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Autumn Chastain Selected as Thistle and Bee’s First CEO

Thistle and Bee, a local nonprofit that aids and empowers women survivors of addiction, sex trafficking, and prostitution, has announced that Autumn Chastain will be their first CEO. 

Chastain has 20 years of experience as a lawyer specializing in protecting the rights of trafficking survivors. 

“I’ve been an attorney in Memphis for 20 years, and primarily in and around things affecting children, dependency and neglect, delinquency, termination. … I slowly ended up being one of the go-tos for cases involving human trafficking,” says Chastain. 

Autumn Chastain (Courtesy Thistle and Bee)

“I also worked with different organizations internationally, combining efforts of foreign governments and things to establish some safe procedures and harbors and education outside the United States on trafficking.”

Chastain’s legal background and passion for protecting the rights of trafficking victims make her an ideal fit for Thistle and Bee, where the women served by the organization are taught how to care for bees, harvest and bottle honey, and make honey-based products –– such as flavored granola, candy, coffee, tea, lip balm, soap –– for several local retail outlets and farmers markets. 

“I’ve also owned retail stores in Memphis for a while,” Chastain continues, “and someone came to me and said that Thistle and Bee was looking for a new chief executive officer, so I thought, oh, I mean, retail, and law with trafficking –– all of it in one place, all of my interests in one thing, instead of me in multiple different areas. Okay, ‘sign me up.’ And it was just a great fit.”

At Thistle and Bee, the women are able to earn an income and gain professional skills through their social enterprise program while engaging with the wraparound services offered via the residential program.

“Our social enterprise is not a business with a mission; it’s a mission with a business,” states Becca Stevens, Founder of Thistle Farms, on their website. 

As a complement to the social enterprise program, the two-year residential program offers a safe place where the women can focus on healing and recovery.

“[It] provides them safe housing in a community safe house environment, where we provide all of their medical, mental health, dental recovery needs. And that’s all free of charge to them. And in addition to it, we have financial literacy, we have physical wellness, and art therapies,” Chastain explains. 

“It’s called The Hive. And everything from circle time, where they share and explore, to their to 12-step programs, to the mental health counseling or medication management partnerships, they are always engaged in some sort of therapy or development throughout each day with our different partners.”

The women at Thistle and Bee don’t all work with bees, though. Like the services and therapy options offered at The Hive, work opportunities are likewise tailored to the individual. 

“Our goal is to help each woman find their inner worth, their passion, their skill set. And so we have some that really enjoy the harmony of working with the bees and the comfort,” Chastain says. “We have those that want to be at the farmers markets, sharing their story, selling the products. And we have others that want to stay in the kitchen and just do granola.” 

Thistle and Bee also offers support in other unique ways, such as getting a woman’s driver’s license renewed, taking care of her past fines and court costs, helping her build her credit, or anything else that might bolster success. 

Beyond hiring a CEO, 2022 will be a big year for Thistle and Bee. In the next several months, Thistle and Bee will launch a corporate gift program, seek to acquire an additional residential home for women transitioning out of the program, and host at least two honey-themed fundraising events. 

“One of my biggest goals is to help raise awareness that we are here and we’re a resource,” says Chastain. 

Those looking to support the organization should keep an eye out for their Virtual Honey Tasting on June 26th and the Honey Harvest Fundraiser on September 25th. But in the meantime, there are other ways to show your support. Visit ThistleandBee.org to donate, volunteer, or purchase some locally sourced honey, granola, and other honey-based products –– or find them at the Memphis Farmers Market.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Cracks in the Binary Box


If there is a single leitmotif that defines the coming disharmony of a local election in these parts, it is the struggle between members of the two parties — Republican and Democratic — for dominance. The 2022 election in Shelby County is skewed in this way, with all the structural advantages adhering to the Dems. Actually, there is a fairly accurate division of influence — with the demographics of the city (i.e., Memphis) favoring Democratic candidates and those of the suburbs tilting unmistakably and dependably toward Republicans.

Yet beyond the party leaderships there is here and there a breach in this binary circumstance. Take the 13 members of the Shelby County Board of Commissioners — apportioned 8 to 5, as of now, in favor of Democrats, with the 2022 election likely to make that division 9 to 4 in favor of the Democrats — on the strength of reapportionment that’s fetched up another seat, the new District 5 seat in Cordova, expected to go the Democrats’ way.

Up until now, the Republicans have for several sessions been holding their own by the simple device of finding two dependable Democrats who could be coaxed onto their side when need be. Democrats Edmund Ford and Eddie Jones (the most recent two such) have reasonably often opted to make common cause with the Republicans, so long as the right trades were made on other points elsewhere.

Within the 2021-2022 session the Democrats did some bargaining of their own, attracting East Memphis Republican Brandon Morrison, already prone to look for non-partisan solutions, to their side on some key votes — both procedural: she would become vice chair instead of the minority Republicans’ choice of Amber Mills in northern Shelby (District 1), and policy-wise: (she would display an open mind on key votes favored by the Democrats (e.g., county funding of MATA), Morrison even agreed to serve as vice chair of a committee to re-examine the virtues of Metro consolidation, that bane of the suburbanite.

That makes the current contest in District 4 (East Memphis, Germantown) between Morrison and political newcomer Jordan Carpenter simply a matter of arithmetic. Morrison’s current GOP colleagues — Mills, Mick Wright, David Bradford, and the term-limited Mark Billingsley — are backing Carpenter to restore as much of an unbroken Republican orthodoxy as possible. Even a bloc of 4 in what is likely to be a new Commission favoring Democrats by a 9-4 margin,  is, in their minds, worth something.

It remains to be seen if party loyalty or the principle of bi-partisanship will prevail. The Democrats, with their probable 9-vote supermajority, can indulge a certain equanimity on the matter.

* * *

The recent brouhaha over the endorsement of Republican state Senate candidate Brent Taylor, in District 31,  by Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland, a nominal Democrat, indicates another way in which the binary party system is being breached. In their primary Democrats had been grooming Ruby Powell-Dennis, an educator and civil figure, to seek the seat, which up to now has been  held by the indicted and now withdrawn GOP incumbent Brian Kelsey.

The fact is, Memphis mayors, whose own elections are non-partisan, have frequently crossed the party line to espouse candidates of another party. Willie Herenton, a Democrat, did it twice on behalf of the statewide candidacies of Republicans Don Sundquist and Lamar Alexander.

Strickland was in the large crowd that gathered on Taylor’s behalf for a fundraiser last Thursday at the East Memphis home of Craig and Cathy Weiss. Spotting the Mayor, who was a full head taller than most of the attendees, Taylor quoted Strickland as having said the endorsement of Taylor was for the sake of “better outcomes for Memphis.” Addressing the Mayor, he jested, “I would ask you to say a few words but I think you’ve probably said enough. If you say any more, they may try to impeach you.”

That got an animated chuckle from the crowd. Then Taylor proceeded: “I know you took a lot of heat for it. But I love Memphis and I think you know I love Memphis, and that’s one reason he endorsed me.”

Taylor continued: “There’s a second thing. I just came back to Nashville on Monday and Tuesday where I met with Senate leadership and about half of the Senate. They are very excited about having me joining the Senate, primarily because they don’t understand Big Shelby. They don’t understand Memphis and its politics. And they’re excited to have me up there…. I will tell you that [the  Mayor’s endorsement] meant more among those senators than the endorsement of [U.S. Senators] Hagerty and Blackburn because they knew they needed somebody to help them understand Memphis and Shelby County.” 

Binary politics is under threat elsewhere in local politics. Shelby County’s Republicans caved in to the reality that they could not find a GOP candidate to beat Sheriff Floyd Bonner, the Democratic nominee; so they have in effect endorsed Bonner’s campaign as well. It was no accident that the huge crowds that gathered the weekend before last at the Sheriff’s campaign headquarters opening included as many Republicans as Democrats.

And conversations between the two parties — like one between Democratic state Representative Dwayne Thompson and Republican John Gillespie, both representing “purplish” adjoining districts — abounded as well.

It will take some time before the twain truly meet, but it has to be a good sign that they are talking.

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Message” by PreacherMan

Today’s Music Video Monday will take you to church.

PreacherMan is a Memphis rapper who combines the boom-bap of Bluff City hip hop with gospel witnessing. This video for his manifesto song “Message” highlights his intensity with some excellent sunset photography that highlights some of the city’s most beautiful views. Check it out:

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

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From My Seat Sports

Memphis Redbirds Reload for 2022

Tuesday night at AutoZone Park, the Memphis Redbirds will host their first conventional Opening Night in three years. After losing the entire 2020 season to pandemic restrictions and opening a shortened 2021 campaign in May, the ballpark’s lights will shine for the “lid-lifter,” with a full, 150-game season on the calendar. Thus will begin the franchise’s 24th season (and 22nd at AutoZone Park).

Some news and notes for the season ahead:

• Ben Johnson is back for his third season as manager of the Redbirds. The pride of Germantown High School will be the first manager to lead Memphis for three seasons since Pop Warner held the job from 2012 to 2014. After a 69-71 record in 2019, Johnson’s club posted a 61-67 mark last year. The ’21 Redbirds established a franchise record with a 15-game winning streak.

• The Redbirds will compete for the first time in the International League, part of the Southeast Division along with Charlotte (Triple-A affiliate of the Chicago White Sox), Durham (Tampa Bay Rays), Gwinnett (Atlanta Braves), Jacksonville (Miami Marlins), Nashville (Milwaukee Brewers), and Norfolk (Baltimore Orioles). Memphis was a member of the Pacific Coast League from 1998 through the 2019 season, before minor-league baseball was restructured with regional travel a priority. They will play a pair of familiar foes from the IL’s Midwest Division: the Iowa Cubs (Chicago Cubs) and Omaha Storm Chasers (Kansas City Royals).

• Memphis should be stocked with premium prospects, at least until the parent St. Louis Cardinals have needs to fill. Infielder Nolan Gorman will open the season with the Redbirds, with hopes of taking his left-handed power to the Cardinals in the near future. Gorman hit .274 with 14 home runs and 48 RBIs in 76 games for Memphis last season. He made a rather seamless transition from his natural position of third base (occupied by Nolan Arenado in St. Louis) to second base. 

Ranked third among Cardinal prospects, just below Gorman, is left-handed pitcher Matthew Liberatore. (19-year-old slugger Jordan Walker tops the rankings and will get time at Double-A Springfield before he appears at AutoZone Park.) Liberatore skipped Double A (with the lost 2020 season) and grew on the mound as a Triple-A pitcher last summer. He split 18 decisions and posted a 4.04 ERA while leading the Redbirds with 124 innings pitched. Still only 22, the lanky (6’4”) lefty is targeted for the Cardinals’ starting rotation, one that took a hit last month when Jack Flaherty was shut down with shoulder tenderness. Liberatore will start the season in Memphis, but expect him to make his major-league debut in 2022.

The Cardinals’ fourth-ranked prospect, Ivan Herrera, should take over catching duties for Memphis. Herrera displayed some power last season at Springfield (17 home runs). As Yadier Molina plays his 19th and final season for the Cardinals, Herrera aims to compete for a 2023 job-opening in St. Louis, one that hasn’t existed in almost two decades. 

Another pair of top-10 Cardinal prospects likely to suit up for Memphis are pitcher Zack Thompson and outfielder Alec Burleson. A left-handed hitter with pop (like Gorman), Burleson slammed 14 homers and put up a .488 slugging percentage for Springfield in 2021 before a late-season promotion to Memphis. Infielder Brendan Donovan contended for a roster spot with the Cardinals until the final week of spring training. He’ll likely be the first Memphis promotion (among position players) when/if the Cardinals are hit with an injury.

• Juan Yepez hit 22 homers and posted a .289/.382/.589 slash line for Memphis last season on his way to recognition as the Cardinals’ Minor League Player of the Year. Yepez entered spring training as a prime candidate for designated hitter with St. Louis. (The National League has adopted the DH as part of the new collective bargaining agreement with the players.) Trouble for Yepez, though, is the return of Cardinals icon Albert Pujols, signed last week to a one-year deal, one that allows Pujols to finish his career where he played his first 11 seasons (and won three MVP awards). Pujols and Yepez are both right-handed hitters with limited value in the field. (Yepez appeared rocky at first base during spring training.) The 24-year-old Venezuelan could be the centerpiece of the Redbirds’ offense, and a prime trade candidate if Pujols finds his groove (again) with the Cardinals. Should Pujols struggle with the big club and Yepez slug for Memphis, youth may end up being served in St. Louis.

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News News Blog News Feature

TBI Report: 31 Killed by Police Deadly Force in 2021

Those killed by Tennessee police last year were mainly white, male, armed, from 25 to 34 years old, and used a firearm against an officer or someone else to resist arrest. 

Those are the main takeaways from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation’s (TBI) annual report on law enforcement-related deaths in Tennessee.  

The profile above is that of someone who has had an interaction with law enforcement usually after someone called the cops. Last year, 31 people in that group were killed by police by use of deadly force, according to the report. October was the deadliest month with seven killed. 

View this gallery for more information on those killed by police here last year:

Other deaths in the report are related to those who died in jail or prison. These deaths may have occurred in the presence of police but were not directly related to use of force by them.

Last year, 245 died in 31 correctional facilities, according to the report. Thirty two of those died while in custody but had not yet been convicted of a crime. Private prisons do not have to submit data for the report. 

View this gallery for more information on those who died in custody last year:

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Book Features Books

Tara M. Stringfellow Launches Memphis at Novel Bookstore

Author Tara M. Stringfellow is a poet, a traveler, a former attorney, a Memphian, and she will launch her debut novel — Memphis — Tuesday, April 5th, with an event at Novel bookstore.

The novel follows three generations of Black women living in Memphis. It’s at once a family saga, a story of the power of art, and a deeply political social commentary. There is much pain in Memphis, but there is hope and triumph as well. It is a heart-wrenching, inspiring, moving novel. And to write it, Stringfellow drew on both her imagination and her own experiences.

“Kind of like my main character in the book, I moved here full-time when I was 10 [years old],” Stringfellow says. Before moving here, she remembers phone calls with family members in Memphis; until she was 10 years old, Stringfellow lived in Okinawa, Japan. Her father, who is also a poet, was a Marine at the time. The author says the beauty of her childhood surroundings and her connection to family in Memphis helped nourish her love for poetry. And her work as a poet suffuses every page of her debut novel.

Also like Joan, the main character in Memphis, Stringfellow says that she has strong ties to her old neighborhood in North Memphis. “Douglass kind of raised me for a bit, and I loved it,” she remembers. Community is a powerful force in her novel, as exemplified by this passage: “All of Douglass—the teenagers in love, the tired working men, the even more tired womenfolk—all of them stood on the steps of the porch Myron had built for Hazel, stood on the lawn, climbed up the branches of the magnolia and found seats where they could. The people in the neighborhood stood watch that night.”

Stringfellow finished writing the novel after returning to Memphis following the early months of the Covid pandemic. She says it felt right to complete it here. When she finished the book, she couldn’t help but think, “What has my family given for me to get here?”

In Memphis, Joan is a young painter whose love for her art both grounds her through some turbulent trials, and might eventually lead her away from Memphis. “I do connect to Joan in that way,” she says. “My passion for writing, I wanted her to have the same passion for art.” Stringfellow says she believes that Joan will carry Memphis with her wherever she goes. “Memphis will always be there in her home. And sometimes we have to leave home, to go to school or go somewhere. And I feel like it’s so nice to come back home.”

Though she has lived in other cities, states, and countries since her childhood, and though she lives in a different neighborhood now that she’s back in Memphis, Stringfellow is quick to profess her affection for the city from which her novel takes its name. “I love my neighborhood,” she says. “All my neighbors are real diverse, and we all just kind of take care of each other. I really do love living in Memphis.” Look for a longer interview with the author in the near future in the pages of the Flyer.

Tara M. Stringfellow is at Novel, Tuesday, April 5th, 6 p.m.