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Sports Tiger Blue

UTSA Ends Tigers’ Win Streak at the Liberty Bowl

Let’s go ahead and say it. There was too much Sincerity at the Liberty Bowl Saturday afternoon. UTSA’s junior tailback, Sincere McCormick, carried the football 42 times for 184 yards and three touchdowns to help the Roadrunners upset the Memphis Tigers and end the home team’s 17-game winning streak at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. When Hunter Duplessis split the uprights on a 42-yard field goal as time expired, the Roadrunners stormed the field, road victors (31-28) in this stadium for the first time since UCF on October 13, 2018.

The Tigers took a 21-0 lead in the first quarter, knocking the country’s 10th-ranked defense on its heels, particularly on a 60-yard scoring strike from Memphis quarterback Seth Henigan to Calvin Austin III. The Tigers led 28-14 entering the fourth quarter, but a pair of lost fumbles — one by Henigan and another by Tiger running back Brandon Thomas — proved decisive. The first misplay set up UTSA for McCormick’s third touchdown, and the second ended a Tiger drive in Roadrunner territory when a score could have secured a fourth win Memphis. Instead, the Tigers fall to 3-1 for the season while UTSA of Conference USA improves to 4-0.

“I’m glad [our players] are angry,” said Memphis coach Ryan Silverfield after the game. “I’m glad they’re pissed off. We have to put our hard hats on and get back to work. One game doesn’t define us, but this wasn’t our best effort. We know what’s ahead of us. We’ve got to be ready.”

What can be gleaned from such a heartbreaking end to that program-record winning streak? Foremost, every opponent remains a threat for Memphis. A week after their big win over Mississippi State and a week before traveling to Temple for their American Athletic Conference opener, the Tigers fell in a classic “trap game.” But for UTSA, a fourth win — and in Memphis, no less — would get them closer to the kind of national attention few C-USA teams enjoy. A motivated opponent is dangerous. The Tigers found this out on a warm, late-September afternoon on their home turf.

Then there are the shortcomings on offense. Memphis gained only 78 yards on the ground, part of the reason UTSA dominated possession time (35:42). Deep strikes to Austin and tight end Sean Dykes (six receptions for 167 yards) got the crowd (29,264) to its feet, but an inability to sustain a lengthy drive or two cost the Tigers at game’s end.

Then finally, those turnovers. Henigan was again interception-free (completing 15 of 25 passes for 329 yards), but that fumble inside the Tigers’ 10-yard line in the fourth quarter . . . it was a killer.

“They out-executed us,” emphasized Silverfield. “It’s as simple as that. We didn’t play clean football. [Memphis committed seven penalties.] They were able to establish their running game. There’s a lot to clean up.”

The Tigers travel to Philadelphia to play Temple next Saturday and will only have one home game (against Navy on October 14th) the next six weeks. A road trip to Tulsa awaits. A visit to, gulp, UCF is on the horizon. The silver lining in a loss is learning one’s flaws, and knowing they need to be addressed before another winning streak can be started.

Memphis remains undefeated in conference play. Of course, by that standard, the Tigers are also winless. As the calendar soon turns to October, a football team aims to start anew, with the goal of transforming weaknesses into strengths. The kind of task requiring collective devotion and, yes, sincerity.

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Music Music Blog

Gonerfest 18: Friday

“I feel like tonight, we’re all Henry Rollins,” said MC Joel Parsons from the stage on Friday night of Gonerfest 18. 

Rollins, the legendary Black Flag frontman, was scheduled to travel to Memphis to be the MC for the show, but canceled because of Covid’s Delta wave. So Parsons, his replacement, simply claimed to be the punk icon all night. The pandemic hovered over the event, which was 100 percent virtual last year, but moved to Railgarten for a vax-only, hybrid event this year.

Joel Parsons

Masking compliance was generally very good in the crowd, which swelled steadily as afternoon aged into evening, except when they were drinking Gonerbrau, the Memphis Made craft beer brewed specially for the fest. (“Chuggable!” brags the official program.) 

Total Hell

The festival’s move to the open-air Railgarten has definitely changed the vibe. Gonerfest is usually something that happens late at night, hidden in cramped clubs, defiantly underground. But these are times that call for change. Goner Records’ Zac Ives said he and co-owner Eric Friedl were skeptical at first, “… but we got in, started looking around, and thinking about our crowd here, and thought, ‘This can work.’” 

Thursday night had started off tentatively, but it ended up being a rousing success. I spent most of Thursday with a camera in my hand as a part of the newly minted Goner Stream Team. The live-stream, under the direction of Geoffrey Brent Shrewsbury, is bringing  the music to the far-flung masses with an ingenious kluge of 20-year-old Sony Handycams, analog hand switchers, and a cluster of mixing boards and dangerously overheating laptops. Gonerfest was actually a pioneer of online streaming, but this year, with the international bands from Australia, Japan, and Europe kept at bay by the pandemic, it’s more important than ever. 

Miss Pussycat and Model Zero’s Frank McLallen.

By the time Model Zero took the stage on Friday afternoon, it was clear Ives was right. The crowd had adapted to the space, which Parsons joked was a “beach volleyball and trash-themed bar.” Model Zero locked into their dance punk groove instantly, and got the afternoon crowd moving with their cover of Buffalo Springfield’s “Mister Soul” and their banging original “Modern Life.” 

Total Hell ably represented the New Orleans trash-metal contingent that has been a Gonerfest staple for years. Nashville’s Kings of the Fucking Sea started their set off by providing noise accompaniment to Memphis’ Sheree Renée Thomas, poet laureate of the New Weird South, before heading off into a set of Can-infused psych jams. 

Nick Allison

Usually there’s several hours after the afternoon sets to change venues, but noise ordinances have forced this outdoor Gonerfest to start and end earlier, so afternoon spilled into evening as Austinite singer/songwriter Nick Allison took the stage with a set that was, dare I say it, kinda Springsteen-y. 

Optic Sink

Another sign that Gonerfest’s audience’s taste has broadened from the old days of all caveman beats, all the time, is Optic Sink. NOTS Natalie Hoffman and Magic Kids’ Ben Bauermeister’s electronic project never sounded better, with the big sound system bringing out their nuances. They, too, debuted a new song that embraced their inner Kraftwerk. 

Sick Thoughts

Gonerfest frequent flyer Drew Owens returned with his long-running project Sick Thoughts. Their set was loud, offensive, and confrontational, and sent beer cans flying across the venue. As Ben Rednour, who was working the Stream Team camera at the edge of the stage, said afterward “When they started sword fighting with mic stands, I knew it was anything goes.” 

Violet Archaea

The Archeas’ album  has been a big pandemic discovery for me, and the Louisville band’s Gonerfest debut was hotly anticipated. Violent Archaea was the charismatic center of attention as the band ripped through a ragged set that reminded us all of why we like this music in the first place. 

Sweeping Promises

The greenest band on the bill was Sweeping Promises. Arkansans Lira Mondal and Caufield Schung have gone from Boston to Austin recording their debut album Hunger for a Way Out, but they haven’t played out much. “I think this is like their fourth show,” said Ives in the streaming control room (which was a tiki bar in the Before Time) as they set up. They’re going to get spoiled by all the attention their Gang of Four-esque, bass-driven New Wave brought from the rapt crowd. 

Reigning Sound’s Greg Cartwright duets with Marcella Simien as John Whittemore and Alex Greene rock along.

The climax of Friday night was Greg Cartwright’s Reigning Sound. After a successful return to the stage with the original Memphis lineup of Greg Roberson, Jeremy Scott, and Memphis Flyer music editor Alex Greene at Crosstown Theater earlier this summer, the “original lineup” has expanded into a Bluff City A-Team with the addition of Graham Winchester, string sisters Krista and Ellen Wroten, and multi-instrumentalist (and dentist) John Whittmore. The Crosstown show had been a careful reading of the new songs from the new album A Little More Time With Reigning Sound. This set transformed the big band into a raucous rave-up machine. (With Cartwright as band leader, set lists are more suggestions of possible futures than concrete plans for how the show will go.) Cartwright invited Marcella Simien onstage for washboard and vocals, duetting with the singer on two songs from A Little More Time, transforming the evening into something between a family reunion and a reaffirmation of Memphis music after a long, scary era. 

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Music Music Blog

Jay Farrar Brings Son Volt — and Hope — to Lafayette’s

Hearing Son Volt’s latest album, Electro Melodier (Transmit Sound/Thirty Tigers), is a cathartic experience, especially once you learn that it was written and recorded entirely under the conditions of quarantine. In a sense, Farrar, who’s always had a political edge to his lyrics, was the perfect scribe of the times, but this time around, he brings more than his trenchant eye for injustice.

The album’s mix of trepidation and optimism is still with us today, as the pandemic rages on, so it’s even more hopeful to learn that Jay Farrar, Son Volt’s founder, singer and songwriter, will bring the group’s unique blend of folk, country, blues, soul, and rock to Lafayette’s Music Room on Sunday, September 26. And to sweeten the deal, local favorite Shannon McNally will open the show with her latest, sultry-voiced take on the Waylon Jennings catalog, The Waylon Sessions.

I caught up with Farrar as he carried on with the group’s tour, and asked him about the unique experience of creating his latest work.

Memphis Flyer: I was surprised at how hopeful the new album is. It was composed in the quarantine era, so one expects the worst, but it’s surprisingly cathartic.

Jay Farrar: Yeah, the songs were written during the pandemic, so there was a lot of introspection going on. But I also wanted to focus on melodic structures, and I guess at the end of the day, it’s the same concept as singing the blues. You feel better just writing and singing these songs. So I guess there was some hope in there somewhere.

Was it a conscious move on your part to remain hopeful as you created these songs?

It gave me a singular focus, for sure, because live performance was taken off the table. So there was definitely a singular focus on these songs during the writing and recording. There were a few learning experiences along the way. We first tried recording via Zoom and different remote locations in different studios. And we did that song, “These Are the Times,” that way. But eventually we realized that some of the synergy was lost that way, so we eventually got together in the studio. Although Mark Spencer, who has his own studio in Brooklyn, added his parts from there. So there was a mixed approach to this recording. A little bit of the old, a little bit of the new.

What time during the quarantine period last year did you start the project?

Our last gig was a date in February, and I’d already done a fair amount of writing by February and March. And then we started recording in April, I think, digging deeper into recording through the summer. We had to have some heart-to-heart discussions. At that point, we didn’t know if masking up was going to be enough, you know? But we decided we had to do it together, to find that chemistry. But there was an eerie quality to it all. If you walked out onto the street, you’d wonder, “Where are all the people?”

I’m curious what you personally look to to find that optimism. Like when you say, “It’s gonna be all right, the worst will soon be over.

That’s a good question. I think I was digging deep. In a political sense, I felt like things were changing at that time. They couldn’t go on the way they had been going. And as it turned out, at least from my perspective, the ship is headed in the right direction. I guess that deep introspection makes you think about what’s important. You just have to believe that things are going to get better.

You sing about looking at our times “more in sorrow than anger,” and I think that is telling. Is grieving a way to get beyond the anger?

Yeah, I mean, we’re still in it and there are still difficult decisions to make. Getting back to live performance has been important for Son Volt. We’re out on the road with a more flexible approach. Obviously getting vaxxed and wearing masks is the right thing to do, but maybe there are situations where people can’t get the vaccines or whatever, so we just have a flexible approach.

Obviously the band name itself screams out Memphis history. What does Memphis represent to you?

The list is long! The effects of Memphis music are profound. I think five or six years ago, Son Volt played the Levitt Shell, and just seeing the list of folks who had played there, from Elvis to Big Star, and many more, was amazing. Both Elvis and Big Star are huge, Charlie Rich, and obviously Sun Studio. I even took my kids there. They had zero interest when we went in, and a lot of interest when we walked out. [laughs] So that speaks to the power of Memphis music right there. And certainly I’d been into other really melodic bands, like Badfinger and the Beatles, before I discovered Big Star, but Big Star is someone I turn to for inspiration now, more than those other bands at this point. It’s a perennial favorite.

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Music Music Blog

Gonerfest 18: Thursday

It was all a bit dream-like, filtering into the Railgarten compound on a bright, balmy afternoon, seeing many friends for the first time since lockdown, faces half-covered as if convening some mad masquerade ball. Later that night, Miss Pussycat would proclaim “This is so weird!” from the stage, as she gazed out at the crowd, and she spoke for all of us. And yet, it was reassuringly familiar as well.

Many had begun their day to the sounds of DJ Matt Uhlman, co-founder of the Royal Pendletons and New Orleans’ Mod Dance Party events, who had set up shop at the Central Station Hotel. That veritable temple of vinyl was an apt setting for folks to receive their complimentary Gonerfest 18 EP, featuring tracks from Reigning Sound, Aquarian Blood, Archaeas and Silver Synthetic.

Gonerfest 18 EP (photo by Alex Greene)

As the beginnings of a crowd gathered at Railgarten and the opening ceremonies marked the festival’s start, Alicja Trout assembled the Alicja Pop band for a quick line check and Boom!, it was on.

Alicja Pop (photo by Chris McCoy)

The first surprise of the day was the guitar-heavy sound of this new Alicja Pop iteration, with Andrew Geraci on bass, Lori McStay on drums and Jared McStay on guitar. Trout stuck to guitar as well, leading the band through a batch of songs sans keyboards. The heavier vibes were more reminiscent of past Trout projects like River City Tanlines or even the Lost Sounds. Quite an appropriate start to Gonerfest.

DJ Jared Boydy’s interlude music during band tear down and set up set a seriously funky, Stax-y mood that played like a grand welcome to Memphis for all weary travelers. The next act, Rocket 808, was a unique palette cleanser, John Schooley III’s solo wailing guitar and vocals over classic drum machine beats. As the Goner guide puts it, “Link Wray meets Suicide madness,” from an artist whose record was Goner’s sixth release way back in 1996.

Next was Smirk from San Francisco, who took the evening up a notch with propulsive beats and restless guitar interplay cut with intriguing vocals, akin to the more rock ‘n’ roll side of the Fall, yet more singable. “Very drinkable,” as Goner co-owner Eric Friedl quipped about the dedicated Gonerbrau by Memphis Made, a “chuggable ale” that was quaffing thirst right and left. It paired well with the convivial-yet-cautious mood that prevailed as the crowd filled out and evening descended.

Throughout the proceedings, nimble-footed elves armed with Sony Handycams flitted on the perimeters of all the action, capturing every move for the well-coordinated live-stream, Goner’s concession to the continued need for socially distanced alternatives. A makeshift command center ensured that the best shots were compiled seamlessly into the online presentation.

The Goner “Stream Team” (photo by Chris McCoy)

Night was upon us, announced by the pounding drums of Detroit’s Human Eye, the latest project from Timmy Vulgar. The outlandish power of the drums was soon matched blow for blow by Vulgar’s guitar stylings, at times locking in with the rhythm in punk-metal riffage, then descending into more freestyle noise bursts. Listeners might have thought a boxcar behind the stage was screeching and careening off the rails, but no, that was Vulgar’s guitar, culminating with blasts of actual fireworks in the final throes of the sonic chaos.

Human Eye (photo by Laura Jean Hocking)
Human Eye (photo by Laura Jean Hocking)

And then, suddenly, the night reached its denouement, as Quintron and Miss Pussycat took the stage with their full band. Given the minimalism of past Quintron/Miss P shows, this was a revelation. A guitar and drums rhythm section augmented Quintron’s canned beats and scratchy organ, with extra freaky, funky texture brought by none other than Goner recording star BÊNNÍ, clad in chain mail, who nonchalantly manned a vocoder. A fellow dancer joined Miss Pussycat’s trademark dance moves, as did the entire audience. The danceability of this Q/P project is greater than ever, with BÊNNÍ’s vocoder either adding bassy funk figures or eerie, swamp-soaked drones. Quintron, for his part, supplemented his grinding organ with licks from a lap steel set atop his keyboard, not to mention his own vocoder in the final number, in tandem with BÊNNÍ’s.

Quintron and Miss Pussycat with full band (photo by Alex Greene)

At one point, Quintron exhorted the audience to consider his electronics. “Please don’t throw ice on the keyboards! Throw your ice at the guitarist! They don’t care what you throw at them. Throw anything on the singers, they love it. Pee on ’em if you want! Just don’t throw ice on the keyboards!”

Together, Quintron and Miss Pussycat swapped vocals, with catchy choruses like “My name is Jesus Christ, and I’m an alcoholic!”, “What do you do??”, “It’s gonna be all right!!” and “If I was you, I’d hate me too!” The audience was revved up, cheering wildly at the close of each song, and so all eyes were on Goner’s Zac Ives when he stepped up to consult with Quintron mid-set. Listening seriously to Ives, Quintron then turned to the crowd and proclaimed, “We can keep going! We didn’t even know it was a possibility that we could not keep going, but we’re just so excited now to learn that we really can keep going!”

Solo pre-puppet show music was provided by Quintron (photo by Alex Greene)

And even when they’d played their last number, they kept going. While Miss Pussycat prepped her puppets, Quintron played exquisitely lush lounge music. Then the puppet proscenium was presented, and the audience dutifully gathered around it, sitting in semi-circles on the ground like kindergartners.

The evening’s puppet show, a regular feature of Miss P’s for years, was perhaps her best yet, including finely crafted figures of a squarish werewolf and two baby maracas, who grew into a fully dressed and wigged dancing team that took the stage with aplomb. Quintron, for his part, participated in the puppetry as well, which also featured his pre-recorded incidental music.

Miss Pussycat addresses the crowd (photo by Alex Greene)

As the puppetry began, Miss Pussycat spoke warmly to the crowd gathered on the ground before her, offering heartfelt thanks. “Thank you so much! We’ve all been clamped down in New Orleans for the past year and a half,” she reflected, expressing amazement that we could be gathered at all. Indeed, it seemed a minor miracle, and all souls filtered out of the venue that night with rather dazed, happy faces, emerging from a collective dream.

Quintron, master of puppets (photo by Chris McCoy)

Visit Gonerfest.com for details on the continuing festivities today, Saturday and Sunday.

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News News Blog

Police: 15 People Shot at Collierville Kroger; Shooter was Third-Party Vendor

The gunman who killed one person and injured 14 others at a Collierville Kroger Thursday was a third-party vendor for the store, according to Collierville Police Chief Dale Lane.

Lane said at a Friday morning press conference that he would not reveal the name of the shooter at this time: “I’m not giving notoriety on this platform.”

Major David Townsend did confirm the identity of the gunman following the press conference. The shooter was 29-year-old UK Thang.

A search warrant was executed at the gunman’s home overnight and the collected evidence is still being processed, Lane said. Additionally, police are still processing the scene inside the Kroger, which Lane said will likely take place through the evening. 

Lane said he cannot reveal any more details, such as motive, as the investigation is still ongoing. 

“We’re getting a clearer picture of what occurred, but we’re not ready to release that,” Lane said. “We want to make sure that we dot the i’s and cross the t’s.”

After opening fire in the store Thursday around 1:30 p.m., the gunman was found dead on the scene from a self-inflicted gunshot, according to police. 

Ten of the victims were employees and five were customers, Lane said. All of the injured victims are in stable condition as of Friday morning. 

A Facebook post by Wes King confirmed that his mother, Olivia King was the victim killed in Thursday’s shooting. 

“Dear friends, it is with a heavy heart that I must inform you that my mother has died to her wounds. I spoke directly to the trauma surgeon,” King wrote. “She was shot directly in the chest. EMTs attempted CPR until the hospital. They tried to save her at the hospital to no avail. I apologize for the graphic details, but this type of crime needs to stop being glossed over and sanitized. No one deserves this.”

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News Blog News Feature

Covid Deaths Top 2,000

Shelby County passed a grim milestone this week as Covid deaths here ended the week at 2,021.

Sixty-one deaths were recorded during the week. Deaths from the 19-month pandemic in Shelby County were 1,960 as of Saturday.

Overall case counts continue to fall, however. The weekly average of positive Covid deaths have fallen for the last five weeks. The seven-day rolling average of new cases here fell every day this week, starting with an average of around 600 on Saturday to around 400 later in the week.

Active cases of Covid fell from week to week, also. Last week, nearly 6,000 were known to have the virus. The number fell to around 5,000 this week. Of those, 1,666 were pediatric cases.

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News Blog News Feature

FAA: Passenger “Air Rage” At Historic Levels

The skies are as unfriendly as they’ve ever been. 

This week the Federal Aviation Adminstration (FAA) reported 4,385 instances of unruly passengers on commercial flights so far this year. Of those, 3,199 were related to wearing a face mask, now required on all flights by law to curb the spread of Covid-19. However, those numbers are only ones reported to the FAA. They’re likely much higher, as it’s up to flight crews to report the incidents. 

(Credit: FAA)

On Thursday, the U.S. House Subcommittee on Aviation reviewed the issue of what government officials call “air rage.” The hearing was set to examine examine the ”alarming increase” in disruptive airline passengers, the causes of “air rage,” its effect on passenger and crew safety, and the enforcement of U.S. laws against it.

So far, the FAA has investigated 755 air rage events and brought 154 law enforcement cases against unruly passengers. The FAA can propose a fine of up to $37,000 per violation in unruly passenger cases, and an incident can involve multiple violations. 

(Credit: FAA)

In testimony Thursday, Teddy Andrews, a flight attendant and member of the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, told lawmakers one incident made him reconsider his career choice. On a flight, he approached a passenger who refused to wear a mask. 

“He looked at me, and here I will not repeat the vile epithet he used, he said, ’N*****, I don’t have to listen to a damn thing you say, this is a free country,’” Andrews said. “I was completely taken aback. I didn’t know what to say. Then he continued, ’You heard me, N***** boy.’”

“He said, ’N*****, I don’t have to listen to a damn thing you say.'”

Testimony of Teddy Andrews, flight attendant

The man eventually put his mask on, but not before Andrew reminded him that failing to comply with flight rules could restrict his ability to fly the airline in the future. 

Sara Nelson. a flight attendant and president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, AFL-CIO (AFA), said, “these numbers are staggering and if they continue at this rate may result in more incidents in 2021 than the entire history of commercial aviation.” 

A recent union survey of flight attendants found the number of incidents is likely way higher. Of the 5,000 flight attendants polled in June and July, 85 percent of them reported an incident with an unruly passenger — 58 percent of those reported at least five incidents. 

(Credit: FAA)

“Flight attendants reported facing extensive verbal abuse, including from visibly drunk passengers, passengers yelling and swearing in response to masking directions, and often aggressively challenging flight crew working to ensure compliance with federal rules,” Nelson said. “Many respondents recounted aggressive incidents, including shoving, kicking seats, throwing trash at flight crew, defiling the restroom in response to crew member instructions, and following flight crew through the airport to continue yelling and harassment.”

U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) asked Nelson if the survey results yielded any information on the demographics of unruly passengers, like race, age, or residence. Nelson did not have specifics but noted that passengers were more likely to anger over face mask rules in regions where masking policies were not consistently communicated or where there was “very clear opposition to masks.” 

“We have had a lot of incidents out of Charlotte,” Nelson said. “We’ve had a lot of incidents out of Florida airports and out of Texas. I’m not saying there aren’t incidents out of other places at all. But there are seems to be a higher concentration [in the South].”

Cohen also explored the connection between alcohol and unruly passengers. He said restaurants in the Charlotte airport will close at around 7 p.m. but the “alcohol places” will stay open until the last flight leaves. 

“Why in the hell will they not give you food but they’ll give you alcohol,” Cohen asked. 

Christopher Bidwell, senior vice president of security with Airports Council International, said he was not familiar with policies in the airport. Cohen answered his own question, guessing “it might be profit margin. It might be they don’t give a hoot. But the areas where they sell alcohol are packed and the people are fairly rowdy.”   

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Organizers of Orange Mound Revitalization Plan Seek Community Feedback

Organizers of a community-centered revitalization plan for Orange Mound are seeking resident feedback. 

The plan,  Mound Up, is a collaboration between JUICE Orange Mound and the Rhodes College Urban Studies Department that began in the spring of 2020. 

Britney Thornton, founder of JUICE, is leading the charge to create a strong resident-driven plan in order to have a say about future development in Orange Mound. 

“When people show up ready to develop, they’re not trying to wait on you to come up with your plans,” she said. “We want to be ready and in position to know what our asks are. Otherwise, we would just have to follow the lead of people who show up ready with money.” 

Thornton said the goal is to get 350 responses to the survey on the plan by the spring in order to have a finalized plan by the end of the spring. 

Thornton said the inspiration for the plan came from South Memphis’ revitalization plan, SoMe Rap. 

“They’re rallying around an actual document that they created with resident input,” Thornton said. “This isn’t something where we feel like we’re innovating. We’re just replicating and just trying to put a spin on it wherever we can to make it something uniquely signature to Orange Mound.”

Thornton said the motivation to initiate the plan came as she began to notice a shift in the market with more interest in Orange Mound properties. She feared that if there was no intervention, people in Orange Mound would be displaced. 

“We want to be ready and in position to know what our asks are.”

“So I knew we had to do something,” Thornton said. “Mound Up is a proactive approach for us to be able to be in position to show up in these conversations knowing what it is that we want and know what direction we want to go in.”

Displacement is prone to happen, Thornton said, but the goal is to prevent the culture of Orange Mound from being completely altered.

“Our whole premise is that we want to work with people to develop people,” Thornton said. “We don’t want to displace people.” 

Thornton, who is from Orange Mound, said it’s always been her desire to move back into the neighborhood. But she said she doesn’t want to sacrifice any of her expectations. 

“I want the house that I want, the look that I want, and the amenities in the community that I want,” Thornton said. “It’s been a real fight to advocate for the things that I personally want to see in my community. I have to go to neighboring communities often to access the amenities that I seek.”

Thornton said the neighborhood needs a spectrum of options in housing, amenities, and common community spaces. 

“To be as great as we can be, we need to see more options,” Thornton said. “Those options need to scale down to meet people where they are and also scale up to be able to offer attractive options for people who want to come here.”

Austin Harrison, adjunct professor at Rhodes, is leading the course that is working with Juice to bring the plan to fruition. 

The courses began last fall, introducing students to Orange Mound and the needs of the neighborhood. Topics included housing, community development, and the history of systemic racism — “why and how Orange Mound looks the way it does and Chickasaw Gardens looks the way it does.”

With the help of community leaders, the students came up with six focus areas for the plan: housing, community health, crime and public safety, economic development, education, and cultural preservation. 

This is the second year of the project with a new class of 13 students. This year’s class is centered on crafting strategies to implement the plan, focusing on how to implement an equitable plan with community input. 

Throughout the process, Harrison said community engagement is a key part of the plan’s success. 

“Engagement isn’t static for us,” Harrison said. “It’s something that we’ll continue to do. We think when you’re working relational and not transactional, there isn’t just an event that you call engagement and you check that box and move on. We’re always working side by side.”

It comes down to ownership, Harrison said. If residents in the neighborhood don’t see themselves in the plan, they aren’t going to fully support it. 

“If community members don’t feel like they own the plan or it’s something they had a say in, it’s going to make implementing it almost impossible,” Harrison said. 

When the plan is complete, Harrison said he would love to have the support of local government, but the plan will move forward and be enacted whether there is official adoption of it or not. 

“We’re not asking for it,” Harrison said. “It’s not ‘can you let us implement this?’ It’s more of ‘this is what Orange Mound sees for their community.’ We’re telling government officials, developers, and outside actors looking to work with Orange Mound, these are the rules of engagement.’”

“If community members don’t feel like they own the plan or it’s something they had a say in, it’s going to make implementing it almost impossible.”

Harrison hopes that the plan will lay a framework for other neighborhoods to replicate. 

“It’s a framework for holding stakeholders accountable,” Harrison said. “It’s also a framework for residents to take control of their neighborhoods. We want residents to take control of the narrative and of who is casting the vision for where they live.” 

As the first neighborhood built by African Americans for African Americans, Orange Mound has a rich history that Thornton and Harrison hope is reflected in the plan. Harrison said he’s never interacted with a community that has such pride. That’s why cultural preservation is one of the project’s six focus areas. 

“It may seem odd to some other planners to include cultural preservation as a priority, but I don’t think that’s an option in Orange Mound,” Harrison said. “A through line throughout the process is preserving the culture and keeping legacy residents at the forefront of our planning. That’s what’s  missing from a lot of neighborhood redevelopment plans.” 

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Music Music Blog

The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, September 23-29

Naturally, the live-stream story of the week is Gonerfest 18, surely one of the most Covid-conscious musical events ever imagined. Some of the luminaries include Reigning Sound, Sick Thoughts, Wreckless Eric, Digital Leather, Wilkins Sisters and scads more. The live shows, all on an outdoor stage at Railgarten, require masks and proof of vaccination, but the real clincher is the virtual online feed of all musical events. Goner Records pulled out all the stops, using the best technology of the 1990s, the Sony Handycam. A phalanx of the devices is being deployed to ensure true widescreen drama on your device of choice, from multiple angles.

Meanwhile, the city’s other live-stream troupers soldier on as well. Check them all out, tip generously and stay safe!

ALL TIMES CDT

Thursday, September 23
5:30 p.m. — 5 p.m., Sunday, September 26
Gonerfest 18 — at Railgarten
Click here for the full schedule of artists
Website

9 p.m.
Devil Train — B-Side Memphis
Facebook YouTube Twitch TV

Friday, September 24
8 p.m.
Max Kaplan & the Magics — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Midnight
Turnstyles, Dry Guy, Solid Goldberg and True Sons of Thunder
— at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Saturday, September 25
10 a.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook

9 p.m.
Eddie Clendening & Velvetina Taylor — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

Midnight
Perverts Again, Predator and Curleys — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Sunday, September 26
3 p.m.
Imagene Azengraber — Chicken $#!+ Bingo at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

7 p.m. and 10 p.m.
Dustin Sims — at Hernando’s Hide-a-way
Website

8 p.m.
Jamalama — B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

11 p.m.
Richard & Anne — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Monday, September 27
10 p.m.
Evil Rain — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Tuesday, September 28
10 p.m.
Max Kaplan & Jad Tariq — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Wednesday, September 29
5:30 p.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook

Categories
News Blog News Feature

Abortion Protestors Met With Handmaid’s Tale Counter-Protesters

A small group or anti-abortion protestors were met Wednesday morning with a small group of counter protesters dressed as characters from “The Handmaid’s Tale” at Planned Parenthood of Memphis.

A counter protester, who identified herself only as “June,” said her group stood silently alongside — but opposed to — the abortion protesters. June said the affair lasted for about an hour between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. Wednesday and remained calm throughout.