Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

In the 50 years since Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson’s first gaming session in a Lake Geneva, Wisconsin basement, Dungeons & Dragons has gone from weird niche hobby to Satanic plot to widely influential pillar of popular culture. Game concepts like hit points, character classes, and alignment which underlie everything from Final Fantasy to Grand Theft Auto began with D&D. Now in its fifth edition, the game is more popular than ever; current owners Wizards of the Coast estimates there are more than 50 million players worldwide. 

D&D has evolved over the years. Coming from the tradition of H.G. Wells’ Little Wars and military tabletop training exercises, Gygax and Arneson were mostly concerned with creating a set of rules for simulating medieval combat and magic. In 1980, The Straight Dope described D&D as “a game that combines the charm of a Pentagon briefing with the excitement of double-entry bookkeeping.” 

But what most players found fascinating was creating characters and participating in derring-do. D&D 5E and other contemporary role playing games like Stars Without Number are primarily story creation engines. A typical D&D game in 2023 is equal parts improv theater and group problem-solving exercise — a game of craps with a plot. 

Hugh Grant as Forge the Lord of Neverwinter. (Courtesy Paramount Pictures)

The setting that Gygax and company envisioned for their game was a mix of real details from the Middle Ages (Gygax had a peculiar obsession with halberds) and Romantic and fantasy literature from Ivanhoe to The Eternal Champion. Knights and kings rub shoulders with wizards and griffons. A part of the game’s appeal is that everyone can create their own fantasy stories, but in practice, the characters and plots created rarely rise to the majesty of Tolkien or exhibit the moral clarity of Le Guin. But so what? The important part is, you’re the one who gets to make the choices, reap the rewards, and suffer the consequences. 

D&D was catapulted into the mainstream when Eliot played it in E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial, but four previous attempts to adapt it for the big screen (not to mention the beloved but terminally corny animated series) have been abject failures. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves avoids the traps its predecessors fell into by taking the source material as seriously as the average player takes their gaming sessions. In other words, it’s an action comedy. 

Michelle Rodriguez and Chris Pine in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (Courtesy Paramount Pictures)

Edgin (Chris Pine) is a bard who ditched his vows as a Harper to take a few levels as rogue after his wife was killed by vengeful Red Wizards of Thay. He finds crime pays better than heroism, and forms an adventuring party with the barbarian Holga (Michelle Rodriguez), the sorcerer Simon (Justice Smith), and charismatic thief Forge (Hugh Grant in full camp mode). They meet the warlock Sofina (Daisy Head) in a tavern, who enlists them in her quest to burgle a Harper trove which she says contains a magic item that could bring Edgin’s wife back to life. Leaving daughter Kira (Chloe Coleman) behind, Edgin leads the party into the vault, only to be betrayed and left to be captured. 

Two years later, Holga and Edgin escape the slammer. Forge has parlayed his ill-gotten gains into the lordship of Neverwinter, with Sophina as his trusted advisor, and Kira his adoptive daughter. Instead of the family reunion they were expecting, Forge marks them for execution, so they’re on the run again. Such is the life of the freelance murder hobo. 

Sophia Lillis as Doric the Druid. (Courtesy Paramount Pictures)

In true D&D fashion, each new obstacle in the party’s path leads to a mini-quest. To redeem himself with his daughter, Edgin must plan a new heist that will expose Forge as Sophina’s catspaw. To do that, he needs a magic helmet. To find out where the magic helmet is, he must speak with the dead. To do that, he needs his old friend Simon, the shapeshifting druid Doric (Sophia Lillis), and the paladin Xenk (Regé-Jean Page). And so on.

The usual problem with adapting games into film is that there’s not enough plot to hang a story on (I’m looking at you, Angry Birds.) D&D is nothing but stories. Honor Among Thieves feels like something a dungeon master would cook up for a campaign. Directors Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley, who did the sleeper hit action comedy Game Night, understand that formulating an overly complex plan and then bickering about who messed up the plan is the real essence of the game. The action sequences are generally well done, and — with the exception of a bravado one-shot sequence where the shape-shifting Doric escapes from a castle —succinct. The magic duels are actually creative, not just wizards unimaginatively shooting lasers at each other like in so many Harry Potter movies. For longtime players, it’s thrilling to see Monster Manual entries like Displacer Beasts and Gelatinous Cubes come to life — proving that these classic creature designs are still superior to most modern Hollywood imaginings. 

Pine, who has been great in everything for years, finally comes into his own as a movie star. The chemistry between him and his team ultimately elevate Honor Among Thieves. What the film most resembles is the low- to mid-budget fantasies of the 80s, like Willow, Ladyhawk, and Legend. Even for the uninitiated, it’s still good fun.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Chancellor Keeps City Out of Mayoral Residency Suit

Phase One of the mayoral residency issue got a hearing Friday in the court of Chancellor JoeDae Jenkins, and the main result was that Memphis city attorney Jennifer Sink, who may have passed the buck on residency requirements to attorney Robert Meyers, had the buck passed right back to her.

Strictly speaking, the issue was whether the City of Memphis should be joined to the case, as attorneys for the Shelby County Election Commission (SCEC) maintained and as attorneys for plaintiffs and mayoral candidates Floyd Bonner and Van Turner insisted was unnecessary.

After hearing testimony from both sides, Jenkins found essentially for the plaintiffs, ruling that he found it “unclear” that the city attorney had officially endorsed or signed off on an opinion from Meyers, a former SCEC chair, that she sent to the commission, which posted it on its website.

In the opinion, Meyers held that candidates for Memphis mayor remained bound by provisions in an 1896 city charter that insisted on a prior five-year residency in the city. Arguing for the SCEC, attorney Ed McKenney attempted to disclaim the commission’s responsibility for the ruling and said the SCEC had merely served as a conduit for the city’s position. The plaintiffs’ position has been that Sink had not submitted the Meyers opinion in any official way.

To the chancellor’s somewhat rhetorical question, “How would the city be bound?,” Bonner’s attorney Robert Spence replied, “Not to be flippant, but who cares? The city does not conduct elections.” Sink, he maintained, had not adopted or co-signed the Meyers opinion.

In essence, Jenkins concurred with that in his finding Friday. The chancellor had mentioned that, in any case he personally was aware of “two or three”opinions the city was privy to other than that of Meyers. (An author of one of those opinions, city council attorney Allan Wade, was in the courtroom Friday.)

Spence said after the hearing that the chancellor had put “the ball in the Election Commission’s court.” McKenney agreed that, pending a response by Sink, who could meanwhile add an official endorsement of the Meyers’ opinion on the part of the city. “We [the SCEC] may be forced to defend it on our own,” he said.

A status conference on the matter will be held in Jenkins’ court on Thursday .

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

Report: No Cancer Clusters Found Around Sterilization Services

No clusters of major cancers were found in a government investigation of the area around Sterilization Services in South Memphis after health alerts were raised on emissions from the company last year.

The company uses ethylene oxide (EtO) in its Florida Street facility to sterilize medical equipment. The gas is odorless and colorless and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) wasn’t aware emissions could raise cancer rates until 2016.

Now, the EPA says EtO emissions from the facility could pose a risk to those living in the neighborhood around it. The agency held public meetings in Memphis last year to warn the residents but said there was little they could do. 

Since that meeting, officials with the Shelby County Health Department (SCHD) and the Tennessee Department of Health (TDH) reviewed areas around the company’s facility. Specifically, they were looking for heightened cases of leukemia, non-Hodgkins lymphoma, stomach cancer, and breast cancer.  

”This cancer cluster investigation did not provide evidence of increased amounts of leukemia, non-Hodgkins lymphoma, stomach, or breast cancers clustered near the Sterilization Services of Tennessee facility compared to a group of residents away from the facility,” reads the report. “Just because we cannot find evidence of increased rates of cancer that are associated with EtO does not mean there may not be increased risk.”

For the study, health officials compared the area around Sterilization Services to another area far from the facility, basically from Cordova to Eads in eastern Shelby County. To get a better context of any population shifts that may have happened, they also compared data from 2000-2009 and from 2010-2019. 

SCHD officials announced the findings of the study this week in a public meeting. SCHD director Dr. Michelle Taylor fielded questions from the a audience and from those watching a live-stream of the meeting. Taylor said the company has been “very cooperative” during the investigation process.  

“We’ve never had a problem with them, with our inspectors going in, asking questions, getting information for from them, none of that,” Taylor said. “So, really it is about finding out what the EPA [Environmental Protection Agency] is expecting in the way of additional controls and then figuring out and negotiating how quickly that can happen.” 

The company has used EtO here since the 1970s. The SCHD has permitted the facility since 1985. The EPA did not begin regulating emissions of EtO until 1994. 

The company is now in compliance with all local, state, and federal regulations on emissions. The EPA is working on some rule changes to limit EtO emissions at places like Sterilization Services. 

Until then, the company can only be asked to make changes voluntarily, which is what the Memphis City Council asked them to do in a resolution in January. At the time, council member Dr. Jeff Warren said Sterilization Services has facilities across the U.S. and has already enacted emission interventions at some of them. 

Citizens asked Taylor this week if the health department could intervene and demand the company to act, even to get them to move. 

“If we learned anything from Covid, we know that our authority is limited at the health department,” Taylor said. “Industry is not just regulated by us, it’s regulated by code enforcement, it’s regulated by zoning, it’s regulated by many other divisions that are not the health department. So, when you’re talking about asking an industry to move somewhere else, the short answer is, we as a health department, as a single entity — we just cannot do that alone.” 

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: Dungeons & Dragons & Pathos

Break out your d20s and Mountain Dew, it’s D&D weekend at the movies.

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is the fourth attempt to adapt the mother of all role playing games for the big screen. With Chris Pine in the lead, supported by an ensemble who understand the assignment, it’s the first one that actually succeeds as a movie. DMs and PC everywhere will enjoy visiting Baldur’s Gate and thrill to the Displacer Beast cameo, but it’s broadly entertaining enough for the uninitiated.

But let’s say dragons ain’t your thing. In a perfect bit of counter-programming, this is also the weekend Sundance Grand Jury Prize Winner A Thousand and One goes broad. (This is a very different “Grand Jury prize” from the one He Who Will Not Be Named just won.) Director A.V. Rockwell’s story of maternal love and systemic racism in New York City stars triple-threat Teyana Taylor (last seen opposite Eddie Murphy in Craig Brewer’s Coming 2 America) as a single mom struggling to stay out of prison and raise her son Terry, played at three different ages by three different actors. I’m issuing a Three-Hanky Cry alert for this one.

The Great Keanu continues to tear up the box office with John Wick: Chapter 4. Directed by ace stuntman Chad Stahelski, these films represent the pinnacle of action choreography. In fact, I would argue that they’re essentially dance movies, and place Reeves in the proud tradition of Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly — but y’all ain’t ready for that conversation yet.

On Monday (April 3rd) at Studio on the Square, Indie Memphis brings the French film The Five Devils to the Bluff City. This wildly imaginative debut from director Léa Mysius looks incredible.

Categories
News News Blog

Sterick Building Sold, New Developments Planned

There are changes in store for one of Downtown’s most notable buildings. Stuart Harris, principal of Constellation Properties, announced that his team have closed on the purchase of the historic Sterick Building.

The 340,000-square-foot, 29-story skyscraper was built in 1929, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. However, the building has stood vacant since 1986. Previously, the idea of a purchase had been complicated, owing to a ground lease that had considered the building separate from the land it sits on. But the new agreement resolves that issue, allowing for future plans of a full redevelopment to begin taking shape.

“This deal would not have been possible without a number of local and national investors who share our commitment to making sure this historic building sees a bright new future,” said Harris. “I also want to thank Equitable, CBRE, Henry Grosvenor on behalf of the sellers’ families, and the Downtown Memphis Commission for their steadfast partnership and belief in our vision.”

Harris has previously overseen redevelopment of the Commonwealth building at 240 Madison Ave. Constellation Properties also purchased parcels at 220 and 224 Madison Avenue, with an eye on further developing the corridor from the Commonwealth down to the Sterick at the corner of North B.B King Boulevard and Madison.

A full redevelopment plan and uses for the Sterick Building are still under consideration. When that is finalized, Constellation plans to seek additional resources and public incentives to help with the project.

The Sterick Building towers (right) above AutoZone Park. (Credit: CBRE, reprinted with permission).
Categories
News News Blog News Feature

CHOICES Works To Improve Maternal Mortality By Addressing Racial Disparities

A report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC,) showed that the U.S. maternal mortality rate had increased 40% from 2020 to 2021. The World Health Organization defines maternal death as “the death of a woman while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and the site of the pregnancy, from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management, but not from accidental or incidental causes”

According to the CDC, 1,205 women died in the United States in 2021, compared to 861 in 2020. 

The report also stated that the rates for Black women “were significantly higher than rates for White and Hispanic women.”

The 2021 Tennessee Maternal Mortality Rate Annual Report showed that “non-Hispanic Black women” are 3.9 times as likely to die from pregnancy-related causes compared to” non-Hispanic white women”.  President and CEO, Jennifer Pepper of CHOICES: Center for Reproductive Health said that both the maternal and infant mortality rate crisis in Tennessee is “dire,particularly for Black women.”

The Tennessee Maternal Mortality Rate Annual Report also stated that more than 75% of deaths were deemed preventable, and discrimination contributed to at least 33% of deaths. 

“There’s something wrong with the system when African American women who are college-educated and have great jobs can still have poorer outcomes than white women who are uneducated,” says Dr. Nikia Grayson, chief clinical officer at CHOICES.

Accessibility is also an issue that contributes to increased maternal mortality rates in Memphis. Information released to CHOICES from the City Health Dashboard said that “60.3% of live birth are to African American and 35.4% of African American women who gave birth lacked adequate prenatal care.” In comparison, “15.3% of white women in Memphis lacked access to adequate prenatal care.”

“The U.S. model of providing reproductive health care is fundamentally broken,” said Pepper. “For people experiencing poverty, particularly people of color, the legacy of racist violence in controlling reproduction is still present. Pregnant women of color are often treated like social burdens instead of valued individuals with a right to bodily autonomy.”

CHOICES is committed to improving these outcomes, and is “increasing access for people at risk in Memphis’ urban core,” said Pepper. One of the ways that they have been able to improve birthing outcomes is through their midwifery services. According to CHOICES, 83% of their midwifery patients are Black women. They also said that Black patients are 6.6. times less likely to have a preterm birth at CHOICES than anywhere else in Tennessee.

There are many reasons why people may choose midwifery services however CHOICES said that it is strongly associated with “lower interventions during pregnancy and birth, cost-effectiveness, and improved outcomes for both the birthing patient and the baby.”

“The midwifery model of care supports pregnant people in trusting the normal processes of pregnancy and birth with the help of experienced midwives,” said Pepper. “Midwifery is people-centered and based on informed choice, which means taking the time to teach people about their bodies using evidence-based information and offering the options available so that a person can make an informed decision about what is best for them.”

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Drop Close Game to Clippers

The Memphis Grizzlies lost the first of two back-to-back meetings with the Los Angeles Clippers at FedExForum Wednesday night, with a final score of 141-132. It was a closely contested battle, but as the saying goes, close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.

Let’s get into it.

This was a trap game. Both teams were short-handed, with the Clippers missing Kawhi Leonard and Paul George, and the Grizzlies being without Jaren Jackson Jr, Desmond Bane, and Tyus Jones, in addition to the ongoing absences of Steven Adams and Brandon Clarke.

But this was not a loss due to lack of available players; this was straight up being outshot from beyond the arc and Memphis being unable to compensate on the other end. When Russell Westbrook (5 of 5) and Robert Covington (7 of 7) combine for more made threes (12) than the entire Grizzlies squad (11), it’s probably going to be a bad time.

Postgame, Head Coach Taylor Jenkins was asked about allowing so many threes throughout the game: “They played with great force, great ball movement. We had too many breakdowns in recognizing our personnel. [Russell] Westbrook played great, obviously played great in the first quarter, set a tone from the three-point line. [Robert] Covington, seven-for-seven. Just too many free looks. Our on-ball defense wasn’t good, poor communication; some situations they took advantage of.”

Our on-ball defense wasn’t good … is putting it mildly. During the fourth quarter it was nearly nonexistent.

Credit where it is due to Memphis, with almost 20 more shot attempts (95 to 78) than the Clippers, they did at least go down swinging. And credit to this Clippers team, they made it a fight all the way down to the final buzzer.

The loss ended a seven-game Grizzlies winning streak, and a 12-game winning streak on the home court. Memphis still holds the best home record (33-6) in the league.

By The Numbers:

All the Grizzlies’ starters ended the night in double-digits.

Ja Morant led the team with 36 points, 4 rebounds, 9 assists, and 3 steals, and shooting 12 of 12 from the free throw line.

Dillon Brooks finished the night with 30 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal, and 1 block.

Xavier Tillman Sr. closed out with 16 points, 9 rebounds, 5 assists, 1 steal, and 1 block.

Santi Aldama put up 17 points and 8 rebounds, while shooting 2 of 2 from beyond the arc.

Luke Kennard made his first appearance in the starting lineup, putting up 12 points, 4 rebounds, and 2 assists.

Who Got Next?

Not quite a do-over, the Grizzlies will again face off against the Clippers in FedExForum on Friday, March 31st. Tip-off is at 7 PM CDT.

Categories
Music News

Brandon and Virginia Ramey Retire from Dancing

Ballet Memphis dancers Brandon and Virginia Ramey are hanging up their ballet shoes.

“You can’t dance forever,” Brandon says.

“We both are retiring with our final performance as Cinderella in April,” Virginia says.

The production will be held April 14th through 16th at the Orpheum. Virginia and Brandon will dance in the Saturday evening performance and the Sunday matinee.

 “The April 16th Sunday matinee will be our last performance on stage,” Virginia says. “Then we start June 1st as co-directors of the Ballet Memphis School and Youth Ballet Memphis.”

“The opportunity was presented to us a couple of years ago,” says Brandon, who, along with his wife, have been assistant Ballet Memphis directors for the past two years.

They weren’t sure what they were going to do next when Gretchen McLennon, CEO and president of Ballet Memphis, asked about their future plans. “At that time, we were going to dance until an opportunity came,” Virginia says. “And it came right on time.”

Janet Parke, former director of Ballet Memphis School, became the new senior artistic associate. “It opened up a space for Brandon and me to step into the school and continue what has been going so well. And make a few changes here and there,” says Virginia. “We have been doing some ongoing training in New York with the American Ballet Theatre national training curriculum. That will be a “little bit of a new curriculum for the school.”

As for dancing, Virginia says, “It takes so much time and energy to dance professionally. And we will now be  putting all that time and energy into the school. We may make guest appearances here and there, but to do what we’ve been doing at this level will not be possible because we have two kids at home and 300 kids at work. We want to be able to really focus on the school and growing the program.”

Asked who was at Ballet Memphis first, Brandon says, “Ginny. By a country mile.”

“I grew up here, so I grew up in the Ballet Memphis School since I was five years old,” Virginia says. “I joined the professional company right out of high school and danced with the company over 20 years now.”

Ballet Memphis founding artistic director Dorothy Gunther Pugh brought Brandon to Ballet Memphis in 2009. “They found me going to San Francisco Ballet School,”  he says. “I’ve fallen in love with my wife and the city and now the school.”

Asked how he and Virginia met, Brandon says, “We got paired for Nutcracker because we’re both very tall. The degree of chemistry we had surprised everybody.”

They fell for each other “pretty immediately,” Brandon says. “I liked her sense of humor and her feisty attitude.”

As for working together, he says, “Sparks can fly, but she never backs down. She’s got a true north compass sense of how movement and music interact. So, it’s like being in the room with Beethoven and Mozart. ‘Oh, wow. She just knows innately how things are put together.’”

“We immediately got along as friends,” Virginia says. “Rehearsals were really fun that first year. He was very sweet. We were doing some very difficult lifts and we realized that one of the lifts was causing bruises on my leg. So, he brought me a jar of multi-vitamins. Little things like that are the things that stole my heart. … We can argue about how a step is being done without it affecting our ability to work together.”

Asked how many times they’ve danced together in productions, Virginia says, “If I had the time I could count exactly, but the big ballets were Nutcracker, Swan Lake, Giselle, and we’ve done Cinderella. And we’ve gotten to do (George) Balanchine works together. Dracula.”

The upcoming Cinderella will be their second time performing it together. “We actually prepared in 2020,” Virginia says. “We were in the middle of rehearsals that would have happened in April of 2020 when the world shut down and we had to put all the work up. It’s been really interesting watching the rehearsal videos from that time.”

They’re looking forward to the new phase in their lives. “For the past two years we’ve felt a little bit like we’ve been doing two jobs each,” Virginia says. “Now we’ll be able to really really focus on the one job of co-directing the school.”

“It’s such an exciting opportunity” to think about all all of the knowledge and experience that we’re going to pass on to the younger dancers,” Brandon says. “But it’s also bittersweet. We’re closing a chapter in order to begin the next chapter of our life.”

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News News Blog

LGBTQ Theater Company Sues to End Drag Ban

Friends of George’s, an LGBTQ theater company at the Evergreen Theatre, has filed a suit against the state of Tennessee regarding what is being called the “reckless anti-drag law.”

The organization announced on its Instagram page that the bill “imperils the lives of drag performers and seeks to oppress queer culture state-wide.”

“We believe that the act of drag challenges traditional societal structures while also providing a medium to connect with others in a celebratory and avant-garde manner,” the statement said. “We refuse to sit silently in the shadows while the government attempts to  strip away our right to free speech and expression.”

The post said the suit is filed against the state of Tennessee in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Tennessee.

The organization was founded in 2010, and according to Mark Campbell, president of Friends of George’s, is a drag-based theater company that hosts shows similar to Saturday Night Live, with lip-synch performances and occasional live vocals.

Drag has long been essential to the dramatic arts. Campbell says that in Shakespearean times, women were not allowed to perform in theaters, so men were cast in those roles.

Campbell says this bill is an attack on the LGBTQ community that considers drag an art form. With drag having such a heavy influence on theater, the bill has drawn criticism nationally as well, with groups like the Actors’ Equity Association (AEA), a labor union representing live theatrical performances, rejecting the law and “lobbying for its elimination.”

“We want to be extremely clear that performing artists across our country are protected from government overreach by the First Amendment,” AEA said in a statement. “For centuries performers have worn costumes that society deems inconsistent with the sex they were assigned at birth.”

Many worry that this law will affect performances of shows such as Hairspray, Kinky Boots, and Mrs. Doubtfire. Actors who play these roles would be considered “male or female impersonators,” who are classified under “adult cabaret performances.” The bill says that such performances cannot be on public property and cannot be viewed by anyone who is underage.

Campbell explained that the shows performed at Friends of George’s heavily feature drag performers, male and female. 

“This is basically a First Amendment case and our right to self expression, trying to dictate how someone dresses,” said Campbell. “If I, as a grown man, were to dress in the same manner as the Grizz Girls, and give the exact same performance, my performance would be illegal and deemed harmful to children, while theirs wouldn’t.”

While Campbell understands that the majority of the Tennessee legislature voted to  pass the bill, he said that he does not believe that this is reflective of Tennessee residents.

“I know a lot of conservative people. People who vote for Republican presidential candidates and Republican legislators and stuff, but a lot of those people come to our shows, and bring their kids occasionally” said Campbell. “I’ve spoken to those people, and they’re as appalled as I am. They’ve seen what we do, and the creativity that we put into it, and the causes that we support, and I just hope that everybody will talk to their friends, tell them about us, and what it’s really about, and the self expression that we put into it.”

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog Politics Feature

Part Two: Mayoral Candidate Update

Note: in a prior article, the campaigns of four presumably mainline mayoral candidates were discussed  — those of Floyd Bonner, Paul Young, Van Turner, and Willie Herenton.

J.W. Gibson: The businessman/developer is something of a wild card in the Mayor’s race. He is a former County Commissioner whose high-matter mark, politically, was a hard-fought but losing in-camera contest for a chairmanship vacancy with then Commission colleague Joe Ford.

Gibson is well known in developmental circles and to a certain extent in political ones, as well. At the moment, he still hopes to be involved in a pending, long-maturing TIF that would cover the Soulsville area of South Memphis.

Of all the declared candidates, Gibson has the most direct access to independent wealth, and that puts him, to start with, at an even keel financially with Bonner and Young, the standout fundraisers so far.

His financial means could be important, especially in a protracted race, but Gibson, however familiar to insiders, has a long way to go to achieve widespread name recognition in the community at large.

Frank Colvett: This city councilman, a former Council chair, took pains when he announced to insist that he was not a partisan candidate and would appeal to all sectors of the Memphis  population in what is, of course, a formally non-partisan race.

Even so, Colvett’s image as a well-known Republican stirred speculation that the councilman intended to corner the local GOP electorate as at least a base for his further efforts.

As last year’s county general election made clear, though, Republicans are a distinct minority in Shelby County, and that disparity is even more pronounced within Memphis city limits, where the GOP-voting population is estimated to be between 15 and 20 percent.

Colvett is doggedly showing up at many of the mayoral forums, often ill-attended, that are so far being held. And he is a fixture at any bona fide Republican event, handing out his lapel stickers at the gate.

James Harvey: Another former County Commissioner, another Republican (as of recent years, anyhow), and a true long shot, Harvey is an African-American who hopes to get his share of widely disparate voting populations.

He has a tendency to talk too long when asked to speak at events (a holdover from his erstwhile Commission habits), but, as he demonstrated at a recent GOP meeting (in Germantown, not the most obvious place to find Memphis voters), he was off-and-on riveting when he talked Law and Order themes to the faithful.

Still, he probably shouldn’t hold his breath. (Or, to invert that metaphor, maybe he should.)

Karen Camper: As the minority leader of the state House Democrats, Camper is an influential figure, and in her campaign announcement, she made a good try of casting herself as a spokesperson for Memphis’ inner-city neighborhoods. 

And her legislative experience has given her a good grasp of the state-local interface she would need to work as the city’s chief executive.

One thing that has held her back is the moratorium that’s been imposed on fundraising of General Assembly members for the duration of the current legislative session. 

Another thing that holds her back is the simple fact that, however important she is as a pubic official, she has been working at a 225-mile distance from Memphis and, consequently, outside Nashville and her legislative district, she remains something of an unknown in Memphis at large.

Michelle McKissack: There surely is a political market for such a highly presentable and well-spoken female candidate as this former local TV personality who has lately served as chair of the Shelby County Schools board.

But McKissack has been stumbling somewhat in making her entry into the race an established fact. She made an unusual public announcement early on that she was thinking of running, but has never amplified on that in any tangible way since. (She has been, however, a presence at several local low-key forums.)

Another drawback to McKissack’s candidacy is that she is subject to fallout from the embarrassing implosion of the now departed and disgraced schools superintendent Joris Ray, whom she had a hand in selecting.

Judge Joe Brown: You kidding me? Is he really running — this former actual Shelby County jurist and, somewhat famously later, a pretend one on syndicated national TV?

Well, he evidently really is. He’s showed up at a couple of local mayoral forums, anyway, where he has continued demonstrating a serious case of foot-in-mouth disease (e.g., saying out loud that a female Mayor would be subject to being raped if she kept a too public profile).

Brown’s name recognition was thought to be an advantage when he ran for D.A. back in 2014, and it may well continue to be, given that  former Councilman and current Shelby County Clerk Joe Brown (no relation) probably owes his various elections to the name similarity.

But Judge Brown’s 2014 campaign dramatically dissolved as a result of his many behavioral and verbal indiscretions, and he had no money to run on, anyhow. He still doesn’t have any.

(This concludes Part Two of a brief survey of Memphis mayoral candidates. Almost surely I’ve overlooked somebody, in which case I’ll realize that at some point and add them on. In any case, petitions can’t even be drawn until May 22, so nobody is really official just yet.)