99-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by junior Gabriel Rogers (one of three Memphis touchdowns in the game that covered more than 70 yards). The scoring play, coupled with a 75-yard jaunt by Kenneth Gainwell on the Tigers’ first snap from scrimmage contributed, ironically, to Navy dominating the first half. The Midshipmen ran 50 plays (to the Tigers’ 15) and held the ball for 22:52 over the game’s first 30 minutes.

After each team punted on its first possession of the second half, the Tigers took the lead (21-20) with a 50-yard drive that culminated in a 5-yard touchdown pass from White to Kedarian Jones. White connected on scoring tosses on each of the next two Memphis possessions, first to Antonio Gibson in stride for 73 yards and then to Damonte Coxie on a catch-and-run that covered 31 yards and extended the lead to 12 points (35-23) with 11:27 left in the game.

After allowing 292 yards in the first half, the Memphis defense only surrendered 81 after halftime, closing gaps that had been exposed by Navy quarterback Malcolm Perry (91 rushing yards and two touchdowns on the ground) early in the game. Sophomore safety Sanchez Blake pulled down an interception in the fourth quarter that sealed the win and may get Memphis back into the Top 25 for the first time since the end of the 2017 season.

“Sometimes when you have that much emotion — when you know you’re on a national [TV] stage — you try and do too much,” said Norvell. “There were moments in the first half when we weren’t playing under control. We had to slow it down, trust the training, trust the game plan. There was no panic. It was all about that next play.”

“There was no flinch on our team,” emphasized White, who completed 14 of 18 passes for 196 yards (all but 29 of them after halftime). “I don’t care [about the booing]. I think it affects my parents more than it does me.”

“That kid is a special kid,” said Norvell about his quarterback. “Tremendous preparation. He was able to control himself; that’s the mark of a great football player. We’re gonna make mistakes. But you play 60 minutes. He showed the heart he has, and the champion that he’s working to become.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Antonio Gibson

Gibson had only caught three passes (two of them for touchdowns) over the Tigers’ first three games before hauling in the 73-yarder late in the third quarter that gave his team a 28-20 lead. “Coach [Norvell] told us we’d get one-on-one matchups,” he said. “And we had to win them. I got one. I didn’t have to do much; he put [the ball] right in my arms.”

Gainwell finished the game with 104 rushing yards, just above his AAC-leading average. Gibson’s three catches were good for 105 yards.

With three of their next four games on the road — starting on October 5th at Louisiana-Monroe — the Tigers are less interested in being 4-0 than in going 1-0 again . . . and again.

In a rush to hop on a bus back to campus, Blake summarized the mindset of his undefeated team: “We’re close. We’re brothers. We hold each other accountable. You’re playing for the guys to your left and right.”

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

If At First You Don’t Succeed…

A consistent problem in Shelby County elections has been the distribution of sample ballots by political entrepreneurs who charge candidates for appearing on them.

Candidate John Marek, a well-known Democratic activist  JB

John Marek

who is running for the District 5 City Council seat in the October 3 city election, was outraged when he saw one being mailed and passed out under the auspices of the “Greater Memphis Democratic Club,” a shell organization operated by entrpreneur Greg Grant that exists mainly to issue sample ballots.

Compounding Marek’s sense of injury was that his opponent, Worth Morgan, is a known Republican, as are three other candidates endorsed on the ballot. All four are official endorsees of the Shelby County Republican Party. A further issue is that the ballot employed several facsimiles of the official City of Memphis seal, a possible violation of both city and state codes.

Backed by the Shelby County Democratic Party and represented by civil liberties attorney Bruce Kramer, Marek undertook to get a Temporary Restraining Order against further distribution of the ballot in Chancery Court on Thursday. The plaintiffs were stymied. How?

Chancellor JoeDae L. Jenkins confessed that he would need to recuse himself because he had bought onto a previous election ballot distributed by Grant as well as one by another ballot entrepreneur, M. LaTroy Alexandria-Williams, also cited in the suit. The plaintiffs hope to seek redress from another judge in another court on Friday.

Marek said that the unexpected snafu was yet another instance of why the pay-for-play ballots should be restricted or banned.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Wiseacre Expands into Georgia, Offers New Year-Round Beers

Wiseacre Brewing Co.

Xanadu

Want to visit Atlanta but worry that they don’t have Tiny Bomb? Here’s some good news for you.

Wiseacre Brewing Co. will launch its beers across Georgia on Tuesday, October 1st, in a new partnership the company announced Thursday. Through Georgia Crown Distributing, Wiseacre will soon shelve Ananda India Pale Ale, Gotta Get Up to Get Down Coffee Milk Stout, Tiny Bomb Pilsner, as well as various seasonal and specialty offerings in the Peach State.

“We’ve gotten so much feedback through emails, reviews, and social media from Georgians who tried our beer on their visits throughout the Southeast, Chicago, and [Philadelphia] and want to be able to buy Wiseacre in their home state,” said Wiseacre co-founder Kellan Bartosch. “We want to say to Georgia: We got the message loud and clear. Now that we’ve got the help of the pros at Georgia Crown, we’ll be able to get our beer to you quickly!”
Toby Sells

Wiseacre co-founders Davin Bartosch and Kellan Bartosch

Georgia will be the ninth state to carry Wiseacre beers. It joins Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Illinois, Florida, and Pennsylvania.

Wiseacre also introduced three new, year-round beers Thursday. Soon, the company will offer a new pale ale, a Berliner Weisse, and an India Pale Ale series. 

Here’s how the company describes them:
Wiseacre Brewing Co.

Beach Within Reach

Regular Pale Ale is a seasonal offering that became a perennial best-seller thanks to its new-age IPA characteristics but session-able 5.1 percent alcohol by volume. The Beach Within Reach Berliner Weisse is a sour beer made in the style of a German ale that Napoleon once dubbed ‘the champagne of the North.’  Lastly, the MemFresh India Pale Ale series will kick off with Xanadu Hazy IPA.
 
“In the realm of hoppy beers, hyper-fresh is increasingly relevant — IPA super-fans want beers that are consumed within weeks or even days of production for maximum flavor and aroma,” said Wiseacre co-founder and brewmaster Davin Bartosch. “With this new IPA series, our goal is to keep the beer extremely fresh, so we’ll be brewing smaller quantities on a regular basis rather than larger batch sizes like we do on most of our year-round beers.”
Wiseacre Brewing Co.

Regular Pale Ale

“This past year, we have experimented constantly with hops, varieties of ale yeast, new grain bills, and more. We’re taking the best and most unique things we learned from that to create this new IPA series. Look for MemFresh beers to pop up a few times before the end of 2019 but to be more widely available in early 2020 on draft and in 4-pack cans.” Wiseacre Brewing Co.

Wiseacre’s soon-to-be Downtown location rises from the ground along B.B. King.

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

OUTMemphis Expands with New Office, Donation Space

Toby Sells

Molly Quinn, OUTMemphis executive director (center left), and Ashley Coffield, PPTNM president (center right), speak during a news conference in front of OUTMemphis’ new administrative office building.

OUTMemphis will open a new adminstrative office building and donation center at I-240 and Summer soon, thanks to a donation from Planned Parenthood of Tennessee & North Mississippi (PPTNM).

Leaders from the two organizations announced the move Thursday at the building close to the Summer Quartet Drive In theater and the PPTNM health center. The building was a call center for PPTNM, but the organization moved that function into its Poplar headquarters.
OUTMemphis

OUTMemphis’ new adminstrative office building.

Molly Quinn, OUTMemphis executive director, said the new 4,500-square-foot facility will raise the regional platform for its work and increase the “capacity to serve the Mid-Southerners who need us the most.”

It will be home to all administrative office space. That move will open more space at the organization’s Cooper-Young facility for programming and expanded health services. The new facility will also be a donation drop-off and distribution venue for clothes, furniture, and hygiene supplies for LGBTQ+ people under age 24.
OUTMemphis

OUTMemphis’ Cooper-Young community center.

“[PPTNM and OUTMemphis] work together on a simple principle that unites us that all bodies and minds are good, righteous, and deserving of health, pleasure, safety, and joy,” Quinn said. “This building and the growth it represents are truly unparalleled contribution to the assets of Memphis and the community we serve.”

Ashley Coffield, PPTNM president, said regardless of where OUTMemphis would have expanded, “Their strength helps us and vice versa.” She said OUTMemphis has stood “shoulder-to-shoulder” with PPTNM during attacks on the organization over the years, “and we stand with them as well.”
Toby Sells

Molly Quinn, OUTMemphis executive director (left), and Ashley Coffield, PPTNM president (right), speak during a news conference in front of OUTMemphis’ new administrative office building.

“Planned Parenthood’s doors are open to all everyone regardless of gender expression, gender identity, or gender orientation,” Coffield said. “We believe all deserve high-quality and affordable health care and good information about sexuality and sexual health, no matter who they are or where they live.

“That’s why we work in partnership with the LGBTQ+ community and expand their access to health care.”

Quinn said construction of OUTMemphis’ youth emergency center and overnight shelter, called The Metamorphosis Project, begins Friday morning. She said she expects the facility to be up and running by January 2020.
OUTMemphis

OUTMemphis’ proposed youth emergency services and overnight shelter building.

Categories
News News Blog

Fire Department, Memphis Animal Services Partner to Bring Lost Pets Home

MAS

If you find a lost pet here, you can now take it to any of the Memphis Fire Department (MFD) stations around the city to help them be reunited with their owner.

Through the Fire Finders program, a partnership of Memphis Animal Services (MAS) and MFD, each of the city’s 58 fire stations will now be equipped with a scanner to detect microchips, the small electronic chips that are implanted into pets to help locate them when lost.

MFD personnel will be trained to scan pets and identify their owners. Once identified, the owner will be contacted and reunited with their pet.

Alexis Pugh, MAS director, said before the program, when pets were lost, they would have to be taken to a vet clinic or an animal shelter to be scanned for a microchip, but there are a number of areas here that are “veterinary deserts,” where one might have a hard time finding access to a microchip scanner.

[pullquote-1]

“Every pet should have a microchip, but what we found was that not all of our citizens had the same access to getting microchips or scanning found pets for microchips,” Pugh said. “We’re solving half of that problem with the Fire Finders program, and we are working on a solution for bringing more microchip access to the community in the future.”

MFD director Gina Sweat said that the fire department here is one of the few in the country to offer a microchip scanning service.

“We’re thrilled to continue partnering with MAS to bring innovative solutions like this one to Memphis, without increasing the taxpayer burden,” Sweat said.

The program is funded by a grant from Maddie’s Fund, a foundation that provides resources to organizations around the country in an effort to create a “no-kill nation, where every dog and cat is guaranteed a healthy home or habitat.”

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Scenes From an Office

Scene from an editor’s office — September 2019:

Desk phone rings. The editor looks up from his computer and stares at the number on the phone. He doesn’t recognize it, but picks it up.

“Hello, it’s Bruce.”

“Oh, hi! I thought I might get a voicemail.”

“Nope. You got me. What’s up?”

“Well, my name is Heidi Snickerdoodle, and my partner, Amber, and I are opening a new massage parlor, gift shop, and body spa just off of Germantown Parkway. Kind of near Ridge Dawn Deer Crossing Terrace. It’s called CBDB …”

“Uh huh.”

“It’s really an exciting concept. We use nothing but CBD products in our oils and lotions. And our oils and lotions are guaranteed pure. ‘CBDB’ stands for ‘CBD Beauty,’ get it?”

“Yeah, got it. Sounds interesting.”

“Anyway, we were hoping the Memphis Flyer could come out tomorrow and do a story on us before our grand opening this weekend.”

“Actually, we really don’t do too many stories like that in the Flyer. I’ve got a small staff these days, and we tend to focus on news and entertainment rather than small business openings.”

“But I really think your readers would really enjoy learning about us. They’re a perfect fit for what we do. We’re a hip, on-the-edge kind of place, and we know your readers are hip, right? I really think your readers would love to hear our story. You might not be aware of this, but CBD products are huge right now. ”

“Oh yeah, I’m aware of that [sighs, rolls eyes at ceiling]. We recently did a cover story on CBD. I’ll tell you what, Heidi: Email me some promotional materials and any other pertinent information, and maybe your place will get a mention in our ‘Healthy Living’ section in January. But I can’t promise anything. Honestly, if you really want to reach Flyer readers, your best bet is just buying an ad in the paper or on our website. We even have a column called CannaBeat, and some CBD businesses advertise adjacent to it. I’d be happy to transfer you to our ad manager.”

“Oh no, thanks. We’re doing all our advertising on social media.”

Scene from Flyer editor’s office — September 2000:

“Hello, it’s Bruce.”

“Oh, hi! My name is Reggie Boondoggle, and I’ve just opened a car-detailing shop on Summer Avenue.”

“And?”

“And, well, I was hoping you could send out a reporter to interview me for a story on my shop.”

“Have you ever read the Flyer?”

“Of course, sure, I read it, uh, every month.”

“Every month, huh? Okay. Have you ever seen a story in the Flyer about somebody opening a new car-detailing shop?”

“No.”

“That’s because we don’t write stories about new car-detailing businesses. We aren’t a business publication. If you really want to reach our readers, your best bet is to buy an ad. Call 521-9000 and ask for Jerry Swift. Have a great day, Reggie.”

I’ve been editing the Flyer for 20 years, and I’ve had countless conversations like those above. As you can tell from the first example, I’m gentler with these kinds of calls than I used to be — less brusque, more understanding. That’s partly a symptom of age, I suppose. No reason to get angry with naive people trying to work an angle for free publicity. I get the hustle. No harm, no foul.

But the disconnect between a caller seeing the obvious value in having Flyer readers know about their product and not seeing the value of buying an ad to reach those readers remains frustrating. Facebook isn’t going to write a story about you.
And that’s why issues like the one on the newsstands this week are so gratifying. It’s 72 pages, and it’s filled to the brim with ads from the good folks who see the value in reaching the Flyer‘s readers, and who see the value in having this paper remain part of the intrinsic fabric of Memphis. They are all truly the Best of Memphis, and without them, we wouldn’t be here to celebrate year after year. We’re grateful to all of them — and to all of you, for reading us.

Categories
News News Feature

King of Laughs: Comedian Kevin James Comes to Cannon Center

Kevin James will stop at the Cannon Center on his stand-up comedy tour this Sunday, September 29th, with a “new show, same beard, and the same IQ.”

James is known for his numerous television and movie ventures, including a starring role in CBS’ nine-season series The King of Queens, and producing, writing, and starring in Paul Blart: Mall Cop, Here Comes the Boom, and Zookeeper. Between those credits and co-starring in movies like Hitch, I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry, and Grown Ups, James is no stranger to the world of comedy.

Tom Caltabiano

Kevin James

Before he hit it big, the Long Island native got his start in the stand-up comedy circuit. He began with community theater, moving on to join his brother Gary Valentine’s improv comedy group. He spent some years performing at comedy clubs, where he met Ray Romano. The two temporarily went their separate ways, Romano picking up steam with Everybody Loves Raymond, and James gaining traction making it to the semi-finals with his stand-up comedy routines on Star Search. His big break came when he got the chance to perform at the Just for Laughs Montreal Comedy Festival in 1996 with a routine about food, phone number rhythms, and relationships. It was then that he was asked to join the cast of Everybody Loves Raymond as Doug Heffernan, moving on to star as the same character in his own show, The King of Queens.

Now, years later, with a number of accomplishments under his belt, James has not forgotten his roots.

“I’m excited about doing a stand-up tour,” he says. “I originally started with stand-up, but I’d gotten away from it. I’ve done some good things doing a lot of movies and TV and stuff. And I’m still doing that, but I’ve been able to dedicate more time to my stand-up career, and I’ve really been able to put time into developing my standards.”

Last year, after a 17-year hiatus from stand-up, James dove back into the routine with a Netflix comedy special called Never Don’t Give Up, in which he speaks of his intolerance of people flaunting their lactose intolerance, sitting “third base” at Benihana and other restaurant and food observations, his interactions with fans and other celebrities, his dynamics with his four children, and more.

James says that his current tour still focuses on observational comedy, but it’ll be nothing like his Netflix special.

“I think [this routine] is even better,” he says. “It’s been working better because, on Netflix, you’ve got to rewrite a whole new hour. So I was concerned about how fast that was going to come to material. But this set seemed to fall in place much quicker than expected.”

One thing James says he loves about live shows is being able to connect with the audience.

“The audience and I feed off each other, and you get results right away, which is really good,” he says. “Right away, you know whether you’re good or bad by the way a joke lands. If it does well, you get that feedback instantly. So, I guess it’s that instant gratification. And you’re taking a chance every night, not knowing what’s going to happen. So it’s about trying different stuff. And it’s exciting.”

James, who speaks of his children often in his stand-up routines, credits them as being his biggest accomplishment. Although they’re not traveling with him on this tour, James still manages to spend as much time with them as possible.

“They like to come to different cities,” he says. “I have a Florida tour coming up later on, and they’re joining me on that one. So it’s great to be able to travel with them.”

James is looking forward to his stop in Memphis.

“I’m excited to come and hang out in Memphis,” he says. “Food will certainly make its way into the equation. There’s really good food in Memphis.”

Ultimately, James encourages Memphians to come out to the Cannon Center Sunday night and have a good time.

“This world is so crazy right now,” he says. “It’s nice to get away and to escape for a couple hours to enjoy yourself and really just not take things too seriously and have fun.”