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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Win Third in a Row Since Return of Ja Morant

With a final score of 125-119, the Memphis Grizzlies defeated the Atlanta Hawks and pushed their winning streak to three games, their longest such streak this season.

Let’s get into it.

Once again, the Grizzlies big three of Ja Morant, Desmond Bane, and Jaren Jackson Jr. each scored 20 points or more, as they have in each of the games since Morant’s return. Memphis is 3-0 since his return and looks like an entirely different team on the court.

The Grizzlies were somewhat sluggish in the first half, and as has been their practice as of late, they came out in the second half and scorched their opponent. 31 of Desmond Bane’s game-high 37 points came in the second half, with 18 coming in the third quarter.

Atlanta could not withstand the Grizzlies’ second-half onslaught even with Trae Young scoring 19 of his 30 points and Sadiq Bey and Dejounte Murray scoring 10 or more points in the second half.

Memphis continues an upward trajectory since the return of Morant, and all signs point to Marcus Smart returning in the next two games. Luke Kennard should not be too far behind him, and there are reports that Brandon Clarke could be ready to return to the court after the all-star break. Suddenly moving up the standings to earn a play-in spot doesn’t seem so far-fetched.

By The Numbers:

Memphis scored a season-high 76 paint points in their victory over the Hawks. They converted Atlanta turnovers into 24 points and finished the night with 51.5 percent overall shooting.

Desmond Bane put up a game-high 37 points, 6 rebounds, 6 assists, 1 steal, and 1 block, and was responsible for 5 of the Grizzlies 11 made threes.

Ja Morant closed out with 30 points, 6 rebounds, 11 assists, 1 steal, and 1 block.

Jaren Jackson Jr. spent most of the game in foul trouble, but was able to put up 20 points on 8-of-10 shooting in 23 minutes.

Ziaire Williams led the second unit with 8 points, 3 rebounds, and 3 assists. Santi Aldama and Xavier Tillman Sr. contributed 6 points each.

Who Got Next?

The Grizzlies continue their road trip after the holiday with a return to the Big Easy on Tuesday to face off against the New Orleans Pelicans. Tip-off is at 7 p.m. CST.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Finally, 12 Returns to FedExForum

Ja Morant hadn’t played at FedExForum since April 26, 2023, in Game 5 of the Western Conference quarterfinals against the Los Angeles Lakers.

Should Memphis turn their season around, Morant’s comeback from a 25-game absence will likely be remembered as a historic achievement.

Joy and excitement had been missing from the FedExForum after the Morant-less Grizzlies went 1-11. 

That all changed on Tuesday night for the 24-year-old ‘s first home game of the season. 

From Derrick Rose’s introductory remarks to the introduction of Morant in the starting lineup, the energy in the arena was apparent.

“I can say it was tough, but I can’t at the same time because obviously the tough part was not being able to be out there and enjoy and have fun with my guys,” said Morant. “Now that I’m out there, I’m making sure that we’re all having fun, no matter what, so that was pretty much just my message.”

He went on to say, “You can just tell by the energy of the team. We catch a lob, you have the bench going crazy, you have the players screaming and yelling and dapping each other up. That’s our type of basketball. That’s how we are. That’s the team we are, people we are. We are very close knit. I just preach that man, regardless of what it is, we have to have fun and celebrate the opportunities we have day in and day out.”

The Grizzlies had plenty of reasons to celebrate and when the final buzzer sounded, it was Desmond Bane, Morant, and Jaren Jackson Jr. who pulled Memphis to a 116-103 win against the Indiana Pacers. 

Bane led the way with 31 points, seven assists, and six rebounds. Jackson Jr. added 21 points while going 8-of-10 from the field and a team-high 8 rebounds. Morant finished with 20 points, a team-high 8 assists and five rebounds. 

The Grizzlies are 6-0 when Morant, Bane, and Jackson Jr. all score 20 or more points. 

It was Vince Williams Jr. shutting the water off on Pacers star Tyrese Halliburton. Halliburton went 3-of-8 from the field when Williams Jr. was his primary defender. 

“It’s great — he’s doing it every single night, and I’m happy for him, but we expect that out of him,” said Jackson Jr. of Williams Jr.’s defensive presence. “He relishes those things. He’s also a perfectionist. He wants to shut down every player on every point, and that’s not always going to happen, but the fact that he shoots for that is amazing. That’s the mentality you need going against these players to make it really hard on them. And he has all these key stops and key shots, and key ball moves and plays on stretches that we’re having that are super important.”

Ziaire Williams, Santi Aldama, and John Konchar were rejuvenated off the bench. Williams chipped in 16 points and 2 blocks, while Aldama had 13 points. Konchar ended with six points, six rebounds, and two outstanding blocked shots. 

Memphis held the number one offensive team in the association to a season-low 103 points. 

The addition of Morant improves many things for the Grizzlies, but they still recognize they have a long way to go before they can save the season.

Jackson Jr. shared his thoughts on the team’s newfound improvement with Morant in the lineup: 

Strictly From the Fans

Long-time Grizzlies fan Bailey McCormick: 

“It felt amazing! It felt like I was watching Memphis Basketball. The energy and support for Ja was off the charts. I could feel the vibe inside the forum from the fans, from his teammates, and it made for an amazing game! If I didn’t already know how the city felt about Ja Morant, last night would’ve made me believe that Ja is a superstar not only for the Grizzlies, but also for the city of Memphis as a whole!”

Season-ticket holder Frederique Worthy: 

“From the moment fans started walking into the Forum, the energy felt completely different, and in the best way. Seeing Ja return to complete our big three, just felt like a weight lifted from our collective shoulders. Smiles, high fives, and shouts of joy were shared all around.”

Up Next 

The Grizzlies head to Atlanta to take on Trae Young and the Atlanta Hawks on Saturday, December 23, inside State Farm Arena at 7 p.m. CT. 

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News News Blog News Feature

Cannabis Flower Products At Risk With New TN Rules

Cannabis flower products could disappear from store shelves in Tennessee next year thanks to new state rules, a threat to businesses and consumers, advocates say. 

State lawmakers passed new laws this year to regulate the growing cannabis industry in Tennessee. Some of those rules went into effect in July. For example, cannabis products are moved behind shelves of stores that aren’t 21 and up. A new, 6-percent tax on cannabis products was levied, too. 

The new law also made the Tennessee Department of Agriculture (TDA) responsible for regulating the cannabis industry here. On Monday, the department issued new rules for cannabis producers and products. 

They immediately drew the ire from the Tennessee Growers Coalition (TGC), the advocacy and lobby agency for the state’s cannabis industry. The group is now organizing its members to fight the new rules.

TGC’s executive director Kelley Hess said the new law focused only on the Delta 9 cannabinoid and said that’s how hemp is defined on the federal level. But state agriculture officials added new THC standards for THCA and CBD flower. This could pinch producers and retailers as these products are “at least 70 percent of the market right now” and “what people have been building their businesses around.”

The new rules won’t affect edible products, like gummies, she said. Those products are made with cannabis oils that can be measured, fine-tuned all along the production process, and remain stable on the shelf. Cannabinoid profiles in flower products, however, can change. 

“The organic, raw flower is what’s really at jeopardy,” Hess said. “[The TDA is] just calculating the cannabinoids differently than what we’ve been calculating them for the last five years.” 

The TDA has overseen the state’s hemp industry since 2015. However, that oversight began as an industrial hemp program, when the crop was most likely intended to make rope, concrete, and those hippy hemp pullovers. 

That changed with the federal Farm Bill and the discovery of cannabinoids that could be pulled from hemp. The word “industrial” was all but phased out and TDA teams now travel the state testing hemp plants to ensure the THC levels in them are below a federally mandated .3 percent. 

In the past, that’s where the department left it. Whatever happened to that legal hemp and its cannabinoids afterward was up to the farmer and the market. The new law now mandates TDA  to manage cannabis and an edible foods program (like gummies) from the plant all the way to the shelf. The new rules issued Monday basically outline the structure of that program. 

Hess said her group and producers across the state offered ideas for state officials for the program but they did not listen. The new THC standard, she said, is a “misinterpretation of the bill” and warned agirculture officials that “you cannot do that.” But “they still did not take that seriously.” 

Hemp growers already have to meet those strict state guidelines in the field, she said. The move cut the number of producers from around 4,000 in the state to around 400. Hess said the TDA is now trying to “copy/paste” similar rules to the product side.

“It’s another standard that these growers and producers have to meet, which is completely unrealistic and unattainable,” Hess said. “So, they can’t do it. Then, all of these products that are on the shelf now will become illegal and noncompliant. So, law enforcement can come with criminal charges. 

A public hearing on the matter is scheduled for February. That hearing comes during the next session of the Tennessee General Assembly. 

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We Recommend We Recommend

On the Fly: 12/22-12/28

Who’s Holiday
The Memphian Room at The Circuit Playhouse
Performances through December 22
Childhood trauma can really do a number on people. Imagine if a man broke into your home, stole all of your family’s Christmas presents and decorations, and then went to all your neighbors’ homes and did the same thing, and then the town acted like nothing happened. That would do a number on you wouldn’t it? So forgive Cindy Lou Who if she’s not the innocent little Whoville you remember from How the Grinch Stole Christmas. And she’ll tell you how she got here in Playhouse’s adult comedy that is guaranteed to leave you laughing all night long. This show’s for the adults, so leave the kiddos at home or bring them to see Playhouse’s other show The Wizard of Oz, and Dorothy will be the innocent little Kansan you remember, don’t you worry. Tickets for Who’s Holiday ($25) can be purchased here, and tickets for the family-friendly Wizard of Oz ($25) can be purchased here

A Christmas Carol
Theatre Memphis
Performances through December 23
Miserly Ebenezer Scrooge is approached by the ghostly vision of his former business partner, Jacob Marley, who warns him of an upcoming spiritual journey. Like, if you don’t already know what this show is about, I’m sorry but have you been living under a rock? That’s also my excuse, so I don’t have to write more. Get your tix here.

One Man’s Christmas Carol
Germantown Community Theatre
Friday, December 22, 2:30 p.m.
Marques Brown’s Ostrander-nominated original adaptation of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is an hour-long sincere and uplifting portrayal of the most legendary tale of the season. Tickets are only $10 for adults and $5 for children 17 and under. Proceeds benefit the Full Spectrum Theatre Initiative.

Unsilent Night
Cooper-Young Historic District
Friday, December 22, 6 p.m.
For this traveling sound installation, participants of all ages bring their own boomboxes (or bluetooth speakers because not all of us are stuck in ye olden times) and drift peacefully through a cloud of sound. Everyone presses play together, beginning at the Cooper-Young Gazebo, and walks through the Cooper-Young neighborhood creating a cacophony of bells, voices, and reverberant joy. The parade ends at Cooper-House Project Brewery. Bring a canned good food donation to get a free beer!

Killer Santa Double Feature
Black Lodge
Saturday, December 23, 6 p.m.

Join the Lodge for a holly-jolly gorefest, as both the naughty and the nice pay the holiday price. It’s time for a Killer Santa Double Feature, screening Violent Night (2022) and Christmas Bloody Christmas (2022), with specialty holiday drinks made for the occasion! Free to all, 18+. Stick around after the movies for a dose of winter darkness on the dance floor at Dystopia’s Nightmare Before Christmas, a special holiday edition of goth night. Honor Krampus all night, dressed as your favorite Nightmare Before Christmas Character! $12 cover at door.

Holiday Markets
You haven’t finished your Christmas shopping? Really? I’m not saying you’re a bad person. I’m just saying you’ve done a bad thing. We all procrastinate. I mean, not me. Never. I’m perfect. But you … well … you’re lucky you have me to tell you that there’s still time. You can check out any of these artists markets below and you’ll be in good hands. You might also want to check out our holiday gift guide, just saying. 

  • WinterArts, 870 South White Station Road, Monday-Thursdays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Fridays, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sundays, noon-5 p.m., through December 24
  • Memphis Arts Collective Holiday Artist Market, Ridgeway Trace Shopping Center, Mondays-Saturdays, 10:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.; Sundays, noon-5 p.m., through December 24
  • Holiday Bazaar, Arrow Creative, Wednesdays-Thursdays, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fridays-Saturdays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sundays, noon-4 p.m., through December 23
  • Last Minute Artist Market, Crosstown Brewing Company, Saturday, December 23, noon-5 p.m.

Bright Light! Bright Light!
Are you in the holiday spirit yet? If yes, check out the events below — they’ll keep that warm fuzzy feeling a-brewin’. If no, check out the events below — they’ll bring on that warm fuzzy feeling you’ve been missing.

  • Holiday Wonders at the Garden, Memphis Botanic Garden, select nights through December 30th, $15-$20
  • Enchanted Forest Festival of Trees, Museum of Science & History, on display through December 31st, $6/children (3-12), $6/seniors, $7/adults (Side note: Also check out MoSH’s Laser Holiday Light Show or catch a screening of The Muppet Christmas Carol or The Nightmare Before Christmas. Here’s to a sedentary experience, amirite?)
  • Starry Nights, Shelby Farms Park, select nights through December 31st, $15.95-$35
  • Zoo Lights, Memphis Zoo, select nights through January 6th, $14/members, $19/nonmembers
  • <NEW!> Deck the Diamond, AutoZone Park, select nights through December 31st, $33.88
    Deck the Diamond is a walk-through experience with over 190 lighting structures including large walk-through tunnels, archways, animals, presents, and trains all centered around a 60-foot Christmas tree. Guests will enjoy festive food and drinks, holiday activities, an ice-skating rink, musical entertainment, scheduled appearances by Santa and Mrs. Claus, fireworks, and much more. 

There’s always something happening in Memphis. See a full calendar of events here.

Submit events here or by emailing calendar@memphisflyer.com.

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News News Blog News Feature

Report Paints Violent, “Out of Control” Picture of Tiptonville Prison

“Inmates are out of control, 200 staff shortage, inmates walking around with homemade knives, the gangs are controlling the units, drug overdoses regularly. This is just some of the issues.” 

The Tennessee Department of Corrections (TDOC) made headlines recently concerning sexual assaults in prison, staff shortages at prisons that make them dangerous places to work, and more, all while the state’s private prison operator, CoreCivic, seeks a $9.8 million budget boost next year. 

The issues came to light in a new audit of the department by the Tennessee State Comptroller’s Office. That report found issues across TDOC.

But one section focused on Tiptonville’s Northwest Correctional Complex, about 130 miles north of Memphis in Lake County. That section paints a troubling image of the facility, especially with firsthand comments from the officers who work there, like the one above. 

“[We] have no help and really if you get assaulted, you’re going to get assaulted until the inmates get tired of beating you because there are really no [correctional officers] available to come help you out,” another officer was quoted in the report. “It’s crazy.” 

“I have been told that if I am in a situation where my life is being threatened, nobody will come to help me,” reads a comment from another officer. 

Anecdotes from officers and data collected by the comptroller show a fragile hold on security at the facility. For example, offenders were free to move at will within their housing units during lockdowns. Physical security failures and dysfunctional equipment at Northwest were so bad, the comptroller legally omitted them from a federal report “because they would expose the facilities’ vulnerabilities.” Incidents of overdoses, contraband, destruction of state property, and assaults go unreported. 

The issues at Northwest, officials said, stem from the same place: staffing shortages. 

“With over 200 correctional officers short, the job is not safe,” wrote one officer from the prison. “We fight inmates every day. There is no discipline for their inmates. Security is a joke! Not enough staff.”

The comptroller’s report says 61 percent of Northwest’s positions were unfilled in the 2023 fiscal year. By August, two months into the state’s new fiscal year, the figure increased to 63 percent. 

Northwest’s job vacancy rate has increased every year since 2020, when the rate was a still-high 46 percent. In 2023, Northwest had more unfilled positions than any other prison in the state. 

The next-highest vacancy rate was at Nashville’s Riverbend Maximum Security Institution with 40 percent of its positions unfilled. Bledsoe County Correctional Complex in Pikeville had the lowest vacancy rate of just 9 percent.        

Staffing issues have real-world consequences. Officials with the comptroller’s office saw that firsthand during a site visit in April. During a tour, the correctional officer escorting the group was called away for an overdose. With no other officers available, the group from the comptroller’s office was left alone in the prison yard.    

For some of this, state officials recommended management take a hard look at the impacts vacancy rates and high turnover rates have on existing employees. Prison management said they have a hard time, however, hiring more employees because of the prison’s remote location, competition from other employers, the declining population in Northwest Tennessee, and the nature of the job. 

Some of this may be helped, the comptroller said, with the appointment of some new high-ranking officials. In January, Gov. Bill Lee hired Frank Strada as the new TDOC commissioner. In June, Strada hired a new warden for Northwest, as well as a new associate warden for treatment and a new associate warden for security for the facility.    

“It is too soon to determine whether the commissioner’s changes will bring sufficient positive change in the culture at the Northwest facility,” reads the report. 

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News News Blog News Feature

GOP Lawmaker Mulls Path for TN Medicaid Expansion

Outgoing Republican Representative Sam Whitson is mulling a reversal of state law requiring the governor to gain approval from the legislature before expanding Medicaid.

Whitson, a Franklin lawmaker who recently announced he will not seek re-election in 2024, said Tuesday he’s been considering such a measure for two years with Tennessee forgoing billions in federal funding that could enable the working poor to obtain insurance coverage. He has not filed a bill yet.

The amount Tennessee is losing ballooned from about $1 billion in 2014 to $2.1 billion this year, according to healthinsurance.org.

“We should give the governor the opportunity to explore options,” Whitson told the Tennessee Lookout. “I’m not saying we need to do Medicaid expansion. I just think that was a restrictive bill done for purely political reasons to enhance Kelsey’s and Durham’s political future.”

Former Sen. Brian Kelsey, who pleaded guilty to federal campaign finance fraud but is fighting to reverse the plea, and former Rep. Jeremy Durham, who was expelled from the House in 2016 for 22 cases of sexual misconduct, passed the resolution in 2014 requiring legislative approval of a plan that former Gov. Bill Haslam was negotiating with the federal government.

Haslam’s Insure Tennessee proposal would have expanded TennCare coverage to some 250,000 uninsured and underinsured Tennesseans, giving them the opportunity to obtain health insurance through private providers, in some cases through a small premium.

Even though the legislature directed Haslam to come up with a plan, a Senate health committee rejected it on a 7-4 vote, stopping it from reaching the House or Senate floor.

Whitson, a member of the House Health Committee, said he is talking to colleagues to see if changing the state law has “traction.”

“We leave a lot of money on the table with that. I’m a big supporter of helping the working poor, people who work and try to make a living and are caught in that gap,” Whitson said.

Tennessee is believed to have more than 300,000 uninsured and underinsured people in a gap between TennCare and Affordable Care Act coverage.

Gov. Bill Lee has refused to take up the matter, consistently saying since his first election five years ago he believes the Affordable Care Act, through which 40 states expanded Medicaid, is “fundamentally flawed.” Since then, Tennessee has lost billions annually to other states.

Democratic Rep. Caleb Hemmer of Nashville, a House Health Committee member who penned an op-ed on the matter, pointed out 70 percent of Tennesseans said in a recent Vanderbilt poll they back Medicaid expansion. He favors a change in the law that restricts the governor’s ability to negotiate with the feds and set policy for Medicaid expansion.

“It’s a pathway,” Hemmer said of Whitson’s idea. “I’m a little concerned our governor wouldn’t do it even if we did pass the law, based on his prior comments.”

Studies show the state could widen coverage to 150,000 to 300,000 and save money, in addition to reducing medical bankruptcies, expanding mental health resources and preventing rural hospital closings, according to Hemmer.

We leave a lot of money on the table with that. I’m a big supporter of helping the working poor, people who work and try to make a living and are caught in that gap.

– Rep. Sam Whitson, R-Franklin

He pointed out the Affordable Care Act passed “a generation ago” and “the world has moved on” to other topics. In addition, Tennessee has a federal Medicaid waiver that gives the state flexibility to use TennCare savings to provide more services.

Lawmakers such as Republican Rep. Kelly Keisling of Byrdstown, who represents one of the state’s most rural districts, back Medicaid expansion but can’t find enough support within the Republican Caucus to push it to passage.

Gaining enough votes would be difficult, mainly because Obamacare and the resulting Medicaid expansion became a national political hotpoint a decade ago. Rejection of Haslam’s plan led to yearly protests at the Capitol, but Republican lawmakers haven’t budged since then. 

House Health Committee Chairman Bryan Terry said in a short statement Tuesday “any Medicaid changes will have an impact on our budget; thus, should go through the legislative process.”

Haslam’s proposal was expected to cost the state $200 million, about 10 percent of the overall expense, which was to be paid by the Tennessee Hospital Association. 

Democratic Sen. Jeff Yarbro of Nashville and Democratic Rep. Larry Miller of Memphis sponsored a bill during the 2023 session removing the requirement for the legislature to approve a governor’s decision on Medicaid expansion. It didn’t move through the House or Senate committee systems.

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com. Follow Tennessee Lookout on Facebook and Twitter.

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News News Blog News Feature

MATA To “Keep Service As Is,” Despite Proposed Changes

The Memphis Area Transit Authority’s (MATA) board of commissioners decided Tuesday to keep transit service “the same until further notice,” despite proposed changes slated for February 2024.

The board met in October of 2023 and decided to put a pause on proposed service changes that were due to go into effect this month. After hearing input from the public, the board questioned the effectiveness of the changes, and tabled the decision for the December meeting. 

The agency has repeatedly stressed that these changes are necessary to “give the community service it can rely on.” MATA has a shortage of mechanics. This means bus repairs take longer, meaning more buses are out of service. The changes would free up buses for better service on some of the most-used routes. Officials said that they are currently missing 20 percent of all of their scheduled trips.

According to MATA CEO, Gary Rosenfeld, these service changes help to make service more reliable.

“The important thing in transit is that what you show on the printed schedule, that bus will arrive,” said Rosenfeld. “We understand that’s a severe impact to our existing customers, so that’s the purpose of these changes, is to help align our service better with the service we could provide.” 

Prior to the October board meeting, the agency held 12 public meetings to discuss the proposed changes and to hear public feedback. According to the agency, the most common comments were concerning the “negative impact of the proposed service end time of 7 p.m.,” and “employment areas such as the airport and logistic centers.”

MATA recommended adjustments to the routes 30-Brooks and Route 69-Winchester. It also proposed extending the service time  beyond 7 p.m., for their “high-performing nighttime routes.” This included 8- Chelsea and Highland, 11-Frayser, 30-Brooks, 32-Hollywood and Hawkins Mill, 36-Lamar, 39-South Third, 42-Crosstown, 50-Poplar, 52-Jackson, and 100-Main Street Trolley.

The board was presented with a number of options that included combinations of proposed service changes with headway variations (the amount of time it takes for one bus to come after the next) and route suspensions. MATA also included options that would “impact service areas with fixed-route changes.”

Option one allowed for MATA service to remain “the same as it is today.” All further options included adjusted headways with route suspensions, with either a few or no additional options.

Option two proposed for weekday service to run until 11 p.m., Saturday service until 10:00 p.m., and Sunday service until 6:00 p.m.

The third option would have weekday and Saturday service run until 7 p.m., and Sunday service until 6 p.m. Officials also said that this option would potentially include the “MATA Night Groove Service,” which would run seven days a week, from 7 pm. to 11 p.m., with “15-20 minute frequency.”  

Option four was deemed “most severe,” as it would suspend weekday and Saturday service at 7 p.m, Sunday service at 6 p.m., with no Night Groove option.

Many urged the board to vote in favor of option one, including Tennessee Rep. Justin J. Pearson (D-Memphis.)

“The community needs more time to understand what the consequence of this decision is going to be,” said Pearson. “These are real consequences. When you think about environmental justice, economic justice, social justice in our communities, which all relate to racial justice, it has real implications.

“To make a decision at this point without more  input from the community about the consequences…we need more time as a community to find out what the best solutions are.”

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Ja Morant Leads Grizzlies to Epic Comeback Victory

The NBA script writers just earned their holiday bonus. After being down by as many as 24, Ja Morant led the Memphis Grizzlies to a tough win over the New Orleans Pelicans with a last-second buzzer-beater — at 9:01 p.m., even. Final score: 115-113.

Let’s get into it.

The first half saw the Grizzlies getting worked over by the Pelicans and longtime Grizz killer C.J. McCollum. New Orleans outscored Memphis 39-16 in the second quarter, and the Grizzlies headed into the second half with a 19-point deficit to overcome. It was a familiar sight for Grizzlies fans, but this time it was different, because finally, the Grizzlies could do what they have needed to do all season long: Call 12.

Need a bucket? Call 12. Need a lob? Call 12. Need a clutch buzzer-beater to win the game? Call 12.

It’s fitting that was the Grizzlies’ first nationally broadcast game of the season because, in his first game back from suspension, Morant seems ready to put the league on notice.

And notice they did.

And Ja noticed them noticing.

Memphis struggled from the long line, ending the night 10-31 from three-point range, but they feasted in the paint with 62 points on 31 of 47 shooting. The Grizzlies were also able to convert 11 Pelicans turnovers into 21 points, even as they struggled with turnovers of their own, giving up 26 points off 18 turnovers.

And while Ja Morant was the focal point, finishing with a team-high 34 points, 6 rebounds, 8 assists, 2 steals, and 1 block, and ultimately the game-winner, this was still a team victory.

Jaren Jackson Jr closed out with 24 points, 6 rebounds, and 3 blocks. Desmond Bane added 21 points and 4 assists.

From the second unit, Santi Aldama contributed 8 points, 3 rebounds, and 1 block while shooting 2 of 2 from three-point range.

The Grizzlies have a long slog ahead of them, but things are looking up for the first time this season. Don’t count them out yet.

Who Got Next?

The Grizzlies return home Thursday night to face off against the Indiana Pacers. Tip-off is at 7 PM CST.  

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At Large Opinion

What the Hell?

Let me tell you, friends, there are weeks when writing this column is a slog. You search your brain for a subject about which you can offer 725 words of original thought and you come up with bupkis.

Other weeks, the world is generous and just gift-wraps something for you. It’s like manna from heaven or in this week’s case, manna from hell. And for that I am grateful. Thank you, Satan.

The fun started when a flyer with the headline, “Hey Kids, Let’s Have Fun at After School Satan Club,” caught the attention of some parents and the local media. According to the flyer, the first meeting of a fun new club apparently dedicated to promoting Lucifer-lovin’ to local kiddos was scheduled for January 10th at Chimneyrock Elementary in Cordova.

Pearls were clutched and outrage was churned. People were mad as, uh, hell. The flyer was soon all over the TV news and the Memphis-Shelby County Schools board was forced to hold a press conference last Wednesday to explain the situation.

“Satan has no room in this district,” said Althea E. Greene, MSCS Board chair. To emphasize the point, a group of 40 or so pastors and faith leaders joined in.

“They threaten to rent a facility under the First Amendment right and they entice us into saying no, and of course, they take us to court and then they look for a settlement,” said Bill Adkins, pastor of Greater Imani Church. He’s right. The organization settled a lawsuit with a school district in Pennsylvania for $200,000 for blocking the organization from using its facilities.

“We don’t go to a school unless there is another religious club operating,” said June Everett, the national campaign director for After School Satan Club. So there’s the rub, Beelzebub. You don’t get to pick and choose which “religious” groups can rent your facilities. It’s all or none. Such divine comedy.

According to MSCS policy, nonprofit community groups are allowed to rent school property for events, meetings, and other functions. Groups such as the Christian-based Good News Club and the Boy Scouts of America are among the nonprofits using facilities after school hours. The Satanic Temple is a legitimate 501(c)(3) public charity and nonprofit recognized by the IRS.

MSCS board member Mauricio Calvo was quoted in the Daily Memphian: “We have a portal on the MSCS website where any organization that is recognized by the IRS has the possibility to rent facilities. Being a public facility, we had to make our facilities accessible. If we let a church rent space from us, does the pastor have to submit his or her sermon days before? If that is the will of the board and the people, then we’ll have to change the policies. This is very new, and there’s no precedent in Tennessee.

“We’re going to continue to engage the public, legal team, state legislatures on what can be done,” Calvo concluded. “Ultimately, participation is going to be the parents’ decision. For now, this is the law. For now, we have to comply.”

Interim Superintendent Toni Williams added, “We can support the First Amendment and support our students at the same time.” That seems like a good plan.

Upon closer inspection, it seems obvious that the Satanic Temple is basically an organization dedicated to trolling for outrage — and perhaps a few bucks. Old Nick is just their snazzy front man, a way to get attention. The ASSC has been holding meetings and events in public schools around the country since 2016.

According to the group’s flyer, the organization is a “non-theistic religion that views Satan as a literary figure who represents a metaphorical construct of rejecting tyranny and championing the human mind and spirit.” Which isn’t very scary, even if it is a bit pretentious.

The flyer says the ASSC “does not attempt to convert children to any religion or ideology,” and “supports children to think for themselves.” The group claims that it’s dedicated to promoting a “scientific, rationalist, non-superstitious worldview” via puzzles and games, nature activities, arts and crafts, science projects, and community service. That doesn’t sound too horrible. Plus, there will be snacks, presumably devil’s food cake and hot tarts.

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Politics Politics Feature

Measure for Measure

As many readers may know, there is an ongoing cold-turning-hot war between Republican state Senator Brent Taylor and Shelby County DA Steve Mulroy over various matters of crime control.

Taylor has aimed several initiatives, rhetorical and otherwise, in Mulroy’s direction of late. Representing himself as a zealous advocate of strict law enforcement — a proponent of “aggressive” approaches as against “progressive” ones — Taylor has complained to the media and to Governor Bill Lee and other state officials and agencies, including the State Board of Professional Responsibility, that the Democratic DA has allowed the Memphis crime rate to skyrocket by undue emphasis on restorative justice concepts at the expense of law enforcement per se.

A fresh quote volunteered by the senator via text: “I am not trying to prove whose dick is bigger. But I am trying to show that more voters aligned themselves with my position of aggressive prosecutions.” 

Whereupon he cited vote totals from his successful 2022 senate race versus his Democratic opponent — apparently unaware that his victory margin in that district race depended on fewer votes overall than were achieved by Mulroy in his defeat of Republican Amy Weirich in the DA’s race.

Similarly, the senator’s case against Mulroy on the law enforcement score is, to say the least, debatable. As is ever the case, some crime statistics are up; others are down. The senator acknowledges that the DA’s recently launched campaign against gang-led “smash-and-grab” assaults on local businesses has achieved some results. “We just need more arrests,” he says grudgingly.

Current points of contention between the two include the matter of bail-bond policy, which Taylor considers too lax, though current bail policy was arrived at jointly by Mulroy and Weirich, his Republican predecessor. Taylor also professes to be steamed by what he calls “collusion” between Mulroy and Criminal Court Judge Paula Skahan in a pair of cases involving the reduction or elimination of sentences imposed on defendants. The senator vows to impose correctives in the forthcoming session of the General Assembly, one of which involves expediting the transfer of juveniles charged with capital crimes to Criminal Court.

Interestingly, in the several months before Taylor and Mulroy acquired their current offices, they had enjoyed a warm, and even cozy, degree of collaboration with each other.

That was in the period of 2021-22 when Taylor, who was already eyeing a district Senate seat that was about to slip out from under the legally vulnerable GOP incumbent Brian Kelsey, was head of the Shelby County Election Commission (dominated 3-2 by Republicans though ostensibly neutral). Mulroy, an activist Democrat par excellence, was pursuing one of his favorite causes, that of local voting via paper ballots.

On several occasions, Taylor, whose party members tended (at that time, anyhow) not to favor that idea, nevertheless exercised what Mulroy considered exemplary fairness in presiding over discussions, in matters of scheduling, and in his parliamentary decisions. In the process, the two of them, quite simply, became buds.

At the moment, that relationship seems fractured — broken on the shoals of partisan differences, political ambition, and state-vs.-local considerations.