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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Bring Your Favorite Bar Home During Quarantine

Wooooo boy, ain’t we in the throes of it now? Feels like it was just last week when my assignment was simply to go to a bar and let y’all know that service is good and drinks are delicious. Well, shit’s changed, and frankly, it’s our duty to change with it. So let’s go to a bar, virtual-style.

I’ve not been able to go to an actual bar (because quarantine is the responsible thing to do, son!), so I’ve explored many options, including delivery, curbside service, and controlled irresponsibility, which is a thing you do with Clorox wipes, growlers, and general intelligence.

Unless you have written it off because your best friend from high school is an anti-vaxxer or your in-laws are trying to friend you, Facebook has been an astoundingly solid resource for restaurants and bars doing some cool stuff. Most any restaurant that you call is willing to make you drinks to-go, offer wines at a discount, or at least try to offload their selection of beer. They mostly let their deals be known on Facebook, so ignore the friend request from your mother-in-law and check out a menu.

“I don’t have the Facebook!” Neat. You can still navigate to the page and see their specials, you catastrophic moron.

Buster’s Liquors & Wines is doing curbside pick-up from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Place an order by 5:30 p.m. and patiently wait outside, and they’ll bring it to you. This is a great option if you haven’t begun drinking yet but plan to before the sun goes down. Shake up some local vodka and a squeeze from a lime you got from the Blue Monkey walk-in cooler. Log into Google Hangouts and play Jackbox with friends.

Photographs by Justin Fox Burks

Wiseacre Brewing Co. is doing delivery. I recommend ordering a couple six-packs of Ananda between 1 and 6 p.m., tipping the person who drops it off, and pressure-washing your driveway with your roommates. If there’s any left over, wipe it down real nice with some industrial wipes you got from Highbar Trading and offer it to the gentleman walking his dog down the street. Afterward, settle down on the couch and have a Zoom conference with all your friends that don’t have a pressure washer. Rub it in their faces.

Justin Fox Burks

Drinking local with hurricanes in pouches from Bayou Bar & Grill.

It sure is nice outside! Use the weather to your advantage and walk to your neighborhood watering hole. Mine is Bayou Bar & Grill, which is doing take-out from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily. Things you can get include incredibly cheap growler fill-ups (especially if you’re in their Mug Club) and drinks in pouches. Because it’s spring break, I opted for a couple hurricanes in pouches and a growler of a local IPA, which I then drank in my front yard as I yelled about the nuances of flight patterns during a pandemic.

Not to be outdone, Slider Inn is doing car bombs to-go, which include a pouch of Guinness and a ramekin of Jameson and Irish cream liqueur. This is great if you want to find out what it’s like to drop a plastic ramekin into a plastic pouch and drink it as fast as you can while watching 30 Rock for the millionth time and playing Hearts on the computer with the people living with you. You get extra points if you then order curbside delivery of a locally owned restaurant and tip outlandishly. My selections the past few days? Bari, Tamboli’s, Huey’s, Young Avenue Deli, Restaurant Iris, Casablanca, and Little Italy.

You know the best part about being asked to stay at home and stop the spread of a lethal virus? First off, it’s responsible at-home consumption of booze acquired from local restaurants, but the second-best thing is camaraderie. No, I’m not advising having a damn parade with children and spit-covered instruments marching through a neighborhood (get your shit together, Central Gardens!). I’m talking about all of us being in this together. And together, we can support our local establishments and, of course, safely consume booze off-premises and in the comfort of our meticulously clean living rooms and/or porches, or really anywhere you can pour a tall one. Cheers to staying safe, everyone.

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Stay Home, Advice from Cox Street Bigfoot

Flow Chart Help

The Memphis Fire Fighters Local 1784 tweeted this helpful flow chart for anyone out there still confused about how to help during the coronavirus pandemic.

Bigfoot Help

A Bigfoot statue on Cox in Cooper-Young dresses for many occasions, like Christmas and St. Patrick’s Day. He did his part last week to educate the public on coronavirus best practices.

Posted to Twitter by the Cooper-Young Community Association

Cox Street Bigfoot says “STAY HOME. GO OUT BAD, STAY IN GOOD. BE SAFE. 6 FEET GOOD.” Listen to Cox Street Bigfoot.

Categories
Cover Feature News

On the Front Lines

“Cover your face.” — Physician

Physician and Memphis city councilman Jeff Warren has dual perspectives on the coronavirus crisis. As a doctor, he says his practice has transformed. “We have completely closed out all regular appointments. … We’re doing telemedicine for people to make sure they’re okay, and we’re also doing triage for flu-like illnesses (FLI) — cough, fever, flu-like symptoms. A few weeks back, we were seeing influenza; now the FLIs are mostly COVID-19.”

Testing availability is still an issue. “If we only test people who are sick, we don’t know the prevalence of the disease in the city. People can’t get tested unless they have fever, cough, shortness of breath. We need more tests and more testing.”

A lack of ventilators has been an issue in other areas struck hard by the virus. Warren says, “If people socially isolate aggressively over the next couple weeks, we could have enough ventilators. If we don’t, then we probably won’t have enough.”

Warren is concerned that too many Memphians aren’t taking the virus seriously and aren’t socially distancing or isolating, citing churches that are still holding services and people gathering in parks in groups. “We’re not where we need to be,” he says.

Donning his city councilman hat for a moment, Warren adds: “If Memphis goes down with this, America’s in big trouble. If we keep running, we save lives. We’ll be shipping medical supplies, PPEs, and tests to the rest of the country. By shutting down the city, Mayors Harris and Strickland may have bought us a few weeks. Time will tell.”

And regarding the public wearing masks? Just do it, Warren says. “Countries that have the virus under control, their citizens have aggressively covered their faces in public. Since 80 percent of people who have the virus may not show evidence of infection, covering faces will make a big difference.”

In his practice, Warren says, “We’re wearing masks till they fall apart — sterilizing them and keeping and reusing them until they fall apart.” As for the public, he doesn’t mince words: “People can use scarves, T-shirts, paper or cloth masks — whatever. Put something over your face. Cover your face.” — Bruce VanWyngarden

Jeff Warren

“We’re scared.” — Nurses

Nurses in hospitals and medical clinics encounter hundreds of patients each week. Under normal circumstances, it’s a trying job, but as COVID-19 spreads rapidly, they’re under more stress than ever.

*Trudy and *Lizzy are local nurses, both with ICU backgrounds, who, for fear of losing their jobs, wish to remain anonymous. Working in direct patient care, both are concerned about the lack of PPE (personal protective equipment) supplied by their workplaces due to global shortages.

Trudy believes that any nurse working in direct patient care during this crisis should have access to proper PPE to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus. “We should be wearing particulate masks [N95 masks], goggles, a full suit, and we are not provided that. Supplies are running out, and the CDC bent their guidelines to accommodate that, saying basically, ‘If you get in a pinch, we recommend using a bandana or a scarf over your face.’ That’s not going to do anything. I think a lot of nurses are really pissed off all over the country because how did we get to this point? We have the most expensive health-care system in the world, and we don’t have protective equipment. It’s like sending a nurse into battle with a toothpick, like ‘Good luck. Hope you don’t get sick and die.’ We’re scared. Everybody is scared. We didn’t sign up for this.”

Last week, Trudy saw more than 100 patients. “I wore the same [surgical] mask all week because we only have about half a box for our entire staff.”

Lizzy works at a local hospital, and while she’s not currently working directly with COVID-19 patients, she knows they’re there — and she knows the risks. “I feel like we’re two weeks behind everything as far as nurses being able to wear masks, the types of masks we’re able to wear, visitors coming in and out, still allowing outpatient procedures to be done — these things should have already been hashed out. And every day, multiple times a day, the rules are changing, and that uncertainty is unnerving.”

The hospital is providing those caring directly for COVID-19 patients N95 masks, but others are only allowed regular surgical masks. “I know it’s in the atmosphere. I know it’s in our environment,” Lizzy says. “It’s like being stuck on the train tracks, and you know the train is coming and there’s nothing you can do. You might survive it, and you might not.” — Shara Clark

Svetamart | Dreamstime.com

“Grateful for work.” — Walgreens Clerk

Walgreens employees are among those considered essential, and many of them are encountering thousands of customers each week. While some workers are concerned about contracting COVID-19, many are thankful to have a job, including Walgreens team member *Jacob. “At first, there was a lot of fear, and some of my co-workers were upset about having to come in,” he says, “but right now, because of people not having jobs, a lot of us are just grateful that Walgreens hasn’t closed. We’re glad to be getting a paycheck.”

Walgreens has adjusted its attendance policy, allowing employees who are sick, want to self-quarantine, or have lost their childcare to miss work. “They’ve given us the option to call out and still have a job because the attendance policy won’t be held against us,” Jacob says.

In regard to the ways in which operations have changed due to COVID-19, Jacob says, “The biggest thing is how we take care of the customers. In photo, for example, we can no longer touch the kiosks or touch customers’ phones if they need help. So some customers are not getting the level of friendliness they’re used to.”

Walgreens has also put safe distancing measures in place, with tape marking off six-foot spaces in which to queue in line. “The only time you’re really not six feet apart is with us at the register because there’s no way you can do that [and check out],” Jacob says.

While wearing gloves or masks is not mandatory, Walgreens does provide them to employees. Some cashiers wear them because “they’re paranoid,” he says, but not all do. “It is mandatory to have your hand sanitizer behind the register, though, and a lot of cashiers are using it [after every transaction].”

All Walgreens locations have gone to 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. store hours, but even at locations that are normally open later or for 24 hours, employees are coming in for their regular shift hours to clean. “Every counter, kiosk, pin pad, door knob, chairs in the pharmacy waiting area — everything anybody touches has to be sanitized often,” Jacob says. Sanitization at registers is scheduled between cashiers’ shifts, but, he says, it depends on the cashier. “Some are cleaning counters and pin pads any time they have a moment between customers.”

Walgreens is also offering all team members one-time bonuses “if you work through this,” says Jacob. Bonuses will be paid at a later date, with the amount based on whether the employee is full-time or part-time. — SC

“There’s not enough.” — Hospital Worker

*Alex works in inventory and supply logistics at a local hospital and says that supplies, including protective gear and disinfectants, are on a monthly allocation. “As logistics, we keep about a month of stock on us at any given time, so when the crisis started and everyone started buying up stock … our allocations got eaten up within two weeks.”

New orders placed for more crucial supplies are not being met. “Today was one of our stock days. I got two cases, which is about 200 masks, out of the 2,000 that we asked for,” he says. “And it’s not just masks. Right now, I can’t buy bleach.”

Due to new protocols surrounding which health-care professionals within the hospital can access PPE, supplies are now kept under lock and key, and many employees are angry that they cannot wear protective gear. “What’s scary is that everybody is so frightened, and with good reason,” Alex says. “I have everybody walking into the hospital wanting to wear full PPE, and I have to explain that [due to stock restraints] we can’t treat everybody like they’re a person of interest. There’s not enough for people — not at all.”

The PPE they have on hand is reserved for those who are working with “people who are in isolation or suspect, waiting for tests to come back — and tests are very limited,” he says. “It’s only people who are going in and out of those rooms — they’re not all in ICU or ED.” The hospital has a small supply of face shields, which are plastic guards meant to be worn over N95 masks to protect the entire face — and are meant to be disposable after each use. “With CDC guidelines [now changing], we can wipe them down per shift,” Alex says. “We’re now issuing one face shield for a person who is going to be in a room [with a COVID-19 patient or suspect]. Each time they leave the room, they take off their face shield, take off their mask, wipe it down, and put it in a paper sack. The next time they enter that room, they don that protective gear again.” The gear is thrown away at the end of a shift.

Aside from dwindling stock, Alex is having a problem with theft, specifically for disinfectant products like Sani-Cloth. “I have to lock down everything. When this crisis began and people started buying all the milk and bread, people did the same thing in the hospital, working there, they took a lot of stuff home.” — SC

Russell Linton | Dreamstime.com

“I am seeing a lot of panic.” — Pharmacists

Doctors and nurses on the front lines of the pandemic fight have been the focus of much media attention, but pharmacists stand beside them as less glamorous, but still essential, health-care providers.

Jana Stader is a retail pharmacist with seven years’ experience. “In pharmacy school, I did a rotation with a couple of days of emergency training. It was more for a giant earthquake or some weather-related emergency. I don’t know that we ever talked about how to prepare for something like this.”

Kaitlyn Krug is president of the Memphis Area Pharmacists Society. She floats between several Walmarts in the area. “I am seeing a lot of panic,” she says. “Lots of phone calls with questions. Everybody’s going online, trying to do their own research, and finding these off-the-wall things from very uncredible sources. So then they’re reaching out to their pharmacist because their physicians are a little harder to get in contact with. They’re looking to us to put their minds at ease, basically. We’re seeing a lot of people wanting to stock up on all of their medicines because this is such a time of uncertainty. Everybody wants to get several months of their medicines at a time. We’re doing the best we can to do that for them, especially with the elderly population, but we’re seeing push-back from insurance companies. They’re not wanting to pay for those multiple months at a time.”

Both Stader and Krug have been fielding unusual questions. “People are asking if they can get a pneumonia shot,” Stader says. “Pneumonia shots are for bacterial prevention, and this is viral. It’s not the same. There’s a misunderstanding of what COVID-19 is.”

Krug says, “I have gotten several questions every day about the use of ibuprofen versus Tylenol for treating the fever and body ache symptoms of COVID-19. A lot of people have been skimming what they find on the internet, then I get phone calls saying ‘I heard ibuprofen causes COVID-19.’ No, it doesn’t cause it! They saw in the treatment of COVID-19 that people just responded better to Tylenol versus ibuprofen. If you’re on ibuprofen for your arthritis, you don’t have to worry about developing coronavirus because of your medicine.”

Krug says she recently received a request for a combination of hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin. “However, after speaking with the physician, it didn’t seem like there was good reason to be prescribing it to the patient, so I refused to fill it … It’s not FDA approved, there’s been no clinical trials supporting the claim that this combination therapy actually works. I understand physicians wanting to try it in a hospital setting, where patients are monitored 24/7, but in an outpatient setting in a retail pharmacy, there’s no way to monitor these patients. There are so many risks for cardiac side effects that personally I don’t feel comfortable filling it at this time.”

Stader says the people in her pharmacy are rising to the challenge. “We’re tired, but we’re proud. We want to be there. In the health-care profession, you want to help people. We’re not complaining that we’re on the front lines. We’re just kind of fearing for our safety, because we don’t have enough face masks and shields. … I hope when it’s all said and done that we can take away how important our own health is, and that we can learn from it and start taking better care of ourselves before another pandemic happens.” — Chris McCoy

Kaitlyn Krug

“Subtle fears.” — Grocery Store Workers

Health-care workers are rightly venerated now, battling on the front lines to heal the sick. Grocery store workers toil in the background, but they also deserve a full pallet of respect. They keep the vital food-supply lines open for the rest of us.

But for grocery store workers, those well-lit aisles may hide a deadly foe. Imagine you’re stocking onions and a stranger sidles up next to you to squeeze a few avocados and ask a question. It is your job to be there and to be nice to customers. What do you do? The short answer to working grocery retail on the coronavirus front lines is: It ain’t easy.

*Robert is — first and foremost — grateful. He still has a job; many he knows in the service industry do not.

“I’m also a little anxious every time I go into work,” he says. “During the past few weeks, my store has seen an insane surge in clientele and sales, so part of me always wonders how many (if any at all, of course) of these customers might be carrying the virus and don’t know it yet.”

A second worker, *Sharon, notes some “subtle fears” of the virus, again because “anybody can come in and you don’t really know if they are ill or not.” But she says her store has implemented new sanitation and social distance policies. “We have signs on the floors guiding customers where to stand. We also have a person at the front door cleaning cart and basket handles for each customer.”

Stores were tense in the first days of the virus, both workers say. Now that things have calmed somewhat, both say they are getting respect and appreciation from customers more than ever.

“I think it started to hit home to some people that we are all in this together,” Robert says. “My co-workers — retail brothers and sisters — we were all doing our best to make sure we had everything someone coming into our stores would need, but there were so many factors outside of our control. I think more people understand that now; everyone seems so much more gracious and polite.”

But there have been a few WTF? moments, too. Sharon has seen customers scoff at panic-buying, then proceed to panic-buy. Stressed-out customers have spoken some stressed-out words — especially if annoyed at out-of-stock items (hand sanitizer, bread, chicken, and chips are hard to keep in stock). Theft is up. Some customers stroll the aisles in “full hazmat suits.”

“Overall, things were super-crazy the first week of the virus gaining speed, and now they are starting to tame back down,” Sharon says. “I’m getting extra pay, extra hours, and a new sense of appreciation for my job and the people I work with.” — Toby Sells

Kroger.com

Kroger

“One dollar provides three meals.” — Food Bank Workers

Outside a Raleigh church, volunteers with protective face masks and rubber gloves place boxes of food in cars queuing in the parking lot.

Inside the boxes are about 40 pounds of food — frozen meat, fresh produce, bread, and other staples. It’s meant to supplement a family for about a week, depending on the size of the family.

This was the site of one of the Mid-South Food Bank’s (MSFB) mobile food pantries last Saturday. The pantries rotate locations across the city, setting up in parking lots of churches, schools, and community centers.

Cathy Pope, CEO and president of MSFB, says the food bank ran mobile pantries prior to COVID-19, but as schools closed the organization “ramped up” that effort.

Pope says when Shelby County Schools initially announced that schools would be closing, the food bank immediately mobilized to put together boxes for SCS students and their families. So far, about 2,000 boxes have been distributed across the city at close to 40 sites.

“My team met to discuss what the needs are going to be in the community and where we can plug in really quickly,” Pope says. “When schools closed, we knew that the need was going to increase because students aren’t able to get meals at school.”

Pope says Shelby County already has heightened statistics for food insecurity and “a lot of that is because 44 percent of our children live in poverty. That’s not okay for our community, so I want to make sure that we are providing the food people need, especially to children and seniors. That was true before the virus and even more now. With layoffs, now we are shifting to also serving working families that are no longer working.”

Pope says without volunteers, the distribution of food at the mobile pantries wouldn’t be possible: “We depend on volunteers every day, pre-COVID-19, but now they are more important than ever. Funding is going to be crucial for us,” Pope says, encouraging the public to donate to the food bank if they can. “It’s the most helpful thing people can do to help us right now. One dollar provides three meals.

“Normally, when there is a disaster, it’s in one location geographically and you can call in the troops from all over the country to help,” Pope says. “For the whole country to be in need at the same time is quite challenging and overwhelming. But what it’s doing is allowing for each community to hold its own. And it’s really working well for Memphis and Shelby County.” — Maya Smith

Maya Smith

A Mid-South Food Bank mobile pantry worker

“We’re peoples’ medication.” — CBD Store Owner

Tanna moved to Memphis from Oregon a year ago to help open Ounce of Hope, a CBD store on Cooper Street. “It’s been pretty awesome,” she says.

Ounce of Hope has remained open after the city-mandated shutdown of nonessential businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We were ready to be considered nonessential, but it was nice to have customers reach out to us. We’re people’s medication. We kind of realized that we have to stay open,” Tanna says. “We had a surge in business before, when there was talk about a mandate happening and people were worried [we’d be] closed down. Since then, things have been pretty calm. We still have our regulars coming in.”

Tanna says the store has been taking extraordinary cautions to ensure the safety of customers and staff alike. “I wear gloves when I’m wearing anything, generally. I disinfect this place every hour, all touchable surfaces. We’ve taken away pretty much all things for customers to interact with. We’ve taken down the sensory bar, things like that. We have hand sanitizer for the public, and I’ve got some of my own in the back.”

Tanna says she has some concern about her personal safety, but it’s the health of others that worries her most. Her boyfriend is on a drug regime that suppresses his immune system. “I come home to him, so there’s a chance I would bring it with me to him,” she says. “It’s not even about being infected. I would hate to be the lynchpin in something. It’s important for me to be in good health because I am interacting in the public.” — CM

Tanna from Ounce of Hope

“It’s decimated.” — Pet Care Provider

On a good day for Mr. Scruff’s Pet Care, a Midtown-based enterprise in the Cooper-Young/East Parkway area, co-owner Ricci Mundy and her partner, Eileen Castine, handle 15 to 18 customers. Mostly dogs, but also cats and “birds, fish, snakes, lizards, and ferrets,” says Mundy, whose business has been providing such services for 20 years.

Depending on the species, the animals are walked, bathed, fed, and given every imaginable kind of appropriate loving care. But, though Mr. Scruff’s, like several competitive enterprises in town, is considered to be an “allowable activity” under Mayor Strickland’s “Safer at Home” order, business is down during the coronavirus pandemic. Way down. “It’s decimated,” says Mundy. Down to an average of three pets a day needing attention.

The main problem, says Mundy, is that too many of the pet owners who usually need her services are in stay-at-home mode and trying themselves to provide the functions that have been provided by Mr. Scruff’s.

Animal care isn’t a hobby. At rates of $18 to $20 a visit, Mr. Scruff’s revenue pays the bills — especially since many of the animals are taken there for extended vacations when their owners are traveling.

It’s possible, of course, that some of the fall-off in the animal-care business might be due to pet owners’ fears that the COVID-19 virus is transmittable to or from their beloved creatures. That’s possibly because the virus, a novel one, is thought to be “zoonotic,” i.e., one that originated in mammalian animal hosts, possibly in a live-animal market in Wuhan, China.

But a recent advisory from the World Health Organization states that “there is no evidence to suggest that dogs or cats can be infected with the new coronavirus,” and the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) concurs. Even so, the slowdown in customers, like the pandemic itself, is all too real — and unpredictable in its duration. A shame, since, as Mundy notes, on her own behalf as well as her competitors, “There’s enough business out there for everybody.” — Jackson Baker

Ricci Mundy with customer

“Showbiz seems off the table.”— Delivery Driver

John, who prefers to be referenced by his first name only, used to work in the music industry as a marketing manager and show promoter. But when COVID-19 struck, he was forced to pursue other streams of revenue.

“Showbiz seems off the table for a long time,” he says. “That makes me incredibly sad.”

With delivery services increasing in demand, John decided he would switch to same-day grocery delivery and pick-up service, Instacart. “Customers seem to really appreciate and need the service right now,” he says. “It’s not something I could see living on, but it’s better than nothing.”

In the last week, John managed to fulfill 30 orders. “It can be very time-consuming,” he says. “A large order can take more than an hour, total.”

Due to high demand, John has experienced lags or complete crashes with the Instacart app, and he says their employee protection could be better. “Their support is nonexistent right now,” he says. “Instacart is stacking the orders and not increasing pay enough. Apparently, they reduced the suggested tip amount [to 5 percent], and they aren’t really doing anything to keep their shoppers safe.”

Instacart employees across the country are going on strike, saying that the company isn’t providing workers with enough safety items, including hand sanitizer, disinfectant wipes, and sprays, and that they aren’t supplying ample hazard pay. Instacart has since announced that they will start working toward demands, including offering free hand sanitizer to employees and supplying up to 14 days of pay for any full-service shopper who contracts COVID-19.

John isn’t taking any chances. “I went out and bought some gloves,” he says. “My sister has access to an N95 mask she’s going to bring me. And I’ve tried to keep distance from people. Most orders have been leave-on-porch orders to minimize contact.”

John says that he is worried about risking the safety and well-being of both himself and his family.

“This could kill me,” he says. “I’m 35 and not in great shape. More than anything, I’m worried about my stepmom who just beat cancer, my mom who isn’t in great health, and my 93-year-old grandma. But I have no back-up [for income], and I have to risk it.” — Julia Baker *Names of some sources in this story have been changed to protect their anonymity.

Categories
Music Music Features

Memphis Music Lovers Support Players’ Online Events

And just like that, the gigs were gone. Musicians around the world have suffered a setback as their primary sources of income — performances in public venues — have evaporated. In previous centuries, such straits might have sent troubadours making do with digging ditches. Now, we have the live-streamed event. And many local players are making it work for them.

“A few people had already done [live-streamed performances] in Memphis before me,” says multi-instrumentalist and songwriter Graham Winchester. “But mine was one of the first ones that someone made an event for and advertised. And it got a lot of support.”

Indeed, Winchester’s live-streamed Facebook event on March 14th occurred right on the cusp of the great shift to social distancing. “The night before, I played my actual record release show at Bar DKDC, and I know a lot of folks weren’t comfortable going out even then. So I wanted to do a second part [online]. And it went really well. I was blown away.”

Gary Baldwin

Gerald Stephens

While such events may not match the steady pay of real-life gigs, there’s a chance they’ll earn you even more. “People were super-generous on the donations,” says Winchester. “On the actual feed, I wrote, ‘If you want to donate $15 or more for an LP, I’ll deliver a record directly to your doorstep.’ So a lot of people were giving two to three times the asking price of the vinyl, saying, ‘I know it’s hard times, man,’ or ‘keep the change.’ It really touched me. I was in tears that night, thinking about how many people were so generous with their donations.”

Gerald Stephens, keyboardist extraordinaire for the Love Light Orchestra and other bands, has also jumped into live-streaming, noting that, “It’s the sharing economy. ‘Give me some content, if I like it I’ll give you a $10 tip.’ That’s people helping each other. I’m grateful. I’ve made some of what I’ve lost back, a substantial amount of it, so I feel grateful. There’s something to us taking care of each other. That’s the good part of this.”

Stephens was surprised, given that his first live-streamed event was launched on the spur of the moment. “It was real quick,” he says. “I just realized, ‘Hey, we lost some money. Hey, my friends tried that, it works.’ And I do enough restaurant gigs, blues gigs, and rock gigs that I’m always in practice. I always have a bunch of different songs that I can play at any given time. So I came up with a setlist on the fly. The second one, I planned a little bit more ahead. Doing the same thing within a week, I don’t want it to be exactly the same.”

Winchester throws himself into the planning. “We put plants in my room, which has a shag carpet, a good vintage vibe, and tried to turn it into a jungle room. And we also ran a bunch of sound checks. You can make a Facebook Live setting private and invite a couple friends. I think there’s a misconception out there, where musicians think, ‘Once you’re live, you’re live. It’s on.’ But there is a way to make it private and sound check it first.”

There’s an aesthetic payoff as well. Stephens says he started his first solo streaming event partly to satisfy his creative side. “I don’t think people are doing it necessarily for the money,” he says. “We need that, and I’ll take it and say thank you. But also, this is what we do. You know how it feels if you’re playing all the time, and then suddenly you’re stuck at home. Now there’s an outlet, you know? The emotional outlet to art is more important than the money. It’s nice to have a little of both so we can just have time to do it better.”

Categories
Art Art Feature

Jamie Harmon’s “Quarantine Portrait” Series

Photographer Jamie Harmon beats the empty streets of a quarantined Memphis — keeping, of course, a good ten feet between himself and anyone he does happen to come across. On March 23rd, Mayor Jim Strickland announced the Safer at Home Initiative in response to the exponential spread of the novel coronavirus COVID-19, making official the soft quarantine many Memphians had already adopted.

Jamie Harmon

Phil Darius Wallace and family

In the Bluff City, where gatherings are a way of life, taken for granted, Harmon, camera in hand, sets out to document the new normal. With his “Quarantine Portrait” series, he’s — with permission — peeking through windows, into Memphians’ lives, and capturing a slice of what life looks like under lockdown. The series is understandably somber at times, but the images resonate with an undeniable sense of hope. Perhaps paradoxically, there is something inherently community-minded in these photographs of isolated individuals. Many of these photos were taken before Mayor Strickland’s Safer at Home order went into effect, and long before Tennessee Governor Bill Lee or President Donald Trump even suggested that the current health crisis might, indeed, be more serious than originally forecasted. As such, the “Quarantine Portrait” showcases Memphians self-isolating in an act of solidarity — stepping up to fill the void of leadership with individual sacrifice.

Jamie Harmon

Jamie Harmon

By day, Harmon is the owner/operator of Amurica Photo and the shared art manager at Crosstown Arts in Crosstown Concourse, the newly repurposed and remodeled Sears building.

“Because I was working 40 hours a week inside of a building, I was not as mobile as I wanted to be. I adapted something I could do where I was,” Harmon says of his “Complementary Objects” series, in which he juxtaposes, 1980s-style, a seemingly incongruous object floating ghost-like next to the smiling face of some Memphis personage. The series is lighthearted, goofy even, and Harmon’s 180-degree pivot to his series of self-isolated individuals speaks to his wide range as an artist.

“Luckily my kids are older. One thing I’m seeing is there are so many people stuck at home with younger kids or people with disabilities that had a routine. Now their routines are broken, and routines are pretty important to a lot of people. My routines have always been pretty adaptable or chaotic or whatever you want to call it. The routine of chaos is fine with me,” Harmon says.

The photographer hopes his brief visits to people’s homes can help break the oppressive monotony of a seemingly endless day, stretching on without distractions from the outside world. “The people who are sitting at home wondering what to do and maybe have little kids, this breaks that day up,” Harmon adds.

Jamie Harmon

Karen Mulford, Oz, Alex da Ponte

“It’s hard to explain to a two-year-old ‘why’ and the concept of ‘temporary,’” says notable Memphis singer/songwriter Alex da Ponte, admitting that her son Oz’s struggles to comprehend the quarantine can be challenging. “He doesn’t understand why we suddenly can’t go to the zoo or go see his grandparents or play at the park,” da Ponte says. “It’s a big part of his world that is suddenly off limits. We bought a couple bags of sand and made him a sandbox with his kiddie pool in the backyard. Little things like that have helped.”

Doubtless, Harmon’s visit was a welcome distraction; Oz, who will turn three in June, can be seen hamming it up with a big smile in some photos in the series. In others, he is either dutifully ignoring the thin, bearded stranger with a mobile light setup and a telephoto lens, or is digging into the role of studious toddler, coached by his mothers, staring at an open coloring book.

Jamie Harmon

Michael Weinberg, Robbie Johnson Weinberg, and kids

“We were empty nesters. We had two college kids come home and we’re living in a way we never thought we would again,” says Robbie Johnson Weinberg, the owner, creator, and longtime manager of Eclectic Eye. “We’re just living in this weird, unknown space.”

Weinberg says that, with uncertainties mounting — about her business and their employees, about her kids’ education and careers — the family has had to adapt. They’ve been creative, though, and have introduced a safe word into the family lexicon. Now, when talk of the nebulous future gets too dire, anyone can, with a shout of “cactus,” compel the family to change the subject and find a way out of prickly territory.

Jamie Harmon

Georgene Boksich-Cachola, Sal Cachola

For Harmon, one of the most exciting aspects of the series has been the ideas his quarantined subjects bring to the venture. “In the past it’s like ‘No, you can’t get on the roof,’ and now, ‘If we’re ever going to get on the roof, this is the perfect time for it.’”

Indeed, the series documents people posing with their pets, clambering onto the roof, thrusting their arms through screen doors like zombies in a Romero movie.
Jamie Harmon

Tamera and Ty Boyland

“It allows people to get out of that shell,” Harmon says. “It’s kind of nice that everybody feels like they gave something to it.”

“I think it’s truly just a gift in these weird times,” Weinberg says. “To have someone like Jamie come and remind us that we’re a family first is beyond lovely. There’s good stuff here, just in being together. The fear of isolation is almost paralyzing until you realize there’s some gift in the middle of it.”

Jamie Harmon

Catrina Guttery, Patrick Francis

“My mom was worried from the get go about being quarantined and not able to work, and I really thought she was just being paranoid. And now here we are,” says Alex da Ponte. “As of yesterday, I haven’t left the house for two weeks.” Da Ponte is hardly an outlier; to many, the new self-isolation precautions did seem like paranoia. Even as news from Italy and China drove home the severity of the problem, as the World Health Organization classified the coronavirus as a bona fide pandemic, America’s national, state, and local governments adopted different, often contradictory stances. For many, the uncertainty alone is enough to spark a spiral of worry and fear. No one seems sure when this will end — or what the world will look like when we emerge from our homes.

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“The rules have changed. You can’t go to restaurants. You can’t go to clubs or big parties, even outdoor festivals. All that’s off the table. So everyone’s walking around their neighborhoods,” Harmon says of the change he’s seen. “We walk around the neighborhood and we all talk to each other on our porches. It’s that funny ideal of America as how it used to be. Now, granted, how it used to be for people who had privilege. At times like this, there are probably people who are worried about losing their homes, not so worried about having a picture made.”

Jamie Harmon

Maritza Dávila-Irizarry, Jon W. Sparks

“No matter what we do, this is a collective experience,” Weinberg says, articulating the truth made apparent by this health crisis and Harmon’s series. COVID-19, coming in the wake of one of the most divisive moments in recent memory, and attacking without regard to age, party affiliation, or other arbitrary qualifiers, highlights simple truths: A community is only as strong as its most vulnerable members; the lines we draw to divide us often do far more harm than good. Harmon’s series makes that plain — the houses, duplexes, and apartment buildings represented are from various neighborhoods and income brackets. Harmon’s lens captures esteemed members of the community (Congressman Steve Cohen and Shelby County Commissioner Tami Sawyer, for starters) alongside now-out-of-work service industry folk. Straight, LGBTQ, black, white, Latinx, young, and old — all members of the Memphis community, all willing to sacrifice their own desires for mobility for the greater good.

Jamie Harmon

Chris McCoy, Laura Jean Hocking

“People taking this seriously is absolutely a form of solidarity in our society. A lot of people who are staying home are doing so not because they think their bodies can’t handle the virus but because they are recognizing that it’s not about that,” da Ponte continues, admitting that she worries about her son’s grandparents staying safe. “I’m not worried about us, but we’re the carriers, and we have to watch out for our parents and our grandparents and our compromised friends,” Harmon says.

Jamie Harmon

Billie Worley, Pat Mitchell

“Everyone’s adapting in their own way,” Harmon says. Da Ponte’s wife, Karen Mulford, adds, “I wonder if people will view social interactions in a new light. Will we hug and handshake with new appreciation? Or will we shy away from it, a lingering scar from this pandemic? I imagine people could go either way.”

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Perhaps this pandemic and our response to it will, like a fever burning off infection, help a nation infatuated with the ideal of rugged individualism accept that the world is interconnected, and only growing more so. After the cloud of coronavirus passes, whether we return with gusto to hugs and handshakes, or grasp a new greeting, there is hope that, however we greet each other, it will be with the warmth of family.


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News News Blog

We Could Use a Little Help

Dear Reader,

We could use a little help.

At the Memphis Flyer, we’re committed to being here for you in the best times, and in the most uncertain times. And friends, these are uncertain times. Like many of you, we’re working remotely now, doing our part to flatten the curve and reduce the impact of COVID-19 on our healthcare system. Our work days have turned into family affairs. We’ve set up shop at our kitchen tables and couches, muttering at the kids while we’re on video conferences. Our reporters continue to track down the stories you need to know about, but we’re doing a lot more phone interviews with barking dogs in the background.

Even in uncertain times, we’re certain about a few things. We’re always independent. We’re always free — we won’t ever charge you for a copy of the Flyer, or for access to our website. And we strive to keep you informed about and connected to our city.

This week, the Flyer published a cover story about the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in the Memphis area. The cover story is very much a reflection of the strength of our team. As this story continues to develop, we will be here for you, just as we have been for the past 31 years.

Also like many of you, we’re seeing the effects of these uncertain times on our business. Our local, independent company is sustained to a great degree by advertising dollars from other local businesses — the sorts of businesses being affected acutely by the changes in our shared lifestyle. The entertainment and dining industries are experiencing radical changes already — and they happen to be our core advertisers.

We love our clients, and we respect their needs to cut back on marketing as they make difficult decisions to shift their own business models in unprecedented ways. Even as we feel the effects of these radical changes in our own pocketbook, we support the local business owners making sane, caring choices to protect community health and the health of their own employees and guests.

When this storm passes — and it will pass — we aim to be here for you still. We look forward to the days when we don’t have to wonder whether it makes sense to publish a calendar of live events, because so many have been cancelled. We look forward to bringing you stories about local restaurants that talk about more than their carry-out and delivery options.

In this moment, we could use your help. We know many of you are worried about your own finances, and we get it. But if you can spare a one-time contribution of $5, $10, or $20, we would be grateful. Think of it as an investment in our shared future. (If you are in a position to do so, we will cheerfully accept larger sums! But no pressure.) We also invite you to chip in a few dollars on a monthly recurring basis. However you choose to give, we’ll welcome you into our Frequent Flyer community. Go here, for details.

If you are not in a position to give financially, there are other ways you can support the Flyer — such as patronizing and supporting our advertisers, reading and sharing our work, and passing this message along to others.

Above all, thank you for being part of our community. We’re in this together.

Anna Traverse Fogle                                                   Bruce VanWyngarden
CEO, Contemporary Media, Inc.                                 Editor, Memphis Flyer

                           

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Election Commission Hears from Public, Will Delay Vote on New Voting Machines

The outlook for proposed new voting machines looks more muddled than ever after a virtual telemeeting of the Shelby County Election Commission (SCEC) Wednesday that was marred by the frequently indistinct audio transmission.

But numerous testimonies from participating citizens were noted, most of them being read into the record from written statements supplied to the SCEC. The great majority of comments were in favor of equipment allowing hand-marked paper ballots, with arguments ranging from cost savings to transparency to an alleged greater safety factor relative to touch-screen alternatives during the coronavirus pandemic.

The roster of citizens calling in or contributing statements ranged far and wide and included sitting public officials and a bevy of well-known activists.

Originally, the five election commissioners were scheduled to vote Wednesday on a recommendation by Election Administrator Linda Phillips of a specific machine vendor, but a vote was postponed to allow the meeting to substitute for a previously promised public comment meeting that had been sidetracked by the onset of the epidemic.

It is taken for granted that Administrator Phillips favors machine-marked voting instruments outfitted so as to allow for a paper trail, but no details on her preference were presented Wednesday.

At the end of the meeting, Commissioner Brent Taylor, one of the three Republican representatives on the five-member commission, moved to postpone any voting until whatever turns out to be the Phillips/staff recommendation can be presented to County Mayor Lee Harris, who can then certify it and call for a vote by the County Commission, which has the responsibility of funding the new machines.

That strategy, which was adopted by the Election Commission, would not directly alter Phillips’ choice, regarded as likely to be endorsed by the SCEC, but it would enable the results of the SCEC-ordered RFP (request for proposal) to be made public, and it would give the County Commission, which had previously voted in favor of hand-marked paper ballots, some means of expressing its collective mind — and possibly its will — on the matter.

As it happened, the County Commission, which was meeting in committee simultaneously with the Election Commission, had on its agenda yet another resolution endorsing hand-cast paper ballots but agreed to send the issue down to its Monday public meeting without a recommendation after hearing of the Election Commission’s action.

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News News Blog

311: The Number to Call if You See Violations of Stay at Home Order

What can you do if you see someone violating the city’s Safer at Home order?

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland said Memphians can call 311 to report violations of the order.

“Since issuing the Safer at Home order, I have received several complaints through emails, social media, and phone calls to my office about businesses not following our guidance,” the mayor said Tuesday afternoon. “I want to let you know that we have City of Memphis Code Enforcement Officers actively working through those complaints and making visits to businesses to ensure compliance every single day. However, they can’t be everywhere all the time, so please keep reaching out and letting us know about those few not taking this seriously.”

The mayor said the order is legally enforceable, and “We will take every measure available to enforce it.” This includes possibly issuing misdemeanor citations, revoking beer permits, and closures of businesses under nuisance abatement ordinances.


Dan Springer, chief media affairs officer for the city, confirmed that this order also applies to private gatherings at residences. If a neighbor witnesses a gathering or disregard of social distancing guidelines, they can call 311, and Memphis Police Officers or other city employees will respond.

The directive issued by the Shelby County Health Department is also legally enforceable and applies to all residents of Shelby County.

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Per the mayor’s executive order and the health directive, residents are not allowed to gather in groups of more than 10 people.

Bruce Rudolph, county health officer, said Wednesday of the department’s directive: “As the health officer, I am empowered by law to be able to issue a directive that requires individuals and business to comply to our attempts to prevent and mitigate this communicable disease, COVID-19. And individuals and businesses who fail to comply can be charged with a misdemeanor. This is not a request or a recommendation but a requirement that is supported in law.

“It’s necessary we move in this direction because our numbers are climbing … And the main tool that we have to try to prevent deaths here in Shelby County is to adhere to what has been outlined in executive orders and the health directive.”


For businesses not complying to the order, Randolph said the first step is to issue an oral warning to comply, which “in my opinion, we’ve already done that.” The next step, he said, is to deliver a written order, asking the business to comply and advising that the health department will shut it down if it continues to violate the order.


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News News Blog

UPDATE: Highest Coronavirus Cases in East Memphis, Cordova, South Memphis

UPDATE: New data from the Shelby County Health Department shows the county’s highest concentrations of coronavirus are in Cordova, East Memphis, and South Memphis.

A heat map issued by the department Tuesday (below) showed Midtown and East Memphis as the largest virus hot spot in the county. Health officials issued a new map showing cases by ZIP code Wednesday afternoon after members of the media requested it.

Shelby County Health Department

The ZIP codes with the highest coronavirus are 38106, 38108, 38028, 38119, 38120, and 38109 — all with between 28 and 40 cases each. Downtown and Midtown ZIP codes have between 12 and 20 cases.

ORIGINAL POST: The Shelby County Health Department is starting to compile and make available a ton of demographic information about the coronavirus pandemic here.

A glance at some of the early figures shows Midtown and East Memphis as the county’s hottest hot spots and that millennials are proving to be the most affected (or have tested positive for the virus so far).

So, here’s the health department’s newly released heat map of coronavirus cases (data is current to Monday, March 30th):
Shelby County Health Department

Here are (crudely) Memphis neighborhoods overlaid on the heat map:
Shelby County Health Department

 So far, the virus has tested positive in males and females almost the same (of those who have been tested, of course):
Shelby County Health Department

The health department and Mayor Jim Strickland have published the demographics by age almost since the beginning.

Shelby County Health Department

Here’s what Strickland had to say about it in his update Tuesday:

“One initial common misconception with this virus has been that it only effects people over 60 years old. By the numbers—that’s simply not true, especially in Shelby County. The health department puts out a graph in their daily update, and I include it each day in here.

Today, I want to call special attention to the numbers in that graph.

Shelby County confirmed cases:

11-20-year-olds= 4.7%

21-30-year-olds= 22.7%

31-40-year-olds= 19.1%

41-50-year-olds= 16%

51-60-year-olds= 17.4 %

Grand Total= 79.9% of COVID-19 cases in Shelby County have been in people 60 or younger.

We’ve limited access to parks, shut down bars, reduced restaurants to take-out and delivery only, and required many other businesses to temporarily close their doors. We are doing everything we can to slow the spread, but we cannot do it without the public taking this seriously.

The virus doesn’t care if you’re younger or older. It doesn’t care if your black or white, and it doesn’t care how much money you have. The virus does not discriminate.”

Also, we’ve seen the cases of positive tests rise in graphs like these:
Shelby County Health Department

But the numbers have not always been even, especially if you look at the dates a new virus case was reported (top) and the dates of when virus symptoms first showed on patients (below):
Shelby County Health Department

Shelby County Health Department

Finally, here you can see the county’s overall testing rate:

Shelby County Health Department

Categories
News News Blog

County to Offer Employees Free Counseling in Response to Coronavirus

Shelby County employees will now have access to unlimited virtual counseling services, Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris announced Wednesday.

The expansion of employee benefits will allow all county employees to receive video, phone, or in-person counseling for free, regardless of if employees are insured through the county.

Harris said as the county works to slow the spread of COVID-19, it’s important to protect the mental health of employees.

“Employees may be anxious about contracting the virus, fearful about exposing their loved ones to the disease, or navigating the unique stressors that have arisen during this public health emergency,” Harris said. “Access to professional teletherapy sessions is one way to ensure that employees have access to counseling and mental health care.”

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Harris is also encouraging other employers in the county to be proactive in supporting the mental health needs of their employees.

The county’s teletherapy program is a part of the Concern Employee Assistance program, which is managed by Baptist Memorial Healthcare.

“Our counseling services are confidential, last about an hour, and can take place via webcam, phone, or in-person,” said Melissa Donahue, program director of Concern. “When you’re stressed or emotionally drained, your ability to perform at home or work suffers tremendously. Now is an appropriate time for organizations to take a look at what they are doing to provide a mentally healthy workplace to their employees.”