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Music Record Reviews

MonoNeon Reaches New Heights with Supermane

Cover artwork by Kii Arens

Though the pandemic might have slowed the roll of many mortals, MonoNeon has been busier than ever. In addition to his steady flow of re-soundtracked found videos, his original stock in trade, he’s been continuing as a member of Ghost Note, collaborating with Daru Jones, contributing to “All Bad” on Nas’ Grammy-winning King’s Disease album, and playing on Grammy-nominee Jacob Colliers’ song “In My Bones.” And, only days after the Grammy Awards, he dropped Supermane, a new solo EP loaded with some of the strongest material of his career.

While the bass virtuoso and multi-instrumentalist has always favored some strong 80s flavors in his arrangements, this eight-song album applies those flavors to some of the songwriter’s most focused material ever. The result is MonoNeon’s idiosyncratic, yet more disciplined, take on classic early George Clinton solo sounds, making that sound his own with the strongest singing of his career.

Of course, one hallmark of George Clinton’s work has been unrpedictability, and that is underscored by MonoNeon as well, when he opens with new wave indie rocker “Just Gettin’ High, Just Gettin’ By.” In a sense, it continues the politically charged material of last year (i.e., “Breathing While Black”), but this time as a near-punk experience, including shouting a rapid-fire catalog of the bizarre state of the world in this moment.

That segues seamlessly into more traditional Clinton-esque quirk-funk, full of tasty synth squeals, scratchy guitar and, of course, the supplest of bass lines. One unifying element is the herky jerky, presumably drum machine-driven rhythms that were such a cornerstone to classic Clinton and other 80s funk. That even applies to the tweaked, algorithmic swing of “Invisible,” wherein MonoNeon asks the musical question, “Don’t you wish you were invisible?… You can be whoever you wanna/And no one’s gonna judge ya/And you ain’t got nothing to prove.”

And on the culture-affirming “We Somebody Y’all,” he even mashes up a bit of Staple Singers vibe with some drums worthy of “Atomic Dog.”

By the album’s midway point, “Grandma’s House,” we get a glimpse of what may be one source of that soulfulness, MonoNeon’s family. The artist had recently paid tribute to his grandmother with an impromptu video of her singing with him. Now comes this joyful ode to such family visits. “Take me back to the good times we had at grandma’s house/We were kids, we were young/We were always havin’ fun,” he sings, in what may be one of the most wholesome funk jams of the century.

On all these tracks, the defining factor is focus. These are tightly constructed tracks, full of polished background vocal asides and synth fills that slot in to the arrangements seamlessly. That applies just as much to the second half, in which MonoNeon also introduces some impressive cameos from other artists, such as Mr. Talkbox, Ledisi, Wax, and, by the final title track, an actual band featuring guest musicians Cory Henry (organ), Jairus Mozee (guitar), and Derrick Wright (drums).

“Supermane,” the song, also features a notable crossover cameo in the sax playing of Kirk Whalum. It’s entirely fitting, as it has the feel of a classic gospel number made more universal by MonoNeon’s pop instincts. That’s entirely appropriate for both his and Whalum’s upbringing in some of the most musical churches of Memphis. And it’s the perfect capstone for a perfect album, a kind of existentialist hymn to live life to its fullest, reminding listeners that “The voice of God is in your mind.” Live like there’s no tomorrow, he sings to us all, and with material this strong, MonoNeon is clearly doing just that.

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News Blog News Feature

New Plan Would Slow Traffic on Riverside Drive

A new plan would deliver a “safer, slower Riverside Drive” by introducing a number of traffic-calming interventions along the stretch bordering Tom Lee Park. 

The new plan was unveiled Monday by the Memphis River Parks Partnership (MRPP). Carol Coletta, MRPP president and CEO, said the design for the street meets the criteria set in mediation with Memphis In May International Festival and approved by Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland. 

If you’ve been on Riverside Drive, you know it feels too much like an expressway.

Carol Coletta, president and CEO of the Memphis Parks Partnership

“If you’ve been on Riverside Drive, you know it feels too much like an expressway,” Coletta said during a presentation Monday. “A lot of people think it’s an expressway between I-55 and I-40 but it’s not. 

“Expressways were never meant to he bet the shortest routes through a city. They were meant to be the fastest route through a city. The fastest route should not be Riverside Drive, the street that divides Downtown neighborhoods and those just beyond Downtown from its Riverfront.”

The new plan would focus on three crossings across Riverside: one at Vance, another at Huling, and one at Butler. At these would be pedestrian crossings to connect Tom Lee Park. These crossings would combine several elements to slow traffic and make crossing safer. 

Memphis River Parks Partnership

As motorists approach a crossing, they’d first encounter a speed hump, warning them of the crossing ahead. At the crossing, they’d find a speed table, a ramp larger than a speed hump. The tops of these speed tables would be level with sidewalks on both dies of the street. So, pedestrians would not have to step down as they crossed and the tables would be high enough to force slower speeds. 

Memphis River Parks Partnership

“You’ve got this combination of design mechanisms that force traffic to slow down,” Colletta said. “Otherwise, your car gets damaged and, maybe so do you because of the jolt you’ll feel.”

This combination is expected to slow traffic at the crossings to 15 miles per hour. 

Memphis River Parks Partnership

Spots for parallel parking along the street are also expected to slow traffic. Such parking will be available only in three “pods” along the western edge of Riverside. Together, these areas are expected to yield 60 parking spots along the street. 

To the immediate west of the parallel parking pods will be a median to separate cars parked there and a straight path for bikes and scooters. Coletta said that path is hoped to keep that faster traffic out of the main part of the park for strolling pedestrians.

Memphis River Parks Partnership

The new design also removes the decorative median strip from the center of Riverside Drive. Smaller medians will remain, though, closer to the three street crossings. 

Coletta said rules enforcement and traffic signs will still be needed along Riverside but hoped the new plan will slow traffic more naturally. 

“The more we rely on design to make streets safer, the better off we’ll be and the more likely we are to sustain the slow speeds that deliver safety,” she said.

Construction of the new Riverside Drive is slated to begin when construction of the new Tom Lee Park begins. Tha projects kicks off after MIM wraps up later this year. 

MRPP is expected to unveil updated plans and new drawings for Tom Lee Park during a call next week.   

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Hattiloo Fellowship Cultivates Arts Managers

Hattiloo Theatre is putting a focus on arts management with its inaugural session of the Black Theatre Managers Fellowship.

This July, four arts managers from four cities will participate in the program that provides practical training in arts administration. The class will be in residence in Memphis for a three-week intensive session led by Hattiloo Theatre executives, consultants, and experts from the field. The fellowship, a three-year program, will see the group of fellows return for additional three-week sessions in 2022 and 2023.

The four are Kai El Zabar, executive director of ETA Creative Arts Organization in Chicago; Ayanna Williams, managing director of Blues City Cultural Center in Memphis; Christie Howard, managing director of Jubilee Theatre in Fort Worth, Texas; and Rhonda Wilson, founder and executive director of Star Center Theatre in Gainesville, Florida.

The program will provide academic training in nonprofit arts management, finance, planning, fundraising, board management, and marketing. Networking and mentoring will continue between sessions. The fellows will develop strategies to address the most pressing challenges facing their theaters.

The Black Theatre Managers Fellowship is funded by the Black Seed — a national strategic plan to create impact and thriveability for Black theater institutions.

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Beyond the Arc Sports Sports Feature

Grizzlies Rout Sixers 116-110

The Grizzlies kicked off the first game of a four-game road trip Sunday night with a win in the city of brotherly love against the top-ranked team in the Eastern Conference. 

The Sixers were missing their star big man Joel Embiid, and while the remaining players put up a valiant effort, they were vastly outmatched against the Grizzlies. For their part, the Grizzlies played some of the best team basketball they have played all season.

Catching Philadelphia on the second game of a back-to-back was a bonus for Memphis. 

Dillon Brooks Things – via Grizzlies Twitter

By The Numbers 

7 players scored in double figures:  

Dillon Brooks – 17 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists 

Ja Morant was the only starter to score in single digits finishing with 8 points, but his 10 assists were a sign of the kind of unselfish play that contributed to his teammate’s offensive success.  

Jonas Valanciunas – 16 points and 12 rebounds 

Kyle Anderson – 10 points and 6 rebounds 

Grayson Allen returned to the starting lineup after missing two games due to injury. It’s good to see him back on the court, but I question the allotment of minutes between Allen and Melton. Allen closed out the night with 15 points, 5 rebounds, and 2 assists, but did so over roughly 27 minutes on 5 of 14 shooting.   

Meanwhile, De’Anthony Melton put up 14 points, 3 rebounds, and 3 assists on 5 of 8 shooting and in only 15 minutes of playing time. 

Maybe De’Anthony Melton could have some of those Grayson Allen minutes, as a treat? 

Brandon Clarke – 15 points on 6 of 10 field goal shooting 

Desmond Bane – 14 points and 5 rebounds, including 3 of 6 from distance 

Tyus Jones – 5 points and 5 assists 

SHOTS SHOTS SHOTS 

As a team, the Grizzlies shot 42% from beyond the arc (16 of 38) against the Sixers. Combined with their 48% three-point shooting against Minnesota (19 of 39), Memphis is shooting just over 45% from behind the three-point line for the month of April. If they can hold fast to this higher level of outside shooting, the odds of making a successful push for the playoffs will go up considerably.  

The Grizzlies currently hold the 8th seed in the Western Conference and with the win over Philadelphia the team moves above .500 on the season.  

Who Got Next? 

The Grizzlies are taking their talents to South Beach to face off against the Miami Heat. Tuesday night April 6th, with tip-off at 7 PM.  

Categories
News News Blog

Jay Martin Named SOE Master Entrepreneur

The Society of Entrepreneurs (SOE) has named Jay Martin the recipient of the 2021 Master Entrepreneur Award.  

The award from SOE, in partnership with Junior Achievement of Memphis, will be presented to Martin, CEO of Juice Plus+, on Saturday, May 1, 2021, at the Virtual 29th Awards Celebration to be aired at 7 p.m. on WKNO-TV. The celebration will also recognize this year’s inductees: Tyrone Burroughs of First Choice, and Michael Hudman and Andy Ticer of Enjoy AM Restaurant Group.

Martin was inducted into the SOE in 2008. A celebrated storyteller, he’s written two books and is sought after as a speaker. 

He graduated from the University of Georgia in 1968 and moved to Memphis in 1969. Martin founded National Safety Associates (Juice Plus Co.) with $500 and has served as president and CEO since its inception. 

Juice Plus+ is a direct marketing company with 75,000 independent distributors in all 50 states and 25 foreign countries. The company has systemwide sales of $425 million annually, and has sales since inception of $12 billion. There are 450 employees, primarily housed at corporate headquarters in Collierville, and a shipping facility in Memphis. Juice Plus Co. hosts two conventions a year with an average attendance of 5,000.

Martin has long been involved in working to improve the city. He initiated one of the most innovative programs in Memphis when he established My City Rides. “It provides affordable scooters through a lease-to-own plan,” he says. “We’re close to 300 people with the scooters and they get 75 to 80 miles a gallon. They really like it.” He and his My City Rides team were awarded an Innovation Award from Inside Memphis Business magazine in 2019. 

Martin has served on the Board of Directors of Church Health Center, St. George’s Episcopal School, the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Memphis, Memphis Athletic Ministries, and the US Direct Selling Association, and is a supporter of the Boys and Girls Club, Church Health Center, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (the company sponsors the St. Jude Marathon), Volunteers of America, United Way of the Mid-South, and the Albert and Jessie Martin Scholarship. He also established the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Memphis’ Job Seeker program with a $5 million grant that helps train, motivate, and place high school graduates from the Boys and Girls Club in meaningful jobs. The program serves 50 to 75 kids annually.

The designation of Master Entrepreneur is given to a member of the Society who best exemplifies the full range of characteristics – self-direction, determination, creativity, leadership, and integrity – that are necessary for membership in the Society. Martin joins a group that includes Jack A. Belz, Michael Bruns, J.R. ‘Pitt’ Hyde, Patrick Lawler, Scott Morris, and Henry Turley.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Lost In Orion” by Don Lifted

Music Video Monday got a new ride.

Don Lifted recently signed with Fat Possum records. He christens the new ride with his most ambitious music video yet, “Lost in Orion.” Matthews co-directed the video with Joshua Cannon, and co-wrote it with Nubia Yasin. Sam Leathers is the cinematographer behind some arresting images, including a spectacular location shot in the empty Orpheum Theatre.

“‘Lost in Orion’ feels confessional to me,” says Mathews. “The weight of feelings that through the summer of 2020 couldn’t escape me, personally and societally. So much of those fears and anxieties manifested themselves in introspection, mystical imagery and poetry. It’s a sacrificial and ritualistic piece of art for me. A culmination of growth and shedding of every version of myself that’s been informed by love, societal pressures and fear. This visual is a new beginning for me. The end of many other things but the start of something I’ve been on a journey to share for quite some time.

“Working with Josh, Sam and the folks at Studio One Four Three has been something long in the works. It’s funny ’cause once I reached out we both expressed when didn’t feel ready enough to collaborate. The shoot days were very special in all of the beautiful and challenging ways making art can exist. Nubia Yasin, Amber Ahmad, Joshua Cannon, Sam Leathers and myself all trying to work toward the best ideas and ways to approach everything, trying to match the vision in my head as best as possible. The subject matter and the elements definitely had effects on all of us in various ways and pushed us toward our goals. I look forward to expanding this world we are building together in conjunction with this music.”

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

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Strong Second Half Lifts Grizzlies Over Timberwolves

With a win 120-108 win at FedExForum over the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Grizzlies are back at .500 (23-23) for the season. After just leading by two at the half, Memphis outscored the Wolves by 10 points in the second half.

“It’s a good team win for us,” said Grizzlies guard Tyus Jones during media availability. “Everyone [was] contributing, everyone [was] playing really well, especially off the bench. That’s how we want to play and contribute to the game. That was good for us. It was a good team win from top to bottom. We’re happy with it.”

Game notes

1. Memphis moved to 12-14 at home this season. Memphis shot 48 percent from beyond the arc after going 19 of 39. Nine different Grizzlies players made a 3-point shot. 

2. Jonas Valanciunas led the Grizzlies with 19 points and 11 rebounds to record his 32nd double-double of the season. Valanciunas has had a double-double in nine straight games. 

3. Grayson Allen finished with 15 points while going 5-of-7 from the three-point line. It was the fifth time this season in which Allen converted on five or more three-point shots. 

4. The Grizzlies bench outscored the Timberwolves’ reserves 56-38. Memphis’ second unit had four players in double figures while Minnesota only one player in double figures off the bench. 

With 39.8 points per game, Memphis entered the night ranked third in the NBA in bench points, first in bench steals with 4.5, second in bench assists at 10.0, and fourth in bench 3-point percentage at nearly 40 percent. 

De’Anthony Melton had a solid night to lead the bench for Memphis. Mr. Do Something finished with 14 points (4-of-6 3P), four rebounds, three assists, and three steals in 24 minutes. Xavier Tillman chipped in 12 points and four rebounds. Brandon Clarke and Jones added 11 points each. 

5. The Wolves had three players in double figures. Karl-Anthony Towns led the way with 30 points and 16 rebounds. Rookie sensation Anthony Edwards added 22 points and six assists. As a reserve, Naz Reid chipped in 18 points and 5 rebounds as the Wolves dropped to 12-37 on the season. 

 Up Next

The Grizzlies head out for a four-game road trip starting Sunday to take on the Philadelphia 76ers.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Godzilla vs. Kong: Fight of the Century

I’m not gonna front. Godzilla vs. Kong had me hooked from the opening scene, where King Kong wakes up in the Skull Island jungle and scratches his ass like Steve McQueen in Bullitt. 

Maybe the monster movie is an outdated form. Certainly, kaiju films are an acquired taste—or maybe appreciation of the inherent artistry of giant monsters pummeling each other just requires a closer contact with your inner middle schooler than many are comfortable with. Me? I’m not a sports fan, and never got into wrestling. Kaiju battles scratch that itch for me. 

I did see Jerry Lawler wrestle in person once at a Coliseum Coalition event. He was years past his prime, but the grace and power of his movements were still compelling. It helped me understand the appeal of wrestling. If, as I wrote in my review of Godzilla: King of the Monsters, Godzilla is the Cary Grant of kaiju, then King Kong is the Jerry Lawler of titans. He is the OG kaiju, making his debut in 1933. The thing you have to understand about Kong is that he’s not the villain of the story. Like Lawler, he has the occasional heel turn, but at heart, he’s a working class face ape. Kong was just chilling with his family of worshippers on Skull Island, hurting only the occasional sacrificial victim, when Carl Denham arrives on the scene with a tanker ship full of knockout gas and a Broadway contract. The destruction he laid upon New York City was richly deserved. 

Those scenes on Skull Island, where King Kong fought an array of dinosaurs, were the genesis of the kaiju. Filmed 90 years ago, they still look miraculous today. But the most remarkable thing about King Kong is the depth of emotion stop motion animator Willis O’Brien was able to wring from a wire frame armature covered in rabbit fur and foam rubber. You always know what Kong is feeling, and what his motivations are. One look in the big guy’s eyes and you know he would never hurt Fay Wray.  

 Ishiro Honda’s haunting Gojira, made twenty years and a world war later, is Kong’s indirect descendant. Unlike the entirely artificial Kong, Godzilla was a guy in a rubber suit smashing up model train sets. On a deeper level, Kong symbolizes our fear of our colonial adventures returning for revenge, but Godzilla is our punishment for the arrogance of the atomic bomb. Where Kong was emo, Godzilla was an impassive force of nature, beautiful and terrible. He’s gonna smash up your city for reasons you can’t possibly understand, and you can’t do anything about it except hope he gets bored before he makes it to your house. In their first onscreen matchup, 1962’s King Kong vs. Godzilla, the King of the Monsters gets second billing, but steals the show, thanks to the mask of the Kong costume being less expressive than O’Brien’s stop motion creation. 

In Godzilla vs. Kong, the billing is reversed, but this time, Kong steals the show. Director Adam Wingard, a veteran low-budget horror helmer, has studied Honda, O’Brien, and the greatest monster maker of all, Ray Harryhausen, creating a shrine to his creatures big enough to accept all worshippers. In Kong’s case, it’s a literal shrine, located deep within the Hollow Earth, where he keeps his axe collection. 

Wingard and his writing team, including Thor: Ragnarok’s Eric Pearson, are conversant in the fringiest pseudo-science, which they put in the mouth of conspiracy obsessed podcaster Bernie (Brian Tyree Henry, charmingly frantic). Stuff like “plot” and “logic” have always been secondary considerations in films where a giant lizard fights a smog monster. Godzilla vs. Kong at least tries to construct a coherent universe where a dinosaur with atomic fire breath goes mostro a mostro with an axe-wielding ape. The humans are at least inoffensive. Wingard unleashes Millie Bobby Brown’s charisma as Madison, daughter of Monarch scientist Mark Russell (Kyle Chandler) turned Godzilla whisperer. Kong’s connection to humanity is through Jia (Kaylee Hottle), a young deaf girl from Skull Island who communicates with her friend via sign language. Villain Demian Bichir meets satisfying comeuppance.

Godzilla vs. Kong’s twin set pieces top just about anything else in the genre since Honda’s swan song, Terror of Mechagodzilla. In the first, set in mid-ocean with Kong using a carrier battle group as stepping stones, is startlingly original. The second, set among the neon towers of Hong Kong, throws Mechagodzilla into the mix. As usual, real evil is a human construct. The kaiju are here to put us in our place. 

Godzilla vs. Kong is in theaters and streaming on HBO Max.

Categories
News Blog News Feature

INFOGRAPHIC: Weekly COVID-19 Data

Data from the Shelby County Department of Health shows a slight increase in new COVID-19 cases and active cases. No new deaths heave been reported in the last 24 hours.

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News News Blog News Feature

Anti-Black Lives Matter, Vax-Hoaxer One Step Closer to Picking Textbooks

The mosque-fighting, anti-Black Lives Matter, vaccine-hoaxer, insurrectionist, and, perhaps, 9/11-truther from Franklin got one step closer to picking your child’s textbooks Wednesday. 

The state Senate Education Committee approved Laurie Cardoza-Moore for a position on the state’s Textbook and Instructional Materials Quality Commission. Only Sen. Raumesh Akbari (D-Memphis) voted against Cardoza-Moore’s appointment. 

See our previous story here for more details on Cardoza-Moore. 

Cardoza-Moore’s nonprofit organization, Proclaiming Justice to the Nations (PJTN) has reviewed several textbooks in the past and offered up changes. In some of those textbooks, Cardoza-Moore claimed she found “propaganda that has turned our children against our country.” However, she said Wednesday she has not looked at the textbooks and curricula in Tennessee. 

In her opening speech, Cardoza-Moore said the terrorist attacks of September 11th were her “wake-up call” to the state of the nation’s educational system. She found “inaccurate and biased curriculum” being used in the classrooms of Williamson County. When asked for a specific example of this by Sen. Akbari, Cardoza-Moore referenced a 2015 textbook that “had a quote legitimizing Palestinians blowing themselves up” and “killing innocent people.”

Akbari

Akbari asked Cardoza-Moore what happened on September 11th. She said the country was attacked by terrorists. Akbari then cited a textbook review from PJTN, Cardoza-Moore’s nonprofit group, that put the suggestion into question. 

The passage from the textbook reads, “on September 11th, 2001, members of al-Qaeda carried out a terrorist attack on New York City, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania.” In the PJTN report, the phrase ”members of al-Qaeda carried out” is underlined. The PJTN report says (on page 23) “given the plethora of evidence, the reviewer suggests removing the underlined section of sentence.” 

From Proclaiming Justice to the Nations’ report on “McGraw-Hill, Civics Economics & Geography, 6-8 Grades, 2018”

“This is a highly contested (per architects and engineers for 9/11 Truth, and demolition experts) argument,” reads the PJTN review. “There is ample evidence that refute the ‘official’ story of what was perpetrated that day.”

The comments are followed by a link to a YouTube video called ”9/11 – 50 Questions They Can’t Answer – (Part 1 of 3)” posted by a user called “Trust No Man.” The video sets out to question the questions presented by 9/11 debunkers, those who trust the “official” version of the events of 9/11, the video says.

When Akbari pressed Cardoza-Moore to confirm that these were, in fact, the statements of her organization, Cardoza-Moore never did. 

“What you’re quoting right now, I never would have said that,” Cardoza-Moore told the committee on the question of al-Qaeda’s involvement in 9/11. “I need to see the quote in the context you’re pulling it from. Is that from a Power Point? I would never say al-Qaeda never participated in [9/11].”

Pressed to deny that the statement was on her website, Cardoza-Moore said, “Until I can look at what you’re looking at, I cannot confirm nor deny” the information is there. 

Cardoza-Moore came to the public eye in 2010 when she publicly fought against the construction of a mosque in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. On The 700 Club television show, she told host Pat Robertson the mosque was a training camp for terrorists. She repeated the claim in Wednesday’s Senate hearing. 

When asked by Akbari about the claims, Cardoza-Moore said two of the mosque’s board members were also members of Hamas, the Palestinian terrorist organization. Cardoza-Moore said one of those members was actively recruiting Muslims on his MySpace page to kill Jews in an effort to free Palestine. Akbari said no proof of those allegations were ever verified. Cardoza-Moore said a judge heard the testimony but a higher court judge dismissed the decision.  

After Cardoza-Moore’s testimony was complete, Akbari said she “cannot think of someone who is more uniquely unqualified to be on this position.”

This person has peddled hate, anti-Muslim rhetoric, and a conspiracy theory about what happened on 9/11.

Sen. Raumesh Akbari

“This person has peddled hate, anti-Muslim rhetoric, and a conspiracy theory about what happened on 9/11, the most tragic event the United States where 3,000 people died,” Akbari said. “To have someone who has such poor judgement on our textbook commission — that reviews books and determines what our students learn — is an insult to people across this state.”  

Committee chairman Sen. Brian Kelsey (R-Germantown) told Senators that the textbook commission’s role “is to ensure our textbooks align with the state standards that have been adopted by the state board, not to ensure they align with any personal views of anyone who is serving on that commission.”

The appointment was passed on a 7-1 vote. The resolution now heads to the Calendar Committee for a scheduled vote from the full Senate.