Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

An Editor’s Reflections on 2023

This year has flown by at the speed of light. Maybe it’s the unending carousel of deadlines that comes with producing a weekly print publication and managing daily web posts and always planning content for the months ahead. Or maybe we’re traveling through some sort of time portal hurtling through space. Whatever the case may be, I’ve taken a look back at my evolving thoughts throughout 2023, which began, in this editorial space apparently, with eggs.

Last January, everyone was bok-bok-ba-gawking at soaring egg prices — upwards of $7 a dozen — and I took a crack at investigating why it was happening. A more complicated answer than inflation, involving “the ongoing conversion to cage-free egg production systems” and a shortage of laying hens after an influx of avian flu.

Within the first 23 days of 2023, though, Memphis suffered much greater pains. The city — and world — was outraged following the brutal beating and death of Tyre Nichols at the hands of MPD officers. In that first month, we also mourned the loss of Memphis icons Gangsta Boo, Lisa Marie Presley, Vincent Astor, and Dr. Charles A. Champion. In February, the Flyer team lost a member of our work family when longtime sales rep and forever bright light Hailey Thomas passed away. A rough start here, to say the least.

By March, after weeks of processing and writing and reading about the weight of it all, I took a brief hiatus, “seeking serenity,” and relocated a while to work from my grandparents’ former residence — a mobile home at the edge of the county line in rural Greenwood, Mississippi. They’d both passed away in 2022, and the land was unoccupied aside from me and an alligator friend who lived in a pond within eyeshot of the front porch. I say friend because it turned out to be quite docile, poking its head up from the water to sun its scutes and offer me daily salutations. Google told me it was in brumation, a form of hibernation, essentially — resting and preparing for the higher activity of the warmer months to come. I decided I, too, was brumating.

In April, beer went woke when Bud Light partnered with trans activist and TikTok sensation Dylan Mulvaney. The nation was astir with boycotts, unknowingly replacing their favorite beer brand with others that — oops — also supported LGBTQ and equality-focused programs. In the midst of it all, Kid Rock shot up a bunch of cans with a semi-automatic. What a time to be alive!

By May, gun violence was top of mind in the aftermath of the controversial expulsion of two Tennessee lawmakers — Justin Pearson and Justin Jones — from the legislature after protesting the issue from the floor of the chamber. And I pondered the negative impression a video that surfaced of Ja Morant flaunting a gun might have on youth.

June was arguably the best month of 2023 for me (and, like January, held much focus on eggs), as I had the opportunity to spend a month house sitting in Midtown and tend to a small flock of hens. Not only was the change in perspective nice, but caring for those lovely, peculiar ladies was a joy. The first week, I mustered the courage to pick up a broody hen and move her from her nesting box, and by month’s end, I petted and picked them up simply because I wanted to. A beautiful bond was built, and I managed to break my own broody mood.

Also in June, a handful of billionaires imploded in a tin can steered by a game controller on a failed Titanic excursion. Again, what a time!

In July, the Supreme Court voted to squash President Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan (bummer), but I was happily writing my third column about chickens as I offered a wrap-up of my Midtown “staycation” and tribute to the five feathered beauties who made my summer (especially, Pancake: I love you, darling!).

In August, a former U.S. intelligence officer testified before Congress that aliens are real. As it turned out, we didn’t really care. I also received my first hate mail, blaming me and the Flyer for all of the city’s crime and “leftist bullshit.” That was fun.

September in Flyer land is all about Best of Memphis — the annual issue in which we celebrate the winners of our all-things-Memphis readers’ poll. In October, I suffered a bout of writer’s block and reflected on the desire to eat berries in the forest rather than fold clothes.

November was the one-year milestone for my editor role — thankful you’ve all tolerated me (and that I haven’t yet received any further hate mail).

December has been a blur as we worked weeks into the future on staggered holiday deadlines, and now, my friends, we’re at the finish line.

I hope this year has been kind to each of you. And a greater hope still is that 2024 is our collective best yet.

Take care of yourselves.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

A Thank You to Our Supporters

This week, we’re devoting this space to the Frequent Flyers who have supported independent journalism in 2023 with one-time or monthly contributions — thank you for helping keep the free press free. Find out more at memphisflyer.com/page/FrequentFlyer.

William Andrews

Ward and Linda Archer

Margot McNeeley and Gary Backaus

Aaron Banks

Cliff Barnes

Connie Bawcum

Savannah Bearden

Willy Bearden

Rebecca Beaton

Daniel Bicknell

Jennifer Black

Nora Boone

Pam Branham

Margaret Brooks

Diane Brown

Clark Buchner

Ron Buck

Robert Burns

Dwayne Byrd

Charles Campbell

Douglas Campbell

Rachel Cantrell

Steven Carman

Ed Carrington

Jackie Cash

Ted Cashion

Linda Caughron

Sandra Chandler

Rebecca Chappell

Edward Charbonnet

Catherine Chilton

Carolyn Clements

Jim Cole

Stanley H. Cox

Sarah Crain

Mary Crites

Patricia Cunningham

Marge Davis

David Dawson

Amanda Dent

Laura Derrington

Wendy Dippery

Raymond Dorris

Judy Drescher

Janice K, Earheart

Les Edwards

Audrey F W Ellis

Eric Elms

Buddy Fey

Michael Finger

Michael Finger

Lara Firrone

Elizabeth Fitzgerald

Cameron Fogle

J. Patrick Foley

Scott Fox

Janet Freeman

Joel Frey

Sandy Friedman

Kristi Frisch

Angie Gardner

Ron Gephart

Liz Gilliland

Gordon Ginsberg

Gary, Bella, and Phin Golightly

Roy Golightly

Douglas Golonka

Steve Good

Emily Graves

Carole Griffin

Frank Guarino

Greg Hall

Eddie Hankins

Alix Harte

Althea Zane Hathaway

Joseph Hawes

Glenn T. and Martha Hays

Chris Hedrick

Janice and Pinkney Herbert

John Himber

Robert & Biula Holcomb

Michael & Kenya Hooks

George & Lorna Horishny

Jeff Hulett

Bobbie Hullermann

Jessica and Kim Hunter

William Irvine

Pat Isham

Frank Jemison

Lyn Joyner

JR Kamra

Craig Kelly

Michael Kernell

Daniel Kiel

Tom Kilroy

Louis King

Mark Kirby

Leanne Kleinmann

Paula Kovarik

Barbara Burch Kuhn

Jean Larson

David Less

David Lewis

Gregory Liebermann

Nick Lingerfelt

Ellen Lipsmeyer

Shannon Little

Evelyn Loch

Yvonne Madlock

Jonathan May

Doug McDonald

Rhonda McDowell

James McMurry

Zac & Bethany McRae

Roger Meier

Pat Morgan

Steve Morley

Rev. Randall Mullins

Amy Mulroy

David Nanney

Kenneth Neill

Nicholas Newsom

Eric Newsome

Mary Ogle

James Oliver

Joe Parker

Jane Parks

Lucas and Jennifer Parris

Terron Perk

Donald Petri

Bianca Phillips

Ivan K. Phillips

Mike Piercey

Dr. Kwadwo Makau PO

Pete Pranica

Malcolm Pratt

James Prewitt

Luke Pruett

Robert Pugh

Lee Purvis

Gary Richardson

Mike Russell

Shahin Samiei

Sandeford Schaeffer

Karl Schledwitz

Douglas Schmitt

Coy Schnadelbach

Mike Schoenberger

Paula Seaton

Stephen Shankman

Jay Sheffield

Gina Sigillito

Douglas Sims

Carrie Sims

Amy Singer

H.B. Smith

Marty Smith

Lynn Sparagowski

Jon W. Sparks

Jeremy Speakes

Beth Dobson Stamey

Steve Steffens

Erica C. Stoltz

Meghan Stuthard

Tina Sullivan

Alagiri Swamy

Michael Synk

Barbara Sysak

Telesa Taylor

Richard Thompson

David Thompson

David Tipton

Andrea Tomes

Anna Traverse

Nicole Treadwell

Warren Triplett

Henry Turley

Mackenzie VanAusdall

Bruce VanWyngarden

John Vergos

Dawn Vincent

Christina Vranich

Mike Waldrop

KC & Jeff Warren

Carol Watkins

Tamara Wegenke

Rosie Richmond Whalum

James White

Holly Whitfield

Kathleen Williams

Lisa Williams

Chris Wilson

Julie Wilson

Bill Wilson

Peggy Winfrey-Hull

Houston Wolf

Jen Wood-Bowien

Jason Yaun

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Your Holiday Dollars Well-Spent

As we ready ourselves for Thanksgiving feasts with family and friends, gift-giving season creeps closer. You may be one of those who got an early start, and have already made your lists and checked them twice (good on ya!). Or you might be like me, a serial procrastinator who has a list of giftees faintly scribbled in my brain, but only a vague idea (or none at all) of what to get for them (whomp whomp!). Lucky for you, dear readers, the Flyer staff has a few things in mind that may kick-start your shopping inspiration here within our annual “alternative Black Friday” gift guide. While it’s tempting to click around the web and “add to cart” to your heart’s content, we hope you’ll consider shopping local and supporting Memphis makers, artists, retailers, institutions, and small businesses this season (and all year round).

Just a little food for thought: According to Amazon Investor Relations, the online shopping giant’s net sales increased 13 percent to $143.1 billion in the third quarter of 2023, compared to $127.1 billion in the third quarter of 2022. The popular Temu app, which claims you can “shop like a billionaire” from its selection of low-cost offerings, has drawn enormous success since its September 2022 launch. According to data from statista.com, “in May 2023, Temu generated approximately $635 million [U.S. dollars] in gross merchandise volume [GMV], a drastic increase over its September 2022 GMV of only $3 million.” The fashion-forward app, Shein, headquartered in Singapore, has expanded its marketplace beyond clothing and apparel, and as reported by CNBC this summer, its “Executive Vice Chairman Donald Tang told investors the company reached record profitability in the first half of 2023, driven by U.S. sales momentum. … The company brought in $23 billion in sales in 2022 and is now worth $66 billion, according to a May report from The Wall Street Journal.”

Wouldn’t it be nice to use some of our gift-buying budget this year to focus on driving more of that sales momentum right here in Memphis? Beyond those highlighted in our “Gift Local 2023” feature, there are so many local retailers who’d appreciate your business. Your hard-earned dollars can be used to support the economy here at home, rather than line the pockets of foreign organizations and multibillion-dollar companies. We’d also like to encourage you to browse these pages and consider purchasing from our advertisers, who help to keep the Flyer free — on newsstands and online.

Tickets to concerts, stage performances, and other events at venues like the Orpheum Theatre, Bartlett Performing Arts & Conference Center, GPAC, Lafayette’s Music Room, MoSH, Playhouse on the Square, Theatre Memphis, Crosstown Arts, Halloran Centre, or Graceland Soundstage would make great gifts — and lasting memories — for just about anyone on your list. If a trip to Vegas isn’t in the cards, a planned night or weekend at one of our regional casinos — Gold Strike Casino & Resort, Southland Casino, 1st Jackpot Casino Tunica, Hollywood Casino Tunica, to name a few — could be a big win for your giftee. A trip to Sheffield Antiques Mall, A Moment in Time Antiques & Collectibles, aquaTreasures Estate Center, or one of the city’s many eclectic secondhand shops could uncover the perfect one-of-a-kind find for a one-of-a-kind loved one. Get in tune with the music-lovers in your life with a gift from rEvolve Guitar & Music Shop or Goner Records. Or spice things up in the bedroom with lovely lingerie for yourself or your partner from Coco & Lola’s.

If you want to peruse a variety of booths and vendors in one place, mark your calendars for one of the many local gift markets happening around town in the coming weeks. The Memphis Arts Collective Holiday Artist Market runs November 24th through December 24th at 5847 Poplar Avenue #110. This year’s WinterArts will be open daily at 870 S. White Station Road November 25th through December 24th. And there’s the Choose901 Holiday Market at Crosstown Concourse Thursday, November 30th, through Saturday, December 2nd. Find additional info on these events and more like them at events.memphisflyer.com.

Speaking of the Flyer, we’ve got merch available at grindcitydesigns.com/memphisflyer for any Flyer fans you might know. If you’re a fan yourself, you could support our work with a one-time or monthly donation by becoming a Frequent Flyer (look for the “Support Us” widget on memphisflyer.com or email frequentflyer@memphisflyer.com to find out more).

We hope you’ll put Memphis at the forefront of your holiday shopping sprees this year. Buying local supports the people — not only business owners, but also their employees and families — who make our city so special. And we think that’s pretty darn important.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

My MF Anniversary

I’ve just celebrated my MF anniversary — my Memphis Flyer anniversary, that is. Well, one of them. It was November 2022 when I took the reins as editor-in-chief of this paper. That designation came after nearly 15 years working for our parent company, Contemporary Media, Inc., in various roles. Some may recall my introduction letter, in which I offered the story of how the heck I got here — from intern to editor. Yes, I started this MF journey (it’s just fun to use MF; humor me, please) as an intern, still a journalism student at the University of Memphis.

I had some experience writing for The Daily Helmsman, but I recall not being able to define an “inverted pyramid” in my initial internship interview — doh! Thankfully, Mary Cashiola and Michael Finger gave me a pass on that fumble — and were impressed enough with my little ol’ portfolio — and hired me to join the team. In that first year, I covered arts, entertainment, news, and whatever writing assignments were thrown my way, and managed the After Dark live music calendar (my baby, I called it). Those early days were an adventure. I was a nervous interviewer, and not-so-confident in my question-asking skills — and I had a whole lot to learn about, well, everything. (In my first food story, I may or may not have spelled “sous-chef” “Sioux chef.”) In one on-the-scene assignment, a while after Platinum Plus closed, a public auction was held at the shuttered adult entertainment club to sell off its contents — the bar, lighting, couches, dance poles, high heels, skimpy outfits, the whole shebang. It was dimly lit and smelled like a musty basement filled with ashtrays, and I was one of few females present. Aside from former employees, the bidders were nostalgic patrons, and I reluctantly approached them: “So, why would you want that heavily soiled chair?” Having never stepped inside a strip club before, it was all just a tad uncomfortable. (“The Last Dollar Dance” can still be found on memphisflyer.com — now that’s how you build a portfolio.)

One time I interviewed Pauly Shore (after waiting anxiously at my desk for a phone call from The Weasel) ahead of his Comedy, TN stand-up show — he said barbecue was “sketchy.” Another time, I attended an event at Lausanne in which TV and film star Ginnifer Goodwin was the keynote speaker, and she was supremely patient with me during our chat when my tape recorder (yes, an actual cassette tape recorder) malfunctioned, causing me to have to go over a handful of questions a second time. Just a couple cool — although awkward — encounters of the Flyer kind. (There are so many more; journalism can be pretty fun.)

Very early on, I covered a protest and purposely avoided the organizer so that I could get my thoughts together and call with questions afterward. All these years later, I’m still a little camera-shy, so to speak (okay, a lot). I’m much more comfortable with written word than spoken (I need time to think, ya know). One of my aims going into the second year of my editor tenure is to try to ease out from behind the byline and get to know you all a little better, whether that be in social media posts, in-person events, or whatever form our next adventures take.

I’m much more comfortable with interviews now and have figured out how to string together a few decent sentences with a little less effort, but I’ve still got a lot to learn. And at this MF anniversary, it might be time for a performance review of sorts. Many of the things I was super-excited about this time last year — bringing back the After Dark calendar, News of the Weird, and Free Will Astrology — have taken flight. Attempts to relaunch the personals stalled on the runway. And we’ve brought in a new column, Metaphysical Connection. I’d love to hear what you think about our content — what works, what doesn’t, where are we lacking, where do we excel? Do you look to us for news, politics, arts, music, food, film — all of the above? Are you reading this in print or online? Do you refer to our robust online events calendar to help plan your weekends (def add it to your bookmarks: events.memphisflyer.com)? What does the Memphis Flyer mean to you?

Our team has ideas brewing for the new year as we round the final bend of 2023, but, as always, the work we do is for our readers. Send your MF thoughts my way, and let’s take this MF to new heights!

Thank you all for coming along for the ride.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

On Scary Stories and Psychology

The first book series I remember being immersed in was Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. I have a distinct memory of lying on the floor, elbows dug deep into the carpet, thumbing through them for the first time. I was probably 8 or 9 years old, my eyes half-closed in fright upon passing a page with one of Stephen Gammell’s ghastly illustrations. While the twisted tales of ghosts and ghouls, death and decomposition, and mania and murder were probably not quite fit for young minds or eyes (“the worms crawl in, the worms crawl out”), I eventually read the three installments several times through. The stories and drawings embedded themselves into my psyche in a strange way — and taught me more about mortality and fear than I’d yet to learn from real-life experience. It’s likely that Scary Stories contributed to my eventual attraction to horror movies and the macabre. Creepshow, Nightmare on Elm Street, and Friday the 13th were among my favorite films long before I had any business watching them. And Halloween — along with all its spooky accoutrements — has always been my favorite holiday. Oddly enough, there was something I liked about being afraid, dipping my toes into these uncomfortable emotions through terror-inducing scenes on paper or screen.

Interestingly, there’s some science behind this. Research has been done on the enjoyment of horror and fear (i.e. films, haunted houses, murder podcasts). In a Psychology Today article, “On the Psychology of Horror Movies,” Mathias Clasen, Ph.D., writes of studies conducted by the Aarhus University in Denmark’s Recreational Fear Lab: “We think that horror provides an imaginative context in which people can play with fear. Horror movies invite viewers to immerse themselves in threat scenarios,” he writes. “ … those horrors stimulate the fear system with which evolution has equipped us. And because the fear system evolved to respond selectively to ancestrally relevant threats, the threats depicted in horror movies tend to reflect dangers that have haunted our species for thousands or even millions of years.”

The New York Times also explored this in “How Horror Stories Help Us Cope With Real Life,” saying, “Scary movies, books, and podcasts can help people think through how they would respond to threats and prepare them for worst-case scenarios … and consuming horror in controlled doses may actually be helpful for our mental health.”

In purposely consuming content that instills fear, we’re activating our fight-or-flight response, and this can help purge real-life, everyday anxieties and negative emotions — actually offering a type of catharsis. “Some studies have found that people who are feeling nervous or are prone to anxiety are drawn to horror films,” the Times’ Melinda Wenner Moyer continues. “Perhaps scary movies provide a new focal point for their worries: Instead of ruminating over, say, finances, they can worry about the zombies they’re watching.”

We get an endorphin rush viewing such scary scenarios — watching villains hunt down victims, for example — but from a safe vantage point. And today, we’ve got plenty of real fears — and things that make us feel unsafe — to sort through: unrelenting rises in cost of living, gun violence, war, global warming. And we can’t exactly hide our faces behind soft blankets to dispel them. Embracing and immersing ourselves in fictional fears might help us feel more in control in a seemingly out-of-control world.

As you settle into this Halloween holiday, don your creepiest costume, and gather around a fire, be sure to share the supernatural stories from this week’s cover story, “A Haunting in Memphis.” The tragedies, mysteries, and myths therein may provide some unexpected comfort this spooky season.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

(Not) Staring at the Sun

An X post last month from Janel Comeau (@VeryBadLlama) made the viral rounds, eventually finding its way to my Facebook feed: “hey sorry I missed your text, I am processing a non-stop 24/7 onslaught of information with a brain designed to eat berries in a cave.” Relatable, Llama.

I’ll admit (as I have before) there are weeks when there’s so much floating around in my head — and in my email inbox, and in my news feeds, and in the world — I don’t always know where to land on words for this space. It’s not that I don’t have thoughts on wars or crime or politics or the hottest topic of the past week here in Memphis — “Beale Street Music Festival! Tom Lee Park! WE’RE MAD! RAH RAH!” It’s just that sometimes, my berry-eating cave-brain takes over, and it’s either too much to rein in or too little to devote deep reflection to.

Of course, the human brain has evolved (most of them, anyway, heh), but I’m not sure our evolution is yet in line with the 24/7 onslaught. Aside from keeping up with news cycles, television shows, notifications, deadlines, or social media feeds, take my Flyer email as an example. Dozens of important messages come through daily, but there are at least 10 times as many that take up unnecessary space: “Memphis ranks #1 city with the nosiest neighbors”; “Over a third of Americans report candy-related accidents to their teeth”; “Jumpiest Horror Movies Of The Last Five Years.” The trivial mail continues (and often gets a sweeping “select” and “delete”).

Anyhow, did you all have a chance to see last weekend’s solar eclipse? While we weren’t in the path of totality, signs of the event could be caught via crescent-shaped shadows cast on sidewalks through leaves. Or in lens flares from cameras pointed toward the sky. I didn’t acquire any eclipse glasses, knowing the western part of the U.S. was where the real action would happen, but I’m happy to have paused to catch a glimpse — not staring at the sun, but through my phone’s viewfinder. In today’s hurried culture, we don’t often stop to think about our place in the vastness of the universe, or the life- and light-giving gift of that ball of fire in the sky, or the wonder of the moon’s glow as everything rotates endlessly in space. It’s nice to have those awe-inspiring glimmers that remind us we’re not just here to process a constant onslaught of information.

Speaking of the universe, an article by Adam Frank published in The Atlantic this summer has sat with me (with due credit to the headline that initially drew me in): “Scientists Found Ripples in Space and Time. And You Have to Buy Groceries.” Well, damn.

According to that recent discovery, “The whole universe is humming. Actually, the whole universe is Mongolian throat singing. Every star, every planet, every continent, every building, every person is vibrating along to the slow cosmic beat,” Frank wrote. Reverberations of galactic collisions from perhaps as far back as the birth of the universe itself are woven into the fabric of our existence. “The gravitational-wave background is huge news for the cosmos, yes, but it’s also huge news for you,” he continued. “The nature of reality has not changed — you will not suddenly be able to detect vibrations in your morning coffee that you couldn’t see before. And yet, moments like these can and should change how each of us sees our world. All of a sudden, we know that we are humming in tune with the entire universe, that each of us contains the signature of everything that has ever been. It’s all within us, around us, pushing us to and fro as we hurtle through the cosmos.”

Knowing this, with an evolved cave-brain that deep within yearns to eat berries in the forest rather than stand in line for overpriced groceries, forgive me if I sometimes have trouble drumming up commentary on the current state of things. The universe hums across eternity. A gentle breeze blows against my face. The mortgage is due. And there’s a sink full of dirty dishes.

Categories
At Large Opinion

Mayor Culpa

What’s the opposite of a landslide? Land that doesn’t move? A stable pile of dirt? A hill? There really isn’t a satisfactory answer that I could find. Whatever you might want to call it, the Memphis mayoral election last Thursday was anything but a landslide. It was more like 17 random stones rolling down a driveway.

Let’s get the doleful numbers out of the way first. There are 373,091 eligible voters in the city of Memphis according to the Election Commission. Of that number, 88,668 voted in the mayor’s race, meaning around 24 percent of us who could have voted bothered to do so. That’s some weak sauce, folks. But it gets weaker.

There were, yes, 17 candidates on the ballot, most of whom had no business being there and had no real chance of winning. Some perhaps entered the race because they were bored and/or just seeking attention; others because they are delusional nutcases; others, who can say? Maybe six of those 17 were legitimate candidates. Of these, four emerged as front-runners in the early polling: Paul Young, Floyd Bonner, Willie Herenton, and Van Turner.

I wrote a column three weeks ago about how I was conflicted because as a progressive I was leaning toward Turner, who has genuine Democratic Party bona fides and had garnered the endorsements of several elected officials whose opinions I respect on such matters. But as a pragmatist, I was leaning toward Young because he was leading in the polling I was seeing and he seemed like a solid guy with business and activist connections and no baggage to speak of. But mainly, I was thinking Young because I was dead set on making sure neither Bonner nor Herenton won — one a cop whose jail had major issues and the other an 83-year-old five-time former mayor whose platform was “I’m Willie Herenton, damn it!”

After that column came out, I got calls, texts, and emails from supporters of both Young and Turner, all of them pitching me on the merits of their guy. In the end, I decided to go with my gut and voted for Turner. He came in fourth, right behind Herenton and Bonner, all three of them drawing in the neighborhood of 18,000 votes. So much for my gut. To sum it up: Young won an election to lead a city of 628,000 people with 24,400 votes, which is 6.5 percent of eligible voters. Ridiculous.

I’m not saying Young didn’t deserve to win. He won, and he did so fair and square, and probably as convincingly as one could, given the system. But the system is absurd — nonpartisan with no runoff. It encourages rather than discourages various loose fruits and nuts to enter. With 17 candidates and a low turnout any one of them could get lucky and stumble into the mayor’s office.

It’s not like we didn’t try to change the system. Not once, but twice, the citizens of Memphis approved IRV (Instant Runoff Voting), also known as ranked-choice voting, a system in which voters select their top three choices in order, the idea being to assure that a winner gets 50 percent of the vote, and that voters don’t have to make calculated guesses like I did when selecting a candidate.

But, as with so many good things in the state of Tennessee, our GOP legislature decided to kick that bucket over and ban IRV in the state. Because … well, because they could. And it would tick off Memphis, so why not?

But enough Election Day replay. Paul Young is the new mayor. He’s put in solid work as president and CEO of the Downtown Memphis Commission. He’s smart. His victory speech was inclusive and inspiring. He’s a family guy, only 44, young enough to walk onstage after his win to the sounds of “Who Run It” by Three 6 Mafia. Which is cool, if you don’t read the lyrics, or at least don’t take them literally. But hey, if hip-hop can get young people engaged in city politics, I’m all for it — anything that can get more than 25 percent of us to the voting booth is a win.

Godspeed, Mr. Mayor. You run it.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Party On!

When I started working for the Memphis Flyer as an intern (and senior at University of Memphis) in 2008, I’d already been reading the paper religiously each week since high school. Pre-college, living across the state line in Mississippi, I’d drive to the Southaven music shop Disc-O-Tech to pick up a copy from the rack before I browsed their selection of new and used CDs. Once I moved to Memphis for school and work, the Flyer could be found pretty much anywhere — in restaurants, bars, street boxes, retail shops, grocery stores, you name it. All the years spent as a reader, I knew the Flyer had its finger on the pulse of Memphis — hip people, cool music, local news, what to do, where to go. One thing I hadn’t known about was the huge celebration thrown each year for the Best of Memphis. 

The first BOM party I attended, as a 20-something green journalist and part of the Flyer team (finally, as I’d dreamed), was held at the Metal Museum. Over the years, there have been many more at (and not in this order) Playhouse on the Square, the closed Imperial Lanes bowling alley on Summer, Minglewood Hall, the FedEx Event Center at Shelby Farms, Beale Street Landing, the Memphis Fairgrounds, and other venues that through the beer-soaked lenses of my BOM memories elude me at this moment. Each and every one of these events have been larger than life, with the best in local music, food, and drink on hand for partygoers to enjoy. It’s always been a celebration for the winners of our annual readers’ poll, but also for the staff, advertisers, Frequent Flyer supporters, and sponsors who keep this publication thriving, nearly 35 years after the first issue hit newsstands. 

The 2023 event was held at the Ravine in the Edge District last week, and, as in years past, the shindig brought many faces together to drink, eat, dance, and mingle. There’s always been an undeniable energy at these parties, one that naturally comes with seeing hundreds of people light up as they pose for photos, hug friends or former colleagues they haven’t seen since maybe the last annual event, or shake hands upon making new connections. (You can see a selection of photos from this year’s BOM party beginning on page 16.) 

One thing it did this time around, nearly a year after taking the helm as editor-in-chief, was remind me that the Flyer is still the coolest of the cool in this city, just as I thought it was when I was a teen. I’ve grown (as a writer) and grown up, literally, alongside so many of these faces — Paula Raiford, the Huey’s team, local news anchors, tattooists, brewery crews, and more, who attend these gatherings year after year. These are just some of the people and organizations that make this place so uniquely Memphis — and the Flyer does that, too. As has always been the case, we continue to create an alt-weekly paper with the type of coverage you won’t find produced by anyone else locally. There are tons of supporters out there who still seek us out, who love and appreciate what we do. And we can throw a hell of a party! Seeing that all in action in a real-life setting, off the page or screen, was a true joy. 

We also host a number of events open to the public throughout the year. Don’t miss our Bacon & Bourbon Festival at FedEx Event Center this Friday, October 6th, from 6 to 9 p.m., or Crafts & Drafts at Crosstown Concourse, held Saturday, November 11th, and Sunday, November 12th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Keep tabs on other events we have in store for you and follow the fun, sometimes snarky, always informative news, politics, arts, music, food, film, theater, and sports reporting (and more) on our social channels or at memphisflyer.com. 

Thanks for being here with us — and party on! 

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Celebrating the Best of Memphis (It’s All of You)

Our biggest issue of the year is here — the annual Best of Memphis. In May, we asked you, our readers, to nominate your favorites in food, drink, retail, services, arts, and more. From those nominations, the ballot was created. This summer, our audience voted on their favorites among the many restaurants, salons, venues, parks, and so many things in between. And now … drumroll, please … the votes have been tallied and results can be found on the following pages.

There are some long-standing beloved Memphis institutions that pull the top spot in their respective categories year after year, but you’ll also notice some new names and faces among the 2023 winners. We hope you’ll enjoy browsing through these sections to see the people, places, and things that keep the Bluff City thriving, stylish, entertained, informed, and fed. These are the businesses, organizations, and service providers that make Memphis great, and we’re happy to feature them as the best among the best.

There are, of course, mom-and-pops, startups, and small businesses that you may not see here in BOM. That doesn’t at all lessen their value or quality. So many more folks are out there creating, cooking, and offering their time and skills to us day in and day out. If there’s something or someone you love but don’t see on the list this year, be sure to put their names in the running during the 2024 nomination season.

A lot goes into making this issue the biggest and best. Aside from all the outstanding nominees and winners, our staff spends countless hours working behind the scenes throughout the year to ensure the entire process goes smoothly. Kudos to our digital services director, Kristin Pawlowski, who works the website magic to build all of the BOM online components, including the massive task of managing nominations and voting; our art staff, Carrie Beasley, Christopher Myers, and Neil Williams, who design the promos, ads, layouts, and art elements that bring life to the many pages you see before you; the sales team, Kelli Dewitt, Chip Googe, and Kalon Ambrose, and our chief revenue officer Jeffrey Goldberg, who hit the ground running with our nomination and voting promotions and party sponsorships to engage clients along the way in the Best of Memphis fun; Margie Neal, our chief operating officer and woman of many, many hats, who handles much of the invaluable planning and organization backstage; our writers, Samuel X. Cicci, Michael Donahue, Alex Greene, Kailynn Johnson, Chris McCoy, Abigail Morici, Toby Sells, Jon W. Sparks, and Bruce VanWyngarden, who pen winner blurbs for the nearly 200 categories in the poll; and the copy editors, Cicci and Morici, who read these pages several times over to ensure no typos slip through the final printed version. Thanks, as well, to Molly Willmott, who plans the annual BOM event hosted for winners to make it the biggest and best party of the year. And finally, to Chet Hastings and our delivery drivers who get this and every other issue out into the world and on the racks for you to pick up and enjoy. (Please take a look at our masthead to see the names and roles of all the valued members of our team who bring the Flyer to you in print and online, all year.)

We love Best of Memphis, not only because we’re able to highlight so many of Memphis’ assets, but also because we have the opportunity to include our readers in what we do. Nearly 20,000 people took the time to nominate and vote — to make your voices heard by telling us your favorites among all things Memphis. As we celebrate the completion of the 2023 BOM issue, we celebrate not only the winners, but every person who reads the Memphis Flyer, every person whose talent contributes to the making of this fine publication, and every advertiser whose support keeps the Flyer free. We could not continue this dream without each and every one of you. Thank you all for being the Best of Memphis!

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

All Eyes on Ground Zero

I was 18 years old, settling into my first semester of college and working the opening shift at my job at a local dry cleaners. Mornings there were especially busy as folks lined up to hurriedly drop off bags of laundry on their way into work. I sorted through the heaps piece by piece, wrote up itemized tickets, and tediously pinned numbered paper tags onto each garment before throwing them into their respective bins — dry-clean only, lights, darks. We had a vintage tube TV — probably a 13-inch, with a bunny-ear antenna atop to facilitate less fuzzy reception, its exterior covered in denim fabric. It sat at the end of the long counter where customers left their dirty business suits and button-ups in piles. Since, like this day in particular, most morning shifts were worked solo, I kept the little TV tuned in to some morning show or another for background noise. Sometimes there’d be celebrity interviews or a topic that caught my interest. But mostly I slogged through, paying little attention as I poured stain remover on soiled collars and mindlessly managed the stacks. At 18, I didn’t know or care much about current events too far beyond my limited view. Until that morning when something way out of the norm happened. Something that connected me to the nation at large in a way I’d never felt before. Something that shook me to my core.

On that edition of NBC’s Today Show (currently viewable on YouTube), Matt Lauer’s interview with Hughes author Richard Hack was abruptly interrupted with breaking news about the World Trade Center. After a brief commercial break, Lauer and Katie Couric returned, cutting to live footage of smoke rising from one of the Twin Towers. “Apparently a plane has just crashed into the World Trade Center here in New York City,” Couric said. “It happened just a few moments ago … We have very little information available at this point in time, but on the phone we do have Jennifer Oberstein, who apparently witnessed this event …”

NBC’s first eyewitness spoke over the line. “It’s quite terrifying. I’m in shock right now,” Oberstein said. “I came out of the subway at Bowling Green, I was heading to work … I heard a boom, walked out and there was a big ball of fire. I’m now looking north at the World Trade Center, and it is the left tower looking north. I’m in Battery Park right now and you can hear the fire engines and the emergency crews behind me … pieces of the building are flying down … it’s horrifying … I see a major fire …”

I watched anxiously (as did most of America) as more information came in throughout the live broadcast — and another plane strike, a hit at the Pentagon — not knowing what this meant or what it could mean for the future. A few customers paused, momentarily glued to the TV with me, as the events unfolded. Do we go about our day as usual? Should we get home to our families?

Nearly 3,000 people died that day in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville, Pennsylvania. “Terrorism,” a word my young mind hadn’t been familiar with, would become part of everyday conversations. Would there be more attacks to come?

A 2021 Pew Research Center retrospective piece said, “A review of U.S. public opinion in the two decades since 9/11 reveals how a badly shaken nation came together, briefly, in a spirit of sadness and patriotism; how the public initially rallied behind the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, though support waned over time; and how Americans viewed the threat of terrorism at home and the steps the government took to combat it.”

I recently wrote in this space how the early days of the Covid pandemic spurred a unity I hadn’t felt before or since. But that’s not entirely true. While I was too young to fully grasp the effects of 9/11, I do recall the camaraderie in its wake — the American pride, the flags waving from the back of pickup trucks and in front lawns “in a spirit of sadness and patriotism.” But I also remember the fear it caused, the cultural division, how suddenly so many were suspicious of people who didn’t look like them. Tragedy can bring us together as much as it can rip us apart.

As we reflect on that day, where we were, and how we felt, let’s hope the next inevitable tragedy fosters more of the former.