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Matthew Sweet Tops Saturday’s PowerPop Bill

Matthew Sweet is the perfect choice to headline the Memphis PowerPop Festival, happening at the Overton Park Shell at 5 p.m. this Saturday, August 31st. Being younger than the likes of the Who, the Raspberries, or Big Star, he’s nevertheless an actively performing link to the originators of the genre — first as a fan. The direct result of the first wave of “power pop” filtering down to younger denizens of the 1970s via radio and funky little record shops, he can well remember the thrill of discovering key LPs back when power pop gems were rare.

Sweet, of course, came to define power pop for a whole new generation after his third album, Girlfriend, blew up in 1991, not coincidentally featuring band members — Richard Lloyd, Robert Quine — who’d appeared on the very records he bought in high school. From the ’90s on, he’s been a reliably rocking and intriguing artist, and continues to mine the power pop vein today, with one album dropping during Covid and another on the way. A common thread through all of his music, as a both fan and an artist, is his love of melody, often paired with rock’s grit. And that, in a nutshell is what power pop is. Naturally, the topic of melody was where my recent conversation with him soon headed.

Memphis Flyer: As it turns out, you and I were growing up in eastern Nebraska at the same time [much discussion of this ensues]. I imagine you were a frequent patron of Dirt Cheap Records in Lincoln?

Matthew Sweet: Most of the records that found their way to me were from my older brother, or from someone recommending them to me at Dirt Cheap. People at Dirt Cheap knew all about everything. So you’d get to know a guy at a record store and he sort of knew what you liked. I remember going in Dirt Cheap one day and seeing one of the 45s that ended up on Singles Going Steady, by the Buzzcocks. That record was one that I really loved, because they were really melodic, but also very new wave.

I think of it as a British Invasion, that kind of new wave, punk, and everything, and it’s interesting, because my concern at the time was, How can I be like an American person, from a new generation or whatever, and do that kind of thing? And that’s why it was so, so critical for me to find [records by] the dBs or Big Star, because they became my American role models. Like on #1 Record, the voices were so pristine and beautiful sounding. The guitars were so incredible. It was everything I loved really melodic stuff that really hit me emotionally. Melody was always really important to me. It’s kind of what I heard first, even before lyrics. Even when the lyrics were important, it was the melodies that I really felt like I had, you know, inside me or something.

There was a lot of surprise in discovering the music then. And now I realize what a special time it was. I love the internet, and I love being able to find out instantly about anything I’m interested in, but back then, records were very special, at least to me and people I knew at the time. A record was this thing that was really personal.

It seems like those melodic records also led you to the South, in a way. The dB’s and Mitch Easter coming out of the North Carolina scene, and Big Star being from Memphis. Were you already into those bands when you moved to Athens, Georgia?

I had all these records in high school. I got into the dBs, and they were the gateway for me to find Big Star. As far as I was concerned, Alex Chilton was, you know, John Lennon, or something. He reminded me so much of Lennon, and does now even, because what I admired about John Lennon was the breadth of emotional things in his songs. He could write very beautiful, tender music that showed he really had a heart, and he could do more edgy stuff that was sort of sassy. And that was also such an Alex thing. From the soft and beautiful to the crazy and weird and electric. And I just loved those records as I was preparing to leave Nebraska, when I got out of high school. I guess that  would have been May of ’83. I just told my parents, like, ‘I have to go to college in Athens, Georgia.’

The scene there was still really kind of going, and there was just kind of a magic. Growing up in Nebraska was so different from that Southern Gothic kind of feeling [in Athens]. It was a place that had a much longer history than we had in Lincoln or Omaha, you know. So it really felt kind of heavy and mysterious and kind of magical to me, as an 18 or 19 year old. Yeah, it was amazing.

And now you’re calling me from Athens, where you really got your career going when R.E.M. and that scene was taking off, and where your current full band tour is taking you now, just before playing Memphis. And you’re living in Nebraska again. A lot of full-circle moments are happening these days! How does it feel to hear the new release, WXRT Live in Grant Park, Chicago, IL, July 4, 1993, documenting a live show you and your band played at the height of the Altered Beast era?

It feels so long ago, I wanted it to be called Matthew Sweet, Live in Chicago, 1893. I thought it was funny, but no one would implement it. But that was a really memorable show. The Jayhawks were there, and I love Gary [Louris]. And Chicago was always a great place for me, so I had a lot of support there, not just fans, but from radio. It was one of the places where everything sort of went right, you know? So it’s always been a little bit of a second home area around Chicago. I wasn’t, you know, living in Nebraska at the time, but it still felt closer to home. You know, it was just sort of cool, the big Midwestern city. But maybe the real reason I loved that show was that the next morning, there was a newspaper headline in Chicago that read: The Pope, the Bulls, and Matthew Sweet. My mother came from a giant Catholic family, and she was pretty religious and so, you know, there could be nothing more thrilling for her than me being mentioned in the same breath as the Pope.

And here you are, 1993 is in the far distant past, and you’re still touring with a full band.

And playing this power pop fest! I’ve never heard of such a thing, except maybe in Spain, right? Power pop is a thing there, and we toured there a lot, and did really well. But to think we are in America, at a power pop festival! I heard it may get moved out of the bandshell to an indoor venue, due to weather, but we really want to play the Shell. It’s one of the last bandshells, I think. There’s only a couple left. And, I mean, you know, we’ve all seen those photos of Elvis standing in the middle of that stage…

The Memphis PowerPop Festival, part of the Orion Free Concert Series, takes place at the Overton Park Shell this Saturday, August 31st at 5 p.m., and features Matthew Sweet with openers Abe Partridge and The Sonny Wilsons. An after-party featuring Your Academy, 40 Watt Moon, and Lately David starts at 9 p.m. at B-Side.

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Art Art Feature News News Blog

Metal Museum to Start Construction in Overton Park

At Thursday’s groundbreaking ceremony for the Metal Museum’s transition to its new home at the former Memphis College of Art building, Carissa Hussong showed off her decked-out hardhat, complete with diamonds and black flames sprawling across the cap. “Yes, the diamonds are real,” she said. “’Cause who doesn’t need a hardhat with their name and diamonds on it?”

The hardhat, she revealed, was gifted to her on her first day on the job 17 years ago by James Wallace, the museum’s founding director who preceded her. It was always destined that the museum would expand in some way, though it wasn’t always known that it would take over the Memphis College of Art’s campus. That suggestion wouldn’t come until 2018, and even then it was met with some hesitation, until eventually that hesitation subsided as the move became more and more logical. 

“The museum has been called a hidden gem. This has a lot to do with our current location,” said Richard Aycock, the museum’s board president, at the ceremony. “Our programs have changed lives, and I can’t tell you how excited we are about the possibilities this expansion gives us to expand our educational opportunities. It will increase our educational offerings sixfold in a place that’s easily accessible by foot, by bike, by car, or by public transportation. The expansion gives us room and space to teach advanced metalworking techniques to more students.

“In addition to addressing the needs of our community, we are very excited and honored to become a part of the Overton Park family and to continue the Memphis College of Art’s legacy of art and education.”

Part of honoring the college’s legacy also means honoring its original architecture and architects Roy Harrover and Bill Mann, so the museum engaged the help of Los Angeles-based wHY Architects and Memphis-based LRK. 

“This project is a true example of how you can work with the existing fabric to highlight its unique features, and then thoughtfully add on to it to serve future generations,” said Krissy Buck Flickinger, senior associate architect with LRK. 

Quoting from the original National Register nomination for Overton Park, she continued, “‘The building is an outstanding example of contemporary architectural design, distinguished by its freestanding concrete sunbreak, folded plate roof structure and generous roof terraces, and balconies, all of which will be preserved and will live on.’

“The historic materials will be used, restored, and retained. I already talked about the folded plate roof. We have terrazzo floors. We have steel windows that are all original and in beautiful condition. We’re restoring the 350-seat auditorium. We’re reimagining the library and the cafe space. … And we’re letting the once art studio spaces live on as art gallery spaces. … And the second vital piece to this project is the addition of the innovative metalworking facility with its own expressive design that draws inspiration from and complements Rust Hall.”

The designs are complete, and construction is ready to begin, with a projected completion date of 2026. 

The museum’s current site at 374 Metal Museum Drive will eventually be converted into a space to host an artist-in-residence program, as well as an events space. 

As Aycock reminded guests at Thursday’s event, “The Metal Museum is the only institute in the United States dedicated to the art and craft of fine metalwork. There is nowhere else in the world where you can go and look at a beautiful exhibition of exquisite metalwork, then go to the shop and watch that metalwork being made, and even take a class and make some with your own hands. It is a special place. It is a place that metalsmiths from all over the world come and that many here in this country call home.”

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News

901 Wrestling Has New Home

The 901 Wrestling promotion has a new home: Minglewood Hall at 1955 Madison Avenue.

“We’re going to be moving to Sundays monthly at Minglewood starting September 22nd,” says Kevin Cerrito, 901 Wrestling host. Anthony Sain is his commentary partner. Both will be back at the helm at the new location.

And the shows, which will be held in Minglewood’s main room, will be from 5 to 7 p.m. instead of at a later time as in the past, Cerrito says.

One free entry for kids will be available with each purchase of a general admission ticket to the matches.

Tickets will go on sale at 9:01 a.m on 901 day, September 1st, at 901wrestling.com.

Fans can catch up on full shows, including the matches and interviews, by going to youtube.com/901wrestling.

Dorian Vain at 901 Wrestling’s “Wild Card Rumble” at Black Lodge (Credit: MIchael Donahue)

According to info from Cerrito, “Promoter Tommy Jax took over a Holly Springs, Mississippi-based wrestling promotion in 2017 with a group of underutilized talent that was mostly based out of Memphis. In 2018, the promotion moved their shows to Rec Room on Broad Avenue in Memphis and it was rebranded to 901 Wrestling in 2019. Covid ended the Rec Room era, and when 901 Wrestling returned in 2021 its new home was Black Lodge until they closed in August 2024.”

According to Jax, “With 901 Wrestling moving to Minglewood Hall, we all have the opportunity to present the biggest local wrestling shows this city has seen in over a decade. This brings us closer to reaching our goal of bringing wrestling back as a mainstay in Memphis once again. 901 Wrestling is not just putting on wrestling shows. We’re trying to make sure we keep something here that is inherently in our city’s DNA. Like barbecue, basketball, and music, wrestling is part of who we are as Memphians.”

And, as Cerrito says, “It’s going to be a new era. We’re really looking forward to it.”

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News News Blog News Feature

Re-MEMernet: Alfredo Sauce, Painted Raccoon, and #buttholegate

Let’s have a look back at some huge (and hilarious) MEMernet anniversaries. 

Posted to Facebook by WMC-TV

“Saucy Situation”

The MEMernet was obsessed this time two years ago with a truck accident that spilled enough Bertolli alfredo sauce to temporarily close I-55. 

Coverage quotes from FOX13’s Kate Bieri went viral, including one used in a tweet from The New York Times that read: “Unfortunately this is Memphis, and we had some pretty intense sun beating down on that alfredo sauce, and also humidity. It was just not a great recipe for a highway full of alfredo sauce.” 

#notmyjob

Posted to Facebook by Richie Esquivel

Richie Esquivel’s sad/hilarious Facebook post went around the world this time last year, picked up by WMC-TV, The Guardian, and The New York Post.

His photo showed a dead raccoon painted over by a road crew laying new traffic stripes along Getwell. It raises so many questions, but one thing was clear to Esquivel. It was “#notmyjob,” he wrote. “Memphis, Tennessee, baby. But Getwell Road looked real nice, tho.”

Neverending #buttholegate

Posted to Facebook by Imagine Butthole Cafe

The Imagine Butthole Cafe Facebook page always remembers.

The scandal was born seven years ago last month and internet scientists have yet to calculate the cumulative hours sunk into the hilarious, Memphis-only rabbit hole. Even researching this brief post, I was sucked into it. 

Here’s our brief reporting of it when it happened in 2017. 

But the wild story and the reaction to it went all over the world (and that’s not hyperbole). Here are some stories from Eater and Vice.  

Susan Ellis, our food writer and managing editor at the time, listed ButtholeGate as one of the top food scandals in Memphis. 

In the Best of Memphis issue of 2017, I picked ButholeGate as the year’s “Best Butthole Buzz.”

“The only butthole-related scandal that mattered this year was ButtholeGate, of course. This mighty beast of social-media hilarity and hurt feelings rose in July from a Google review (yes, a Google review) of Imagine Vegan Cafe in Cooper-Young. ButtholeGate paralyzed Memphis Facebook and Twitter for nearly two days, and the story finally spread as far as The Washington Post (yes, that Washington Post). Before it was all over, the humor harvest yielded “Butthole McYodelTown,” a puckered logo for “Hole Foods Memphis,” and #buttholesoutforchelsea. — TS”

ButtholegGate (SEE?! I can’t even stop writing about the thing now!) surged again on Reddit around its anniversary last month with some curious folks just wanting to know what the heck was going on. Delicious hilarity ensued. Check it out: 

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News News Blog News Feature

Citizens Call On City Officials To Act In MATA’s Budget Crisis

Riders and citizens are calling on city leaders to intervene regarding the effects of the Memphis Area Transit Authority’s(MATA) newest budget.

These comments come days after the $67 million budget was approved unanimously by the agency’s Board of Commissioners. Prior to the approval, interim CEO Bacarra Mauldin and her team had been open about how the budget would affect both riders and personnel with routes being suspended and more than 200 employees being laid off.

While MATA had been vocal about these proposed changes, this didn’t make it easier for the public to accept, and are calling on the city to intervene.  In a statement released by the Moral Budget Coalition, Bennett Foster, executive director for Memphis For All said these changes will affect “tens of thousands of Memphians,” and the city “has the power to prevent that.”

“Chronic underfunding has already led to reduced transit services, hitting hardest in majority Black neighborhoods that depend on public transportation the most,” Foster said in a statement. “This situation jeopardizes public safety, economic mobility, and racial justice. Enhancing MATA is not only vital for connecting residents to jobs, healthcare, and education–it is also crucial for the economic growth and overall quality of life in Memphis.”

The Moral Budget Coalition has asked for Mayor Paul Young and the Memphis City Council to allocate at least $20 million to MATA. They have several recommendations such as increasing property taxes, re-allocating portions of rainy day funds, and increasing vehicle registration.

MATA officials have noted that the city has historically been their primary funding source. During this year’s budget season, Memphis City Council allocated $30 million for Fiscal Year 2025.It was also during this budget season that officials said they would be more involved in MATA’s budget moving forward.

Members of the coalition spoke about how citizens are dependent on public transit for their transportation needs. Foster said the city is primarily responsible for maintaining transit service, and that he felt MATA had not been a priority in current and previous administrations.

“We are here to make sure that cycle of chronic disinvestment in public transit and public services –it begins and ends here,” Foster said. “If we don’t take action now – it’ll be too late. If MATA is cutting their employees in half, cutting their service by 30 percent we’re gonna lose access to federal funds, we could lose formula funds that match our budget and we’re gonna get into a debt spiral.”

The public also made comments during this month’s meeting. One attendee said they didn’t agree that the agency was out of options for revenue and suggested that the city tax airplane passengers, real estate transactions, football and basketball tickets, as well as offering Beale Street transportation.

“If you don’t think this is a desperate situation, I’m telling you it is,” the attendee said. 

Funding has long been an issue for MATA since the pandemic. During Tuesday’s board meeting, Mauldin stressed this saying that the agency struggled to receive consistent funding as CARES funds ran out.

“MATA has operated for a number of years without any increases in the amount operating funds made available to it,”  Hamish Davidson, external CFO of J.S. Held LLC  said during Tuesday’s meeting. “It has managed to survive and indeed grow beyond its means through the provision of the CARES Act funds made available post Covid.”

Davidson said MATA cannot sustain itself without the increase of funds, and they receive 95 percent of their funding from federal,state, and local funds. The other 5 percent comes from advertising and farebox revenue. Davidson said that historically funding had not stayed static, but it has reduced with no regard to inflation, and that the last two budgets were deficit budgets.

In addition to rising operating costs a majority of MATA’s costs stem from employee compensation and benefit packages. Davidson also said they have reached a new collective bargaining agreement for union members.

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On the Fly We Recommend We Recommend

On the Fly: Week of 08/30/24

Ride the Cyclone 
Germantown Community Theatre
Performances through September 1
Picture it: A creepy abandoned amusement park. The ghosts of five high-schoolers who died on a roller coaster. A mechanical fortune-teller with the power to return only one of the youths to life. Oh, the decisions to be made. The fights to be had. How morbidly delightful. All of this is thanks to the regional premiere brought by Germantown Community Theatre. Performances end this weekend. Showtimes are Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Tickets ($16-$26) can be purchased here.  

Delta Fair & Music Festival
Agricenter International
Friday, August 30-September 8
It’s fairly obvious that this festival is a fair shot at a great time, with games, rides, and all your fair classics. It is the Delta Fair, after all. You can enjoy the children’s barnyard, mechanical bull rides, the petting zoo, the rock wall, theme days, special events, and live music. Gate admission is $15/adults (13 and older), $10/youth (5-12), free/children (4 and under), and $10/seniors (65 & older). You can also purchase tickets at Kroger. Wristbands for rides are $25, except for Saturdays, Sundays, and Labor Day when they are $30. For more information, visit deltafest.com

Orion Free Concert Series: MonoNeon
Overton Park Shell
Friday, August 30, 7 p.m.
MonoNeon is playing at the Shell for FREE. F-R-E-E, that spells free. Alex Greene wrote about him back in July (read that article here), so you know he’s cool. As with any Orion Free Concert, picnic baskets, coolers, beverages, blankets, and lawn chairs are welcome, as are leashed dogs. Good Groceries Mobile Diner, Stick ’Em, Green Beetle, and Juiced What You Needed will be on site selling their fare. 

Healthier 901 Fest
Shelby Farms Park
Saturday, August 31, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Writing these weekly “On the Fly” posts means I have a healthy appetite for events, and this event is all about health. Coincidence? Yes. Did I force a segue with the word “health”? Also, yes. But here we are, and here is the Healthier 901 Fest, a festival devoted to making Memphis healthier through fitness classes, food trucks with healthy options, fun ways for kids and adults to get active, giveaways, and more. Find out more about the event here

First Tiger Game of the Season
Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium
Saturday, August 31, 11 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
The Tigers will take on the North Alabama Lions. Wooooo! Before kickoff at 6 p.m., the Tiger Tailgate Team will host the annual BBQ Extravaganza with a cocktail bar of Grind City brews, domestics, cocktails, and the drink of the day, The Lion Tamer. The Tiger Walk is at 3:30 p.m. 

WLOK Stone Soul Picnic
The Coronet
Saturday, August 31, noon-7 p.m.
To quote a great writer — not like Mark Twain or Sappho, but I’m sure this quote will end up in one of those books of quotes — so to quote a great writer, my coworker Jon — Jon W. Sparks — I couldn’t tell you what the W stands for, but I’ll tell you what he wrote — “What’s fresh, free, and fun even after 49 years? How about the WLOK Stone Soul Picnic, which has become a Memphis tradition with a mix of gospel tunes and modern R&B. It’s happening Saturday, August 31st, from noon to 7 p.m. at The Coronet (formerly the Memphis Music Room), 5770 Shelby Oaks Drive. It’s nonstop entertainment with giveaways, kids’ activities, and food trucks. Throughout the day, top musical groups will perform, including headliner The Canton Spirituals, an award-winning gospel group that pioneered the mixing of traditional gospel with modern R&B. Read his full article on the event here

UNAPOLOGETIC Presents Nubia Yasin and Eillo Followed by Kid Maestro
Bar DKDC
Friday, August 30, 10 p.m.
To quote Alex Greene from this week’s music column: “You might think you know UNAPOLOGETIC. How could a Memphis music fan not know the likes of Cameron Bethany, AWFM, and PreauXX — or producers like C Major, Kid Maestro, and IMAKEMADBEATS? And yet there’s always more simmering below the collective’s surface than what its public-facing (or face-masking) side reveals. For example, at 10 p.m. this Friday, August 30th, at Bar DKDC, some talent whose faces may seem new to UNAPOLOGETIC fans will top the bill. And yet, paradoxically, they’ve been involved in the organization’s background for years, part of what’s always ‘simmering below the surface’ there.” The artists Alex speaks of are Nubia Yasin and Eillo, and they’ll be performing with Kid Maestro. Cover is $10. 

901 Day
For many places, September 1st is just the first of the month, but for Memphians, it’s 901 Day, the day to celebrate the city. Here’s just a short of what you can do on your 901 Day:

  • 901 Days in the Ravine: Celebrate your city down in the Ravine over three days. On Friday (4-10 p.m.), The Poor and Hungry and Hustle & Flow will be showing in the Ravine. On Saturday (1-10 p.m.) and Sunday (1-7 p.m.), there will be live music by James and the Ultrasounds, DJ James, and Turnstyles. On Sunday (1-7 p.m.), expect a vendor market; music by Church Brothers, Zoe, and Jeff Hulett Band; a Memphis Roller Derby demonstration; and an Opera Memphis pop-up performance. | Memphis Made Brewing Co., Friday, August 30-September 1
  • 901 Fest: Friday’s lineup includes John Nemeth, Terrance Simien, and DJ Witnesse; Saturday’s features Showboats, Lucky 7, Dead Soldiers, and DJ Qemist; and Sunday’s has The Wilkins Sisters, Talibah Safiya, and Marcella Simien. | Railgarten, Friday, August 30-September 1
  • 901 Day on Broad Ave.: Visit shops and businesses on the street throughout the day to see what they’re offering. | Broad Ave., Saturday, August 31 
  • 901 Day: Hosted by the one and only Sydney Neely, featuring headliner Big Boogie, and special guest performances by Kia Shine and Al Kapone, this day will have a youth talent show, Memphis Jookin battle, poetry slam, fashion show, DJ battle, flashmob, live paintings, and so much more. | Beale Street, Sunday, September 1, 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
  • 901 Day at Ghost River Brewery: Celebrate all things Memphis on 901 Day at Ghost River Brewery & Taproom with local brews, live music, art vendors, tattoo artists, and good vibes. | Ghost River Brewing Co., Sunday, September 1, 10:30 a.m.-11 p.m.
  • 901 Day Celebration: Grind City will have drink specials, plus free people and pet caricatures and Memphis-themed music. | Grind City Brewing Company, Sunday, September 1, noon-10 p.m.
  • 901 & Only Get Hitched by the Ditch: Wiseacre hosts four back-to-back wedding ceremonies for 901 Day. | Wiseacre Brewing Company, Sunday, September 1, 1-8 p.m.
  • Turnt 901 Day Celebration | Lamplighter Lounge, Sunday, September 1, 2 p.m.
  • 901 Day Memphis Jookin Warz: See Memphis very best dancers performing live Downtown on Main Street. | Rumba Room Memphis, Sunday, September 1, 6-10 p.m.
  • Open Genre – 901 Day Edition: Celebrate 901 Day as 10-plus DJs showcase their skills and knowledge of Memphis music. | Ugly Art Co., 635 Madison, Sunday, September 1, 6-11:30 p.m.

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

Investigation Urged on State Sen. Brent Taylor’s Online Posts

A West Tennessee prosecutor has requested a state investigation into a Memphis senator for allegedly breaking state law by posting documents online containing a defendant’s personal information, possibly after obtaining it from the Gibson County Sheriff’s Office.

District Attorney General Fred Agee confirmed to the Tennessee Lookout he filed a complaint with the Comptroller’s Office and Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, asking them to investigate whether Sen. Brent Taylor (R-Memphis) put information on X showing a man’s birth date and Social Security number, which would be a Class B misdemeanor accompanied by nearly six months in jail.

Agee, a Republican whose prosecutorial district covers Crockett, Haywood, and Gibson counties, requested the appointment of a pro tem prosecutor to look into the matter. He said the items were posted online for at least 10 hours.

“With all the identity theft that goes on daily, I felt I had a duty to report it and to also ask for a special prosecutor since [Taylor’s] social media post was directed toward me,” Agee told the Lookout.

Taylor responded to questions by text message Tuesday, saying he posted the public record “for the benefit” of constituents and West Tennesseans to show an example of “outrageous plea deals” Agee reaches. He reiterated his claim that Agee and Mulroy are “soft on crime.”

“When I discovered one of the dozens of documents, that have been passed around more than a joint at a Willie Nelson concert, may have possibly contained a Social Security number, I quickly replaced them with newly redacted documents out of an abundance of caution,” Taylor said.

As part of the investigation request, Agee said he asked the state’s investigative agencies to see whether the Gibson County Sheriff’s Office gave the information to Taylor. Separately, Gibson County Sheriff Paul Thomas has been indicted in connection with directing inmate labor to an outside company he owned as part of a $1.4 million scheme.

The situation stems, in part, from an op-ed Agee wrote Aug. 6 for The Daily Memphian supporting Shelby County District Attorney General Steve Mulroy, a Democrat accused of being soft on crime and threatened with an ouster by Taylor and House Speaker Cameron Sexton (R-Crossville). Taylor has said he will file legislation to have Mulroy removed from office during next year’s legislative session.

Taylor posted documents within the last two weeks to paint Agee as a liberal prosecutor by detailing a plea agreement Agee’s office made with Brewston Lamonte Cole, who has been convicted of multiple DUIs, drug possession, firearms possession, violation of the sex offender registry, and violation of probation. Cole was sentenced to 10 years in prison, but that was suspended for probation or supervision by Community Corrections. He had served nearly four months in jail already after having his bond revoked and will receive a harsher sentence if he doesn’t comply with probation requirements.

As part of that post, Taylor put up three Google Drive links containing the plea agreement document that listed Cole’s birthday and Social Security number. The Lookout has obtained screenshots of Taylor posts and those links, which have since been removed, and the documents reposted without the personal information.

The state Comptroller’s Office declined to confirm it has been requested to investigate the matter.

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 X.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Say Amen to the Stone Soul Picnic

What’s fresh, free, and fun even after 49 years? How about the WLOK Stone Soul Picnic, which has become a Memphis tradition with a mix of gospel tunes and modern R&B. It’s happening Saturday, August 31st, from noon to 7 p.m. at The Coronet (formerly the Memphis Music Room), 5770 Shelby Oaks Drive. 

It’s nonstop entertainment with giveaways, kids’ activities, and food trucks. Throughout the day, top musical groups will perform, including headliner The Canton Spirituals, an award-winning gospel group that pioneered the mixing of traditional gospel with modern R&B.

It continues a long tradition that’s even older than the Beale Street Music Festival (born in 1977). It was in 1974 that a couple of staffers at WLOK thought that the station’s listeners would enjoy some music and food. They didn’t know how right they were. They got the King Cotton company to provide some meat, Wonder Bread to bring the buns, and Coca-Cola to supply the beverages in hopes that a couple of hundred people would show up at Martin Luther King Riverside Park. But thousands of people turned out and it’s been going strong ever since.

Art Gilliam acquired the station a couple of years later and kept the picnic going. The station’s music was R&B but has since changed to gospel, but the event remains free and joyous. And WLOK — still under Gilliam’s leadership — remains a community station with not just music but programming that includes, among other topics, civic issues and health information.

Here’s the musical lineup for Saturday:
12:05 p.m. – Deborah Barnes
12:20 p.m. – Memphis Youth Arts Initiative
12:35 p.m. – Memphis Baptist Ministerial Chorus
1 p.m. – Cedric King & Restoration
1:25 p.m. – Tamara Knox
1:45 p.m. – The Mellowtones
2:15 p.m. – Patrick Hollis & United
2:40 p.m. – Vincent Tharp & Kenosis
3:15 p.m. – Roney Strong & the Strong Family
3:50 p.m. – Josh Bracy & Power Anointed
4:25 p.m. – The Sensational Wells Brothers
5 p.m. – The Echoaires
5:35 p.m. – The Canton Spirituals

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Sushi Jimmi Opens Poke Paradise Restaurant

 Jimmy “Sushi Jimmi” Sinh is back with a new restaurant, Poke Paradise, which he owns with his wife May.

The restaurant at 6343 Summer Avenue, Number 110, the former site of Izzy & Adam’s pizza restaurant, opened August 20th.

He will be selling poke bowls, including “Spicy Kimchi Taco,” “Fire Salmon,” “Rainbow,” and “Spicy Ninja.”

Poke, which originally is from Hawaii, was created by fishermen, Sinh says. The dish is made from raw fish, usually tuna and salmon, but other fish can be used as well. Then soy and sesame sauce and “other goodies like seaweed” are added, he says.

Sinh is including his famous sushi rolls, including the special rolls and traditional rolls. The menu also includes sushi burritos, sashimi, nigiri, and a range of appetizers and entrees.

“We brought back fried rice,” Sinh says. “We have Japanese cold noodles. And we have a few more things we’re going to add on once I have enough staff trained. We’ll run some specials on the weekends; depending on what the season is, we’ll match the season we’re in.”

Sinh owned the popular Sushi Jimmi Asian Fusion restaurant at 2895 Poplar Avenue. He closed that restaurant on May 23rd, 2019.

As to why he wanted to open a new restaurant, Sinh says, “I’ve been doing really well with Poke Paradise [food truck] for the past four years, and we’ve done a lot of catering and a lot of private dinners.”

But, he says, “What made us want this restaurant is, it’s more consistent for the customers to enjoy. We’re open all day long and they can walk in anytime they want to order anything they like on the normal menu.”

And people can now find him at one spot. “Instead of trying to follow me around town on the food truck or keep up with my schedule at the shop.”

“It has the perfect amount of space I needed,” he adds. “It’s not too big where I can’t manage it.”

There are “just enough tables” for customers to sit down and enjoy his food, Sinh says.

And he doesn’t need as much staff, but, he says, “I still need a good staff to run the place for me. Starting September is when I’ll get back to being on the road doing my catering and private dinners.”

Customers can still see him at his restaurant, but “a lot of the weekends I will be gone because every year there are the same customers who book me for catering and private dinners.”

His takeout shop at 5310 Crestview Road is now closed. “As for right now, the food truck is not operating because I want to get this restaurant up and going before we even talk about the food truck.”

Poke Paradise “is not a brand-new business. It’s just transitioned to a restaurant. And now that it’s a restaurant, customers can enjoy it more. And they can come in and see me during the weekdays.”

But Sinh might not get out of the kitchen that quickly to greet his fans. “I’m always in the back cooking. And that’s what I have always loved doing.”

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MATA Board Approves Budget With More Than 200 Layoffs

The Memphis Area Transit Authority’s board of commissioners have unanimously approved a budget that will lead to more than 200 employees being laid off.

During the Tuesday’s monthly board of commissioners meeting, the board approved its budget for Fiscal Year 2025, with the board having requested officials present a balanced budget. In addition to staffing cuts, the budget also affects ridership routes.

Interim CEO Bacarra Mauldin has been vocal about potential changes as the organization worked to address its financial instability. Last week, the organization suspended its trolley service as it worked to scale back spending, since repairing a brake issue proved to be a “costly” expenditure.

“If we were to keep operating the way we’re operating today, our budget would be $85 million,” Mauldin said during a city hall presentation last week. “We have committed to our board that we were going to present a balanced budget. We presented a draft budget of $67 million for FY25.”

MATA board chairman Michael Fulton echoed these sentiments during the meeting, as he recognized these budget cuts as being tough decisions, but necessary for the organization’s future.

The agency has faced difficulties in procuring funding, unable to identify consistent sources. Earlier this month Mauldin said not only had ridership plummeted as a result of the pandemic, but relief funds had also run out.

As a result, the agency opted to streamline staffing and vendor costs. Mauldin said the agency’s debt has been growing due to the increased cost of doing business, decreased ridership, and flat funding. She added that their budget holds have resulted in slower on-time performance.

Last week the organization said that it planned to have the budget approved during Tuesday’s meeting, and to send notices to affected employees today.

“Every affected employee will be notified in the coming weeks and receive support securing alternate employment,” MATA said in a statement. “In addition, vendor contracts have been discontinued and/or dramatically scaled back.”

While these measures have been put in place in order to save the agency, this doesn’t soften the blow for riders and advocacy groups. Sammie Hunter, co-chair of the Memphis Bus Rider Union, urged the board to vote no on the measure as it seemed like the “blame” fell on riders “who had nothing to do with the $60 million deficit.”

“The proposed budget by the MATA administration is an example why Mayor Paul Young should clean house at MATA,” Hunter said in a statement prior to the meeting.

Both the Memphis Bus Rider Union and Citizens for Better Service have long voiced their opposition to these changes. The groups feel that these cuts send the wrong messages to riders and drivers, and that it “sends a message that [the board] is in favor of service cuts and layoffs.”