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Editorial Opinion

Ruby Wilson

There’s a video clip from 1988 of Ruby Wilson singing “The Thrill Is Gone” at the Peabody Hotel with B.B. King and Rufus Thomas. When Ruby steps up to the microphone, B.B. steps back. “You think I’m gonna sing behind that, you’re crazy,” he says, getting out of the way.

And who can blame him? Wilson, who passed away August 12th, following a severe stroke, was a one-woman wall of sound. Her voice could be a precision tool or a wrecking ball, and when even B.B. King yields the floor, it’s not hard to see how she earned her reputation as the Queen of Beale. 

Ruby Wilson

Wilson, a 40-year veteran of Memphis nightclubs, grew up in Texas, where she worked in the cotton fields as a laborer, picking and chopping the stuff. Her mother was a maid and the director of her church choir. Her father was a self-employed handyman, mechanic, and friend of guitarist and Federal recording artist Freddie King. Between her two parents, Wilson was firmly grounded in gospel and blues traditions, and she started singing in public when she was only 7. By the time she was 15, she was touring as a backup singer for gospel star Shirley Caesar. At 20, she was singing with B.B. King, who called her his goddaughter. 

Following advice given to her by Isaac Hayes, Wilson moved to Memphis in the early 1970s and went to work in the Memphis City Schools system as a kindergarten teacher. She wrangled 5-year-olds by day and continued to pursue her career as a singer at night, performing at a club called the Other Place on Airways. She soon became a fixture on Memphis’ club scene, playing all over town in venues like Club Handy, Club Royale, Rum Boogie, Mallards, Alfred’s, Silky’s, Neil’s, Boscos, and Itta Bena, to name only a few. She appeared in several films, including Craig Brewer’s Black Snake Moan, and performed on stage with Beale Street Ensemble Theatre, a summer stock company working out of Southwest Tennessee Community College. 

Wilson toured the world numerous times. She sang for presidents, prime ministers, princesses, and queens. She performed alongside artists such as Willie Nelson and Ray Charles and recorded 10 solo albums. 

She was also a survivor, who reclaimed not only her speech, but her ability to sing and perform following her first stroke in 2009.

The thrill may have gone away when B.B. King passed last year, but, as anybody who ever partied with Ms. Ruby on Beale knows, now it’s gone away for good.

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Editorial Opinion

A Matter of Time

In the course of proclaiming himself a “change agent” in a luncheon speech to members of the Rotary Club of Memphis on Tuesday, Juvenile Court Judge Dan Michael did his best to justify such an appellation by advancing an innovative idea in relation to juvenile crime that has implications for other areas of social policy.

Basing his conclusions on what he said had been the findings of”science,” Michael said that society’s current thinking about incarcerating offenders, especially young ones, has been erroneous, pointing to the fact that in the last 40 years the number of youthful offenders undergoing various forms of lockup nationally has risen from 300,000 to 2.3 million.

The problem, he said, is that such a punitive response may conform to the hunches of the gut, but it isn’t justified by science, and “I’ll take science every time.” What he suggests is that brain development in human beings has been found by study after study to be biologically incomplete at the age of 19 (the age at which, in Tennessee and various other jurisdictions, offenders can pass over from juvenile courts to adult tribunals and become eligible for hard time in prison). The age at which mental and emotional capacity can be said to have matured is 25, Michael argued, noting that the country’s founders made that the minimum age for election to Congress and that car-rental companies also treat it as a threshold for their customers, seeing 25 as the time for reaching optimal potential in making judgments.

Below that age, you still have “kids,” Michael said, and “it’s in their contract to be stupid.”

The vast majority of people currently being housed at the county’s correctional center at 201 Poplar are not violent criminals, the judge said, but the young ones among them are at risk of becoming so if their brains are allowed to finish development in the company of hardened lawbreakers. Time, he said, is a central concern to the youthful offender and to those in society who would attempt to rehabilitate and guide them, as well. He cited such successful local efforts at rehabilitation as JIFF (Juvenile Intervention and Faith-based Follow-up) and Hope Academy, a public school that has reduced the rate of recidivism for the youthful offenders enrolled there to 8 percent (as against a national average of 58 percent!).

Michael has a concrete proposal to reform the current juvenile justice system in the form of a bill, currently on file in the state legislature, that would raise the age for processing offenders in adult court from 19 to 25. Give him that much extra time to deal with his youthful charges, he said, “and I will guarantee to turn about 90 percent of these kids around.”

It was serious food for thought to Rotarians attending the luncheon, and at least one of them took Michael’s thesis about age levels and brain development to a logical extension. The judge was asked: What does all of that say about the country’s political system, which opens the voting rolls to people at the age of 18?

Judge Michael agreed: “That’s a good question.” But he passed on answering it.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said…

Greg Cravens

About Jackson Baker’s and Chris Davis’ stories, “Tales of Two Cities” …

A wonderful and totally unusual pair of reports about this bizarre moment in American history — if there is history to be written after all this. The Ark is a perfect symbol for this time when politics are being drowned by religion.

Peter Ceren

Whoever does or has done the hiring down at the ole Memphis Flyer deserves a bonus.

CL Mullins

About the Flyer’s cover story, “You Know You’re From Memphis If …”

Kudos for the great article! Here are a few more nominees:

… you say “and hushpuppies” whenever catfish is mentioned.

… you still almost turn in at Peabody and McLean to check out a book at the library.

… you think of J.C. Levy’s ‘Dial ‘n’ Smile’ when you hear a recorded phone message.

… you are able to tell a tourist how to find an address on Monroe Avenue.

… you pass at least eight other churches on the way to your own.

… you still want to ask for ice cream at the Happy Hocker on Airways.

My wife and I do not know quite how to frame one about Burkle’s Bakery but will gladly treat anybody who does to lunch at Payne’s Barbecue!

Robert Matheny

… you have waited in the Grisham line at Burke’s Book Store at least once.

Rebecca Tickle

… you are a guitar player who’s married to a nurse.

C

… You’ve kissed Vincent Astor.

Mia S. Kite

About Richard Cohen’s Viewpoint on John McCain …

Cohen’s Viewpoint was spot on. McCain’s fall from legitimate war hero to GOP whipping boy started in 2000, when George Bush used low-blow smear campaigns against him and he later fell in line to support W. without question. The descent went on to include naming Sarah Palin his running mate and the Obama-bashing that bordered on racism.

He went from cochairing legislation with Democrats to jumping on the conspiracy crazy train, blaming Obama for the Orlando nightclub shooting, and, now, supporting Trump. The end of his political career can’t come soon enough. It won’t be a swan song, but more like a man put out of his misery.

Elizabeth L. Miller

About Toby Sells’ story “Greensward Grumbling” …

Enough! Please put an end to covering this irrelevant issue. Paraphrasing Allen Iverson: “We’re talking about parking, man!? Parking?!”

David Rainey

About the dangers of the trolley tracks …

I want to give a heads-up to Memphis drivers regarding hydroplaning on the trolley tracks. I was driving east on Madison, in the medical area last week. It had been lightly raining for about half an hour. I was in the lane with trolley tracks running inside its length. Going 40 miles an hour, I attempted to change into the right  lane. Instead, my car spun out of control into the opposing traffic’s lane. Thankfully there was no traffic.

Saj Crone

About the Flyer being taken over by liberals …

I’ve been a fan of the Flyer since the very first issue. However, it appears that over the last five years or so your paper has been hijacked by the liberals. It’s always good to have differing opinions to keep things in perspective, so please count me in as one of your “conservative readers.”

Yes, I voted for a Clinton once. Yes, I have friends who are Democrats.

Mark McKee

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Editorial Opinion

After the Conventions: On the Plus Side

The Republicans and Democrats have each held their quadrennial conventions and certified their nominees. As tradition would have it, now the American people can sink back into a late-summer torpor, not to fasten their attentions on presidential politics again until Labor Day.

Something tells us this will not be the case in 2016. For one thing, the murderous outrages inflicted on the world by the Islamic State (or, more likely, by copycat amateurs inspired by ISIS) have been happening with such ominous regularity of late that it is hard to imagine the perpetrators humoring the rest of us with a siesta period. And, given both the volume of combustible rhetoric among the Republicans at Cleveland and the resort to something remarkably like jingoism on the Democrats’ last day at Philadelphia, any new international incident or act of terror could swing the sentiment of this country’s voters in an unexpected direction.

In other words, watch out for sudden volatility and mood swings among the electorate. Whatever the polls are telling us about the probable election outcome at any given time is likely, to use the catchphrase of another not-so-distant political time, to become “inoperative.”

Meanwhile, let us take such comfort as we can. There were some silver linings in the storm clouds emanating from the pumped-up oratory of the conventions. The much-vaunted “social issues” that have distorted relations between persons and institutions and classes and tainted our nation’s politics for a generation or more may at last be on the way out. Give Donald Trump this: For all the patent demagoguery that has fueled his unexpected rise to political prominence, The Donald deserves some props for a tip of the hat in his acceptance address to a community of fellow citizens hitherto ignored or ostracized by his party (as they still are in the Comstockian language of the Republican platform). However awkward his bingo-call enunciation of the letters LGBTQ was, he crossed a threshold by the straightforwardness of his acknowledgment. The presence on the GOP dais of an openly avowed gay entrepreneur was another welcome move in that direction.

And on the Democratic side, that glass ceiling of gender discrimination has been exploded at last —by a woman whose personal prowess is so undeniable that even her political enemies have to magnify their claims of high crimes and misdemeanors in an effort to neutralize her. As state Representative Raumesh Akbari of Memphis told the Democratic convention proudly, Hillary Clinton, like her or not, is one bad sister!

One last threshold whose crossing is deserving of mention: There was a time when the word “socialist” was as disqualifying as any word in the American political lexicon. Through his steadfast and spot-on criticisms of the economic inequalities afflicting this nation, Senator Bernie Sanders gave the term new legitimacy and made enough converts to come narrowly close to winning his party’s nomination. Especially given the youthfulness of the new cadres that felt the Bern this year, the chances are excellent that, in election years to come, the economic facts of life can be faced and discussed squarely, without having to work around outmoded taboos in the political vocabulary.

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Editorial Opinion

“Hunger Games” at The Commercial Appeal

If you work for the Commercial Appeal‘s copy desk these days, the odds are most definitely not in your favor. Come to think of it, the same might be said for subscribers.

Earlier this month, Gannett representatives announced intentions to eliminate seven copy editor and five design jobs in Memphis, centralizing much of that work at Gannett’s “design studio” in Nashville.

Memphis Newspaper Guild President Daniel Connolly has a special name for this outsourcing of work to the Tennessee Capitol. Connolly, a longtime CA reporter and Guild leader, calls the newspaper’s creeping Gannettization the “Hunger Games,” after Suzanne Collins’ popular dystopian novel trilogy and the subsequent movie franchise.

For the handful of people who’ve somehow avoided exposure to Collins’ work or the Jennifer Lawrence vehicles, The Hunger Games tells the story of a distant and decadent ruling class that forces poor kids to fight one another to the death for entertainment, and to remind citizens who might consider resistance or rebellion, they’re entirely at the Capitol’s mercy.

As Connolly recently wrote in a message to Guild members, affected Memphis employees can apply for the Nashville jobs or for six new “digital producer” jobs in Memphis, forcing coworkers to “compete for economic survival.” Connolly’s literary comparison is a clever one, only in this case there’s no obvious Katniss Everdeen, radiant as the sun, ready to save the day with her flaming dress and flashing bow and arrow. Or with a red pen and deep well of local knowledge.

The Guild is doing what it can by filing grievances challenging Gannett’s assertion that some employees who’d been working for the Commercial Appeal for years before Gannett took over don’t merit severance pay. It’s good to know that somebody has the workers’ backs. But who’s there to look out for the readers and subscribers? Who’s there for advertisers who pay to put their product in front of a steadily diminishing number of eyeballs?

The CA‘s staff, like the newspaper itself, seems to get smaller with each passing year. And it’s difficult to hear about these new cuts and not reflect on a recent, tone-deaf headline that resulted in an apology from editor Louis Graham, and a protest by members of the Black Lives matter movement. The headline — “Gunman Targets Whites” — wasn’t technically incorrect, but it contextualized the facts in a racially insensitive way that called to mind, however unintentionally, the newspaper’s shameful Jim Crow-era reporting.

It’s difficult to understand how that kind of error could happen, given a modicum of time and writers and editors with some sense of the current political climate and sensitivity to Memphis culture. It is, however, exactly the kind of mistake one might expect if these decisions are made and approved elsewhere. Tennessee’s grand divisions aren’t merely geographic, they’re cultural, and local editing is every bit as important as local reporting.

It’s hard to remember a time when the Flyer wasn’t reporting on layoffs and buyouts at The Commercial Appeal. And with Gannett turning Tennessee’s major daily publications into a statewide version of USA Today, it’s impossible to know when it will end.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said…

Greg Cravens

About Toby Sells’ story, “Tina Sullivan Talks Trams in the Old Forest” …

There are alternative routes to get from any one place to another on any given surface. This is basic geometry. It’s not really hard to see that the Memphis Zoo leadership is full of elephant droppings here. Again.

OakTree

The zoo continues to be adamant about using the roads through the Old Forest, a practice which is illegal, according to the state of Tennessee. That area is off limits to motorized vehicles.

Everyone is trying to compromise and work out a solution. Chuck Brady continues to be the chief impediment to any solution to this problem. It’s time to approve the mayor’s plan, end parking on the Greensward forever, and get a new CEO for the zoo.

Save Overton

About Jackson Baker’s column, “Filling the Space” …

Very sorry for your loss, but I’m glad you intend to stay on the job for another few decades.

CL Mullins

Thanks, always, for your good work.

Bill Andrews

About the Flyer’s cover story, “Woke.” …

I think you can look for police numbers to decline and policing to get more difficult and crime to go up. That does not mean that changes should not take place, but behavior still goes back to childhood, parenting, schooling, discrimination, and economics.

TruthBeTold

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Editorial Opinion

The RNC: Preview of a Trump Presidency

Those watching the first night of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland on television were treated to the following: An opening prayer that referred to presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton as “the enemy;” a speaker who led a chant, “Hillary for Prison;” Iowa Congressman Steven King, who questioned what “non-white” people have done to advance civilization; a former television actor Scott “Chachi” Baio, who defended his use of the “C word” in describing Hillary; another actor who questioned whether President Obama was a Christian; and a general who led a chant of “Lock her up!”

Not to mention, one of the beardy guys from Duck Dynasty railing about Americans who wanted “free stuff,” three mothers raging about “illegals,” one mother ranting about Benghazi, two former Benghazi combatants doing a surreal war story/comedy routine, and a Milwaukee sheriff who called Black Lives Matter “anarchy” while celebrating the acquittal of an officer involved in the death of Freddie Gray.

And we’d be remiss in not mentioning the fact that the candidate himself, Donald Trump, couldn’t resist calling in to Fox News for an interview during one of the convention’s highlighted speeches, undercutting the message coming from his own party’s prime-time exposure on national television.

But the crowning highlight of the evening was supposed to be a speech by Trump’s wife, former model and theoretical First-Lady-in-Waiting, Melania Trump. The Donald strode out onto the stage cloaked in a misty haze to the strains of Queen’s “We Are the Champions” (which was used without permission, but that’s another story). He introduced and presented his wife to the rapt GOP audience, then graciously — and very uncharacteristically — left the stage within moments.

Melania got through the speech nicely, though her Slovakian accent made it obvious that English was not her native language. (But no matter; she is one of the “legal” types of immigrants.) When she finished, The Donald returned to walk her off the stage to the roar of the approving GOP multitudes. Then it got weird.

It turned out that two paragraphs of Melania’s speech were plagiarized (there is no other word for it) from, of all people, Michelle Obama’s 2008 speech to the Democratic Convention. Of course, there were denials. Stories were changed: Melania wrote it; Melania had speech-writers and didn’t know anything about it. Trump valet Chris Christie insisted there was no problem, since 93 percent of the speech was original. (Try using that line on one of your teachers.)

What does it all mean? Does it really matter in the grand scheme of things?

Yes, it matters, because in this convention we are probably getting a preview of a Trump presidency. And if that is the case, then that administration will be sloppy, careless with facts, impulsive, unprofessional, divisive, and built on fear-mongering and deception. The left hand won’t know what the right hand (both very small) is doing.

It’s quite remarkable that it only took one night of the RNC to make it clear to most sentient Americans that President Donald Trump would be an unrelenting nightmare for the American people.

Categories
Editorial Opinion

Props to AG Slatery

A few weeks back, we used this space to look mildly askance at state Attorney General Herb Slatery for a bit of what we perceived as waffling on the matter of laws denying bathroom preference to transgenders. Slatery, we noted, had interceded unmistakably during the 2016 session of the General Assembly to prevent passage of such a law in Tennessee, and his criticism of that proposed legislation as a likely impediment to the state’s eligibility for Title IX federal funding is probably what caused its eventual withdrawal.

So far, so good. But then we took the A.G. to task for his decision to join 10 other states in a lawsuit challenging a directive from President Obama advising states strongly (if a bit ambiguously) to allow transgenders to use the bathroom facilities of their declared gender. We saw no bigotry in Slatery’s action, just a bit of legal hair-splitting that allowed him — and the state of Tennessee — some standing room on both sides of a controversial issue.

Tennessee AG Herbert Slatery

In any case, turnabout is fair play, and we now deem it only fair to give Slatery his props for taking effective, ethical, and legally defensible positions on a couple of other public issues. Back in February, the selfsame Tennessee legislature formally directed Slatery to sue the federal government over the federal refugee program in an effort to prevent victims of the ongoing Syrian violence from being resettled in the state.

Slatery took that matter under advisement and recently responded with a courtly but firm statement of “No, thank you.” Said the A.G. in a letter to the clerks of both the state Senate and state House of Representatives: “I have constitutional concerns about one branch of government telling another what to do.” Slatery deferred to attorneys for the two legislative branches to sue away to their hearts’ content if they chose to, but they would have to do so independently of his office, he said, advising the legislators that such an action would almost certainly be futile. A better course of action, he suggested, would be for state officials to request quarterly fact-finding meetings with representatives of the federal government and, further, to sit in on ongoing public sessions being conducted by Catholic Charities, which operates the Tennessee Office for Refugees.

A most judicious response, we thought. We support Slatery in that action, as well as in his adamant stand, more recently, that citizens of Tennessee are entitled to know the contents of a recent state investigation into alleged misconduct by state Representative Jeremy Durham (R-Franklin). Late in this year’s legislative session, Durham was banished to an office outside the state Capitol and ordered to keep his distance from interns and other staffers in the wake of complaints of sexual harassment on his part. He is now suing Slatery and state House Speaker Beth Harwell in an effort to prevent publication of the state’s findings in his case.

In response to Durham’s claim that such publication would do him “irreparable harm,” the attorney general countered on Monday of this week that, au contraire, the harm would be to the “public interest” if the results of the investigation should be suppressed.

Well done, we say. It is long past time for some redeeming sunlight on the predatory behavior of the Durhams in government.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said…

Greg Cravens

On Chris McCoy’s The Legend of Tarzan review …

This is what I thought. But, my wife wants me to look like this Tarzan fellow. So, I am sure we will see it soon enough anyway. Sausage Factory.

Dwayne Butcher

Dwayne, hang in there. My wife eventually settled for me looking like a gorilla.

Crackoamerican

On Bruce VanWyngarden’s Letter from the Editor, “Bombs Over Midtown” …

Ya know … I like to think I’m as patriotic as the next person, but clearly not as patriotic as the hump that lives way too near to me. This person shot off very loud, bomb-like fireworks from before sunset until after 11 p.m. Monday night, a few after 8 Tuesday night, and another very loud one, albeit just one, around 9 p.m. last night. Pyromania, perhaps? Maybe, but definitely annoying … and made my cats very nervous.

Mejjep

On Toby Sells’ News Blog post, “Greensward Vote Delayed Two Weeks” …

I remain cautiously hopeful. Midtown Memphis can not sustain a Disneyland-like entertainment sprawl.

Susan Butcher Barnett

But it can sustain a Disneyland-like bus system to transport people to the zoo? Hmmm … Who buys the buses? Who pays for the insurance to cover transporting people in the buses? Hmmm …

Firefox

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said…

About Jackson Baker’s Politics column, “Settle the Carson Matter!” …

Mr. Kustoff, if you can singlehandedly end Obamacare, stop illegal immigration, and destroy radical Islamists, there’s no reason to wait until Election Day. Please, sir, put on your cape, and fix all our problems immediately. Having done so, you will no doubt win by acclamation. 

Boris

Seeing the party’s inability to audit its own books, we are left to ponder a couple of possible reasons: 1. The party is incapable of performing an audit due to an utter lack of accountability for the funds, not just from the former chairman, but everyone involved (i.e., no one submitted receipts even for legitimate expenses), or 2. The party is unwilling to perform an audit due to general penny-ante corruption, not just of the former chairman, but throughout the organization.

And the actions of the state party chairman, rather than being a harsh reprimand, seem more like the actions of someone desperate to sweep the whole thing under the rug.

Jeff

It’s foxes guarding the hen house. Maybe I’m just a cynic, but I’m not optimistic that Bryan Carson will satisfy the entire $6,000 debt.

Regarding David Kustoff’s campaign ads: I’ve noticed that they don’t display any of the arrogance, condescension, and general snarkiness that he exhibits on shows like Informed Sources. Maybe he has turned over a new leaf.

Okay. That was pretty sarcastic.

Jenna