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Hunka Hunka Memphis Love

Are you one of those Memphians who proudly says, “I’ve lived in Memphis my whole life and I’ve never been to Graceland”? Hmmm? Or, maybe, you’re more of the “been there, done that” type — the type who says, “MoSH? No, I haven’t been there since it was the Pink Palace.” But why? Why be so pessimistic when your city has so much to offer and there’s so much to do? No matter how long you’ve lived in Memphis, you haven’t seen everything; you haven’t been everywhere.

So, this summer, we encourage you to throw away your curmudgeonly attitudes, and discover or rediscover those spots that have put Memphis on the map. Sure, sometimes, they’re a bit touristy, but, hey, be a tourist. Lace up your brightest white sneakers and fasten your fanny pack around your hips. Affix your visor on your head and lather on that SPF. It’s time to staycation, baby.

Photo: Toby Sells

Go Back to Beale Street

Beale Street’s magic lies in mystery and discovery.

This mystique has drawn millions to its sidewalk shores for decades. Visitors know it’s a party place with music, probably. Curiosity magnetizes desire. Before they know it, they’re walking with their feet 10 feet off of Beale. (I said what I said.)

Maybe the mystique is gone for locals. Maybe that’s why they proudly shun Beale, on par with cocktail-party protestations about never going to Graceland.

But Beale Street deserves another look, locals. Here are a couple of assignments to help you get back to Beale.

1. Shop local — No, you don’t need another “Memphis” shot glass. But you need local beer (and music).

Assign yourself to go drink one beer at the Ghost River Brewing Co. taproom on Beale’s east end. The beer is fresh, local, and the taps are always changing. If nothing else, go for the beer garden. It’s beautiful, spacious, and one-of-a-kind. It’s a local’s oasis on Beale with a big stage for live music and a second-story patio built for great people-watching.

Stroll to Beale’s west end for a look inside Walking Pants Curiosities. Housed in the former Tater Red’s space, the shop offers elevated tourist fare, some of it appropriate for a Midtown cookout. (Consider the “South Mane” T-shirt.) Much of it is made by local makers like apparel from God Forbid & Co. and Cosgrove & Lewis Handmade Luxury Soaps.

2. Just go — Throw pride (and maybe prejudice?) to the wind. Consider all of Beale local. It is. Eat a bowl of gumbo at King’s Palace Cafe. Play pool at People’s. Catch a live band in one of those open-air bars. Take your kids for ice cream at A. Schwab. It’s all in the 38103. That means it’s Memphis. Just go. Let Beale’s mystery fuel your local discovery. — Toby Sells

Ching’s Hot Wings (Photo: Kailynn Johnson)

Indulge in Ching’s Hot Wings

A staycation is the perfect opportunity to knock something off of your food bucket list. As I scrolled through my cluttered saved posts on Instagram and TikTok of places that had been stowed away as the result of “camera eats first” posts and stories, I decided to knock something off my list that had sat there since my college days. As a Mississippi girl I thought the best wings that the South had to offer came from the Dixie Queen locations in DeSoto County. However, when I was a student at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, I would always hear my Memphis friends longing for the taste of honey hot wings from Ching’s Hot Wings located at 1264 Getwell Road. My friend Jessica Davis let me know, after months of settling for franchises like Zaxby’s and Buffalo Wild Wings, that Ching’s was the spot to truly get a taste of what differentiates Memphis wing culture from others.

I decided to reward myself with a well-deserved cheat meal of honey hot chicken tenders, honey hot drizzled fries, ranch on the side, and an Orange Mound punch. As I went to pick up my order, it felt like walking into Memphis’ own Sardi’s as pictures of famous celebrities, both locally and nationally known, filled the walls, adding to the cozy vibe accompanied by the mouth-watering smell of wing sauce. As I took my first bite into my chicken tender, I realized Jessica was right: This wasn’t the same as the dipped tenders we’d eat during late-night outings in Knoxville. I can see why she’d be in such a hurry to get back home. — Kailynn Johnson 

Bass Pro Pyramid (Photo: Bass Pro Pyramid | Facebook)

Journey to the Pyramid

The Great American Pyramid opened in Downtown Memphis in 1991. Originally envisioned as a 20,000-seat arena for sporting events and concerts, the Pyramid was home court for the University of Memphis basketball team for several years and hosted performances by the Grateful Dead, Bruce Springsteen, Prince, R.E.M., Fleetwood Mac, and other major artists. 

In 2001, the Pyramid became the home of the newly transplanted (from Vancouver) Memphis Grizzlies. In 2004, when the FedExForum was completed, the Pyramid was closed and sat empty until 2015, when it reopened as the Bass Pro Shops at the Pyramid. And if you haven’t experienced the current incarnation of the building, you need to head Downtown and take it in, at least once. 

It’s an immersive experience. You walk into a life-size cypress swamp filled with fish of many varieties, live ducks, and even a couple of alligators. In the center of it all, there’s a 300-foot freestanding elevator that takes you to a restaurant at the top of the building with a breathtaking balcony view of the Mississippi River and Downtown. 

There’s an archery range, a pistol range, a Wahlburgers restaurant, and even a river-themed bowling alley, where “alligator eyes” and other creature features decorate the bowling balls and shimmering lights make you feel like you’re under the river’s surface. There are boats and ATVs and all manner of fishing and hunting equipment for sale, plus clothes, boots, ammo, outdoor grills, a fudge shop, and so much more. And, here’s the best part: If you decide you can’t just leave until you see it all … you don’t have to! You can just book a room at the in-house wilderness-themed Big Cypress Lodge and spend the night enjoying the comforts of the “big pointy bait shop,” as Memphians lovingly call it. It’s a one-of-a-kind experience. — Bruce VanWyngarden

Return to Chucalissa

The bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River where Memphis now stands have been inhabited by humans on and off for thousands of years. When Hernando de Soto’s expedition reached the river in 1541, they found a group of abandoned mounds in the area. The Chickasaw called the place “Chucalissa,” which means “abandoned house.” In the 1930s, Civilian Conservation Corps workers who were building T.O. Fuller State park rediscovered the mound complex. Archeological excavations revealed that the site had been occupied for at least 500 years. It is now a National Historic Landmark, and the site of the C.H. Nash Museum at Chucalissa. 

Most native Memphians know Chucalissa from elementary school field trips. But it’s definitely worth a visit with fresh eyes. The museum itself is built in the shape of a mound. It has an extensive collection of Native American artifacts recovered over 40 years of excavations. The “abandoned houses” belonged to a community associated with the Mississippian culture. From approximately 800 to 1600 C.E., the Mississippians spread from their capital in Cahokia, near what is now East St. Louis, Illinois, north to the Great Lakes, south to the Gulf Coast, and as far east as Charleston, South Carolina. Little is known about the Mississippians, who had no written language, except for what was written down by de Soto’s scribes and a handful of other sources from early European colonizers. But the pottery and other artifacts they left behind speak to a highly sophisticated culture. 

Behind the museum is the mound where the village chief had his home, and the plaza where the Chucalissians gathered for communal events, including games of stickball. There’s even a replica Mississippian house, based on archeological studies of the community which once stood here. It all makes for a fascinating afternoon learning how the first Memphians lived. — Chris McCoy

Michael Donahue at the Peabody (Photo: Jon Sparks)

Stay at the Peabody

Part of a great trip for me is to stay at a grand old hotel. Something outstanding and beautiful that’s stood the test of time. A place with great restaurants. A hotel that reeks of elegance and stature.

You know. Like the Peabody Hotel.

People take staycations at the Peabody, says Kelly Brock, the hotel’s director of marketing and communications. “We promote ourselves locally, too,” she says.

In March, the hotel finished “a complete renovation of the lobby and the lobby bar.”

Brock suggests arriving at 4 p.m. Check in, and then hang out and have a cocktail at the lobby bar. Watch the live duck march at 5 p.m. Or take your drink upstairs and watch the sunset from the Peabody roof.

Have dinner at Chez Philippe, the hotel’s fine dining restaurant with a French presentation, or Capriccio Grill, the Italian steak house.

Start the next day with coffee or a Bloody Mary or mimosa when the bar opens at 10 a.m. Watch the duck march at 11 a.m. Then have brunch between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. in Capriccio Grill. Pick out something like Elvis or Priscilla would wear at one of the Lansky shops and get a massage or facial at Feathers Spa.

Pretend you’re in London with “Afternoon Tea,” which begins at 3:30 p.m. Wednesdays through Sundays in Chez Philippe. Indulge yourself with tea sandwiches, warm scones with clotted cream and raspberry jam, petit fours, and cakes.

Guests who check in Thursday get free admission until 7 p.m. to the Peabody Rooftop Party, which features live music on Thursdays through August 15th. 

Note: No duck is served on any menu. But toy ducks are for sale at the South’s Grand Hotel. — Michael Donahue

Deanie Parker’s Grammy (Photo: Courtesy Stax Museum of American Soul Music)

Choose Your Own Adventure at Stax

The beauty of the Stax Museum of American Soul Music is that the relatively modest building on McLemore, built to the specs of the original theater’s blueprints, is a bit of a labyrinth. Not only can you wind through the pleasingly meandering exhibit space, music echoing around you, but you can imagine the demo studios and offices in the back, a hive of activity in its heyday. That’s where a lot of the action documented in last year’s CD set, Written in Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos, went down. Now you can see Deanie Parker’s Grammy for it on display. 

Similarly, you can imagine the sparkling, thumping sound of the label’s classic records as you look over the reconstructed control room, with its one huge, mono playback speaker, or pace the gently sloping floor of the space where the instruments of Booker T. and the M.G.’s sit out, ready to resume their labors. It’s a vintage recording studio geek’s dream. 

There are many paths to choose, all ripe for rediscovery. Another favorite is the Isaac Hayes express, hopscotching between all exhibits pertinent to Black Moses, including his eye-popping desk and office décor, his growing activism with The Invaders empowerment group, and, of course, that Cadillac, still gleaming like a starship. 

On some days, I can barely get past the opening exhibit, so powerful and rich are its details. Welcoming visitors is a small country church from Duncan, Mississippi (home of Deanie Parker’s people), exuding history’s vibes like some lost Rosetta Stone. You can imagine hands passing over its wooden pews in the soft light of a thousand Sundays. As outgoing executive director Jeff Kollath said of the museum, “This is a people-driven endeavor, and this is a Memphis-people-driven endeavor.” — Alex Greene

Woodruff-Fontaine House Museum (Photo: Abigail Morici)

Meet the Woodruffs and Fontaines 

I had only ever stood outside the Woodruff-Fontaine House Museum on a ghost tour with Historical Haunts (a bonus staycation suggestion for you). So on a Wednesday, and on assignment for this staycation issue, I took myself there. Did I go in the hopes of seeing the spirit of Mollie Woodruff myself? Maybe. Did I succeed in that endeavor? No. Did I enjoy myself? Very much. 

Built in 1871, the house was home to two prominent families in Memphis history: first the Woodruffs and later the Fontaines. The building withstood yellow fever, had a stint as an art school, and outlasted other Victorian houses in the area which were knocked down in favor of urban renewal. Only a handful remain in the city. 

The Woodruff-Fontaine opened as a museum in the 1960s, thanks to the work of the Memphis Chapter of the Association for the Preservation of Tennessee Antiquities, and today it is furnished with period-appropriate artifacts and heirlooms that have been donated by Memphis and Mid-South families. (Don’t touch any of the antiques, though, because, as the signs will warn you, anyone who has ever touched them is now dead. Yikes.)

Photo: Abigail Morici

Notably, the organization has also amassed an impressive collection of textiles, which they display on rotation. Currently, there’s the “Southern Summers” exhibition, where you can learn how early Memphians kept their cool during those hot, hot days of summer, including how they dressed. (Ooh la la!)

Tours are self-guided, but the ever-knowledgeable staff are always around to answer any questions you may have. Seriously, the Woodruff-Fontaine has some delightful people (and an outdoor cat)! (Don’t know about the ghosts, though. They’re a little standoffish.) You’ll be able to see all three floors, and if you aren’t afraid of heights, head up to the tower and get a view of the Memphis skyline. It’s worth it.

Tours are available Wednesday to Sunday, noon to 4 p.m., with the last admission at 3:30 p.m. Oh, and the museum is often putting on events like Twilight Tours and magic shows, so check out their website at woodruff-fontaine.org for more information. — Abigail Morici 

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Happy Birthday, Great Pyramids, and MemGPT

Memphis on the internet.

Happy Birthday

Posted to Facebook by City of Memphis

City leaders remembered the city’s birthday last week in a Facebook post that read, “It’s true, we were founded on this day in 1819 (and we’re told we don’t look a day over 200). Starting as a quiet little spot along the mighty Mississippi, we grew, and grew, and grew into this amazing place so many of you call home today.”

Great Pyramids

Posted to Facebook by Allan Creasy

The MEMernet celebrated the world’s greatest pyramids in a meme making the rounds last week. Only one of the pyramids has waders and turkey fryers, though.

MemGPT

Lauren Korleski asked ChatGPT last week to craft a Memphis-correct message to someone, asking them to come to work on time. Success? You be the judge:

“Hey there, buddy! Listen up, ’cause I got somethin’ important to tell ya. We need you to hightail it to work on time, no dilly-dallyin’. Time is tickin’ and we can’t afford no tardiness, y’hear? So, lace up them boots, grab a cup o’joe, and hustle your way to the workplace pronto. We’re countin’ on ya to be here and give it your all. Don’t keep us waitin’ like a slowpoke on Beale Street. See ya bright and early, partner!”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Wahlburgers Wild Opens at the Pyramid

Fancy a bison burger? Or, perhaps a large bowl of venison chili? Fret no more; chef Paul Wahlberg conjures the spirit of the outdoors with plenty of big game dining options at Wahlburgers Wild in the Bass Pro Pyramid, the chain’s first Tennessee location.

The Wahlburgers brand has had its eye on Memphis for a while, with plans for a Beale Street location scrapped in 2019. The Wahlburgers Wild brand was announced earlier this summer, and officially opened its doors Monday, September 27th.

Diners can expect a few twists on a regular Wahlburgers menu. Owner and chef Paul Wahlberg sticks to many of the flavors and dishes he ate while growing up in Dorchester, Massachusetts, but is hoping to provide a few items unique to Memphis.

“It’s going to be great opportunity for us to show what we can do,” he says, “and give people a chance to try something different.”

Venison chili bratwurst (Credit: Wahlburgers Wild)
Venison chili (Credit: Wahlburgers Wild)

Wahlburgers Wild whips up plenty of the brand’s signature dishes, like the Our Burger made with signature Wahl sauce, crispy chicken sandwiches, or spinach and parmesan Wahlbites. But the “Wild” section of the menu contains some gamier tastes, featuring the aforementioned bison burger and venison chili, alongside a venison bratwurst and the venison chili bratwurst. For dessert, drink up with one of the franchise’s thick shakes (alcohol optional).

The restaurant will offer lunch and dinner options every day of the week. According to the Wahlburgers website, the restaurant will be open 7 a.m. – 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 7 a.m. – 7 p.m. on Sunday.

Co-owned by Paul with brothers Mark and Donnie, Wahlburgers has more than 50 locations around the country. The brothers, and the restaurant, were subjects of a ten-season documentary series on A&E that wrapped in 2019.

Wahlburgers Wild is located at 1 Bass Pro Drive.

L to R: Mark, Paul, Donnie, and Alma Wahlberg (Credit: Wahlburgers Wild)
Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Trump Parks on the Greensward and “Tower of Babel Project”

Nextdoor Politics

Rhonda Young’s “guy on a bike” post blew up on Nextdoor last week, clocking in at 131 comments as of press time.

“I was just sitting on my front porch and a skinny white guy rode by on his bike and yelled ‘go back to Europe, cracker,'” Young said. “Not sure what to make of that? I have a Biden sign in my yard.”

Comments swirled in political toxicity. But they did yield some hilarious Trump signs reimagined for the Memphis set.

Posted to Nextdoor by Tammy Laxton

Pinch Tower of Babel

Kade Banbury reimagined the newly proposed Pinch Tower as a floating “Tower of Babel Project” in a Facebook post satirizing the Flyer’s version of the story.

Banbury went full Giza in a later post that reimagined the entire Pinch District with a sphinx, two towers, and three extra Pyramids.

Posted to Facebok by Kade Banbury

Categories
News News Blog

City Clear-cuts Wolf River Harbor Bank

The city of Memphis has filed an “after-the-fact” permit for clear-cutting the east bank of the Wolf River harbor. More here.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

The Big Empties, Redux

“They dot the Memphis landscape like craters on the moon — old bridges, shut-down factories, and abandoned office buildings. In their day, all these places were humming with activity, helping to spin the wheels of Memphis commerce and industry.”

That was the opening sentence of Michael Finger’s 1997 story in the Flyer called “The Big Empties.” Cited in the piece were the Sears Crosstown Tower, the Tennessee Brewery, and the Harahan Bridge — all now undergoing renovation and reinvention.

Now Bass Pro has brought the Pyramid (the pointiest big empty in the world) back to life in a grand way. And just this week, it was announced that the long-dormant French Quarter Inn near the now-booming Overton Square will be torn down and replaced by the 134-room Hotel Overton. On South Main, the Hotel Chisca is coming back, and numerous other downtown and Midtown properties have gotten or are getting new life — too many to mention here. As I wrote last week, a renaissance is happening. And more big empties are filling up.

Twenty years ago, you would have been hardpressed to find anyone who thought any of those edifices had a future. Remember the huge debate about the wisdom of building AutoZone Park downtown? Lots of folks were insisting that it should be built “out east, where the people are,” instead of in what was perceived by many then as a dying downtown. Now the ballpark is one of the city’s crown jewels.

Visionaries like AutoZone’s Pitt Hyde and forward-thinking developers like Henry Turley and Jack Belz, and precious few others, put their money where their hearts were and invested in the city core when many businesses were fleeing to the hinterlands. Their commitment to Memphis is now bearing fruit for all of us.

And I know this isn’t often said, but we also owe a debt to former Mayor Herenton, who first unleashed Robert Lipscomb on the city’s wretched public housing, almost all of which has now been transformed into livable and attractive multi-income housing. I predict that Lipscomb’s often disparaged role in the city’s redevelopment will be one at which future historians will marvel. He’s gotten a lot of things right.

There are still plenty of big properties lying fallow, of course, still acres of blight in some of the city’s poorer neighborhoods, but the conversation has changed from “What can we do about these eyesores?” to “What’s the best way to reinvent this property?” That’s huge.

Looming ahead is the battle over the future of the Fairgrounds and the Mid-South Coliseum, which pits Lipscomb and an as yet unknown developer against a core of Midtown activists who want to save the historic venue. I won’t predict how that will play out, but one thing is certain: The “save the Coliseum” proponents can point to numerous examples where reinvention has paid off handsomely for all of us.

Categories
Opinion The BruceV Blog

Bill Dance Gives a Preview Tour of Bass Pro Pyramid

It’s well known that Memphis’ premier bass fisherman and outdoor TV personality, Bill Dance, is good friends with Bass Pro CEO Johnny Morris. Dance was around in November to tag along with Morris when the media were given a tour of the progress being made inside the big, pointy bait-shop.

Now, in what appears to be a video made more recently, Dance takes us on a tour from the soon-to-be swampy bottom to the spectacular view from the top. If all goes according to schedule, you’ll be able to take your own tour — and shop to your heart’s delight — beginning May 1.

Click here for the video.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said (November 6, 2014) …

Greg Cravens

About Toby Sells’ post, “Luttrell Did Not Proclaim ‘Jefferson Davis Day'” …

Apparently this sort of thing happens to local sheriffs and mayors all the time. It’s just that nobody notices when the sheriff’s office declares “Beehive Hairdo Day” in Mayberry.

Jeff

About Toby Sells’ post “Pyramid: Now With More Alligator” …

“Swamp installation, including the alligator pit?” WTF! This place is all about animal murder. Maybe it will go out of business and we can turn it into a water park.

Tommy Foster

If Memphis is going to be a world-class city, what we need is a giant corporate logo plastered over our city’s landmark! The only way we’ll outdo the Empire State Building, the Gateway Arch, and even Nashville’s Parthenon, is with a breathtaking view of a 40-foot-tall bass popping out of a pyramid.

Dracula

To compare the Pyramid to the Gateway Arch, the Parthenon, and the Empire State Building is asinine. The Pyramid is a landmark only because it’s so ugly, and Memphis was duped into building it. Thank gawd for Bass Pro for coming along and making good use of it.

Nobody

About Wendi C. Thomas’ column, “What Happens Next” …

It appears we have reached a point in our politics, that if one keeps repeating falsehoods often enough, people begin to believe them. Never has this been more apparent than in the debate over the proposed Amendment 1 to the Tennessee state constitution. The people pushing this deeply flawed and dangerous amendment are using outright untruths to attempt to sell their message.

Falsehood 1: Abortion in Tennessee is unlicensed, unregulated, and performed in unsafe facilities.

Truth 1: Abortion is highly regulated in Tennessee. From mandatory reporting to the Tennessee Health Department to regular Health Department inspections, along with a host of regulations including parental notification for minors. Abortion in Tennessee is performed in licensed ambulatory surgical centers by doctors with hospital-admitting privileges.

Falsehood 2: Abortion is dangerous.

Truth 2: Abortion has a safety record of more than 99 percent, and it is 10 times safer than childbirth.

Falsehood 3: This amendment would protect women.

Truth 3: Quite the contrary: Amendment 1 would have no regard for a woman’s health or well-being, as it makes no exceptions for rape, incest, or when a woman’s health is in danger.

Falsehood 4: All Christians will vote for Amendment 1.

Truth 4: Many sincere Christians, including clergy, have come out publicly against Amendment 1. They understand that a woman’s private health decisions should be made only by her, with counsel and support of her family, and they subscribe to the basic Christian tenet, “judge not.”

Politicians have no business meddling in the personal health decisions of a woman and her family, obliterating the strong privacy provisions in the Tennessee Constitution. I urge all people of good will to vote No on Amendment 1.

Mary M. Loveless

About the verdicts in the “Kroger teen mob” incident …

The swift arrests of the youths in the Kroger mob violence sent the right message. As did Mayor Wharton and Police Director Armstrong immediately standing together to denounce it.

The soft sentences eight of the youth received for this crime sent the wrong one. Justice was not served. The victims could have been killed. The eight deserved more severe punishments, ones that would deter future actions like this one and prompt parents to make certain that their children never behave this way.

With teachers quitting their classrooms because of disrespectful, unruly kids and with the increase in the number of gangs, there are many Memphians who may decide to exit our city and many from outside who will choose not to come here to live.

I want to live the rest of my life here, but we need to take the necessary steps to ensure a good future for Memphis.

Philip Williams

Categories
Opinion

Investing in The Bass Pro Pyramid

Bass-Pro-Shops-Memphis-Pyramid-Store.jpg

Moved by mordant curiousity and a falling stock market, I called a local bond trader to see how those Bass Pro Pyramid bonds are doing now that the Bassmasters have admitted that this deal won’t be done until late 2014, if ever.

Bass Pro founder Johnny Morris has changed his mind again. The new details are, why bother, check the daily and its puff piece. Something about an elevator. Or an inclinator. Or two of them. This is his baby. It will probably change a few more times. Remember the glass band all the way around when he came here for the big announcement and fish fry a couple years ago? Here’s a less flattering piece from the national media.

All Memphis can do is wait and hope. And invest, if you’re brave enough.

Thanks to Johnny Lessley at Duncan Williams for the bond info. You’ll need a minimum of $5000 or more likely $100,000 to get in the game. These bonds are not widely traded. Mutual funds and insurance companies scooped up most of them in the initial offering. Some days they’re available and some days they’re not. It isn’t like buying cheeseburgers at McDonald’s except that a bad one can make you really sick.

There were three different bonds on this project, two of them taxable and one tax free, with different maturities as far out as 2030. A taxable 2030 will get you five percent interest if you can find one. A tax-free bond priced at $98.50 at issue, slightly below par, is $108 or $109 today. Not because Bass Pro’s prospects or the future of downtown Memphis has changed, but because interest rates have fallen since 2011. The bonds are rated “A.”

They’re backed by Tourism Development Zone (TDZ) revenue. A TDZ is a legislative creation to build convention centers in Nashville and Memphis, since distorted for all kinds of purposes and places. The Bass Pro bonds are not revenue bonds or general obligation bonds, which would be backed by the taxing authority of the city of Memphis. The interest payments come from TDZ funds collected downtown. MLGW is a big contributor. Nothing says “tourism” like “utility company” does it?

Bass Pro doesn’t start making payments until the super store opens. That will improve the debt service outlook because more state sales taxes will be rebated to the city.

Could Bass Pro Pyramid become another AutoZone Park, where the bond holders took what is called “a haircut” and didn’t get the payments they expected? Possible, but those bonds were backed by luxury suite revenue projections which turned out to be way too optimistic. That said, Bass Pro was supposed to be open late this year, so we’re talking about several million in lost sales taxes if this store is the retail monster it is touted to be. And Bass Pro, we have often been reminded, is just one part of the overall redevelopment of the Pinch District and Convention Center. Nothing is happening there, and nothing is likely to happen for at least another year in light of this week’s announcement.

So show your love and buy yourself a bond or two. If you can put your treasure in the promises of Johnny Morris and Robert Lipscomb and the retailing future of downtown Memphis for the next 17 years you’ve got a stronger stomach than I do.

Categories
Opinion The BruceV Blog

Those Big-Bass Signs on the Pyramid

I’m on record as being a fan of the Bass Pro Shop moving into the Pyramid in downtown Memphis. I think that it’s a perfect fit for this market, that it will bring needed retail to downtown, and will re-energize the Pinch District, which has faded since the Pyramid was moth-balled a few years back.

It’s a big, gaudy Vegas-style building, and Bass Pro plans to gaudy it up even more with its proposed 90′ by 66′ lighted logo signs on all four sides. The city council is belatedly grappling with the issue, trying to wring concessions from the company to reduce the size of the signs. Bass Pro says the deal is done and the signage was agreed to in its contract with the city.

I can see both sides of the argument. Bass Pro wants to maximize its visibility so that those driving across the I-40 bridge at highway speed have plenty of time to decide to take the exit on Front Street and check out that big ol’ store. And I can see why the city fathers don’t want the signage setting a precedent for ignoring the city sign regulations.

Can’t we all get along? Why not a deal where we allow Bass Pro to put larger signs on the sides of the Pyramid facing the river and the bridge, and maybe reduce the signs to a more tolerable size on the sides facing the city and the North End residential neighborhoods?