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For the Culture

Tone’s been busy. The arts nonprofit organization is dedicated to “elevat[ing] Black artists as innovative thought leaders, courageous storytellers, and risk-taking problem solvers through intentional exhibitions, conversations, concerts, and artist development, “with the goal of “shift[ing] the culture of Memphis through groundbreaking art, media, and communication that centers Black experiences in our city’s past, present, and future.”

To accomplish that goal, Tone has to keep a lot of plates spinning. The latest exhibition at their Orange Mound gallery, which opened on June 8th, is called “Invisible Man.” The theme for the group show, featuring artists from inside and outside Memphis, is deconstructing concepts of masculinity. “We’ve chosen that name because the essence of the exhibition is inspired by Ralph Ellison’s book Invisible Man,” says curator Kylon Wagner.

Tone’s annual Juneteenth celebration has become wildly popular. This year, it will stretch into three days, from Friday, June 14th, to Sunday, June 16th. It will feature the biggest lineup of entertainment yet and give attendees a preview of the latest developments in the organization’s grand opus: The transformation of a derelict Purina animal feed factory into an innovative center for Black arts, wellness, and entrepreneurship called Orange Mound Tower.

Sitting in the freshly renovated offices of the Tone gallery in Orange Mound, Tone executive director Victoria Jones says sometimes her organization’s ambitious agenda of community transformation can feel overwhelming. “It’s been going, it feels like hyper speed some days. We at Tone internally have really had to focus on building capacity so we could take on the project — not just take on the development of the project, but once it exists in its full capacity, actually grow into that larger space. And so, we have been working on capacity building for our staff, which has led to some really great partnerships with the Mellon Foundation, where we’ve been able to get everybody an honorable salary, wages, and healthcare. Obviously, that’s gonna change the morale of a team! So that’s been really exciting. We have had an opportunity to work with folks like the Memphis Music Initiative, who led the [office] renovation back here for us. … It’s a strong, solid team right now. We’re really learning our systems differently. Because we’ve been such a young, kind of scrappy organization that we were just like, ‘Ooh, let’s try this. Ooh, let’s try that.’ But now we’re learning what it means to actually build out systems, plan for the future, and see those things through. We’re learning what accountability structures could look like, and that’s been giving us space for our imaginations. I think that was a fear for me — and that could be my own Aquarius nature — that systems would block some of that imagination work. But we’ve understood, with the systems we’re beginning to implement, it actually gives the imagination space to grow and see the visions through.”

Juneteenth

1862 was not a good year for the United States. The Civil War was raging, and things were not going to plan for President Abraham Lincoln. In the East, Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s army was menacing Washington, D.C., and Lincoln was firing a succession of failed generals. Things were going better in the West, where General Ulysses S. Grant’s campaign to deny the Confederacy access to the Mississippi River had led to the capture of Memphis. But the cost was great, and Grant’s forces were getting bogged down laying siege to Vicksburg, Mississippi.

In early September, the two armies fought to a draw at Antietam, Maryland. It was the single bloodiest day in American history, with more than 27,000 dead, wounded, or missing. But it halted Lee’s invasion of the North, at least temporarily. On September 22nd, to capitalize on the victory, and give his abolitionist supporters the moral crusade against slavery they craved, President Lincoln announced the Emancipation Proclamation. Effective January 1, 1863, all slaves in the Confederate territories would be henceforth free. As the news of liberation spread, many enslaved Black people in the West ran away and flocked to newly liberated Memphis, altering the city’s demographics forever.

But many of the enslaved, who had been purposefully kept ignorant by their masters, didn’t know about the emancipation. Even after the Confederacy surrendered in April 1865, slavery continued in then-remote places like Texas. On June 19, 1865, Major General Gordon Granger landed in Galveston, Texas, to begin the military occupation and Reconstruction, and informed the people of Texas that “In accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free.” In the years that followed, the more than 250,000 Black people liberated that day started calling the holiday Juneteenth. The National Museum of African American History and Culture calls it “our country’s second Independence Day.”

Since it was founded as The CLTV, Tone has made Juneteenth their day of celebration. “We don’t have that many holidays that center our experience in general,” says Jones. “We have had to create Juneteenth. I think it’s our first opportunity to begin to truly celebrate freedom, even before it’s been fully won — ’cause I feel like we still got a little ways to go. It’s an opportunity for us to take a pause and go all the way up for what our ancestors had to go through, what our elders have walked us through, and what we can do in the future. It feels a lot like a real opportunity to celebrate this baton that’s been passed generation to generation. … Slavery didn’t happen a super long time ago, as much as we want to feel like it was some distant experience. My grandmother was raised in a home with someone who was enslaved as a child. The way that affects my family, and the ways I understand generation to generation what had to be sacrificed for my bloodline to be where it is right now, I don’t know of another holiday that would give me room to reflect on that, celebrate that, lift that up, love on the ancestors that had to go through that, and imagine what we can still be working on and doing going forward.”

In 2021, the festival debuted at 2205 Lamar Avenue, a long-vacant, blighted post-industrial site that featured a tower visible from all over the historic Orange Mound neighborhood. “That was the first festival,” says Jones. “We’d done one Juneteenth celebration before that. It did not include a festival. We outfitted this space to do a big gala. Then, after Covid, we thought we needed to bring it outdoors. What could an outdoor celebration look like? Should we try a festival? Can we do a festival?”

The 2021 Juneteenth festival was an unlikely success. Jones recalls a bartender, hired that first year, in a panic wondering how they were going to accommodate thousands of people in a place with no power and no working bathrooms. Unapologetic, Tone’s partner in the Orange Mound Tower project, provided the entertainment. The gathering went a long way toward putting Tone on the map of Memphis arts orgs. “It’s grown substantially each year,” says Jones. “Even with the rain that hit last year, we saw a huge boost in attendance and participation from the artists and headliners we had selected. It’s been a fun growth to watch.”

One of Tone’s goals for the festival is to make it a sort of Black homecoming, attracting people who have left Memphis to come back. “We’re wanting to name Memphis as the cultural beacon of the South, but wanting to do that in connection with other cities,” says Jones. “If we’re thinking about the emancipation of Black folks and that entire experience, the thought that the country as a whole can reckon with any kind of post-racist experience and not have that reckoning happening here in the South is null and void.”

When designing the celebration, Jones says the organizers asked themselves, “How do we participate in and help launch some of those efforts to offer up space for Black folks to be healing, and inviting folks from the South to participate in that? And then essentially hoping that the festival and we can become so large that it’s a true beacon back home, an invitation to come back home, if it’s for the weekend or if it’s for longer. Come back home; help build this new future with us. Juneteenth really gives us that opportunity. We are watching folks pull up for that weekend and get a taste of Memphis. It’s folks who might not have been here for a long time and are like, ‘I didn’t know this was happening here. I didn’t know these folks were here. I didn’t know this community was here.’”

Appropriately, for a Black homecoming celebration, Juneteenth 2024 kicks off with a game of Spades. How did the card game get so popular in the Black community? “I don’t know,” says Jones. “I just know I ain’t never been to a function without it.”

“It’s a game about making do with what you have. You get that hand, and how can you make it jump?” says Willie McDonald, Tone’s development director. “The gala didn’t feel like the right first touch point for the weekend. So just trying to figure out, how do we welcome folk? What we have been seeing in attendance lately is, folks are coming from outside of the city to join us. … Our Juneteenth celebration happens under the banner of a family reunion, and Spades is an essential family reunion activity.”

The Friday night Spades tournament will be held in the Tone gallery, amid the artwork of the “Invisible Man” exhibit. More than 150 people have signed up so far. “We’ll have a whole new, larger crowd to experience that exhibition,” says Jones.

“It was live last year,” says McDonald. “There was some controversy in the room.”

On Saturday night, the celebration moves across the street to Orange Mound Tower for the gala. “It’s in one of the smaller warehouses,” says Jones. “This year, the is theme is revival. I’m imagining reviving the tower. And so the theme will be ‘Sunday best.’”

The seated banquet will include a keynote speaker and entertainment from Beale Street musicians and the Tennessee Mass Choir. “The way it’s sectioned off, it gives us three or four different room opportunities. We gonna have some unique experiences in each room,” says Jones.

On Sunday, the party kicks into high gear, with a vendor marketplace and Black-owned food trucks. One new addition this year will be a carousel with actual horses. Since the event commemorated by Juneteenth happened in Texas, many enslaved people found out about their emancipation from Black cowboys who spread the word on horseback. The Black rancher tradition has recently been in the spotlight, thanks to Jordan Peele’s film Nope, and Beyonce’s country-flavored Cowboy Carter album. (Peele is currently producing a documentary about Black cowboys.) “That’s a real part of Juneteenth tradition that I don’t think we get to elevate as often, that it was a Black cowboy letting a lot of the enslaved folks know,” says Jones. “We’ve been trying to find unique ways to tie Black folks on horses into the experience. It’s the symbolism of freedom and mobility.”

The star of the show on Sunday is the music. This year’s lineup is stacked with talent, both from Memphis and elsewhere in the South. McDonald says the nature of the event helped attract some big names. “The significance of us having this Juneteenth in Orange Mound, being the oldest neighborhood established by emancipated Black folks in the United States, and the funding from that going toward the larger capital campaign efforts for establishing a hub for Black innovation.”

The biggest name performer is neo-soul legend Erykah Badu, who will be doing a set under her DJ name Lo Down Loretta Brown. Memphis hip-hop legend, Three 6 Mafia founder, and secret engine of popular culture innovation Juicy J, whose accomplishments are too numerous to list here, will be on hand to deliver a highly anticipated performance. Also on the bill is New Orleans rapper and record label owner Curren$y, fresh off his 2024 collaboration with Trauma Tone on Highway 600.

Hitkidd (Photo: Kam Darko Visuals)

The official headliner is Memphis’ own Hitkidd. The producer of GloRilla’s song of the summer “F.N.F. (Let’s Go)” and Campsouth Records mastermind is no stranger to the OMT stage. “He was at last year’s Juneteenth, and probably my favorite performance of the night,” says Jones.

“It was epic!” says McDonald. “[Last year] the main stage rained out, so our entire crowd stormed the north warehouse, and it made the second stage turn into the main stage. We had to get barricades up in like 10 minutes. Then we got Hitkidd standing up on top of tables and Slimeroni and three other female artists going HAM. It was the moment.”

The Architects of the Future

One person who attended last year’s Juneteenth festival was Germane Barnes. He’s an associate professor and the director of the Community, Housing & Identity Lab at the University of Miami School of Architecture; a Rome Prize Fellow; and the winner of the 2021 Harvard GSD Wheelwright Prize. He was at the festival at the suggestion of Chicago-based artist, professor, and entrepreneur Theaster Gates, a pedigree which impressed Jones and the Tone board of directors. “His practice is based around building out culturally informed spaces, spaces that have the cultural references that resonate for the people that they’re designed for,” says Jones.

Germane Barnes (Photo: Courtesy Studio Barnes)

The architect was intrigued the moment he saw the tower rising over Lamar. “He walked with me all the way to the top of the tower the first day that he came,” says McDonald. “He stopped and took detailed photographs on every floor. He attended the gala. He hung out with us the whole weekend. Then he leaves, and we don’t hear from him for a couple weeks.”

When Barnes recontacted Tone, he asked permission to use the Orange Mound Tower project in a class he was teaching at Ohio State University. “He’s got these grad students, and he had them do renderings of the tower. So we fly out to Ohio, and we’re looking at these CAD renderings. They’re splitting the tower open like an egg, showing us cross sections. They’re throwing all kinds of different facilities into it, just giving us perspective on what it could turn into. Some of these would be featured in the space where we’re hosting the gala. There’ll be an installation showing the progress of the tower that we’re sharing right now.”

Jones says, “The work we got to do with those students was so important. That’s our first time learning how to give feedback to architects. He’s pushing us, ‘Speak up, do you like this? How do you feel about this?’ … We got a lot of positive feedback from the students as well. Most of their coursework is for projects that don’t even exist in real life, so to know this could affect and touch an actual community was meaningful.”

Orange Mound Tower (Photo: Chris McCoy)

Barnes formally came on board as the architect of record for the Orange Mound Tower project in early 2024, thanks to a grant from the Memphis Music Initiative. “Germane got on that first call with us excited, and that felt good, really affirming that this is a dream project,” says Jones. “He’s never gotten to do a project of this scale, and so for him, this is an opportunity to touch a big project that, as he describes it, would usually be reserved for a 70-year-old white man. Him being able to come in as a young Black guy and flex what he can do, we know he knows that in a space this Black, it’s just gonna be incredible. He’s teamed up with local firms LRK [Looney Ricks Kiss] and APA [Aaron Patrick Architects], and they’re creating an architecture dream team for us.”

While Unapologetic remains an ownership partner, Tone has taken the front seat in development work. The Tower team also includes Brent Hooks, an accomplished project manager with more than a decade’s worth of experience in large-scale urban development and complex project coordination. “His extensive background in civil engineering and construction management ensures the successful delivery of high-quality projects, contributing significantly to the team’s success,” says Jones.

Veteran developers Bill Ganus and Darrell Cobbins serve as development consultants. “They’re just so deeply familiar with the landscape of Memphis, and they’ve really been helping us identify some moving parts. We want such a unique approach to tenancy, and how we’re imagining these kind of communities forming around the art and culture, food and agriculture, small business, and health and wellness. [Darrell] has been encouraging and inspiring as we’re imagining how we can truly build out communities around these concepts, not just getting folks to sign leases, so that they can also participate in imagining what the space could look like.”

With almost $4 million invested in the project’s design phase, and another $7 to $9 million on deck, Jones expects to be ready to move Tone onto the 10-acre site sometime in 2025, along with other tenants who will sign up for space in the massive warehouse that will be rejuvenated in the first phase of the project. “We’ve broken it into digestible chunks to make our fundraising job a bit easier,” says McDonald.

Jones says Tone is trying to build an infrastructure for Black freedom in Memphis, to retain talent, and to attract new people and new innovation to the city. “What does it mean if we’re able to actually build the infrastructure in our image in ways that are more thoughtful, more innovative than the structures that we’ve seen around New York, L.A., even Atlanta? You don’t have to force a fit here. You can actually build it to be what you want it to be. Once that infrastructure is developed, or at least in those beginning phases, we’re inviting folks in. Hey, this platform is here. You ain’t gotta go nowhere. Matter of fact, we need you not to go anywhere! Go see the world, but keep your home here, so we can build this city together.”

Visit tonememphis.org for a full schedule of Tone’s Juneteenth events and for more information.

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Book Features Books

The Ron Hall Chronicles

There are record collectors, and then there are record collectors. Holding strong against the tides of time, which have rendered recorded music as weightless as a cloud, streaming past us like raindrops and just as ungraspable, Memphis is yet home to many mini-librarians. We curate our own collections of vinyl, tapes, and CDs, still attached to those miniature works of art and the ritual of listening that they require. Yet, among this haven of gatherers — raging, raging against the dying of the vinyl — there once walked among us the ur-collector, and the ultimate documentarian of the history behind his stacks of wax. 

His name was Ron Hall. There was no one more committed to the history and lore of local music than he, and no bigger fan of Memphis wrestling.

When Hall passed away in March at the age of 73, after suffering a major stroke two months earlier, the city lost not only a gifted private archivist but a gifted author. Shangri-La Projects, who published his entire oeuvre, posted this on social media as a response to his death:

“Ron was a savant in shining a light on what it meant to grow up in the middle of the post-war pop culture explosion in one of the most influential pop culture, music, and professional wrestling cities in the world. Ron’s three books, two CD compilations, documentary film, and Memphis music calendar solidified him into being one of the craziest chroniclers/fellow fanatic travelers of all that is wacky in Memphis’ creative cauldron of the ’50s/’60s/’70s/’80s.”

Here, then, is a recap of Hall’s important body of work.

Playing for a Piece of the Door: A History of Garage and Frat Bands in Memphis, 1960-1975

This was the book that started it all, and it remains a constant reference source for this writer and many others in Memphis. Tellingly, the introduction begins with Hall’s memories of actually performing with a band, when “the 13th Muse took the stage at a home for unwed mothers in the Oakhaven area of Memphis, Tennessee,” in late 1969. Though they only played the one show, Hall recounts, “I was doing what hundreds of other kids in Memphis wished they could do.”

That everyman spirit informs this look into the stories of over 500 local bands that cropped up in the title’s 15 year span. Some went on to stardom, others were only locally celebrated, and some weren’t even that. Yet all are cataloged with an inclusive, democratic zeal by Hall, who not only collected the sometimes obscure 45s that made these bands immortal but saw many of them performing in their prime. This lends crucial historical context to the groups. Take The Embers, for instance, “one of the top bands in the Jackson/Humboldt, Tennessee, area in the mid-to-late ’60s.” 

Starting in 1964, many (most?) of these groups were inspired by The Beatles. This is, after all, an undeniably partial collection of groups, centered on the largely white ensembles that sprung up in The Beatles’ wake. But Hall reaches back before the Fab Four’s heyday as well, as with his entry on The Monarchs, who, starting in 1959, were “one of the few surf bands in the area.” Hall fills out his archival research with interviews with some of the players, making this book a kind of oral history as well. “The Beatles killed us,” recalls Charles McAllister of the Monarchs.

And, as the book takes us into the ’70s, we see the post-Beatles groups flourish as well, with power pop and California rock-tinged groups like Big Star, Target, and Cargoe hitting their stride. In all, it’s one of the most important chronicles of how sounds morphed through a decade and a half of the city’s golden years at the top of the music industry.

The Memphis Garage Yearbook, 1960-1975

When Playing for a Piece of the Door came out in 2001, it sparked a new surge of demand for all that was obscure and garagey in Memphis music, and soon after Shangri-La Projects released two CDs compiling the best tracks from Hall’s and others’ vinyl collections. Concerts were held on the Shangri-La Records porch, featuring onetime ’60s artists like Jim Dickinson, B.B. Cunningham, and the Castels. Ultimately, a second book was released which covered much the same ground, but through a different lens. Put together like a high school yearbook, and relying more heavily on rare photographs and show bills collected by Hall, it’s a stunning visual accomplishment. The book being organized chronologically (rather than alphabetically, as the first book is) sheds a different light on the evolution of the groups and the various players who shuttled between them. And the live performance photos underscore that this book, as well as its predecessor, doubles as a chronicle of the era’s key venues as well as its bands.

Sputnik, Masked Men, and Midgets: The Early Days of Memphis Wrestling

Hall was not only fascinated with local music, as this 2009 volume made clear. If many, like me, first became aware of the connection between early pro wrestling in the city and rock-and-roll by reading Robert Gordon’s It Came from Memphis, Hall seems to have gotten it organically, from being a dedicated fan of the sport since his youth. Rare 45s by more sonically ambitious wrestlers like Jackie Fargo, Sputnik Monroe, and (of course) Jerry Lawler are featured in photographs and on the book’s accompanying CD. Moreover, Hall called on some key fellow collectors for the visuals here, namely Robert W. Dye Sr., a local amateur photographer; Jim Blake, owner of the record label that released Lawler’s musical ventures; and many others. The result is a galvanizing compendium of eye-gouging action shots, tough guy poses, screaming show bills, and detailed write-ups from Wrestling, King of Sports, a local wrestling rag from the era. Not long after this book appeared, Shangri-La Projects released the film Memphis Heat: The True Story of Memphis Wrasslin’, which relied heavily on this book by Hall, who also served as the film’s executive producer. 

Memphis Rocks: A Concert History, 1955-1985

While retaining much of Hall’s fascination with all things Memphis, this book expands the scope of his research, documenting more than local bands. In a photo-heavy format closer to Hall’s wrestling book than Playing for a Piece of the Door, it collects concert photos, ticket stubs, show bills, and print media ads for practically any major concert in the city over a 30-year span. This includes both national and local groups, with a focus on the former: the big concerts that music fans flocked to, now cherished in the memories of those who attended. Yet smaller shows make the cut as well, and this, like Hall’s other works of music history, serves as an important chronicle of now-forgotten venues. Contrary to the subtitle, for example, the book actually begins in 1954, devoting a page to every local live performance by a certain Elvis Presley that year. Many of them were at Eagle’s Nest. Who knew? 

It’s also a de facto celebration of the Mid-South Coliseum, charting the many stellar shows there over three decades, from James Brown in 1965 to The Beatles the next year to Iron Maiden in 1985. Resonating with any fan savoring the experience of such shows are the “Concert Memories” compiled by Hall, where local musicians and others recall the power of seeing pivotal performances in their lives. As such, this, like all of Hall’s painstaking works, is a compendium of not only Memphis music and Memphis memories, but key moments in the history of American culture as a whole. 

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Black Lodge Hosts Comedian Ben Bailey

Ben Bailey, former host of Cash Cab, will be in Memphis to perform stand-up at Black Lodge on Friday, June 14th, at 8 p.m. 

And, yes, while you might know him best for asking trivia questions from the driver seat in a taxi on the streets of New York City, Bailey says stand-up is his true calling. “I’ve been a comedian for over 30 years,” he says. “Believe it or not, Cash Cab was for about half that time. We did it for 15 years, on and off. But stand-up comedy is what I really do, not the other way around.”

Still, Bailey is appreciative of his time on the show that earned him multiple Daytime Emmy Awards. He recognizes it’s why a bulk of his audiences comes to see his stand-up. “My goal when they come to see me is to make them forget that I’m the Cash Cab guy because they’re laughing so hard and they’re so caught up in what I’m doing on stage. … My job is to make you laugh hard enough that you forget about the things in your life that suck.”

Bailey describes his comedy as surreal and observational, silly even. “There’s a little twist of crazy,” he says. “Someone once called it, like, the Far Side of stand-up.” 

Funnily enough, Bailey fell into comedy seemingly by a chance meeting. He had moved to L.A. with hopes of going into show business. “I was totally lost,” he says, but he got a job answering phones at The Comedy Store, where one night he found himself talking to a comedian. 

“I was telling the story in the green room, which is where I sat to answer the phones,” Bailey says. “And the guy thought I was a comedian and asked me how long I had been doing it, and I said I just started. The guy offered me a spot on his show that Saturday, and I said no because I was terrified. But then luckily, he gave me a business card because the next day, I was like, ‘Maybe I should give this a try.’ … I did it the first time, and I got a laugh with the first thing I said. I knew right then that it was going to be what I was going to do for the rest of my life.” 

Since then, in addition to hosting more than 550 episodes of Cash Cab, Bailey has starred in two specials for Comedy Central (“Road Rage and Accidental Ornithology” in 2011 and “Ben Bailey: Live and Uncensored” in 2016), and he has appeared in several TV shows and films. 

Tickets for Bailey’s show at Black Lodge are $35 in advance and $38 day of show. VIP tickets, which include seats in the first four rows and a meet-and-greet, cost $60 in advance and $65 day of show. Purchase tickets in advance here.

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Sullivan Steps Down at Overton Park Conservancy

Tina Sullivan is stepping down as executive director of the Overton Park Conservancy (OPC), the organization announced Tuesday morning. 

Sullivan will serve in the role until a successor is brought on board. She has helmed OPC since its creation 12 years ago. In that time, the park has seen a number of improvements, which brought a surge of popularity. OPC said visitor counts over the last several years have reached 1.5 million. 

 “Having the task of connecting people to nature has been deeply rewarding,” said Sullivan. “Something magical happens when people come to Overton Park and experience its unique beauty and welcoming culture. People from different backgrounds form bonds around their love of this place. The park’s diverse community is vibrant and thriving, and that strength is what will protect this place for future generations.”

Since OPC’s creation, the 126-acre Old Forest was designated as a State Natural Area, and the title brought a number of new protections for the area. New entrances to the forest were created by local artists and erected at its entrances. 

Overton Bark, a dog park, was created. The organization conducted research, removed invasive plants, renovated and maintained trails, and launched a schedule of nature-based programming, many of these with the help of park volunteers and supporters.

Maybe the biggest issue Sullivan helped to tackle in her tenure was one that, ultimately, ended nearly 30 years of parking on the Overton Park Greensward. Negotiations and controversy followed the issue for years until OPC leaders, the Memphis Zoo, and the city of Memphis signed an agreement in 2022. 

“Tina’s patient leadership during that tenuous period kept everyone at the negotiating table until the best possible solution could be found,” said OPC board chair Yancy Villa. 

The agreement also brought additional acres of old-growth forest back to the park. It also opened a large area in the park’s southeast corner, as the city agreed to close part of its maintenance facility there. 

Sullivan said the time is right for her to step aside. 

“With the park thriving and the Conservancy in a steady-but-growing position, this is the opportune time to relinquish the captain’s seat,” she said in a statement. “We’re in a moment of calm before the next growth phase, which gives the board some freedom to spend time recruiting the best possible leader.”

Villa said, “Tina has been the right leader at the right time for [OPC]. From its inception to today, she has led the Conservancy with integrity, tenacity, and passion.” 

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Report: Nearly Half of Tennessee Households Don’t Earn Enough to Meet Basic Expenses

Nearly half of all Tennessee working families cannot afford the basic cost of living in their counties, according to new analyses of Census and federal economic data by the United Way of Tennessee.

The report examined the challenges facing households that earned more than the federal poverty level but, nevertheless, struggle to make ends meet.

While the number of households living in poverty decreased by nearly 5,000 across the state between 2021 and 2022, more than 34,214 households were added to the category of Tennesseans unable to pay for basic needs despite earnings that put them above the poverty level. In total, the report found that 1.2 million Tennessee households fall into this category.

The report concluded that the “survival budget” necessary for a family of four increased to $75,600 between 2021 and 2022. The budget includes the cost of housing, food, childcare, transportation and healthcare — all of which grew more expensive. In 33 Tennessee counties, more than half of all households failed to earn enough to meet their survival budgets.

While wages have increased in that time period, the 20 most common occupations in Tennessee still pay less than $20 per hour, the report found. These include jobs like sales, truck driving, administrative assistants and elementary school teachers.

Although poverty levels for Tennessee kids have shrunk, the report found that 38 percent of working Tennessee families with children at home did not earn enough to keep up with basic expenses.

2024-ALICE-Update-TN-FINAL

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network 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

Youth Connect To Address Mental Health Disparities In Shelby County

Youth in Shelby County now have access to free therapy services through a partnership with the Shelby County Youth and Family Resource Center(SCYFRC) and The Braid Foundation.

The two organizations have joined together to launch Youth Connect, a service offering up to 12 free individual and group counseling services during the summer, after school, and on the weekends as needed.

Youth Connect officially launched in late May after years of planning and input from youth in the community. This service is available for anyone ages 13 to 18.

Dr. Shaneika Smith, co-executive director of the Braid Foundation and licensed professional counselor, and  Cathy Emerson, co-founder of The Brain Foundation and school psychologist, say they have a combined 14 years of mental health practice in the Memphis area, which led them to work towards removing stigma around mental health and breaking down barriers to accessing mental health care.

On the private practice side, Smith said her and Emerson noticed that the idea that people had access to mental health services just because they had insurance wasn’t true.

“There’s one issue where a lot of our youth and families are not insured, but then there’s another issue where if you are insured you can have an insurance claim that does not cover mental health services at all,” Smith said. 

Both Smith and Emerson worked in the school system and saw this as a recurring and consistent issue. This is also the extension of work started in 2020 where over 80 “youth-serving organizations” came to address youth mental health through the Coalition of Youth Mental Health.

“They’re the ones who really propelled this work,” Emerson said. “We were already seeing higher rates of suicide attempts, hospitalization due to self harm or self injurious behavior in Memphis and Shelby County — and now we add a pandemic to that.”

Emerson said this was how the work started, and after procuring the funding, they were able to lay the groundwork for what is now Youth Connect. She emphasized the support of Shelby County government by not only partnering with a nonprofit, but by creating Kache Brooks’ role, youth mental health coordinator at SCYFRC.

“Partnering with a nonprofit is one of the beauties [of this partnership.] Yes, serving the youth and getting people the help they need is the whole purpose of this work, but I think another highlight of this is that this is truly a blend of the community and government coming together to do something to address a need in a holistic, durable way,” Emerson said.

Emerson also said an important part of bringing this project into fruition was to have the voice of the people they’re helping. She said it was essential for both The Braid Foundation and SCYFRC to have a youth voice. Part of this was doing outreach work and conducting youth-centered surveys. They also wanted to know if there was there truly any stigma surrounding youth and mental health services.

Smith added that a lot of the times when programs are made for youth, the designers make assumptions about what is needed. By including youth input, they not only found out more about the needs of the community, but they found that their clients wanted to take an active approach to their mental health needs.

“As someone who works with youth, they even proved me wrong in the things that they wanted and the things they needed. That’s why youth voice is really important in this,” Smith said.  “Some of the gaps that we see is with them and sharing with adults in their lives which therapy can really help them do…They’re talking to each other, and there’s not this stigma amongst each other about that.”

After surveying close to 250 young people in Shelby County prior to the launch, Youth Connect found that 46 percent of participants said they were “likely to extremely likely” to utilize therapy, while 84 percent said they would “not think negatively about someone who was in therapy.”

“One thing that we noticed is that with young people, the conversation is definitely there. They’re a lot more open than people might expect. That’s not to say that there isn’t any stigma at all, but I think a lot more young people are a lot more self aware than we give them credit for and open to bettering themselves in their mental health journey,” Brooks said.

This emphasize on self awareness and agency is evident in the application process as well, as Youth Connect encourages those interested to fill out the forms on their own.

“It’s your body, it’s your emotions, it’s your experience –don’t you want to have control over what that process looks like for you?” Emerson said. “What we know is when you are empowered to have responsibility for your own mental health and do the work and show up, that is going to have the long-lasting effects that therapy is supposed to have.”

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BRIDGES Announces Tosca Nance-Jones as New Chief Administrative Officer

The nonprofit BRIDGES has promoted Tosca Nance-Jones to chief administrative officer, a new position within the organization’s leadership. Nance-Jones has worked with BRIDGES for the past eight years, first as director of community engagement and then as vice president starting in 2019. 

For Nance-Jones, her proudest accomplishment with BRIDGES, so far, has been launching the Youth Action Center, which she describes as “a multi-dimensional space that enhances and expands youth leadership opportunities especially for youth in marginalized communities by creating partnerships with organizations in the community.”

The Youth Action Center, Nance-Jones adds, is “led by an intergenerational facilitation team. We want to harness that energy of the young people. They’re passionate, and they’re the driving force behind our success. That’s really my success.”

Once a youth activist herself with activist parents, Nance-Jones says, “I grew up understanding and knowing the value of community and civic engagement, and I’m fueled by restorative equity work. So, the unique thing about BRIDGES and what BRIDGES offers, it was a natural kind of alignment of my values. They offer the opportunities for youth to find a place for themselves.

“For those who are passionate about social justice and want to create solutions, or those youth who want to develop their leadership skills in areas that lead to entrepreneurship or developing their artistry, or if they just have a desire to connect with people and grow their problem-solving and communication skills to find their own voice, we have a place for them. We just provide the tools so that they realize the possibilities are essentially limitless for them. And I love that about BRIDGES.”

“It’s been an honor to be entrusted with this, as I say, responsibility,” Nance-Jones adds about her new position. “I firmly believe that collaboration is the key to success. I’m also eager to leverage the collective expertise of our teams, our staff, our young people, and promote a cross-functional collaboration and communication that has us constantly focused on improvement.”

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Ride” by Dead Soldiers

Dead Soldiers are back from the dead! Or at least from a hiatus. No strangers to Music Video Monday, the sprawling big band of Ben Aviotti, Nathan Raab, Krista Wroten, Michael Jasud, Clay Qualls, Paul Gilliam, Victor Sawyer, and Jawaun Crawford plays “city music,” not country music.

Director Joshua Cannon is a fan, so he was excited to get the nod to direct their first music video in six years. “Dead Soldiers fall in line among the best bands to come out of Memphis. We’re so lucky we get to claim them as our own. Seeing them live is really something special — just supremely talented and good-natured people.

“We kicked around a few concepts for this video, but with a song like ‘Ride,’ and with the eight of them doing what they do so well, I decided to keep the focus there and keep the camera moving. Working with my buddy Ryan Parker on this was a ton of fun. He cooked barbecue and we watched The Last Waltz a lot to prepare. Michael Jasud also turned us onto a performance of The Animals playing ‘House of the Rising Sun,’ which was real sick and inspired the composed moments. Overall, it was one of the best experiences I’ve had making anything, thanks to an amazing crew of talented people who are so good at what they do and to the Soldiers, who are a great hang.”

Guitarist Ben Avioti says the feeling was mutual. “He [Cannon] was such a joy to work with. The whole crew was awesome and they totally put up with our antics for 14 straight hours.”

You can see a lot more of the Soldiers’ antics and hear “Ride” live on June 21st at The Green Room in Crosstown Concourse. But first, check out the video.

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

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Marathon Golf: OP99 Raises Money for Memphis Kids’ Golf

They played 99 at OP9.

That is, a group of friends played 99 holes Tuesday at Overton Park 9 for the good of Memphis golf. 

The 15 friends started at 6 a.m. — three groups of five. The goal was to play 11 consecutive rounds of the nine-hole course. They’d walk the whole thing. One of the group said total milage would be around 25 miles. 

For this, they raised money, all the money going to the Overton Park Junior Open, the Overton Park Conservancy (OPC), and the Loren Roberts Scholarship Fund through The First Tee.

Will Frazier’s face was sun-reddened by around 4 p.m. on the eighth round of the 11-round OP99, as they called it. His feet hurt but his spirits were still up. His irons were still crisp. His sense of humor was still intact. 

“I just wish somebody else would’ve put this on,” Frazier joked. “From the beginning I said this is a good idea. This should happen. Sounds great. Who’s going to be the guy who’s going to put it together?” 

The guy turned out to be him and his “partner in crime” John Irvine. Frazier had survived a similar golf event in East Tennessee, that one a total of 100 holes called the Hundred Hole Hike. That event helped to subsidize golf rounds up to $5 for kids there. Memphis kids play every city-owned course for free. So no need to help pay for rounds.     

Instead, the OP99 funds will help fund the Overton Park Junior Open. The tournament has been a staple of the Memphis golf scene since it began in 1947. While free and open to all Memphis youth ages 7 to 16, organizing and creating the event is not. 

Funds for the OPC will support the OP9 golf course, of course. 

The Loren Roberts Scholarship fund through The First Tee is awarded to a graduating Memphis student who participates in the First Tee program. That program introduces youth to the game of golf with coaches and practices. The scholarship came from PGA Tour member Loren Roberts, who wanted to make an annual contribution to the Mid-South Junior Golf Association (MSJGA).

As of Thursday, OP99 had raised $54,400. 

“I have two little boys — an 8-year-old and a 5-year-old — who love the game of golf,” said OP99 golfer Daniel Connerley. “When [Frazier] said we’re doing this, and we’re going to get it going for the growth of the game and to get more kids involved in it … I’m like, absolutely. 

“I grew up playing golf with my dad and I want to do the same with my boys. If there’s more places to do that and more opportunities for them to do it, that’s what I’m here for.” 

Game play on the eighth round was still brisk and competitive. Word on the fairway was that Chase Harris, a former University of Memphis golfer and current PGA golf pro at Chickasaw Country Club, had set the OP9 course record on one round. He was on pace to break his own record in following rounds. Harris finished the day with an astounding 55 birdies, more than half of 99 holes he played. 

Frazier is ready to do it again. 

“So the game plan is to try to build enough momentum from this that it just sort of rolls on itself because it’s a great idea,” Frazier said. “We’ve got 15 guys out here. But I bet there are 50, 75, 150 guys in Memphis that would love to do this and these legs aren’t going to hold up forever. 

“I can do it a couple of times. But not forever.”

The OP99 players were Frazier, Irvine, Connerley, Harris, Stephen Ellis, Tucker Fox, Justin Smith, Alex Ransone, Davidson Alexander, Brian Abraham, McCown Smith, Luke Jensen, Alex Butterworth, Foster Smith, and Jimmy Beard. 

To find out more about the OP99, visit overtonpark99.com.

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Renting Surpasses Buying In Homeownership Affordability

Traditionally, the cheapest option for those seeking homeownership is to buy instead of rent. However, this is no longer the case for those in Memphis.

Ryan Miller, senior investment portfolio strategist at First Horizon Bank, said historically Memphians favored homeownership over renting since interest rates were reasonable, and payments were able to be divided over long periods of time.

However, in 2021 prices of houses began to drastically increase in a short period of time, with interest rates increasing as well. These factors create higher mortgage rates. While rent has gone up, Miller said it hasn’t gone up as much as these prices and rates.

“It is very unaffordable to try and buy a home for most homebuyers in Memphis — especially first-time homebuyers,” Miller said. “Seventy-two million millennials are entering the housing market while supply from 2018 to 2020 decreased 52 percent.”

A number of factors have contributed to this revelation, such as the rise in median home pricing, median wage not keeping pace, and the national rank of housing affordability being lower.

Miller recently spoke at the Affordable Housing Symposium in Memphis back in May. During his research, Miller found that as of 2023 Memphis has a housing gap of 16,341 units and an affordability gap of $14,018.

“There are 569,954 units, but the need is 586,295,” Miller said, explaining where this “shortcoming” comes from. 

For those who can’t buy homes because of this shortage, their next option is to rent; however, in the city the median rental comes in at $1,224 a month. According to Miller, an individual would need to make $44,064 per year to qualify, while the median income in Memphis is $30,046.

“Basically, the median income in Memphis would have to rise by 52 percent in order for a renter to go rent a house with a ratio of just 33 percent of their overall income,” Miller said. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development classifies those who “pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing” as “housing burdened.”

Miller said one solution is rehabilitation. He said an answer to affordability is having builders who are focused on affordable and starter homes as opposed to “McMansions.” He said between 2018 and 2022, the housing supply shortage increased from 2.5 million units to 3.8 million units.

In comparison, 40 percent of homes built in the 1980s were starter homes, compared to 2019 where they only made up 7 percent. 

“You need investors to go in and buy up housing in areas where the homes are aged and rehabilitate them so that they can be put back into the affordable housing inventory,” Miller said.

In 2021, finance company Freddie Mac concluded that while the overall share of aging housing stock is less than 60 percent, an “overwhelming majority of the census tracts in the city center have shares of aging housing greater than 80 percent.” 

Areas that have houses whose best options are rehabilitation include Frayser, East Memphis, Whitehaven, parts of Midtown, and more. Miller said rehabilitating homes in these areas would help the affordability issue.

To help cope with this issue, Miller said people should have a pooling of assets — having friends and family rent together. He also said education is a vital part of this as well.

“There’s a direct correlation between education, whether it’s at an educational university for traditional studies or a vocational school,” Miller said. “Education in one way shape or form allows somebody to get the job to have a higher income to bridge the gap for affordability.”