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Into the Multiverse: How Christopher Reyes Created an Alternate World

[slideshow-1]

The moto crawler has crashed on a moon in an obscure corner of the multiverse. Its pilot and creator, Baron Von Opperbean, is missing. A towering volcano spews smoke and dribbles lava. Mysterious caves beckon you to enter. Maybe the Baron went this way. But then you remember the warning from Louise, the helpful A.I. who guided you here — “Don’t go near the anomaly.”

It sounds like a scene from a sci-fi blockbuster or a role-playing game. But it’s not. Walk into Off The Walls gallery, a warehouse space near Downtown, and you’re in Baron Von Opperbean’s Exploratorium of Magic, Science, and the Multiverse, a 2,000-square-foot art installation that is the brainchild of multimedia artist Christopher Reyes.

Christopher Reyes

Ahead of His Time

Reyes was born in Northern California. His grandfather helped found a martial arts discipline known as Kajukenbo. “It started in the 1940s in Hawaii, so technically it’s the first mixed martial art in the country, but it’s not well-recognized,” Reyes says.

Growing up, Reyes learned Kajukenbo with his father, Grandmaster Alan Reyes. “I still train almost every morning, just for a bit, to wake up and get the flow going.”

After his parents’ divorce, he moved to Memphis in 1986, where his mother, Vernie Kuglin, was based as a pilot for FedEx. Reyes’ artistic skills got him accepted into Memphis College of Art, on the cusp of the digital age. He discovered a new passion in the college’s tiny computer lab and began to use digital tools in his graphic design work. “I was the only one using the computers,” he says.

He got a job at Ardent Studios exploring the fledgling world of interactive entertainment. “We were working on enhanced CDs and CD ROMs. They weren’t called that yet because no one had a name for them. That’s where I cut my teeth. I had access to computers and video editors. We had one of the first Avids in the city, I’m sure. That’s where I learned how to video edit.”

His nights were spent in Memphis’ electronic music scene. “I don’t know if I’d call myself a musician,” he says, “but I can sequence the hell out of some electronic music.”

It was around this time, in the early 1990s, that he approached Downtown real estate mogul Henry Turley about buying an empty warehouse space at 1 S. Main. At the time, Downtown Memphis was nearly abandoned. An artist with a well-paying tech job was the ideal person to revitalize the space. But Reyes couldn’t get a loan to cover the entire building, so Turley proposed a solution: He would create a condominium association for 1 S. Main and sell Reyes the cavernous upper story of the building, while retaining control of the ground floor, which was rented to a small restaurant.

Accessible only through a rickety metal staircase in an alley, the artist’s loft became Reyes’ home. For years, Reyes had to go downstairs to use the bathroom. But as the ’90s wore on, he paid off the first mortgage and took out a second one to finance renovations. Eventually, he built a second floor in the loft, expanding from 4,000 to 6,000 square feet, with two bathrooms and plenty of space for offices and the kind of big art projects he favored.

In 1999, with the internet spreading rapidly, Reyes realized he was surrounded by great music that no one outside Memphis was privy to. “The idea was to stream music because Memphis musicians were so isolated,” he says. “With no record labels here, no distribution at that time, no infrastructure, no industry at all, they just had no outlets.” By 2001, he had taught himself enough web design to create a website to host his recordings. It was called Live From Memphis, and it quickly grew in scope and ambition. Before Facebook, or even Myspace, Reyes created the first online directory of Memphis musicians. “It was weird because I thought I knew a lot about Memphis music. Then when I did that project, I realized, I didn’t know Jack about it. There were all these silos of different types of music all over the city.”

Soon, other types of artists had their own listings on Live From Memphis — LFM for short. “I was trying to provide resources to them, and I figured, here’s a graphic designer, here’s a filmmaker. I had two directories going and I was like, ‘This is stupid. I need to just put these directories together, and they’ll find each other.'”

The LFM creatives directory eventually had more than 5,000 entries. It became the premiere tool for creative networking in the Bluff City.

Reyes was also tied into the Memphis film scene, creating animation and music videos. LFM sponsored the first music video showcases at Indie Memphis and eventually spun the program off as a music video festival. LFM fielded camera crews to document Gonerfest for a decade, producing two DVD concert films. (Note: I worked with LFM as a co-creator from 2009-2013.)

Reyes experimented with streaming video, but it wasn’t until YouTube came on the scene in 2005 that it became practical to put LFM’s video creations on the web. “Flipside” was a series of short documentaries on Memphis artists that accompanied Craig Brewer’s pioneering webseries $5 Cover. “Get Down” was produced with the Downtown Memphis Commission to promote the newly flourishing neighborhoods around 1 S. Main.

Live From Memphis was ahead of its time, but the world caught up. Reyes never sold advertising, and eventually grants and donations dried up. Facebook’s global spread made the directory redundant. LFM shut down in January 2013.

“I see people over and over trying to do a music directory or a music thing that’s gonna change Memphis music. It always ends up petering out because what they’re thinking about is just music,” Reyes says. “You need an ecosystem.”

Fish and Foul

“For a couple of years, I was just kind of floundering,” Reyes recalls. “It was really hard to get out and shake that off because Live From Memphis was my identity. It was how I saw myself, and when I didn’t have that anymore, I was like, who the hell am I? What am I doing?”

Reyes became fascinated with projection mapping, a new technology that allowed precise control of projected digital images that can make surfaces appear to come alive. “VR [virtual reality] is cool, but when you can bring the weird stuff into your world, that’s cooler. You’re actually in something, and it’s happening around you.”

Meanwhile, Reyes and his longtime girlfriend and business partner, Sarah Fleming, had two children together. In 2016, he and Fleming and filmmaker Laura Jean Hocking collaborated on a breakthrough project called Fish. “They wanted to do a film, Laura Jean and Sarah, and I said, ‘Well, why don’t we do it like you’re inside the film?'”

Fish combined video, some of which was shot at the Memphis Zoo aquarium, with murals and projection mapping to create an immersive underwater world. It was the first big exhibition at Crosstown Arts. Mounted before the opening of the Crosstown Concourse, it legitimized the fledgling arts organization in the minds of Memphis. “Fish is the most magical thing I have seen in Memphis probably ever,” wrote Commercial Appeal art critic Fredric Koeppel.

But the triumph would be short-lived. In the early 2000s, Turley sold his interest in 1 S. Main to the owners of the Madison Hotel. In 2016, Aparium Hotel Group bought the Madison, and a share of 1 S. Main with it. The building had been under a PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) program since before Reyes bought his condo. When the PILOT expired in 2016, the new owners exploited a loophole in the program:

Technically, any building under a PILOT is owned by the Downtown Memphis Commission; the “beneficial owners” only lease it, with an option to buy at the end of the term. When the PILOT expired on 1 S. Main, Aparium claimed the building’s title and sued Reyes to take control of his condo. A bruising court battle ensued. Reyes and Fleming appealed for help to the Downtown Memphis Commission, whom they had worked with for years branding Downtown, but were rebuffed. The artistic community Live From Memphis had nurtured rallied around Reyes and Fleming, organizing street protests outside city hall. Broke, and fearing for the future of his children, Reyes was eventually pressured to settle with Aparium. Stung by the negative publicity, Aparium changed the name of the Madison Hotel to the un-Googleable Hu. The terms of the settlement are secret. When asked about 1 S. Main, Reyes declined to comment.

Making A World

Reyes was adrift. To make matters worse, his father passed away in 2019. “I was going into my own world.” Reyes says. “I needed to do something. I was talking about this idea I had about Baron Von Opperbean a lot. Then my partner [Fleming] and I split up. It was really difficult because it was breaking up the family. I immersed myself in my project. Fortunately, Yvonne Bobo had just bought this building from the state and was fixing it up. She was really excited about it and wanted me to come look at it and said, ‘Hey, let’s do this project together.'”

Baron Von Opperbean’s Exploratorium of Magic, Science, and the Multiverse is the culmination of all of Reyes’ skills. It combines sculpture, murals, projection mapping, sound design, and music to create an immersive experience. “I’m making a world. I just need to make all these elements that make my world exist.”

Reyes’ creation is an example of what he calls experiential art. While researching the project, he visited the City Museum in St. Louis and Meow Wolf in Santa Fe. “When I saw my kids running around experiencing that joy at City Museum, I was like, that’s it. Whatever I make has to give people joy. It has to give them the sense that they’ve walked away from their problems, their troubles, and the reality of the world, and give them a new reality.”

Reyes started work on the project in 2019, with the goal of opening in March 2020. “I had no money and no materials when I started. All I had was this space that Off The Walls had given me. So I just put it out there to the community. The money came in slow, but the materials came in pretty fast.”

The maze-like installation is made almost entirely of creatively reused materials — including a bundle of old Memphis Flyers transformed into a papier-mâché landscape. The University of Memphis supplied projectors for the ever-changing videos that combine with murals and sculpture to create an immersive environment. Donated sound systems provide each area with a unique soundscape. School children helped create alien flowers out of plastic bottles.

Reyes worked feverishly to finish the massive project, set to open on March 28, 2020. “I was doing 24-hour sessions to get it done, and then COVID hit. I was just like, ah, man, it’s over. I just can’t do it anymore. Then I was like, well, actually I could make the videos better. I could make the sound better.” Reyes finished the project largely by himself, with final help from filmmaker John Pickle. The results are stunning — mysterious and immersive.

A Portal

The premise: Baron Von Opperbean is a scientist/magician who travels space and time collecting technology and artifacts that catch his fancy. But the Baron has gone missing, and it’s up to visitors to solve the mystery of his disappearance by following his trail through a series of portals to different worlds. Or, you can just enjoy the ride, Reyes says. “We tried to pack as much as I could into this space. It’s multilayered to make it feel like you don’t know which direction you are going. I don’t want to explain it to people. I just want them to experience it.”

Before the pandemic, Reyes had wanted the Multiverse to be a communal experience, but for now, it’s open on an appointment-only basis. Groups of up to 16 can book trips. “They have to be people you’re comfortable being around. I didn’t want strangers bumping into each other because in a portal, you’d be in a tight space. I’m losing money with only two people in there, but I don’t care.”

Reyes says the reactions have been “overwhelming.” At first, kids are reluctant to explore, but once they get comfortable, they start to ramble all over the maze-like space. “It was really fun. Lots of crawling,” says Mike Pleasants, who recently visited with his wife, Virginia, and daughter, Vera. “There were so many little details. It was really cool how many parts are all coherently pulled together.”

Reyes says this version is a prototype. He hopes to eventually create a permanent attraction on the scale of City Museum, which attracts a million visitors per year. “I’d like to put a giant multiverse in the Coliseum,” he says. “Hopefully there’ll be people who recognize the potential that exists with immersive spaces. People want it, and with COVID even more so because they’ve been cooped up, and this makes them stop thinking about all the bad stuff in their lives.”

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Walking (Dead) in Memphis, Twitter Clapback, and 901 Reasons

Walking (Dead) In Memphis

Downtown Memphis is invaded by flesh-eating Walkers in the Walking Dead mobile game.

Posted to Reddit by u/Dbfresh0

Marsha, Marsha Jemele Hill/Twitter

Writer and podcast host Jemele Hill roasted Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn with a comeback tweet heard ’round the internet last week.

Blackburn tweeted, “We will never rewrite the Constitution of the United States.” Hill responded, “If there wasn’t a rewrite, you wouldn’t be a Senator (and also couldn’t vote) and I’d be enslaved.”

901 Reasons

The city of Memphis began an online campaign recently to give citizens #901Reasons to wear a mask, social distance, and stamp out COVID-19 here. This one is the best so far.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Voices of the South Hosts Online Play, Goddess of Tears

Doesn’t it feel like 2020 is the result of mythological Fates standing over a cauldron stirring the pot of chaos as they use their knowledge of the future to toy with and destroy human beings?

Playwright, filmmaker, and performance artist Keegon Schuett certainly uses mythology to explain our fate at the moment in his original new work.

“This play is about how difficult it is to be isolated,” says Schuett of Goddess of Tears, which was written over the course of two months within quarantine.

Facebook/Voices of the South

As tears go by — Niobe is the Goddess of Tears.

The play reimagines Greek gods and goddesses as overwhelmed people working in the digital Cloud of Olympus and isolated from each other. Each has their own staggering department, but maybe none as staggering as Niobe, the goddess of tears, forced to approve or deny access to every single teardrop on Earth. Niobe cannot cry herself and goes on a journey to rediscover herself and her own fate.

“It is hard to make theater in Zoom,” Schuett says. “It’s just weird. But in those restrictions, there are freedoms.”

One of those freedoms is access to actors from all over the world. This performance features a team of actors from Memphis, New York, and Chicago collaborating across time zones. Some familiar names will be in this Cloud of Olympus, including Alice Rainey Berry, Ron Gephart, Christina Hernandez, Jenny Odle Madden, Gloria Swansong, and others.

Will Niobe conquer her passionless immortality? Let us see what the Fates have wrought.

Goddess of Tears, Online via Zoom from Voices of the South, voicesofthesouth.org, Saturday, Sept. 26, 7 p.m., $7-$20.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Shelby County Bars Eligible for $10,000 ‘Share the Tab’ Grants

Justin Fox Burks

Cady Smith with a blazing cocktail

Limited service restaurants (or bars) impacted by COVID-19 shutdowns can now access $450,000 in grant funding from the Shelby County government’s Share the Tab program.

The program was announced Tuesday, September 22nd, and is supported by federal CARES Act funding. County officials said the $10,000 grants are available for rent/mortgage, payroll, sanitization, expenses related to switching to a full-service restaurant, and more.

“Limited service restaurants, or bars, as they are most commonly referred, have taken a profound and significant hit to their businesses,” said Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris. “These businesses are often locally owned. They employ thousands of workers in our community. They give back to our community in countless ways. This new program is about trying to help these businesses get on the path to recovery. Although we continue to fight COVID, we also have to move towards a safe economic recovery.”

Nearly 45 limited service restaurants were required to close their doors at the beginning of the summer and, for the most part, remain closed. Shelby County Health Department officials announced Tuesday that — thanks to steady virus data here — bars, wine bars, pubs, taprooms, and more could open Wednesday.

“The Share the Tab fund supports the restaurant and hospitality industry in a tangible way,” said Shelby County Commissioner Van Turner. “We know that social distancing requirements make it difficult for social clubs and bars to operate as they did before. I hope that every qualifying business applies for the funds.”

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News News Blog

Bars Now Open on Health Department Order

Justin Fox Burks

High Cotton

All businesses can open here Wednesday, thanks to the latest change from the Shelby County Health Department (SCHD).

The change was announced Tuesday during the briefing from the Memphis and Shelby County COVID-19 Task Force. The move came after new daily case counts averaged below 185 for several weeks.

The change is a big win for limited service restaurants like bars, wine bars, pubs, and others that focus on sales of alcoholic beverages more than the sale of food. Those establishment have remained shuttered for weeks while full-service restaurants and others were allowed to open.

Dr. Alisa Haushalter, director of the SCHD, said bars were shut down not just because they were bars, but because of the activities that take place within them, calling the activities “high-risk behavior for (virus) transmission.” The health department did not make the decision to close bars on any specific local data, she said. She said they relied on evidence from other communities that showed bars were hotspots for transmissions.

However, the health department now has greater capacity and new data sets that can  identify an outbreak in specific bars in a more timely fashion and can “be laser focused.”

Limited service restaurants will have to adhere to the same guidelines as full-service restaurants: No seating at physical bars. Alcohol can only be served alongside food to customers sitting at tables. Service to customers can only last two hours. All establishments must close at 10 p.m. However, curbside and delivery can continue after 10 p.m.

Dancing and singing are not allowed inside at any establishment yet. However, live music is allowed at outdoor venues, but not dancing. Music must be played at a volume that still allows customers to speak at a regular volume and not yell at one another.

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We Recommend We Saw You

Jason Harlow’s “Another Evil Night” Horror Flick to be Released October 1st

Sybil Presley doesn’t realize what’s in store for her in Another Evil Night.



Jason Harlow will release his new horror feature film, Another Evil Night, on October 1st.

Just in time for Halloween.

Another Evil Night is a sequel to a movie from 1992 called Evil Night,” says Harlow, 25. “I wasn’t even born when Evil Night came out.”

Evil Night is about “a killer who wears a creepy clown mask.” 

The idea to make a sequel began after Harlow and Evil Night director Todd Jason Cook struck up a Facebook friendship “through mutual friends in the horror community.”

Harlow told Cook, “that’s the coolest mask I’ve ever seen.”

He then told him, “I think it would be cool to do a different take on the film.”

“He was very receptive to the idea right off the bat. He said, ‘Make your film. I made mine. Go out, grab some friends, local actors or whatever, and make a movie with some blood and guts. And it’ll be a sequel.’”

And, Harlow says, “He shipped me the mask in the mail.”

The first movie, set in 1992, “follows a tormented brainiac, just a general college student. And everybody is just mean to the guy for no reason, pretty much.”

The guy, Jimmy Fisher, is a chemistry major who develops a potion that gives him telekinetic powers. “He uses that to kill a bunch of people at a party one night.”

Harlow’s sequel “starts out with another tormented, really smart college kid. He gets bullied at the very beginning of the film. And he instantly comes in contact with the killer in the clown mask from the original film. Same attire and everything. He wears a black cloak with a hood on it and then some white gloves.”

Harlow’s movie takes place the day before Halloween and on Halloween. “There’s a Halloween party planned and all this stuff that the cool crowd is doing. So, the tormented college student gets Jimmy Fisher, the killer from the original film, to go along with him and track down all of the people before the party even begins and he kills them all.”

Ben Purvis plays the tormented college student in Harlow’s film. “He’s so good with improv. He can come up with something just totally on the fly and it really adds value to the film.”

He found Purvis through the film’s cinematographer, Jacob Gordon.

Harlow plays Jimmy Fisher. “I actually did that myself because we needed someone. I don’t have any acting skills, to be honest, but we needed somebody who could be there for every shot because Jimmy is in about 85, 90 percent of the film pretty much.”

Wearing that clown mask from the original film was “incredible. I never thought I’d ever see the mask in person, but getting to wear it for a 70-minute slasher film is just the coolest thing in the world.”

Jason Harlow

A native Memphian, Harlow grew up on horror movies. “I started watching horror films at a really young age. Probably four or five. The first one I truly remember was Child’s Play 2. I was absolutely terrified of all things horror back in the day, but I was addicted to it, if that makes sense. I would watch Goose Bumps and Are You Afraid of the Dark and just absolutely terrify myself. But I didn’t want to stop watching it even though I was screaming and crying.”

Another favorite was Clown House, which Harlow saw when he was in the first or second grade. He described it as “a very disturbing film.” The movie “follows three younger boys who are on their way to the circus. And they encounter three escaped mental patients who follow them home and try to kill them.”

The mental patients are dressed as clowns. “That was absolutely terrifying.”

“I can watch other movies but, for the most part, I think 90 percent of the movies I’ve seen in my entire life are horror movies. I saw the movie Saw the weekend after opening weekend when I was in the fourth grade and it was terrifying. Just the thought of waking up with a chain around your ankle and having to cut your foot off and not knowing how you got there. And just the way the killer went about kidnapping the victims with the creepy pig mask on and injecting them with some kind of sedative. That whole thing was just so crazy.  And to see that in the fourth grade was, honestly, pretty ridiculous.”

He and his family were eating dinner at P. F. Chang’s when they “made a group decision as a family to go watch it,” Harlow says. “We had seen the trailers for it and we just decided. It was a spur-of-the-moment thing.”

His parents “are not too big on horror films,” but Harlow and his brother, Garret, and sister, Kayla Williams, are. Williams is the lead in his movie. “She’s the innocent girl that just wants to throw the party.”

By the time he was ten years old, Harlow had seen 100 horror movies. “It got to the point where every weekend at my aunt’s house, I would get her to take me to Blockbuster’s and I would rent two or three horror movies.”

Harlow decided when he was a junior in high school to make horror films. “I just started networking and getting to know other filmmakers. The whole process started with me helping them with their projects.”

He would find someone to do the music for them or to edit their film. “I just kind of saw the process take place on other people’s projects. That helped me to be able to understand what goes into making an entire feature film.”

Harlow made his first short horror film, The Invited,  in 2015. “It was not the most thought-out plot. I made a kind of a fun little eight-minute film. And, basically, it’s a guy who wears a burlap sack mask and murders a bunch of people with an ax.”

Buddy High, a friend Harlow worked with, played the murderer. “He’s just built. One of those guys who would play Jason Voorhees or Michael Myers. He’s just a big dude.”

The Invited was in the Unreal Film Festival and played at Malco Studio on the Square “in front of a somewhat decent-sized crowd.”

He and North Carolina-filmmaker Noah Nelson have been working on a movie, Prom Queen. “He came to me with an idea and was like, ‘Let’s work on this together.’”

Harlow wrote “the more horror-style stuff” for the film. “It should be ready to go sometime in the near future. It looks incredible from what I’ve seen.”

Another Evil Night will be released Oct. 1st on DVD and VHS “and should be available on at least a few video on demand outlets. The preview link — screamtimefilms.com — is already live. People are already placing orders on the film.”

Las Vegas actress Tommie Vegas appeared in Another Evil Night.

Cook is impressed with Harlow’s sequel to his Evil Night movie. “I thought Another Evil Night was wildly entertaining with a lot of great cinematography and fun sequences,” Cook says. “The main character is solid and the story brings the elements of the original while creating a new atmosphere and time frame.”

Todd Jason Cook

And, he says, “Back in 1993, I was beginning to develop some ideas for — ironically — a sequel with the same title Jason chose. I was also going to do Another Night of the Clown as a sequel to Night of the Clown. So, it was really cool to see he was on the same wavelength.”

Harlow, who specializes in risk management with Northwestern Mutual, hasn’t decided if he’s going to pursue movie-making as a career. “I honestly don’t know,” he says. “I feel like making movies is something that’s fun, but I really just need to see what the reaction to this first one is.”

And, he says, “Probably, or at the very least, I’d love to still have people come to me and I’d assist with writing their films.”

Meanwhile, Harlow has been playing around with an idea for another horror movie. “I’ve looked into getting a story going with a really goofy title along the lines of There’s a Goblin in the Woods or Night of the Creepy Goblin. I’ve already purchased a mask that would be amazing to use for the goblin character.”

Categories
Music Music Blog

Gonerfest 17 Fires Up Its Engines For A Virtual (And Global) Weekend

courtesy Goner Records

Cheater Slicks, ca. 1990

As reliably as today’s fall equinox, the end of September brings Gonerfest, and this year is no different. Of course, this being 2020, everything’s topsy turvy, but, this being Goner Records, that’s sure to bring some topsy turvy magic as well. With COVID-19 still scratching at our doors, Goner has opted for the safest approach and put the entire festival online. I chased down co-owner Eric Friedl to get some of the details on this year’s virtual Gonerfest 17, which goes down this Friday – Sunday. 

Memphis Flyer: I guess the headliners are not really highlighted in the announcement you’ve posted. Who would you say are the biggest shows?

Eric Friedl: You know, it is sort of a weird mix. When you put on these things, you need the bands that feel bigger, so it’s kind of oriented towards them, even if, in the end, the ones people remember the most are the ones they don’t know. I think the Cheater Slicks, Jack Oblivian and Quintron & Miss Pussycat are probably the biggest bands that people know. But there are so many bands there that are gonna just catch people’s attention.  courtesy Goner Records

Cheater Slicks, 2020

It’s such a crap shoot doing things either live stream or pre-recorded. It’s so hard to get any kind of energy through the screen. But you know, really my litmus test, or the proof that it could be done, was the Reigning Sound show. I thought that was fun to watch and people really enjoyed it. It kind of gave us the model. If you get people on the chats that are having fun it can be a good thing. I’m sure there’s people online that know all this stuff, but I don’t participate in that stuff that much. So that was a good signal to me that this could work.

And the sound was done beautifully by Joe Holland at the B-Side for that show.

Yeah, that’s another thing that’s hard to figure out. That’s a variable with different bands and venues and download speeds and internet connections. It’s mind boggling. So we’re literally learning something every day, either how to do this or why you shouldn’t do this. And we’re gonna make it happen one way or another.

Any band live-streaming from B-Side?

No, we’re not doing any from B-Side. Though they were pioneers in getting all that stuff down. True Sons of Thunder are gonna be out of the Hi-Tone. And we’ve got a few people in the Goner shop. And some other surprises.

So I suppose most bands are streaming videos from their home locations?

Yeah. Except for the Archaeas. They’re gonna be doing it out of the store again. They liked the experience when they played for Goner TV. They liked how it sounded, and we sorta know how to make that work. So, they were up for doing it.

So some shows will be live streamed and some will be pre-recorded?

Yeah, it’s a mix. Our first idea was, everything should be live streamed. And there’s a certain excitement with that, and also a certain amount of folly in trying to do it. So once we had people in time zones that are 18 hours apart, it’s just not possible. It is possible, but you don’t get someone’s best performance when they’re playing at seven in the morning on a Tuesday. The way it worked out was, we’re opening up and going to a stage in Auckland, and there’s five bands playing in Auckland on Friday afternoon. And it’s mid morning, but New Zealand just opened up completely. So they can have people in the bar.

So it can be a real show. Even if they’re playing at noon, they have a real show going on. So that was lucky. We asked around there because they are open, and it seems like in other places, bands can’t even get together to play a live-stream.

We’ve got a couple other things to add to the schedule. Robert Gordon is doing a talk about It Came From Memphis, the new version published by Third Man. And J.B. Horrell’s doing a discussion about The Invaders movie, and the soundtrack for that. So there’s a little more Memphis stuff thrown in there too.

I interviewed King Khan for a bit of that promotional footage for The Invaders.

King Khan is quite a character!

It’s nice you’re carrying on the cinematic side of Gonerfest. Like when you screened The Sore Losers at Gonerfest 15.

Yeah, this seemed like a natural thing. And the Country Teasers, I had approached them about that movie, This Film Should Not Exist. It’s a film about the Country Teasers and [bandleader] Ben Wallers, who performs as The Rebel now. He’s doing a live thing on Saturday afternoon. We’re gonna get some extra footage from them, probably just the Oblivians. ‘Cos there’s a lot of Oblivians stuff in there too. They basically followed us around on tour for a couple weeks in, like, 1994. So there’s some really good Oblivians footage in there. So, that’s a U.S. premiere for that film. 

Jack Oblivian

What will you do for the opening and closing ceremonies, which are usually held at the Cooper-Young gazebo?

I guess our closing ceremony is our alley shot. It’s kind of a tradition. And we’re gonna try to figure out how to do that as a group internet experience. So many details are being worked out as we speak.

The way it is now, it seems like you could encourage people to come out and participate a little bit. But it didn’t seem like that was the way things were going, so we shied away from that. It seemed irresponsible. People wanted to come and have shows and things, and we were just like, “No, we can’t do that.” So we’ve tried to put it all online. Once we made that decision, that’s what we ran with.

Gonerfest 17 takes place Friday, September 25 – Sunday, September 27. Click here for more details. Featured bands will include:

CHEATER SLICKS (Columbus, OH)
QUINTRON & MISS PUSSYCAT with Sam Yoger on drums (New Orleans, LA)
JACK OBLIVIAN & THE SHEIKS (Memphis, TN)

Quintron

MELENAS (Pamplona, Spain)
THE REBEL (London, UK)
MARY TEE & BRUCE BRAND (London, UK)
MICK TROUBLE (New York, NY)
GEE TEE (Sydney, Australia)
ARCHAEAS (Louisville, KY)
EN ATTENDANT ANA (Paris, France)
BLOODBAGS (Auckland, NZ)
DAVID NANCE (Omaha, Nebraska)
SABA LOU (Berlin, Germany)
NA NOISE (Auckland, NZ)
DICK MOVE (Auckland, NZ)
NICK ALLISON (Austin, TX)
OH! BOLAND (Galway, Ireland)
OUNCE (Auckland, NZ)
AQUARIAN BLOOD (Memphis, TN)
GUARDIAN SINGLES (Auckland, NZ)
BELLA & THE BIZARRE (Berlin, Germany)
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Test Totals Top 430,000

COVID-19 Memphis
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Test Totals Top 430,000

New virus case numbers fell slightly from elevated numbers reported from the last few days. New cases counts from Monday morning were 108, less than half of the 231 reported a day earlier.

Total current active cases of the virus rose again, though, to 1,722, up slightly from the 1,709 reported Monday morning. That figure had dipped to 1,399 recently.

The new testing figures remain high. The Shelby County Health Department now reports the total number of tests given, not just how many individuals have been tested. The figure rose from 428,525 on Monday morning to 430,089 on Tuesday morning.

The new reporting process changed the weekly positivity rates going back to March, in many cases the figures were reduced. For example, in July’s height of the pandemic (so far), the positivity rate on tests was around 16 percent. With the new testing reporting process, the figure was reduced to 12 percent in numbers released by the health department.

The latest weekly positivity rate rose slightly from the week before. This figure enjoyed weeks of declines following the county mask mandate and the closure of bars. The average rate of positive tests for the week of September 6th was 6.5 percent, up slightly from the 6 percent recorded the week before.

The total number of COVID-19 cases here stands at 30,594. No new deaths were reported in the last 24 hours and remains at 446. There are 7,178 contacts in quarantine, a drop from the 7,376 in quarantine Monday morning.

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Leo Bearman Jr., Memphis Legal Lion, Dies

Leo Bearman Jr.

The Flyer has learned that Leo Bearman Jr., a lion of the Memphis legal profession and co-founder and senior counsel of the law firm Baker, Donelson, Caldwell, and Berkowitz, has died at Baptist Hospital at age 85. Cause of death was not immediately known.

Mr. Bearman had been selected this month to receive the prestigious 2020 American Inns Court Lewis F. Powell Jr. Award for Professionalism and Ethics. The award, which recognizes exemplary service in the areas of professionalism, ethics, civility, and excellence in the legal profession, is one of the many that came the way of the distinguished lawyer.

A 1957 graduate, magna cum laude, from Yale University, Bearman received a law degree from Harvard Law School in 1960. After school, he returned to his native Memphis to practice law with his father, Leo Bearman Sr., and the two of them merged their firm with another in the foundation of Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz.

Bearman’s areas of expertise included civil litigation, class action defense, government matters, insurance defense litigation, products liability defense, intellectual property litigation, professional negligence defense, and commercial litigation.

He had served as counsel of record for the city of Memphis and MLGW before the Supreme Court in actions concerning the city’s groundwater supply, and handled numerous other important cases. He was also an adjunct professor at the Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law at the University of Memphis.

More information will be supplied as it is received. Canale Funeral Directors are handling arrangements.

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MATA Rolls Into ‘Cashless Economy’ With App, Website

Justin Fox Burks

Last week Memphis Area Transit Authority launched a redesigned website and new app aimed towards modernizing and streamlining its bus service.

The app, GO901 Mobile, is a free mobile fare app that allows passengers to purchase single fare tickets and all-day passes on their smartphones using a debit or credit card. The app also enables users to add money to and manage their account balance allowing them to buy multiple passes or tickets and store them for future use.

Once downloaded, riders will be able to hit the “use ticket” or “use pass” button to display their single-use ticket or all-day pass. They then need only to scan their pass on the scanners located in the front of MATA vehicles.  

With the launch of the app, MATA also rolled out a new version of its website. The changes included a new sleek design as well as integration for the new mobile app. The website allows users to more easily manage their account balance and ticket purchases with the new GO901 app.

“A few years ago, we began making a concerted effort to improve communications by implementing a series of actionable recommendations,” said MATA spokeswoman Nicole Lacey. “When we met with key stakeholders at that time, one of the biggest takeaways was that we needed to improve the mobile interactivity of the website. We think we have accomplished that and hope that visitors find it to be more appealing, more informative, and more engaging.”

The redesigned website and new app are the most recent changes in a long line of modernization efforts by MATA. Last December, MATA began offering wi-fi access on all of its fixed-route buses, para-transit vehicles, and rail trolley cars. The next step for MATA will be the implementation of new ticket vending machines and point of sale systems.

While MATA had plans to introduce new buying options before the outbreak of COVID-19, the pandemic heightened the need to offer cashless fare options.

“We’re seeing all across the country how the COVID-19 pandemic has caused more industries — including public transportation — to take a second look at how to operate in a cashless economy,” said MATA Chief Executive Officer Gary Rosenfeld. “With the introduction of the new GO901 mobile app, it will hopefully remove the fears associated with the virus and paper money as well as offering passengers more convenient payment options and the possibility of attracting new customers who don’t want to carry cash or go to the transit centers to purchase passes.”