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The Bob’s Burgers Movie

When The Simpsons premiered in 1989, it changed the way animation was perceived. Before then, cartoons were for kids on Saturday morning. After The Simpsons became a massive hit, the idea of animation as a conduit for sophisticated humor aimed at adults became acceptable, even ubiquitous.

The family The Simpsons portrayed was based on creator Matt Groening’s childhood memories of a middle class life in the 1960s: a father who worked a 9 to 5 job which paid the family’s bills, and a mother who stayed home to keep house and care for the three children, who went to public school. In 1989, this was already a self-conscious anachronism. The irreverent Simpsons were meant to be a commentary on the conservative model of the nuclear family found in older sitcoms like The Honeymooners and Father Knows Best. Now, 33 years into its run, the middle class world of The Simpsons is all but extinct. 

The world of the Belcher family in Bob’s Burgers looks a lot more like America in 2022. Father Bob (voiced by H. Jon Benjamin) and mother Linda (John Roberts) own a small burger joint catering to tourists in the waterfront area of an unnamed New England town. They live in a cramped apartment above the restaurant along with their three kids, Tina (Dan Mintz), Gene (Eugene Mirman), and Louise (Kristen Schaal), who help out at the diner when they’re not in school. Bob’s Burgers has run for 12 seasons on Fox, and the Belchers’ oft-delayed feature film debut has finally made it to the big screen.

The whole family’s wants and needs are neatly summed up in the film’s opening musical number, “Sunny Side Up Summer,” where they make their plans for what to do once school is out. Bob is nervously making a perfect speciality burger to give to his loan officer in the hopes that they can get a payment deferral. But when the banker is unpersuaded by quality fast-casual food, they have a week to get a loan payment together or risk repossession of the kitchen. Just as they’re brainstorming ways to make up their budget deficit, a sinkhole opens in front of the restaurant, making it almost impossible to attract the customers they need. Favorite regular Teddy (Larry Murphy) pitches in by building a food cart so they can take their operation mobile just as the summer tourist season kicks in. 

Meanwhile, Louise’s beloved bunny hat has become a source of teasing from the other kids in her class. To prove she isn’t a “baby,” she ventures down into the sinkhole, where she discovers a skeleton that appears to be a murder victim. When Louise rallies the kids to try to solve the mystery, the answers seem to point in the direction of their landlord, Calvin Fischoeder (Kevin Kline).  

Created by Lauren Bouchard, whose series Home Movies is a gem of the early ’00s Adult Swim animation boom, The Bob’s Burgers Movie was produced at just the right time, with the writing staff at the top of their game and the core voice-cast still intact. Of course, it’s easier to keep your voice-cast intact when multiple parts are played by voice acting legend H. Jon Benjamin. He has provided the deadpan voice for everyone from the hapless Coach McGuirk on Home Movies to the dipsomaniac super spy Archer, and his perpetually exhausted but ever hopeful Bob provides the emotional core of the show. 

All three of the kids have distinct personalities, but they are believably siblings. Tina, the oldest, is an eighth grader obsessed with boys, but not really sure what to do with them. Gene, the middle child, is the most creative, and the master of one-line quip. Louise, with her trademark bunny hat, is the ringleader, but also the most insecure. 

While there are some expanded set pieces and fancier-than-normal animation, the film mostly plays like an extended episode of the show. In this case, that’s not a left-handed compliment. The writers deftly juggle individual story lines for the family, as well as Teddy and the Fischoeder family, which includes Zach Galifianakis as brother Felix and David Wain as cousin Grover. I’m not sure this is a full-fledged musical comedy, but music has played a bigger and bigger part of the show for the last few seasons, and the film leans into the welcome trend with standout songs, including a major number by a crew of carnies from the nearby boardwalk amusement park. 

The Bob’s Burgers Movie represents a rare success in translating TV animation to the big screen. It’s universal and big-hearted enough to serve as an intro to the excellent series, but if you’re already a fan, it’s a must-see. 

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AAA: TN Gas Prices Likely to Rise After Record Highs

Gas prices will likely rise again after a brief respite coinciding with the Memorial Day holiday, according to AAA.

Even with a bit of stabilization at the pump, Tennessee drivers paid the highest gas prices on record during this Memorial Day weekend, AAA said. The state’s average gas price is $4.28, nearly 39 cents higher than a month ago and $1.41 more than a year ago. 

(Credit: AAA – The Auto Club Group)

Memphis-area drivers saw record-setting prices at stations on Monday of last week. That’s when the average price of gas in Memphis ran $4.32 for a gallon of regular unleaded. The price had barely softened Monday, to around $4.31 for a gallon of unleaded. Average unleaded prices a year ago in Memphis were $2.89 cents per gallon.

We could be looking at the calm before the storm for gas prices.

Megan Cooper, AAA – The Auto Club Group

“While drivers might have seen a small break in pump price increases this holiday weekend, we could be looking at the calm before the storm for gas prices,” said Megan Cooper, spokeswoman for AAA — The Auto Club Group. “Crude oil prices surged to $115 per barrel last week alongside further tightening of domestic supplies. Renewed upward pressure on pump prices likely means additional increases in pump prices for drivers in the next couple of weeks.”

Prices may also rise due to ongoing fears of further global supply constraints caused by a European Union (EU) ban on Russian oil exports. U.S. gas demand may again start to climb as drivers fuel up for the three-month-long summer travel season, which began last weekend. 

AAA estimated that nearly 35 million travelers hit the road for Memorial Day. It’s the highest number since 2019, despite record prices at the gas pump.

However, Tennessee prices remain below the national average. 

(Credit: AAA – The Auto Club Group)
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Junior Achievement of Memphis to Launch Startup Park by FedEx

Junior Achievement of Memphis have teamed up with FedEx to produce the next generation of Memphis entrepreneurs. A new program between the two organizations will teach early-stage entrepreneurship education for elementary school students.

The new program, Startup Park by FedEx, will introduce 5th and 6th graders to a diverse range of minority- and women-owned businesses that are in the first stages of development.

“There’s simply no replacement for a student seeing someone who looks like them succeeding in business,” said Jason Campbell, Junior Achievement Board Member and VP of Operations and Ops
System Support for FedEx Custom Critical. “FedEx continues to invest in small, minority- and women-owned businesses in the region — and that includes doubling down on our investment in local youth through our strategic support of JA.”

Located in Junior Achievement’s new experiential learning center at 516 Tillman in Binghampton, the program will act as a “storefront” within Junior Achievement’s BizTown, where students partner with well-known businesses that are big parts of the global economy. Startup Park will aim to teach children the basics of starting a business, and how to engage partners that can help the business thrive.

“Children can’t be what they can’t see,” said Leigh Mansberg, president and CEO of Junior Achievement of Memphis and the Mid-South. “FedEx has been collaborating with us and, with their generous support, we’re excited to transform the narrative for thousands of future Black, brown, and women entrepreneurs across the 25-county area JA serves.

“Our long-term goals are to lay the foundation for a pipeline to entrepreneurship through high school and beyond,” continued Mansberg, “and also to see evidence that participants in Startup Park by FedEx are developing tangible, age-appropriate entrepreneurial ideas and solutions that can be supported within the local youth entrepreneur ecosystem.”

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Moth Moth Moth New Program Director for Focus Foundation

The Focus Center Foundation has named Moth Moth Moth as its new program director. 

The Focus Center is a Memphis nonprofit foundation that provides programming for Focus LGBT magazine and the Mid-South community. New programming for the foundation will include expanding The Prism Pages (a literary section in Focus from local queer creative writers), a new local HIV art showcase program to use creativity through the arts to raise awareness, and a new podcast to complement the work in each of these avenues.

Moth Moth Moth, known as Mothie, is a Memphis artist, writer, performer, and programmer. In her career, Mothie has “developed programs for youth, created some of the city’s most favorite drag shows, and has made a cultural impact on the region one hug at a time.”

“Bringing someone unique like Moth on as our program director is sure to bring a new creative element to the LGBT canvas that is the Mid-South,” said Focus founder Ray Rico. “Their work writing, creating art, and performing as visual artists with drag is something that the community embraces. 

“The experience in programming Moth brings to us is invaluable and we are so thrilled to bring Moth on board.” 

Moth Moth Moth “seeks to find places for people to feel safe, to express, and to move forward as a spiritually beautiful and literally beautiful culture.”

To get in touch, email programs@focuscenterfoundation.org.

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Film Features Film/TV

Top Gun: Maverick

In February, as Russian forces drove towards Kyiv, the Ukrainian people found their first war hero: A young pilot who shot down six Russian planes on the first day of the invasion, becoming the first European fighter ace in 77 years. The Ghost of Kyiv’s name would live forever alongside Eddie Rickenbacker and Chuck Yeager. 

The problem was, as a Ukrainian defense official later told the BBC, The Ghost of Kyiv didn’t exist. He was “a super-hero legend created by Ukrainians.” Yes, the Ukrainian Air Force has fought bravely. They were widely expected to be wiped out in hours, but three months into the invasion, they’re still flying, and the feared Russian air wings have been badly mauled. The Ghost of Kyiv, it turns out, was the first salvo in the information war. 

Since the days of The Red Baron, governments have recognized the propaganda value of a brave fighter pilot. In World War II, the greatest air ace in American history, Major Dick Bong, was pulled from combat in the Pacific to sell war bonds. In the last days of the Cold War, Americans gained our own fictional hero: Naval Aviator Lt. Pete Mitchell, callsign “Maverick,” played by Tom Cruise in Top Gun. In the summer of 1986, when Top Gun soared at the box office, while Berlin’s “Take My Breath Away” and Kenny Loggins’ “Danger Zone” topped the Billboard charts, the Navy saw a 500 percent increase in applications. 

Tom Cruise

 Top Gun established director Tony Scott’s reputation as a master visual stylist and made Cruise one of the biggest movie stars in the world. Rumors of a sequel circulated for years, but when Scott died in 2012, the project seemed to die with him. But Cruise, who was scouting locations with Scott two days before the director’s suicide, wouldn’t give up the ship. Now, after years of pandemic delays, Top Gun: Maverick is poised to rule Memorial Day weekend. 

After a thoroughly ’80s-syle opening credits montage, which gives us doses of both Harold Faltermeyer’s chiming theme and “Danger Zone,” we catch up with Maverick, who has now been in the Navy for 30 years. By this time, he should either be an admiral, like his frenemy “Iceman” Kazansky (Val Kilmer), now the commander of the entire Pacific fleet, or helming the Memphis to Mumbai milk run for FedEx. Instead, Maverick is a test pilot tasked with taking the experimental Darkstar scramjet to Mach 10. When he hears his commanding officer “Hammer” Cain (Ed Harris) is coming to scrap the program so he can devote the test budget to drones, Maverick sets off on one more flight to prove what this puppy can do. He succeeds, but crashes the plane in the process. 

Instead of getting court-martialed, he is summoned back to Top Gun school in San Diego. There’s a top secret mission on tap to destroy a nuclear lab in some never-named “enemy”country, and they need Maverick to train the Navy’s top pilots for the suicidally dangerous mission — which just happens to resemble the trench run from Star Wars: A New Hope, but whatever. 

The order of the day for director Joseph Kosinski was to ask himself “What would Tony Scott do?” And the answer is almost always, “training montage set to pop music.” Let’s be honest, that’s what we’re here for, right? Top Gun had some classics, including one of the most homoerotic moments of ’80s cinema, the pilot’s beach volleyball game, set to Kenny Loggins “Playin’ With The Boys.” Maverick puts his charges — including Miles Teller as “Rooster” Bradshaw, the son of Maverick’s deceased partner Goose — through a similarly oiled-up team building exercise, but it’s made slightly less homoerotic with the inclusion of “Phoenix” (Monica Barbaro).  

This new generation of pilots have the rock-hard abs necessary for success, but Maverick is still the hottest pilot in the sky. Air combat has been a favorite subject filmmakers since Howard Hughes spent a fortune staging dogfights for Hell’s Angels. Scott’s Top Gun aerial combat scenes are rightfully revered to this day. Armed with a squadron of F-18s, compact digital cameras, and a wild disregard for Tom Cruise’s personal safety, Maverick’s aerial sequences are the most spectacular ever filmed. 

Despite mustard-smeared corndog dialog and gaping plot holes, Maverick is extremely entertaining. Cruise’s charisma is undeniable, and the whole enterprise never tries to be more than what it is: slick propaganda for the military industrial complex. It’s been a winning formula since 30 Seconds Over Tokyo, and if the $801 billion we spend each year on sick toys like aircraft carriers means we can’t have nice things like health care, at least we get to watch the cool jets go vroom. 

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News News Blog

The 40 Southern Baptist Church Sex Offenders from Tennessee

The Southern Baptist Convention recently released a list of 700 sex offenders affiliated with the church over the past 20 years. A PDF of the full list is here. Nashville television station WMSV created a breakout of the 40 offenders from the state of Tennessee. That list is below. Names of several offenders have been redacted. No reason is given in the release for the redactions.

NameYearCase notesDenomination
Mark Curtis Adams2018In 2017, Adams, who was a deacon and youth teacher at Oak Grove Baptist Church in Mount Carmel, was arrested on child pornography and one count of enticing a minor to engage in sexual activity. He was then sentenced on May 7, 2018, to 120 months in federal prison in federal court after pleading guilty to a charge that he used social media application called “Kik” to induce a minor child to engage in illegal sexual activity.SBC
*redacted*2009Former paster booked on aggravated kidnapping and aggravated rape of a female adult.SBC
Larry Michael Berkley2014Berkley was a pastor at Shiloh Baptist Church in Harrison, AR, and a former pastor at Victory Baptist Church in Henning, TN. He was arrested for abuse of over a dozen boys as young as 14 and 18. Police say he plied them with alcohol and marijuana and showed them porn to gain compliance.
Berkley was convicted of 16 crimes, including four counts of aggravated statutory rape and four counts of sexual battery by an authority figure, and was then sentenced to 33 years. He was incarcerated in Tennessee and registered as a sex offender.
SBC
Courtney Michelle Bingham2018Dec. 11, 2018, Bingham, youth leader, Bethany Baptist Church Loudon, TN, admitted and was charged with “aggravated statutory rape and soliciting sexual exploitation of a minor.”SBC
*redacted*2021On July 7, 2021, the 47-year-old minister of students was charged with solicitation of a minor in a TBI undercover operationSBC
Timothy Neal Byars2008 Abuse 2006In 2006, Byars, 44, minister of youth, education, and music, Springhill Baptist Church, Dyersburg, TN, was arrested on charges of rape, sexual battery by an authority figure, and aggravated statutory rape (14-year-old and 19-year-old sisters).SBC
*redacted*2017In 2017, the former associate youth pastor was accused by three men of sexually assaulting them in the 90s while he was working at the church. He was not prosecuted because the statute of limitations had expired.SBC
*redacted*2007A former pastor was charged with having inappropriate contact with a resident.Baptist Type Unknown
Luke A. Cooke2015In 2007, Cooke was a youth pastor and was indicted on rape and aggravated sexual battery charges involving 8-year-old and 16-year-old girls. Cooke fled the country and was later returned to the US and was sentenced to 138 months in federal prison.
He had fled to China, Morocco, and Albania after being indicted on sex crimes charges in Shelby County, TN in 2007. In 2015, he was brought back from Albania by U.S. marshals and convicted in Tennessee of “coercion or enticement of a minor” for having transported a juvenile with the intent of engaging in illegal sexual activity. He is now in federal prison.
SBC
Christopher Ryan Crossno2015Christopher Ryan Crossno, Sunday school teacher and volunteer at Spring Creek Baptist Church, Clarksville, TN, pleaded guilty to sexual battery for inappropriate contact with a 6-year-old in 2012. His plea resulted in a three-year suspended sentence. He is to register as a sex offender and undergo a psychosexual evaluation.SBC
Gregory Stanley Dempsey2006 Abuse 2003Gregory Stanley Dempsey who was a former minister of music, at Oak Street Baptist Church, Soddy-Daisy, TN, confessed to allegations and was charged with 3 counts of statutory rape and 3 counts of sexual battery for abusing a 16-year-old boy in 2003. In 2006, he was a pastor of Middle Valley Methodist Church.
He was later convicted of a Sep. 1, 2003, sexual battery by an authority figure, according to his Tennessee sex offender registry.
SBC
Charles Alan Denton2014In 2012, Denton was a retired police sergeant and associate pastor at Bethel Baptist Church and was charged with 2 counts of rape on allegations that he inappropriately had sexual contact with a 36-year-old mentally challenged woman. In 2014, he entered a guilty plea to an amended count of sexual battery, a Class E felony, and agreed to three years of probation at 35%.
In 2014, Pastor Ted Denny said that Denton remains a pastor at that church because he accepted a plea and felt it was in the best interest of him and his family.
As of 2022, he is no longer listed on their website.
SBC
Timothy Ronald Felts2009Felts was a youth pastor at North Springfield Baptist Church in Springfield, TN.
Convicted of sexual battery in 2009 and listed as a sex offender. He was convicted again in 2016 of three counts of aggravated statutory rape as well as attempted aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor for offenses that occurred in 2015 and 2016. Serving a 14-year-prison sentence in Tennessee.
SBC
Jonathan Tyler Giles2011Giles was a youth minister at Spring Creek Baptist Church in Clarksville, TN.
The 24-year-old served as a youth pastor before his arrest in June 2009 on three counts of statutory rape by an authority figure, two counts of solicitation of a minor, and sexual battery by an authority figure involving three teenage girls who attended Spring Creek Baptist Church.
Giles pleaded guilty in Jan. 2011 in a plea bargain reached to keep victims from having to testify in court. He was sentenced to two years in prison and placed on a post-trial diversion allowing him to avoid jail time if he completed 240 hours of public service, lived with his parents out of town, and stayed in school.
SBC
Steven C. Haney2009 Abuse 2001In 2001, Haney, 47, who was a former pastor at Walnut Grove Baptist Church in Cordova, TN, was handed down criminal indictments from a grand jury of rape, 3 counts of sexual battery by an authority figure for assaulting a 15-year-old boy.SBC
Randall T. Hollifield2009Hollifield, who was a youth volunteer at New Beverly Baptist Church in Knoxville, TN, was charged with Rape of a Child, Especially Aggravated Sexual Exploitation of a Minor, and Criminal Attempt to Commit Aggravated Sexual Battery.Baptist Type Unknown
Matthew Maurice Jernigan2009In 2010, Jernigan who was a church youth volunteer at Heartland Baptist Church in Murfreesboro, TN, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 15 years in prison and 15 years probation. The abuse happened sometime in 2009.Baptist Type Unknown
Jason Kennedy2016Kennedy who was a youth minister at Grace Baptist Church in Karns, TN, was arrested for patronizing prostitution and human trafficking. He is now registered as a sex offender for soliciting a minor for sex.SBC
*redacted*1987A Baptist minister in TN was accused of molesting and raping three small sisters during church outings and visits, once raping a five-year-old girl under a church pew. He was also accused of molesting and raping the sisters at their family’s home and during an outing arranged to help him distribute religious tracts. The girls had tried to tell their parents but were not believed. “Being a preacher,” the father had told officials. “We thought he was a good man.”
The minister killed himself in July 1987 when facing trial for abusing the three sisters.
SBC
John Randy Leming1998Leming, a pastor at Antioch Baptist Church in Sevierville, TN, pleaded guilty to two counts of statutory rape for oral sex with a 16-year-old congregant when he pastored Shiloh Baptist Church in Sevier County. He pleaded guilty in 1998 to the offenses that occurred in May and June 1994, when he was 31, and lost his appeal of the concurrent 18-month sentences he deemed harsh.
Leming has continued to serve at Antioch Baptist Church since March 2014 according to the SBC Annual Church Profile.
The SBC Executive Committee disfellowshipped the church in 2021 for employing a pastor who confessed to two counts of statutory rape.
SBC
*redacted*2008The youth paster was charged with two counts of solicitation of especially aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor, 27 counts of exploitation of a minor by electronic means, five counts of solicitation of a minor for aggravated statutory rape, and solicitation of sexual exploitation of a minor by electronic means. He was later indicted after he allegedly solicited a 15-year-old girl for sex online according to Detectives.
SBC said it is unknown if he was sentenced.
SBC
Chad Eugene Luttrell2010Luttrell was a volunteer at Vacation Bible School at First Baptist Church in Bemis, TN.
He is a registered sex offender after pleading guilty to a June 10, 2009, offense of sexual battery.
SBC
Mark Woodson Mangrum2007In 2007, Mangrum, 47, was a former preacher, FBC in Parsons, TN, and settled on a plea agreement. He plead guilty to distributing porn to minors by computer, charged with sending email and instant messages while trying to entice him into committing oral sex of a 14-year-old.
He later plead guilty and was sentenced in 2018 to 70 months in federal prison and 20 years supervised release for distributing child porn in order to “induce a minor to engage in sexual conduct.”
SBC
Donald McCary1992In 1992 McCary, 48, minister of music and youth, Central Baptist Church, Hixon, TN, was sentenced to 72 years in prison for abusing 4 boys ages 12-15 in 1989.
In 1996, the Supreme Court overturned the conviction on the grounds that testimony from a man who claimed to have been molested by McCary as a child was permitted although the pastor was never charged with the crimes involving the witness.
The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals has upheld the conviction of McCary in one trial and reversed another conviction. He was given two other trials involving two different victims, and he was convicted in both cases. The appeals court upheld one jury’s findings, but in the second case said the state had not properly elected offenses to proceed on and that a prosecutor made improper statements to the jury.
SBC
*redacted*2003In 2003, the former pastor was indicted on sexual misconduct charges involving a 14-year-old girl and a 30-year-old woman that occurred in 2000 and 2001. He has lived in Arizona, Missouri, Illinois, Texas, and Tennessee.
He was later ordered to complete two years of community supervision without adjudication of guilt in 2004 after pleading no contest to the felony sexual assault made by a child victim. A warrant was issued for his arrest in 2006 after prosecutors claimed he failed to complete conditions as required.
SBC
Jimmy Orick2018Orick was a pastor at Mountain View Independent Baptist Church in La Follette, TN, and pleaded guilty to three counts of aggravated statutory rape, three counts of attempted statutory rape by an authority figure, and two counts of sexual battery by an authority figure.Baptist Type Independent Fundamental
Matthew Dennis Patterson2017In 2017, Patterson was a pastor at Nolensville Road Baptist Church in Nashville, TN. He was indicted on eight counts of aggravated sexual battery. Each count is linked to a different child.Baptist Type Independent Fundamental
*redacted*2004In 2004, the 25-year-old administrative employee was indicted on statutory rape of a 17-year-old female.SBC
Edward Earl “Eddie” Prince2011Prince was a pastor at Oak Grove Baptist Church in Hernando, MS, arrested on possession of child pornography.
He is now listed as a sex offender in Mississippi for a 2013 conviction of child exploitation.
SBC
Heath Tyler Ransom2017Ransom was a youth minister intern at Englewood Baptist Church in Jackson, TN. He is accused of contacting four minors and attempting to persuade them to engage in sexual activity.
He is now a registered sex offender in Tennessee for a 2017 conviction of criminal attempt to commit solicitation of a minor. He is on probation through 2025.
SBC
*redacted*2007The pastor was charged with disorderly conduct and indecent exposure.
It is unknown if he was sentenced.
SBC
Tandy Eugene Roberts2017In 2017, Roberts was a former pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Santa Fe, TN. He was arrested on charges of aggravated sexual battery by an authority figure regarding acts against a 12-year-old female in 2012.SBC
Christopher Douglas Ross2018Ross was a youth pastor at Fairview Church in Lebanon, TN, and pleaded guilty to two counts of statutory rape by an authority figure.
He was convicted in 2016 and is serving a four-year sentence in Tennessee state prison.
SBC
*redacted*2018The pastor was indicted for 3 counts of rape, 2 counts of unlawful contact, and sexual battery by an authority figure. He was a guest speaker for a local church meeting in 2014 when the rapes occurred.
It is unknown if he was sentenced.
SBC
*redacted*2018Pastor was charged with stalking and the case was sent to the Grand Jury.
It is unknown if he was sentenced.
Baptist Type Uknown
Andy Savage2018Savage was a teaching pastor at Highpoint Church in Memphis, TN, a non-denomination congregation. He resigned after admitting to the congregation that in 1998 as youth minister at Woodlands Parkway Church near Houston, now known as Stonebridge Church, he had a sexual incident with a high school student. Since the stature of limitations had expired, no charges were filed.SBC
Demarcus Smith2015Smith was a pastor at Oak Hill Missionary Baptist Church in Memphis, TN, and was sentenced to 85 months in prison on child pornography possession charges.Baptist Type Unknown
David Lee St. John2016In 2016, St. John was a pastor at The Bible Truth Baptist Church in Bristol, TN. He pleaded guilty to six felony counts of aggravated sexual battery and three felony counts of rape of a child for activities with two girls under the age of 13 and was sentenced to 30 years in prison without the chance of parole. The church dissolved after the pastor was arrested.Baptist Type Unknown
Benjamin Widrick2019Widrick, 24, of Syracuse, NY served as a 2018 summer intern at Long Hollow Baptist Church’s Gallatin campus where he engaged in sexual intercourse with a 16-year-old girl. He was arrested on 3 acts of statutory rape.
In 2018, he was a 23-year-old Liberty University student majoring in pastoral leadership. The victim stated they had sexual intercourse once while at camp and twice when Widrick came back to TN to visit her. He pleaded guilty and was issued an effective five-year Range I probation sentence. As part of the plea agreement, the offenses were reduced to statutory rape, a Class E felony.
He is not a registered sex offender.
SBC
Paul Williams2006In 2006, Williams was an assistant pastor, minister of prayer and special projects, at Bellevue Baptist Church in Cordova, TN. He admitted that he was guilty of sexually abusing his son in 1990. Bellevue leaders told the church Williams had committed a “moral Failure” that required his leave of absence and an investigation into the allegations.
Pastor Steve Gaines told the congregation Williams had confessed the misconduct to him six months earlier. He received criticism for not reporting the abuse earlier. Williams was later fired.
It is unknown if he was sentenced.
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Art Art Feature

Last Chance: “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down” Closes Saturday

“Art viewing and art making are incredibly important for my mental health,” says Leslie Holt, whose show “Don’t Let the Sun” closes this weekend at David Lusk Gallery. “It sort of reminds me why I live sometimes. Art’s a life force for me.” 

Holt, who is based in the Northeast, says that she’s been into art ever since she was a kid, despite coming from “a family of scientists.” 

“My sister is a neuroscientist,” she says. “My mom was a physicist.” But even in the pursuit of painting, this hereditary thirst for scientific inquiry didn’t skip over Holt — that much is evident in her “Brain Stains,” which takes inspiration from PET scans of brains from those with different mental health illnesses. 

Though they cannot diagnose mental illnesses, as clinical imaging tools, PET scans reveal, through a mapping of an array of colors and patterns, underlying different physiological activities. A PET scan of a depressed brain, for instance, lights up almost entirely in different shades of blue, while a non-depressed brain will light up in hues of red, yellow, and green, with blue present in a much smaller area. 

“Depression Stain” by Leslie Holt (Credit: Leslie Holt)

“I’m a very visual person, and I just think they’re beautiful — the scans themselves,” she says, adding that with her family of scientists, “I’m kind of aware of this imagery, not that I have in-depth knowledge of meaning or interpretation behind them.”

Though she has researched extensively for her art, has worked in social work, and volunteers for National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), Holt stops herself from getting caught up in the specifics of the scans and the facts. “There’s a couple in the show that are more literal interpretations, where I’ve translated the color pretty faithfully and the shapes pretty faithfully,” she says, but as the series progressed, “they really became much more abstract.

“I think the PET scan sort of design and diagram started to feel a little limiting to me,” she continues, “and a little bit like privileging the scientific part of what I’m trying to do, how I’m trying to speak about mental health.” To Holt, having suffered depression herself and having witnessed bipolar disorder’s effect on her mother, how mental health operates on a human, personal level takes priority above a clinical definition. Each case varies by person, and each person’s case can vary by moment and situation. 

As such, Holt also turned to embroidering onto the canvas phrases and verses of poetry, selected “to speak about the human condition and sometimes the mental health condition in ways that scientific language doesn’t really get to.” Sometimes she will also embroider text from clinical notes and texts like the DSM, suggesting the tension between the interiorization of the clinical and personal language that often coexist after a diagnosis — inseparable yet opposing forces of logic. 

But, on the surface of the paintings, a viewer will not recognize all these words because Holt has embroidered them onto the back of the canvas, leaving the front indecipherable, with threads left hanging and tangled, as if undone and lost in translation — “like how communication gets garbled for anybody trying to explain something, but particularly for folks who are in the midst of mental health symptoms.” Five of the paintings, however, are suspended in the gallery space, allowing the viewer to witness both sides of the canvas, a vulnerability offered by few artists. 

“Depression Stain” by Leslie Holt (Credit: Leslie Holt)

Also, on view are paintings in Holt’s “Unspeakable” series. The initial inspiration for this series was Picasso’s Guernica, one of the artists’ favorite pieces of art of all time. “I think it captures raw emotions in ways that words can’t,” she says. From there, she branched out to other artists “like Käthe Kollwitz, Frida Kahlo” and their depictions of intense emotion before turning to “hysterical women who were documented by clinicians in the 19th century.”

“The clinicians would draw them and photograph them and make sculptures of them in the midst of a ‘hysterical fits’ to try and understand, to try and categorize the different stages of hysteria,” she says. “And it’s a disturbing history because they would sometimes provoke symptoms or they would clearly put the women on display in front of an auditorium and induce symptoms as a performance themselves.”

The pain, trauma, and exploitation in these moments are unspeakable, marked with shame, obtrusive like the staining on Holt’s canvases that spread behind the suffering figures embroidered onto the surface, mere outlines held together by thread. 

When considering the two series in conversation with each other, Holt says, “I think of the PET scans as being sort of modern day interpretations of mental health conditions and then these hysterical women being the historical approach, and questioning which is more accurate and how far have we really gotten. 

“What I love is that this work promotes conversations about this topic and is often very affirming, and people will really respond to the fact that I’ve made this topic more public than it usually is. … I think there’s part of me — because I come from a scientific family — that’s like, ‘What right do I have to speak on this topic?’ I am not an expert. And I think [my art is] asserting that it’s okay. It’s sort of empowering.”

“Don’t Let the Sun Go Down” is on view at David Lusk Gallery through Saturday, May 28th. For more information on the artist, visit leslieholt.net or neuroblooms.com, where you can purchase pins inspired by her “Brain Stains.” Ten percent of the proceeds of Neuro Blooms goes to mental health organizations like NAMI.

Leslie Holt’s work is on view at David Lusk Gallery (Courtesy David Lusk Gallery)
Categories
Music Music Blog

The Flow: Live-Streamed Music Events This Week, May 26 – June 1

This is a watershed moment for The Flow, as we put this live-streamed music events calendar on ice until needed once more. When we began The Flow on April 16, 2020, there was no telling how the coronavirus pandemic would develop, but we knew that many musicians were continuing to perform online, against all odds. Nowadays, it’s not as common, nor as necessary — for now. We salute Hernando’s Hide-a-Way and B-Side Memphis, the two venues that have continued to offer live-streamed shows locally for the past two years, and we hope that they and others keep doing it. Surely they will, just as surely as Goner TV will carry on sporadically. As Covid continues to disrupt our lives, there’s no telling when we’ll look at live-stream-enabled artists and venues as heroes once again. As ever, make prudent pandemic decisions, and keep tipping those performers, whether online or face-to-face.

ALL TIMES CDT

Thursday, May 26
7 p.m.
Rowdy Franks & Bri-Marie — at Hernando’s Hide-A-Way
Website

9:30 p.m.
Devil Train — at B-Side Memphis
Facebook YouTube Twitch TV

Friday, May 27
7 p.m.
Drew Baldridge — at Hernando’s Hide-A-Way
Website

9:30 p.m.
Jack Oblivian & the Tearjerkers and Turnstyles — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Saturday, May 28
4 p.m.
Double D’s Blues Jam — at Hernando’s Hide-A-Way
Website

8 p.m.
Dale Watson — at Hernando’s Hide-A-Way
Website

9:30 p.m.
Just Groovin’ — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Sunday, May 29
5 p.m.
Memphis Mojo — at Hernando’s Hide-A-Way
Website

9:30 p.m.
Louder than Bombs — at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Monday, May 30
9 p.m.
Memorial Day Bash with Aubrey, Dillon, Jamie, and Khari
— at B-Side Memphis
YouTube Twitch TV

Tuesday, May 31
No live-streamed events scheduled


Wednesday, June 1
5:30 p.m.
Richard Wilson
Facebook

7 p.m.
Nick Shoulders and The Daiquiri Queens — at Hernando’s Hide-A-Way
Website

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

What This White Comic Found at Their Kids’ School isn’t Funny. It’s Racist.

Every school day, I pick up my two kids. I walk to the door of my youngest’s elementary school and we walk back to the car. We drive to pick up the oldest and head home, talking about their respective days.

Recently, though, I was late picking up the oldest because someone decided to add stickers to the dumpsters where my youngest has to pass to get to my car. In big black and white letters, one read: IT’S OK TO BE WHITE and another said: BLACK LIVES MURDER WHITE CHILDREN. 

I couldn’t help but say, “OH WHAT THE F—” out loud and then I told my youngest kid to wait.  But he jumped right in, and together, we scraped off four of the former and two of the latter. I cussed and sweated as we worked, and I told my son we had to get them off before anyone else saw what these *expletive deleted* put near his school. 

We took an example of each into the office to tell the nice lady who calls us adults Mom and Dad but knows all the kids’ names that a white supremacist group had been through. I tried to keep it businesslike, suggesting that the maintenance staff keep an eye out in case there were more. 

But the truth is that I also spoke in that grown-up tone because a second-grader was in the office and I didn’t want him to be curious and ask what I’d given the nice lady.  

In 2022, nearly 70 years after Brown v. Board of education, I had to hand a Black woman, who cares deeply for children, hateful propaganda. We both tried to pretend it was regular vandalism. Neither of us wanted the child to know he was being threatened. 

She murmured, “Oh my God, why would anyone do this?”

Photo illustration of the two stickers Coleman found on school grounds. MLK50 distorted the images of the stickers to avoid amplifying the racist messages they intend to spread.

Why indeed? 

I live in Rozelle-Annesdale, where I frequently see Black Lives Matter yard signs on our street. Our neighborhood is next to Cooper-Young, where the city’s LGBT community center sits and where every other yard has a BLM sign and several houses have large artistic pieces supporting BLM.

Reports of these stickers keep popping up on social media in the Cooper-Young district. Presumably, the area is being targeted for being whatever “woke” means to racists. Funny how closely linked are the dual rages at a rainbow crosswalk and Black Lives Matter. It’s almost like the anger isn’t logical. 

I see you people. I grew up in West Memphis and Marion, across the river in Arkansas, back when it was still very segregated. I recognize the code words. The sly jokes meant to obscure anti-Black feelings. The small disrespects done to Black people. You’re angry that you’re not kings and need to blame someone. So, of course, you do the most radical thing you can think of — you put stickers on a dumpster for 7-year-olds to read. That will show them. 

This isn’t the first time. In January, at my middle schooler’s campus, about a dozen “IT’S OK TO BE WHITE” stickers showed up on the fence posts; then earlier this month, another few appeared on the backs of signs. My youngest thought I was insane when I parked and jumped out of the car to claw them off. When I took an intact sticker to the faculty, I leaned in to assert, “This is absolutely a white supremacist slogan. They have been all around the area.” 

I wanted to be sure the staff didn’t presume that maybe it was some musical band sticker or a TikTok challenge by kids trying to be edgy. I couldn’t let this slip into that space where people convince themselves that what they’re seeing may not be what they think it is. I wanted to pull the alarm as hard as I could. I didn’t want to scare the faculty, but I wanted them to take it seriously. No child deserves to start their school day in racial violence. 

Memphis-Shelby County Schools serve a 74% Black student body in a 64% Black city and a 54% Black county. If you have a kid in MSCS, you know that the educators and staff have absolutely stepped up at every opportunity to provide a safe place for the kids. They’ve twisted themselves in knots to focus on getting young people what they need, whether it’s virtual science demonstrations via Microsoft Teams or shoes that don’t pinch. During learning from home because of the pandemic, meals were provided, devices were distributed. There was even a number to call for parents to be tutored so we could support our kids with homework help. My seventh- and fifth-grader have been cared for in ways I never knew a public school could provide. In times when it felt like the entire country went insane, I turned to school superintendent Dr. Joris Ray in his press conferences. MSCS is an incredible boon to the children lucky enough to attend. 

Children should be protected. The mom in me cannot ever understand how anyone could hurt a child. We don’t value a baby because they’re “diverse”, we value them because they are a BABY. (My Southerness means all people under voting age are babies, but babies can include anyone younger than me, anyone who needs protection.)  Black kids don’t need to earn our protection by being relatable. They’re just babies.

One of Coleman’s children uses a plastic spatula to remove the stickers that have been appearing around Memphis with white supremacist messages. (Photo by Katrina Coleman)

All kids are sweet and weird and a pain in the butt and eat all the damn cookies when you aren’t looking. There’s nothing they have to do to deserve our care. There’s nothing they can do to lose it. 

Standing near the stink of an elementary school dumpster (rotten honeybuns and hot milk are a MIX, let me tell you), scraping off white supremacist propaganda, all I could think was that a person like this – someone who saw the need to put a child in their place, to establish dominance over a kid who has enough on their plate just learning to tie their shoes and remember that I comes before E but not all the time – should not be given any consideration. What kind of foul coward slips in the dark of night to proclaim something akin to the 14 words? What manner of bully has to threaten a small, powerless human being with anonymous words? 

It made me laugh when I ranted and raved back at home to my husband, as I was cleaning adhesive from my fingernails, that this was basically, “You will not replace us” in some really weak inkjet formatting. I was tearful and angry. 

What made me laugh is that they will replace us. The kids, that is. This world will be theirs. My fellow mayo moms and ranch dressing dads and provolone parents have a choice. Every single time we uncomfortably chuckle at a racist joke or walk past a sticker insisting that asking for rights is akin to murder, we are complicit. I probably can’t tell the people that cranked these stickers out on address labels with their Canon home inkjets anything. They’re too far gone to be reasoned with.

I can tell you that taking a moment to scrape off a sticker full of hate will tell your kid all they need to know. We may not be able to do big things. We can’t change a racist system all at once. But when we come across something vile and harmful, we do have a choice. 

We can scoff and say, “Oh that’s terrible,” or we can teach our kids to take ‘em down. 

Katrina Coleman is a parent of two and a comedian. They produced the Memphis Comedy Festival as well as the You Look Like show. 

This story is brought to you by MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, a nonprofit newsroom focused on poverty, power and policy in Memphis. Support independent journalism by making a tax-deductible donation today. MLK50 is also supported by these generous donors.

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Medicinal Psychedelics Explored This Weekend at Memphis Mushroom Festival

Last week U.S. Senators Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and Cory Booker (D-New Jersey) urged the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to conduct more research into the potential therapeutic uses of psychedelics.

The high-level ask lent even more legitimacy to the burgeoning use and study of drugs like psilocybin (magic mushrooms), LSD, and ketamine to treat mental health issues like depression, anxiety, and alcohol addiction. In January the NIH hosted a workshop called “Psychedelics as Therapeutics: Gaps, Challenges and Opportunities.” It highlighted existing research and the regulatory challenges and opportunities to advance psychedelic research. 

Notes for the workshop said, “psychedelics have well-described effects on perception of the exterior world and an individual’s concept of their role within it. But these agents also influence mood, stress management, memory, and social functioning.” 

Psychedelics have well-described effects on perception of the exterior world and an individual’s concept of their role within it. But these agents also influence mood, stress management, memory, and social functioning.

National Institutes of Health

U.S. research on psychedelics goes at least back to 1950. But increased recreational use of these drugs during the 1960s counter-culture movement stigmatized them politically. Congress placed many of the drugs on Schedule I and later set harsh penalties for having and using them in the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. Subsequently, research funding for these drugs dried up. 

But research moved forward in the 1990s, ultimately getting therapeutic approval for MDMA (or ecstasy) to treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In April 2021, the NIH awarded its first grant dedicated to medicinal psychedelic research, focused on psilocybin.     

Jessica Shea, founder of Memphis-based Forward Counseling, prescribes a ketamine/esketamine nasal spray for some of her patients, sometimes with very positive results, she said. She also founded Memphis Mushroom Festival, which takes place this weekend at Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park. The event features three days of music, food, chef demonstrations, yoga, and lectures on the therapeutic effects of magic mushrooms.

— Toby Sells

Credit: Jessica Shea

Memphis Flyer: Why do you believe in psychedelics? 

Jessica Shea: I believe in psychedelics because they are more effective than our current medications and they also work on hard-to-treat diagnoses. 

The umbrella term “psychedelic medicine” is used for a class of medications that alters consciousness, temporarily.  These medications affect your perceptions, feelings and thoughts and we are finding that this effect is helping people resolve addictions, anxiety, depression, and PTSD.

Many of the research participants in clinical trials of these breakthrough medications called their experience with psychedelic medicine a spiritual experience and one of the most important experiences of their lives.  And these are people who have been suffering with severe depression and hopelessness. In my opinion, the mental health field needs this innovation to treat the epidemic of depression and suicide that this nation is facing. 

You prescribe ketamine/eskatamine to your patients. Tell me about results you’ve seen. 

I have been referring clients for ketamine or eskatamine since 2019 and just this year, Forward Counseling was approved to provide ketamine/eskatamine in our own offices. We have seen people who are severely depressed and with suicidal thoughts and ideation feel relief and hope.  

We have also seen complete resolution of depression symptoms. Ketamine and eskatamine are twice as effective as [selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors — SSRIs] at resolving depression, with less side effects.  

You also founded the Memphis Mushroom Festival. What can those attending expect?

Memphis Mushroom Festival is a multi-day experiential event held at Meeman Shelby Forest. Each day has different speakers, demos, chefs, music and entertainers. We will be teaching about the intersection of nature and health in a fun and interactive way with an emphasis on how mushrooms can improve our lives.

We will also have lectures about the psychedelic medicine, psilocybin, which comes from certain mushrooms, from its history as sacred potions to modern applications and research.  You can come for the day or you can come camp at the park with us for the whole time.  

Credit: Memphis Mushroom Festival