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Down to the Wire

The 2024 election season had its share of both suspense and drama. 

That was certainly true of the quadrennial national election for president (arguably the most momentous one since the Civil War), which went down to the wire and frazzled millions of nerve endings before a winner could be discerned.

As all prognostications had it in advance, the presidential picture seemed headed for a resolution later than election night itself. Such opaqueness as lingered in the vote totals abruptly dissolved by the morning’s light, however. Shockingly, Donald J . Trump was back. With a vengeance.

At the center of the suspense had been the three so-called “blue wall” states of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. It was presumed that a victory for Democrat Kamala Harris in all three of these habitually Democratic states would give her the presidency, but just barely. A victory for former GOP president Trump in any of them could drastically derail that prognosis. In the event, he appears to have won them all, as he did in 2016.

Kamala Harris (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)
Donald J. Trump (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)

Nor was drama absent from the local side of the ballot. There is little prospect of the local results being challenged, as is always possible with the presidential numbers, but their effect may linger and, in some cases, simmer.

This is especially true of the series of referenda that Memphis voters were asked to pass judgment on. As of late Tuesday evening, election commission totals had all the referenda winning handily.

The most significant ones — the outcome of which was never much doubted — had set city against state and enraged the guardians of statehouse authority well in advance of the individual items receiving a single vote.

In brief, the offending referenda items of Ordinance 5908, asked city residents to approve (1) restoration of permits for the right to carry firearms, (2) a ban on the sale of assault weapons in the city, and (3) a “red flag” proviso empowering the local judiciary to confiscate the weapons of demonstrably risky individuals.

All of the items are “trigger laws,” to be activated only when and if state law should permit them.

Even so, the Republican Speaker of the state House of Representatives, Cameron Sexton, had made bold to threaten the city of Memphis with loss of state-shared revenues unless the offending referendum package — unanimously approved by the city council — was withdrawn from the ballot.

That was enough to make the Shelby County Election Commission blanch, but the council itself was not cowed and, led by Chairman JB Smiley Jr., sued to have the measures restored. Chancellor Melanie Taylor Jefferson obliged.

As did Memphis voters, in their turn. All three questions of Referendum 5908 passed by gigantic majorities of 100,00 votes or more.

Other referenda passed on Tuesday would: strike down the city’s existing ban of runoffs in at-large elections (Referendum 5884), impose a two-year residency requirement for Memphis mayoral candidates (Referendum 5913), and authorize the city council to determine the salaries of the mayor, council members, the city chief administrative officer, and division directors (Referendum 5893). 

All in all, it was a good night for the referenda, as well as for the council itself. And, arguably, for the citizens of Memphis.

Perhaps predictably, the form sheet also held for elective offices, with incumbents of both parties doing very well indeed.

Marsha Blackburn (Photo: United States Senate, Public domain | Wikimedia Commons)

Republican U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn held off a challenge statewide from Knoxville state Representative Gloria Johnson, her Democratic opponent, though in heavily Democratic Shelby County, Johnson was leading, 156,303 to 104,633.

Another Republican incumbent, 8th District Congressman David Kustoff led Democratic challenger Sarah Freeman by a 2 to 1 margin in Shelby County’s portion of the vote, 66,398 votes to 30,255.

Steve Cohen (Photo: U.S. House of Representatives, Public domain | Wikimedia Commons)

Meanwhile, 9th District Democratic Congressman Steve Cohen was overwhelming his perennial Republican opponent Charlotte Bergman even more dramatically with vote totals in the county of 162,299 to 47,634.

On the legislative scene, the much-ballyhooed District 97 state House race saw Republican incumbent John Gillespie edging out his Democratic challenger Jesse Huseth, 15,859 to 14,600.


John Gillespie (Photo: Courtesy tn.gov)

And, in another state House race where Democrats nursed upset hopes, in District 83, incumbent Republican Mark White held off Democrat Noah Nordstrom, 19,283 to 13,713.

Mark White (Photo: Courtesy tn.gov)

Most attention — locally, nationally, and even worldwide — remained on the showdown between Trump and Harris. 

As late as the last weekend before this week’s final vote, the presidential race was being referred to as a dead heat, a virtual tie, a sense of things apparently corroborated by a string of polls in the so-called “battleground” states — the Rust Belt trio of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin; the Sun Belt states of Nevada and Arizona; and the competitive Southern states of Georgia and North Carolina.

A freakish outlier poll in the presumably red state of Iowa showing Harris with a last-minute edge over Trump in Iowa, though, was an indicator of possible unexpected volatility.

That the presidential race had even gotten so measurably close was a reflection of a political standoff in which halves of the nation had seemingly cleaved against each other in a variety of different and sometimes paradoxical ways. 

This was not the same old story of Democrats versus Republicans. Both of those coalitions had undergone profound changes over the years. No longer was the “working class” (ditto, the “middle class”) to be grouped in a single body. Upward mobility had revised people’s notions of class, then stalled in such a way as to confuse them further. Generational change was rampant, and ethnicity was no longer a dependable metric for determining political attitude. Disagreement over social matters like gender identity and abortion policy had sundered the old divides.

The center could not hold. It was not only, a la Yeats, that the falcon could not hear the falconer. Social media and impatient ways had created multitudinous new sources professing to be the latter.

The nation’s two-party political system had atrophied to the point that, seemingly, neither was able to generate a dependable bench of A-list players. Donald J. Trump, the Republicans’ once and would-be future president, had come from the worlds of seat-of-the-pants commerce and TV showbiz to reign over a hodgepodge of time-servers, has-beens, and sycophants in his party, and Democratic incumbent president Joe Biden, a survivor of his party’s dwindling corps of traditionalists, headed up the Democrats.

That’s how things were at the end of the early-year primaries, and there were no few voices wondering aloud: Was that all there was, this uninspiring rematch of moldy oldies?

To give Biden his due, he had done his best to wreak from overriding political inertia some promising legislation, especially in the rebuilding of the country’s decaying infrastructure. To give Trump his due, he had recovered from a stupefying series of misdeeds, including, arguably, an aborted coup against the political system, to regain his political stature.

When the two met on a late-June debate stage on the eve of the two party conventions, the 81-year-old Biden, who had fared well in the earlier presentation of his State of the Union address, crumbled so visibly and profoundly that to many, probably most, observers, the presidential race seemed over then and there, especially when the 78-year-old Trump would go on to defiantly survive a serious assassination attempt two days before the opening of the GOP political convention in July.

But desperation in the Democrats’ ranks had meanwhile generated a determination to replace the compromised Biden at the head of the party ticket. Enough pressure developed that the incumbent finally, if reluctantly, had to yield, and realistically, given the lateness of the hour, the most feasible outcome proved to be that of elevating Vice President Kamala Harris, the erstwhile California senator and former prosecutor, in Biden’s stead at the Democratic convention in August.

Once the matchup between Trump and Harris got established, it quickly settled into an even-steven situation, a kind of free-floating draw in which the two sides always stayed within reach of each other.

From the Democratic point of view, this would seem something of a miracle. Nikki Haley had based her runner-up GOP presidential race on the conceit that a female could win the presidency, either herself or, with the aging Biden still a candidate, his vice president, Harris, still regarded at that point as a nonentity. It was Haley’s way of mocking the opposition.

Indeed, even in Democratic ranks, Harris was long seen to be something of a liability, a drag on the ticket. That this was due to the way she had been used — or misused — by the incumbent president (in the ill-defined role of “border czar,” for example) became evident only when she was freed to become her own person. 

On the stump in her own right, she proved to be a natural, with unsuspected reserves of charisma and an appeal that was fortified by her selection of the pleasantly homey governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz, as her running mate. (Trump’s choice as potential veep, the edgy Ohio Senator JD Vance, was clearly head-smart and acceptable to Trump’s base among the MAGA faithful but kept bumping up against his own innate arrogance.)

The change in tone among the Democrats was almost instantly evident. It came to be symbolized in the concept of “joy” and in Harris’ slogan, “a new way forward.”

While coming across as a certifiable New Thing, she was also able, credibly, to posit herself as the defender of constitutional values against the alleged schemes by the usurper Trump to override them in the interests of personal power.

“We are the promise of America,” she would say, uniting her own purpose with those of her audience members. 

Against this, against Harris, the ebullient rock-star presence on stage, Trump seemed buffaloed. In his fateful June debate duel with Biden, he had seemed vital, a hurricane of restless energy hurling scorn and unchecked charges at his befuddled opponent. Now it became more and more obvious that he, too, was a near octogenarian, with no new promise of his own to offer.

The shift in positions was fully demonstrated, post-conventions, in the follow-up debate with Harris when, matador-like, she had baited the bullish Trump with mockery of his rallies (which, in fact, were becoming more and more disorganized and less and less focused and empty of real content). His red-eyed response, that Haitian immigrants were eating the dogs and cats of Middle Americans in Ohio, was perfectly framed for the television audience by the split image of Harris’ gleeful wonderment at this out-of-nowhere non sequitur.

It was not long afterward that Harris’ progress was slowed somewhat, as much by a petulant media’s insistence that she submit to interviews as a sign of her seriousness as anything else. Dutifully, she did, and emerged with appropriate talking points — a middle-class tax cut, subsidies for small business and new housing starts, and legislation to suppress price-gouging. These would become highlights of the “to-do” list which she would juxtapose against what she characterized as the brooding Trump’s ever-multiplying enemies list. 

It became a cliche of press coverage that the former president’s seething ire at an imagined “enemy from within” was displacing what his would-be handlers wanted him to discuss — a supposedly intractable inflation and the pell-mell overcoming of the nation’s borders by a horde of illegal invaders. Both menaces, as it happened, were in something of an abatement — the former by a plethora of relatively rosy economic indices, the latter by fairly resolute, if delayed, executive actions taken by the lame-duck president in the summer and fall.

What Trump’s audiences were getting on the stump instead was the overflow of his ever more naked id, a witches’ brew of resentment and machismo — insults against his adversaries, threats to use the machinery of government against them, and improvisations on themes ranging from Arnold Palmer’s junk size to nostalgia for “the late, great Hannibal Lecter.”

Partly, this was due to what Harris characterized as her opponent’s presumed “exhaustion,” but partly, too, it was Trump’s instinctive reliance on what had always been the source of his appeal, an exposure of pure personality, a willingness, for better or for worse, to let it all hang out, to be The Show, a cathartic vehicle for release of his followers’ emotions. 

It was this penchant, after all, that had allowed him to sweep past a stage full of practical Republican politicians during the primary season of 2016 and, later that year, to surprise the calculating and overconfident Hillary Clinton at the polls.

GOP eminences — even those who, like Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, despised Trump, or, who, like senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, had been vilified by him, learned that they were no match for his carnival-like presence and resolved to use him for their own purposes, only in the end to be used by him instead for his. 

It remained a fact that, for all his defects, real and imagined, Trump was able to sustain a plausible hope of regaining the office he had lost to Biden in the pandemic-inflected campaign year of 2020.

And, beyond the presidential race itself, Republicans still nursed hopes of holding onto their slim majority in the House of Representatives as well as of capturing the Senate outright. At stake were such matters as healthcare, climate change, and reproductive policy domestically, as well as of meeting the economic challenge of China and in the conduct of foreign policy in the Middle East and vis-a-vis Russia in its challenge to NATO in Europe. 

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies’ Win Streak Halted in Brooklyn

The Memphis Grizzlies’ Monday night matchup didn’t go as planned, ending in a 106-104 defeat to the Brooklyn Nets, who secured a two-game sweep of the season-series.

The Grizzlies dominated inside, outscoring Brooklyn 66-48 in the paint, but the Nets countered with a strong outside game, hitting 13 three-pointers to Memphis’ eight.

Zach Edey had a stellar performance, scoring 25 points, grabbing 12 rebounds, and blocking four shots. He made history as the first rookie since Hakeem Olajuwon (1984) to achieve 25+ points, 10+ rebounds, and 4+ blocks on 90% shooting. 

Additionally, Edey became the first Memphis rookie since Marc Gasol (2009) to record consecutive double-doubles in points and rebounds.

Ja Morant added 25 points, nine assists and five rebounds as Memphis dropped to 4-4 on the season. 

Again, Morant showcased his thrilling skills, delivering Ja-dropping plays that quickly spread across social media, solidifying his reputation as the NBA’s most electrifying player.

NBA Communications announced on X (formerly Twitter), “Ja Morant’s two acrobatic layups from last night’s Grizzlies-Nets game have generated 161M video views (and counting) across NBA social media. Each play stands out as the most-viewed video on NBA platforms this season.”

Jaren Jackson Jr. struggled from the field at times but made plays on both sides of the ball late that put Memphis in a position to possibly win the game. 

He ended up with 15 points off of 5-of-11 from the field, including 3-5 from beyond the arc, while adding five rebounds and two blocked shots. 

Memphis will welcome the Los Angeles Lakers to FedExForum on Wednesday, November 6, at 7 p.m. CT, kicking off a two-game homestand.

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News News Blog News Feature

Letter Condemns County’s Decision Regarding Juvenile Court Transportation and Transition

Community partners are urging the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office and Youth Detention Center to be transparent about their decision to stop transportation of youth to court, and their decision to transition Youth Justice and Education Center (YJEC) operations to the Juvenile Court.

An open letter issued on behalf of youth justice and community organizations asked Sheriff Floyd Bonner to address these issues, while also shedding light on how these decisions affect both young people and the community. 

“Just days before Juvenile Court resumed operations following a five-month closure, the Sheriff’s Office announced it would no longer transport youth to court hearings, forcing an emergency shift to virtual proceedings,” advocates said. “This decision comes amid ongoing disputes about the sheriff’s unilateral announcement to transfer detention center operations to Juvenile Court by December 2024, despite mid-budget cycle constraints and the need for proper transition planning.”

In October, it was announced that juvenile court would remain virtual due to lack of transportation from deputies. Prior to this, Juvenile Court was closed in April for “remedial work.” 

Ala’a Alattiyat, youth justice coordinator of the Youth Justice Action Coalition, emphasized that these decisions negatively impact the youth and their families.

“When we deny youth proper court access and rush critical transitions without adequate planning, we’re not just affecting their legal rights —we’re sending a message about how little we value their future opportunities.”

Aries Newton, government affairs director of Stand For Children, called the December 2024 deadline “arbitrary and hasty” and said these choices seem to prioritize convenience over wellbeing.

The four-page letter was signed by several community organizations such as Stand for Children Tennessee, Memphis For All, and Memphis Interfaith Coalition for Action and Hope (MICAH). Not only did the document express concern, but it included a call to action on transportation, “transition planning,” and the entire experience.

“We write with profound concern about how recent operational decisions affecting the Youth Justice and Education Center are damaging the rehabilitation and development of young people in our community,” the letter said. “The abrupt cessation of youth transportation services and rushed timeline for transitioning the detention center reflect choices that not only violate constitutional protections but, more critically, threaten to create a cycle of disconnection and recidivism that impacts all of Shelby County.”

Advocates emphasize that the obstacle of transportation affects multiple facets of the rehabilitation process. The letter asserted that familial connections and “comprehensive support” can reduce recidivism rates according to research.

They went on to state that when the YJEC was built, it was meant to be a place for “rehabilitation and hope.” It represented a $30 million investment that included a kitchen, computer lab, and outdoor spaces for “young people to develop skills and envision different futures for themselves.”

The letter also advocates for expanded in-person visitation, activated educational and vocational facilities, wellness programming, mental health and counseling support, and more. According to the letter, the decision to not be intentional about facility operations sends a negative message to the youth and implies that they don’t matter. 

Earlier this year, a different letter was sent from a consortium of organizations urging Bonner to address these changes. Their biggest concern was their decision not to allow in-person visitation, while also criticizing the fact that their education did not parallel mainstream public schools.

Another major point of concern is the December deadline, as the current budget cycle doesn’t allow for proper funding.

“Your office’s threat of litigation regarding budget modifications creates further barriers to proper resource allocation,” the letter said. “The transition timeline doesn’t align with the fiscal year, creating funding gaps that could compromise youth services.”

In addition to being sent to Bonner,  Juvenile Court Judge Tarik Sugarmon, Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris, and the Shelby County Commission, and other partners are cc’d on the letter.

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News News Blog News Feature

CannaBeat: Buds & Brews Sets Open Date for Broad Location

Buds & Brews, Tennessee’s first cannabis bar and restaurant concept, will open in Memphis next month. 

The restaurant was created and is owned by Nashville-based Craft Cannabis, a Tennessee seed-to-shelf cannabis company. The company’s new Memphis location is slated to open on Friday, Dec. 13th, in the former Bounty on Broad space in the Broad Avenue Arts District. 

“We are excited to bring the Buds & Brews experience to this dynamic arts community,” said Michael Solomon, owner and president of Craft Cannabis. “Along with a curated list of craft cocktails and beers on tap, we’re excited to offer our very own brand of THC-infused beverages and New Highs cannabis cocktails. 

“We’ve partnered with a brewery in Chattanooga to create these top-shelf quality cannabis beverages and have collaborated with some of the very best in the food and beverage industry in Memphis to bring a truly unique culinary adventure to this community.”

The first Buds & Brews opened in Nashville in 2022. It offers patrons the opportunity to “enjoy cannabis in a safe, legal, and fun environment” with upscale bar food like burgers, wings, and “Wake & Bake Brunch.” Diners can choose their favorite condiment sauces infused with Tennessee grown and extracted hemp-derived THC. The menu also features dessert edibles. 

For more information, click here

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Film Features Film/TV

Music Video Monday: “Calculator” by General Labor

General Labor just released their second album, The Airtight Garage. Thomas Corbin says the album was recorded in 2023, when General Labor was still a four-piece band. It’s available on a double cassette with the techno punk band’s first album Galaxy Motors from Memphis cassette label Machine Duplication Recordings.

“From petty beef and LSD-fueled baseball to presidential elections and the end of the world, this album spans the emotional gamut,” says Corbin. “The opening track ‘Calculator’ seems the most innocuous, but it actually serves as a sort of surrealist mission statement for the band. The simple chorus, “I don’t trust your calculator,” aggressively screamed over stabbing synths and squealing, affected guitars is a pretty direct encapsulation of the band’s love/hate relationship with technology, using complicated gear to express our technophobia.”

The band’s split personality finds expression in the “Calculator” music video. “When Nia Rincon revealed that she had been working on a fully AI music video for ‘Calculator’ that exemplified our tech-paranoia, we were super excited to see what her artistic vision would be. The uncomfortable, uncanny valley horror that comes with AI generated video proved really effective in getting our point across, and adds to the contradictory nature of the band by using the most current software available to express our trepidation for that very type of technological advancement.”

Here is the world premiere of “Calculator”!

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

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News News Blog News Feature Uncategorized

Early Voting Drops Statewide as Davidson, Shelby See Major Declines

More than 2.2 million Tennesseans cast ballots during early voting over the past two weeks as turnout nearly reached 46 percent, nearly 3 percent fewer than the 2020 presidential election total. 

Early voting in person totaled 2,132,610, and 82,253 were cast by mail, for a total of 2,214,870 through Oct. 31st, the final day of early voting, according to the Secretary of State’s office.

Though some involved in the presidential election are calling it the most important one in this era, early voting numbers don’t quite match that view, falling 2.89 percent. Tennessee typically sees about half of voters go to the polls early.

Early voting turnout in the 2020 presidential election between current President Joe Biden and Donald Trump, who was the incumbent at the time, hit 2,280,767, nearly 66,000 more than cast ballots so far in this year’s election between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump.

Both early voting totals, though, are much higher than in 2016 when 1.67 million Tennesseans cast ballots early as Trump defeated former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Secretary of State’s figures show.

Enthusiasm across Tennessee through the 14 days of early voting was evident, as Tennessee saw more than 2.13 million registered voters cast their ballots in person — a new record.

– Doug Kufner, Tennessee Secretary of State’s office

Among the state’s biggest counties, Davidson, typically a stronghold for Democrats, showed a major decline in early voting from four years ago, dropping off 13.3 percent as 219,411 cast ballots early compared to 253,123 in 2020. 

Davidson County Elections Administrator Jeff Roberts said the difference could be that 34,000 people voted by absentee ballots during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 compared to 13,000 this year, a difference of 21,000. All of those are counted as mail-in ballots.

Absentee balloting fell off by nearly 61 percent this fall to 82,253 from 210,428 in 2020 when many voters were afraid to go to the polls and risk catching COVID-19. The American Civil Liberties Union sued the state to give voters more exceptions to vote absentee four years ago.

Davidson County was split into three congressional districts before the 2022 vote, a move that gave Republicans an advantage in winning all three seats and forced longtime Democratic U.S. Rep. Jim Cooper to step away from Congress.

Early voting in Shelby County, another focal point for Democrats, fell off even more dramatically, dropping by 20.9 percent to 257,733 this fall from 326,007 in 2020. Shelby County’s decrease of 68,274 early voters topped the total state decline of 65,900.

Hamilton County, in contrast, saw a 13.2 percent increase with 117,254 casting ballots early compared to 103,590 four years ago.

Knox County reported a small decrease, down .61 percent to 170,736 from 171,790 in 2020.

Rutherford County also reported a 2.7 percent decrease in early voting, dipping to 117,040 from 120,281 four years ago. In addition, Williamson County dipped .57 percent, from 122,277 in 2020 to 121,585 this year. 

Secretary of State spokesperson Doug Kufner said early voting ran well because of the work of county election commission staff and poll workers statewide.

“Enthusiasm across Tennessee through the 14 days of early voting was evident, as Tennessee saw more than 2.13 million registered voters cast their ballots in person — a new record. Seventy-six counties also exceeded their in-person early voting turnout from 2020. We anticipate a robust Election Day turnout, and we encourage all registered Tennesseans who have not yet voted to make their voice heard on Nov. 5,” Kufner said in a statement.

In spite of disruptions from Hurricane Helene, most of the counties that suffered from massive flooding reported early voting increases. In some instances, election officials in those counties had to change voting sites because of flood damage and road outages.

Greene County, for instance, experienced an early voting increase of 30.4 percent with 19,851 casting ballots this year, compared to 15,220 in 2020.

Carter County saw early voting increase by 21.2 percent with 14,753 participating this year compared to 12,169 four years ago.

Washington County experienced a 6.8 percent jump in early voting totals, going to 45,825 from 42,909.

Johnson County saw a small increase of 1.92 percent as early voting went up to 5,474 from 5,371 in 2020. Cocke County also saw a bit of an increase with early voting jumping 3.3 percent, to 10,670 from 10,325 in 2020.

Unicoi County saw a slight decline of 1.73 percent to 6,067 this year from 6,174 four years ago.

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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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies Pummel 76ers Behind Jaren Jackson Jr.’s Big Night

The Memphis Grizzlies took on the Philadelphia 76ers Saturday night and came up with a resounding 124-107 victory on the back of career nights from several team members.

The game started slowly in the first quarter, with the Grizzlies struggling with turnovers from sloppy ball handling and poor three-point shooting.

But Memphis pushed the pace in the second quarter, outshooting Philadelphia from the field and beyond the arc. The Grizzlies finished the half with a seven-point lead that would only continue to grow in the second half. They were missing Desmond Bane and Marcus Smart, who are listed as week-to-week after suffering a right oblique strain and a right ankle sprain, respectively, both acquired in Wednesday’s matchup against the Brooklyn Nets.

Philadelphia was without Joel Embiid and Paul George, neither of whom has played this season. After their quick first-quarter start, the 76ers struggled, giving up 28 points off 14 turnovers.

Highlights of the night include all five Grizzlies’ starters finishing the night in double-digits, rookie center Zach Edey’s first career double-double, and backup big man Jay Huff’s career-high 20 points.

Jaren Jackson Jr. led all scorers with 27 points, and added six rebounds, three steals, and two blocks.

Ja Morant finished the night with 18 points, six rebounds, and 12 assists on six of 13 overall shooting.

Jaylen Wells added 15 points and five rebounds on six of 11 overall shooting and two of four from three-point range.

Zach Edey put up 10 points and 10 rebounds in posting his first career double-double.

Santi Aldama also added 10 points, along with 13 rebounds and four assists.

From the second unit:

Jay Huff led the bench with his career-high 20 points on five-of-seven three-point shooting, with 12 points coming in the third quarter. He also posted five rebounds.

Scotty Pippen Jr. closed out the night with 12 points, four rebounds, and 13 assists. Both Huff and Pippen Jr. are showing how they earned an upgrade from two-way players to regular-season contracts.

Who Got Next?

The Grizzlies are now 4-3 on the year and head to Brooklyn to face off against the Nets Monday night for the second and final time this season. Tip-off is at 7 PM CDT.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Morant’s Masterful Performance Powers Grizzlies Past Bucks

With a 122–99 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Thursday inside FedExForum, the Memphis Grizzlies completed their four-game homestand on a high note.

The Grizzlies showed a lot of grit and perseverance against Milwaukee after a lackluster showing against the Brooklyn Nets on Wednesday night. 

Ja Morant delivered an electrifying performance by unleashing his trademark WTF-inducing plays. 

The Murray State standout reaffirmed his superstar status as he put on a masterclass against the Bucks with 26 points, 14 assists, and 10 rebounds. He messed around and got his 12 career triple-double and, like Ice Cube, I can hear him say, “Today was a good day.”

With his 20+ points, 8+ rebounds, and 9+ assists stats at halftime, Morant joined just five other players since the 1996–97 season. Over the course of the team’s back-to-back games, Morant racked up 40 points, 18 boards, and 25 assists. This season, Morant has played in five games and recorded four double-doubles.

“Just staying aggressive, playing free, being Ja [Morant],” stated the two-time All-Star on his playmaking as the Grizzlies improved to 3-3 on the season.

“Nah, I play free — with me, you’re going to deal with turnovers,” Morant said on taking care of the ball. “I tried to throw a lob off the glass — if Zach [Edey] catches it, it’s not a turnover. Even if it is, I don’t care. It’s the right play. Me and him do it in practice all the time. I’m just going to play free and always try to make the right play.”

He continued, “Me and him do it at practice and in 5-on-0. So yeah, I’m just going to play free. I’m always trying to make the right play. It’s not like I’m going down trying to turn the ball over. So, some of them, you just have to deal with. Obviously, you can clean some of them up, but hey, a lot of stuff comes with Ja.”

Regarding the team’s priorities in terms of player rotation and the significance of keeping him or Jaren Jackson Jr. on the court throughout the game, Morant explained, “I feel like those guys look up to us, and we’re pretty much the engine to the team. 

“So, seeing one of us out there on the floor is a good thing, but I don’t think they lack confidence if we’re not. Obviously, we want to instill confidence no matter what and play the same way no matter who’s out there on the floor. Tonight, we had that — one of us on the floor, and I guess it worked.”

Yes, it did work! For Morant, statistics, honors, and recognition mean nothing until they lead to wins for his team.

Key Takeaways: 

  • Dominant Rebounding: Memphis outrebounded Milwaukee 56-38, with a 49-29 defensive glass advantage.
  • Decisive Run: 19-1 run in the first quarter, including 14 straight points.
  • Series Dominance: Memphis wins sixth straight against Bucks, averaging 20.8-point margin.
  • Historic Streak: Longest winning streak in head-to-head series for Memphis.
  • Bucks’ Struggles: Milwaukee loses fourth straight, finishes 0-3 road trip.
  • Defensive Milestone: Memphis holds opponent under 100 points for first time this season.
  • Balanced Offense: All five Memphis starters score in double figures, combining for 84 points.
  • First Career Start: Rookie Jaylen Wells finished with 16 points and grabbed seven boards in his. Plus played dogged defense on Damian Lillard.

Up Next:

Kicking off a two-game road trip, the Memphis Grizzlies will face the Philadelphia 76ers at Wells Fargo Center on Saturday, November 2nd, at 6:30 p.m. CT.

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News News Blog News Feature

Expert Sees BlueOval Project as Opportunity for Housing Approval Reform

Ford Motor Company’s BlueOval City, a project that was announced in 2021 as a part of an investment in electric vehicles and sustainable manufacturing, is expected to bring both new jobs and residents to Western Tennessee in 2025. As a result, housing experts are urging the state to examine residential approval processes in the area.

With the planned expenditure of $5.6 billion, the project is expected to create 6,000 jobs for Tennesseans in Haywood County. The University of Memphis recently received a grant to explore transportation challenges ahead of the project’s opening, examining public transit systems such as fixed-line buses, on-demand micro transit, and more.

Information from the United States Census Bureau said as of July 1, 2023, Haywood County had 8,274 housing units for a population estimate of 17,328. Close to 60 percent of these houses were occupied by homeowners.

A policy brief published by Charles Gardner and George Dean is filled with recommendations for the state’s housing market. It noted that housing prices in the state are on the rise, with many middle-class buyers not being able to keep up with the market. In Memphis specifically, renting has become a more viable option for those seeking housing due to prices increasing drastically in 2021.

“A main contributor to this shortage of affordable housing is the challenge of obtaining subdivision approvals and final permits for both single-family and multifamily housing,” the brief said. “The current housing crisis obligates Tennessee’s policymakers to examine the means for speeding up housing production. One approach is through targeted reforms that streamline the land use approvals process. “

The census reported that as of 2023 Haywood county had 17 building permits. Gardner explained that the state doesn’t strictly regulate building and zoning, leaving those who give out these permits with a lot of freedom. As a result, these permits can take a long time, with no guarantee of approval. He added that Tennessee’s procedure of common law writ of certiorari is “archaic and not well understood.”

To remedy this, Gardner makes several recommendations to streamline the decision-making process and to improve transparency by basing the approvals of solid evidence as opposed to influence from local government. 

The brief criticizes Tennessee Vested Property Rights Acts, stating that it has “plagued” the state for decades. Under the doctrine of vested, developers can rely on the zoning laws that were in place when they applied for a project. He mentioned that since the 1935 zoning law doesn’t mention these rights, which can result in the courts getting involved or local officials making decisions.

“In Tennessee, it is not uncommon for public backlash or objections from local officials to arise after a building permit is issued,” the brief said. “Often, those who object to the project quickly introduce a bill to the city council to change the underlying base zoning in a way that renders the construction noncompliant. Typically, these new zoning regulations are adopted much more quickly than the permittee can finish a substantial part of the construction.”

The Tennessee General Assembly recognized this and enacted the Vested Property Rights Act of 2014 which guarantees that a developer’s building permit or project approval will have guidelines and rules that will stay in place for a number of years.

While this addressed a key issue, the policy brief recommends amending the act so that development rights are protected when plans are submitted as opposed to when they are issued. They also ask that zoning rules don’t change “in a manner that reduces development potential.”

In addition to this, Gardner and Dean recommended reforming variances and conditional use permits, replacing the writ of certiorari, and boosting board member trainings.

The entire brief can be read here.

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Tuition Could Rise Again at Tennessee Universities Next Year

The cost of tuition at Tennessee’s public universities could rise again as the Tennessee Higher Education Commission (THEC) reviews the topic in a meeting slated for next week. 

Commission staff said the state’s university system needs $75 million in new funds each year going forward. Most of the new funds — $40 million — will fund operations. The other portion — $35 million — will go to a 2.5 percent increase in raises for university staff. That figure is indexed to the state’s salary increases. 

THEC gets about $1.5 billion from the state each year. The system will will ask for those new funds in next year’s state budget. 

But the system’s total budget is about $3.3 billion. State schools get 57 percent of their money from student tuition and fees at universities. Tennessee community colleges get 40 percent from them and colleges of applied technology get 33 percent, according to THEC. 

To cover revenues here, THEC staff will suggest commission members consider a tuition and fee increase between 0-5 percent for the next school year.  

With a 1-percent increase suggested for next year, tuition at the school would increase by $107 to $10,835. Tuition and fees at the University of Memphis (U of M) have risen 8.1 percent over the last five years. Tuition and fees now cost students $10,728 at U of M. That’s up from $9,924 in the 2019-2020 school year. 

Tuition at Tennessee Technological University (TTU) increased 22 percent over the last five years, the largest of any THEC school. University of Tennessee Chattanooga (UTC) has raised tuition by nearly 13 percent in that time. 

Tuition at University of Tennessee at Knoxville (UT) remains the highest in the THEC schools at $13,812.

The THEC will meet on Thursday to review a change to the tuition increase range. They’ll likely set concrete rates in a future meeting.