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MEMernet: Memphis on TikTok, Garth Brooks for Sale on Nextdoor

Who to follow

Still want to know what TikTok is all about (but are afraid to ask)? Follow Memphian @kingthagman. He spoofs other TikTok videos, dances, lip syncs, drinks, hangs with friends, and does it all with an effortless hilarity.

Frampton v. Lee

Peter Frampton (yes, that one) took on Tennessee Governor Bill Lee in a tweet last month, asking, “What possible reason could you have at this point to not issue a mask mandate? This is beyond serious!” We’re still wondering, too.

Friends in Low Prices

Bold Nextdoor user Isabel Coulter recently listed country music mega-star Garth Brooks for sale. The singer was listed for $12, down from the $20 Coulter was asking previously.

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Fly-By: The Year That Was

JANUARY

University of Memphis increased its minimum wage to $13.

State lawmakers filed bills against refugee resettlement, for chemical castration of some sex offenders, and against transgender student athletes.

The state Senate voted to allow private adoption agencies to discriminate against gay couples. Tennessee Governor Bill Lee later signed the bill into law.

Debate began for the possible removal of a bust of Nathan Bedford Forrest from the State Capitol Building.

Southland Casino Racing opened its book for sports betting.

FEBRUARY

The Shelby County Health Department debunked a rumor that someone at 201 Poplar had coronavirus.

A Tennessee house committee reviewed a bill that would have labeled CNN and The Washington Post as “fake news.”

Gov. Bill Lee pushed to make Tennessee a constitutional gun carry state.

No COVID-19 cases were confirmed in Shelby County, but health officials monitored 20 people who recently returned from China.

MARCH

The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) planned to remove toxic coal ash from the Allen Fossil Plant.

The first Shelby County resident tested positive for coronavirus; 70 were quarantined.

Alisa Haushalter, director of the health department, said there was no immediate risk to the general public from COVID-19.

Governor Lee declared a state of emergency Thursday, March 12th.

A second case of coronavirus was confirmed here.

Memphis Light, Gas and Water (MLGW) suspended service cutoffs.

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland ordered libraries and community centers closed and stopped issuing event permits.

State lawmakers cut short the 2020 legislative session.

A third case of COVID-19 was confirmed here.

A fourth case was reported.

Ten cases of COVID-19 were reported.

A drive-through testing site was established at Tiger Lane.

Strickland issued a state of emergency and ordered restaurant dining rooms to be closed.

Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris issued a state of emergency.

Memphis in May (MIM) halted 2020 events.

COVID-19 cases rose to 84.

Strickland issued the Safer at Home Initiative.

Shelby County and each of the county’s seven municipalities issued Stay at Home orders.

COVID-19 cases rose to 1,432.

APRIL

The Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) reduced service to slow the spread of COVID-19.

The Tennessee Supreme Court directed judges to reduce jail populations.

Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich released some incarcerated at the Shelby County Jail and dismissed hundreds of cases.

Memphis in May announced new fall dates for the 2020 festival.

Memphis nonprofit funding was down $32 million on COVID-19 concerns.

A federal district court blocked Governor Lee’s attempt to ban abortion because of the coronavirus.

COVID-19 cases totaled 1,807. Deaths totaled 38.

MAY

Phase I of the Back to Business plan began.

Salons, barbershops, and gyms were allowed to reopen.

Beale Street reopened.

Southland Casino Gaming and Horseshoe Tunica reopened.

Graceland reopened.

Phase II of the Back to Business plan began.

The final concept for Tom Lee Park’s new design was unveiled.

COVID-19 cases totaled 3,877. Deaths totaled 88.

JUNE

A protest in response to the recent deaths of Black people in America closed Union Avenue.

Gov. Lee authorized the Tennessee National Guard to respond to protests.

A nightly curfew in Memphis began to calm protests related to the police killing of George Floyd.

The nightly curfew was lifted.

A move to Phase III of the Back to Business plan was paused.

An all-white House committee voted to keep the bust of slave trader Nathan Bedford Forrest in the Tennessee State Capitol.

Strickland said he was opposed to defunding the police department.

Memphis in May was canceled.

A video of Germantown businessman Lloyd Crawford went viral as the man was filmed telling a man holding a Black Lives Matter poster he was not welcome in the city.

COVID-19 cases rose to 6,119. Deaths totaled 133.

JULY

Officials announced a new radio station, WYXR 91.7, would air in the fall.

Bars were ordered closed. Restaurants were ordered closed by 10 p.m.

The State Capitol Commission voted to move the bust of Nathan Bedford Forrest from the Tennessee State Capitol building.

The Cooper-Young Festival was canceled.

The city council renamed a stretch of Poplar Avenue to Black Lives Matter Avenue.

Shelby County Schools announced fall classes would be all virtual.

COVID-19 cases rose to 20,797. Deaths totaled 275.

AUGUST

Operation LeGend brought 40 federal agents to Memphis to reduce the city’s violent crime rate.

State lawmakers passed bills to crack down on protesters.

The $200-million project to transform the Mid-South Fairgrounds into a youth sports destination was branded as Liberty Park.

COVID-19 cases rose to 26,903. Deaths totaled 370.

SEPTEMBER

Five businesses were temporarily closed on COVID-19 violations.

A new report said Memphis needed 2,800 police officers, about 700 more than it had at the time.

The “Father of Identity Theft” was sentenced for identity theft.

Memphis in May reported it lost $1.8 million in 2020, the worst financial year in the festival’s 44 years.

A new, 30- to 45-story tower was proposed for the Pinch District in a $180 million project that would re-shape the city’s skyline.

COVID-19 cases totaled 31,771. Deaths totaled 475.

OCTOBER

Veteran television journalist Mike Matthews announced his retirement.

The health department did not cancel Halloween events but did not recommend them.

The U.S. Department of Justice issued $2 million in grants to combat violent crime in Memphis.

Jennifer Oswalt announced she was leaving the Downtown Memphis Commission as president.

COVID-19 cases totaled 37,480. Deaths totaled 571.

NOVEMBER

Tennessee voters turned out in record numbers (more than 3 million) to cast ballots in the 2020 presidential election.

A federal judge sided with Tennessee in an ongoing water-rights case from Mississippi.

A council member filed an ethics complaint against another member for profane insults hurled during a meeting.

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital researchers announced they may have figured out how the pandemic virus kills and how to stop it.

COVID-19 cases totaled 49,263. Deaths totaled 672.

DECEMBER

Thanksgiving traffic at Memphis International Airport was cut in half.

City officials halted curbside recycling services as a quarter of the city’s solid waste crews either had COVID-19 or were in quarantine.

Nine restaurants were closed on COVID-19 violations.

Ground was broken on the $60-million Tom Lee Park project.

Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery signed onto a Texas lawsuit to throw out millions of swing-state votes in the 2020 presidential election.

Only 15 ICU beds were available as hospitals strained under surging COVID-19 numbers.

COVID-19 cases totaled 59,387. Deaths totaled 727 (as of December 18th).

Visit the News Blog at memphisflyer.com for fuller versions of these stories and more local news.

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Best of 2020

Best of the Year

Thank you, citizens of the MEMernet. You perfectly captured this wild year online for all of us. Here are some of the year’s best.

Power of a Post

Roxie’s Grocery blew up after an epic and hilarious post from Kim Scott on the Where Black Memphis Eats Facebook page also blew up, proving the power of the MEMernet.

Lloyd, Lloyd

Lloyd Crawford was easily the most-famous star of the MEMernet in 2020. A video captured him confronting a Black Lives Matter supporter in Germantown, telling him, “I’d like you out of my town, quick.” Crawford waddled away leaving many to wonder if he was drunk or (as one on Twitter speculated) he “shate his pants.”

Tweet of the Year

“I thought for sure it would be a Trump war that would bring us ruin. I would never have guessed it would be a plague.” — John Paul Keith

Editor’s Pick

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MEMernet: COVID-19 Vaccines Arrive, Tigers at Target, and the McRib

Wheels down

The first COVID-19 vaccines arrived here Sunday. FedEX Corp. captured this historic moment in a tweet that could not have come soon enough.

Positive 2020?

University of Memphis president Dr. David Rudd tweeted a bold statement last week. “One thing got much better in 2020.”

McRib Vaccine

E. Parkway McDonalds is still going strong on Twitter even though the restaurant there is not (it closed years ago). The account captured this gross but weirdly accurate moment in time last week as the mysterious McRib sandwich reappeared.

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MEMernet: A Damn Good Burger at Roxie’s and Memphis Intersections as Art

A Roxie’s Tale

Photo by Chandra Tillis

Roxie’s Grocery blew up over the weekend after an epic and hilarious post on the Where Black Memphis Eats Facebook page also blew up.

Kym Scott recounted her experience at the Uptown store and restaurant in a post that had more than 7,000 likes and 5,100 comments as of press time. In it, she and her nephew arrive, order, and eat. Though Scott admitted being “shaky because it’s dark outside, and it’s Memphis. That’s more than enough to be scared as hell.”

Back in the car, “I’m locking all doors, checking the back seat of the car, and looking in all the mirrors that point to the back of my car.” But then, “the damn burger was so good, I forgot where we was and all the danger that I felt like I was in, immediately disappeared.”

Scott’s story sent dozens to Roxie’s over the weekend.

Street Art

Photo by Barelymaps

Etsy maker BarelyMaps offered up handmade prints of the “Intersections of Memphis” last week. The prints give a stylized, bird’s-eye view of some of the city’s most complex intersections, like the one at Poplar and East Parkway.

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MEMernet: A Binghamptom Wedding, a Midtown/Germantown Feud, and a Real-Life Grinch

Never Know

Nextdoor user Cindy Brandon wrote last week, “Never know what you’ll see in Binghampton. There was a wedding today, I guess, at Blessed Sacrament church in Binghampton and we live across the street. They had horses and a mariachi band. I absolutely love Midtown Memphis.”

Feud Remembered

The Historic Memphis Facebook group brought back some jokes from the ’70s-era Germantown/Midtown feud.

John O’Bryan posted, “Do you know why Germantown house wives never host orgies? Too many thank you notes to write.”

Tim Gibson wrote, “Memphis will never fall in the river because Germantown sucks.”

Tweet of the Week

@tamisawyer: “Pro Tip: Instead of bottle service, you can buy Veuve at @joeswines & sparklers online and it’ll come out cheaper and without COVID-19.”

You’re a Mean One

Dennis Ostrow called out a real-life Grinch with a security-cam photo on Nextdoor last week after the guy stole Ostrow’s Christmas lights.

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MEMernet: Steve Harvey at Mahogany and Ja Morant Meets Ja Raffe

Harvey & Mahogany

Comedian/game show host/radio show host Steve Harvey hyped a Memphis restaurant Monday on his radio show, The Steve Harvey Morning Show. According to those on the Where Black Memphis Eats Facebook group, Harvey and his wife were seen this weekend eating at Mahogany Memphis, the upscale Southern restaurant in Chickasaw Oaks Village. He bragged on the restaurant on the show and mentioned it was Black-owned.

Ja Meets Ja

A Grizzly met a giraffe last week when Ja Morant met Ja Raffe, the Memphis Zoo’s new baby giraffe named for Morant. The two met Friday and made some MEMernet gold.

Posted to Twitter by @memgrizz

In his own Twitter video of the meet-up, Morant said, “If I ever did a dunk contest, I’m taking my son [Ja Raffe] with me. I’m going to jump over him.”

Morant’s zoo visit also included visits to other animals. He fed Rhatu, the Sumatran tiger, by flinging a Flintstones-sized drumstick into the enclosure. He had to clear the moat, though. He did. He shot. He scored.

Posted to Twitter by the Memphis Zoo

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MEMernet: Demographics, Catalytic Converters, and a Lost Duck

Memphis Rides

Posted to Reddit u/betweenthewinds

Catalytic

At least five Nextdoor users have had the catalytic converters stolen from their parked cars in recent weeks. The thieves strike at night and surprise the car’s owner with a mess in the morning.

“According to the repair shop, I’m the 9th person they’ve seen in two weeks,” Zach Carr wrote in a post last week.

Just Ducky

It’s the magic of the internet, really. Last week, Nextdoor user Ashley Bruneau found a duck and posted its photo with a simple plea: “Is this your duck?”

Yep. Within a day, the duck was digitally reunited with its owners. Stephanie and Ti-Pei Feng claimed it. But as of press time the two had not been able to contact the original poster. Now we wait.

Tweet of the Week

@Midtownbuck put Trump’s motorcade crowd into perspective in a weekend tweet.

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MEMernet: 69 Degrees at 4:20, Fire at Mud Island, and a Free but(t) Loved Couch

Nice

“Memphis was dank earlier today.”

Posted to Reddit by u/jkillz87

No chill, 2020

“Well, the Mud Island Marina is burning down. Par for the course in 2020.”

Posted to Reddit by u/JesusLanaPhrasing

Cheeky Couch

This free couch had been nothing but(t) loved. “Comfy, just needs to be recovered,” reads the curb alert post from Nextdoor last week.

Posted to Nextdoor by Ashton S.

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MEMernet

#YouCanBeABCs

The internet blew up last week on an Instagram post by Memphis cool kid @samuelw3. He and his dad grooved through the alphabet, naming a profession that you can be for every letter.

The original post had more than 570,000 views as of press time. But it’s gone around the country with even a Facebook share from former First Lady Michelle Obama.

COVID-Ween

Memphis streets were spookily empty last Saturday in a largely COVID-canceled Halloween. But it didn’t stop some Memphis neighbors from stoking the spirit of the holiday.

Idlewild resident Regina Newman planted individual bags of candy in her yard.

Posted to Nextdoor by Regina Newman

Over in Highpoint Terrace, Tony Milam slid treats through a 14-foot candy luge.

Posted to Nextdoor by Tony Milam

Then, there was this awesome bicycle built for two.

Posted to Reddit by u/Fart_Summoner