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Film Features Film/TV

Never Seen It: Watching Labyrinth With Actor/Podcaster Markus Seaberry

This time in the Never Seen It hot seat is Markus Seaberry, prolific Memphis film and television actor and co-host of the Black Nerd Power podcast. He had never seen the 1986 Jim Henson fantasy Labyrinth, which was released 35 years ago this summer. We set out to fix that oversight.

Chris McCoy: What do you know about Labyrinth?

Markus Seaberry: I know David Bowie is in it, Jennifer Connelly is in it, and Jim Henson put some Muppets in it. I didn’t see it, because, for my African American churchgoing parents, the trailer has to have Black people prominent in it, or it’s no deal. That’s true to this day. I tried to show them Slumdog Millionaire, and they were like, “Where’s the Black folks?”

CM: We talked for a long time about what movie you wanted to do, and you ended up picking this one. Why, out of all the films we discussed, did you pick this one, specifically?

MS: Because I feel like my eighties kid cred is not official until I see Labyrinth and The Dark Crystal. In the early days of my podcast, Black Nerd Power, my co-host Richard Douglas Jones, found out I had never seen them, and our friendship has never been the same.

CM: OK, time to save a friendship. Let’s go.

101 minutes later…

CM: You are now someone who has seen Labyrinth. What did you think?

MS: I’m freaking out. My mind is not used to so many practical effects! It’s been so long since I’ve seen a film like this, because everything now is just CGI’d to hell. And it’s great! I love the battle scene where you get live chickens, a puppet on a live dog, Muppets all around, puppeteers in the mix controlling the big monster Ludo, and then a live Jennifer Connolly. And it’s all mixing together like orderly chaos.

CM: It feels real, in a way that the Marvel movies don’t. It hit me during that scene that this film has a “Marvel third act,” where the heroes fight a faceless army that comes out of nowhere. I guess movies have been doing that for a long time. I may not have seen this movie since the ’80s. It came out while I was working in a movie theater, so I saw everything. I remember seeing it on VHS, too. It was a lot better than I remembered.

MS: I liked in the beginning, they show you a shot of Maurice Sendak’s Where The Wild Things Are. Then, in the closing credits, it said “Jim Henson acknowledges his debt to the works of Maurice Sendak.”

CM: Ludo looks like one of those big Wild Things.

Ludo

CM: Like you said while we were watching it, there is a very strong Wizard of Oz thing going on. Our heroine is not following the Yellow Brick Road, but she’s finding her way through the labyrinth. There are also a lot of beats from Alice in Wonderland. Terry Jones wrote the first draft. It’s obvious that a lot more thought went into the story than you see in a lot of movies today. It’s a dude from Monty Python self-consciously trying to construct a fairy tale-like narrative. All those guys were super well-educated. I think Terry Jones went to Oxford.

MS: I dug it. Yo, we gotta talk about Bowie, man! I mean, wow! Normally in stuff like this, I prefer people to play it straight, because I feel like if you ham it up, it makes it a cartoon. But I think this needed to be kind of cartoony and over the top. Bowie hamming it up worked, and it was cool to hear him singing the songs in the middle. It gave a kind of a musical aspect.

CM: He’s so good. And you know, whenever he acts, he’s always great. Like in The Prestige, he’s Tesla, playing opposite Christian Bale, and it’s just perfect. But yeah, you’re right about playing villains low-key. I mean, I love seeing people go over the top if they do it right. It’s such a tightrope walk.

MS: He was just perfect the whole time.

CM: Another great actor who goes over-the-top in an eighties fantasy movie is Max Von Sydow in Flash Gordon.

MS: Ming the Merciless!

CM: He might be my favorite on-screen villain. But then, from around the same time, you’ve also got James Earl Jones as Thulsa Doom in Conan The Barbarian. He plays it straight, like you were saying, and it’s chilling.

CM: Those sets! There’s that one shot, where Ludo comes out of the top of the tower, and you see the whole city behind him. That was real!

MS: Hammers and nails created that, not ones and zeroes.

Ludo don’t need no CGI.

CM: And that scene when that room blows up, and Sarah flies out—they really did that!

MS: Well, she had a stunt double. The first thing I saw Jennifer Connelly in was The Rocketeer. She was young in that, but she was really young in this.

CM: She was 16. This is a super hard part. Can you imagine how long they were on set?

MS: It just seems like a lot of moving pieces.

CM: They were throwing everything at it, too. There was rear projection, there was green screen. There were all kinds of practical sets. There were puppets everywhere. The MC Escher sequence, that was insane. To me, it was better than the Escher sequence in Doctor Strange.

MS: Hey now, you know I’m a Marvel zombie, man.

David Bowie as Jareth, the Goblin King. The sequence was inspired by M.C. Escher’s lithograph “Relativity”.

CM: We need to talk about David Bowie’s penis.

MS: Oh, God….

CM: It was very prominent.

MS: It was inescapable.

CM: There was one shot, we both said something. The bulge had its own fill light.

MS: Do you think he used a sock, or not?

CM: No, I think the Thin White Duke was packing heat.

MS: More like the Thick White Duke.

Ladies…

CM: This is a fairy tale with a female protagonist. I know the Hero’s Journey — everybody knows the Hero’s Journey — but there is a corresponding Heroine’s Journey that I don’t really know as well.

MS: It also is cool that she didn’t feel like your typical damsel in distress to me. I mean, she had help. I’m a dude and I feel like that’s condescending, so I can only imagine what women feel like. It’s like, yo, let the woman save herself sometimes.

CM: And she solves problems not by fighting, but by persuading friends to help her. She figures things out herself. She solves the riddle where one guard always lies, and the other one always tells the truth. She solves problems by making friends. That’s part of it. Like I said, I don’t know the Heroine’s Journey, but women protagonists in this kind of stuff, they don’t refuse the call to adventure, where in the Hero’s Journey, he always refuses the call to adventure, and is then forced to go anyway. Even Jesus refuses the call, you know? But Sarah never does. Look at Rey in the Star Wars sequel trilogy, in The Force Awakens. She never refuses the call, either.

MS: That’s true. I gotta say, it’s cheesy, but I liked it. I think fantasy can be too self-absorbed, too self-important sometimes. Sometimes you just want scrambled eggs for breakfast.

CM: It’s fun and cheesy, but it’s also psychologically grounded. It’s that eighties high fantasy, but this is the moment that the eighties aesthetic became decadent. This is considered the low point of Bowie’s entire career, musically. And, um, it’s not great. The synthesizer stuff that seemed so sophisticated and Euro a few years earlier now just seems chintzy.

MS: I still dream of owning a keytar.

CM: Well, yeah. Of course.

MS: I was willing to accept the asethetics because there’s heart to it. Listen, I was a little let down by the final confrontation, because it wasn’t as physical as I probably would have liked, but that’s not what Jennifer Connelly’s character was doing. She’s not carrying a big stick and breaking stuff. She’s been using her wits to elude the villain and rescue her baby brother.

CM: And if you think about it, the ending is her telling a toxic boyfriend to fuck off.

MS: I see that. I see that.

CM: Getting back to David Bowie’s package, there’s a very strong element of her sexual awakening. She eats the fruit, like Persephone, and then she’s transported to like this Eyes Wide Shut sex ball, and Bowie sings the best song in the movie, “As The World Falls Down.”

MS: I thought it looked like a Calvin Klein commercial.

CM: The thing that she’s most threatened by is being attracted to David Bowie. But Jareth is a total toxic boyfriend who’s gaslighting her the whole time. At the end, he was like, “Oh, what are you doing to me? I did everything for you, and you’re throwing me away!” Classic toxic boyfriend move. Then she says, “You have no more power over me!” That’s how she wins: She breaks up with the chump.

MS: There’s a little love morality tale, there. And we need to start a punk band called David Bowie’s Package.

Jennifer Connelly as Sarah, and Hoggle, played by puppeteers Shari Wiser and Brian Henson, son of Jim Henson.

MS: Hoggle man. I thought he was so ugly, I thought he was going to be villanous. He was an unwilling servant, but as time went on, he became more sympathetic and grew on me.

CM: She’s the one who says “You are my friend.” And he’s like, “Nobody accepts me as a friend.” Once again, she solves problems by using empathy and making friends.

MS: And also Ludo is the best!

CM: He’s the Chewbacca figure who can command smelly rocks, somehow. 

MS: Yeah. I was trying to figure out. I thought it was telekinesis, but it’s more of a voice command. It’s more like a summoning.

CM: If it was D&D, his special power would be Summon Fart Rocks.

The goblins.

CM: So, bottom line, would you recommend Labyrinth to people?

MS: Yes, but with parameters. Know that it’s cheesy, and embrace it. It’s not trying to be cool. And the heart balances out the cheese.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Stax Brings the Wax: Soul Museum Draws Vinyl Lovers this Saturday

On the whole, Memphis is a vinyl-crazy town. Long before vinyl singles and LPs staged a comeback in the music market, this town had anything the collector of dusty old platters could want. So it’s only fitting that the vinyl medium is roundly honored by the Stax Museum of American Soul Music, where so many classic sides were created in the first place. Indeed, the label’s players and producers regularly researched the hip sounds of the ’60s via customers at the front of the Stax building, in the Satellite Record Shop.

Those record shop roots live on today. Case in point, the gift shop of the Stax Museum carries an impressive array of vinyl. And much of that will be available this Saturday, May 29th, at their Memorial Day weekend Sidewalk Sale. Running from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., this event, much beloved by vinyl aficionados throughout the region, will offer vinyl records, CDs, books, clothing, housewares, souvenirs, and more, at significant discounts. Hundreds of soul 45s, including deep Stax cuts, will be available, causing many a collector to flock to the event. (We recommend showing up early.)

Rounding out the day, DJ Superman, aka The Soul Brother, will be spinning R&B, soul, and funk vinyl all day. Food trucks will also be on hand, so you can grab a quick bite standing, then get back to digging through those crates.

Among the platters available will be many examples of vinyl devotion from Stax and Craft Recordings. The latter’s painstaking reissues of classic Stax releases, such as the 2019’s Soul Explosion double LP, speak volumes about how seriously they take the art of the lathe.

And this appreciation of wax stacks doesn’t just stop at the gift shop doors. The interior’s permanent exhibit features walls covered with every 45 released on Stax and its subsidiaries, but that’s only the tip of the iceberg. Recently, the museum also acquired one of the premier collections of Chicago soul vinyl in the world, originally curated by the late Bob Abrahamian.

Consisting of more than 35,000 singles and LPs, along with related high school yearbooks, photographs, scrapbooks, and other artifacts, the collection was begun by Abrahamian when he was a volunteer DJ at the University of Chicago in the 1990s. After his suicide in 2014, Abrahamian’s family searched for an appropriate home to house the collection, eventually settling on the Stax Museum this year. As such, their donation not only honors the profound connection between Stax Records and Chicago-area artists like the Staple Singers, it recognizes the museum’s commitment to all American soul and the vinyl medium in particular.

Abrahamian’s archive of rare records has nothing to do with Saturday’s sale, of course, but will be highlighted in various ways in the museum’s future exhibits, and made available to researchers. Nonetheless, it’s just one more example of why Memphis and the Stax Museum are a vinyl lover’s dream.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Take Game One Against the Jazz, Can They Take Game Two?

Game 1 Final: Grizzlies – 112, Jazz – 109 

The Grizzlies have returned to the NBA postseason for the first time since 2017 and are playing as the 8th seed for the first time since 2011. Longtime followers of this team will recall that back in 2011, the 8th seed Grizzlies beat out the 1st seed Spurs in the first round. Now the new-look Grizzlies are trying to run that back for their playoff debut.  

The Jazz were missing a key player in game one — Donovan Mitchell. Mitchell will almost definitely be making a return to the lineup for Wednesday’s game two, so the Grizzlies will need to plan accordingly. 

The good news is the Grizzlies have a lot of positive momentum from game one they can build off, and a group of guys who are locked in and hungry. 

The bad news is they are still facing off against the top-ranked team in the league, a Jazz team that swept the regular season series against the Grizzlies.  

Here’s a few things the Grizzlies can do to set themselves up for another win in Salt Lake City:  

Play with purpose — the stakes are not yet win or go home, but it would benefit the Grizzlies if they treated each game in this series as an elimination game. If the goal is to get past the first round, they must stay locked in and ready and adjust on the fly as necessary.  

Defense to offense — The Grizzlies play their best basketball when their defense fuels their offense. They lead the league in fast break points and forcing turnovers and converting them to points on the other end is a strategy that has served this team well. In game one, the Grizzlies had 19 more field goal attempts than their opponents, which goes to show once again that taking care of the ball on defense leads to good things offensively.  

Defend without fouling/stay out of foul trouble — this should be self-explanatory.  

YGTMYFT — You’ve got to make your free throws. Grizzlies were 15 of 21 from the charity stripe in game one — a game in which they won by three points. Missed free throws have plagued this team all season long, and they can and will come back to haunt them in close games. Free throws are free and fun to make; tell your friends.  

A public service announcement from the Ministry of Making Your Fucking Free Throws

Next up: Game two against the Jazz is scheduled for Wednesday, May 26th, and will tip-off at 9 p.m. CST.  

Categories
News Blog News Feature

Crews Wrap Up First Phase of Bridge Repair

The first phase of repairs for the Hernando DeSoto Bridge are complete, Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) officials announced Tuesday.

The agency said Kiewit Infrastructure Group, the contractor hired for the bridge repair project, “worked 24-hour shifts installing fabricated steel plates on each side of the fractured member to secure the bridge for permanent repairs.”

“Phase one is complete!” TDOT exclaimed in a Tuesday news update.

Kiewit will now begin cleaning the worksite and extending the platform. In phase two, the damaged piece of the bridge will be removed and replaced. This phase must be complete before the bridge can reopen to traffic.

TDOT officials said the restriping project at the I-55 and Crump interchange “is working” to improve traffic flow there. Traffic data show a 40 percent reduction in travel time from Monday, May 17th to Monday, May 24th; a 47-minute delay was reduced to 27 minutes, TDOT said.

Categories
News Blog News Feature

Real Talk Host Keeps Memphis Current on COVID and More

Chip Washington just can’t seem to stray too far from a camera or microphone. 

He’s a former television news reporter and anchor with stints in Meridian, Mississippi, Jackson, Mississippi, Jackson, Tennessee, and in Memphis at Fox13 and WMCTV. In total, he spent more than 20 years in front of a camera.

He moved from in front of the camera (but not far from them) as a public information officer, a sort of liaison between government agencies and the press, for the Jackson Mississippi Police Department and the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office. Since July 2020, Washington has been the media’s point person for the Shelby County Health Department’s COVID-19 Response Team. 

But the draw to broadcast called to him again back in 2019 with the opportunity to do a radio talk show on WMQM 1600 AM. Washington’s voice got a boost last year when he was invited to bring his show to the newly opened airwaves of WYXR 91.7 FM. 

Since then, Real Talk With Chip Washington has been a platform of on-air conversation for a variety of guests talking about a variety of issues like police matters, COVID-19, and the Memphis airport.   

We caught up with Washington to talk about his job and his show. — Toby Sells

Memphis Flyer: For many of us out there, the pandemic kind of seems to be winding down. What’s it like doing your job now? 

Chip Washington: The city is, basically, over the vaccines. Although, the health department will get it back at some point. It’s still busy. Obviously, things are winding down. You see some of the bigger [vaccine points of distribution] are starting to close down. The vaccination process, while it is ongoing, it is slowing down.

It’s always a challenge to be continually and perpetually putting out the message that COVID, while it’s drastically slower, is still among us. Variants out there are still affecting our young people and that’s why it’s important for the population of those 12 to 15 years old get vaccinated.

MF: I was scrolling through archive episodes of your show and you’ve had some high-profile people on there: Pat Halloran, former president and CEO of The Orpheum Theater; Bobby O’Jay, radio veteran; Mike Rallings, former director of the Memphis Police Department; Dr. Steve Threlkeld, infectious disease expert, and many more. 

CW: I’m blessed for that. You just have to call and find out if they want to come on. They have to answer the phone and they have to say, “yes.”

I hope that, after the hour is up, people can say “man, that was a really informative show. I really learned some things. That’s my focus and what inspired me to get behind the microphone.

MF: Well, just looking at the archives and, given your background in journalism, the show is bound to be informative. 

CW: I wanted to make it conversational and to make it interesting. I really wanted to showcase programs or businesses that, maybe, people hadn’t heard about but they’d done very good work. I’m all about trying to be uplifting and help our people. This is a platform to allow folks to come on and talk a few minutes to. … showcase what they do. 

Real Talk With Chip Washington, Mondays 6 p.m.-7 p.m. WYXR 91.7 FM.

Categories
News Blog News Feature

Liberty Park Work Can Begin Tuesday

Dirt could turn on Liberty Park as soon as Tuesday after the more than $200 million project cleared a key funding hurdle at the state level.

Liberty Park, the youth sports complex to be built at the Mid-South Fairgrounds, got bond approval Monday, May 24th, from the Tennessee State Funding Board. Those bonds will be supported from the Tourist Development Zone (TDZ) established for the project, so some tax dollars collected within the zone will go to the project and not state coffers.

(Credit: brg3s Architects) A rendering shows the proposed Liberty Park.

With funding in place, the city of Memphis gave the green light to Turner Construction and onsite groundwork can begin at the Fairgrounds as soon as Tuesday, May 25th, officials said Monday.

“Our project timeline remains on schedule, and our construction team is prepared to begin the next phase of Liberty Park immediately,” said Mary Claire Borys, administrator of strategic initiatives for the city of Memphis Division of Housing & Community Development. “We look forward to getting the Sports and Events Center underway while also reimagining and returning the Liberty Park campus to its true ‘park’ identity with infrastructure and landscaping plans.”

(Credit: brg3s Architects) A rendering shows the proposed Memphis Sports & Events Center exterior.
(Credit: brg3s Architects) A rendering shows the proposed Memphis Sports & Events Center interior.

The project will be anchored by the Memphis Sports and Events Center (MSEC), a 227,000-square-foot, column-free events pavilion designed to host sporting events, trade shows, graduations, and more. Construction of the MSEC is slated to be complete by October 2022.

Initial work at Liberty Park will focus on the MSEC and along Central Avenue for a future 18-acre mixed-use private development with public plazas, hotels, retail and dining space, and residential apartments.

(Credit: brg3s Architects) An aerial map shows the proposed 18-acre mixed-use development along Central Avenue.

So far, city leaders have signed letters of intent with Capstone Development Co. to develop two hotels at Liberty Park and with High 5 Entertainment to develop a 40,000-square-foot indoor arcade — complete with a bowling alley, bars, and restaurant — and a 25,000-square-foot outdoor miniature golf course.

(Credit: brg3s Architects) A rendering shows proposed outdoor sports fields.

Liberty Park’s plans also include improved public rights of way, new playgrounds and pavilions, a renovated Pipkin Building, outdoor playing fields at the MSEC, and a new track and football field at Tobey Park.

The city portion of the project is $126 million, with $70.6 million to come from the TDZ fund.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Transitions Key as Memphis 901 FC Secures a Point in Atlanta

On Sunday, Memphis 901 FC rolled up to Atlanta United 2 in sweltering 90 degree heat for their second match of the season. For the most part, we saw an assured performance from coach Ben Pirmann’s crew, with plenty of solidity at the back and a number of quality chances going forward. And while 901 FC walked away with a point after the 2-2 draw, the 90 minutes showcased plenty of promise for the rest of the season. Here are a few things that we glimpsed in yesterday’s match.

Transition, Transition, Transition

Whenever the home team turned the ball over, we suddenly bore witness to the Atlantean Wile E. Coyotes futilely chasing after Memphis’ roadrunners. On paper, it looked like Pirmann set his charges up in a 4-4-2 formation, perfect for soaking up pressure defensively and launching attacks the other way after a turnover. Time and again, passes were quickly pinged up to either the front two of Dre Fortune and Michael Salazar, or kicked up to wide players Kadeem Dacres and Francis Atuahene. In the middle of pitch, Laurent Kissiedou and Dominic Oduro would offer passing options to their defenders, sucking in the Atlanta United 2 press before switching the play to the opposite flank, with fullback Mark Segbers usually the recipient on the right. With the home side struggling to contain Memphis pouring numbers forward on the break, 901 FC players consistently worked the ball into great goal scoring positions, and the team easily could have scored three or four on the night with a little more composure.

On the flip side, there’s a little more work to be done for defensive transitions. Perhaps cognizant of the long ball from which they conceded last week against Birmingham, the Memphis defense didn’t push up as much to join their marauding attackers. Atlanta sometimes found it easy to run straight through the heart of the pitch after 901 FC had committed players forward, and a focus on getting back into shape quickly will help curb the number of opportunities for opponents. Being just that little bit more attentive after a turnover will help immensely, both at the front and at the back. But overall, Memphis did well to eliminate any good looks for the Atlanta attack.

Kadeem Dacres the Offensive Fulcrum

When 901 FC advanced the ball into dangerous positions, it was more than likely that new signing and Buff City Soap Man of the Match Kadeem Dacres was involved. He was the brightest spot among 901 FC’s buccaneering attack yesterday, cutting inside to shoot, popping up in the box unmarked, or playing creator for teammates. Dacres slotted home Segbers cross to tie the game at 1-1 right before halftime, and also slipped a nice through ball to Kissiedou to put Memphis up 2-1 in the 73rd. 

Many Atlanta players were chasing his shadow all night long, and he mixed well with most of his teammates. Based on this showing, the player to build the attack around going forward is Dacres.

The Segbers Express Motors Onward

Last season, Mark Segbers was one of the most important players for 901 FC’s attack, with the fullback unafraid to charge upfield and get to the byline for crosses. He continued that fine form today, claiming an assist via his cross for Memphis’ opener. Plenty of other times, he charged down an empty right flank when Atlanta had shifted over to the other side of the pitch. That tireless running is a huge weapon for Memphis, able to stretch or overload the opposition defense. Expect plenty more Segbers action throughout the season.

Late Concession Can’t Take Away From a Good Performance

The admittedly well-taken equalizing goal from Atlanta’s Aiden McFadden — scored in the 93rd minute and after the home team had been reduced to 10 men — soured the mood for Pirmann and co. But the late goal can’t take away from the fact that Memphis executed its game plan from the first minute to the last, keeping the home side at bay and creating more quality scoring chances. That’s a far cry from last season, when 901 FC would put in a good performance for 60 or so minutes before things started to crumble. 

Memphis goalkeeper John Berner starts a play out of the back for Memphis 901 FC. (photo courtesy Atlanta United).

But this is a new group of players, and they’ve clearly already developed some chemistry despite so many being late additions to the roster. Both of Atlanta’s goals (a free kick and the impressive “right-place, right-time” volley from McFadden after goalkeeper John Berner palmed away a cross) weren’t the results of gaps in Memphis’ pattern of play. It’s unlucky, but Pirmann has to be encouraged. There are plenty of pieces to work with, and the players who started Sunday’s match against Atlanta showed off some of the excitement we can expect from the team’s attacking weapons this season.

Memphis 901 FC’s next match is at 7:30 p.m. next Saturday, May 29, away to OKC Energy FC.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Secret Lover” by Yesse Yavis

Music Video Monday is just between us.

Jesse James Davis is not the editor of the Memphis Flyer. That’s the other Jesse Davis (hi boss!). Jesse James Davis is a singular singer, guitarist, drummer, and all-around musician who has played with the likes of Jack Oblivian, The Sheiks, The Tennessee Screamers, Model Zero, and my own band, 1000 Lights. Yesse Yavis (Bandcamp link) is the name he uses for his solo act, where he dispenses songs that veer from four-on-the-floor garage punk to poppy love songs.

The instrumental tracks that would become the song “Secret Lover” was recorded in 2017, and finished later with the addition of The New Mood Basement Singers. “The whole idea for these Yesse Yavis songs was inspired by Sam Cooke’s Live at Harlem Square Club record,” he said. “The atmosphere on that album is just complete joy, and has the energy of the greatest house party of all time. I wanted to make music that evoked that same energy and took from that well of doo-wop, ’60s ‘girl groups’ like The Shirelles, The Ronettes, or The Shangri-Las, and pure party music of the late ’50s/early ’60s. The lyrics aren’t really important, the sound and the vibe are what’s on display here. It’s just a simple love song about someone sick of being just a secret side piece and wanting to be a full time lover, not a Secret Lover.”

Last year, the pandemic gave Davis a chance to learn video production and create the 40-minute Yesse Yavis Extravaganza Spectacular Record Release Show, a mix of comedy and live performances taped at B-Side in Midtown. I promise you will not be disappointed with either element. Davis also directed and edited “Secret Lover,” so prepare for liftoff — you don’t have to be the side piece no more.

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

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Redbirds Report

The Memphis Redbirds have completed their first three series of the season, having lost one (to Durham), split another (with Nashville), and won a third (over Louisville). A few observations as the summer heat approaches.

Cardiac Kids

Nothing builds clubhouse chemistry for the daily grind of a baseball season like a walk-off victory. And the Redbirds had three such wins over a four-day span last week. Wednesday afternoon, Jose Rondon was the hero, driving in the game-winning run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth to complete a comeback from two runs down entering the frame. Then Thursday night, Irving Lopez got the happy ambush, only a few days after his promotion from Double-A Springfield. Saturday night, it was Evan Mendoza, the infielder who drove in the game-tying runs on Wednesday. When multiple players contribute to heart-pounding wins, sore muscles and achy joints tend to feel much better. Lots of baseball yet to be played, but the 2021 Redbirds have answered a dreadful first series against Durham (1-5) with a month’s worth of late-inning success packed into a single week.

That’s With Two A’s

Not since Jeremy Hazelbaker roamed the AutoZone Park outfield in 2015 have the Redbirds suited up a more delightfully named player than Lars Nootbaar. The 23-year-old outfielder was selected by the St. Louis Cardinals in the 8th round of the 2018 draft. He hit .264 in 101 games overall in 2019 (33 games at Double-A Springfield). Nootbaar hit a pair of home runs in Sunday’s loss to Louisville, each a line drive to right-center that simply ran out of ballpark. He has a comfortable swing from the left side of the plate and that can make for a long career. The California native drove in the tying run late in Saturday night’s comeback win and is second on the team with 14 RBIs.

Relief for Cardinals?

If you’re looking for a position group that may soon discover roles up I-55 at Busch Stadium, start with the Redbirds’ bullpen. The Cardinals have struggled to get outs from relievers not named Alex Reyes, Gio Gallegos, or Genesis Cabrera. Last Friday night, Memphis beat Louisville, 4-3, thanks in large part to three men out of the bullpen — Austin Warner, Jesus Cruz, and Junior Fernandez — tossing three-and-two-thirds hitless innings in relief of Johan Oviedo. Among the three, only Fernandez is currently on the Cardinals’ 40-man roster (and eligible for a promotion to St. Louis). If the St. Louis bullpen continues to implode, that may change.

All Eyes On Liberatore

The Cardinals’ top-ranked prospect is 21-year-old Matthew Liberatore, a 6’4” starting pitcher who physically resembles the Adam Wainwright who pitched at AutoZone Park way back in 2004. (Just as lanky then, Wainwright has built a stellar career on his right arm.) Liberatore came to St. Louis in a 2020 trade with Tampa Bay Ray that sent Randy Arozarena to the Rays. Arozarena, of course, went on to earn MVP honors in the 2020 American League Championship Series and set a big-league postseason record with 10 home runs. So you could say the spotlight on Liberatore is not only bright, but hot. For the trade to approach long-term balance, Liberatore needs to be pitching in the Cardinals rotation, and soon.

The Arizona native is off to an uneven start at the Triple-A level. He keeps the ball around the strike zone (only five walks in 21 innings pitched) and reaches the mid-90s on the radar gun. But Liberatore has given up more than a hit per inning and has an 0-3 record to show for it with a 5.48 ERA. It’s a good time to remember that minor leaguers are in catch-up mode with their development, having lost an entire season of competitive baseball to the pandemic. Liberatore finds himself pitching to hitters one level below the big leagues without ever throwing a pitch in Double A. Major-league tools appear to be there. Some patience is required, no matter how many long balls Randy Arozarena hits this season.

The Redbirds play a six-game series at Gwinnett this week and return home to host the Toledo Mud Hens June 1-6.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Playoff Preview: Grizzlies vs. Jazz

The young, gritty, and resilient Memphis Grizzlies squad defied all odds and expectations to secure a spot in the NBA playoffs after knocking off the San Antonio Spurs and stunning the Golden State Warriors in the NBA’s play-in tournament.

Memphis will have a first-round matchup against a hot Utah Jazz, who had the league’s best record in the regular season. How do you prepare for a team most viewers didn’t give a chance of winning against the Warriors in San Francisco?

The Grizzlies will be the underdogs in the series, but the Jazz should in no way underestimate them. Memphis players are not just going to have a “we are just happy to be here vibe.”

Both teams have something to prove. Last season, Utah was bounced out of the first round after having the Denver Nuggets up 3-1 in the series. Memphis barely missed the playoffs after a heartbreaking loss to the Portland Trailblazers in the play-in tournament. 

To preview this series, our Sharon Brown and Aimee Stiegemeyer answer questions that may determine if Memphis will advance to the second round. 

Will Dillon Brooks be able to contain Donovan Mitchell? 

Sharon Brown: Mitchell is recovering from an ankle injury that caused him to miss the last 16 regular-season games. Mitchell averaged 35 points in the two games against Memphis in the regular season. 

Everything is really depending upon which version of Mitchell will be present during this series. The strategy in defending Mitchell should be the same as how Brooks defended Stephen Curry in the last two games against the Warriors. If Brooks can limit Mitchell and defend without fouling, Memphis will have a great chance of pulling off the impossible and at least take one game in Utah. 

Aimee Steigemeyer: That is the hope. One of the necessary factors for success for the Grizzlies in this series will be his ability to lock up his defensive assignments. I might not always agree with his shot selection, but I absolutely believe in his defensive abilities. 

Can Ja Morant have a repeat performance from the play-in elimination game against the Warriors to advance to the second round?

Sharon: Absolutely, he must continue to play out his mind and with poise. In the regular-season matchups against Utah, Morant put up 36, 32, and 12. So he is more than capable of finding his shots among the trees. The Murray State alum needs to continue to have confidence in his three-point shot as he did in Wednesday’s game. 

He knows the team is counting on him in order for them to advance to the next round, and I believe he will be ready for the task before him. 

Aimee: Simply put — yes. Ja Morant is ready for the moment.  

Which matchup are you looking forward to seeing — Jonas Valanciunas against Rudy Gobert or Mike Conley against Morant?

Sharon: Both matchups should be great. To see Valanciunas and Gobert battle in the paint will be awesome, but to see Conley and Morant go at it will be edge-of-your-seat entertainment. It will be good to see the old guard Grizzlies player in Conley go up against the new Grizzlies cornerstone in Morant. Either way, it will be good for Memphis to see how the two players match up in games of this caliber. 

Aimee: Do I really have to choose? I am looking forward to both for different reasons. The past point guard vs. present point guard narrative is compelling for sure. Regardless of the outcome of this series, there is a very “passing the torch” feel to it. I’m rocking with Morant all the way, but Conley will always be my Captain.  

Having said that, Jonas Valanciunas has just been a pure, unbridled basketball joy to watch all season, and I will take as much of that as I can get.  

Which bench player do you think will be the most impactful? 

Sharon: If Grayson Allen can continuously hit 4 of 5 from the three-point line like he did Friday night against the Warriors, then it would be him, without question. Also, I am interested to see how well Xavier Tillman Sr. will match up against Derrick Favors in the second unit. 

In order for Memphis to win this series, bench production will be key. The second unit is the reason the Grizzlies won plenty of games in the regular season and that shouldn’t change in this playoff series. 

Aimee: It will be a toss-up between De’Anthony Melton and Xavier Tillman Sr. Really, it needs to be all of them stepping up, as this Grizzlies lineup is very much one that wins as a team.