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Music Music Blog

The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, July 2-8

Devil Train

While some venues are back to hosting live music on patios and decks, most Memphis musicians are erring on the side of caution. Yet they continue to live-stream their art from empty rooms and homes across the city. Support them and their socially aware methods by following the links below, and Happy Fourth of July!

REMINDER: The Memphis Flyer supports social distancing in these uncertain times. Please live-stream responsibly. We remind all players that even a small gathering could recklessly spread the coronavirus and endanger others. If you must gather as a band, please keep all players six feet apart, preferably outside, and remind viewers to do the same.

ALL TIMES CDT

Thursday, July 2
Noon
Amy LaVere & Will Sexton
Facebook

Noon
Live DJ – Downtown Memphis Virtual Carry Out Concert
Facebook

6:30 p.m.
Cazateatro – Celebrating Memphis’ Spanish-speaking communities
Facebook

7 p.m.
The Church Brothers
Facebook

7 p.m.
The Rusty Pieces
Facebook

8 p.m.
Devil Train
Facebook


Friday, July 3

8 p.m.
Andrew Cohen, Frank Fotusky, Nick Wade
Country Blues, Rags, Spirituals & Old Time Music
Facebook

Saturday, July 4
10:30 a.m.
Tony Manard – Coffee in a Cadillac
Facebook

1:30 p.m.
Michael Graber – Microdose
Facebook

Sunday, July 5
3 p.m.
Dale Watson – Chicken $#!+ Bingo
Facebook

4 pm
Bill Shipper – For Kids (every Sunday)
Facebook

Monday, July 6
8 p.m.
John Paul Keith (every Monday)
Facebook

Tuesday, July 7
7 p.m.
Bill Shipper (every Tuesday)
Facebook

8 p.m.
Mario Monterosso (every Tuesday)
Facebook

Wednesday, July 8
7 p.m.
Miz Stefani (every Wednesday)
Facebook

8 p.m.
Turnstyles
Facebook

8 p.m.
Richard Wilson (every Wednesday)
Facebook

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News News Blog

New Virus Cases Swell by 394

COVID-19 Memphis
Infogram

New Virus Cases Swell by 394

Test results reported Wednesday morning showed 394 new cases of COVID-19 in Shelby County, nearly 100 more positive tests than were reported Wednesday morning. The latest data available shows 10.3 percent of all tests were positive for the week of June 14th. The positivity rate has grown steadily since the 4 percent rate recorded for the week of May 4th, just as the county’s economy began to re-open.

Since yesterday’s report, 3,164 virus tests were given in Shelby County. The county’s overall average positive rate for COVID-19 rose slightly for the fourth day in a row to 8 percent on all test results.

The total number of COVID-19 cases here stands at 10,602. No new deaths were recorded. The death toll remains at 192 in Shelby County.

A new tool from the Harvard Global Health Institute offers a COVID risk map. It shows if a county or state is on the green, yellow, orange or red risk level, based on the number of new daily cases. The framework then delivers broad guidance on the intensity of control efforts needed based on these COVID risk levels.

Harvard Global Health Institute

A new tool from the Harvard Global Health Institute shows how COVID-19 cases are dispersed throughout Tennessee.

Davidson County, for example, has hit a tipping point, according to the map, and requires stay-at-home orders. Shelby County is in the orange zone, which means leaders here need to either implement stay-at-home orders or do rigorous testing and contact tracing.

The figures for the map come from a variety of sources like the World Health Organization and Bing’s COVID Tracker. However, the figures — at least for Shelby County — were a few days old as of Thursday morning.

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News News Blog

COVID Grants Given to Local Arts Organizations

The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) has chosen ArtsMemphis as one of nine local arts agencies nationwide to receive $250,000 in CARES Act funding. Separately, the Community Foundation of Greater Memphis (CFGM) selected ArtsMemphis to receive a $200,000 capacity building grant from the Mid-South COVID-19 Regional Response Fund.

Both grants will help the nonprofit arts community combat the financial implications of COVID-19.

In addition to the CARES Act grant to ArtsMemphis, the NEA announced grants of $50,000 each to four Memphis arts organizations: Blues City Cultural Center, Hattiloo Theatre, Indie Memphis, and Opera Memphis.

The NEA recommended grants for direct funding through the CARES Act to 855 organizations across the country. ArtsMemphis and eight other local arts agencies were selected to receive a larger grant of $250,000, joining Boston, Chicago, Lafayette, Colo., Phoenix, Reno, Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa, and Tucson. The remaining 846 organizations will receive grants of $50,000.

The CFGM grant is part of a larger block of funding from the Mid-South COVID-19 Regional Response Fund intended to address community needs, and to provide a wider safety net for the forward progress of the arts sector. “We will redirect these funds as unrestricted support to nonprofit arts organizations in Memphis and Shelby County,” says ArtsMemphis president and CEO Elizabeth Rouse.

A survey of more than 250 Shelby County artists and organizations conducted by ArtsMemphis indicated a total anticipated loss of income across the arts sector of $7.4 million through June 30, 2020. Nationally, according to data released by Americans for the Arts (AFTA) of 17,000 arts organizations surveyed, projected losses through June 30th at $8.4 billion.

This is the second distribution of funds received by ArtsMemphis from CFGM’s Mid-South COVID-19 Regional Response Fund since the pandemic forced arts organizations to close on March 16th. ArtsMemphis established the Artist Emergency Fund (AEF) in partnership with Music Export Memphis (MEM) and together they distributed $308,000 to 443 individuals in the Mid-South arts sector.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Alexander Says Trump Should Wear Mask, Addresses Other Controversies in Chat with Rotary

Retiring U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander, who, like any seasoned politician, knows how to pull a punch, didn’t pull many in discussing President Donald Trump with members of the Rotary Club of Memphis this week.

Alexander addresing Rotarians

Addressing an online Zoom audience on Tuesday made up of Rotarians from various local clubs, Alexander emphasized the importance of wearing face masks in public during the still ongoing Covid-19 crisis and made no exception for the President, who is notoriously reticent to be seen masked in public.

Early on in his dialogue with Rotarians, Alexander, who was speaking remotely from Washington, was asked about the mask issue. “I just came from a hearing with Dr. [Anthony S.] Fauci. And Dr. [Robert] Redfield and …all the top people, really a group of extraordinary individuals who run those agencies. The thing that came through to me right now, and something I’ve talked about last couple of days is we need to be wearing masks.”

The Senator observed: “We’ve gotten into this political debate. That’s if you’re for Trump, you don’t wear a mask and if you’re against Trump, you do wear a mask. And that’s just such nonsense because all the health officials tell us that there are three things we can do that would make a big difference in containing this virus and one is wearing a mask.” The others, he said, were social distancing and frequent hand-washing.

Alexander continued, speaking in diplomatic but direct terms, “One way that would help in this politicalization of the mask issue is for the President occasionally to wear a mask. I’m not sure I understand why he doesn’t. Because he gets tested. Everybody around him gets tested. And so they’re not infecting each other. He doesn’t wear one when he’s speaking and he’s speaking a lot of the time. So there are really very few occasions when he could wear a mask. But if he would wear a mask sometimes — he has a lot of admirers. In Tennessee, about 90% of Republicans say they approve of him — so I think if he wore a mask if he made it clear it was important then I think millions of his followers would wear a mask — they’d follow his lead, which is a compliment to him not a criticism and our country would be better off we’d be more likely to contain the disease.”

Responding to questions, the Senator tackled other controversial issues. One concerned the fact that Vice President Mike Pence refuses to repeat or acknowledge the phrase ‘Black Lives Matter.’ Alexander himself approved the phrase and then said, “But It’s so difficult for the vice president to say that. I don’t know this, you know, if I spent every day trying to give a running commentary on what the President and the Vice President do, I wouldn’t be able to do anything else. So what I try to do is say what I think and show respect for their offices and other offices here and let other people judge them and judge me.”

The Senator acknowledged the need for Americans to periodically reconsider their approved icons but advised moderation in the process: “I like to take American history teachers on the floor of the Senate, They go to my desk where Howard Baker and Fred Thompson once sat, they go to Daniel Webster’s desk, they go to the desk the Kennedy brothers had, and they go to Jefferson Davis’, who resigned the Senate to be president of the Confederacy, and on that desk are some chalk marks. And the story goes that when the Union occupied the Capitol, this Union soldier started chopping at the desk with a sword to destroy it. And his commanding officer stopped him and said, ‘Stop that. We’re here to save the Union, not to destroy it.’ Well, we could go burn Jefferson Davis’s desk, but I think we ought to keep it right where it is. Why? Because I’d like for American history teachers to be able to teach their students An example i that we had a civil war. We had senators who resigned to be officers on both sides.”

Another question concerned the ongoing controversy over the treatment of African American citizens by police. The Senator told a story about his Senate colleague Tim Scott (R-S.C.0, who is black: “Two years ago, he was stopped seven times by police for being a black man in the wrong place while he was chairman of the county council in Charleston, and so I said to him a few weeks ago, I said ‘Tim, can I tell that story publicly?’ He said sure, because It happened again last month. So I told that story on the Senate floor. I wrote a column about it. And what I said was that maybe one step in understanding racism and how African Americans feel about it is trying to put ourselves in this in the position of a white man who might be stopped for being a white man in the wrong place and a community that’s mostly black.”

One more controversy the Senator addressed concerned efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). Alexander, who voted against the Act in 2009, made clear he still had misgivings about it but said, “I thought the lawsuit that the government brought was pretty flimsy. I mean, basically, what they’re arguing is that Congress, this Congress repealed the Affordable Care Act when it voted to eliminate the penalty for the independent mandate. Well, I didn’t hear any United States Senator say they thought they were repealing the entire Affordable Care Act when they voted to get rid in effect of the independent mandate. So I thought it was a pretty flimsy case.”

Categories
Music Music Blog

Listen Up: Brooke Fair — Taking Ukuleles Seriously. And a New Single July 17th.

Memphian Brooke Fair will release her new single ‘Universe’ July 17th.



Brooke Fair wrote her first song when she was in the third grade.

“No one told me I couldn’t do it,” she says. “I always assumed — which I know now isn’t the case — people who sang wrote their own songs. And I had this third grade pop star dream: ‘I’m going to write a song because I’m going to be famous.’”

“Escape” was the name of that song. “It was about my imaginary boyfriend. You just write a lot of bad songs. The more bad songs you write, the more good songs you have. I have 10 times as many terrible songs.”

Now 16, Fair has written more than 100 songs. On July 17th, she will release her new single, “Universe,” which was produced by Justin Timberlake guitarist Elliot Ives and Scott Hardin at Young Avenue Sound.

Born in Memphis, Fair began writing prolifically after she picked up the baritone ukulele when she was 12. “There’s this singer I really love, Dodie Clark. I’ve been obsessed with her since second grade. Her lyrics are very universal, but specific at the same time. She played ukulele. “

Fair, who doesn’t remember a time when she didn’t sing, began taking lessons at House of Talent when she was 8 years old. “I just got to go there and sing my heart out for an hour.”

She also studied with Timberlake’s former teacher, Bob Westbrook, but, she says, “I really liked belting and singing very emotional songs, but he was always trying to make me sing ballads. I wanted it to be more fun and lighthearted. At the time, I just wanted to be Ariana Grande. To be honest, I didn’t have my personality.”

Fair then began studying at School of Rock, which was a great experience, she says. Singing in front of audiences helped with her anxiety. She also liked the feedback from other musicians. 

One of the instructors, Sarah Simmons, and Simmons’ husband, Greg Langston, were “really important in making me realize I could record. All this stuff seemed so far away. I didn’t realize I could record music in Memphis.”

That was when Fair picked up the baritone ukulele. She had been playing a soprano ukulele, but she loved the sound of the baritone, which suited the emotional type of music she was writing. “It’s so simple-looking and simple to play. It’s not that difficult. But you can make it sound so pretty and use it to write a lot of songs. And you can translate it to the guitar because it’s the bottom four strings of a guitar.”

The first song she wrote on a ukulele was “Elevator Music” — “another love song,” she says. The song, which she wrote to her boyfriend at the time, begins, “When I’m with you, everything else is like elevator music. Nothing else matters.”

In 2018, Fair released her first single, “Love Songs on Loop,” which is “about being stuck on someone you’ve been with. Not being able to get over somebody. But in a lighthearted way, not a sappy way. It got on a few Spotify lists and got some traction. Almost 90,000 streams on Spotify. Which really is not an obviously impressive number. But when you take into account we didn’t do any publicity for this song — it kind of organically grew like that — I think it’s really cool.”

Fair released her first EP, All Queens Wear Crowns, in 2018.

She then began studying with her current teacher, Memphis musician/Memphis University School instructor Matt Tutor, who began teaching her “how to sing a little bit better.” But he also concentrated on her “potential as a songwriter.”

Fair went into Young Avenue Sound last February to record “Universe.” The song is “flipping the narrative on the whole type of songs I used to write, where I was the one being played or being strung along by some guy. Instead of being heartbroken, [I’m] being the heartbreaker.”

She released “I Can’t Breathe,” also produced by Ives and Hardin, last April before George Floyd was killed. The song is about “anxiety” and a lot of lines coincidentally pertain to the Floyd incident, she says. “A few days after George Floyd was killed, I realized that after listening to the song and going through my Instagram feed at the same time.”

People were telling her how much the song applies to Floyd. “There’s a line: ‘When the world mistreats me, I’m left in pieces.”

Fair had already decided to donate all the proceeds of the song to suicide prevention awareness charities, she says.

“I’ve always been a huge advocate of human rights and things like that. The fact I wrote a song applicable to ‘Black Lives Matter’ shows I’m kind of meant to use my platform to support things that matter to me.”

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News News Blog

Total Virus Cases Top 10,000 As New Cases Rise by 304

COVID-19 Memphis
Infogram

Total Virus Cases Top 10,000 As New Cases Rise by 304

Test results reported Wednesday morning showed 304 new cases of COVID-19 in Shelby County.

Since the last report, 2,209 virus tests were given in Shelby County. The county’s overall average positive rate for COVID-19 rose slightly for the third day in a row to 7.9 percent on all test results.

The total number of COVID-19 cases here stands at 10,208. The death toll rose by seven since the last report and is now 192 in Shelby County.

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News News Blog

Neutral Expert Reports Findings in Covid-19/Jail Case

The neutral expert witness appointed by U.S. Judge Sheryl Lipman has made his report in the case Busby v. Bonner, in which the plaintiffs seek significant changes in the manner of treating actual and potential COVID-19 victims in the Shelby County jail.

The expert is Michael K. Bray, director of the criminal justice division for Sabot Consulting, and the text of his repor was released Tuesday.

Extracts from the lengthy report seem strongly to support the plaintiffs’ case. The general thrust is summed up in the following estimate of the response plan to the Covid-19 epidemic put in place at the jail by Wellpath, the caregiving agency contracted with by Shelby County to administer medical policy at the jail.

“The Wellpath Covid-19 response plan is inadequate to protect the vulnerable inmates housed in the Shelby County Jail,“ says the report. “Wellpath leadership needs to be more aggressive and more vocal about protecting the vulnerable inmates in their care. There are several practices that take place in the jail that are potentially harmful to their patients, and they should not be allowed to continue.”

Further: “The Shelby County Jail is not maximizing its efforts to enforce social distancing in its living units and should consider rethinking how it programs inmates in all areas of the jail. … [There is not] consistent multidisciplinary effort within the jail to secure alternative custody venues for vulnerable inmates.

Among the many specific findings: The report criticizes the way in which inmates are moved back and forth from medical isolation to County courtrooms, both in the way they are transported, in their lengthy stays with other prisoners in holding dock, and in the lack of testing for exposure to the coronavirus. In addition, the jail is faulted for not clustering vulnerable inmates in housing units together away from the general population, nor do jail authorities enforce sufficient sociaL dIstancing..

The report concludes that “there is no concentrated and coordinated effort to assemble and present information to the courts regarding an inmate’s medical conditions that may make him vulnerable to serious illness or death while housed in the jail.” And it suggests Mischelle Best, the Court Expeditor, while” hard working and passionate about her job,” is “spread too thin and has to do the job of a competent criminal defense attorney in addition to her other duties.”

Finally, while “a significant number” of vulnerable inmates had very serious charges, others “have been charged with garden variety felonies and … because of their medical condition are not a current threat to public safety if they were placed in a structured and supervised environment.”

Judge Lipman is expected to review the report, along with final briefs from both the plaintiffs’ and defendants’ sides and to issue her ruling sometime in July.

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News News Blog

Brooks Has Limited Opening Today, to General Public on July 15th

The Memphis Brooks Museum of Art is reopening on July 1st, first to Brooks members and first responders. It opens to the general public on Wednesday, July 15th.

During July, admission will be pay-what-you-can, and day tickets can be purchased at brooksmuseum.org. Reservations are encouraged.
Courtesy Memphis Brooks Museum of Art and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art

Dana Claxton, Headdress

Some permanent collection galleries will remain closed, but an exhibition that was up when the pandemic forced the museum to close has been extended. “Native Voices, 1950s to Now: Art for a New Understanding,” which was organized by Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, will be on display through September 27th. It had originally been set to close on May 17th.

“We had a phenomenal opening [of the Native Voices show in February] with great buzz,” says Emily Ballew Neff, executive director of the Brooks. “This was something that we were doing to support the Memphis bicentennial by focusing on indigenous heritage and culture of exactly where we stand.”

At this juncture, the museum store, Café Brooks, and Inside Art, the museum’s interactive gallery, will remain closed until further notice. Protective face coverings will be required for ages two and older. Visitors must bring their own face coverings. All museum staff will be screened for temperature with a no-contact thermometer upon entering the building. For more information, go here.

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

American Idiot

Was it only a little more than three months ago when President Trump was loudly disparaging countries that hadn’t controlled the coronavirus — like China, Italy, Greece, and Germany? When the president of the mighty United States was smugly banning travel from China and the European Union?

Well, yes, actually, it was. I know it’s hard to keep up with such things when every day brings six new scandals, but on March 12th, in a nationally televised speech, the president unilaterally and abruptly announced that the United States would ban travelers from Europe, following an earlier ban on travel from China.

At the end of his 10-minute speech, Trump added this amazingly arrogant and stupid prediction: “The virus will not stand a chance against us.”

Actually, COVID-19 now stands a better chance against the United States than against any other country on the planet. Along with Brazil and Russia (two other countries with incompetent leaders), the United States is now a raging epicenter for the COVID pandemic. With 4 percent of the world’s population, the U.S. has 25 percent of the world’s coronavirus cases — and 25 percent of the world’s coronavirus deaths. The infection level in this country is rising at an unprecedented rate, as several Republican governors scramble to close down their states after arrogantly and stupidly opening them for business as infection rates were rising — following our “stable genius” president’s lead. 

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee gets a special “I’m Extra Stupid” award for even now not allowing the state’s mayors to require masks in their cities. (And for pushing through an illegal and unenforceable abortion ban bill. But I digress.)

Science is so overrated, apparently. Karma, unfortunately, is not.

Thanks to this administration’s incompetent response to the global pandemic, my wife, a French citizen, can no longer go visit her family — nor can millions of other Americans who want to do business or take vacations or visit family in Europe. Now, we are a shithole country, banned from traveling to civilized societies.

Several other significant stories have broken recently, collapsing on top of each other like a tower of Jenga blocks, each a stunner that would have destroyed any presidency before this one.

The president’s personal lawyer, aka Attorney General Bill Barr, has been stepping all over the justice system — getting friends of the president out of stiff sentences, releasing them from jail, and firing the attorney general in the Southern District of New York (who happened to be handling several cases involving Trump and his allies). Barr’s behavior was so egregious it caused longtime Justice Department prosecutors to turn whistleblower. But, meh, now it’s just another small explosion in Trump’s media minefield. A mere diversion.

Then CNN broke a story from Trump officials who had witnessed the president’s phone calls with foreign leaders. Here’s a sample: “In hundreds of highly classified phone calls with foreign heads of state, President Donald Trump was so consistently unprepared for discussion of serious issues, so often outplayed in his conversations with powerful leaders like Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish President Recep Erdoğan, and so abusive to leaders of America’s principal allies, that the calls helped convince some senior U.S. officials — including his former secretaries of state and defense, two national security advisers, and his longest-serving chief of staff — that the president himself posed a danger to the national security of the United States, according to White House and intelligence officials intimately familiar with the contents of the conversations.

“The calls caused former top Trump deputies — including national security advisers H.R. McMaster and John Bolton, Defense Secretary James Mattis, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and White House chief of staff John Kelly, as well as intelligence officials — to conclude that the president was often ‘delusional,’ as two sources put it, in his dealings with foreign leaders.”
CNN.com

One final detail: Our president called German Chancellor Angela Merkel “stupid.” Merkel, it should be noted, has a doctorate for her thesis on quantum chemistry.

Okay, so Trump screwed up the coronavirus response and got us banned from Europe; his AG is deconstructing the Justice Department; he’s stupid, ill-informed, and abusive on phone calls with foreign leaders. A pretty devastating week, right?

Oh, wait, I forgot to mention that little thing where Trump was informed that Russia had set up a cash bounty hunt with the Taliban on U.S. combat troops in Afghanistan — and ignored it.

The president at first denied he’d been informed about it. The next day, The New York Times, citing two U.S. intelligence officials, reported that the information was in Trump’s daily briefing on February 27th. The White House spokesperson then responded that the administration was still considering its options.

The United States has become a banana republic, run by a narcissistic grifter, the kind of guy who blithely posts a video of a man shouting “white power” and then goes to play golf. We have a vice president who again this week praised the president’s response to the pandemic as “wonderful.” We have an administration run by incompetent toadies and lobbyists. And we have the entire leadership of a major American political party marching in lockstep with it all, as if blindfolded.

I’ve run out of faith that the American democratic institutions that have guided the country past the pitfalls of nefarious leaders and human inadequacy for 250 years are going to put the brakes on Donald Trump. Except for maybe the election process. Maybe. At this point, our only hope seems to be to survive this idiot until November and vote him out, along with his corrupt enablers. Only then can we begin the long and painful recovery from this unprecedented disaster of an administration.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Cooper-Young to Host a Virtual July 4th Celebration

Cooper-Young Community Association

Normally, around this time, the Cooper-Young Community Association (CYCA) would be gearing up for its annual CYCA 4th of July Family Parade at Peabody Elementary School, complete with decorated bikes, people, and wagons, as well as live music, Mempops, and fun family activities.

According to Amanda Yarbro-Dill, executive director of CYCA, this event was always a chance for CYCA to thank the Cooper-Young community for partaking in paid events, like the Cooper-Young Festival 4-Miler and Cooper-Young Beerfest, throughout the year.

“The parade has increased in attendance every year, and it’s one of the things that we use our money we make from other events to put it back in the neighborhood, give everybody a reason to get together and see each other,” she says. “It’s just a nice, sweet, simple little thing that we certainly can’t do this year.”

When it became clear that they could not get together for the parade this year, Yarbro-Dill and the rest of the team at CYCA decided they needed to find an alternative way for community members to interact with each other on Independence Day. What they came up with was an Instagram contest wherein community members are invited to submit photos Cooper-Young Community Association

 of children and/or pets dressed in costume, or of homes decked in 4th of July decor, in hopes of winning fun prizes like gift cards and Cooper-Young swag.

“That was kind of our thinking: Well, if we can’t do this together, then if people want to still use it as an opportunity to kind of show off and have fun with that kind of thing, let’s give them a chance and give prizes to make it a little more fun,” says Yarbro-Dill. “I think the whole neighborhood has really suffered from not being able to get together easily. So it’s kind of like the illusion of a social experience, even though we’re all just stuck in our pods or bubbles.”

Yarbro-Dill says that this is a chance for members of the community to show off the spirit of their neighborhood and that anyone can participate, whether they’re from East Memphis, Bartlett, or beyond.

“I just hope that, even if people are just seeing each other on Facebook, this will give everybody a boon,” says Yarbro-Dill. “We haven’t been out and haven’t had the opportunity to be together, so this will give everyone a chance to see each other and reconnect.”

Cooper-Young’s Virtual July 4th Celebration, instagram.com/cooperyoungassociation, July 4th, all day, free. Submit photos with hashtag #CYJULY4.