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Summer in the City: From Cold Beer and Sweet Treats to Kayaks and Museums — Make the Most of the Season

Welcome to summertime in Memphis, Tennessee. It’s hot. It’s humid. The unforgiving sun is shining like a diamond. But the city’s opening back up in ways we only could have dreamed of this time last year. Whether outdoors or in, there’s fun to be had — and ways to cool down. Snow cones, refreshing cocktails, canoeing, swimming, and more await to make this summer the best one yet.

Assignment: Drink Beer

Summer is for beer. Cold ones are just better on hot days. That’s science.

The pandemic kept us on the porch for much of the summer 2020 beer-drinking season. Those annual traditions — like cookouts, concerts, and baseball games — all easily melted behind daily worries of a cruel illness that took so much more than just our summertime fun time.

For most, COVID-19 worries have now melted and those summer traditions have priority seating. We know what we missed last year, and we now know just how important that fun stuff — like drinking summer beers with your friends — really is.

To ensure you don’t regret missing a moment this summer, here is your Memphis summertime, beer-drinking assignment sheet.

Enjoy a cold one to take the edge off during an inning at AutoZone Park. (Photo: Courtesy of AutoZone Park / Facebook)

1. Drink light beer at AutoZone Park.

Beer and baseball is the winningest combo since pork shoulder and dry rub. Let’s face it, they belong together.

You absolutely can grab an IPA (and probably other styles) at the park. But the magic of the park and the game is really made with a light American lager, like Miller Lite. It’s simple, dependable, and when it’s served ice-cold in a big plastic cup — don’t ask me how it works but — the summer spell is cast.

2. Drink a fruity sour beer watching an outdoor concert.

Drinking to livestreams in your pajamas cannot compare to dancing to live music in your bare feet. We’re back at it this year with tons of live music events guaranteed to be packed and to boogie-oogie-oogie you from your socially distanced funk-ola.

Fruity sours are summer-perfect. They’re different, light, sweet, sometimes mouth-puckeringly tart, but predictably transportive. Like dancing in a crowd in 2021, sours will make you say, “Whoa. This is different. But I like it.”

3. Drink an epic hazy IPA at your favorite taproom.

Your favorite brewery’s taproom was closed last year. You couldn’t try the crazy beer with the crazy name that would never make it to grocery-store shelves.

Now that you can, you may not know that the national haze craze — the wave of hazy IPAs — has pooled securely in Memphis breweries. Call me a hazy boi all you like, but these beers are great.

They’re soft and sometimes sweet. Here, they show off the real creativity of Memphis brewers, the diversity of flavors these talented folks can concoct from one style.

Show up and order the hazy. Then you’ll know what’s up with a trendy beer that’s crazy-Instagrammable. (Shoot your glass with the sun behind it. And your local brewery will thank you.) — Toby Sells

Make your backyard the perfect home for more than just rubber duckies —
no need to mow your lawn. (Photo: Bruce VanWyngarden)

Create a Yard for Wildlife

Tired of mowing and maintaining a lawn? I was, too. That’s why, a few years back, my wife and I began transforming our Midtown backyard into a natural habitat that attracts birds, hummingbirds, butterflies, bees, and other pollinators. By using native and easy-to-care-for perennials, our main chore each year is to cut them back in the spring, fertilize them, and watch them grow and blossom. And as a bonus, it’s beautiful.

Our native black and blue salvia flowers, butterfly bushes, bee balm plants, daylilies, lantana, orpine, and even basil and thyme flowers attract hummingbirds better than our feeders do, though we have a couple of those, as well. The flowers also bring in bees and butterflies of every variety throughout the summer and fall. We keep a bird feeder filled with seeds year-round, which keeps the cardinals and finches nesting nearby.

The National Wildlife Federation (NWF) offers guidelines for making your yard a sustainable environment. The five keys are: food (plants and feeders that provide nectar, seeds, nuts, fruits, berries, foliage, pollen, and insects); water (birdbaths or other sources); cover (bushes, trees, and tall grasses); places to raise young (ditto the bushes, trees, and tall grasses); and sustainable gardening practices (no chemicals). If you’re into that sort of thing, you can apply to the NWF for a sign to put in your yard when you think you qualify.

We don’t have an official sign, but by midsummer our backyard is filled with life and beauty that brings us enjoyment throughout the day. By July, our fig tree is an all-day party. (Pecking order: blue jays, robins, cardinals, then assorted little guys and squirrels.) We have thrilling aerial “battles” between bumblebees, hummingbirds, and dragonflies as they jockey for position on the blooms. And our butterfly variety is second to none.

Sound good? Get started today. Dig up your lawn, start planting flowers and bushes, and just say no mow. — Bruce VanWyngarden

Say hello to ice cream in a cocktail: Global Cafe’s Peaches and Cream. (Photo: Samuel X. Cicci)

Beat the Heat With Sweet Summer Treats

Where I come from, humidity doesn’t exist. So it’s understandable that this former desert-dweller constantly needs a way to stave off all that excess water vapor when the Memphis summertime rolls in with its 90-plus-degree temperatures. Luckily, there are plenty of ways to temper the heat wave, and many of them just so happen to come out of Memphis’ booming food scene. Here are just a few ways to keep it cool while the sun is shining.

For something a little different from your standard ice cream cone, hop out to Cordova or East Memphis for a refreshing take on the sweet confection. Poke World serves up rolled ice cream, a dessert originating from Thailand. A regular ice cream base is poured over a freezing stainless steel surface and, once solidified, scraped off and formed into thin rolls. It’s both novelty and familiarity all at once, rounded out with other sweet toppings. Celebrate the season with the Summer Love, covered in bananas, strawberries, and whipped cream.

Down Summer Avenue (or one of its other four locations), Memphis’ very own paleteria always comes through in a pinch. La Michoacana serves up paletas, a popsicle derivation originating from Mexico. But these popsicles pack an extra punch that’s a cut above the usual frozen sugar water. Paletas are usually made from fresh fruits like mangos and strawberries or from creamier ingredients like chocolate. The bright, swirly combinations of fruity goodness will have your head spinning with brain freeze because it’s just so good. Devour at your own peril, but no one leaves La Michoacana unsatisfied.

But if a little more zing is needed in a dessert, just head on over to Global Cafe and let Juan work his magic behind the bar. The food hall’s cocktails always pack a punch, but go with this year’s seasonal drink, the Peaches and Cream. It comes as advertised, fresh California yellow peaches pureed into silver rum and topped with whipped cream. It’s basically ice cream in a cocktail format, and all the better for it. I stopped at one, but the urge to grab several more sits right there, dangerous and tantalizing.

These sweets are best in moderation, saved for a truly hot summer day. But there’s plenty more out there, of perhaps the Jerry’s or MEMPops variety, so get to exploring. — Samuel X. Cicci

Do you feel your temperature rising? Cool off with “King of Karate.” (Photo: Courtesy of Elvis Presley’s Graceland)

Day at the Museum

It’s a sidewalk sizzling Memphis summer, and after a year-plus of social distancing and livestreaming digital events, I’m ready to resume one of my favorite air-conditioned(!) pastimes — strolling leisurely through one of the Bluff City’s museums.

With recently debuted and soon-to-open exhibits at many of the museums in question, one would be hard-pressed to find a better time to take in some fine art, history, or pop culture.

The Memphis Brooks Museum of Art in Overton Park has too many exhibits to give a full accounting here, but “Persevere and Resist: The Strong Black Women of Elizabeth Catlett” and “Memphis Artists In Real Time” are two worth a closer look. Opening later this month is “Eggleston: The Louisiana Project” featuring work by Memphis photographer William Eggleston.

Over at the Memphis Museum of Science & History (MoSH for short, though old-timers might know it as the Pink Palace), museum marketing manager Bill Walsh says, “Our ‘Machine Inside: Biomechanics’ exhibit and Sea Lions: Life by A Whisker giant screen movie make MoSH the perfect place to cool off this summer and explore science, history, and nature.”

Meanwhile, further east, the Dixon, with its gardens and museum galleries, offers an equilibrium between indoor and outdoor activities. “We love to offer ways for visitors to beat the heat,” says Chantal Drake. “Cooling off in the museum is an enjoyable and educational way to get out of the heat. Summer exhibitions at the Dixon Gallery & Gardens highlight local artists, a centenarian artist, and our founders, Margaret and Hugo Dixon.

“Although it’s summer in Memphis,” she continues, “the shady spots in the garden are perfect for a picnic where visitors can top it off with gelato from Zio Matto at Food Truck Fridays.”

Meanwhile, at Elvis Presley’s Graceland, David Beckwith says, “Graceland officially kicks off the summer with the All-American 4th of July Weekend. The two-day event will include concerts, parties, a barbecue, a gospel brunch, special tours, and more, all capped off with an Elvis-themed fireworks spectacular.”

That’s just the tip of the hunka, hunka iceberg, though. The “Inside the Walt Disney Archives” exhibition, which opens July 23rd, celebrates the legacy of the Walt Disney Company archives, with behind-the-scenes access never before granted to the public. Currently open is the “King of Karate” exhibit. Included in the pop-up exhibit’s collection will be Presley’s personal karate gis, his seventh- and eighth-degree black belt certificates, and the original handwritten script for his 1974 karate documentary, The New Gladiators.

Stax Museum would like to share its “Solid Gold Soul” with you. (Photo: Jesse Davis)

Finally, at Stax, they’re celebrating their archives with “Solid Gold Soul: The Best of the Rest from the Stax Museum,” which opens Friday, July 16th. “‘Solid Gold Soul’ showcases the museum staff’s favorite objects that are not part of the permanent exhibits and, with the exception of Isaac Hayes’ office desk and chair, all items are on display for the first time,” says Stax’s Jeff Kollath. “Highlights include rare photographs of the Bar-Kays, Otis Redding, and Isaac Hayes; stage costumes worn by members of Funkadelic and the TSU Toronadoes; and rare vinyl records and photographs from the recently acquired Bob Abrahamian Collection.”

Of course, there are more Memphis museums to explore. The views from the Metal Museum’s bluffs are worth the trip, and every Memphian needs to visit the National Civil Rights Museum — preferably more than once. The Withers Collection Museum & Gallery on Beale is a personal favorite, and its deceptively small size in square footage is no hindrance to the breadth of Memphis life on view, as captured by the lens of photographer Ernest Withers. Whether it’s culture, history, science, or just powerful air-conditioning you seek, Memphis’ museums make for some special summer fun. — Jesse Davis

Paddle away from your responsibilities this summer. (Photo: Bruce VanWyngarden)

Paddle Your Cares Away

For this former Boy Scout, summer means it’s paddling season. While crafts like kayaks, canoes, or stand-up paddle boards take a bit of skill to keep under control, it’s not a steep learning curve, and the rewards are enormous, including the sublime quiet of such boating: All you hear is the dip of your paddle in the water and whatever the environment offers.

The environment can be spectacular if you make the short trip out to the Ghost River, a section of the Wolf River. Unlike parts of the Wolf in and around Memphis, the Ghost River section to the east has not been dredged and is dominated by cypress trees rising solemnly out of the unhurried flow, complemented with abundant wildlife, flowers, and grasses.

As Mark Babb, co-founder of Ghost River Rentals (ghostriverrentals.com), puts it, “Thanks to the efforts of the Wolf River Conservancy and others in the late ’80s, there is no erosion. It’s a Class 1 river, with a mild current. But we won’t go down the river with a chain saw and clear out the vegetation to make it an easy trip. We want to keep it natural. And when these trees fall across the river, they help to restrict the flow to prevent the erosion so it doesn’t become channelized or become a steep-banked river, like you see in other sections.”

As a result, Babb’s boat rental service recommends having at least one experienced paddler per boat. “A paddler needs to know how to steer a boat,” he says, “how to re-right their boat, how to avoid the tree limbs, how to portage over and around the downed trees.” Or one can spring for a guide to lead a group through the area.

Another option is to stick closer to the city. “When it comes to inexperienced paddlers, we recommend Kayak Memphis Tours (kayakmemphistours.com), which my son started. They offer canoeing and kayaking on the Memphis harbor and at Shelby Farms, including full moon floats every month, and July Fourth fireworks viewing out on the harbor.” — Alex Greene

Order a Wedding Cake Supreme for a summertime dream at Jerry’s. (Photo: Michael Donahue)

Cool off at Jerry’s

With apologies to Mungo Jerry and his song, “In the Summertime”: In the summertime when the weather is high — you can choose from 100 flavors at Jerry’s Sno Cones.

That also goes for fall, winter, and spring. And you can get hamburgers, chicken tenders, and other food items at either of the Jerry’s locations (1657 Wells Station Road or 1601 Bonnie Lane in Cordova).

Owner David Acklin was a customer before he owned the business, which he believes opened in 1967. “I used to go there when I was a teenager,” says David whose favorite flavor was — and still is — blue raspberry.

He got to know the owners L.B. and Cordia Clifton, whose son Jerry was the namesake of the business. The Cliftons became his “replacement grandparents,” says Acklin, who was 18 when he lost his grandfather. Acklin worked at a printing company at the time, but he also worked for the Cliftons for free after he got off his other job.

Acklin eventually bought Jerry’s Sno Cones, but he continued to work at the printing company. “I used to change clothes at red lights. Take off my tie and put on my shorts. … I used to wear penny loafers. I’d pull my socks off and slide into my flip-flops.”

There would already be a line when he got there at 3:30 p.m.

Acklin remembers going outside one July. “The line went straight out around the sign and two houses down.” He asked a kid in line to count the people. “So, 220 people.”

What’s the most popular snow cone flavor? “Wedding Cake Supreme. It’s red wedding cake and it’s got vanilla ice cream running through it.” — Michael Donahue

(Photo: Fortune Vieyra / Unsplash )

Summer in the Streets

Memphis has enough parks and playgrounds and other open space to accommodate a generous amount of summer recreation. And there are things to do off-campus, as it were.

The Bluff City has historically not witnessed the street stickball or other hazardous pastimes of so much big-city urban legend elsewhere, although the city’s sidewalks still work for hopscotch, and, with proper caution and adult supervision and sufficient notice to the neighbors, a children’s game or two undoubtedly gets played in the quieter residential coves.

As it happens, the streets are literally ideal for one particular form of recreation, which also has numerous utilitarian aspects. That would be bike-riding — if performed in the numerous lanes provided and plainly marked out along the margins of city streets and roads and carried out with sufficient attention to the rules of safety, particularly the wearing of helmets. Memphis has a variety of clubs for cyclists, and these groups generally provide for training and both spontaneous and carefully structured events.

As it happens, the simple act of walking and, with special care for fellow pedestrians, running are the most basic, easiest, and least expensive of street pastimes. Here, too, the largely common-sense rules of safety, such as attention to crosswalks and traffic lights, is called for.

Luckily, the Memphis Runners Track Club and other groups organize races and fun runs during the warm-weather months, and these, in cooperation with city government, take place along pre-planned and sectioned-off routes. The charge, when there is one, is nominal.

The often-overlooked Mud Island Riverwalk is technically not a street attraction, but it is outdoors, free of charge, and — in the oft-abused phrase — educational with its evocation of the city’s larger landscape, with enough DIY potential to appeal to the liberated spirit.

And, as veterans remember about the Jakob Dylan street concert of some 20 years ago, a serendipity stemming from a Beale Street opening, once in a while we have the good fortune of some free music. Maybe we’ll get lucky again. — Jackson Baker

Coach Rob Snowberger

Swim!

“It’s hot, and you need a pool!”

That’s how the classic Memphis commercial for Watson’s announced the beginning of summer. When the thermometer creeps upward, nothing is better than splashing in a pool or diving into a lake. But first, you should learn to swim, says Rob Snowberger.

As a swim coach for 50 years and the owner of Coach Rob’s Pool School, Snowberger has taught tens of thousands of Memphians to swim. “Drowning is the second-largest cause of accidental death, after car accidents,” he says. “It is the leading cause of death among preschool children. Below 3,000 deaths is considered a ‘good year.’ Seventy percent of those preschooler deaths take place in the backyard pool, which is the focus of our swim school — trying to avoid that catastrophe.”

Snowberger says it’s never too late to learn to swim — his oldest beginning student ever was 72. Children as young as 18 months can start learning, but the coach says most kids don’t develop the physical coordination needed until about age 3. “Swimming is a very complex feat. You’re kicking your legs, moving your arms, controlling your breathing. You’re turning your head in sequence with your arms. Dribbling a basketball is an easy skill, compared to all those things.”

Is it okay to jump in Memphis’ most famous body of water, the Mississippi River? “Oh, hell no!” says Snowberger.

Swimming in swiftly moving water is extremely dangerous. The Mississippi might look lazy on the surface, but that hides some of the strongest currents in the world. With those currents come all the debris that washed into the river as it traveled from Minnesota to Memphis. Swimmers run the risk of being struck by debris or pulled under by those currents.

Luckily, there are plenty of places to get wet, from public pools to backyard splashes to lakes. Snowberger says if you have small children, avoid the inflatable arm floaties and invest in a good life jacket with a strap between the legs.

And have fun! After all, it’s hot out. — Chris McCoy

Categories
News News Feature

Trust the Process: Don’t Let FOMO Dictate Your Investments

One of the most frustrating things about investing can be FOMO — fear of missing out. Most new investors pick their positions by looking at the highest returns in previous periods and buying whatever did the best. Then they engage in an unfortunate game of leapfrog, getting drawn in by the next hot investment after it’s already gone up.

This outcome-oriented thinking not only produces poor returns; it’s also extremely discouraging. It’s the reason that after a setback, investors often start thinking about the markets as an unreliable casino and hang onto their cash, to their long-term detriment.

In a way, capital markets are a casino — but the rare one that is in your favor in the long run. Nobody can guess what will happen this month or year, but if history is any guide, it’s hard to be worse off in the markets as the years turn into decades and the growing earning power of thriving companies begins to manifest in your account.

It’s all about your mindset. Here are three simple statements that process-oriented — and successful — long-term investors tend to believe:

1. For any set of stocks or funds, just one will perform the best over any given period, and sometimes even the best one will go down.

2. Despite statement number 1, investors should stay invested and diversified through good markets and bad, even though much or all of their portfolio will miss that one best thing. They should not chase extreme performance no matter how tempting it may be.

3. Looking backward, investors shouldn’t regret number 2, even if they had a good guess about what would do best or if they see questionable choices of irresponsible investors rewarded with huge windfall profits.

While it’s difficult not to wish for a windfall, here are a few ideas that might help you avoid short-term regret once you’ve made the correct long-term choices:

1. Understand that the market outcome for a given period is just one of countless ways things could have turned out. A more conservative allocation might annoy you when everything is going up, but when things go wrong it can be a lifesaver. You never know, in advance, what will go wrong in the economy (COVID-19 anyone?).

2. To jump in and out of speculative bets successfully, you have to nail the timing perfectly, twice. You have to get in near the bottom and get back out at or near the top. Getting either decision right is hard. Getting both right is almost impossible. No matter what they say, your friends or people you read on the internet are not consistently successful at this in the long-term.

3. The kinds of investments that are likely to double or triple in a short time are also usually the kind that can go to zero very quickly. Believe it or not, if you can just average 20 percent returns a year, in the long run you will be one of the best investors in the world. There’s no reason to swing for the fences all the time.

4. Your investments are irreplaceable once you reach a certain career stage and age. A 20-year-old could lose their life savings on a speculative stock and make the money back in a matter of months. A 60-year-old looking at retirement would dramatically impair their lifestyle if they lost a big chunk of their nest egg. There’s just not enough time to accumulate money and get it working in the market to ever recover past a certain point.

Most new investors think the outcome is all that matters and compare their results to the hottest stocks and benchmarks to inevitable disappointment. A process-oriented investor can be confident they made good choices before even seeing the results. A process-oriented investing mindset can help you with the most important thing — staying in the race.

Have a question or topic you’d like to see covered in this column? Contact the author at ggard@telarrayadvisors.com. Gene Gard is Co-Chief-Investment Officer at Telarray, a Memphis-based wealth management firm that helps families navigate investment, tax, estate, and retirement decisions.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Jon Hassell, Memphis-Born Avant Garde Composer, Dies at 84

On Saturday, the world lost a native son of Memphis, a trumpet player and innovator who few know of here, and even fewer associate with the Bluff City. Jon Hassell was a tireless pioneer of new sound possibilities offered by the trumpet, especially when paired with electronic processing techniques, but also a creator of cross cultural hybrid musics that defied easy categorization by genre.

Best known for partnering with composer and producer Brian Eno, he was a venturesome collaborator whose playing appears on records by Peter Gabriel, Talking Heads, Ry Cooder, David Sylvian, Ani DeFranco, Tears for Fears, and many others. Moreover, he was an innovator and solo artist in his own right who developed the concept of “Fourth World” music, based on blending global cultural traditions of sound with futuristic audio processing.

As detailed by Jared Boyd last year in The Daily Memphian, Hassell took to the horn at an early age, after inheriting an old cornet that his father had played at Georgia Tech University. After playing in the Messick High School band and taking private lessons from trombonist Jack Hale, Sr., Hassell went on to study at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York.

That was where he became more formally interested in the avant garde, especially the work of Karlheinz Stockhausen. He ultimately enrolled in Stockhausen’s Cologne Course for New Music in Germany, then returned to the U.S. and worked with minimalist composer Terry Riley, performing on the first recording of Riley’s seminal work In C in 1968. This led to his work with La Monte Young and the Indian singer Pandit Pran Nath.

And yet, in an in-depth interview with the RA Exchange podcast in 2016, Hassell retrospectively traced his interest in cross cultural sounds and electronic music to his earliest days in Memphis. As he put it:

It’s deep, there [in Memphis], for sure. There’s a question I always think about. I’m very blessed to have been born in Memphis rather than Idaho or someplace, or even Chicago. There’s a crossing. You talk about the crossing of cultures, and where does that come from? The era of segregation was still present, so I was introduced to it from that, looking across the racial divide point of view. Parked on my street might have been Johnny Cash’s beat up stretch limo, and at the same time, there was an African American guy, Henry Barnes, who was a kind of helper for my family, and very trusted, and would take my older brother and sister to school on a bike. And things like that.

I remember him taking me out to a — you know the word ‘joint’? Like a Mississippi-type place that’s made of RC Cola signs nailed together on a wooden frame? He took me out to this proto-juke joint in the outskirts of Memphis someplace, and it’s one of the big sound experiences I ever had … although I cannot … Like all I can do, speaking of, is it better to imagine or better to be? I cannot imagine what that, I can’t quite recreate it in my mind, other than to say it was probably the very earliest electronic instrument thing going on, like the very first, earliest amplifiers and guitars and things like that.

It was just so astounding to me. And as I speak about it I’m still like one of those cartoons where your head is going boiiing! Right? I’m still blown away by it. And you could spend a lifetime just trying to mine, and imagine what that was. And back to the crossing of cultures thing: I thought to myself later, after I left, you never really know your place, even if you grow up in a small town, you don’t really know what it is until you leave and you look back on it again.

Jon Hassell died at age 84 of natural causes, after suffering from ill health for over a year. His last studio album Seeing Through Sound (Pentimento Volume Two) was released in 2020.

Categories
News News Blog Politics

Bracing for Worst as Permitless Carry Law Goes Into Effect Thursday

This story is co-published with MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, a nonprofit Memphis newsroom focused on poverty, power and public policy — issues about which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. cared deeply. Find more stories like this at MLK50.com. Subscribe to their newsletter here

A new Tennessee law that allows most adults to carry a handgun without a permit could lead to more tragedies in Memphis Black communities already beleaguered by gun violence and exacerbate tensions with police, some local and state leaders said.

The law goes into effect Thursday and allows most people 21 and older to carry a handgun, openly or concealed, without a permit or training. The measure was pushed through by a Republican-controlled legislature and signed by Republican Gov. Bill Lee on April 8, despite opposition by Democrats and some law enforcement organizations and local officials.

Memphis community leaders, including Stevie Moore, fear what may come next.

“It makes me sick in the stomach to think about July 1,” said Moore, founder of Freedom From Unnecessary Negatives, a nonprofit focused on ending gun violence.

Moore was among a large group that gathered June 12 at Hamilton High School for a “Unity Walk Against Gun Violence” through South Memphis. Students, religious leaders, elected officials, and mothers with shirts commemorating their slain children called for a collective effort to end shootings in Memphis.

Now, Moore is bracing himself for the “wild, wild west,” he said.

The Rev. Melvin Watkins, pastor of Mount Vernon Baptist Church-Westwood, said the law indicates the legislature is careless and insulated from the consequences of gun violence.

“They don’t see our children, they don’t see our boys and girls, they don’t see (people getting shot) driving down I-240. They don’t see all of that,” Watkins said. “If they saw what I see, they would not be trying to pass laws to make it easier for individuals to (carry) guns without permits.”

Lee pushed the measure as a part of his “public safety agenda” and said it would make Tennessee safer, the Tennessean reported. However, local officials, including Mayor Jim Strickland and Police Chief Cerelyn “C.J.” Davis, expect the opposite. Strickland has said he thinks the change will lead to more gun violence, while Davis has said it complicates traffic stops.

The law comes as both officials are looking to tackle Memphis’ rising crime rates, which match a national uptick. New guidelines for federal COVID-19 stimulus dollars will allow the funds to be spent on public safety, including hiring new officers for MPD, Strickland announced last week.

It was the same day President Joe Biden’s administration announced a “comprehensive strategy to combat gun violence and other violent crime,” which includes allowing local governments to use American Rescue Plan Act funds in the fight. The money can be used for preventive measures, including hiring more police officers, for community violence intervention and efforts to stop the flow of illegal firearms.

The strategy does not address right-to-carry laws.

Homicides rose 30 percent in large cities last year mainly due to the social and economic stress of the pandemic, according to a study from the Council on Criminal Justice cited in the White House’s comprehensive strategy plan. In Memphis, between January and March, there were 1,576 gun-related violent incidents, which is up 30 percent over last year, according to data from the Memphis Shelby Crime Commission.

A 2018 study by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that right-to-carry laws are associated with a 13 percent to 15 percent increase in violent crime 10 years after they’re enacted.

Members of law enforcement oppose the new law, including the Tennessee Sheriffs’ Association, the Tennessee Association of Chiefs of Police and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

A representative for Shelby County Sheriff Floyd Bonner Jr. said in a statement that Bonner supports the Second Amendment but doesn’t support permitless carry because it doesn’t offer training and education before gun owners can carry their weapons.

“The current (Tennessee) handgun carry process allows for background checks and a minimum level of training or verification of training in the use of firearms,” the statement says. “It provides for training about the state’s firearm laws, and education in the correct use of firearms, such as when someone can employ the firearm to protect themselves or others.

“There is a process to obtain a license to drive an automobile, which ensures your ability to operate the vehicle and the testing of your knowledge about traffic laws. There should be similar common-sense requirements before a 21-year-old can start carrying a firearm in public.”

MEMPHIS, TN – June 12, 2021: Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich with members of the South Memphis Warriors Youth Football Organization during the 4th Unity Walk against Gun Violence at Hamilton High School. (Photo by Brad Vest for MLK50)

Fears of escalation

The law change doesn’t apply to people legally prohibited from owning a gun, including those convicted of felonies.

Republican legislators have framed the change as protecting the Second Amendment with “constitutional carry” and argue it will increase public safety.

“That’s marketing,” said Democratic state Rep. Antonio Parkinson, whose district covers parts of North Memphis. “It doesn’t matter how they frame it, it still has its consequences.”

Parkinson worries the new law could lead to an escalation in armed confrontations.

“I’m concerned that there could be more (shootings) because the access (to guns) is completely there, now. We don’t know the mental conditions of the people that are carrying. You don’t know where a person is at any moment. It doesn’t necessarily have to be that they’re mentally ill. It could be a whole host of things.”

Parkinson is also concerned that the loss of required classes for a permit could result in new gun owners misusing their weapons out of ignorance of gun laws. Additionally, while the bill supposedly expands gun liberties, Parkinson doesn’t expect Black gun owners to receive the same grace as white gun owners.

“We already know the law is not applied evenly when it comes to minority populations and others, and so I look at who will be charged and convicted in cases where people use stand your ground laws as a defense.”

The new law removes the offense of carrying a handgun without a permit but raises the penalties for other gun-related offenses. Theft of a firearm is raised from a misdemeanor to a felony under the new law and people convicted of felonies who are caught with firearms cannot be granted early release.

MEMPHIS, TN – June 12, 2021: Former interim police director James Ryall, center, during the 4th Unity Walk against Gun Violence at Hamilton High School. (Photo by Brad Vest for MLK50)

Increasing tension between citizens and police

Moore, the community leader, thinks the law will widen the trust “gap” between police officers and communities like South Memphis. Democratic state Rep. Jesse Chism agreed.

“It’s going to feed an already tense environment between police officers and citizens of color. I’m afraid one unintended consequence of this bill will be more police shootings,” Chism said.

The Memphis Police Department will adjust its training given the change, said James Ryall, who was interim director when he attended the “Unity Walk Against Gun Violence” on June 12. Usually, an officer can legally approach an armed person and ask for their permit, but after the law goes into effect, that won’t be the case, he said.

“It does create a little tension and concern,” Ryall said. “Knowledge is power, so we’re going to help educate our officers about the new law, about things they can and can’t do,” Ryall said at the walk. “It is pretty eerie for officers because we don’t have to sit here and talk about what guns can do. And when an officer approaches someone who’s armed, not having that ability to check it out, it’s going to create that ‘unknown zone’ and that’s a strong concern to our fellow officers out there.”

Moore contends the heaviest consequences of the change won’t fall on suburbs like Germantown and Collierville, rather on economically distressed communities in the “inner city.”

“They’re sitting up behind a desk, want to get reelected, and getting money from the National Rifle Association,” Moore said. “Most of them never been in South Memphis, they ain’t never been in North Memphis, ain’t been in Westwood, and won’t come because they’re afraid to come. They’ll pass (the law) because they’re in Nashville and they ain’t got to come to our community.”

Jonathan Cross, a Black gun instructor, believes the effects of the new gun law will be minimal because the existing permit standards are so low.

“People who have the permit, they haven’t really been trained; they are under the illusion that they’ve been trained,” Cross said. “What I’ve seen is that people who have permits have a very low probability of seeking additional training. They are more of a danger to themselves or a danger to society than they are defender of their own life, because they literally have not been trained.”

Cross, who spent part of his childhood in Frayser — an area that is fighting gun violence — argues a key to curbing gun violence is arming and training vulnerable communities, he said.

“I take issue with the phrase ‘gun violence.’ In my mind, there is no such thing as gun violence; there is violence. And people who are prone to commit violence, will commit violence in the face of people who do not have the ability to stop them,” Cross said.

And even with a permitting system, criminals don’t obtain guns legally, he said.

“Criminals will not go through systems to appropriately procure weapons of any kind, including firearms. But here’s what criminals will do: criminals will work their criminality with impunity in communities that have been conditioned not to be able to stop them.”

MEMPHIS, TN – June 12, 2021: Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland speaks at the start of the 4th Unity Walk against Gun Violence at Hamilton High School. (Photo by Brad Vest for MLK50)

More guns, safer community? 

Black gun ownership is climbing quickly as the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a gun retailers’ association, reports a 58.2 percent increase in ownership among Black people for 2020, the highest increase among racial demographics.

Cross argues Black gun ownership is vilified and discouraged, leaving Black communities vulnerable.

Although Watkins of Mount Vernon Baptist Church understands Cross’ position, he’s skeptical that more guns will lead to a safer community.

“I’m not saying that we shouldn’t protect ourselves. I want to address why we need to shoot and shoot back at each other in the first place,” Watkins said.

Mount Vernon has hosted a walk against gun violence through Westwood, but those steps toward awareness must be followed with economic steps toward progress, Watkins said.

A 2019 study published in the Public Library of Science medical journal shows factors like income inequality and poverty are drivers of homicide rates. Memphis’ 2019 overall poverty rate of 21.7 percent is nearly 10 percent higher than the national rate and nearly 15 percent higher for Black Memphians.

“It makes no difference if you walk against gun violence, (if) you don’t invest in those same communities, so that our young people have some productive, positive activities in the community,” Watkins said.

Moore agreed that walking isn’t enough.

“Most people at that (Unity Walk) don’t live in this community,” Moore said. “(They) walk and go back home. But the problem is still left after you go home. It’s a good camera shot; it’s good because it’s still trying to wake up the community to get involved. But after two hours, you’re gone, back to your safe environment, and we still got the problem.”

Moore invites state lawmakers to visit his community and others affected by gun violence.

“Come walk with me in the community,” Moore said. “Let’s go out in North Memphis, let’s go out in South Memphis, let’s go out in Orange Mound where the real people are dying. And if they’ve got any — any — compassion in their heart, they’ll change these laws real quick.”

County Commissioner Reginald Milton, who represents South Memphis, expressed a similar sentiment in remarks before the walk.

“They build the highways over us, so they can drive 60 to 70 miles an hour and not have to look at the poverty and despair and ignore what is happening here. We walk so they don’t forget.”

“We look at our children, we see them suffering, and they say what’s wrong with these children? … I say it’s not them. What’s the problem with our society that’s created this problem? They don’t make the guns; they don’t bring the guns to these communities; they weren’t born with these weapons,” Milton said.

“We put it in their hands and we tell them this is the only way you can make it. Then we blame them for their failures.”


Carrington J. Tatum is a corps member with Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms. Email him at carrington.tatum@mlk50.com

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News Blog News Feature Uncategorized

Feet Billboards Protected by First Amendment

The foot looks diseased, glossy in brown-black, and rot has taken the smallest toe, replacing it with a black mass of corrupted flesh. 

This is not a line from a zombie horror novel. It’s a description of a foot on a billboard that rises over Union Avenue, one that has greeted commuters, tourists, and more for ages. It’s hard to miss, hundreds of feet in the air, and it looks to be the size of a Honda Civic.  

The billboard and others like them have grossed out many Memphians. Some have wondered what would have to be done for them to come down. But billboard content — even those diseased feet — is protected by the First Amendment. Tennessee had to shift its existing billboard law just last year to comply with a free-expression ruling from a federal court that was years in the making and started in Memphis.  

The feet and the public

By some accounts the Union Avenue foot isn’t the worst one. A different foot on other billboards around Memphis barely seems human. It’s smaller and its dried, bark-colored skin seems mummified, leaving some to mistake it for a tree branch. Several toes are missing amid masses of yellow scabs. 

“Don’t let this happen to you,” read the billboards from the Vascular and Vein Institutes of the South.

As long as these billboards have been up, Memphians have complained about them online. 

“2020 is awful enough,” Hannah Zaleski wrote in a Facebook post in October. “Can someone PLEASE take down the vascular rotten feet billboards around Memphis?”

Replies to the post said the billboards are “so gross!” and “I legit hateeeee them,” and “I get so vomity in the back of my throat EVERY. TIME.”

Earlier this year, Reddit user Burythepezz posted this:

Reactions there were: “I have to see this every morning on the way to work. WHY?” and “I’m still 90 percent sure that’s a mummy foot,” and “I just moved here. I actually gagged when I saw it.” Medical professionals weighed in, too, explaining that “diabetes is a killer” and “I get patients with elephant feet ALL THE DAMN TIME.” 

”They aren’t old people usually, they have their own kind of funky feet,” wrote Reddit user superpony123, who identified as a registered nurse. “But this shit right here is so, so common with very obese people who get hard, scaly skin on their shins and feet. It’s common with people who have bad peripheral vascular disease, which is caused by high blood pressure and/or diabetes but usually people have both down here.”

No official explanation of the disease or the strategy behind posting the feet on billboards was given. No one from the Vascular and Vein Institute of the South responded to a call for comment on this story. The clinic has six Mid-South locations scattered from Millington to Oxford, Mississippi. No one from Lamar Advertising, the billboard’s owner, responded either.   

Some online wondered how the billboards could be changed and who controls the content of billboards in Memphis. According to Dan Springer, Deputy Chief Operating Officer for the city of Memphis, no one in the city controls it.

“Our sign code does not regulate content, per United States Supreme Court precedent,” Springer said in a statement. “Signage is protected free speech under the First Amendment of the Constitution.

Our sign code does not regulate content, per United States Supreme Court precedent.

Dan Springer, Deputy Chief Operating Officer for the city of Memphis

“Content-related sign regulations are subject to ‘strict scrutiny,’ meaning they must be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental [or public] interest. This is a very high bar; the United States Supreme Court almost always strikes down content-related regulations for failing to sustain a strict scrutiny analysis.”

(Credit: State of Tennessee) Shawn Bible, manager of the TDOT’s Beautification Office

The state does not control billboard content either, said Shawn Bible, manager of the Tennessee Department of Transportation’s (TDOT’s) Beautification Office. Her office controls the number of billboards on some state routes and on interstates, their spacing, and their size. Much of that, she said, comes down to beautification efforts and promoting un-distracted driving. 

Bible’s office handles billboard complaints, especially after a new law passed in 2020. But she said, “I’ve been here 17 years and I have not had any complaints about billboard content. We haven’t had any naked ladies, or, you know …”

I’ve been here 17 years and I have not had any complaints about billboard content.

Shawn Bible, TDOT’s Beautification Office

One caller, though, complained about a sign that suggested “certain government officials were corrupt.” Another time, her office got a call from a minister who was traveling with his grandson and saw a billboard with graffiti that made the sign “say a bad word,” Bible said. They contacted the company and corrected it. 

But as far as a Memphian calling up about a billboard with a rotting foot, that’s not really what Bible’s office does, yet. Even if they did, it would be doubtful that any state agent could control billboard content. Tennessee — especially Memphis — was at the center of a lawsuit focused on this issue watched by industry professionals, First Amendment advocates, government officials, and politicians alike.  

Memphis at the center of Tennessee billboard fight

William Harold Thomas Jr., a billboard owner, began fighting Tennessee’s billboard laws in federal court in 2013. The suit revolved around whether or not he needed a permit to erect a billboard on a vacant lot he owned. 

Arguments swirled around Tennessee’s law regulating billboards. It had different rules for billboards located on the place the activity or property advertised. It had different rules for billboards with commercial messages, like advertising, and noncommercial messages, like a Bible verse. All of those arguments, though, boiled down to one thing: Did the rules restrict free speech?

State attorneys argued in a federal appeals court that the law sought to serve public interests for traffic safety and for protecting the constitutional rights of the property owner, according to information from Middle Tennessee State University’s Free Speech Center. 

Germane to the Memphis foot billboards, though, the state attorneys also argued that the law served public interests in protecting public aesthetics. However, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said, “public aesthetics was not a compelling governmental interest,” according to the Free Speech Center. Neither were the other augments, the court said. 

In 2017, the court ruled Tennessee’s billboard law was unconstitutional. Writing for the three-judge panel, Judge Alice Batchelder said in enforcing sign laws, “there is no way to make these decisions without understanding the content of the message.”

The 2020 Fix

Last year, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee signed legislation passed by the Tennessee General Assembly to fix state law around the court ruling. It came with a host of new definitions for billboards and was applauded by industry leaders for offering new certainty and stability in the Tennessee billboard business.  

The new law adds a billboard complaint process. But Bible said TDOT’s Beautification Office doesn’t yet know what that will look like. 

“We’re working on new rules and regulations … to figure out how to have that complaint process,” Bible said. “So, we haven’t not worked out the complaint process. 

“I have to say, we have not gotten any complaints. If we had, I’d remember and I’d tell you anyway. But we haven’t been keeping a formalized list because we haven’t worked out how to do it.”

Bible said she’s waiting for word on details about the complaint process from the legislature and the billboard industry.   

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We Saw You

We Saw You: This Party Went to the Dogs

Sir Meatball was the guest of honor at a birthday party. He was naked — except for a hat — during the party. And he spent a lot of time walking in and out of a plastic swimming pool with other guests, who also were in the nude.

Meatball is an English bulldog. The other guests were dogs of various breeds, who attended his birthday party on June 27th at Loflin Yard.

This isn’t just any old English bulldog. Meatball, who belongs to Mary Lauren and Michael Stewart, is a celebrity.

“He’s very popular on Instagram,”  Mary Lauren says. “He has over 15,000 followers.”

Meatball doesn’t always just wear his birthday suit. “I got Meatball my last year of law school. And I just kind of, for fun, started dressing him up and taking pictures. I realized I could dress him up in whatever and put a wig on him and anything I could and he’d just sit there for the picture. And the Instagrams kind of took off from there.”

Michael and Mary Lauren Stewart with Sir Meatball and Milkshake. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

 The Stewarts hold a party for Sir Meatball, who they bought from a breeder in Bolivar, Tennessee, every year.

About 30 dogs attended this year’s event. “We usually just invite our friends and their dogs. But this time we kind of talked with Loflin about having dogs off leash in the backyard. And we kind of opened it up to anyone who wanted to come.”

Sir Meatball’s birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sir Meatball’s birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sir Meatball’s birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sir Meatball’s birthday party Credit: Michael Donahue
Sir Meatball’s birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Dog birthday cakes graced the table. “We had three cakes from Hollywood Feed. They have the Hollywood Feed Fresh Bakery in Memphis. And I’ve really become friends with the bakery manager. I’ll send her what I’m thinking and she’s able to make my cake dream come true.”

One of the cakes was shaped like a beer mug. “It was his third birthday. He’s 21 in dog years.”

They also served dog beer, Mary Lauren says. “One of them was a Busch dog beer. The other brand was Good Boy dog beer. They’re made from bone broths. But it’s like a beer.”

A lavish spread for Sir Meatball. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Activities included “tennis balls and stuff for the dogs to play with. And we had the kiddie pools and bubbles going. A bubble machine.”

Sir Meatball’s birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sir Meatball’s birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The Stewarts also own another English bull dog, Milkshake, who attended the party. “He is a year and a half younger than Meatball. He had his first birthday in December and we had it at Loflin Yard.”

Milkshake is a “wild child,” so they had a wild child-themed party.  “He’s very spunky and has a lot of energy. They share the Instagram. I post pictures of both of them. They do a lot of shenanigans together. but they love to snuggle with each other and have fun.”

Any fights between unruly guests during the party? “There were a few agitators, but, for the most part, it was a fun, friendly event.”

Sir Meatball’s birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

As a special treat, Sir Meatball and Milkshake spent the night at The Peabody. They shared a room with the Stewarts.

Chilling at The Peabody. (Credit: Mary Lauren Stewart)
We Saw You
Categories
Food & Drink News News Blog

Memphis Ranked 5th-Best BBQ City by Lawn Mowing Company


When it’s a slow news day, survey rankings like this one sometimes get a little attention — and a little attention is about what this survey deserves. LawnStarter, a landscaping and pest-control company has a hard-working PR department that is constantly creating clickbait surveys and rankings, i.e. 2021’s Best Cities for Your Summer Vaxcation; 2021’s Best Cities for Single Dads; 2021’s Best Cities to Get (and Stay) Married; 2021’s Best Cities for LGBTQ Singles; 2021’s Horniest Cities in America; 2021’s Best Biking Cities in America, etc. You get the idea.

This week, they did 2021’s Best BBQ Cities in America, and, well, as you may have guessed from the headline above, they did Memphis wrong, ranking the Bluff City fifth-best in the country, just behind that legendary barbecue mecca, Cincinnati.

C’mon Lawnstarter. You don’t see us out here ranking lawn mowers and weed eaters. We know what we’re good at and we know what we know better than any other place in America — and that’s barbecue (and yes, real barbecue cities spell it out). And what is this absurd ranking of Memphis as number 40 in “quality”? FORTIETH? Get outta heah with this mess.

According to LawnStarter, the real hub of great “BBQ” is “the Midwest.” Puh-leeze. Here’s how the grassy know-it-alls address the criminal assault on America’s true greatest barbecue city: “Kansas City: The BBQ Capital of America. Sorry, Memphis. Kansas City tops our list of the Best BBQ Cities. With far more winners in the World Series of Barbecue contests and the second-highest number of national excellence awards, the Heart of America is a powerhouse for quality brisket and burnt ends.” 

Read it all here, if you’re having a slow day and need an irritant.

Categories
We Saw You

We Saw You: Trolley Night is Back

Hunter Raines sums up the return to Trolley Night after a 19-month absence: “Glad to see crowded sidewalks again.” 

Raines and his wife, Sophie, were among the throng of people who attended the South Main Association event on Friday, June 25th.

Joviality was everywhere on a perfect weather-wise evening for the tour, which drew “at least 1,000 people,” estimates South Main Association president Eric Bourgeois. “It’s tough to put a number on it,” he says, adding, “It’s so strung out. In reality it starts around 5 and ends at 9 p.m. But for some people it ends at 1 a.m. There’s no set start and finish to Trolley Night. It’s whatever you make of your night.

“Trolley Night had something for everyone, whether you were enjoying live music at Slider Inn or shopping at Stock & Belle, or dancing the night night away, Soul Burger in hand, at Earnestine & Hazel’s at 2 a.m.”

Jessica Montesi, Montie Doss, and Erika Montesi were at Trolley Night (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The route is “loosely defined to allow for inclusion, especially on Trolley Night, when it’s all about supporting the neighborhood businesses. But it’s essentially from Martin Luther King north from Crump and west from B. B. King.

“In years past there was always kind of a mental stop at the G. E. Patterson area and Central Street Station. That long half mile stretch on to the next stop.”

This year, Ghost River Brewing Co., which is at Main Street and Crump Boulevard, was included. “They wanted to figure out how to have more representation on Trolley Night. So, the South Main Association coordinated with MATA for the first time to extend the trolley bus route all the way to include Ghost River at the South end of Main Street.”

(Credit: Michael Donahue)
(Credit: Michael Donahue)
(Credit: Michael Donahue)

More than 50 businesses take part in Trolley Night, Bourgeois says. “You had a combination of art gallery showings, live music at multiple locations, and you had different food and drink specials deals. And, thanks to the newly-implemented to-go alcohol rules, people were able to grab a cocktail and continue their stroll up and down South Main.”

It’s amazing to think that it’s been more than a year and a half since the last Trolley Night. “We didn’t have an official South Main sanctioned Trolley Night in all of 2020. We’re officially back.”

(Credit: Michael Donahue)
(Credit: Michael Donahue)
(Credit: Michael Donahue)
(Credit: Michael Donahue)

And, Bourgeois says, “We were able to reintroduce our South Main Association member lounge. That had the most attendees we ever had. Between Primas Bakery (+ Boutique) and the Trek bike shop.”

The South Main Association member’s lounge was the place to be on Trolley Night. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

This year’s event was “just a huge smashing return to the Trolley Nights of old. And it set the standard for the last Friday of the month to come.”

Mark your calendars. The next Trolley Night is July 30th.

(Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: Swimware

Music Video Monday is lost is cyberspace!

Swimware are an instrumental band consisting of Jake Vest, Greg Faison, and Alex Pilkington. You might be familiar with them from some of their previous work with Tiger High, The Bulletproof Vests, Dream Team, and as collaborators with the late Clay Otis. The friends have always been musical chameleons, and this iteration sees them exploring the synth-heavy sounds of the ’80s.

MVM is bringing you a double-shot of Swimwear with two super-fun videos by the band and versatile Memphis artist St. Francis Elevator Ride. The first is called “Dial Up,” which, for the youngs out there, is how we used to get our interwebs on. Creating this high-flying video involved “Two solid months of rotoscoping out the flight cables and harnesses,” says St. Francis Elevator Ride. “It has a bit of a modern day Three Stooges / Duck Soup thing going on.”

Second is a clip for “The Net 2.0.” “Yup that’a a direct reference to the Sandra Bullock, Carl Reiner adored, cyberterrorist classic,” says St. Francis Elevator Ride. Log on now!

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

Categories
Music Music Blog

Blast Habit Records Lifts Off This Saturday

Memphis has long been a city of independent record labels, and now a new contender is throwing its hat in the ring — or on the turntable, as the case may be. Blast Habit Records is the new project being launched by local musical scene makers Jared McStay (Shangri-La Records), his wife Lori McStay, and Graham Winchester. Tomorrow, they’ll hold court at Bar DKDC to celebrate this new chapter in Memphis music history.

Given the prolific and diverse musical output of all three, together and separately, the prospect of a label providing a platform for them is a promising one. I asked Jared McStay about the beginnings of Blast Habit recently, and he clued me in to what’s in store.

Memphis Flyer: You and Lori have been great collaborators around town for years now, forming ad hoc bands with other musicians, and generally following the path of fun. Is the new label an extension of that?

Jared McStay: A couple of years ago, I started a band called So Gung Ho with Graham Winchester and Seth Moody, and we did a whole record in 2019 with Andrew McCalla. We were going to put it out last year, and then the pandemic hit. But the record was finished, and I really liked the way it turned out. So, talking with Graham about wanting to put this record out, and not wanting to shop it around, we decided,’ Let’s just do our own label.’ And Lori is part of the label, too. I’m kind of a package deal with her these days [laughs]. The radio show, the label, married.

Seth Moody is also in So Gung Ho. Is he involved in Blast Habit?

Just the three of us. It’s me and Lori and Graham. The Moody’s [Seth and Coco] are going to be on the label, but they’re so tied up with other stuff. And it’s such a small thing right now, three people seemed like plenty. But we’re going to do a record with the Moody McStays, the group Lori and I have with the Moodys, and there are a few others we have in the pipeline. We all have other projects. Graham obviously has quite a few.

So Gung Ho (Credit: Lori McStay)

Blast Habit. What’s it mean? “Blast” sounds like a cyberpunk intoxicant or something.

Well, we fooled around, trying to think of a good name, and came up with Blast Habit. Like, “making a habit of having a blast,” I guess.

It grew out of So Hung Ho, but you plan to feature other artists?

It did, and hopefully there’s going to be more. Not just more people that sound like we sound, but diverse. And we’re going to focus on our own act at first, but then we’re hoping to branch out in Memphis, and then everywhere. I’ve had a lot of out of town people call me who are interested. So it’s kind of exciting. We’ve never done this. And Graham is so fun to work with. He’s so gung ho!

All of you are very prolific. Will you release some of Graham’s solo stuff?

I think we probably will do something or other. But Graham has so much stuff, and his group with Seth, the Turnstyles, are on Black & Wyatt Records. So he has other avenues.

We’re having a big party for it at Bar DKDC at 10 p.m. on Saturday. The Moody McStays and So Gung Ho are going to play, and we had t-shirts made up. And hopefully the So Gung Ho record will be out soon. Lori did all the artwork. She’s great with computers and formatted the cover. I’m excited about it!

Will Blast Habit mainly be focused on vinyl?

Yeah. Probably all the releases will be on vinyl. We might put some CDs out, but I kinda doubt it. I don’t know. Maybe if we sell out all the vinyl. But nobody’s figuring we’ll get rich from this or anything. We just want people to hear it, and what better way than to just bet on yourself?