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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Sushi Jimmi and Temoor Sarwar Partner in New Restaurant

Jimmy “Sushi Jimmi” Sinh and Temoor Sarwar will open JT Fusion on Wednesday, October 7th.

Diners will be able to get everything from a sushi taco to a $250 sushi boat for a group of 10 at the restaurant, which is part of the Cordova location of La Hacienda Mexican restaurant owned by Sarwar and his family. JT Fusion will become its own restaurant when it moves to a brick-and-mortar building in 2021.

The “J” stands for “Jimmy” and the “T” stands for “Temoor.” They’re 50-50 partners in the new endeavor. “That’s why it’s fusion,” Sinh says. “It’s both of us.”

And, he says, “La Hacienda has been in business since 1996. They’re not going anywhere. JT Fusion is a totally separate concept.”

Temoor Sarwar and Jimmy ‘Sushi Jimmi’ Sinh

JT Fusion “is a brand we want to introduce to Memphis. More of an upscale Asian restaurant. Everything we order is shipped overnight. We cannot get it in Memphis. Even our wasabi. If you eat the sushi boat, then you’re going to get real wasabi.”

Those boats will include bluefin tuna and “all your exclusive fish.” They’ll sell for between $150 and $250, depending on the type of fish and how many it will serve, Sinh says. “It’s not a cheap boat. It’s high-quality fish.”

“We’re just doing things we feel like are really good,” Sarwar says. “Our Pork Belly Philly concept came from the Philly sandwich, but we’re doing it with pork belly. It’s kind of like a chunky bacon. It’s really good.

“And that’s the kind of stuff I’m excited about. A lot of times chefs or cooks get stuck in cooking one style of food because that’s what’s expected of them.”

JT Fusion has “no rules” in the kitchen, Sarwar says. “We can pick up and do whatever we want with the food and menu. We don’t have to be classical. We don’t have to be regionally correct to any style or any kind of food.”

Don’t rock the sushi boat.

They will serve what they feel “tastes great,” he says.

The menu, which also will include sushi, will feature Sinh’s take on the sushi taco. “Mine is not fried at all,” Sinh says. “It’s more of a healthier choice. It’s just wrapped in seaweed. It has that crunch because of the seaweed, and it has the rice that sticks it together. And the flavors, you get it in the spicy tuna, spicy crawfish, spicy crab. You can get it pretty much stuffed with anything. Also, it has a little bit of pico de gallo and tobiko — fish eggs.”

Like their food, the drinks at JT Fusion also will be fusion. They’ll mix spirits from different countries, Sarwar says. They fuse Italy with Japan in a cocktail made with limoncello and sake.

The drink list will be “definitely different from anywhere else,” Sinh says. The Ninja, made with sake, peach Smirnoff vodka, apple Cîroc vodka, and cranberry juice, is served in a big fish bowl. You can drink it by yourself or share it with a second person. I put dry ice in it. That makes it cooler.”

For now, JT Fusion will be a section of about six tables at La Hacienda, Sinh says. “We’re just getting a small part of the restaurant to serve our food … a small part of the kitchen. We’re looking for a place of our own right now. I would say 2021 we’re going to open it. It will be a brand-new year. Everything is going to be good again. And we want to introduce it to Memphis the right way. That way, we can come out with a new year, a new restaurant, and serve you guys better.”

Since JT Fusion now has a limited number of tables, customers must make a reservation to eat there.

“I feel like restaurants have gone away from the experience,” Sarwar says. “Everything is so uptight. We want people to have fun.

“We’re trying to give people an experience. Trying to give people our energy. Jimmy and I are super excited about this.”

JT Fusion is at La Hacienda, 1760 N. Germantown Pkwy. in Cordova; (901) 624-2020.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Get a Private Screening at Malco Theatres

Seeing a movie in a theater is an uncertain prospect during the pandemic, but a new solution could relieve that uncertainty. Malco Theatres has announced a new program which allows you to book one of their theaters for a private screening for up to 20 people. You can choose any of the films currently in release and see it on the biggest screens available in the Mid-South. This would allow you to enjoy a night at the movies and avoid sharing the theater with people you don’t know and trust, minimizing the risk of coronavirus transmission.

The Malco Select program is an expansion of previously existing services offered by the Memphis-based theater chain, says president & COO David Tashie. “While we have always offered packages for mid-sized and large groups, this new program is geared toward guests who want to be able to select a movie and have their own private screening for themselves, family, and friends.”

Malco has taken extensive precautions to avoid spreading the virus in their theaters, including requiring masks and regularly sanitizing all frequently touched surfaces. They have also upgraded the air filters in their HVAC systems to prevent aerosolized transmission.

In the Memphis area, the Malco Select program has rolled out at the Paradiso and the Collierville locations. The Razorback Cinema in Fayetteville, Arkansas and the Grandview Cinema in Madison, Mississippi are also renting theaters. Furthermore, Malco has announced that significant demand has led to a planned expansion of the program to the Stage Cinema Grill, the Desoto Cinema Grill, the Jonesboro Towne Cinema, the Rogers Towne Cinema Grill, Fort Smith Cinema, Renaissance Cinema Grill, Tupelo Commons Cinema Grill, Oxford Commons Cinema Grill, Corinth Cinema, Columbus Cinema, Gonzales Cinema Grill, and the Owensboro Cinema Grill & MXT. You can find more information about the program on the Malco website

Categories
News News Blog

New Daily Case Count Among the Highest in Weeks

COVID-19 Memphis
Infogram

New Daily Case Count Among the Highest in Weeks

New virus case numbers rose by 258 over the last 24 hours, putting the total of all positive cases in Shelby County since March at 32,306. The daily tally is among the highest that number has been in recent weeks.

Total current active cases of the virus rose to 1,442 Tuesday from the 1,267 active cases reported Monday morning. The new active case count represents 4.5 percent of all cases of the virus reported here since March.

The Shelby County Health Department said tests given here now total 472,036 after 5,223 tests were given in the last 24 hours.

The latest weekly positivity rate fell one percentage point from the week before, the biggest decline in the number for three weeks. The average rate of positive tests for the week of September 20th was 5.2 percent, down from the 6.3 percent rate recorded for the Week of September 13th.

The latest weekly positive rate is the lowest since the week of May 17th. The figure was 4 percent for the week of May 4th. But before that, the figure had only been as low as 5 percent during the week of March 8th.

Total deaths now stand at 490. The average age of those who have died here is 73, according to the health department. The age of the youngest COVID-19 death was 13. The oldest to die from the virus here was 100.

There are 6,801 contacts in quarantine.

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Music Music Blog

TvYellow’s Worst Invention is a Rowdy Debut

If I were driving to work these days — instead of rolling out of bed and shuffling over to the desk in the corner of the room — the debut album, Worst Invention, by Memphis band TvYellow would be my first choice to soundtrack the morning drive Downtown. Though the commute is far shorter in these work-from-home days, a healthy dose of Worst Invention is still the best medicine to help jolt myself out of the morning fog. The album is a shot in the arm, a wake-up call for somnambulists sleepily stumbling through the morning.

TvYellow is Salvador Sanchez, Luke Stubblefield, Noel Clark, Billy Ray Thomas, and relatively new recruit Crockett Hall, who joined the band as vocalist during the recording process. “They’d already cut all the music with Matt Qualls at Young Avenue Sound before I joined the band,” Hall tells me. “So all I had to was write the lyrics and vocal melodies.”

Hall continues, “It was my first time writing to songs that I had not been a part of from their inception, so it was a really challenging and fun experience for me.” If Hall hadn’t said so, I never would have guessed. The vocal melodies are in perfect harmony with the instrumentation, and the turnarounds are tight, as if the band mates have been sharing stages for years.

The first track, “TV Yellow,” is a personal favorite. It opens with a drum hit followed by rhythm and lead guitars playing in lockstep. The bass marries the melody and the beat. “I don’t want you to do just what you’re told,” Hall sings. “I just want you in my head to tell me just what I’m fighting for.” The song is catchy, and I found myself humming it on and off all weekend.

While “Grow Up” makes excellent use of the punkish down-strum, “Under the Rug” opens with a melodic riff. There is a hint of punk in the TvYellow melting pot, but it presents itself more in the band’s attitude than in adherence to genre tropes.

Worst Invention finds a new Memphis musical act firing on all cylinders. It’s an impressive debut that warrants multiple listens. Worst Invention is available via all music streaming platforms.

Categories
News News Blog

Memphis TV News Veteran Mike Matthews to Retire

Mike Matthews, a veteran of Memphis television news, announced Monday morning that he will retire at the end of the year.

Matthews covers Memphis City Hall and other key beats for Local 24 News and CW 30 News. In the past, he’d worked with WREG New Channel 3. Matthews is well known by his television alias, “The Watchdog.”

In a Monday-morning post to Facebook and Twitter he said of the news, “I’m actually sad about this.

I’m actually sad about this. I’ve been in television news since 1976. And I’ve loved it. I’ve loved it all (with a few…

Posted by Mike Matthews on Monday, October 5, 2020

Memphis TV News Veteran Mike Matthews to Retire

The news brought an outpouring of appreciation of his long time work on the front lines of news in Memphis.

“I wish you only the best in your next adventure,” wrote veteran Daily Memphian reporter Clay Bailey. “I always knew when Mike Matthews showed up at a story I was covering, I had to work a little bit harder. Because you had done your homework. Knew the issues and were going to be fair. Best wishes, Mike.”

Former Shelby County Mayor Bill Morris wished Matthews well.

“Over the years our paths have crossed many times and unless my memory has really faded it was always positive,” Morris said in a Facebook comment. “Journalism and TV reporting has truly suffered and so have readers and listeners because we have lost talent and convictions which you have shared.”

Over on Twitter, Matthews’ news was met with the same blend of appreciation and respect  from journalists, city leaders, and friends.

Memphis TV News Veteran Mike Matthews to Retire (3)

 

Memphis TV News Veteran Mike Matthews to Retire (2)

Jackson Baker’s 2015 Flyer cover story on Matthews is a great read and overview of his career.

Justin Fox Burks

Matthews and Baker together at the Celtic Crossing bar.

Categories
Music Music Blog

WYXR 91.7 FM Goes Live Today, Radio Flyer to Air Every Friday at Noon

WYXR

New radio station WYXR’s initial staff includes (from left) Shelby McCall, Robby Grant, and Jared Boyd.

As Toby Sells reported in July, there’s a new kid on the block, and its name is WYXR. It’s the latest activity stirring in Crosstown Concourse, which has partnered with The Daily Memphian and the University of Memphis to make the station a reality. Today, paper covering the station’s broadcast room windows, which face out onto the Concourse atrium, will come down before the station begins broadcasting at 5 p.m.

Program director Jared Boyd spoke to the significance of the station’s location in July: “When you walk into Crosstown Concourse, it won’t be hidden. The nuts and bolts of the operation will be showcased behind glass right in the lobby of the Central Atrium. By design, this community-minded radio station will not just broadcast to its audience, but live and breathe alongside it.”

The frequency 91.7 FM was formerly used by U of M’s WUMR, the city’s premiere jazz station. Re-imagining the university station last fall led to the partnerships that helped create WYXR. And from the beginning, the new non-commercial station has kept community service at the heart of its mission. Also at the center of that vision is cultivating a sense of freedom.

As executive director Robby Grant said this summer, “By taking a free form approach, we want to begin finding personalities and DJs who have their own tastes and things they’ve grown up loving and sharing with people.” Since then, the station has indeed recruited a diverse stable of DJs, covering a multitude of genres and aesthetics.

For those who relied on WUMR’s jazz programming, never fear: the new station will feature plenty of jazz of all stripes, including DJ Jim Duckworth’s return to spinning rare pre-World War II jazz platters. Much indie rock, blues, rock ‘n’ roll, gospel, hip hop, avant garde, and even “unpopular pop” will be highlighted as well, with DJs running the gamut from Goner’s Zac Ives to Juan Shipp, former pastor at the Greater Abyssinia M. B. Church for over forty years and founder of the Memphis-based D-Vine Spirituals record label.

Every Friday at noon, tune in to Radio Flyer, an hour’s worth of news and music from The Memphis Flyer, hosted by associate editor Toby Sells and music editor Alex Greene. In the first half hour of every show, Sells will interview guests and other Flyer reporters about their beat for the week. The second half will be devoted to music, with Greene spinning cuts reflecting that week’s reporting and the Flyer‘s entire history of arts coverage, including exclusive excerpts from interviews.

In today’s Daily Memphian, Boyd summed up the experience of preparing for launch in the age of quarantine, and the payoff of manifesting community bonds today, now that it’s all going live. “Every exhausting step up a U-Haul ramp with a box of records; every trip to a large, whirring transmitter in a suburban shed; and every angry email from a jazz-lover devoted to the station’s old format,” he writes, “was manageable once I saw the eager eyes peering back at me over the cloth face-coverings of Memphians, many of whom I’ve admired in my own comings and goings, but never imagined I’d see in a room together, working toward a common goal.”

WYXR 91.7 FM goes live today at 5 p.m. with a special on-air party hosted by Robby Grant and Jared Boyd.
Special Inaugural Broadcast Schedule:
• 5-9 p.m. – Robby Grant & Jared “Jay B.” Boyd Kickoff Party
• 9 p.m. 11 p.m. – Time Passage w/ Andrew VanWyngarden of MGMT
• 11p.m. 12a.m. – The Mado Experience / Mado
• 12 a.m.- until … – *SPECIAL GUEST DJ*

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Bosses, Closed Since March, is for Sale

Bosses, closed since March, is for sale





Bosses, the East Memphis hot wing restaurant that has been closed since March, is for sale, says owner John Daniel Yacoubian.

He plans to sell the 10-year-old restaurant, which is known for its honey gold, honey hot, and other wings, at 5030 Poplar Avenue Suite Number Three.

“We shut down March 11,”  says Yacoubian, 38. “We were the first restaurant in Memphis to close, I think, due to COVID.”

John Daniel Yacoubian

They had been keeping up with news about the virus since November or December of last year, he says. “We knew if something like that came over here it could get out of hand. And the nature of the virus was pretty scary from the perspective of somebody trying to avoid getting it. So, on top of it being deadly to older people, we were around older people, my parents and Ashley’s [his wife]  mom, my wife is immune compromised because of medication she takes takes for Crohn’s.”

So, he says, “We’re not able to take any risks, really.”

Also, he says, “I always try to plan out everything as much as possible for the restaurant. And I hire young people. I know they would never want anything bad to happen. It’s very difficult for me to feel like I have control over something going on outside of the restaurant. And I couldn’t reasonably expect somebody to change all their social behavior. Especially, for people in their late teens and early 20s.”

He considered re-opening if a vaccine was introduced. “I was talking to Ashley. I was saying, ‘If there was a vaccine, this thing could be done by the end of this year.’ And she said, ‘No. That’s not how it works. It would be at least a year. At the very least, more like a year and a half.’ This was something that if we were going to reopen, the entire dynamic was going to be different.”

Yacoubian decided to sell the restaurant and work at his father’s 86-year-old jewelry store, Daniel Yacoubian Jewelers, which is next door to the restaurant. “My dad asked me if I wanted to help him with the jewelry store about a month ago.”

He remembers the day they closed.  He had just ordered wings. “I had probably 20 cases or something. Maybe got through three or four in a day, so it was a ton. It was probably almost 2,000 wings we ended up tossing.”

The restaurant has not yet been sold. “But there’s been some interest. People have been interested. For me, I would like to see somebody in the space using the space because it’s our building and we like to see it full.”

But, he says, “I ran it the way I wanted to. And if it’s somebody else in Bosses, it would be like a different restaurant to me.

“I was always realistic about who I was and what the business itself was. And I take pride in my actions and efforts and all that went into the business. But even then I felt like it was not necessarily my business because it was my family’s building. It was like growing up in my family’s house. It was never really yours. You’re just occupying that space.”

Restaurant business was not his lifelong dream. “I never thought when I went into it I’d be doing restaurants the rest of my life. I didn’t set out to have a 50-year or 100-year business.”

But people went wild over his hot wings, including his most popular ones: honey gold and honey hot. “We’re also known for our seasoned wings and seasoned fries. We use the same seasonings for both.”

His “Questionable Decision”  extra-hot-Buffalo-sauce wings, were acclaimed by Men’s Journal, Yacoubian says. “They had a list of the top 15 wing posts in the United States and we made it.”

They will sell the recipes along with the equipment when they sell the restaurant, as long as the new owner keeps the name Bosses, he says.

As for the name, Yacoubian says, “My little brother came to us with the name. That was more about the way the word sounds and the shortness of it. And it’s catchy. Everybody has their own interpretation, but it means ‘multiple bosses.’ So, that was kind of the collaboration between the family and the input of other family members.”

And, he says, “When you have to put up a neon sign, it’s $1,000 a letter. You’ve got to keep it kind of brief. I wanted ‘Memphis Chicken Academy,’ but I started calculating how much that would cost. I said, ‘No, way we’re going to do it.’”

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Jeff Hulett

Get up to speed with Music Video Monday.

“Safe at Home” is the latest from Memphis troubadour Jeff Hulett’s quarantine album of the same name. It sees Hulett praising the joys of home life amid an uncertain world.

The video is by Jenny Myers, Hulett’s neighbor and friend. Myers slowed down the song and let Hulett’s daughters run wild on the front lawn. The result is a charming tribute to the power of family. Take a look:

Safe at Home_Jeff Hulett from Jenny Myers Media on Vimeo.

Music Video Monday: Jeff Hulett

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

Categories
News News Blog

Active Virus Cases Fall to 1,267, Lowest in Months

COVID-19 Memphis
Infogram

Active Virus Cases Fall to 1,267, Lowest in Months

New virus case numbers rose by 95 over the last 24 hours, putting the total of all positive cases in Shelby County since March at 32,048.

Total current active cases of the virus fell to 1,267 Monday from the 1,452 active cases reported Friday morning. The new count is lowest the figure has been in months.

The Shelby County Health Department said tests given here now total 466,813. However, only 282,342 people have been tested in Shelby County.

The latest weekly positivity rate fell one percentage point from the week before, the biggest decline in the number for three weeks. The average rate of positive tests for the week of September 20th was 5.2 percent, down from the 6.3 percent rate recorded for the Week of September 13th.

The latest weekly positive rate is the lowest since the week of May 17th. The figure was 4 percent for the week of May 4th. But before that, the figure had only been as low as 5 percent during the week of March 8th.

Total deaths now stand at 488. The average age of those who have died here is 73, according to the health department. The age of the youngest COVID-19 death was 13. The oldest to die from the virus here was 100.

There are 6,803 contacts in quarantine.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

SMU 30, #25 Tigers 27

What a difference 336 days make. Especially the last 28.

Eleven months after beating SMU in one of the most scintillating games in the program’s history, the Memphis Tigers took the field in Dallas for the rematch . . . their first game in four weeks due to a Covid-19 outbreak that shut down operations for much of September. Playing in front of a small, scattered audience in Gerald J. Ford Stadium, the Tigers erased a 21-point deficit with a scoring frenzy that bridged the second and third quarters. But shortly after a fumble by Tiger quarterback Brady White gave the Mustangs possession, SMU kicker Chris Naggar drilled a 43-yard field goal to help his team improve to 4-0 for the season and end a six-game losing streak to Memphis. The Tigers are now 1-1 (0-1 in the American Athletic Conference) and will have another semi-extended break before hosting UCF at the Liberty Bowl on October 17th.
U of M Athletics

Marquavius Weaver takes a handoff from Brady White.

SMU won despite losing a pair of impact offensive players. Running back T.J. McDaniel had to be helped off the field after violently twisting his lower left leg on the Mustangs’ first play from scrimmage. Then late in the third quarter — after making a lengthy pass reception — senior receiver Reggie Roberson left the game on a cart after injuring his left knee. Roberson’s play was decisive, though, as he scored on plays that covered 70 and 85 yards on his way to 243 yards for the game.

Down 24-3 after Roberson’s second touchdown, the Tigers began their climb back with a White-to-Calvin Austin touchdown pass covering eight yards midway through the second quarter. White found Sean Dykes for a touchdown less than four minutes later and senior kicker Riley Patterson connected on a 56-yard field goal on the last play before halftime to make the score 24-20, SMU, at the break.

Naggar connected on a 25-yard field goal early in the third quarter, but Memphis answered with a 92-yard drive, capped by a five-yard touchdown pass from White to freshman Tahj Washington. The score remained tied for the remainder of the game, until Naggar’s game-winning kick with nine seconds on the clock. The Tigers’ three fourth-quarter possessions resulted in two punts and White’s fumble.

White completed 29 of 42 passes for 380 yards and three touchdowns, but tossed a pair of interceptions in addition to his late fumble. Dreke Clark gained 98 yards on 16 carries, while Damonte Coxie starred in the passing game, hauling in eight passes for 169 yards. Dykes caught six passes for 85 yards.

Just like their 2019 shootout at the Liberty Bowl — a 54-48 Memphis win that followed ESPN’s GameDay presentation from Beale Street — both teams topped 500 yards in total offense (Memphis 585, SMU 549). The Tiger defense allowed 474 of those yards through the air.